Everything about Rolling Stones totally explained
The Rolling Stones are an
English band whose music was initially based on
rhythm and blues and
rock & roll. Formed in London and having their first success in the UK, they subsequently became popular in the US during the "
British Invasion" in the early
1960s.
The band formed in 1962 when original leader
Brian Jones and pianist
Ian Stewart were joined by singer
Mick Jagger and guitarist
Keith Richards, whose
songwriting partnership later contributed to their taking the leadership role in the group. Bassist
Bill Wyman and drummer
Charlie Watts completed the early lineup. Ian Stewart was removed from the official lineup in 1963 but continued to work with the band as road manager and keyboardist until his death in 1985.
The band's early recordings were mainly covers of American
blues and
R&B songs. Their 1965 single "
(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" established the Rolling Stones as a premier rock and roll act. Starting with their 1966 album
Aftermath, the songs of Jagger and Richards, aided by the instrumental experimentation of Jones, expanded an always present stylistic flexibility. Jones died in 1969 shortly after being fired from the band and was replaced by
Mick Taylor. Taylor recorded five albums with The Rolling Stones before quitting in 1974. Former
Faces guitarist
Ronnie Wood stepped in and has been with the band ever since. Wyman left the Rolling Stones in 1993; bassist
Darryl Jones, who isn't an official band member, has worked with the group since 1994.
The Rolling Stones have released 22 studio albums in the UK (24 in the US), eight concert albums (nine in the US) and numerous compilations; they've had 32 UK & US top-10 singles, 43 UK & US top 10- albums between 1964 and 2008, and have sold more than 200 million albums worldwide. 1971's
Sticky Fingers began a string of eight consecutive studio albums at number one in the United States. In 1989 the Rolling Stones were inducted into the American
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and in 2004 they were ranked number 4 in
Rolling Stone magazine's
100 Greatest Artists of All Time
. They are also ranked as the number 2 artists of all time on Acclaimedmusic.net. Their latest studio album,
A Bigger Bang, was released in 2005 and followed by
the highest-grossing tour in history, which lasted into late summer 2007. During the
1969 American tour, tour manager Sam Cutler introduced them as "The Greatest Rock and Roll Band in the World",
Band history
Prehistory
In the early 1950s Keith Richards and Mick Jagger were classmates at Wentworth Primary School in
Dartford, Kent. They met again in 1960 while Richards was attending
Sidcup Art College.
Richards recalled, "I was still going to school, and he was going up to the
London School of Economics... So I get on this train one morning, and there's Jagger and under his arm he's four or five albums... He's got Chuck Berry and Mhairi Paterson, Muddy Waters". With mutual friend
Dick Taylor (later of
Pretty Things), they formed the band Little Boy Blue and the Blue Boys.
1962–1964
On
12 July 1962 the group played their first formal gig at the
Marquee Club, billed as "The Rollin' Stones". The line-up was Jagger, Richards, Jones, Stewart on piano, Taylor on bass and Tony Chapman on drums. Jones intended for the band to play primarily Chicago blues, but Jagger and Richards brought the rock & roll of
Chuck Berry and
Bo Diddley to the band. Bassist
Bill Wyman joined in December and drummer
Charlie Watts the following January to form the Stones' long-standing
rhythm section. (Gomelsky, who had no written agreement with the band, wasn't consulted.)
George Harrison, meanwhile, recommended to
Decca Records'
Dick Rowe - who had made the mistake of declining to sign the Beatles to Decca - that he should give The Rolling Stones a recording contract. The band embarked on their first UK tour in July 1963 and played their first gig outside of Greater London on Saturday
13 July at the Outlook Club in
Middlesborough, where they shared the billing with
The Hollies. In Bill Wyman's book "Rolling With The Stones" (a detailed journal of his time with the band) he incorrectly says that this was at a Middlesbrough club called the Alcove.
After signing The Rolling Stones to a tape-lease deal with Decca, Oldham and Easton booked the band on their first big UK tour in the autumn of 1963. They were billed as a supporting act for American stars including Bo Diddley,
Little Richard and
The Everly Brothers; the opportunity to study these artists at work was an important "training ground" for the young band's stagecraft.
