The Rolling Stones European Tour 1970 Explained

Concert Tour Name:The Rolling Stones European Tour 1970
Artist:The Rolling Stones
Start Date:30 August 1970
End Date:9 October 1970
Number Of Legs:1
Number Of Shows:23
Last Tour:American Tour 1969
This Tour:European Tour 1970
Next Tour:UK Tour 1971

The Rolling Stones' 1970 European Tour was a concert tour of Continental Europe that took place during the late summer and early autumn 1970.

History

This was the Stones' first tour in Europe since 1967, and became part of a pattern (not always followed) wherein the group would play North America, continental Europe, and the United Kingdom on a three-year rotating cycle.

Shows were similar to that of the 1969 American Tour, but with the material more familiar to audiences as Let It Bleed had now been out for some months. The Stones continued to preview new material, however, as "Brown Sugar", "Dead Flowers", and "You Gotta Move" were set list regulars; they would not appear on record until Sticky Fingers was released a half year later. Unlike many of the group's tours of this era, here the group only played one show a night with only one exception (Milan). The band played "Gimme Shelter" only once, in Malmo, Sweden (the first show of the tour). It can be heard on the bootleg Secrets Travel Fast, and features solos by Keith Richards, Bobby Keys, and Mick Taylor.

Following a tradition set since the band's earliest days, the tour was not without its altercations. The show at Råsunda stadion in Stockholm on 4 September was interrupted by police who feared that fans, provoked by Jagger, would storm the stage. The singer duly responded by pointing the microphone to the police on stage and soon after suggested the audience would sit down for the next song (the slower "Love in Vain").[1] On 14 September a thousand or so forged tickets were rejected at a show at Ernst-Merck-Halle in Hamburg; two hundred policemen were needed to handle disappointed fans. Two days later at Deutschlandhalle in West Berlin, there were nasty battles between assorted youths and the police before the show, and some 50 arrests were made. Then on 1 October at Milan's Palazzo Dello Sport, two thousand youths tried to crash the gates to get into the show. Police had to use tear gas to quell the riot; there were injuries among both the cops and the crowd, and 63 arrests were made.

No live recordings of the tour have been officially released; there is only one known soundboard recording from Paris.

Personnel

The Rolling Stones

Additional musicians

Tour set list

The fairly typical set list for the tour was:

  1. "Jumpin' Jack Flash"
  2. "Roll Over Beethoven"
  3. "Sympathy for the Devil"
  4. "Stray Cat Blues"
  5. "Love in Vain"
  6. "Prodigal Son"
  7. "You Gotta Move"
  8. "Dead Flowers"
  9. "Midnight Rambler"
  10. "Live With Me"
  11. "Let It Rock"
  12. "Little Queenie"
  13. "Brown Sugar"
  14. "Honky Tonk Women"
  15. "Street Fighting Man"

Tour dates

DateCityCountryVenue
30 August 1970 Baltiska hallen
2 September 1970 Helsinki Olympic Stadium
4 September 1970 Sweden Råsunda Stadium
6 September 1970 Liseberg
9 September 1970 Vejlby-Risskov Hallen
11 September 1970 Forum Copenhagen
12 September 1970
14 September 1970 Ernst-Merck-Halle
16 September 1970 Deutschlandhalle
18 September 1970 Sporthalle
20 September 1970 Killesbergpark
22 September 1970 Palais des Sports
23 September 1970
24 September 1970
26 September 1970 Wiener Stadthalle
29 September 1970 Palazzo dello Sport
1 October 1970
(2 shows)
Palazzetto Lido Sport
3 October 1970 France Palais des Sports de Gerland
5 October 1970 West Germany Festhalle Frankfurt
6 October 1970
7 October 1970 Grugahalle
9 October 1970 RAI Amsterdam Convention Centre

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Tingvall, Ove (1999); "Rolling Stones i Sverige"
  2. Web site: The Rolling Stones and Stephen Stills in Amsterdam 1970. www.morrisonhotelgallery.com. en. 2019-07-19. 19 July 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190719223400/https://www.morrisonhotelgallery.com/photographs/caPUqI/The-Rolling-Stones-and-Stephen-Stills-in-Amsterdam--1970. dead.