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Ultimate Classic Rock

That Time Prince Got Booed Off the Rolling Stones’ Stage

In the fall of 1981, Prince wasn’t a rock star. This was before 1999 and Purple Rain , “Little Red Corvette” and “Let’s Go Crazy.” He was merely a quirky upstart with one falsetto-sung pop-funk hit (“I Wanna Be Your Lover”) under his thong strap. But  Mick Jagger was a fan of Prince’s early stuff and he invited the young performer to open a pair of Rolling Stones concerts in Los Angeles. It didn't go well.

The Stones’ 1981 tour was a massive undertaking that saw the band break attendance records while filling America’s most gargantuan stadiums. The L.A. Coliseum was no exception, loaded with an estimated 94,000 music fans. Make that Stones fans. This crowd wasn’t too thrilled with the music that Prince was playing.

At the first L.A. concert on Oct. 9, Prince and his band (soon to be called the Revolution) took the stage before fellow openers George Thorogood and the Destroyers and the J. Geils Band . Before he even played a note, it was clear that the androgynous musician might not have been the best fit for this macho, blues-rock audience. Prince came to the microphone in his typical stage attire from that era – see-through jacket, thigh-high boots, black bikini briefs. Perhaps he was trying to bridge a gap with his setlist, playing rock-ier material such as “Bambi” and “When You Were Mine,” singing falsetto parts in his natural voice and turning the guitars way up.

It didn’t matter, the afternoon crowd began hurling racist and homophobic slurs at the band, and when that didn’t work, bottles, cans and anything else they could find.

“Next thing I noticed was food starting to fly through the air like a dark thunder cloud. Imagine 94,000 people throwing food at each other; it was the craziest thing I had ever seen in my life,” remembered bassist Brown Mark, who had just joined Prince’s band. “I got hit in the shoulder with a bag of fried chicken; then my guitar got knocked out of tune by a large grapefruit that hit the tuning keys…”

After Prince played “Jack U Off,” one fan remembers promoter Bill Graham coming on stage in an attempt to calm the field-level hordes, to little avail. Prince and pals stopped the set partway through their fourth song, “Uptown,” amidst a stadium’s worth of boos. Stones fans had successfully turned Prince away.

A frustrated and upset Prince was reportedly crying backstage, vowing to skip the second show two days later. He flew home to Minnesota without the band. A round of calls from his manager, his guitarist Dez Dickerson and Jagger encouraged Prince to try again on Oct. 11.

“I talked to Prince on the phone once after he got two cans thrown at him in L.A. He said he didn’t want to do any more shows,” Mick recalled in 1983 . “God, I got thousands of bottles and cans thrown at me! Every kind of debris. I told him, if you get to be a really big headliner, you have to be prepared for people to throw bottles at you in the night. [Laughs] Prepared to Die !”

Watch Prince Perform 'Honky Tonk Women'

Prince flew back out west and led the Revolution through another opening slot. Although they got about the same treatment – a bootleg recording reveals rampant booing and insults along with comments about the amount of trash thrown on stage – the band finished their five-song set on this occasion. In a shot surely directed at the audience, Prince closed with “Why You Wanna Treat Me So Bad?” It was rumored that the performer later described the crowd as “tasteless in music and mentally retarded.”

The show continued with Thorogood and J. Geils before the Stones delivered the hits, plus new stuff from Tattoo You . In an article called "Food Fight: Real Life Rock Top 10 1981," Greil Marcus reprinted an anonymous letter Ken Tucker of the Los Angeles Herald-Examiner  received after writing a review of the concert.

"You obviously are a fan of that f----- n----- group or you wouldn’t of lied about it," it read . "I just wanted you to know that us W.A.S.P. rock n rollers pay to see white performers and not n-----s, f-----s or tawdry critics like yourself President Reagan has proven once and for all that liberals, n-----s, f--s and minorities are out. Thank god for that. I can sure bet your ass on one thing, prince wont open up for the stones next time around.”

Prince would never open for the Stones again. Following the Stones’ tour, Keith Richards was asked about the Prince incidents. “Prince has to find out what it means to be a prince. That’s the trouble with conferring a title on yourself before you’ve proved it,” Richards said, apparently unaware that Prince was his birth name. “That was his attitude when he opened for us on the tour, and it was insulting to our audience. You don’t try to knock off the headline like that when you’re playing a Stones [concert]. You’d be much better off just being yourself and protecting that. He’s a prince who thinks he’s a king already. Good luck to him.”