Prior to this tour, in July 1963, the band's first single, Chuck Berry's "Come On" reached number 21 in the UK. It a was cover of The Beatles "I Wanna Be You Man" number 12 in November 1963 in the UK, that brought them to the attention of the record buying public and a run of eight number one singles in the UK within the next five years.
Oldham crafted the band's image of long-haired tearaways "into the opposite of what the Beatles [were] doing". When the band appeared on
Dean Martin's TV variety show
The Hollywood Palace, Martin mocked both their hair and their performance. During the tour, however, they did a two-day recording session at
Chess Studios in
Chicago, where many of their musical heroes recorded. These sessions included what would become the Rolling Stones' first UK chart-topper: their cover of
Bobby and Shirley Womack's "
It's All Over Now".
On their second US tour in the autumn of 1964, the band immediately followed
James Brown in the filmed theatrical release of
The TAMI Show, which showcased American acts with British Invasion artists. According to Jagger in 2003, "We weren't actually following James Brown because there were hours in between the filming of each section. Nevertheless, he was still very annoyed about it..." On
25 October the band also appeared on
The Ed Sullivan Show. Sullivan, reacting to the pandemonium the Stones caused, promised to never book them again, though he later did book them repeatedly. In December 1964 London Records released the band's first single with Jagger/Richards originals on both sides: "
Heart of Stone" backed with "What a Shame"; "Heart of Stone" went to number 19 in the US.
1965–1969
The band's second UK LP -
The Rolling Stones No. 2, released in January 1965 - was another number 1 on the album charts; the US version, released in February as
The Rolling Stones, Now!, went to number 5. Most of the material had been recorded at Chess Studios in Chicago and
RCA Studios in
Los Angeles. In January/February 1965 the band also toured
Australia and
New Zealand for the first time, playing 34 shows for about 100,000 fans.
The first Jagger/Richards composition to reach number 1 on the UK singles charts was "
The Last Time" (released in February 1965); it went to number 5 in the US. Their first international number-1 hit was "
(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction", recorded in May 1965 during the band's third North American tour. Released as a US single in June 1965, it spent four weeks at the top of the charts there, and established the Stones as a worldwide premier act. The US version of the LP
Out of Our Heads (released in July 1965) also went to number 1; it included seven original songs (three Jagger/Richards numbers and four credited to Nanker Phelge). Their second international number-1 single, "
Get Off of My Cloud" was released in the autumn of 1965,
Jagger, Richards and Jones began to be hounded by authorities over illegal drug use. In February 1967, the Sussex police, tipped off by the
News of the World, raided a party at Keith Richards's home, Redlands. Jagger and Richards were subsequently charged with drug offences. Richards said in 2003, "When we got busted at Redlands, it suddenly made us realise that this was a whole different ball game and that was when the fun stopped. Up until then it had been as though London existed in a beautiful space where you could do anything you wanted."
In March, while awaiting the consequences of the police raid, Jagger, Richards and Jones decided to take a short trip to
Morocco, accompanied by
Marianne Faithfull, Jones' girlfriend
Anita Pallenberg and other friends. During this trip the stormy relations between Jones and Pallenberg exacerbated to the point that Pallenberg left Morocco with Richards. Richards said later: "That was the final nail in the coffin with me and Brian. He'd never forgive me for that and I don't blame him, but hell, shit happens." Richards and Pallenberg would remain a couple for twelve years.
Despite these complications, the Rolling Stones toured Europe in March and April of 1967. The tour included the band's first performances in
Poland,
Greece and
Italy.
On
9 May 1967 - on the same day Jagger and Richards were arraigned in connection with the Redlands charges - Brian Jones was arrested for possession of
cannabis.
The Times ran an editorial entitled "
Who breaks a butterfly on a wheel?" criticising the sentences. While awaiting the appeal hearings, the band recorded a new single, "
We Love You", as a thank-you for the loyalty shown by their fans. It began with the sound of prison doors closing, and the accompanying
music video included allusions to the trial of
Oscar Wilde. In July, the appeals court overturned Richards' conviction, and Jagger's sentence was reduced to a
conditional discharge. Brian Jones' trial took place in November 1967; in December, after appealing the original prison sentence, Jones was fined £1000, put on three years' probation and ordered to seek professional help.
