Thursday, January 16, 2025

Peace and Love triumph as Ringo spreads joy (and to me a dash of mortal melancholy) in "Look Up" concert that Nashville guests turn into glorious tribute to a Beatle who loves country music

 

Ringo raised me to tears of joy and melancholy during the magnificent Ringo & Friends at the Ryman concert and television taping Wednesday night.

While the show was to support the launch of his new, country album, “Look Up,” it really turned into a tribute to the 84-year-old entertainer who has been a part of my life for more than 60 years.

And not all the joy came from the iconic Beatles drummer and his almost soft-shoe showmanship, but from the people who gathered around to perform with him or to perform some of his classics while he waited in the wings with affable music producer and performer and Dylan crony T Bone Burnett, who served as master of ceremonies.

The concerts – the first installment was Tuesday – were to promote Ringo’s new country album, “Look Up,” that restates his love of country music. That love was shared by his Beatles cohorts, who borrowed heavily from all types of American music.   

Ringo restated his love of country music with his wonderful “Beaucoups of Blues,” his second solo effort, released in 1970, as members of the Fab Four moved their own directions.


Ringo Starr during The Beatles' final stage in the first picture, from the film "Get Back" (still playing on Disney-Plus) and the cover of his first country album, "Beaucoups of Blues," from 1970).  

On this night, most of the classic songs Ringo has voiced with his old mates and in the years since were covered by some of Nashville’s best, mostly young, musicians, while Ringo showed off some of his new songs from “Look Up.”

For example, Molly Tuttle got the crowd singing along to “Octopus’ Garden,” a song Ringo wrote – with generous encouragement from his cohort George Harrison – and which is on arguably The Beatles’ best (and last) album, “Abbey Road.”

Jack White, who helped get the show going when he joined Ringo on “Matchbox,” was a generous guest.

White also did “Don’t Pass Me By,” another Ringo classic, and he was the star’s biggest support during the soul-stirring finale, “With a Little Help From My Friends.”

 Indeed, after that finale – an intense and exuberant singalong featuring most of the night’s performers as well as guests like Emmylou Harris and Brenda Lee and the loud, perhaps offkey Ryman crowd -- White stayed on the stage, enjoying his favorite activity, playing guitar, while the backing band continued to play after the rest of the guest stars, led by Ringo, almost rhythmically exited stages right and left.

Billy Strings, a great musician in part responsible for the resurgence of bluegrass music, did Ringo’s Beatles classic, “Honey Don’t,” and he and Tuttle teamed up for “What Goes On.”

War and Treaty, Sheryl Crow, Jamey Johnson, Larkin Poe, Mickey Guyton, Rodney Crowell, Sarah Jarosz and more all took their turns at singing for (occasionally with) Ringo.

Ringo does his "job" as drummer for The Beatles in 1964, in this photo from Wikipedia. 

My tears – some happy, some melancholy dealing with mortality – actually were spurred by the great showman himself, when he performed songs like “It Don’t Come Easy,” “Boys,” “Photograph,” led the singalong of “Yellow Submarine” and especially the star-filled stage finale of “With A Little Help From My Friends,” his best-known Beatles song (from “Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.”)

That joyous melancholy for me reached its peak earlier, on the 10th song of the night, “Boys,” when Ringo climbed up behind his drumkit to sing and to play that instrument where he is most at home and where he first became an international household name more than 60 years ago.

Something about being 50 feet from Ringo Starr on the drums (the giant screens made it closer) while he did that Beatles classic song – on which he was the original voice – and watching him play the drums “Ringo-style,” an easy smile on his face as he sang….

Likely this gentle man had memories flooding him of when he did it back in 1963 with his mates, John, Paul and George. And it emphasized to me the fact that it was 61 years ago that I heard that song first, with this same guy on drums. Wednesday night, I put my walking cane aside to stand up for the ovation. I’m no longer a kid. And that great drummer no longer is a young man.  

And Ringo’s rendition of his solo hit, “Photograph” hit also bit deeply my heart. It was written in 1971 by him and by George Harrison. But over the years, the tale of lost love has become something of an essential part of Ringo’s set, and many view it as a sad farewell to Lennon, who was gunned down nine years after the song was recorded.

Ringo's two nights of Ryman concerts will be spliced together for what ought to be an amazing CBS TV special.

Also, Ringo – who lives in Beverly Hills, California -- is donating a chunk of the concerts’ proceeds to Los Angeles-area wildfire relief.

As Ringo guaranteed at the beginning of the show, it would be a night of peace and love. It was that. And, to me, it also was a night of pleasant memories and visions of mortality. Peace and love.

Ringo with his cowboy hat for the new country album, "Look Up."

  

 

No comments:

Post a Comment