Rolling Stones delay tour as Jagger seeks medical treatment
“I’m devastated for having to postpone the tour but I will be working very hard to be back on stage as soon as I can,” Jagger said on Twitter, without providing further details.
“I’m so sorry to all our fans in America and Canada with tickets. I really hate letting you down like this.”
Fans were quick to reply to his post, wishing him well.
The 75-year-old rock star was expected to make a full recovery, the band’s publicist said.
“The doctors have advised Mick that he is expected to make a complete recovery so that he can get back on stage as soon as possible,” the publicist said in a statement.
The band’s North American tour had been scheduled to run from April 20 until June 29.
The Stones have had to cancel sell-out concerts in the past, like in Las Vegas in 2016, when Jagger contracted laryngitis.
Some misadventures of lead guitarist Keith Richards, the co-author with Jagger of hits such as “Satisfaction” and “Brown Sugar”, have also caused show postponements and cancellations during the band’s 50-year-long career.
The group had to cancel gigs in 1990 when Richards infected his finger, and the start of a European tour was postponed in 1998 when he fell off a ladder in his home. Some 2006 shows were also delayed when Richards fell from a coconut tree while on vacation.
(Reporting and writing by Elisabeth O’Leary and William Schomberg; Editing by Andrew Heavens and Marie-Louise Gumuchian)