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The lights drop in Atlanta and Paul McCartney steps into a room full of memory—and invention. We unpack how an icon in his eighties still delivers a two-hour-forty marathon by leaning on tight harmonies, a punchy horn section, and the kind of live tech that lets Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite explode off a modern stage. The show’s emotional peak arrives when Paul sings I’ve Got a Feeling with John via Get Back footage, a moment that proves technology can connect past and present without cheapening either one.
From there we chase the thread of discovery. Remember when The Doors felt brand new again in 1980? A radio deep dive, Apocalypse Now, and a greatest hits record turned Hello, I Love You and Riders on the Storm into fresh obsessions for a new generation. We map that rush forward and backward: how L.A. Woman and Morrison Hotel still punch, how Mr. Mojo Risin’ became every teenager’s riddle. Along the way, we decode the stories behind The Rolling Stones’ Get Off of My Cloud and Neil Diamond’s Cracklin’ Rosie, and how fame, loneliness, and late-night singalongs sneak into pop myth.
Then we give American Beauty the close listen it deserves. From Box of Rain’s tenderness to Ripple’s campfire wisdom and Truckin’s road-scarred grin, we talk sequencing, sunshine daydream codas, and the tradition behind I Know You Rider. We round out the tour with U2’s Boy—lean, urgent, and still startling—and a Ramones reappraisal that finds great songs beneath Phil Spector’s glossy wall. Through it all, one idea keeps returning: artists adapt, listeners evolve, and the best songs keep meeting us where we are.
If that resonates, hit play, follow the show, and share it with a friend who loves live music and music history. Leave a review to tell us which song hit you differently this time—we’ll feature our favorite takes on a future episode.
Learn Something New or
Remember Something Old
Like and follow our Facebook and Instagram pages and spread the word if you enjoy the podcast.
Contact us at [email protected] with your own musical memories.
Send us a one-way message. We can’t answer you back directly, but it could be part of a future Music In My Shoes Mailbag!!!
By Jim5
2424 ratings
The lights drop in Atlanta and Paul McCartney steps into a room full of memory—and invention. We unpack how an icon in his eighties still delivers a two-hour-forty marathon by leaning on tight harmonies, a punchy horn section, and the kind of live tech that lets Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite explode off a modern stage. The show’s emotional peak arrives when Paul sings I’ve Got a Feeling with John via Get Back footage, a moment that proves technology can connect past and present without cheapening either one.
From there we chase the thread of discovery. Remember when The Doors felt brand new again in 1980? A radio deep dive, Apocalypse Now, and a greatest hits record turned Hello, I Love You and Riders on the Storm into fresh obsessions for a new generation. We map that rush forward and backward: how L.A. Woman and Morrison Hotel still punch, how Mr. Mojo Risin’ became every teenager’s riddle. Along the way, we decode the stories behind The Rolling Stones’ Get Off of My Cloud and Neil Diamond’s Cracklin’ Rosie, and how fame, loneliness, and late-night singalongs sneak into pop myth.
Then we give American Beauty the close listen it deserves. From Box of Rain’s tenderness to Ripple’s campfire wisdom and Truckin’s road-scarred grin, we talk sequencing, sunshine daydream codas, and the tradition behind I Know You Rider. We round out the tour with U2’s Boy—lean, urgent, and still startling—and a Ramones reappraisal that finds great songs beneath Phil Spector’s glossy wall. Through it all, one idea keeps returning: artists adapt, listeners evolve, and the best songs keep meeting us where we are.
If that resonates, hit play, follow the show, and share it with a friend who loves live music and music history. Leave a review to tell us which song hit you differently this time—we’ll feature our favorite takes on a future episode.
Learn Something New or
Remember Something Old
Like and follow our Facebook and Instagram pages and spread the word if you enjoy the podcast.
Contact us at [email protected] with your own musical memories.
Send us a one-way message. We can’t answer you back directly, but it could be part of a future Music In My Shoes Mailbag!!!

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