Lucky or not, in a few years Prince would become one of the most famous and respected musicians in the world, headlining arena shows of his own. Through a variety of musical shifts (and name changes), Prince would remain one of music’s biggest stars until his 2016 death . After his death, the Stones remembered their former opener fondly. “Prince was a revolutionary artist, a wonderful musician and composer,” Jagger wrote in a statement. Richards called Prince “a true original” as well a “great guitar player.”

But back in 1981, the Stones – and their fans – weren’t so sure.

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The Rolling Stones appeared to blame Prince for their audience's deplorable reaction to his performance at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on their 1981 Tattoo You tour

Prince and Mick Jagger

Today, Prince is considered one of the greatest musicians and songwriters to ever grace the airwaves. Not only did The Purple One leave behind a lengthy trail of chart-topping hits, from sultry club-pop bangers to epic rock anthems, he was a genuine guitar hero, multi-instrumentalist, producer, actor, sex symbol and all-round icon.

Given his outrageous talent, it's difficult to envision a time when Prince wasn't rightly acknowledged as The Special One. But even future superstars are obliged to pay their dues, and in his formative years, the virtuoso Minneapolis musician experienced some of the worst crowd reactions imaginable, with haters responding to his music with racism, homophobia, abuse and shocking disrespect. 

One such incident took place in 1981, when he was booked to support The Rolling Stones on their US tour in support of Tattoo You, an endeavour which would become the largest grossing tour of that year. At this point, Prince - who was the first special guest of the night ahead of George Thorogood and the Destroyers and the J. Geils Band - had only the one hit to his name, 1979's I Wanna Be Your Lover. 

The tour's opening night took place on October 9, 1981 at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, a show for which 94,000 tickets were sold. Far from home, Prince was not given a warm welcome. The audience - seemingly unimpressed by being presented with colourful, funk-laced tunes from a musician and showman who didn't conform to conventional 'Dad Rock' traditions - started throwing food toward the stage.

As Prince and his band tried their best to get through the set, they faced a barrage of fried chicken, bottles, cans, and other objects. All too soon, a wave of racist and homophobic slurs followed.

Recalling the event, Prince bassist Brown Mark said: "Next thing I noticed was food starting to fly through the air like a dark thundercloud. Imagine 94,000 people throwing food at each other; it was the craziest thing I had ever seen in my life. I got hit in the shoulder with a bag of fried chicken; then my guitar got knocked out of tune by a large grapefruit that hit the tuning keys."

After Prince performed his 1981 track Jack U Off, with the abuse failing to cease, promoter Bill Graham bounded on stage to try to diffuse the situation, to little effect. Understandably overwhelmed, the band threw in the towel on their set's fourth song, Uptown. Prince reportedly left the venue in tears, flying home without his fellow musicians to Minnesota, insisting he would perform at the tour's next gig, scheduled to take place two days later.

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In an 1983 interview, Stones frontman Mick Jagger remembered the gig but exhibited little empathy for Prince. "I talked to Prince on the phone once after he got two cans thrown at him in LA. He said he didn’t want to do any more shows.

"God, I got thousands of bottles and cans thrown at me! Every kind of debris. I told him, if you get to be a really big headliner, you have to be prepared for people to throw bottles at you in the night. [Laughs] Prepared to Die!”.

Sharing the sentiment, guitarist Keith Richards savagely quipped: "Prince has to find out what it means to be a prince. That’s the trouble with conferring a title on yourself before you’ve proved it.

"That was his attitude when he opened for us on the tour, and it was insulting to our audience. You don’t try to knock off the headline like that when you’re playing a Stones [concert]. You’d be much better off just being yourself and protecting that. He’s a prince who thinks he’s a king already. Good luck to him.”

Ironically, "Prince" was not a title the young musician bestowed upon himself, but part of his legal full name, Prince Rogers Nelson.

Following encouragement from his manager, guitarist Dez Dickerson and Mick Jagger, Prince agreed to rejoin the tour for the next date on October 11, however his performance met with similar results. Unsurprisingly, he never supported the Stones again.

Liz works on keeping the Louder sites up to date with the latest news from the world of rock and metal. Prior to joining Louder as a full time staff writer, she completed a Diploma with the National Council for the Training of Journalists and received a First Class Honours Degree in Popular Music Journalism. She enjoys writing about anything from neo-glam rock to stoner, doom and progressive metal, and loves celebrating women in music.

