Wings Over Europe Tour
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Wings Over Europe Tour | ||
---|---|---|
Tour by Wings | ||
Dates | July 9 - August 24, 1972 | |
Legs | 1 | |
Shows | 26 5 in France, |
In the summer of 1972, Paul McCartney's newly-formed band, Wings, set out on a concert tour of Europe. Coming on the heels of a tour of English universities, the Wings Over Europe Tour was intended to promote recent singles "Give Ireland Back to the Irish" and "Mary Had a Little Lamb", as well as provide live recordings to be included on a future album. The second objective never came to fruition, however, and Red Rose Speedway was released in Spring of the next year without any of the concert material. Only the August 21 performance of "The Mess" at The Hague was officially released, as a b-side to Number One single "My Love".
The band, with the McCartney children and their road crew, loaded up in a brightly-colored double decker bus for the tour of the continent. The tour proceeded largely without incident, but on August 10 in Gothenburg, Sweden, Paul and Linda McCartney were arrested for possession of marijuana and fined US$1,200. Paul joked the arrest would “make good publicity” for the tour, but this arrest would cause him much trouble trying to gain visas for future tours.
Wings' lineup for the tour was Paul and Linda McCartney, Denny Laine, Henry McCullough, and Denny Seiwell.
[edit] Setlist
- "Bip Bop"
- "Smile Away"
- "Mumbo"
- "Give Ireland Back to the Irish"
- "1882"
- "I Would Only Smile"
- "Blue Moon of Kentucky"
- "The Mess"
- "Best Friend"
- "Soily"
- "I Am Your Singer"
- "Henry's Blues"
- "Say You Don't Mind"
- "Seaside Woman"
- "Wild Life"
- "My Love"
- "Mary Had a Little Lamb"
- "Maybe I'm Amazed"
- "Hi, Hi, Hi"
- "Long Tall Sally"
- "Cotton Fields" - Only performed in Antwerp
[edit] Venues played
- July 9: Centre Culturelle, Chateauvallon, France
- July 12: Juan-les-Pins, France
- July 13: Theatre Antique, Arles, France
- July 14: Lyon, France
- July 16: Olympia, Paris, France
- July 18: Zirkus-Krone-Bau, Munich, West Germany
- July 19: Offenbach-Halle, Frankfurt, West Germany
- July 21: Kongreß-Halle, Zürich, Switzerland
- July 22: Pavillion, Montreux, Switzerland
- August 1: K. B. Hallen, Copenhagen, Denmark
- August 4: Maess Halle, Helsinki, Finland
- August 5: Idreats, Turku, Finland
- August 7: Gröna Lund, Stockholm, Sweden
- August 8: Idretshalle, Örebro, Sweden
- August 9: Njaardhallen, Oslo, Norway
- August 10: Skandinavien Halle, Gothenburg, Sweden
- August 11: Olympean, Lund, Sweden
- August 12: Fyns Forum, Odense, Denmark
- August 14: Vejlby Risskov Hallen, Aarhus, Denmark
- August 16: Rheinhalle, Düsseldorf, West Germany
- August 17: De Doelen, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
- August 19: Evenementenhal, Groningen, The Netherlands
- August 20: Concertgebouw, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
- August 21: Congresgebouw, The Hague, The Netherlands
- August 22: Cina Roma, Antwerp, Belgium