What’s so funny about peace, love and understanding?
To coin the Elvis Costello song, nothing if you are ex-Beatle Ringo Starr and you are playing for the first time in such a historic venue as the place where Woodstock was held.
In a two-hour show Saturday night featuring his 11th All-Starr Band, Starr showed why he is a beloved Beatle with his warm sense of humor, wit and muscianship.
In only the third show of the tour, Starr delivered a strong set featuring Fab Four classics, his trademark Beatles numbers, timeless solo hits and a few new numbers and several tunes by his bandmates that are musical monsters in Rock ‘n’ Roll history and ones that tore up the charts during the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s.
The band launched into “It Don’t Come Easy” during the soldout performance at the Bethel Woods Center for the Arts and out came Ringo, dressed all in black to front the stage for the opener, “Honey Don’t,” and the more recent “Choose Love.”
“It’s great to be here,” Starr said. “This is a historic musical memory.”
Then Ringo went to man the drums, turning over the set to his band: sharpshooters including saxophone/keyboard virtuoso Edgar Winter, bassist Richard Page, guitarist Rick Derringer, Wally Palmar on guitar, Gary Wright on keyboards and Greg Bissonette on drums.
Talk about some musical history.
It all started off with a Derringer number that he said was his first No. 1 record and the official state rock anthem of Ohio: The classic “Hang on Sloopy,” which Derringer did with The McCoys when he was 17 in the summer of 1965. (The Beatles’ “Yesterday” knocked it off the top of the charts.)
Next, the popular Winter took center stage. The albino featured a big collaboration with Derringer in the mid-70s called “Free Ride.” The blistering guitar solos got the crowd on its feet.
Palmar took the next turn at the microphone with his MTV hit for the Romantics: “Talking In Your Sleep.”
Ringo slipped in an early Beatles song “I Wanna Be Your Man” from his drum kit, showing the crowd why he’s considered the greatest drummer in music history.
He introduced Wright, who discussed how George Harrison had given him a book when the two took a trip to India. From that book, Wright came up with the words for the huge 1974 hit “Dream Weaver.”