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prince 1981 rolling stones tour

The Rolling Stones with Prince

On October 9 & 11, 1981, The Rolling Stones performed at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum with opening support from Prince. At the time, Prince wasn’t well-known but Mick Jagger was a fan of his early work and invited him to open the show. Less than four songs into their set, the crowd of 94,000 promptly booed Prince and his band off stage, likely because his music and fashion was much different than taste of The Rolling Stones’ audience.

Following the poor treatment, Prince flew back to Minneapolis, set on not returning to the stage. However Jagger and his manager convinced him to come back for night two. Prince and his band received similar treatment on October 11, but finished their five-song set, closing with “Why You Wanna Treat Me So Bad?”

The Rolling Stones 1981 American Tour took over massive stadiums and venues across the country. The band was promoting ‘Tattoo You’ and was the highest grossing tour of the year. The band received over 51 million dollars in ticket sales and had roughly two million attendees over the span of their concerts.

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Prince – Controversy – Press

Nov 10 2021

Prince and The Rolling Stones, 1981

  • By A Pop Life (Erwin Barendregt) in Commemoration , Concert , Prince

Prince and band en route to Rolling Stones show 1981 (twitter.com)

Prince and band en route to Rolling Stones show 1981

Introduction

In 1980 Mick Jagger saw Prince live at The Ritz in New York during the Dirty Mind Tour . It made quite the impression. When The Rolling Stones were touring the US in 1981, Prince was invited to be the first support act on October 9th and 11th, 1981. Both performances would turn into incidents with legendary status.

The Rolling Stones

It seemed like a perfect combination The young and upcoming Prince as one of the opening acts to The Rolling Stones, at the time still The Greatest Rock ‘n’ Roll Band In The World . Mick Jagger always tried to stay in contact with the current spirt of the times. So when stories about a new young musician, multi-talent and genius performer appeared, Jagger wanted to know and see what the fuss was all about. Jagger witnessed Prince in New York during the Dirty Mind Tour . He never forgot that night and when two timeslots became available for The Rolling Stones shows is Los Angeles, Jagger suggested Prince.

It presented Prince with an opportunity to play for a predominantly white audience, 94,000 of them, twice.

En route to the soundcheck October 1981 (pinterest.com)

En route to the soundcheck October 1981

Keyboard player Lisa Coleman:

We were so excited, we’d rehearsed our little booties off, our funky black asses. This is it, we’re gonna make the big time. © Prince – The man and his music, Matt Thorne, 2016

October 9th, 1981

The first day, October 9th, 1981, was an unusually hot day. The audience had been standing in the stadium for quite some time and had to ‘endure’ 3 support acts before The Rolling Stones would start. Drummer Bobby Z. had this to say:

It’s Prince, it’s George Thorogood & The Destroyers, J. Geils Band, and the Rolling Stones. People that are up front are rough—it’s the Stones’ reputation—and it’s a festival scene. So if you survive the front, you were there since 6 am. You’re probably drunk for the third time and high on God knows what. They’re excited that there’s music about to start. But they don’t realize that they’ve got five hours until the Stones and three opening acts. So concert promoter Bill Graham comes out and says, “All right, we’ve got a new act for you today.” Boo. Everybody wants the Stones. … We start out with I think “Uptown” and they hear us singing falsetto. They’re not interested, they’re not willing, they’re certainly not tolerant. You’ve got three brothers up there. You’ve got weird-looking white people in the back. It’s New Age weird punky funk rock—all the stuff they don’t want to know about or be interested in. They just want the blues or rock and roll. They don’t want to listen to anything new—let alone from the guy who looks like a chick but he’s not a chick and the chicks like him. © A Soldier in Prince’s Revolution, Jayne Haugen Olsen, 12/05/2016

Numerous racist and homophobic insults were hurled onto the stage accompanied by trash, cups, etc. Prince and band left the stage sooner than planned.

Keyboard player Matt Fink:

We went on when the sun was still up, I think we hit the stage around six or seven at night. We get on stage and within two minutes of the first song the audience, which was a hardcore hippie crowd, they took one look at Prince and went what the heck is this? And they started booing, flipping us the bird. … And they’re throwing whatever they could get their hands on…a crumpled up Coca-Cola can. I saw a fifth of Jack Daniels whiz by Prince’s face… © I Would Die 4 U – Why Prince became an icon, Touré, 2013

Bass player Brown Mark remembers the shows well. Moreover, it was his initiation with Prince, as it was first ever official show as Prince’s bass player.

