Air
Canada Center, Toronto
on Wednesday 16th of October 2002.
Set list:
Street Fighting Man - It's Only Rock'n'Roll - If You Can't Rock Me - Don't
Stop - Rocks Off - Love In Vain Ronnie - Let It Bleed - Monkey Man -
Gimme Shelter - Tumbling Dice - Thru And Thru - Happy - Start Me Up - Honky Tonk
Women - Can't You Hear Me Knocking - Satisfaction - Mannish Boy - Neighbors
- Brown Sugar - Sympathy For The Devil - Jumping Jack Flash
Review
Stones power out hits for ACC faithful
By Vit Wagner
Don't Stop."
This spanking new Rolling Stones song, one of four recent tunes on the
current double CD compilation Forty Licks, didn't come anywhere near to topping
the list of crowd pleasers during the band's sold-out set last night at the Air
Canada Centre. But it fairly captured the overwhelming sentiment in the arena.
While the Stones have taken their share of heat in recent years, much of it
aimed squarely at their refusal to exit the scene gracefully, there were few, if
any, skeptics among the 18,000 in attendance. And don't expect many more
naysayers when the group follows up Friday before an expected audience of more
than 40,000 at SkyDome.
After opening things up with "Street Fighting Man," "It's Only
Rock 'n' Roll" and "If You Can't Rock Me," the band risked
interrupting the celebratory mood by interjecting "Don't Stop," the
first song that Mick Jagger felt it necessary to introduce.
As it turned out, the tune more than held its own against more familiar
favourites.
For all of Jagger's prancing onstage antics, there is no getting around the
fact that he and lead guitarist Keith Richards will both turn 60 next year.
Drummer Charlie Watts is already past that point, leaving second guitarist Ron
Wood, at a relatively spry 55, as the baby of the bunch.
You would never guess any of this from watching Jagger, who remains
remarkably energetic and athletic — although, frankly, there were times when a
little more reserve might have been in order.
It was left to Richards to put things into context, which he did in
predictably wry fashion.
"We're all here despite ourselves," he said, grinning
mischieviously and exhaling a plume of Virginia's finest as he stepped up to the
microphone.
"Hey Toronto," he added a couple of moments later, "it's good
to be back. But as I like to say, it's good to be anywhere."
After taking a turn at singing with "Thru And Thru," he announced
somewhat abashedly, "Nobody's perfect. I could fall over at any time."
He went on to deliver a stirring rendition of "Happy." And didn't
fall over that time, either, although he took a brief respite on his knees
before being rejoined by Jagger for a boisterous rip into "Start Me
Up."
Far from toppling over, the Stones acquitted themselves admirably. Maybe they
can no longer rock the joint with the same edgy conviction effortlessly mustered
by newcomers the Strokes in the same venue a week ago. But after four decades
the Stones are far from losing it.
A month into its current tour, after a summer rehearsal residency in Toronto,
the band is firing smoothly. One of several highlights included a mid-program
combination of "Gimme Shelter," during which Jagger was aided by
powerful backing vocalist Lisa Fisher, and "Tumbling Dice," from Exile
On Main Street. A jammy take on "Can't You Hear Me Knocking" used the
four-member brass section to full effect.
The party goes on.
Rolling
Stones on Aircanada Center:
by Aaron Brophy, Chart Attack com.
The first time I ever encountered The Rolling Stones was at the home
of one of my father's biker drinking buddies. As a curious 10 year old, I'd
rifle through the biker's records, judging them almost solely on the look of
the album covers. It's when I got to The Stones' Goat's Head Soup that my
impression of the band was forever calcified. Musically, the best moment is
the melancholy ballad "Angie," but what really struck me was the
pull-out poster sleeve of actual goat's head soup. I stared at that photo for
a long time. It was kinda gross, but also compelling, dangerous and very, very
evil. It was also the coolest thing I'd ever seen.
As I continued to learn more about The Stones and music in general, their
mystique continued to grow. Maggie Trudeau. Heroin busts. Sympathy For The
Devil. Brian Jones. Hell's Angels. Altamont. Exile On Main Street. It all
swirled together to create a vision of one of the most vital and nasty rock
'n' roll bands in history.
But that is history and this is 2002.
Some 40 years after their inception, The Rolling Stones are a different
band. The danger is now clouded in a thick fog of nostalgia and that rambling,
rollicking rock band has morphed into an efficient, effective touring machine,
a cash-hoovering monster trading in on waves of feel-good familiarity.