December 1967 also saw the release of
Their Satanic Majesties Request (UK number 3; US 2), released shortly after the Beatles'
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. but in 2003 Jagger said: "The reason Andrew left was because he thought that we weren't concentrating and that we were being childish. It wasn't a great moment really - and I'd have thought it wasn't a great moment for Andrew either. There were a lot of distractions and you always need someone to focus you at that point, that was Andrew's job."
The band spent the first few months of 1968 working on material for their next album. Those sessions resulted in the song "
Jumpin' Jack Flash", released as a single in May. The song, and later that year the resulting album,
Beggars Banquet (UK number 3; US 5), marked the band's return to their blues roots with new producer
Jimmy Miller. Featuring the album's lead single, "
Street Fighting Man", and the opening track "
Sympathy for the Devil",
Beggars Banquet is another eclectic mix of country and blues-inspired tunes, and was hailed as an achievement for the Stones at the time of release. On the musical evolution between albums, Richards said, "There is a change between material on
Satanic Majesties and
Beggars Banquet. I'd grown sick to death of the whole Maharishi guru shit and the beads and bells. Who knows where these things come from, but I guess [themusic] was a reaction to what we'd done in our time off and also that severe dose of reality. A spell in prison... will certainly give you room for thought... I was fucking pissed with being busted. So it was, 'Right we'll go and strip this thing down.' There's a lot of anger in the music from that period." During this time (1968) Richards started using
open tunings (often in conjunction with a
capo), most prominently an open-E or open-D tuning, then in 1969, 5-string open-G tuning (with the lower 6th string removed), as heard on the 1969 single "
Honky Tonk Women", "
Brown Sugar" (
Sticky Fingers, 1971), "
Tumbling Dice"(capo IV), "
Happy"(capo IV) (
Exile on Main St., 1972), and "
Start Me Up" (
Tattoo You, 1981). Open tunings led to the Stones' (and Richards') trademark guitar sound.
By the release of
Beggars Banquet, Brian Jones was troubled and contributing only sporadically to the band. Jagger said that Jones was "not psychologically suited to this way of life". His drug use had become a hindrance, and he was unable to obtain a US
visa. Richards reported that, in a June meeting with Jagger, Richards, and Watts at Jones' house, Jones admitted that he was unable to "go on the road again". According to Richards, all agreed to let Jones "...say I've left, and if I want to I can come back". - a description he repeated throughout their
1969 US tour, and which has stuck to this day.
The release of
Let It Bleed (UK number 1; US 3) came in December. Their last album of the Sixties,
Let It Bleed featured "
Gimme Shelter", "
You Can't Always Get What You Want", "
Midnight Rambler", as well as a cover of
Robert Johnson's "
Love in Vain". Jones and Taylor are featured on two tracks each. Many of these numbers were played during the band's US tour in November 1969, their first in three years. Just after the tour the band also staged the
Altamont Free Concert, at the
Altamont Speedway, about 60km east of
San Francisco. The biker gang
Hells Angels provided security, which resulted in a fan,
Meredith Hunter, being stabbed and beaten to death by the Angels. Part of the tour and the Altamont concert were documented in
Albert and David Maysles' film
Gimme Shelter. As a response to the growing popularity of
bootleg recordings, the album
Get Yer Ya-Yas Out! (UK 1; US 6) was released in 1970; it was declared by critic
Lester Bangs to be
the best live album ever.
In 1970 the band's contracts with both
Allen Klein and
Decca Records ended, and amid contractual disputes with Klein, they formed their own record company,
Rolling Stones Records.
Sticky Fingers (UK number 1; US 1), released in March 1971, was the band's first album on their own label. The album contains one of their best known hits, "
Brown Sugar", and the
country-influenced "
Wild Horses". Both were recorded at
Alabama's
Muscle Shoals Sound Studio during the 1969 American tour.
Sticky Fingers continued the band's immersion into heavily blues-influenced compositions. The album is noted for its "loose, ramshackle ambience" and marked Mick Taylor's first full release with the band.