The Rolling Stones concert was my first gig with Prince. It was an unforgettable experience and very enlightening to say the least. I remember pulling up to the Coliseum in LA and walking through a small town of tents and trailers. It was a lot like a circus or fairgrounds with all the cables, tents, and generators and people everywhere working behind the scenes. Security brought us to our tent filled with flowers, mirrors, bright lights and a banquet of fruits, lunch meats and a variety of breads. You could hear the crowds roar although you couldn’t see them through the city of tents. As show time fast approached, security lined us up to direct us to the stage. It felt like a scene from the movie Gladiator as we walked towards the stage. I remember a huge set of white curtains towering across the back side of the stage and a very wide stair case taking us down to the stage. As we walked through the curtains from the back of the stage there was musical gear everywhere, technicians running back and forth; it was very chaotic. As we came around the towers of amps and speakers and entered the stage we still couldn’t see the audience because of the large curtains in front of us. We all looked at each other and Prince gave the ready signal. As the curtains opened, the drums started beating and all I can remember was the site of a massive herd of bodies all piled together like cattle; 94,000 if I can remember correctly. Everyone was hot and sweaty from the heat, screaming and dancing to the music, holding up beer cans and bottles. I couldn’t even hear the band, the crowd was so loud! On each side of the coliseum were these massive water hoses spraying every one down to keep them from dehydrating. As we finished the first song I noticed people not liking what they were hearing. This was a crowd of Stones fans, predominately bikers, and they wanted to hear Rock music. We changed up the set in an instance and started performing Bambi but the audience, not being familiar with this music, became very violent. The scene shifted quickly as the crowed began to up their middle finger, hollering out all sorts of profanities. Next thing I noticed was food starting to fly through the air like a dark thunder cloud. Imagine 94,000 people throwing food at each other; it was the craziest thing I had ever seen in my life. I got hit in the shoulder with a bag of fried chicken; then my guitar got knocked out of tune by a large grapefruit that hit the tuning keys and I knew then it was time to run! I dropped that guitar and started flying but the funny thing was, everyone else was already gone! They were smart enough to get the heck out of there not knowing what was going to happen at that point. Brown Mark, 2009

Prince as support act to The Rolling Stones October 1981 (twitter.com)

Prince as support act to The Rolling Stones October 1981

Setlist October 9th, 1981

  • When You Were Mine

Prince felt humiliated and was on his way back to Minneapolis. Somehow, he was persuaded (by Mick Jagger and Dez Dickerson) to do the second show as well.

October 11th, 1981

It was even worse than the first night. Having heard of the previous show, the audience came prepared. This time the stage was bombarded after just one note: rotting fruit, garbage, bottles, etc., etc. Once again the band didn’t play their full set.

Setlist October 11th, 1981

  • Why You Wanna treat me So Bad?

Prince on the Rolling Stones stage October 1981 (allen-beaulieu-photo-prints.io)

Prince on the Rolling Stones stage October 1981

At the time, the well-known American (rock) journalist Greil Marcus received a letter from one of his readers after his description of the events in Los Angeles:

You obviously are a fan of that faggot nigger group or you wouldn’t of lied about it. I just wanted you to know that us W.A.S.P. rock n rollers pay to see white performers and not niggers, faggots or tawdry critics like yourself President Reagan has proven once and for all that liberals, niggers, fags and minorities are out. Thank god for that. I can sure bet your ass on one thing, prince wont open up for the stones next time around. © Food fight: Real life rock top 10, 1981 (12/81), Greil Marcus

There’s really nothing to add here. Of course this doesn’t mean that all Stones fans felt this way, but to dismiss the thought that many agreed is naive. Just as The Sex Pistols en disco were despised by rock fans, Prince was treated rudely, just for being different. It is rather ironic that young, new, innovative music and/or musicians were threatened and ridiculed by the very same people who had fought for their own new sub culture only a decade earlier.

Prince - Rolling Stones backstage pass (rrauction.com)

Prince – Rolling Stones backstage pass

In 1982 Prince was interviewed and had this to say about the shows:

When we first went on stage, a lot of people were throwing things and making noises. At first I thought it was funny. I figured, ‘We’d better just play’. When I looked up a bit later, it had simmered down and a lot of people seemed relaxed. But there was this one dude right in front, and you could see hatred all over his face. What was really strange was there was two of them. We kept playing and the one of them noticed that everyone else had cooled out. So he tried to stop this other dude, but the guy wouldn’t stop. The reason I left was because I didn’t want to play anymore. I just wanted to fight – to fight him, . I was really angry. I’m sure wearing underwear and a trench coat didn’t help matters… but if you throw trash at anybody, it’s because you weren’t trained right at home. © The renegade Prince, Robert Hilburn, 11/21/1982

Both Mick Jagger and Keith Richards weren’t exactly understanding towards Prince.

