Rock stars Bruce Springsteen and Sir Paul McCartney had the plug pulled on them after over-running at a concert in London’s Hyde Park.
Headline act Springsteen welcomed Sir Paul on stage for renditions of the Beatles’ I Saw Her Standing There and Twist and Shout.
But their microphones were turned off before they could thank the crowds.
Springsteen had exceeded the time limit for the Hard Rock Calling event after playing for more than three hours.
“It made for a slightly bizarre, anti-climactic end to what had been a fantastic show,” said Stephen Robb, a BBC reporter who was at the event.
“The band obviously couldn’t tell from on stage that the sound had been shut off.
Visit: / Here you can pdxcommercial.com generic viagra, viagra, generic viagra, pdxcommercial.com, Propecia, Xenical, and Soma. Now I don’t care which nostril it’s coming through, but I’m definitely smelling cialis online pharmacy spare ribs. The chemicals provided in the medicine help softening penile tissues, relaxing penile muscles viagra shop usa and improving blood supply in the penile region. And in such situations, apart from first responders who can be a passerby or your relatives it all rests on the cheap tadalafil online ICU ambulance to take you up to give the best shot. “It just looked a bit like everyone was milling about on stage having forgotten how the show should end.”
Guitarist Steven Van Zandt, a member of Springsteen’s E Street Band, was angered by the forced curtailment, accusing “English cops” of preventing “80,000 people having a good time”.
“When did England become a police state?” he wrote on Twitter.
“English cops may be the only individuals left on earth that wouldn’t want to hear one more from Bruce Springsteen and Paul McCartney!”
Let the broken hearts stand as the price you’ve gotta pay.