Following the release of
Sticky Fingers, the Rolling Stones left England on the advice of financial advisors. The band moved to the South of
France where Richards rented the
Villa Nellcôte, and sublet rooms to band members and entourage. Using the
Rolling Stones Mobile Studio, they held recording sessions in the basement; they completed the resulting tracks, along with material dating as far back as 1969, at Sunset Studios in Los Angeles. The resulting
double album,
Exile on Main St. (UK number 1; US 1), was released in May 1972. Given an A+ grade by critic Robert Christgau and disparaged by Lester Bangs — who reversed his opinion within months —
Exile is now accepted as one of the Stones' best albums. The films
Cocksucker Blues (never officially released) and (released in 1974) document the subsequent highly publicised
1972 North American ("STP") Tour, with its retinue of
jet set hangers-on.
In November 1972, the band began sessions in
Kingston, Jamaica, for their follow-up to
Exile,
Goats Head Soup (UK 1; US 1) (1973). The album spawned the worldwide hit "
Angie", but proved the first in a string of commercially successful but tepidly received studio albums. The sessions for
Goats Head Soup led to a number of outtakes, most notably an early version of the popular ballad "
Waiting on a Friend", not released until
Tattoo You eight years later.
The making of the record was interrupted by another legal battle over drugs, dating back to their stay in France; a warrant for Richards' arrest had been issued, and the other band members had to return briefly to France for questioning. This, along with Jagger's convictions on drug charges (in 1967 and 1970), also complicated the band's plans for their
Pacific tour in early 1973: they were denied permission to play in
Japan and almost banned from
Australia. This was followed by a
European tour (bypassing France) in September/October 1973 - prior to which Richards had been arrested once more on drug charges, this time in England.
The band went to Musicland studios in
Munich to record their next album, 1974's
It's Only Rock 'n' Roll (UK 2; US 1), but
Jimmy Miller, who had drug abuse issues, was no longer producer. Instead, Jagger and Richards assumed production duties and were credited as "
the Glimmer Twins". Both the album and
the single of the same name were hits.
Nearing the end of 1974, Taylor began to get impatient. The band's situation made normal functioning complicated, with band members living in different countries and legal barriers restricting where they could tour. At the same time, Richards' drug use was affecting his creativity and productivity, while Taylor felt some of his own creative contributions were going unrecognized. At the end of 1974, with a recording session already booked in Munich to record another album, Taylor quit The Rolling Stones. Taylor said in 1980, "I was getting a bit fed up. I wanted to broaden my scope as a guitarist and do something else... I wasn't really composing songs or writing at that time. I was just beginning to write, and that influenced my decision... There are some people who can just ride along from crest to crest; they can ride along somebody else's success. And there are some people for whom that's not enough. It really wasn't enough for me."
1974–1982
The Stones used the recording sessions in Munich to audition replacements for Taylor. Guitarists as stylistically far-flung as
Humble Pie lead
Peter Frampton and ex-
Yardbirds virtuoso
Jeff Beck were auditioned.
Rory Gallagher and
Shuggie Otis also dropped by the Munich sessions. American session players
Wayne Perkins and
Harvey Mandel also appeared on much of the album. Yet Richards and Jagger also wanted the Stones to remain purely a British band. When Ron Wood walked in and jammed with the band, Richards and everyone else knew he was the one. Wood had already recorded and played live with Richards, and had contributed to the recording and writing of the track "It's Only Rock 'n Roll". The album,
Black and Blue (UK 2; US 1) (1976), featured all their contributions. Though he'd earlier declined Jagger's offer to join the Stones, because of his ties to the
The Faces, Wood committed to the Stones in 1975 for their upcoming Tour of the Americas. He joined officially the following year, as the Faces dissolved; however, Wood remained on salary until Wyman's departure nearly two decades later, when he finally became a full member of the Rolling Stones' partnership.
The 1975
Tour of the Americas kicked off with the band performing on a flatbed trailer being pulled down
Broadway in New York City. The tour featured stage props including a giant
phallus and a rope on which Jagger swung out over the audience.