I talked to Prince on the phone once after he got two cans thrown at him in L.A. He said he didn’t want to do any more shows. God, I got thousands of bottles and cans thrown at me! Every kind of debris. I told him, if you get to be a really big headliner, you have to be prepared for people to throw bottles at you in the night. © Rolling Stone, 11/24/1983

Keith Richards was pissed and was seemingly unaware of who/what Prince was, especially given his remark about Prince’s name, not realizing it was his actual birth name.

I wish him luck. He’s got a problem with his attitude and it comes across on record. Prince has to find out what it means to be a prince. That’s the trouble with conferring a title on yourself before you’ve proved it. That was his attitude when he opened for us on tour, and it was insulting to our audience. You don’t try to knock off the headline like that when you’re playing a Stones crowd. You’d be much better off just being yourself and projecting that. He’s a prince who thinks he’s a king already. Good luck to him. © Musician Magazine, 1983

All who were involved have their memories about the shows. Guitar player Dez Dickerson has an interesting view of what went down.

The folklore surrounding those shows is fairly epic, especially regarding how things went down Day 1 versus Day 2. The shows took place with a day off in between, on Friday and Sunday, and we had a very different experience on the first show than the second. The response after the first song on the first day was something I’ll never forget – the sound of 120,000 people cheering is almost overwhelming. In addition to rank and file fans, there were hundreds of Hell’s Angels in the audience. They did not look favorably on a short black man wearing high heels, leg warmers, bikini underwear and a trenchcoat, singing in falsetto, on the Stones’ stage, and they let us know, along with a few other similarly inclined individuals. They threw paper Coke cups and booed heartily, but they were outnumbered by those who cheered us. It was enough to rattle Prince, though, who exited the stage early and left the band onstage to fend for themselves. He left the stadium and went straight to the airport, returning to Minneapolis. Bill Graham, the promoter, got up onstage and cussed out the people he singled out as troublemakers, and he got booed. The word that went out between Friday and Sunday is that we had been booed off the stage, which was not true – Bill got booed, we just cut our set short. A station that broadcast live from the stadium misreported the booing thing, and the legend grew until Sunday, by which time thousands came to the show intent on running us out of town. In the interim, after attempts by both our managers and Mick Jagger to convince Prince to come back and do the second show, I was asked by management to call and talk to him. We talked for 45 minutes, and I convinced him to get on a plane and come back. It was a bit like landing on Normandy Beach on stage the second day, but we did our entire set and left on our terms – that was important to us. Dez Dickerson, 2009

Prince and Ron Wood July 16th,1988 (pinterest.com)

Prince and Ron Wood July 16th,1988

Prince had definitely learned from this experience. There was some work to be done to achieve the real cross-over. For his next album 1999 he would go about things differently. And it quickly paid off: Little Red Corvette ensured the cross-over. Two years later everything exploded: Purple Rain turned Prince into the most successful and popular artist around the world in 1984 and 1985.

Prince and The Rolling Stones did cross in the years after. Jagger remained an avid fan and told he liked to work out to The Black Album .

On August 13th, 1986, Prince played an aftershow in London during the Parade Tour , where he played The Stones’ Miss You for the first time. It’s the only song of which he has publicly stated that he wished he had written it himself. Stones guitar player Ron Wood was also on stage at the time. On July 16th, 1988, it was repeated.

On and off, Prince would play Rolling Stones songs during the rest of his career.

April 21st, 2016

Following Prince’s death on April 21st, 2016, Ron Wood, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards all replied on Twitter .

Prince - Ron Wood - Twitter 04/21/2016 (twitter.com)

Prince – Ron Wood – Twitter 04/21/2016

Prince - Mick Jagger - Twitter 04/21/2016 (1) (twitter.com)

Prince – Mick Jagger – Twitter 04/21/2016 (1)

Prince - Mick Jagger - Twitter 04/21/2016 (2) (twitter.com)

Prince – Mick Jagger – Twitter 04/21/2016 (2)

Prince - Mick Jagger - Twitter 04/21/2016 (3) (twitter.com)

Prince – Mick Jagger – Twitter 04/21/2016 (3)

Prince - Keith Richards - Twitter 04/22/2016 (twitter.com)

Prince – Keith Richards – Twitter 04/22/2016

On October 24th, 2021, The Rolling Stones played in Minneapolis and honored Prince by playing two short fragments from Prince songs Purple Rain and Controversy .

