rolling stones msg 1975Flashback

The Rolling Stones Rock MSG in 1975

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The Rolling Stones live at the Madison Square Garden, New York City 1975

June 22, 1975: Madison Square Garden, NYC, NY, USA
Honky Tonk Women/All Down The Line/If You Can’t Rock Me-Get Off Of My Cloud/Star Star/Gimme Shelter/Ain’t Too Proud To Beg/You Gotta Move/You Can’t Always Get What You Want/Band introduction/ Happy/Tumbling Dice/It’s Only Rock’n Roll/Heartbreaker/Fingerprint File/Angie/Wild Horses/That’s Life/ Outa Space/Brown Sugar/Midnight Rambler/Rip This Joint/Street Fighting Man/Jumpin’ Jack Flash/ Sympathy For The Devil
*With special guests Eric Clapton and The Steel Association on Sympathy For The Devil

Read more (from the New York Times)

*Click for MORE ROLLING STONES FLASHBACK

Steel, Stage, and Sympathy: The Rolling Stones at MSG ’75

Two hours before the show, the buzz outside Madison Square Garden was electric. Young fans crowded Seventh Avenue, eager for tickets, feeding off the anticipation of what the Stones had promised to be a dazzling New York City spectacle. Inside, 100 Caribbean steel drummers stirred up the crowd with percussive renditions of Sympathy for the Devil—but their extended set slowly tipped from festive to frustrating.

Then at 9:25, the air shifted. Copland’s Fanfare for the Common Man blared, and the giant metallic lotus-shaped stage unfolded. Mick Jagger emerged nervously clutching a petal, and the Stones launched into Honky Tonk Women, thus igniting a night that would prove tighter, sharper, and more refined than earlier shows on the tour.

Rough Edges Smoothed, Raw Energy Preserved

While the stage was glossier, with 15 more tons of steel and flashing neon, theatrics mostly stayed subtle. The real difference was in the music: familiar songs—Gimme Shelter, You Gotta Move, Get Off of My Cloud—felt more polished, their edges smoothed by weeks on the road. Even Fingerprint File, often more flash than feeling, featured an impressive bass solo by Ron Wood.

But the surprise came at the end. Just when Jumpin’ Jack Flash seemed to wrap the night, the drummers returned—and then, out of nowhere, came Sympathy for the Devil, complete with Eric Clapton on guitar. For the first time in six years, Jagger sang the controversial anthem on U.S. soil, this time surrounded by Black musicians whose joy and rhythm transformed the moment.

What started as another great rock show ended with symbolic redemption—a celebration not just of rock ‘n’ roll, but of reconciliation, showmanship, and soul.

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