• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Rolling Stones tour grossed more than $500 mln

Wed Oct 3, 2007 1:55pm EDT
Rolling Stones lead singer Mick Jagger (C), guitarist Keith Richards (R), drummer Charlie Watt (2nd R) and Ron Wood (L) perform during the band's ''A Bigger Bang'' European tour stop in Lausanne August 11, 2007. The final tally on the Stones' two-year world tour is in and it topped a half billion -- making it the top grossing trek in history. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse

NASHVILLE (Billboard) - The final tally on the Rolling Stones' two-year world tour is in and it topped a half billion -- making it the top grossing trek in history.

Entertainment  |  Music  |  People

The staggering total -- $558,255,524, to be exact -- was accumulated between August 21, 2005, and August 26, when the "Bigger Bang" tour wrapped at the O2 arena in London after a second European leg.

The box office gross figure was provided to Billboard by longtime Stones tour producer Michael Cohl. The tour long ago passed the old record, set by U2's 2005-06 Vertigo tour, which topped out at $389 million. The previous mark had been the Stones' $320 million Voodoo Lounge tour of 1994-95.

According to Cohl, 4.68 million tickets were sold on the 144 "Bigger Bang" shows, which saw the Stones visit such countries as Romania, Serbia, and Montenegro for the first time. The rockers also visited smaller North American cities such as Wichita, Kansas; Louisville, Kentucky; Missoula, Montana; and Halifax, Nova Scotia.

The tour was certainly not without its challenges, including the infamous head injury suffered by guitarist Keith Richards during a Fijian break in April 2006.

"It was a long tour, but more than anything it was fantastic," Cohl told Billboard. "We had to overcome a lot; this was like Homer's Odyssey. There were all sorts of difficulties to overcome and it turned out to be just one amazing triumph."

Reuters/Billboard



More from Reuters

Photo

Democrats reach deal on health bill

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Senate Democratic healthcare negotiators said they agreed on Tuesday to replace a government-run insurance option with a scaled-back non-profit plan and would seek cost estimates on the deal.

File photo of snow covered Uhuru peak of the largest free-standing volcano in the world, Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, taken on March 10, 2006. REUTERS/Neil Wallace
Postcards to Copenhagen:

Wish we weren't here

Mount Kilimanjaro's melting snow cap is one of many things forever altered by climate change. Here's a snapshot of a world dealing with environmental destruction.   Full Article 

People prepare to lower the body of one of the ministers killed in a blast from a suicide bomber last Thursday at Shamo Hotel in Somali's capital Mogadishu December 4, 2009.  REUTERS/Feisal Omar

Scenes of a "slaughterhouse"

War is just about the only story to tell in Somalia. But when one reporter tried to cover an event reflecting positive change, violence reared its ugly head again.  Full Article