See also☛
PAUL McCARTNEY AT KENNEDY CENTER HONORS (
Complete)
http://youtu.be/RL76v3qoEeI
Performances in order of appearance on the
PBS Special:
0:00 -
Intro
1:27 -
Interview with
Paul McCartney
5:16 - Paul McCartney -
Got to Get You
Into My Life
8:13 -
Stevie Wonder -
We Can Work It Out
12:27 -
Jonas Brothers -
Drive My Car
15:09 -
Jerry Seinfeld's comedy routine
20:22 -
Jack White -
Mother Nature's Son
23:23 -
Faith Hill -
The Long and Winding Road
27:13 -
Corinne Bailey Rae &
Herbie Hancock -
Blackbird
31:08 -
Elvis Costello -
Penny Lane
35:35 -
Emmylou Harris -
For No One
39:14 -
Lang Lang -
Celebration
42:39 -
Dave Grohl -
Band on the Run
48:39 - Paul McCartney & Stevie Wonder -
Ebony and Ivory
53:54 -
President Obama's dedication speech
1:00:22 - Paul McCartney's acceptance speech
1:02:30 - Paul McCartney -
Michelle
1:05:36 - Paul McCartney -
Eleanor Rigby
1:08:26 - Paul McCartney -
Let It Be
1:12:43 - Paul McCartney -
Hey Jude
1:20:04 - Paul McCartney -
Yesterday
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President Obama presented
America's highest award for popular music − the
Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for
Popular Song − to
Sir Paul McCartney in the
East Room of the
White House which featured live performances of several artists singing famous McCartney tunes as well as a mini-concert by Sir
Paul himself. The musical tribute was in celebration of the
Library of Congress Gershin Prize for Popular Song award being presented to Sir Paul by President Obama.
Among the special tributes by performers including Elvis Costello, Dave Grohl, Jack White, Faith Hill and
The Jonas Brothers, was a special performance by Stevie Wonder.
Stevie first performed his own version of "We Can Work It Out" and then later was joined by Paul onstage to sing their
1980s hit "Ebony and Ivory."
The song was originally released in
1982 and spent seven weeks at number one on the
Billboard charts according to
Wikipedia.
Almost 30 years later, the song about racial harmony had even more significance as McCartney and
Wonder performed it at the White House before the first
African-American President in the
United States.
McCartney commented in an interview with the AP:
"One of the highs was singing 'Ebony and Ivory' with Stevie because we'd never done it live together, so that was great. To sing it live together for the very first time with the first black president there, it suddenly gave a great significance to the song
....To sing it with Stevie in front of President Obama was very emotional."
When accepting the award, McCartney said: "This is such a fantastic evening for me. I mean, getting this prize would just be good enough, but getting it from this president..." which resulted in cheers and applause from the audience.
Paul McCartney's girlfriend,
Nancy, accompanied him to the show and McCartney's children,
Stella,
Mary and
James were sitting in the second row behind their father.
As they gathered to present the annual award for extraordinary contributions to
American music and culture, in his remarks, the
President took a moment to address the challenges
Americans face and the value of music in tough times:
We've gone through a difficult year and a half, and right now our thoughts and our prayers are with friends in another part of the country that is so rich in musical heritage -- the people of the
Gulf Coast who are dealing with something that we simply had not seen before. And it's heartbreaking. And we reaffirm, I think together, our commitment to see to it that their lives and their communities are made whole again.
But part of what gets us through tough times is music, the arts, the ability to capture that essential kernel of ourselves, that part of us that sings even when times are hard. And it's fitting that the
Library has chosen to present this year's
Gershwin Prize for Popular Song to a man whose father played
Gershwin compositions for him on the piano; a man who grew up to become the most successful songwriter in history --- Sir Paul McCartney
.
In the East Room of the White House. June 2,
2010.
- published: 19 Jun 2012
- views: 2904958