Mick Jagger and Keith Richards will meet in December to decide how the Rolling 
Stones will celebrate next year's 50th anniversary, according to a top 
tour-industry source. "I don't see why in the world the Stones can't put 
together some kind of show next year," says Richards. "I'd almost count on it. 
It doesn't have to be the whole spectacle bullshit again, but 
we've got to find our own way through this."
"It is quite amazing when you think about it," Jagger adds. "Anything's 
possible."
A top source tells Rolling Stone that AEG Live, Live Nation 
and veteran Stones promoter Michael Cohl have already reached out about 
acquiring the band's anniversary tour, which has the potential to be the 
biggest of all time. "It would be a total home run," says the source.
The rock world is paying attention: "The Stones are iconic figures in Western 
society," says Sting. "I hope they'll stop bickering. I'd like 
to see them doing what they do." Adds Joe Perry, "I would love to see 
them just go and do arenas and have it be as stripped-down as possible, 
the way they did on the Exile tour – where they had the horn section and Ian 
Stewart playing keyboards. As close as they could get to that would be great."
Following a band meeting in September at the Stones' London office, 
Richards, guitarist Ronnie Wood and drummer Charlie Watts were set to 
convene in November to jam in London. "I would suggest a lot of blues in the 
beginning," says Richards. "That's where the band's roots are. 
We'll start playing some Jimmy Reed stuff and some Muddy Waters stuff 
and then things will blossom from there. It might bore Mick to death – 
and that's the idea. We're just going to go, and you start from Day One. You've 
got the drums and a couple of guitars and you start hammering 
away.
"Mick is welcome," Richards adds. "I'm sure he'll turn up."
Richards' nasty, gossip-packed 2010 memoir, Life, painted an unrelentingly 
negative portrait of Jagger and his contributions to the 
Stones – straining the duo's relationship. "I think there's a healing 
process waiting to take place," Wood says. "I think it's happening now 
as we speak, but it has to be resolved. Something has to be resolved 
there. They have to come to terms with going on a working basis, which 
Charlie and I will help make happen. Wish me luck."
"That old healing process," says Stones saxophone player Bobby Keys 
with a laugh. "Boy, that is an ongoing process. But last time I was 
onstage with them, there was no blood lost. They always seem to work it 
out." Adds longtime friend Peter Wolf, "If one looks at the history of 
great collaborations, Gilbert and Sullivan didn't always have a good 
time at it, either. But once they choose to get together to work, that 
is usually the great healer."
Richards says he's up for another massive world stadium and arena run like 
2005's Bigger Bang tour, but isn't sure Jagger wants to make such a large 
commitment. "I don't know about that," Richards says. "I don't 
think Mick would. We'd like to be ready to be able to do it if the idea 
starts to happen. I'd even invite Bill Wyman and Mick Taylor back in. 
Why not? It's 50 years. Everyone deserves a party."
Adds Jagger, "That'd be very complete if it all happened." Taylor and Wyman 
have both worked with the Stones recently: Taylor, who left the 
band in 1974 to pursue a solo career, contributed new guitar work on 
last year's Exile on Main St. box set, and Wyman, who departed 
in 1992, plays bass on a cover of Bob Dylan's "Watching the River Flow" 
that the band recorded for a 2011 tribute album to late keyboard player 
Ian Stewart. "I've been reading about the possibilities in the press, 
but Keith hasn't turned his lips in my direction yet," says Wyman. 
"Let's see what transpires over the next few weeks, and I can then make a 
serious decision. I've got my chops together, and I know that my mate 
Charlie has – so let's see if it ever happens."
One option some insiders floated has the band camping out for 
multinight runs in major cities. "I think the idea of doing multiple 
shows in certain cities – New York, L.A., maybe Chicago, maybe Atlanta – would 
be wonderful," says longtime keyboardist Chuck Leavell. Bobby 
Keys agrees: "In my fantasy of Rolling Stones gigs, I would like to see a gig 
that's centralized in one place: Let the people come to us instead 
of making all that traveling. That's always the main thing that bothers 
me about going on the road. It didn't used to, but hell, now we're all 
in our late sixties and shit, and it's just kind of a pain in the ass."
For its 40th anniversary in 2002, the band launched the massive Licks Tour, 
playing stadiums, arenas and small venues (sometimes all in the 
same city) and releasing a career retrospective with new songs. But this time 
around, there is no sign of new material. "I'm not writing for 
them right now," says Richards, who has been working on a solo project 
"reminiscent of early Chess records." "I'm cutting my own stuff with 
[producer and drummer] Steve Jordan," he says. "There's no point in 
writing for the Stones until I know that Mick Jagger's in. He could have every 
song I've ever written. They're all for him. If he doesn't like 
them – or if he poo-poos them – I take them somewhere else." Adds Wood, 
"I think we have so much back catalog that we would go out without new 
material, but then again one of the boys might go, 'No, I wouldn't dream of 
going out unless we have new material. I don't mind, really.'"
The band last played live together in August 2007 at London's O2 Arena, 
wrapping the two-year, $558 million Bigger Bang tour. "We were riding the top 
of the wave," says Wood. "I didn't want 
it to end." Since then, the Stones have been unusually busy: Jagger 
released an album with reggae-soul supergroup SuperHeavy; Richards 
published the bestselling Life; Watts toured with his longtime 
jazz group; and Wood released a solo album, exhibited paintings and 
hosted a U.K. classic-rock radio show. In between, the group went back 
into the studio to add new parts to outtakes included with the stellar Exile 
and Some Girls reissues.
For Jagger, probably the least-nostalgic Stone, the looming 
anniversary has him reflecting on just how far the band has come. "It's a very 
different group than the one that played 50 years ago," he says. 
"When I think about it, one part of me goes, 'We're slightly cheating,' 
because it's not the same band – still the same name, but it's only 
Keith and myself that are the same people, I think. I've tried to find 
out when Charlie's first gig was [but can't]. But it's an amazing 
achievement. It's fantastic and I'm very proud of it."

Read more: 
http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/stones-near-decision-on-50th-anniversary-shows-20111123#ixzz1eylafNAP


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