New York: Rolling Stones' album "Hackney Diamonds" was released in Manhattan.
The Rolling Stones had a launch party to celebrate the release of their first record in eighteen years. A six-song record that was influenced by the rock and roll icons Hackney Diamonds was danced to by people. Hundreds of fans cheered and applauded for their favorite performer at the Racket NYC club.

Reports from New York Thursday night, the West Side club in Manhattan hosted the Rolling Stones' first live performance for their first album in eighteen years. The venue was packed with music fans. The six-track CD "Hackney Diamonds," which was influenced by the rock and roll fandom, was played as people danced.
Hundreds of fans cheered and applauded for their favorite performer at the Racket NYC club.To an excited audience, The Stones disclosed that new successes, such "Jumpin' Jack Flash" and "Tumbling," had been altered. The band once drove a flatbed truck down Fifth Avenue and rode a caboose into Grand Central Terminal before releasing their two CDs to considerable hoopla in New York. In addition to "Sweet Sounds of Heaven," another song on the band's latest album sounds like it belongs on the hit song from the 1970s, "Moonlight Mile." Gaga and Jagger gave outstanding performances. The audience loved their dance very much.
Jagger wore a traditional black shirt, while Gaga arrived in a striking red and black one-sleeved costume. covers of Mick Jagger with 76-year-old Ron Wood and 79-year-old Keith Richards, "Hackney Diamonds" is the group's first new song studio album since "A Big Bang" in 2005 and their first recording after drummer Charlie Watts' death in 2021. On the new album, Paul McCartney, Elton John, and Stevie Wonder—who left the group in the 1990s—return. The last song on the CD is "Rolling Stone Blues". The credit for the video is Evening Standard.