Sting performs onstage at the GRAMMY Museum in Los Angeles

Sting will re-open Paris’ Bataclan concert hall on Nov. 12, a day before the anniversary of the jihadist attack that left 90 people dead there, the British rock star said Friday.
The former frontman of The Police said he had agreed to the highly-charged gig “to remember and honor those who lost their lives in the attack a year ago, and to celebrate the life and the music that this historic theater represents.
“In doing so we hope to respect the memory as well as the life affirming spirit of those who fell. We shall not forget them,” he added in a statement on his website.
The announcement is a major boost for the venue which had reportedly been struggling to attract big names back to perform there, fearful of the emotional weight of the occasion.
All revenues from the show will be donated to two charities working with victims of the Paris attacks, Sting’s statement added.
On the day of the anniversary itself, survivors of the attack will attend the unveiling of a plaque in front of the concert hall, Paris city hall said.
But the building itself will remain closed. The US rock group Eagles of Death Metal — who were on stage when the massacre began — will also be present at the ceremony, according to French rolling news channel BFMTV.
Another British rocker, Pete Doherty, will play the refurbished venue for two nights starting on Nov. 16 and he will be followed by Senegalese star Youssou N’Dour and singer Marianne Faithfull.
The British-born Sixties legend, who lives in the French capital, told AFP she will perform “They Come at Night” for the first time, a song that she wrote in the immediate aftermath of the attacks. “I understand that it’s frightening,” 69-year-old Faithfull said of bands who were reluctant to play the venue in eastern Paris again. “I don’t blame them. But there is no point in being afraid. I don’t think it will happen again.”
The French singer Francis Cabrel said recently he had declined an offer to appear. “There was just too much emotion for me,” he said. “I am sorry, but it is beyond me.”
The Bataclan was one of several targets in a wave of bloody attacks across the French capital by Islamic State gunmen and suicide bombers on the night of Nov. 13, 2015. Bars, restaurants and the national stadium were also hit, leaving a total of 130 people dead.

Source: Arab News