Rolling Stones kick off 60th anniversary European tour in Madrid
Send a link to a friend
[June 02, 2022]
By Silvio Castellanos
MADRID (Reuters) - The Rolling Stones
rocked Madrid on Wednesday with gusto, and a bit of nostalgia for their
late drummer Charlie Watts, as they kicked off a European tour marking
their 60th anniversary as a band.
Some 53,000 fans at the Wanda Metropolitano stadium roared with
excitement as they welcomed to the stage the original band members Mick
Jagger, 78, and guitarists Keith Richards, 78, and Ronnie Wood, who
turned 75 on Wednesday.
They have been joined by drummer Steve Jordan for the tour, titled
SIXTY. Watts, who joined the band in 1963, died last year aged 80.
"Hola Madrid!" shouted the band's wiry frontman Jagger to even louder
cheering after the band opened the show with “Street fighting man” and
Jagger launched into his signature strut dance moves.
Right before the first song, videos of Watts where displayed in big
screens on the stage and the band gave an emotional tribute to their
late friend.
“This is our first European tour without Charlie, we miss him a lot,”
said Jagger in Spanish right before playing “Sad, sad, sad” to a moved
crowd.
"The band dedicated the show to him," show designer Patrick Woodroffe,
who has worked with the Stones for four decades, told Reuters. "Some
time has gone past and we miss him all the time, we laugh about him, we
talk about him a lot and this is a way to celebrate his life rather than
to mourn it."
After 17 songs, The Rolling Stones left the stage just to return in
response to a big round of applause by the Madrid crowd.
The band played “Gimme shelter” as the Ukrainian flag and footage of
destroyed Ukrainian cities where displayed on the monitors as a
statement against war.
[to top of second column]
|
The Rolling Stones perform during the kick off concert of the "SIXTY
Stones Europe Tour 2022" at the Wanda Metropolitano Stadium in
Madrid, Spain, June 1, 2022. REUTERS/Susana Vera
After the two-hour show beaming fans
clad in Rolling Stones t-shirts and draped in flags with the
trademark lips and tongue logo left the venue chanting
“Satisfaction”.
“It was like they are 30 years younger again,” said
Javier Romero.
During the 14-show tour the British band will play stadiums and
arenas in 10 countries, including their homeland.
"On their 50th (tour) in 2012 we said this might be the last we’ve
seen them and we have seen them around Europe many times since then,
and in England,” said 60-year-old Paul, a fan who came from Britain
for the gig.
The Stones will next play in Munich on Sunday and later perform in
Liverpool, Amsterdam, Bern, Milan, London, Brussels, Vienna, Paris
and Stockholm.
According to Woodroffe, the Stones have no plans to stop rolling and
refuse to call any tour their last one.
"I can tell you categorically that The Rolling Stones will never do
a farewell tour... I think everybody in the world is asking 'is this
the end of The Rolling Stones?'
"Every time they go on tour again and the only people who don't
question it is The Rolling Stones themselves."
(Editing by Andrei Khalip, Rosalba O'Brien and Lincoln Feast.)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|