Wings Over Europe Tour

{{Short description|1972 concert tour by Wings}}

{{Infobox concert

|concert_tour_name = Wings Over Europe Tour

|image =

|artist = Wings

| album = "Give Ireland Back to the Irish" and "Mary Had a Little Lamb" singles

| start_date = 9 July 1972

| end_date = 24 August 1972

|number_of_legs = 1

|number_of_shows = 25

| last_tour = Wings University Tour
(1972)

| this_tour = Wings Over Europe Tour
(1972)

| next_tour = Wings 1973 UK Tour
(1973)

}}

In the summer of 1972, Paul McCartney's newly formed band, Wings, set out on a concert tour of Europe, in a double decker bus, WNO 481.{{cite web|url=https://www.paulmccartney.com/live/wings-over-europe-tour|publisher=paulmccartney.com|title=Wings Over Europe Tour|accessdate=2024-06-19}}

Promotion

Coming on the heels of a tour of English universities, the Wings Over Europe Tour was intended to promote recent singles "Give Ireland Back to the Irish" and "Mary Had a Little Lamb", as well as provide live recordings to be included on a future album. The second objective did not come to fruition for a long time, the album Red Rose Speedway was released in Spring of the next year without any of the concert material. Only the 21 August performance of "The Mess" at The Hague was officially released, as a B-side to the single "My Love".

The live version of new song "Best Friend" was intended to be released as part of Cold Cuts compilation album, but the album was abandoned permanently.

In 2012 a live track consisting of "Eat at Home" and "Smile Away" recorded in Groningen was released as an iTunes exclusive to the reissue of Paul and Linda McCartney's Ram.

Only in 2018, a newly compiled live album Wings Over Europe was released in the limited edition boxset Wings 1971–73 in the Paul McCartney Archive Collection.,{{Cite web|url=https://www.paulmccartney.com/news-blogs/news/paul-announces-reissues-of-wild-life-and-red-rose-speedway|title=Paul announces reissues of 'Wild Life' and 'Red Rose Speedway' + 'Wings 1971–73'|date=8 October 2018}} while "Best Friend" and "1882" were also released as part of Red Rose Speedway reissue.

Touring

The band, with the McCartney children and their road crew, loaded up in a brightly coloured double decker bus for the tour of the continent. The tour proceeded largely without incident, but on 10 August in Gothenburg, Sweden, Paul and Linda McCartney were fined US$1,200 for possession of marijuana. Paul joked that the incident would "make good publicity" for the tour, in comments reported around the world at the time (e.g. Miami Herald, 12 August 1972{{Cite news |date=1972-08-12 |title=Clipped From The Miami Herald |pages=9 |work=The Miami Herald |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/102010570/the-miami-herald/ |access-date=2022-05-17}}). The Daily Telegraph (12 August 1972) quoted "a member of the group" as saying that this was an "excellent advertisement. ... Our name flies now all over the world".{{Cite news |date=1972-08-12 |title=Clipped From The Daily Telegraph |pages=3 |work=The Daily Telegraph |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/102010608/the-daily-telegraph/ |access-date=2022-05-17}}

Wings' line up for the tour was Paul and Linda McCartney, Denny Laine, Henry McCullough, and Denny Seiwell.

Tour dates

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"

! width="200"| Date

! width="200"| City

! width="150"| Country

! width="300"| Venue

9 July 1972Ollioulesrowspan="5"|FranceCentre Culturel de Châteauvallon
12 July 1972Juan-les-PinsLe Théâtre de la Mer Jean Marais
13 July 1972ArlesThéâtre Antique
14 July 1972LyonUnknown – Show canceled{{Cite web |url=http://bootlegzone.com/album.php?name=livelyon§ion=3 |title=BootlegZone : Paul McCartney & Wings - ET72 - Live In Lyon - July 14, 1972 |access-date=February 22, 2011 |archive-date=July 8, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110708083314/http://bootlegzone.com/album.php?name=livelyon§ion=3 |url-status=dead }}
16 July 1972ParisL'Olympia Bruno Coquatrix
18 July 1972Munichrowspan="2"|West GermanyCircus Krone Building
19 July 1972FrankfurtStadthalle Offenbach
21 July 1972Zürichrowspan="2"|SwitzerlandTonhalle
22 July 1972MontreuxPavillon Montreux
1 August 1972CopenhagenDenmarkK.B. Hallen
4 August 1972Helsinkirowspan="2"|FinlandMessuhalli
5 August 1972TurkuKupittaa Sports Hall
7 August 1972Stockholmrowspan="2"|SwedenGröna Lund
8 August 1972ÖrebroIdrottshuset
9 August 1972OsloNorwayNjårdhallen
10 August 1972Gothenburgrowspan="2"|SwedenScandinavium
11 August 1972LundOlympen
12 August 1972Odenserowspan="2"|DenmarkFyns Forum
14 August 1972AarhusVejlby-Risskov Hallen
16 August 1972DüsseldorfWest GermanyRheinhalle
17 August 1972Rotterdamrowspan="4"|NetherlandsDe Doelen
19 August 1972GroningenEvenementenhal Martinihal
20 August 1972AmsterdamConcertgebouw
21 August 1972The HagueNederlands Congresgebouw
22 August 1972AntwerpBelgiumKinema Roma
24 August 1972West BerlinWest GermanyDeutschlandhalle

References

{{reflist}}

{{Wings}}

{{Paul McCartney}}

Category:Wings (band) concert tours

Category:1972 concert tours