Beatles legend Paul McCartney, right, and lead guitar Rusty Anderson perform on the Halifax Common in Halifax on Saturday. The 78th Highlanders played with McCartney on Mull of Kintyre. Beatles legend Paul McCartney, right, and lead guitar Rusty Anderson perform on the Halifax Common in Halifax on Saturday. The 78th Highlanders played with McCartney on Mull of Kintyre. (Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press)

Got a pipe and drum band? You just might get to play with Paul McCartney.

When members of the 78th Highlanders pipe band heard the rock legend was coming to Halifax, they contacted his representatives and offered to play Mull of Kintyre, should it be on the setlist.

The song, a 1977 hit by McCartney's band Wings, is a tribute to the Kintyre peninsula in Scotland.

McCartney duly invited the bagpipers and drummers on stage for his Nova Scotia show — giving a rare live performance of the song at his only appearance in Canada this year.

For the Halifax band, it meant taking part in rehearsals with the former Beatle.

Pipe Sgt. Bruce Gandy said during one rehearsal, he had to work up some courage to point out a small error in the handwritten musical score the band was working from, which had been given to them by the Peel police.

"We were looking at it saying 'I don't know, it's a C major, C sharp and we should be in D really. Is it the right note?'" Gandy said.

"It was one of those things. Do we look like fools asking the obvious question or do we do the right thing and ask the obvious question so we don't look like fools [on stage]?"

One wrong note

Gandy and McCartney looked over the music together and agreed that one note was wrong. It was an opportunity for Gandy to ask for an autograph.

"It was just a really sleazy way to try to scoop an autograph from him but he said, 'No, absolutely.' So he wrote Paul McCartney and then he wrote, 'Get it right' as a joke."

After their performance Saturday night, Gandy and the other pipers watched the rest of the show near the front of the stage.

Gandy said they got loud cheers from a group of American visitors who follow McCartney on tour.

"They said, 'You guys have made this night for me,'" Gandy said. "And I thought, well thank goodness we really made the thing work well and didn't look like some cheesy Scottish gimmick."

Gandy hopes that his experience onstage with McCartney inspires young pipers. If you practise hard, he said, you never know what rewards are in store.