Jagger had booked a live recording session at the
El Mocambo club in
Toronto to balance a long-overdue live album, 1977's
Love You Live (UK 3; US 5), the first Stones live album since 1970's
Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out!. Richards' addiction to heroin delayed his arrival in Toronto; the other members had already assembled, awaiting Richards, and sent him a telegram asking him where he was. On February 24, 1977, Richards and his family flew in from London on a direct
BOAC flight and were detained by
Canada Customs after Richards was found in possession of a burnt spoon and hash residue. On March 4, Richards' partner
Anita Pallenberg pled guilty to drug possession and was fined for the original airport event. On Sunday, February 27, after two days of Stones rehearsals, armed with an arrest warrant for Pallenberg, the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police discovered "22 grams of heroin" in Richards' room. Richards was charged with importing narcotics into Canada, which carried a minimum seven-year sentence upon conviction. Later the Crown prosecutor conceded that Richards had procured the drugs after arrival. Despite the arrest, the band played two shows in Toronto, only to raise more controversy when
Margaret Trudeau was seen partying with the band after the show. These two shows were kept secret from the public and the
El Mocambo had been booked for the entire week by
April Wine for a recording session. A local radio station ran a contest for free tickets to see April Wine and the winners were allowed to pick a night to see the band. The winners that picked tickets for the Friday or Saturday night were surprised to find that the Stones were playing. While Richards was settling his legal and personal problems, Jagger continued his jet-set lifestyle. He was a regular at New York's
Studio 54 disco club, often in the company of model
Jerry Hall. His marriage to
Bianca Jagger ended in 1977.
Although The Rolling Stones remained popular through the first half of the 1970s, music critics had grown increasingly dismissive of the band's output, and record sales failed to meet expectations. This changed in 1978, when the band released
Some Girls (UK #2; US #1), which included the hit single "
Miss You", the country ballad "
Far Away Eyes", "
Beast of Burden", and "
Shattered". In part a response to punk, many songs were fast, basic, guitar-driven rock and roll.
Dirty Work came out in March 1986 to mixed reviews; Jagger refused to tour to promote the album, stating later that several band members were in no condition to tour. Richards was infuriated when Jagger instead undertook his own solo tour; he's referred to this period in his relations with Jagger as "World War III". Jagger's solo records,
She's The Boss (UK 6; US 13) (1985) and
Primitive Cool (UK 26; US 41) (1987), met with moderate success, although Richards disparaged both. With the Rolling Stones inactive, Richards released his first solo album in 1988,
Talk Is Cheap (UK 37; US 24). It was well received by fans and critics, going gold in the US.
In early 1989, The Rolling Stones, including Mick Taylor, Ronnie Wood and Ian Stewart (posthumously), were inducted into the American
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Jagger and Richards appeared to have set animosities aside, and The Rolling Stones went to work on the album that would be called
Steel Wheels (UK 2; US 3). Heralded as a return to form, it included the singles "
Mixed Emotions", "
Rock and a Hard Place" and "
Almost Hear You Sigh". The album also included "Continental Drift", recorded in Tangier in 1989 with Bachir Attar and the
Master Musicians of Jajouka, whom Brian Jones had recorded in 1968. It would go on to win the 1995 Grammy Award for
Best Rock Album.
1994 also brought the accompanying
Voodoo Lounge Tour, which lasted into 1995. Numbers from various concerts and rehearsals (mostly
acoustic) made up
Stripped (UK 9; US 9), which featured a cover of
Bob Dylan's "
Like A Rolling Stone", as well as infrequently played songs like "
Shine a Light", "Sweet Virginia" and "
The Spider and the Fly".
The Rolling Stones ended the 1990s with the album
Bridges To Babylon (UK 6; US 3), released in 1997 to mixed reviews. Th video of the single "
Anybody Seen My Baby?" featured
Angelina Jolie as guest and met steady rotation on both MTV and VH1. Sales were reasonably equivalent to those of previous records (about 1.2 million copies sold in the US), and the subsequent
Bridges to Babylon Tour, which crossed Europe, North America and other destinations, proved the band to be a strong live attraction. Once again, a live album was culled from the tour,
No Security (UK 67; US 34), only this time all but two songs ("
Live With Me" and "The Last Time") were previously unreleased on live albums. In 1999, the Stones staged the
No Security Tour in the US and continued the Bridges to Babylon tour in Europe. The No Security Tour offered a stripped-down production in contrast to the pyrotechnics and mammoth stages of other recent tours.
2000–present
In late 2001, Mick Jagger released his fourth solo album,
Goddess in the Doorway which met with mixed reviews. Jagger and Richards took part in "
The Concert for New York City", performing "
Salt of the Earth" and "Miss You" with a backing band.
