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Rock/Pop

Rolling Stones Tickets

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The Rolling Stones return to the stage in summer 2022, visiting London and Liverpool

Celebrating 60 years of game-changing rock and roll, The Rolling Stones have announced three huge UK dates for summer 2022, performing at British Summertime Hyde Park on Saturday 25 June and Sunday 03 July, plus a very special show at Liverpool's Anfield Stadium on 09 June.

Clichés and high praise get thrown and thrashed around the world of rock music more than scratched and seasoned old guitars. But when it comes to The Rolling Stones, it really is hard to overstate their significance and influence on popular music history. Arriving on the scene in the early 60s as an edgier and naughtier alternative to The Beatles, The Stones brought the blues into rock with clout, grit and a visceral energy and swagger that would define the common understanding of a rock star for years to come.

Formed when old childhood friends Mick Jagger (vocals) and Keith Richards (guitar) were reunited by mutual friend and bassist Dick Taylor, and joined multi-instrumentalist Bryan Jones, pianist Ian Stewart and drummer Mick Avory, the then-called Rollin' Stones had their first gig at the Marquee Club in 1962. Taylor and Avory soon left the band and were replaced by Bill Wyman and Charlie Watts respectively, forming the classic line-up we know today.

With their free-flowing locks and likely lad charm, some of the music business saw the opportunity to market The Stones as a kind of bad boy alternative to The Beatles, with their sharp suits and neat haircuts.. In 1963 signed a generous deal with Decca Records, releasing a cover of ‘Come On’ by Chuck Berry (though the band weren’t keen on performing this live). In May 1964 The Rolling Stones released their debut, self-titled LP, which was appropriately subtitled England's Newest Hit Makers on the American release.

Though they soon began to work their way up the charts both sides of the Atlantic, it was the release of rebellious ‘(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction’ in 1965 that would elevate them to new levels, as Jagger and Richards’ writing partnership continued to create magic. In the years that followed The Rolling Stones’ writing output was prolific, releasing instant classics including: the psychedelic Aftermath (1966), which featured ‘Paint It, Black’ and ‘Under My Thumb’; the piano-pop centric Between The Buttons (1967), with the likes of ‘Ruby Tuesday’ and ‘Let’s Spend The Night Together’; and of course the Jimmy Miller-produced Beggars Banquet, which with tunes such as ‘Sympathy For The Devil’ and ‘Street Fighting Man’, ushered in the era of World's Greatest Rock & Roll Band.

Though this self-proclaimed statement used to promote a tour at the end of the 60s may have seemed premature to some given they’d been a band for less than ten years, their revolutionary live performances — with their groundbreakingly huge audio set-up and Jagger’s frenzied on-stage gyrating —  were proof enough. Their 1969 Hyde Park show, which pulled in somewhere between 250,000 and half a million people, would go down in history, as one writer put it, as “a great and epoch-making event in British social history”.

Setlists

    1. 1Start Me Up
    2. 2Get Off of My Cloud
    3. 3Tumbling Dice
    4. 4Angry
    5. 5Let It Bleed (fan-voted song)
    6. 6Street Fighting Man
    7. 7Whole Wide World
    8. 8Mess It Up
    9. 9You Can't Always Get What You Want (followed by band introductions)
    10. 10You Got the Silver (Keith Richards on lead vocals)
    11. 11Little T&A (Keith Richards on lead vocals)
    12. 12Before They Make Me Run (Keith Richards on lead vocals)
    13. 13Sympathy for the Devil
    14. 14Honky Tonk Women
    15. 15Midnight Rambler (with a snippet of Robert Johnson's "Hellhound on My Trail")
    16. 16Gimme Shelter
    17. 17Paint It Black (Mick thanks crew & fans for the great tour before song; Reprise intro due to Keith’s guitar issues)
    18. 18Jumpin' Jack Flash
  1. Encore

    1. 19Sweet Sounds of Heaven
    2. 20(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction
    1. 1Shattered
    2. 2Angry (live debut)
    3. 3Whole Wide World (live debut)
    4. 4Tumbling Dice
    5. 5Bite My Head Off (live debut)
    6. 6Jumpin' Jack Flash
  1. Encore

    1. 7Sweet Sounds of Heaven (live debut)
    1. Charlie Watts Tribute
    2. 1Street Fighting Man
    3. 2All Down the Line (tour debut)
    4. 3Tumbling Dice
    5. 4Rocks Off
    6. 5Out of Time
    7. 6Fool to Cry (tour debut)
    8. 7You Can't Always Get What You Want
    9. 8Living in a Ghost Town
    10. 9Honky Tonk Women
    11. 10You Got the Silver (Keith Richards on vocals)
    12. 11Happy (Keith Richards on vocals)
    13. 12Miss You
    14. 13Midnight Rambler
    15. 14Paint It Black
    16. 15Start Me Up
    17. 16Gimme Shelter
    18. 17Jumpin' Jack Flash
  1. Encore

    1. 18Sympathy for the Devil
    2. 19(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction
    1. Charlie Watts Tribute
    2. 1Street Fighting Man
    3. 2Let's Spend the Night Together
    4. 319th Nervous Breakdown
    5. 4Tumbling Dice
    6. 5You Can't Always Get What You Want
    7. 6Living in a Ghost Town
    8. 7Start Me Up
    9. 8Honky Tonk Women (Band Introductions followed)
    10. 9Connection (Keith Richards on lead vocals)
    11. 10Slipping Away (Keith Richards on lead vocals)
    12. 11Miss You
    13. 12Midnight Rambler
    14. 13Paint It Black
    15. 14Sympathy for the Devil
    16. 15Jumpin' Jack Flash
  1. Encore

    1. 16Gimme Shelter
    2. 17(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction
    1. 1Let's Spend the Night Together
    2. 2Tumbling Dice (followed by Mick Jagger's tribute speech to Charlie Watts)
    3. 3Under My Thumb
    4. 4Troubles a' Comin (The Chi‐Lites cover) (live debut by The Rolling Stones)
    5. 5Living in a Ghost Town (live debut)
    6. 6You Can't Always Get What You Want
    7. 7Midnight Rambler
    8. 8Miss You
    9. 919th Nervous Breakdown (first time since 2005)
    10. 10Start Me Up
    11. 11Gimme Shelter
    12. 12Sympathy for the Devil
    13. 13Jumpin' Jack Flash
  1. Encore

    1. 14(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction

FAQS

10:00, Friday 18 March

There is limited provision for public car parking in the Anfield Area, more information will be available closer to the concert.  

Yes, there will be a wide range of food and beverages available to buy. Alcohol will be available to buy for adults aged 18, however you will be required to provide photo identification as proof of age. There will also be on-pitch dispense service for general admission patrons.

10:00, Friday 18 March

Please note the minimum age you can enter the Stadium without an adult is 16 years old. Any Child under the age of 16 years old must be accompanied by an adult who is over 18 years old. Any Child attending the concert without an accompanying adult will be refused entry.

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