Rolling Stones rock out in Rio 

Published: 6:41AM Monday February 20, 2006

Source: Reuters

Veteran rock group the Rolling Stones treated one million delirious fans to a rock 'n' roll spectacle with a free show on Rio de Janeiro's Copacabana Beach in what was one of the biggest rock concerts ever.

Singer Mick Jagger, 62, danced around the stage like a skinny teenager for the two-hour show, which featured songs from their early days in London 40 years ago and from their latest Grammy-winning album A Bigger Bang.

Police deployed more than 6,000 officers throughout Rio, one of the most beautiful but violent cities in the world. Officials had been worried about widespread thefts or trouble with the drug gangs that rule the shantytowns, or favelas.

"Nothing serious happened, thanks to God. It was calm," police Col. Leonardo Tavares said.

A fire department official said about 250 people were treated for exhaustion, drunkenness and other problems.

Paramilitary troops had occupied several favelas after rival drug gangs killed six people in the Rocinha shantytown on Wednesday.

Tavares estimated the crowd numbered about 1 million people. Thousands more milled around surrounding streets, drinking beer and holding impromptu parties.

Others watched from a flotilla of private boats in the bay and from hotel rooms along Atlantic Avenue, the main thoroughfare along the beach.

With its reputation for decadence, drugs and debauchery, Rio was the perfect venue for the Stones, former bad boys of rock who transformed into a powerful business operation.

The Rio concert was part of the band's A Bigger Bang tour, which kicked off in the United States in August and was the top-grossing rock tour of 2005.

Fans from Japan, Europe, flocked to Rio

Fans came from as far away as Japan and Europe for the show.

From the classic opening riff of Jumping Jack Flash, to the encore of Satisfaction, fans sang, tried to dance on the crammed 1.5-km stretch of beach and chanted praise for craggy-faced guitarist Keith Richards.

A group of die-hard supporters from Minas Gerais state arrived at the beach at 9 a.m. so they could get as close to the action as possible.

"I just wanted to see the greatest rock and roll band in the world. This is history," said one fan who identified himself only as Carlos. "I want to hear Gimme Shelter, Start Me Up and Wild Horses." The band played the latter two songs.

The public was separated from the stage by an enclosure for 4,000 VIP guests of the promoter, the sponsors and the band. The enclosure aggravated Freda, a 30-year-old teacher who traveled from Sao Paulo to see the concert.

"It is always like this in Brazil, everything for the millionaires," she said.

At one point, a section of the crowd started an obscene chant directed at the VIPs, who included actor Rodrigo Santoro and Brazilian TV presenter and model Luciana Gimenez, Jagger's former lover and the mother of his six-year-old son, Lucas.

"Brazilians have been through a lot of hardship, so this is a gift for them," Gimenez told Reuters. "It is free, so that is politically correct."

Rio de Janeiro city paid about $750,000 for the show, or about 16 percent of the cost, with the rest covered by telecommunications companies Claro and Motorola.

It was billed as the biggest rock concert ever, but a reported 3.5 million people saw a free show by Rod Stewart on Copacabana Beach on New Year's Eve 1994.


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Provocative, unflinching, Thursday 9:30pm
Back Benches - giving politics back to the people
The way New Zealand wakes up weekdays, 6:30am
No one gets you closer, weeknights 7pm
Looking out for the little guy, Wednesday 7:30pm
Meet the people that bring you the news
TV ONE weekdays, 6am
The home of NZ politics - Sunday, 9am TV ONE
Where there's a story, we'll find it, Sunday 7:30pm
Te Karere, Maori News - 4pm weekdays, TV ONE
News on digital channel TVNZ 7

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