Dear Kirill,

Thank you for sharing your wonderful review of what must have been an
opportunity of a lifetime.

Your report is a real gem that has provided me with as close of a substitute
as could be expected for this big event which I regretfully missed.

Nicely done!

Cheers,

Marc Bashaw

p.s. Pls let us know if/when a quality video of this concert appears.

> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Thu, 02 Aug 2007 00:04:42 +0400
> From: Kirill Galetski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Expat List  The Rolling Stones in St. Petersburg
> To: [email protected]
> Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=koi8-r
>
> As far back as 1989, when the Rolling Stones were on the Steel Wheels tour
and I was a wageslave teenager who turned down a gig rigging their lights at
Sullivan Stadium in Foxboro, Massachusetts, they were already the butt of
old-age jokes, such as some wag renaming the tour "Steel Wheelchairs." Well,
the level of exaggeration in those jokes has stayed high as far as I'm
concerned. The Stones are still to be taken seriously, even in their 60s,
and they proved it at Saturday night's appearance in historic Palace Square
in St. Petersburg.
>
> Naturally, anticipation was high, with a 50,000-strong crowd, which
featured about three generations of people from all over Russia. The band
had only been to Russia only once before, nearly nine years ago (August 11,
1998) and that was in Moscow. They were supposed to play St. Petersburg last
summer, but had to cancel due to complications from Keith Richards' coconut
tree incident.
>
> In a manner typical to Russian control-freak promoters, the square was
divided into uninviting, enclosed cattle-pen sectors, with reserved seating
on either side of a runway that would accommodate the stage moving forward,
with a small, standing-room only area called the Fan Zone directly in front
of the end of the runway. The lowest-price general admission tickets were
even further away, behind the Fan Zone and totally separated from the other
ticket sectors by a metal barrier lined with security guards.
>
> Bursting suddenly onto the stage about an hour after the comparatively
anemic opener Steve Harley, the Stones started in with the appropriately
titled and high-powered "Start Me Up." The lithe and wiry Mick Jagger, who
had just celebrated his 64th birthday in town two days earlier, moved as
fast as lightning most of the time, prancing, dancing and even running his
way through a set that was kind to those of us wanting to hear the
time-honored cuts off greatest-hits records such as Rewind. Richards, whose
physical appearance showed his age more than the others, was nevertheless in
fine form as well, showcasing his surprisingly good singing voice in "You
Got the Silver" and "Little T & A."
>
> During "Miss You," the moveable stage moved to the front end of its
runway, staying there for "It's Only Rock'n'Roll (But I Like It)," "(I Can't
Get No) Satisfaction," and most of "Honky Tonk Women." This part of the
show, which should have been the icing on the cake for those of us (myself
included) in the Fan Zone, was hampered by sound problems probably
associated with the stage movement. The snafu rendered this part of the
concert muddy and incoherent. Still, for a few fleeting songs, Mick, Keith,
Ronnie and Charlie were only a few feet away from us with no security
barriers in between, and squinting my eyes, I could just imagine how they
would look playing one of their trademark short-notice club dates.
>
> The highlights of the show came after a short break, starting with
"Sympathy for the Devil," containing the famous lyric about the Devil in
revolutionary St. Petersburg, which Jagger wisely sang without any
particular emphasis or lingering. Here the Stones went all out with the
theatrics, using their elaborate stage show to the hilt with a red color
scheme, a video screen depicting symmetrical snakeskin patters, with the
spaces between the ribcage protrusions from the screen as an extension of
images on the screen, fireworks and finally Mick Jagger in a long and shiny
red lam&#233; coat with tails. It was a smart, contemporary version of the
song and Jagger let the theatrics accentuate the well-worn stanza that
cemented the associations with Palace Square being the key site of the
October Revolution of 1917. The high point of "Sympathy for the Devil"
turned into a double whammy when the band segued into the equally if not
more powerful "Paint It Black," arguably the most well
>   known Stones number in Russia, with every other teenager belting it out
on acoustic guitars in the staid and stagnant Soviet '70s.
>
> The best aspect of the concert's sound was the seemingly painstaking
effort to pull off numbers that featured a bigger sound on record in a form
fairly close to their studio versions. The renditions of "You Can't Always
Get What You Want," "Tumbling Dice" and the James Brown cover "I'll Go
Crazy" featured keyboards, brass and backing vocals provided by the
formidable backing band consisting of bassist Darryl Jones, guitarist
Blondie Chaplin, R&B diva Lisa Fischer, jazz musicians Bobby Keys, Bernard
Fowler and Tim Ries and ex-Allman Brothers keyboardist Chuck Leavell, all of
whom Jagger introduced individually after "Tumbling Dice."
>
> Date: Saturday, July 28, 2007
> Location: Palace Square, St. Petersburg, Russia
>
> Start: 21:31
> End: 23:37
>
> Set List:
>
> Start Me Up
> You Got Me Rocking
> Rough Justice
> Bitch
> She's So Cold
> You Can't Always Get What You Want
> Midnight Rambler
> I'll Go Crazy (James Brown cover)
> Tumbling Dice
> [Bandmember intros]
> You Got the Silver
> Little T & A
> Miss You [stage moves to the front]
> It's Only Rock'n'Roll (But I Like It) [stage in front]
> (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction [stage in front]
> Honky Tonk Women [stage moves back to the rear]
> Sympathy For The Devil
> Paint It Black
> Jumpin' Jack Flash
> Brown Sugar (Encore)
>
>
>
>

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