Whether or not Prince’s experience during The Rolling Stones shows were formative, we’ll never know. Fact is that Prince was getting into a kind of flow, which led him to writing and recording a song a day. According to his engineer at the time, Peggy McCreary, it was even more than that at times (!).

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  • Kernan on 10/11/2023 at 1:55 AM

I loved Prince such an amazing talent

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  • A Pop Life (Erwin Barendregt) on 10/11/2023 at 1:28 PM Author

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35 Years Ago: Prince Opens For The Rolling Stones, And It Does Not Go Well – At All

35 Years Ago: Prince Opens For The Rolling Stones, And It Does Not Go Well – At All | Society Of Rock Videos

photo credit: Citizen Stewart

Prince Gets More Than He Bargained For

It’s hard to imagine Prince as anything but the diminutive force to be reckoned with that we remember him as, capable of commanding a stage with the ease, grace, and precision of a military general while fueling dreams and dance parties with his explosive brand of rock infused funk and soul. However, even Prince had to begin somewhere and decades before he was kicking reality television stars from his stage, the Purple One was actually forced from the stage after 15 minutes by an unruly crowd that made it clear that they didn’t want to see him.

On October 9th, 1981, Prince – then relatively unknown and two years away from “Little Red Corvette” – hit the stage as part of The Rolling Stones’ massive 1981 tour, tapped by Mick Jagger to open for the band. Appearing onstage in a see-through jacket, thigh-high boots and black bikini briefs, Prince’s audience made their dislike for him known long before he even played a note – hitting him with food, drinks, and hurling insults and homophobic slurs at the 23 year old singer and forcing him from the stage in tears after 15 minutes.

By the end of the 80s, not only would Prince bounce back from the experience, he would emerge as one of the most successful artists of the decade before going on to become one of the most celebrated artists of our time. What’s that they say about success and revenge, again?

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  • October 9, 1981 Setlist

Prince Setlist at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, Los Angeles, CA, USA

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  • Bambi Play Video
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  • Uptown ( Aborted ) Play Video

Note: Opened for The Rolling Stones. Band was booed and forced off the stage.

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4 activities (last edit by dblgleason , 13 Oct 2022, 11:41 Etc/UTC )

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Los angeles memorial coliseum.

  • The Rolling Stones Add time Add time
  • The J. Geils Band Add time Add time
  • George Thorogood & the Destroyers Add time Add time
  • Prince This Setlist Start time: 3:00 PM 3:00 PM

Prince Gig Timeline

  • Jun 04 1981 Théâtre Le Palace Paris, France Start time: 2:30 AM 2:30 AM
  • Oct 05 1981 Uncle Sam's Minneapolis, MN, USA Add time Add time
  • Oct 09 1981 Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum This Setlist Los Angeles, CA, USA Start time: 3:00 PM 3:00 PM
  • Oct 11 1981 Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Los Angeles, CA, USA Start time: 3:00 PM 3:00 PM
  • Nov 20 1981 Stanley Theatre Pittsburgh, PA, USA Add time Add time

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prince 1981 rolling stones tour

prince 1981 rolling stones tour

THIS DAY IN 1981: PRINCE OPENS FOR THE STONES IN L.A.

prince 1981 rolling stones tour

This day in 1981: Prince opens for the Stones in L.A.

This day in 1981 – During a North American tour The Rolling Stones played the first of two nights at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in Los Angeles, California. Support act was Prince, who dressed in his controversial bikini briefs and trench coat ran off stage after 15 minutes due to the crowd booing and throwing beer cans at him.

Prince and his band (soon to be called the Revolution) took the stage before fellow openers George Thorogood and the Destroyers and the J. Geils Band. Before he even played a note, it was clear that he might not have been the best fit for this blues-rock audience. Prince came to the microphone in his typical stage attire from that era – see-through jacket, thigh-high boots, black bikini briefs.

