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The Rolling Stones: North America 11 3rd British Tour 1964: 1 August 1964 – 22 August 1964 Europe 11 4th British Tour 1964: 5 September 1964 – 11 October 1964 Europe 64 2nd American Tour 1964: 24 October 1964 – 11 November 1964 12 × 5: North America 11 1965: Irish Tour 1965: 6 January 1965 – 8 January 1965 The Rolling Stones No. 2 ...
The American Tour 1981 was a concert tour by British band the Rolling Stones, promoting their album Tattoo You (1981). The tour visited stadiums and arenas in the United States, and it became the largest grossing tour of 1981 with $50 million in ticket sales.
A few shows had no web vote (for example, in Brazil, where the band performed with Bob Dylan on "Like a Rolling Stone"). This was the band's first tour where a B-stage was featured at most shows (they had used one on the Voodoo Lounge Tour, but only at one show). The band normally played three numbers on the B-stage, with the exception of the ...
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At the final performance of their North American tour at Thunder Ridge Nature Arena in Ridgedale, Andy Greene from Rolling Stone commented "there were no huge surprises in the setlist, but it was a rare show that featured both "Whole Wide World" and "Mess It Up" from Hackney Diamonds... and "Angry" was the only song from their new album they ...
Canadian rockers The Beaches have opened for The Rolling Stones more than once, but the shock still hasn't worn off. "It was crazy," drummer Eliza Enman-McDaniel exclusively told Us Weekly ahead ...
[1] [3] In 1963, the show moved to WPIX-TV, where for five years it was successful, thanks to first-time guest appearances of the Rolling Stones (on a program with one other guest act – the Beatles), Neil Diamond, Dionne Warwick, Simon & Garfunkel, Richie Havens, Tony Orlando, Blood, Sweat & Tears and the Rascals.
The Rolling Stones' 1969 Tour of the United States took place in November 1969. With Ike & Tina Turner, Terry Reid, and B.B. King (replaced on some dates by Chuck Berry) as the supporting acts, [1] rock critic Robert Christgau called it "history's first mythic rock and roll tour", [2] while rock critic Dave Marsh wrote that the tour was "part of rock and roll legend" and one of the "benchmarks ...