In 2002, the band released
Forty Licks (UK 2; US 2), a
greatest hits double album, to mark their forty years as a band. The collection contained four new songs recorded with the latter-day core band of Jagger, Richards, Watts, Wood, Leavell and Jones. The album has sold more than 7 million copies worldwide. The same year,
Q magazine named The Rolling Stones as one of the "50 Bands To See Before You Die", and the 2002-2003
Licks Tour gave people that chance. On
30 July 2003, the band headlined the
Molson Canadian Rocks for Toronto concert in
Toronto,
Ontario,
Canada, to help the city — which they've used for rehearsals since the Steel Wheels tour — recover from the 2003
SARS epidemic. The concert was attended by an estimated 490,000 people.
On
9 November 2003, the band played their first concert in
Hong Kong as part of the
Harbour Fest celebration, also in support of the SARS-affected economy. In November of 2003, the band exclusively licensed the right to sell their new four-DVD boxed set,
Four Flicks, recorded on the band's most recent world tour, to the US
Best Buy chain of stores. In response, some Canadian and US music retail chains (including
HMV Canada and
Circuit City) pulled Rolling Stones CDs and related merchandise from their shelves and replaced them with signs explaining the situation. In 2004, a double live album of the Licks Tour,
Live Licks (UK 38; US 50), was released, going gold in the US.
On
July 26,
2005, Jagger's birthday, the band announced the name of their new album,
A Bigger Bang (UK 2; US 3), their first album in almost eight years.
A Bigger Bang was released on
September 6 to strong reviews, including a glowing write-up in
Rolling Stone (noted for its consistent support of the group). The album included the most controversial song from the Stones in years,
"Sweet Neo Con", a criticism of
American Neoconservatism from Jagger. The song was reportedly almost dropped from the album because of objections from Richards. When asked if he was afraid of political backlash such as the
Dixie Chicks had endured for criticism of American involvement in the war in Iraq, Richards responded that the album came first, and that, "I don't want to be sidetracked by some little political "storm in a teacup".
The subsequent
A Bigger Bang Tour began in August 2005, and visited North America, South America and East Asia. In February 2006, the group played the half-time show of
Super Bowl XL in Detroit, Michigan. By the end of 2005, the Bigger Bang tour set a record of $162 million in gross receipts, breaking the North American mark also set by the Stones in 1994. Later that month, the band played to a claimed 1.5 million on the
Copacabana beach in
Rio de Janeiro in a free concert.
After performances in Japan, China, Australia and New Zealand in March/April 2006, the Rolling Stones tour took a scheduled break before proceeding to Europe; during this break Keith Richards was hospitalized in New Zealand for cranial surgery after a fall from a tree on
Fiji, where he'd been on holiday. The incident led to a six-week delay in launching the European leg of the tour. In June 2006 it was reported that Ronnie Wood was continuing his programme of rehabilitation for alcohol abuse, but this didn't affect the rearranged European tour schedule. Two out of the 21 shows scheduled for July-September 2006 were later cancelled due to Mick Jagger's throat problems.
The Stones returned to North America for concerts in September 2006, and returned to Europe on June 5, 2007. By November 2006, the Bigger Bang tour had been declared the highest-grossing tour of all time, earning $437 million. The North American leg brought in the third-highest receipts ever ($138.5 million), trailing their own 2005 tour ($162 million) and the
U2 tour of that same year ($138.9 million).
On
29 October and
1 November 2006, director
Martin Scorsese filmed the Rolling Stones performing at New York City's
Beacon Theater, in front of an audience that included
Bill and
Hillary Clinton, released as the 2008 film
Shine a Light; the film also features guest appearances by
Buddy Guy,
Jack White and
Christina Aguilera. On March 24, 2007, the band announced a tour of Europe called the "Bigger Bang 2007" tour.
June 12,
2007 saw the release of the band's second four-disc DVD set:
The Biggest Bang, a seven-hour document featuring their shows in
Austin, Rio de Janeiro,
Saitama,
Shanghai and
Buenos Aires, along with extras.
On
June 10,
2007, the band performed their first gig at a festival in 30 years, at the
Isle of Wight Festival, to a crowd of 65,000. On
August 26,
2007, they played their last concert of the
A Bigger Bang Tour. Mick Jagger released a compilation of his solo work called
The Very Best Of Mick Jagger (UK 57; US 77), including three unreleased songs, on
October 2,
2007.