“Next thing I noticed was food starting to fly through the air like a dark thunder cloud. Imagine 94,000 people throwing food at each other; it was the craziest thing I had ever seen in my life,” remembered bassist Brown Mark, who had just joined Prince’s band. “I got hit in the shoulder with a bag of fried chicken; then my guitar got knocked out of tune by a large grapefruit that hit the tuning keys…”

Prince and his band stopped the set partway through their fourth song, “Uptown,” amidst a stadium’s worth of boos. Stones fans had successfully turned Prince away.

He flew home to Minnesota without the band. A round of calls from his manager, his guitarist Dez Dickerson and Jagger encouraged Prince to try again on Oct. 11.

“I talked to Prince on the phone once after he got two cans thrown at him in L.A. He said he didn’t want to do any more shows,” Mick recalled in 1983. “God, I got thousands of bottles and cans thrown at me! Every kind of debris. I told him, if you get to be a really big headliner, you have to be prepared for people to throw bottles at you in the night.

Prince flew back out west and led the Revolution through another opening slot. Although they got about the same treatment – a bootleg recording reveals rampant booing and insults along with comments about the amount of trash thrown on stage – the band finished their five-song set on this occasion. In a shot surely directed at the audience, Prince closed with “Why You Wanna Treat Me So Bad?”

The show continued with Thorogood and J. Geils before the Stones delivered the hits, plus new material from Tattoo You.

Prince would never open for the Stones again.

prince 1981 rolling stones tour

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IMAGES

  1. Prince and The Rolling Stones, 1981

    prince 1981 rolling stones tour

  2. Prince and The Rolling Stones, 1981

    prince 1981 rolling stones tour

  3. Prince's Controversy 1981

    prince 1981 rolling stones tour

  4. Prince opening for the Rolling Stones, October 1981

    prince 1981 rolling stones tour

  5. Prince opening for the Rolling Stones, October 1981

    prince 1981 rolling stones tour

  6. Prince Concert & Tour History

    prince 1981 rolling stones tour

VIDEO

  1. Controversy-Prince(1981 Album Version)

  2. Prince's Best Guitar Solo (Joy In Repetition, 2002, One Night Alone Tour) *Solos Only

  3. Prince's First Concert: The Beginnings of Him Becoming One of The Greatest Live Performers

  4. Prince live Dirty Mind Tour

COMMENTS

  1. The Rolling Stones American Tour 1981

    Learn about the largest grossing tour of 1981 by the British band the Rolling Stones, promoting their album Tattoo You. Find out the history, stage design, guests, records, and controversies of the 50-show stadium and arena tour.

  2. That Time Prince Got Booed Off the Rolling Stones' Stage

    Prince wasn't yet a huge star when he opened for the Rolling Stones on Oct. 9, 1981. Fans booed the singer off the stage while throwing food at his band.

  3. "He's a prince who thinks he's a king already": The day a young Prince

    One such incident took place in 1981, when he was booked to support The Rolling Stones on their US tour in support of Tattoo You, an endeavour which would become the largest grossing tour of that year. At this point, Prince - who was the first special guest of the night ahead of George Thorogood and the Destroyers and the J. Geils Band - had only the one hit to his name, 1979's I Wanna Be Your ...

  4. Revisiting the shocking moment Prince was booed off The Rolling Stones

    Prince was invited by Mick Jagger to open for The Rolling Stones in Los Angeles, but faced racist and homophobic abuse from the crowd. He was pelted with food and objects, and left the stage in tears, but returned for the second show.

  5. Controversy Tour

    Prior to the tour, in October 1981 Prince played two shows at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum as an opening act for The Rolling Stones.On the first date, Prince and his band did not finish their set, as the crowd turned hostile towards him.

  6. The Rolling Stones with Prince

    The Rolling Stones performed at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum with Prince in 1981, but the crowd booed Prince off stage both nights. Learn how Prince came back for the second show and how The Rolling Stones dominated the 1981 American Tour.

  7. PRINCE⚜️ OpeningAct 4 The Rolling Stones, LA 1981 [audio]

    PHOTOS in this clip: copyrighted by Allen Beaulieu / PRINCE supporting The Rolling Stones @Memorial Coliseum, Los Angeles on october 11, 1981 /BAND: Prince ...

  8. The Rolling Stones's 1981 Concert & Tour History

    The Rolling Stones. American Tour 1981 Photos Setlists. Rosemont Horizon: Rosemont, Illinois, United States: Nov 24, 1981 The Rolling Stones. A Jovan Presntation Setlists. ... The Rolling Stones / The J. Geils Band / George Thorogood and The Destroyers / Prince Oct 9, 1981 Los Angeles, California, United States Added by Milocampo.

