Sunderland Echo

‘Scruffy’ Rolling Stones got no satisfacti­on from city outfitter

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There is no argument that the Rolling Stones are one of the biggest acts in the history of entertainm­ent. They are instantly recognisab­le, have sold hundreds of millions of units and played legendary gigs. Venues for these include Wembley, the Tokyo Dome, Altamont, the Mecca Bingo Hall on Holmeside…

We’re only kidding about that last venue. It was actually the Odeon Cinema when the Stones played there; twice one Tuesday, March 9, 1965.

This was not when they were up-and-coming unknowns.

They had made it. Only the Beatles could claim to be bigger.

Yet the Stones were happy to play Holmeside, just before they hit number one with “The

Last Time”, the third of their eight UK chart-toppers. They were massive, and the two gigs were the usual frenzied, screaming affairs.

Today bands of such stature play huge arenas, but in 1965 British stadium gigs were in the future and the Odeon had seating capacity of 2,500, so the band played two shows in one day. A year earlier the Stones played the Top Rank Suite, later the Blue Monkey, in Bedford Street.

They weren’t the first big act to play the Odeon. Bill Haley and Cliff Richard had performed there but the Stones were a coup for the town, even if not everyone saw it quite this way. During their visit, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, always looking for stylish clobber, popped into JW Gracey’s Men’s Outfitters, directly opposite the Odeon, and asked to see some shirts.

The owner, Jack Gracey, was unimpresse­d as the pair were somewhat less conservati­ve than his usual customers.

Mr Gracey arrived home that evening, muttering to his 16-year-old son David that he’d earlier served two dreadful scruffs, who looked like they didn’t have two ha’pennies to rub together, said they were some sort of musicians apparently.

Young David couldn't believe his ears. He showed photograph­s of the world-famous group to his father, pointing out Mick and Keith. No further impressed, Mr Gracey maintained that they were still a couple of scruffs.

Keith’s thoughts on this upstanding Holmeside businessma­n are unknown. But the Rolling Stones never played Sunderland again.

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