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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Bootlegs  





3 Personnel  



3.1  The Rolling Stones  





3.2  Additional musicians  







4 Tour set list  





5 Tour dates  





6 Notes  





7 References  





8 External links  














The Rolling Stones UK Tour 1971






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


The Rolling Stones UK Tour 1971
TourbyThe Rolling Stones
Start date4 March 1971
End date26 March 1971
Legs1
No. of shows18
The Rolling Stones concert chronology

The Rolling Stones' 1971 UK Tour was a brief concert tourofEngland and Scotland that took place over three weeks in March 1971.

History

[edit]

The Stones had not staged a tour proper in their homeland since autumn 1966. Now they were going out after having announced on the day of their first show that they were becoming tax exiles and decamping to the South of France, which they did shortly after finishing the tour. As a result, this tour was also called the Good-Bye Britain Tour or formulations thereof.

The tour was not lengthy, but audience numbers were enlarged by playing two shows on almost every night. Although Sticky Fingers was still not released, the group expanded the number of selections from it played compared with the previous Fall's European Tour; "Wild Horses" and "Bitch" were among those added. Nicky Hopkins took over from Ian Stewart the role of stage keyboardist.

The Brighton, Liverpool, Leeds and London performances were recorded with the Rolling Stones mobile studio by the Rolling Stones crew,.[1] Almost the entire Leeds show was later broadcast in mono by the BBC. A stereo version of the Chuck Berry cover "Let It Rock" from the same concert was officially released on the Spanish edition of "Sticky Fingers" in 1971. A recording of "Let It Rock" from the Leeds concert appeared on the Brown Sugar maxi single in the UK.

Press opportunities focused on the usual banter with lead singer Mick Jagger:

Reporter: "Many remark on the tendency of Mick Jagger to be as feminine as masculine. Would you like to be a woman?"
Jagger: "If God wants me to become a woman, then a woman I will become."

The Groundhogs were the supporting act for the shows.

Bootlegs

[edit]

The Leeds Concert has been released unofficially numerous times, making it one of the most well-known bootleg recordings of the Rolling Stones to date (most famously with the title Get Yer Leeds Lungs Out, obviously a reference to the Rolling Stones official live record Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out!). All of these recordings however omit the concerts first two songs, "Jumpin' Jack Flash" and "Live with Me", and they are mono recordings. The Marquee Club and Roundhouse Gig have also surfaced on various bootleg records. The 2015 re-release of the album "Sticky Fingers" has seen an inclusion of the complete and remastered Leeds performance in stereo as part of the super deluxe edition. The extended version of the album contains bonus studio outtakes as well as parts of the Roundhouse Concert. Subsequently the Marquee Club has been released separately on 19 June 2015 in CD and vinyl format including a BD or DVD of the performance.

Personnel

[edit]

The Rolling Stones

[edit]

Additional musicians

[edit]

Tour set list

[edit]

The typical set was:

  1. Jumpin' Jack Flash
  2. Live With Me
  3. Dead Flowers
  4. Stray Cat Blues
  5. Love In Vain
  6. Prodigal Son
  7. Midnight Rambler
  8. Bitch
  9. Honky Tonk Women
  10. (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction
  11. Little Queenie
  12. Brown Sugar
  13. Street Fighting Man

Encore:

  1. Let It Rock

For the rest of the tour some songs were dropped, at certain shows. "Wild Horses" was likely played at the 1st Newcastle show and definitely at the 2nd Newcastle show. It was likely played at other shows as well. Sympathy For The Devil may have been played as the first encore, with Let It Rock as the second encore, at the 2nd Newcastle show.[2] It may have been played at other shows. Through interviews with Mick Jagger and Bobby Keys it appears the band attempted Can't You Hear Me Knocking at least once early in the tour.

Tour dates

[edit]
Date City Country Venue Opening act(s)
4 March 1971
(2 shows)
Newcastle upon Tyne England Newcastle City Hall The Groundhogs
5 March 1971
(2 shows)
Manchester Free Trade Hall
6 March 1971
(2 shows)
Coventry Criterion Theatre
8 March 1971
(2 shows)
Glasgow Scotland Green's Playhouse
9 March 1971
(2 shows)
Bristol England Colston Hall
10 March 1971
(2 shows)
Brighton Regent Cinema
12 March 1971
(2 shows)
Liverpool Liverpool Empire Theatre
13 March 1971 Leeds University of Leeds Refectory
14 March 1971
(2 shows)
London Roundhouse
26 March 1971[a] Marquee Club[a]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b The concert on 26 March 1971 at the Marquee Club was the Rolling Stones final concert in England in 1971. It was not officially part of the tour, but the Melody Maker said that it was performed "before a small but elite audience that included Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page, Ric Grech, and Andrew Oldham".[3] It was also the first time that the tongue and lips logo was ever used, when it appeared on VIP passes to the concert.[4]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Wyman, Bill (2002); Rolling with the Stones p. 375
  • ^ "The Rolling Stones on Tour: Goodbye Great Britain". Rolling Stone. 15 April 1971.
  • ^ Havers, Richard (26 March 2023). "The Rolling Stones' Historic 1971 London Marquee Gig". Universal Music Group. Archived from the original on 2 April 2023. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  • ^ "Iconic Stones Logo Appears For First Time". Songfacts. 26 March 2023. Archived from the original on 6 December 2022. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Rolling_Stones_UK_Tour_1971&oldid=1195921635"

    Categories: 
    The Rolling Stones concert tours
    1971 concert tours
    1971 in the United Kingdom
    March 1971 events in the United Kingdom
    Concert tours of the United Kingdom
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    This page was last edited on 15 January 2024, at 20:32 (UTC).

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