Post-Beatles, Ringo Starr has made a nice career out of getting by with a little help from his friends, and Ringo & Friends at the Ryman, which streams on Paramount+, is the latest example. The beloved Beatle, drummer, singer, and songwriter is 84 now, but he still knows how to have a good time, and for this concert special, recorded late last year in Nashville, Starr is joined in performance by Jack White, Sheryl Crow, Billy Strings, Molly Tuttle, and Larkin Poe. Also making appearances/delivering testimonials are Paul McCartney, Dolly Parton, Lainey Wilson, The War & Treaty, and Brenda Lee, and the whole night celebrates Ringo Starrâs 21st solo record, 2025âs country music-themed Look Up. Â
RINGO & FRIENDS AT THE RYMAN: STREAM IT OR SKIP IT?Â
Opening Shot: An announcer greets the audience over aerial shots of Ryman Auditorium, the 3000-seat former home of the Grand Ole Opry. âGet ready for a once-in-a-lifetime show when Liverpool lands in Nashville!â
The Gist: Ringo & Friends at the Ryman is pretty performance-based, and kicks off with Jack White joining Ringo on vocals and guitar for âMatchbox,â the Carl Perkins tune, which the Bealtes covered in 1964. âHe was the one who really brought a lot of country influence to that band,â White says of Ringo in one of the brief cutaway interviews also included in Ryman. White goes on to reference the country feel of Starrâs 1970 solo album Beaucoups of Blues, and in a separate interview, alongside Look Up producer T Bone Burnett, Starr recalls the memorable 48 hours he spent in Nashville while recording some of his first solo work. Burnett additionally serves as a kind of emcee for Ringo & Friends event, and at the Ryman, he introduces Sheryl Crow, Molly Tuttle, and Mickey Guyton as they contribute terrific harmony vocals on a version of Ringoâs 1971 single âIt Donât Come Easy.â
âWe were a cover band in the Beatles,â Ringo tells Crow in Ringo & Friends at the Ryman. âWe did borrow riffs and stuff like that, but we borrowed the finest and the best.â The special balances these little interview snippets with non-performing appearances from McCartney, Dolly, and Lainey Wilson, and for the younger country, bluegrass, and Americana musicians who are performing, they mostly summarize it with a line like âI canât believe Iâm on stage with a Beatle.â Molly Tuttle performs the title track of Look Up with Starr, but even an outsized personality like Jack White is deferential to the legacy on display. Playing the guitar and singing with Ringo is one thing â White says heâd be happy just to hold the Rock and Roll Hall of Famerâs drum sticks.
âI think you get to play drums on this,â Crow says as Ringo joins her for what he calls one of his favorite songs, âBoys,â the Shirelles number included by the Beatles on Please Please Me. Tuttle takes a pleasant solo spin through âOctopusâs Garden,â Billy Stringsâ electric guitar shines on âHoney Donât,â and Rodney Crowell sings âAct Naturallyâ with accompanying vocals and some incredible guitar work from Sarah Jarosz. Overall, Ringo & Friends at the Ryman hits a sweet spot somewhere between honoring Starrâs work with the Beatles, hitting the highlights of his solo work â Strings also joins Starr for âPhotographâ â and having fun on stage as a rock ânâ roll legend goes a little bit country.
What Shows Will It Remind You Of? Peter Jacksonâs docuseries Get Back has become a defining statement on the Beatles dynamic since its 2021 release. But content mining around one of the biggest bands ever doesnât end, which explains how 2024 saw a remastered release of Let It Be. That oneâs notable for the rooftop concert footage, but also, Ringo Starr and George Harrison are winners in the fashion department.
Our Take: There is an entire wing of the entertainment industry that seems to boil down to Asking Surviving Beatles Shit. So you get stuff like Beatles â64, which mostly revisits existing documentary material, but also finds a way to shoehorn in a funny, foul-mouthed new quote from Paul McCartney. Whatâs interesting about Ringo & Friends at the Ryman, for one thing, is that itâs centered on live performance instead of interviews. Ringo is in his 80s, and heâs a legend. He could promote his new solo record, which this set draws from, heavily or not at all; it would still sell. But at the Ryman heâs out there onstage doing the songs, interacting with the musicians and the crowd, and enjoying a little sway whenever he steps away from the drums to take lead vocals. Itâs a contented, almost quiet version of showmanship that Ringo brings, and itâs always tuned up with his trademark self-deprecation. âAs you may know I have a solo record out,â he tells the audience at one point, as if no one did. Itâs an enjoyable bit of stage banter, and similar to Jack Whiteâs sentiment, who understood the feel of the evening. âIâm gonna play a song from the White Album,â he says, introducing âDonât Pass Me By.â âAnybody got a copy of that?â
âThereâs just something fun, youthful, and energetic about him,â singer-songwriter Jamey Johnson says in Ringo & Friends, âand it seems to also be eternal.â Itâs another nice way to characterize the feel of this special, where musicians with Grammys and country music bonafides are clearly enjoying bringing elements of that sound to the Beatlesâ and Starrâs music, or just the chance to jam live with Ringo.
Sex and Skin: None.
Parting Shot: Itâs a group blow-out on stage as the performers and other notables gather with the man of the hour for celebratory singalong versions of Ringo Starrâs most famous lead vocal appearances with the Beatles, âYellow Submarineâ and â you knew it would be the set closer â âWith a Little Help from My Friends.â
Sleeper Star: The backing band throughout the evening, many of whom are regular members of Ringoâs All-Starr Band, are a crisp and expressive unit. But âSleeper Starâ status goes to Paul Franklin, whose pedal steel leads steadily add tasteful country flavor to the set.
Most Pilot-y Line: âI canât think of anybody who emulates love and peace like Ringo,â Shery Crow says from the stage. âThatâs what we need, right? Are you guys feeling that, too? And to be here with such legends, but also for me to get to play with the young whippersnappers, who are inspiring me to keep going, what a cool night.â
Our Call: Stream It. Bits of country licks are added to Beatles classics, and a few deep cuts from the Ringo solo years are also highlighted as Ringo & Friends at the Ryman takes the stage in Nashville with concert special vibes. Â
Johnny Loftus (@johnnyloftus.bsky.social) is a Chicago-based writer. A veteran of the alternative weekly trenches, his work has also appeared in Entertainment Weekly, Pitchfork, The All Music Guide, and The Village Voice.
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