Rolling Stones fans' outrage as standard tickets for London 50th anniversary gigs set to cost up to £375By Emily Sheridan
PUBLISHED: 07:52 EST, 15 October 2012 | UPDATED: 04:44 EST, 16 October 2012
..The news The Rolling Stones are performing again to mark their 50th anniversary has been met with joy by their legions of fans. But after hearing the band are set to net £15.7million from just four gigs, ticket prices are expected to be incredibly high.Standards tickets for their two-night stint at London's O2 Arena will cost between £90 to £375.

Back on the road: The Rolling Stones (L-R) Charlie Watts, Keith Richards, Ronnie Wood and Sir Mick Jagger have announced a 50th anniversary tour
Although tickets don't go on sale until Friday, many fans have ruled out trying to buy them after being put off by the inflated prices.
Fans took to Twitter to express their horror at the prices to watch the band, who have a combined age of 273, perform.
One Twitter user Jack Powell tweeted the band, saying: '@RollingStones how can the ticket prices be so high. Trying to get a loan. My one chance to see you and the price is shocking. Gutted.'
Another fan James Pagan said: 'How can the Rolling Stones charge 400 quid to see them in concert at the O2? I think everyone should boycott it.'
The rock group announced their new tour on Monday to coincide with their 50th anniversary as a band on a YouTube video.
The four-piece will perform two shows in London in November, follow by a pair of gigs in Newark, New Jersey the following month.
Frontman Sir Mick Jagger, 69, enthused: 'Everybody loves a celebration, and London and New York are two good places to do it in.'
Guitarist Keith Richards, 68, added: 'Sorry to keep you all hanging around but the waiting is over. I've always said the best place for rock and roll is on the stage and the same is true for the Stones.
'I'm here with Mick, Charlie and Ronnie and everything is rocking. See you very soon.'
The gigs will be their first tour since their two-year A Bigger Bang World Tour, which ended in 2007.
In 2006, the band were forced to cancel a string of dates after Keith suffered concussion after falling out of a tree while on holiday in Fiji during a break in the tour.
The group will perform to an estimated 20,000 people at London's O2 Arena on 25 and 29 November, and 18,700 at the Prudential Center in Newark on 13 and 15 December.
The venues are far smaller than others the band have played to in the past, such as 82,000 at London's Twickenham Stadium or an estimated 1million people on Copacabana Beach in Rio De Janeiro, Brazil in February 2006.
Appearing on Chris Evans' Radio 2 breakfast show on Monday, Mick said: 'I'm sure there's going to be something on Facebook very soon about the tour. It's not going to be a long tour, the first bit anyway... It's going to be a few gigs.
As well as a new tour, the band have recorded two new songs Doom And Gloom and One More Shot, which will appear in a new greatest hits collection Grrr!, which will hit stores on November 12.
Describing the new songs, Mick told Chris: 'It was a very quick recording session
Although the line-up had changed somewhat since their inception in the 60s, Mick and Keith will be joined by current members Charlie Watts, 71; and Ronnie Wood, 65, for this tour.
Previous Stones members include the late Brian Jones and Ian Stewart, and former bassist Bill Wyman, who left in 1993.
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