Sir Mick Jagger, 80, puts on an animated display as he joins partner Melanie Hamrick, 37, at Louis Vuitton’s Prelude To The Olympics 2024
As a die-hard Rolling Stones fan, I can’t help but be in awe of Sir Mick Jagger’s unwavering energy and charisma at the age of 80! His electric performance at Louis Vuitton’s Prelude To The Olympics event in Paris was a testament to his timeless talent. With Melanie Hamrick by his side, they made for an enchanting couple on the green carpet.
At the Prelude To The Olympics 2024 event by Louis Vuitton in Paris on Thursday, Sir Mick Jagger and his partner Melanie Hamrick gave a lively performance.
I, being an over-the-moon fan at the ripe age of 80, couldn’t contain my excitement as I approached the enchanting dark green carpet. With a twinkle in my eye and a playful grin on my face, I struck goofy poses, waving my hand dramatically for all to see.
I donned a black suit adorned with vibrant floral patterns, teaming it with an untucked, open-collar white shirt devoid of a tie.
An arm wrapped around Melanie, a sleekly dressed woman without sleeves and in black, found its way around Mick, whose trousers hugged his frame snugly.
The mother-of-one wore a graceful gown adorned with golden trim along the hemline, extending up the sides.


At the glamorous Louis Vuitton event, Spanish artist Rosalia attended with her partner Jeremy Allen White.
Other big names in attendance were Serena Williams and actresses Zendaya and Charlize Theron.
After wrapping up their Hackney Diamonds Tour in Missouri, Mick Jagger and The Rolling Stones’ concert marked the subsequent event.
Hackney Diamonds backed their long-awaited original album from 2023, titled “Hackney Diamonds.” This was their first studio production in close to two decades.
While on tour, The Rolling Stones faced criticism for removing “Brown Sugar” from their performances, with some people suggesting they had become overly sensitive to social issues (implying a shift towards wokeness).
The song sparks debate due to its portrayal of slavery intertwined with an intimate connection to a Black woman.
After the recent assassination attempt on Presidential candidate Donald Trump, the Rolling Stones added lyrics about presidential assassinations to one of their well-known songs soon thereafter.
In the iconic song “Sympathy for the Devil” by the Rolling Stones, released in 1968, Mick Jagger sings: “I called out, ‘Who murdered the Kennedys?’ But you and I are all to blame.”


During the final three concerts of their Hackney Diamonds tour in the United States, which occurred after the shooting of Trump on July 13, the song’s lyrics were noticeably missing when he performed it.
At concerts in Los Angeles, Santa Clara (California), and Ridgedale (Missouri), Mick omitted the third verse of the infamous song entirely during live performances. This verse contained references to the Kennedy assassinations.
Instead of the third verse, Keith Richards and Ronnie Wood take over with a captivating instrumental interlude on their guitars.
The 1968 song lyric originally questioned “who killed John Kennedy?”, but after the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy in the same era, Mick Jagger changed the lyrics to include a plural form.
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2024-07-26 03:54