Tuesday, 25 November 2025

Tunesday : Maybe I'm Amazed

 

                                      

Maybe I'm Amazed

Written and Performed by Paul McCartney

Maybe I'm amazed at the way you love me all the time
Maybe I'm afraid of the way I love you
Maybe I'm amazed at the way you pulled me out of time
Hung me on a line
Maybe I'm amazed at the way I really need you
Maybe I'm a man
Maybe I'm a lonely man who's in the middle of something
That he doesn't really understand
Maybe I'm a man
Maybe you're the only woman who could ever help me
Baby, won't you help me to understand?
Maybe I'm a man
Maybe I'm a lonely man who's in the middle of something
That he doesn't really understand
Maybe I'm a man
Maybe you're the only woman who could ever help me
Darling, won't you help me to understand?
Maybe I'm amazed at the way you're with me all the time
Maybe I'm afraid of the way I leave you
Maybe I'm amazed at the way you help me sing my song
You right me when I'm wrong
Maybe I'm amazed at the way I really need you
Maybe I'm a man
Maybe I'm a lonely man who's in the middle of something
That he doesn't really understand
Baby, I'm a man
Maybe you're the only woman who could ever help me
So baby, won't you help me to understand?
Yeah, baby, I'm a man
Baby, I'm a lonely man who's in the middle of something
That he doesn't really understand
Oh, baby, I'm a man
Maybe you're the only woman who could ever help me
So baby, won't you help me to understand?
Yeah, baby I'm amazed
Yeah, baby I'm amazed
Yeah, baby I'm amazed
I'm amazed
With you



Not long after I got the tickets for me and Mal to see David Byrne together, I discovered that Paul McCartney would be touring locally, and although Dave would have loved to come to this show, he knew that he would be in Shanghai at the time, so I invited Mal, saying, "For sure, this is your Christmas present." And of course, Mal had no complaints about that.

I posted that picture of us on facebook (yes, I'm wearing the Paul McCartney Sgt Pepper jacket that I once made as a Halloween costume for Mal) with the caption, "Twelve year old me and twelve year old Mal would have never imagined we'd be here tonight", and that's so true: I was an out-of-time preteen Beatlemaniac in the late 70's, and Mal was an out-of-time preteen Beatlemaniac in the early 2010's, and neither of us really thought we'd ever see Paul live (even though I have seen Ringo more than once, this just seemed somehow less likely). Ultimately: this was a very surreal concert experience, and Sir Paul still commands a crowd.

It seemed strange that of only two Canadian dates, one of them would be in Hamilton (instead of nearby Toronto), but Mal explained that not only was this the venue where M Night Shyamalan's latest movie Trap (about a big concert) was filmed, but McCartney had been booked as the first performer after a 300 million dollar upgrade to the stadium. By the time I decided to get tickets, I had to pay reseller prices (not quite as high as the group behind us who mentioned that they thought $800/seat was reasonable for the view) and high up overlooking the side of the stage was the best that I could find (which was actually a pretty good and interesting perspective, with many large screens showing us the head on view).

It was simpy incredible to me that, at eighty-three-years-old, McCartney performed for three hours straight and sang everything from Love Me Do to Helter Skelter; from Band on the Run to Maybe I'm Amazed; my favourite Paul song of all time. Over dinner (incredible food, service, and atmosphere at Mystic Ramen) I was telling Mal that I had a sentimental spot for Mull of Kintyre (Cora and I had worked up the harmonies on it [when we were preteen Beatlemaniacs] to sing for her family's get-togethers), and although we agreed it wasn't likely to be on the setlist, McCartney did end up doing this song, too; the crowd absolutely blowing the roof off when a local pipe and drum band came marching out in their kilts to add the bagpipe line. And the crowd was one of the best parts of the whole concert: from our high vantage point, I could see the superfans on the floor and in the stands — Beatlemaniacs of every age — and we all knew all the words, and we all na-na-na-naed along with Hey Jude, and it was personal and it was communal and I got to share it all with my own erstwhile Beatlemaniac.


Yeah, baby I'm amazed
Yeah, baby I'm amazed
Yeah, baby I'm amazed
I'm amazed

With you

Tuesday, 18 November 2025

Tunesday : Dust in the Wind

                           


Dust in the Wind

(Livegren, K) Performed by Kansas

I close my eyes
Only for a moment and the moment's gone
All my dreams
Pass before my eyes with curiosity
Dust in the wind
All they are is dust in the wind
Same old song
Just a drop of water in an endless sea
All we do
Crumbles to the ground, though we refuse to see
Dust in the wind
All we are is dust in the wind
Oh, oh
Now don't hang on
Nothin' lasts forever but the earth and sky
It slips away
And all your money won't another minute buy
Dust in the wind
All we are is dust in the wind
(All we are is dust in the wind)
Dust in the wind
(Everything is dust in the wind)
Everything is dust in the wind
(In the wind)



In keeping with this year of getting out more and seeing old bands while we still can, when I mentioned to Dave months ago that Kansas would be coming to town, he said, "Get the tickets!" And since Dan and Rudy have been enjoying some of these concerts lately, too, they decided to come with us. But, in the end, Dave had to go away on a business trip, and Kennedy got to take her Dad's ticket.

It's funny that I came into this concert knowing exactly two Kansas songs, and after hearing their greatest hits live, I would swear that those were the only two Kansas songs I have ever heard. Perhaps even funnier: none of the original band members were on stage, so we essentially saw a cover band playing a couple hours of music that had mostly never made an impression on us in a combined two hundred years of living. They did rock the house, though, and no regrets getting out with this gang.

Of note: as an introduction to Dust in the Wind, the singer explained that Kansas guitarist Kerry Livegren had been sitting in the living room of his house doing some rolling chord fingering exercises when his wife popped her head in and said, "That sounds great, I can't wait to hear the words you put to it." Livegren tried to explain that this was just an exercise, not a song, but as he thought about his wife's reaction, he did decide to put words to it and accidentally wrote Kansas' biggest hit. Funny that nothing else they played this night sounded anything like this (I thought most of the songs were like the overwrought vibe Jack Black was going for with the kids in School of Rock, Rudy asked if they reminded me of Spinal Tap; they did), but it still felt like something to seen this performed live.