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Rolling Stones rock HK, but taxpayers sing blues
Honk Kong, Nov 08: The Rolling Stones rocked Hong Kong for the first time in their 40-year career on Friday, headlining a government-sponsored music festival that has angry taxpayers singing the blues.
But the party, organized by the American Chamber of Commerce, could leave taxpayers with a hangover costing at least HKD 100 million, thanks in part to slow ticket sales and the hefty fees charged by the Western acts.
The Rolling Stones were reported to have charged US$5 million, and other acts such as rocker Neil Young and tenor Jose Carreras do not come cheap.
The government said earlier this week it would appoint a commission to probe the event, which wraps on Sunday when the Rolling Stones perform a second show.
The controversy was far from the minds of the largely expatriate crowd that packed the 13,000-seat Tamar Site arena in central Hong Kong for the Stones show.
Watching from the wings was former U.S. President Bill Clinton -- dubbed "rent-a-guest" by drummer Charlie Watts in the band's new DVD. Clinton sang and clapped along when the band performed its anthem "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction."
The band did not acknowledge the presence of its famous guest, who was in town for a conference of CEOs. Instead it focused on whipping up the fans with a 110-minute set packed with hits such as "Brown Sugar," "Paint It, Black" and "Jumpin' Jack Flash."
"It's taken us a long time to get here," singer Mick Jagger told the audience. "And now we're finally here, and we're glad we made it."
The Stones were originally due to play in Hong Kong last March but were forced to cancel the shows because of the SARS epidemic.
In 1973 they scheduled two shows as part of a planned Far East tour but scrapped that jaunt when the Japanese government refused to issue a visa to Jagger because of a drugs conviction.
Hong Kong marks the final stop of a world tour that began in Boston in September 2002 and took the Stones to 21 countries.
Bureau Report