On
September 26, 2007, it was announced The Rolling Stones had made $437 million on the A Bigger Bang Tour to list them in the latest
edition of
Guinness World Record.
On
November 12, 2007, the double compilation (UK 26) was re-released for the Christmas season. As with the case of ABKCO Records and their history of unofficial releases, the actual band had nothing to do with the re-release of the compilation.
Shine a Light (UK 2; US 11), the soundtrack to the concert film of the same name, was released in April 2008. The album's debut at number 2 in the UK charts was the highest position for a Rolling Stones concert album since
Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out! in 1970.
Keith Richards sparked rumours that a new Rolling Stones studio album may be forthcoming, saying during an interview following the premiere of
Shine a Light, "I think we might make another album. Once we get over doing promotion on this film."
The early Rolling Stones catalog (the rights to which are owned by
ABKCO) was briefly introduced to
eMusic in April 2008; it was subsequently withdrawn by ABKCO. Spokespeople for eMusic blamed a misunderstanding.
Musical evolution
The Rolling Stones are extremely notable in modern popular music for assimilating various musical genres into their recording and performance; ultimately making the styles their very own. The band's career is marked by a continual reference and reliance on musical styles like American blues, country, folk, reggae, dance; world music exemplified by the
Master Musicians of Jajouka; as well as traditional English styles that use stringed instrumentation like
harps. The band cut their musical teeth by covering early rock and roll and blues songs, and have never stopped playing live or recording cover songs.
Infusion of American Blues
Often the first instances of this come through the Stones' use of a blues-based R&B sound. Jagger and Richards' shared interest in the Americans Jimmy Reed, Muddy Waters, and Little Walter, were influential on the band's leader, Brian Jones, of whom Richards says, "He was more into T-Bone Walker and jazz-blues stuff. We'd turn him onto Chuck Berry and say, 'Look, it's all the same shit, man, and you can do it.'"
Jagger, recalling when he first heard the likes of Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley, Muddy Waters,
Fats Domino and other heavies of the American blues scene, said it "seemed the most real thing" he'd heard up to that point. Similarly, Keith Richards, describing the first time he listened to Muddy Waters, said it was the "most powerful music [hehad] ever heard...the most expressive." These strong early impressions helped fuse the music of the American Blues into the foundation of the Rolling Stones.
Early songwriting
Despite the Stones' predilection for blues and R&B numbers on their early live setlists, the first original compositions by the band reflected a more wide-ranging interest. The first Jagger/Richards single, "
Tell Me (You're Coming Back)," is called by critic
Richie Unterberger a "pop/rock ballad... When [Jaggerand Richards] began to write songs, they were usually not derived from the blues, but were often surprisingly fey, slow, Mersey-type pop numbers." "
As Tears Go By," the ballad originally written for
Marianne Faithfull, was one of the first songs written by Jagger and Richards and also one of many written by the duo for other artists. Jagger said of the song, "It's a relatively mature song considering the rest of the output at the time. And we didn't think of [recording] it, because the Rolling Stones were a butch blues group." The Stones did record a version which became a top five hit in the US.
On the early experience, Richards said, "The amazing thing is that although Mick and I thought these songs were really puerile and kindergarten-time, every one that got put out made a decent showing in the charts. That gave us extraordinary confidence to carry on, because at the beginning songwriting was something we were going to do in order to say to Andrew [LoogOldham], 'Well, at least we gave it a try...'" Jagger said, "We were very pop-orientated. We didn't sit around listening to Muddy Waters; we listened to everything. In some ways it's easy to write to order... Keith and I got into the groove of writing those kind of tunes; they were done in ten minutes. I think we thought it was a bit of a laugh, and it turned out to be something of an apprenticeship for us."
The writing of the single "The Last Time," The Stones' first major single, proved a turning point. Richards called it, "a bridge into thinking about writing for The Stones. It gave us a level of confidence; a pathway of how to do it." Built around a riff played by Brian Jones, the song was based on a traditional gospel song popularised by
The Staples Singers and would be emblematic of the heavily guitar based sound to come.
