And since Broadway is a major thoroughfare in one of the busiest cities in the world, there really was no other choice. "We went to do the soundcheck, and we're talking about middle of the afternoon here, traffic going past; the word had just got out so the street was full of people causing problems with traffic, photographers and all that. They put black drapes up atop the awning so the band could knock a few numbers out. Paul puts his head out the curtains and goes 'Hello, New York!' and immediately, as soon as I put that through the PA, I had the commissioner, the police and all sorts of people running over, shouting 'Turn it off! Turn it off!' "So 'Hello New York!' was my soundcheck for the whole thing! I did the rest on cans and when it came to the show, I just went for it."
Putting PA up on the marquee was an impossibility, likely as much for space considerations as for weight (notably, temporary steel support beams were placed beneath the awning during the event--having it collapse beneath a Beatle would likely make for great TV but terrible lawsuits). As a result, the loudspeakers had to be groundstacked in the street--they couldn't even be on the sidewalk, causing the production to lose an additional half-foot.
Boothroyd recalled after the fact, "The funny thing was, every time a truck or bus came through, I lost the PA! The street wasn't closed off, so they'd drive in front of the ground stack, and I'd say 'Whoa! What happened?' I'd look over and see a bus going by in front of the PA. They go past, that side comes back, then they go by the other stack and the other side would disappear. And Grubby goes, 'Bloody hell, Pab! Every time a truck goes by, I get blasted with high-end from your ground stack!'"
After a brief interview with Letterman inside the theater, McCartney joined his band outside to knock out the Beatles' "Get Back" and the more recent "Sing The Changes," taken from his last album, Electric Arguments, released under the long-running pseudonym, The Fireman. Once the TV show taping concluded, however, the group kept going, running through additional tunes including "Band on the Run," "Back in the U.S.S.R.," "Let Me Roll It," "Coming Up" and "Helter Skelter." In between, there was banter with the crowd, as McCartney queried, "Shouldn't you all be at work?"--and everyone (even our bosses) yelled back "No!"
"It went on for another 20 minutes," said Boothroyd, "before the police said, 'You know, we love you Paul but that's enough. Broadway is Broadway and it's causing havoc.'" The additional songs were taped and appeared on Letterman and McCartney's respective websites; hearing the gig played back afterwards provided a touch of relief for the FOH engineer, as it turned out.
Boothroyd explained, "You go from being in the street and hearing your ground stacks disappear, to going downstairs in the building, listening to it and going 'Cool, the guys were rocking.' Me and Harvey [Goldberg], the sound engineer from the Letterman show, got together, he remixed the broadcast and as you do, you touch it up for broadcast. I have to say the band played great, it sounded wonderful and everybody was knocked out; Harvey's a great engineer and he has a great team, so thanks to him as well--it was a great result."
That evening's episode of The Late Show with David Letterman handily beat the talk show competition, getting viewed by 4.4 million people, but for the estimated 4,000 who crammed on to the sidewalks around 53rd and 54th Streets, the free show was a grand time all on its own. Even with the PA being hassled by trucks, Boothroyd himself was pleased: "It sounded good and went down pretty well--people rocked out in the street!"
Look for more with Pab Boothroyd on the CitiField shows in September's issue of Pro Sound News.