And therein lies the dilemma. I knew going into the Stones show at the Air
Canada Centre that this wasn't going to be the barroom romance of Love You
Live or the vital near-punk of Got Live If You Want It. But I was certainly
hoping for more than a slap-dash of the hits, count the money and
prep-the-next-set-of-suckers run-through.
Things got off to a dubious start. With the exception of what appeared to
be every aging stripper in the G.T.A., the crowd was well-heeled,
well-lubricated, well-greyed and well-girthed. More disturbing however was Keith
Richard's dramatic tumble across the stage to kick-off set opener
"Street Fighting Man."
Watching any near senior citizen take a tumble is unsettling, but seeing
Keith Richards do so to start a show is even worse. Still, considering the
audience shared what was likely a knowing sympathy, there was little in the
way of gawking, audible gasping or otherwise. As the band went into "It's
Only Rock 'N' Roll" Richards still seemed off his game, which only served
to reinforce how valuable Ron Wood is.
As the Richards jester routine began to right itself, Woods held down the
fort going into song three, "If You Can't Rock Me." Sublimely cool,
through the course of the evening Wood's solos and slidework would polish and
refine Richards' antics and Mick Jagger's posturing.
The pairing of "Don't Stop" and "Rocks Off" would
introduce the multimedia portion of the show, with the first of many lip/tongue
montages displayed on a huge screen backdrop. That was followed by a lurid
short film featuring young, nubile and sexually ambiguous model types getting
drunk and feeling each other up.
Up until this point everything was rather perfunctory and a not just a
little bit embarrassing. Then came "Love In Vain." Slow and dirty,
this song was a breakthrough. Where up until then The Stones were aging
hit-peddlers, here they were world-wizened blues-rock masters.
"Let It Bleed" and "Monkey Man" continued to fuel this
resurgence. By this point Jagger was in full frontman mode, strutting and
cocky. Richards came to life as well, playing particularly vibrantly on
"Monkey Man."
The plodding audience clapalong in "Gimme Shelter" and Jagger's
fumbling faux sex-up with backup singer Lisa Fischer brought things back down
again, but this wasn’t the lowlight of the evening.
That was reserved for the Richards-sung double-shot of "Thru And Thru"
and "Happy," followed by "Start Me Up" and "Honky
Tonk Woman." The fault with the Richards songs is obvious and my distaste
for "Start Me Up" is a strictly a personal idiosyncrasy. But "Honky
Tonk Woman" was a whole different set of weird. The band were incidental
to what could be described as Stones anime porn flashing on the big screens,
where a topless Betty Page-type lewdly rode a pierced tongue. That may pass
for dangerous in the 'burbs, but it was more just embarrassing.
Still, in what was slowly developing as the theme for the evening. A moment
of bad was framed by a moment of sublime. In this case "Can't You Hear Me
Knocking." Once again returning to their roadhouse roots, this song,
faithfully rendered and stretched out with Jagger harmonica and Wood guitar
solos, recaptured the vitality that represents the best attributes of the
Stones.
"Satisfaction" was a crowd-pleaser but the true highlights came
when the Stones shifted operations to an "intimate" stage set up in
the middle of the floor. Packed together and shorn of the high walls and
barricades that quash initmacy, the band tore into "Mannish Boy,"
"Neighbours" and a singalong "Brown Sugar."
This was clearly the Stones at their most fiery. Charismatic, swaggering
and mere inches from their audience, the band ended their regular set in
dramatic fashion.
By the time band returned to the main stage for the encores of "Sympathy
For The Devil" and "Jumping Jack Flash," many of the evening's
earlier transgressions had been forgotten.
Having taken it all in, I realized you can't go back. Heck, I wasn't even
there in the first place — I was still a baby when many of the Stones most
dangerous moments actually took place. But for a few minutes I was transported
back to some bygone era. There I was in a dingy, smokey club, strange goats
head and tongue images were all around. Brian Jones was there, too. "The
Last Time" and "Bitch" were also miraculously playing at the
same time. In this haze I got to witness Mick, Keith and the boys at their
most rocking and most world-beating. And because of that I can understand
everyone who woo'd to "Brown Sugar" and sung their hearts out to
"Satisfaction." And, frankly, that's enough.
|