I was thinking that Jagger is much calmer on stage now than previous tour and then I realised, the man is 80 years old... 😃 Unbelievable how fit he is. Do we have another example of a known/famous person that was this fit at 80 years old? I can't think of anyone else.
Not quite the same, but Paul McCartney is 81 and singing/playing 3 hour shows. Ringo is 83 and spends half his shows playing drums, the other half standing and singing.
Miss You exceptional song like it so much 👍 Rolling Stones are fantastic 💥💎 Mick Jagger Ever at TOP ✌️👑♥️🙆♀️ I glad so much this beautiful video 👍 Thanks 👌
I would be pretty frustrated if I was Mick telling the sound people the bass is too loud from the beginning of the song until the end at least 3 times (while he is suppose to be fronting and outwards toward the audience. And remembering lyrics and keeping the focus on his own performance.)
@@Jev55 if you begin a solo loud, where do you go & how do you build it up then? (Unless you want it streamlined, Stones was never streamlined, it isn’t their product.) If people think the original members of Stones don’t know how to do stadium gigs the best way, the Stones way. Then they’re ignorant. No one on this planet is more experienced and probably no one will ever be, because Stones journey was a result of a world society & times making it possible. Things is’t like that anymore. The issue was unbalanced sound. And when people pay a little fortune to hear Mick, Keith and a little bit of Ronnie. It’s weird not giving them headroom in the soundscape to work with. Charlie Watts was regularly the one complaining about things being loud on stage. They lost that guy and Mick suddenly got that role now so is struggling more than 50 years as a frontman. (I never seen he doing this when Charlie was with them.) And even if it looks like he just got out of his teens, he isn’t getting any younger. (Remember Beatles quit playing live because the live sound wasn’t balanced. I don’t think Ringo was the same personality as Charlie.)
The sound engineers can mix a totally different mix to his in ear monitors or to the monitors in front of him from what the audience hears. If it’s too loud in his personal mix then I get him being annoyed but also that can be super subjective and should have been leveled during rehearsal. The band has no way at all of knowing how it sounds in the audience. What they hear on the stage(if they aren’t using in ear monitors which they SHOULD be) will be totally different than the audience mix. For that matter where you sit in the stadium can sound totally different! Musicians aren’t audio engineers usually and the technology is night and day different from 50 years ago.
@@Jev55 Not a single person in that stadium is more around than Mick (way out in the middle of it) and he turns his monitor on_&_off/up_&_down several times to get some of the amibien sound as well. Trust me, he knows what he’s doing and checking how it is. The sound out is in_fact not balanced and boosted in the low frequency. Could work very well for bands not longing fore the backbeat feel. This is Rolling Stones tho’
@@martinaakervik Sorry but you're wrong. He is not able to monitor the sound for the audience just by being "way out in the middle of it" That is literally the job of the audio engineer mixing the sound for the audience. He also does not personally have control of the exact mix to his monitors. He can turn volume up or down but would have to ask a tech to adjust the mix.
@@frankrusso9200 I know what's you're saying it's the volume of the bass on stage, maybe it's because he's playing in a higher register & it's cutting through? Personally I think the bass is killer & let's be honest, never mind the session player's, the three of them have been pretty darn sloppy on stage for decades & I wouldn't have it any other way.🙂
Fu€k 🅾️FF, darling. This band rules since 62 years ago, and do a better career than 95% artist of all the history. Grat show, great band and incredible talent.