ABC Home | Radio | Television | News | Your Local ABC | More Subjects… | Shop

Email

McCartney to play Israel concert

Posted August 28, 2008 09:06:00
Updated August 28, 2008 11:50:00

Sir Paul McCartney will play in Tel Aviv on September 25.

Sir Paul McCartney will play in Tel Aviv on September 25. (Getty Images: MJ Kim)

Paul McCartney will perform for the first time ever in Israel next month - more than 40 years after The Beatles were blocked from giving a concert in the country.

The former Beatle, who along with John Lennon wrote most of the band's songs in the 1960s, will perform on September 25 in Tel Aviv.

McCartney and The Beatles - one of the most popular bands in rock history - had planned to perform in Israel in the mid-1960s, but the concert was scrapped. The non-event has since taken on almost legendary significance.

For years, it was said that the government blocked the show out of fear that it would corrupt the nation's youth.

But a more recent account given this month in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz blames the show's cancellation on a rift between two concert promoters.

Earlier this year, Israel's ambassador to Britain, Ron Prosor, apologised for the cancellation in a letter to the two surviving Beatles, McCartney and Ringo Starr.

"There is no doubt that it was a great missed opportunity to prevent people like you, who shaped the minds of the generation, to come to Israel and perform," Mr Prosor wrote.

McCartney says he looks forward to this second chance to perform in Israel.

"I've heard so many great things about Tel Aviv and Israel, but hearing is one thing and experiencing it for yourself is another," he said in a statement on his website.

The show is billed as a "Friendship First" concert, part of a series of shows that have taken McCartney to cities he never visited before.

Last month, McCartney performed in Quebec City, Canada, for the first time and drew 300,000 fans. The show happened on the year of Quebec's 400th anniversary.

This year is the 60th anniversary of Israel's founding.

- Reuters

Tags: arts-and-entertainment, music, israel, united-kingdom, england

Opinion

Dr Bernhard Moeller and his family celebrate the decision

Curious inequities

Migration law must be reviewed to end discrimination against people with disabilities.

Feature

Ford workers are breathing a sigh of relief.

Cap in hand

US carmaker bosses have left the private jets at home and promised to work for $US1.

Listen

Postcard of Dame Nellie Melba

Latest release

Previously unheard recordings from one of Australia's best-known opera singers, Dame Nellie Melba.