

Mick Jagger performed like a man half his age (78) on Nov. And if anything, Jagger became even more animated during the 19-song set’s second half, leading the meaty groove of “Miss You” and the titanic dynamics of an epic “Midnight Rambler” with youthful glee. From side to side, down a ramp that took him to the center of the stadium floor, sporting nearly a dozen different shirts and jackets, Jagger was in nearly constant motion, pausing only to play guitar on a couple of songs and take a break while guitarist Keith Richards performed a pair of songs. ‘Lifeboat’ tops Michigan best sellers for Novemberįarmers Market hosts after-Christmas antique saleĭFT hosts holiday showing of restored ‘Beauty and the Beast’Ĭhief credit for that goes to Jagger, still performing like someone less than half his 78 years. TV: Meet some new British ghosts this Christmas Southeast Michigan entertainment calendar Dec. But on Monday the Stones sounded - and for the most part even looked - as strong as ever, defying age to stake yet another claim to the assigned mantle of World’s Greatest Rock ‘n’ Roll Band. leg for more than a year and a half due to COVID-19 (the original Ford Field date was June 10, 2020), then suffering the passing of drummer Charlie Watts in August. The venerable British rock group’s No Filter Tour has taken other hits as well during the past 20 or so months, having to postpone this U.S. Instead the group answered the best way possible - with its music and a roof-raising two-hour-and-15-minute show to prove that nearly 60 years on the Rolling Stones have hardly run out of gas, gas, gas.

15, Jagger and company had a similar reply for the Who’s Roger Daltrey, who branded the Stones “a mediocre pub band” in a new interview aired over the weekend. On stage at Detroit’s Ford Field Monday night, Nov. When Paul McCartney dismissed the Rolling Stones as “a blues cover band” last month, Mick Jagger responded with a quick quip on stage in Los Angeles.