Band members
Line-ups
| 1962 |
with
Dick Taylor - bass
Ricky Fenson - bass
Bill Wyman - bass
Tony Chapman - drums
Carlo Little - drums
Mick Avory – drums
|
| January - April 1963 | Mick Jagger - lead vocals, harmonica, percussion
Brian Jones - guitars, backing vocals, harmonica, percussion
Keith Richards - guitars, backing vocals
Ian Stewart - piano, percussion
Charlie Watts - drums
Bill Wyman - bass, backing vocals
|
| May 1963 - May 1969 | Mick Jagger - lead vocals, harmonica, percussion
Brian Jones - guitars, backing vocals, harmonica, percussion, tamboura, sitar, dulcimer, keyboards, autoharp, brass, woodwinds, theremin, kazoo
Keith Richards - guitars, vocals, bass, keyboards, percussion
Charlie Watts - drums, percussion
Bill Wyman - bass, vocals, percussion, keyboards, autoharp, vibes
|
| May 1969 - December 1974 | Mick Jagger - lead vocals, harmonica, keyboards, percussion, guitar
Keith Richards - guitars, vocals, bass, keyboards
Mick Taylor - guitars, bass, synthesizer, percussion, backing vocals
Charlie Watts - drums, percussion
Bill Wyman - bass, synthesizer
|
| May 1975 - 1993 | Mick Jagger - lead vocals, harmonica, keyboards, guitar
Keith Richards - guitars, vocals, bass, keyboards, percussion
Charlie Watts - drums, percussion
Ronnie Wood - guitars, backing vocals, drums, percussion, bass
Bill Wyman - bass, synthesizer
Chuck Leavell - studio keyboards
|
| 1993 - present | Mick Jagger - lead vocals, harmonica, percussion, guitar, bass, keyboards
Keith Richards - guitars, vocals, bass, keyboards
Charlie Watts - drums, percussion
Ronnie Wood - guitars, backing vocals, bass
Chuck Leavell - keyboards, assistant musical director
Darryl Jones - bass
|
Discography
Tours
1963 - British Tour (as an opening act)
1964 - 4 British tours, 2 US tours, 1 concert on European Continent (The Netherlands)
1965 - 1 Far East tour, 4 European tours, 3 British tours, 2 North American tours
1966 - Australia and New Zealand Tour, European Tour, North American Tour, British Tour
1967 - European Tour
1969 - American Tour 1969
1970 - European Tour 1970
1971 - UK Tour 1971 (also known as the Goodbye Britain Tour)
1972 - American Tour 1972 (also known as S.T.P. Tour)
1973 - Pacific Tour 1973
1973 - European Tour 1973
1975 - Tour of the Americas '75
1976 - Tour of Europe '76
1978 - US Some Girls Tour 1978
1981 - Tattoo You American Tour 1981
1982 - European Tour 1982
1989/1990 - Steel Wheels/Urban Jungle Tour
1994/1995 - Voodoo Lounge Tour
1997/1998 - Bridges To Babylon Tour North America and Europe
1999 - No Security Tour and European Bridges To Babylon Tour
2002/2003 - Licks Tour
2005-2007 - A Bigger Bang Tour
Official videography
Officially released films featuring the Rolling Stones are listed with their original release dates. (The formats mentioned are the most recent versions officially available, not necessarily the original release formats.)
1968: One Plus One (also titled Sympathy for the Devil), directed by Jean-Luc Godard (DVD)
1969: Stones in the Park (DVD)
1970: Gimme Shelter, directed by Albert and David Maysles (DVD)
1974:, directed by Rolin Binzer
1982: Rocks Off and Let's Spend the Night Together, both directed by Hal Ashby (DVD)
1984: Video Rewind (VHS)
1989: 25x5 - The Continuing Adventures of the Rolling Stones (VHS)
1990: Stones at the Max, directed by Julien Temple (DVD)
1995: (DVD)
1996: The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus, directed by Michael Lindsay-Hogg (filmed in 1968) (DVD)
1998: Bridges To Babylon Tour '97-98 (DVD)
2003: Four Flicks (DVD)
2007: The Biggest Bang (DVD)
2008: Shine a Light, directed by Martin Scorsese, released to theaters in standard and IMAX presentations
The officially-unreleased 1972 film Cocksucker Blues is available from various sources on the Internet in various formats.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Rolling Stones'.
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