  9. When Prince went on tour with The Rolling Stones

    A look at the moment when Prince went on tour with The Rolling Stones in 1981 and polarised the opinions of Mik Jagger and Keith Richards. ... When Prince went on tour with The Rolling Stones and polarised the band. Tom Taylor @tomtaylorfo. Thu 29 September 2022 11:00, UK.

  10. Oct 09, 1981: The Rolling Stones / Prince / J Geils Band / George

    The Rolling Stones, Prince, & J Geils Band info along with concert photos, videos, setlists, and more. ... Tattoo You Tour Oct 9, 1981 (43 years ago) Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Los ... The Rolling Stones Prince The J. Geils Band George Thorogood. Concert Details. Date: Friday, October 09, 1981 Venue: Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Location ...

  11. Prince "The Infamous Rolling Stones Tour" Circa (1981)

    Discussing the infamous 1981 Rolling Stones tour that put Prince on the course to super stardom.Prince got a kick in the but when he got booed off stage in L...

  12. Oct 09, 1981: The Rolling Stones / The J. Geils Band / George Thorogood

    The Rolling Stones / The J. Geils Band / George Thorogood and The Destroyers / Prince . Oct 9, 1981 (43 years ago) Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Los Angeles, California, United States

  13. Prince and The Rolling Stones, 1981

    Introduction. In 1980 Mick Jagger saw Prince live at The Ritz in New York during the Dirty Mind Tour.It made quite the impression. When The Rolling Stones were touring the US in 1981, Prince was invited to be the first support act on October 9th and 11th, 1981.

  14. Prince Setlist at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, Los Angeles

    Get the Prince Setlist of the concert at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, ... CA, USA on October 11, 1981 from the Controversy Tour and other Prince Setlists for free on setlist.fm! ... Opened for The Rolling Stones. Band was booed and forced off the stage. Promoter Bill Graham chastised audience.

  15. Setlist History: Rolling Stones Kick Off 1981 Tour

    Relive the first shows of the Stones' 1981 tour, featuring Journey and George Thorogood, with setlists, photos, and stories. Learn how the band opened with "Under My Thumb", played "Time is On My Side", and faced a fan invasion in Virginia.

  16. What Happened When Prince Opened For The Rolling Stones?

    Taking a little look a Prince's Infamous Rolling Stones Opener in 1981Buy me a Coffee at www.buymeacoffee.com/TheNightchild

  17. 35 Years Ago: Prince Opens For The Rolling Stones, And It Does Not Go

    Prince was booed, pelted with food and drinks, and forced to leave the stage in tears by a hostile crowd at his first show with the Rolling Stones. The incident was a low point in his career, but he later became a superstar and a legend.

  18. Prince Setlist at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, Los Angeles

    Get the Prince Setlist of the concert at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, Los Angeles, CA, USA on October 9, 1981 and other Prince Setlists for free on setlist.fm! setlist.fm Add Setlist. Search Clear search text. follow. Setlists; Artists; Festivals; Venues ... Opened for The Rolling Stones. Band was booed and forced off the stage.

  19. Prince's 1981 Concert & Tour History

    Rolling Stones / J Geils Band / George Thorogood & the Delaware Destroyers / Prince. Tattoo You Tour 1981 Setlists. Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum: Los Angeles, California, United States: Show Duplicates ... The Rolling Stones / Prince / J Geils Band / George Thorogood Oct 9, 1981 Los Angeles, California, United States Uploaded by Chris Gicking ...

  20. TBT: When relatively unknown Prince was booed off LA Coliseum stage in 1981

    In October of 1981, the Rolling Stones played a pair of shows at the LA Coliseum to promote their latest album 'Tattoo You'.. To accommodate the USC football game set for Saturday, Oct. 10 (an ...

  21. This day in 1981: Prince opens for the Stones in L.A

    This day in 1981 - During a North American tour The Rolling Stones played the first of two nights at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in Los Angeles, California. Support act was Prince, who dressed in his controversial bikini briefs and trench coat ran off stage after 15 minutes due to the crowd booing and throwing beer cans at

  22. The Rolling Stones US Tour 1981

    The Rolling Stones US Tour 1981. The Rolling Stones. Read more about The Rolling Stones; The Rolling Stones. Read more about The Rolling Stones; The Rolling Stones. ... 10/18/1981: The Rolling Stones, The J. Geils Band, George Thorogood: Candlestick Park: San Francisco: California: USA: 10/24/1981: