The Rolling Stones

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The Rolling Stones
V. l.  to r .: Mick Jagger, Ron Wood, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts (2018)
V. l. to r .: Mick Jagger, Ron Wood, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts (2018)
General information
origin Great Britain
Genre (s) Rock , blues rock , blues
founding 1962
Website www.rollingstones.com
Current occupation
Mick Jagger
Keith Richards
guitar
Ron Wood (since 1975)
Charlie Watts (since 1963)
former members
guitar
Brian Jones (1962-1969)

Mick Taylor (1969–1974)

Bill Wyman (1962-1993)
Ian Stewart (1962–1963, continued pianist for the band until † 1985)
Early members / longtime live and session members
bass
Dick Taylor (1962)
Drums
Tony Chapman (1962-1963)
Bobby Keys (1970–1973, 1981– † 2014)
piano
Nicky Hopkins (1967-1973)
piano
Billy Preston (1971-1977)
piano
Chuck Leavell (since 1982)
bass
Darryl Jones (since 1993)

Rolling Stones Yellow Logo pre-show August 14th 2019 Seattle.jpg
Band logo Tongue and Lips

The Rolling Stones are an English rock band formed in 1962 . They are among the longest-lived and most commercially successful groups in rock history. In 1989 they were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame . The music magazine Rolling Stone listed her as fourth of the 100 greatest musicians of all time .

Band history

Foundation (1962)

On the morning of October 17 1961, the eighteen year old met Mick Jagger and the same age Keith Richards her hometown randomly at the station Dartford ( Kent ). Jagger was on his way to the London School of Economics and waited on the platform for his train, Richards also wanted to go to the Sidcup Art College in London, about 30 kilometers away . The two teenagers had known each other from years together in elementary school, but contact had broken off over time. Since Jagger was carrying records by the American blues musicians Chuck Berry and Muddy Waters under his arm and Richards was also enthusiastic about the music, which was relatively unknown in Great Britain at the time, a conversation developed. They dated to listen to blues and rock 'n' roll records. The common interest in this music led to the resumption and intensification of their friendship. In their spare time, Jagger, his ex-classmate Dick Taylor and Bob Beckwith met to make music together under the name Little Boy Blue and the Blue Boys . Taylor also attended Sidcup Art College and happened to know Keith Richards. After Jagger for his part renewed the acquaintance with Richards and learned that he played the guitar, he and Taylor decided to involve their mutual friend. The four of them rehearsed the songs of their American role models in their parents' apartments, but there were no public appearances.

To see live performances by popular blues formations, they visited London clubs on the weekends and on April 7, 1962 at the Ealing Jazz Club for a concert by Blues Incorporated , led by Alexis Korner , the country's first electric blues combo. Since it was a completely open formation, Jagger and Richards jammed with the musicians on stage before the performance. A certain Brian Jones , who called himself Elmo Lewis at the time, attracted attention with his slide guitar playing and the bottleneck technique, which was little known in Europe at the time . In contrast to the three students from the suburbs who still lived with their parents, the bustling Jones was already on his own as the father of three illegitimate children and had caused a social scandal in his hometown of Cheltenham through his paternity . In May / June 1962 Jones decided to leave Blues Incorporated and tried hard to found his own rhythm and blues band. Looking for like-minded people he placed an advertisement in the magazine Jazz Weekly, whereupon the boogie-woogie - pianist Ian Stewart , with whom he had already played together for joining. Jones made Mick Jagger, whom he knew from joint sessions with Blues Incorporated, the offer to join the band as a singer. Jagger expressed interest as long as his friends Keith Richards and Dick Taylor were allowed to be there, which Jones agreed to. Taylor switched from guitar to electric bass , and in the back rooms of London pubs they set out to rehearse a repertoire of rhythm and blues songs.

First appearance and band name

Marquee Club, Upper Saint Martins Lane, Covent Garden, London

Blues Incorporated now played twice a week at the Marquee Club on Oxford Street in London . Due to TV recordings on the BBC , they had to cancel an agreed gig, and Alexis Korner arranged the band around Brian Jones (with Jagger, Richards and Watts) as a replacement. In the line-up of Mick Jagger (vocals), Brian Jones (guitar), Keith Richards (guitar), Dick Taylor (bass), Ian Stewart (piano) and - presumably - Tony Chapman (drums), they first appeared on July 12, 1962 called The Rollin 'Stones . As opening act for the blues singer Long John Baldry , they played five cover songs in front of about 100 spectators.

There are inconsistencies regarding the cast of the drummer. While Bill Wyman states that Mick Avory (later founding member of The Kinks ) was the drummer in the Marquee and Keith Richards even explicitly points out in his autobiography that Avory and not Tony Chapman, as often claims, did this part and the band on hers official website names Avory as the drummer, Avory himself stated several times that he had never performed with the Rolling Stones, but only rehearsed twice with them before the concert at the Marquee. The group, according to Avory, was looking for a drummer, but since he was not interested in joining the band at the time, he ultimately did not play in the marquee. In any case, Chapman was one of several drummers who played with the Stones in 1962 and Keith Richards, in retrospect, referred to him in 1971 as their first steady but poor drummer who had great difficulty keeping the pace.

There is disagreement regarding the choice of the band name The Rolling Stones (literally translated: 'The rolling stones', meaning 'The tramps / drifters'), which the musicians led after their first appearance in the marquee club . If you follow the explanations of the later bassist Bill Wyman, Brian Jones was inspired by the line “ I'm a rollin 'stone ” from the song Mannish Boy by Muddy Waters from 1956. Keith Richards and Dick Taylor, on the other hand, lead the choice back to the piece Rollin 'Stone (or Rollin' Stone Blues, as the title is also called on British records from the 1950s), which was also recorded by Muddy Waters . The allegory "rolling stone" used in both songs , which, depending on the context, can have both a positive and a negative connotation, was derived from the English proverb " A rolling stone gathers no moss " and describes a person with an unsteady way of life. At the beginning, the group called themselves ( omitting the g) "The Rollin 'Stones", according to Dick Taylor because of this spelling of the Waters title Rollin' Stone Blues .

Around the time of their first appearance Brian Jones, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards related to the mutual friend James Phelge a shabby, run-down apartment in 102 Edith Grove in Chelsea District . While Mick Jagger initially continued to attend the London School of Economics, Richards and Jones made no serious attempts to enter a middle-class life: Richards dropped out of school, Jones quit his job in a department store. The musicians devoted themselves exclusively to the development of the band and their skills on the instruments. Jones taught Jagger to play the harmonica , which he now even preferred to the guitar. Financially they were so bad that they sometimes stole food in supermarkets.

Early changes and first successes (1963/64)

The Rolling Stones during a press conference (1964)

Since Dick Taylor did not want to be committed to a role as bassist, he left the Rolling Stones in November 1962. He continued his studies, but founded the band The Pretty Things in 1963 . Before drummer Tony Chapman also left the band, he placed 26-year-old Bill Wyman as the new bass player, who officially joined the Stones on December 7, 1962. With his self-modified Vox AC30 - guitar amp he lifted the sound of the band to a new level. After Chapman left, the band courted jazz drummer Charlie Watts , who had recently left Blues Incorporated because he felt he was not good enough to play with such excellent artists. Despite his musical reservations, he managed to convince the hesitant Watts, who initially continued to work full-time as a graphic artist , to join the band. On January 12, 1963, they performed for the first time with their new drummer at the Ealing Jazz Club .

Between February and September 1963 the impresario Giorgio Gomelsky enabled the Rolling Stones a permanent engagement as a house band in the Crawdaddy Club in Richmond, which he ran . The fee was initially one pound sterling per member. The band covered songs by Chuck Berry, Muddy Waters, Jimmy Reed , Bo Diddley and Howlin 'Wolf and, with their wild stage performances, advanced to become one of the most interesting live bands on the London music scene. On April 14, 1963, the Beatles , who were already able to celebrate national chart successes, attended a gig by the Stones in the Crawdaddy Club and a friendly relationship developed between the band members. During their engagement, the Stones developed their own " black " and aggressive sound, which clearly stood out from the beat music that dominated the British charts at the time . Rhythm and lead guitar, harmonica and vocals could not be clearly separated from each other, the rhythm section around Charlie Watts and Bill Wyman formed the stable foundation of the band.

On April 28, 1963 Andrew Loog Oldham , who had worked briefly for the Beatles manager Brian Epstein , attended a performance by the Rolling Stones. He was impressed and offered them to become their manager after the concert. Jagger and Richards, for their part, were impressed by Oldham's demeanor and signed a contract. It stipulated that Oldham should take care of the band's image and he advised Ian Stewart, who was a bit staid compared to the other band members, to leave the band. His appearance does not match the image he has in mind for the Stones. Stewart stayed with the band as a tour manager, live and studio musician until his death in 1985. Oldham succeeded in portraying the Rolling Stones as the "evil" version of the Beatles: they looked grim in photos, wore longer hair and gave themselves an aura of danger and aloofness. This impression was reinforced by her loud, vulgar stage show, which was charged with sexual innuendos.

Oldham gave the Rolling Stones a recording contract with Decca Records , which had recently rejected even the Beatles, and appeared on June 7, 1963, a cover of Chuck Berry's Come On on the A side and Want to Be Loved by Willie Dixon on the B-side the band's first single. The song Come On reached number 21 on the UK Singles Chart. As the band desperately needed their own hit, they turned to Paul McCartney , who wrote I Wanna Be Your Man for the Stones . Because of their friendship, the Beatles (or John Lennon and Paul McCartney) left this composition to the Stones, which was published on November 1, 1963. The second single by the Rolling Stones reached number twelve on the charts.

Due to the incipient success, the Rolling Stones ended their engagement as a house band and embarked on their first Great Britain tour (The Rolling Stones British Tour) between September 29 and November 3, 1963 with 60 national appearances.

Not Fade Away, a composition by Norman Petty and Buddy Holly , was the next single. It was released in Great Britain on February 21, 1964 and was the first publication in the United States (March 9, 1964). With The Rolling Stones the first LP was released on April 16, 1964 , which was released in the USA under the title England's Newest Hitmakers on May 30, 1964.

June 1963 to June 1969: The years with Brian Jones

The Rolling Stones 1965

On April 20, 1964, the Rolling Stones made their first appearance on mainland Europe as part of the Rose d'Or Festival in the Casino in Montreux . In addition to Petula Clark and other musicians, they were the guests of a special broadcast of the British television series Ready Steady Go recorded there . From June 5 to 20, 1964, the Stones completed their first US tour and recorded songs for the first time in the Chess Studios in Chicago. At the start of the tour, their own composition Tell Me was released as a single in the USA . Jagger and Richards first used the pseudonym Nanker Phelge as authors .

The Stones performed in
Oslo in 1965

With the single It's All Over Now released on June 26, 1964 , the Stones first reached the top of the charts in Great Britain. Another EP was released on August 14, 1964 under the title Five by Five with the following tracks: If You Need Me, Empty Heart, 2120 South Michigan Avenue (named after the address of Chess Records in Chicago ), Confessin 'the Blues and Around and Around. There were 200,000 pre-orders for this EP in the UK.

At the beginning of their career, the Rolling Stones concentrated their musical activity mainly on stage appearances in order to increase their level of awareness. For this they made use of the repertoire of American blues musicians such as Muddy Waters, Howlin 'Wolf , Willie Dixon , Robert Johnson , John Lee Hooker and Chuck Berry. For marketing reasons Jagger and Richards were urged by Oldham to increasingly write their own songs. At first, Jagger and Richards composed almost exclusively ballads like As Tears Go By, which, sung by Marianne Faithfull , became a top 10 hit in Great Britain in mid-1964. This piece was also recorded in Italian by the Stones in 1965 under the title Con le mie lacrime and published in Italy.

The next single, the blues piece Little Red Rooster , was a cover version and was originally by Willie Dixon. It is characterized by the playing of Brian Jones on the slide guitar and Mick Jagger's harmonica.

Her first self-composed song, which topped the charts in England, was the single The Last Time (written by Jagger and Richards), released on February 26, 1965, but based on the gospel This May Be the Last Time , which was first published in 1954 by The Staple Singers was recorded and later (1957) was a big hit by the Blind Boys of Alabama . With this title, the Stones emerged with their unmistakable rhythm and underlined their ability to merge R&B and pop in an attractive way. It was followed by (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction . The Stones achieved their worldwide breakthrough (No. 1 in Great Britain and the USA). With Satisfaction they created the exemplary pop text, the unmistakable guitar riff is one of the most famous in pop history. In the same year, Get Off of My Cloud (October 22, 1965) another piece reached first place in the British and US charts.

In the Olympia in Paris the band on 17 April 1965, and on March 29, 1966, and April 11, 1967. During a stay in guested Ireland and Northern Ireland , where the Rolling Stones on 3 and 4 September 1965 Dublin and Belfast occurred , Peter Whitehead directed the documentary Charlie Is My Darling produced by Andrew Loog Oldham , which premiered in the spring of 1966. On September 11, 1965, the Rolling Stones started their first Germany - Austria tour. At the end of this tour, 22,000 fans came to Berlin's Waldbühne on September 15, 1965 . After the peaceful concert, there was a bitter battle between the music fans and the police, in which the Waldbühne was heavily devastated and numerous S-Bahn wagons were demolished.

While the Rolling Stones were primarily considered to be a better live band compared to the Beatles (and vice versa than the worse studio band), they have since been attested to have a quality similar to that of the Liverpoolers in writing and composing. The album Aftermath from 1966 only contained his own compositions.

The singles for 1966 were 19th Nervous Breakdown (released February 4, 1966), Paint It Black (released May 7, 1966), and Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby, Standing in the Shadow? (published September 23, 1966). In 1966 the band received the Silver Bravo Otto from the German youth magazine Bravo.

The Rolling Stones had been on concert tours since 1963, spent many days and even more nights in recording studios and were quite burned out by the end of 1966; Brian Jones in particular, who was in poor health, found it difficult to keep up with the pace presented.

The years from 1963 to 1967 mark the period in which the Stones established themselves as the most successful and influential British pop band alongside the Beatles with hits like (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction or Paint it Black .

Appearance in the Houtrusthallen in The Hague , 1967
Guitarist Brian Jones (1967)

On January 13, 1967, Let's Spend the Night Together was released with the reverse side Ruby Tuesday . The album Between the Buttons , released on January 20, 1967, reached number 3 in the UK and number 2 in the US charts. The European version did not contain the two pieces, but instead contained the gentle ballad Back Street Girl and Please Go Home. When the Stones had an appearance on the " Ed Sullivan Show" in 1967 , they had to change the text of the single to "Let's spend some time together" out of consideration for the moral attitude of the Americans.

There should be more serious problems later this year. In Keith Richards' country house Redlands in Sussex took place on the weekend of 11/12. February 1967 a party took place, at which among others the photographer Michael Cooper , the art dealer Robert Fraser , the antique dealer Christopher Gibbs , George Harrison and Pattie Boyd as well as Mick Jagger and Marianne Faithfull took part. A raid took place after George Harrison and Pattie Boyd left the party. At Jagger, banned amphetamines were found in England , which a doctor had prescribed to his friend Marianne Faithfull during a stay in Italy. Richards was charged with indulging in intoxicating drugs in his home. Both faced several years' imprisonment. Due to a newspaper article written by the editor of the Times William Rees-Mogg ("Who breaks a butterfly on a wheel?"), The opinion turned so that only fines were imposed. Mick Jagger spent one night in jail at the beginning of the investigation. The rock band The Who showed solidarity by recording the Stones songs The Last Time and Under My Thumb and releasing them as a single. In May 1967 Brian Jones was arrested; The police found pills, traces of marijuana and cocaine on him. He was released on bail on condition that he seek professional help.

Between the arrests and court hearings, the Stones went on another European tour (March 25 to April 17, 1967), during which they performed for the second time in Germany and Austria and for the first time as part of a tour in Switzerland. At the concert in Switzerland (Zurich), vandals smashed the furniture.

Pieces that were not on the US releases of Aftermath and Between the Buttons , three new songs ( My Girl, Ride on Baby and Sittin 'on a Fence ) and some singles were on the album Flowers , which was released on July 15 Issued in 1967.

On August 20, 1967, the Stones released We Love You . The song begins with steps and the slamming of a cell door as well as a piano intro by Nicky Hopkins , who was to be a regular part of the band's line-up until 1981. John Lennon and Paul McCartney can be heard in the background choir. It was officially announced that the song was a thank you from the Stones to their fans. With We Love You, however , they probably mocked the relevant tabloids, which delighted in the raids and arrests.

Influenced by Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band of the Beatles and following the zeitgeist, the Stones recorded a psychedelic album: Their Satanic Majesties Request (December 8, 1967).

Jumpin 'Jack Flash , released May 24, 1968, became another hit for the Stones. Beggars Banquet was released inlate 1968. The LP includes country blues , rhythm and blues, and rock .

On December 11, 1968, the " Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus " took place in London . It was a show that was recorded for television. The Stones invited John Lennon , Eric Clapton , The Who , Jethro Tull and Taj Mahal to the R & R Circus . The show was supplemented by fire-eaters and artists. The Rolling Stones decided against broadcasting the program because they were not satisfied with their own performance. It was not until 1995 that the project was released on CD and DVD.

Due to the personal problems of Jagger, Richards and especially Brian Jones, who had not been in good physical shape for a long time due to his heavy drug use, the Stones had not given a concert since 1967. The convicted Jones left the band on June 8, 1969 at the urging of Jagger and Richards. He planned to start a new band, but due to his unexpected death a few weeks later, that was not to happen.

July 1969 to 1974: The years with Mick Taylor

On July 3, 1969, Brian Jones drowned in his swimming pool under circumstances that have not yet been clarified. The official cause of death, according to the investigations at the time, is "death by accident". Since then there have been rumors of a violent death again and again; Among other things, various publications cite alleged evidence that the construction manager Frank Thorogood, employed by Brian Jones, is suspected of having killed Jones.

Mick Taylor , San Francisco 1972

The free concert in London's Hyde Park , planned two days later for the introduction of the new guitarist Mick Taylor - he came from John Mayall's Bluesbreakers - became a memorial service for Jones. In front of around 250,000 people, Jagger recited a poem by Percy Bysshe Shelley in memory of him , let hundreds of butterflies soar into the afternoon sun and sang live for the first time the Stones' new number one hit: Honky Tonk Women . The concert was organized by Blackhill Enterprises , stage manager was Sam Cutler , who announced the Stones as "the greatest rock & roll band in the world", which was retained during the subsequent 1969 US tour and the band still has a label on it today.

In November 1969, Let It Bleed was released as a follow-up album to Beggars Banquet . In the same month, after two and a half years of stage abstinence, a successful USA tour began. The album Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out! includes live recordings of this tour from New York . The impressions of this tour were clouded by the events at the Northern California Altamont Free Concert on December 6, 1969. Four people died in this last-minute reorganized concert, which attracted around 300,000 people, including Jefferson Airplane , Santana , Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young and the Flying Burrito Brothers . The 18-year-old Meredith Hunter was stabbed to death by one of the Hells Angels hired as stewards in front of the stage, allegedly in self-defense. He is said to have aimed a gun in the direction of the stage. In retrospect, this incident is seen as a turning point in the history of the predominantly peaceful love-and-peace generation . A film about the US tour was made by Albert and David Maysles and was released under the title Gimme Shelter .

At the beginning of the 1970s, the band's record deal with Decca Records expired , at the same time they parted ways with their manager Allen Klein . The legal disputes over the termination of the contract with him dragged on for many years. In fact, the Rolling Stones were financially poor at the time, as Decca owns the rights to all of the plays released up to then. Due to the high tax burden in Great Britain, the musicians relocated to the south of France and founded their own record label: Rolling Stones Records - with the now world-famous red tongue as a trademark, which, contrary to popular belief, was not designed by Andy Warhol but by John Pasche . The Stones Tongue was first released in 1971 on the inner sleeve of the critically acclaimed Sticky Fingers album. Over the years, various modifications of the original design were to be used. With their own record label, a greater independence from the big record companies was achieved and the rights to all subsequent releases were with the band itself, which quickly improved the financial situation of the five musicians, but above all of the two songwriters Jagger and Richards.

Mick Taylor, who is now firmly integrated into the band, provided new impulses. The five years in which he was a member of the band are often considered to be the musically best phase of the Rolling Stones.

In the basement of the Villa Nellcôte rented by Keith Richards in Villefranche-sur-Mer in the south of France, the recordings for the double album Exile on Main St , which was completed and published in Los Angeles the following year , began a little later . Initially disregarded by critics, this album later gained general recognition as one of the best Rolling Stones albums. The American music magazine Rolling Stone ranks it seventh on its list of the 500 best albums in music history . The reports about the creation of the album in exile, the recording conditions and rumors about life in Nellcôte contributed to the formation of the myth about the band.

The tours in 1972 ( North America ) and 1973 ( Europe , Australia , Asia ) built on the success of the double album. On the North American tour, the concert film Ladies and Gentlemen, the Rolling Stones was shot in the Texas cities of Fort Worth and Houston . It was released in theaters on March 1, 1974. Another film commissioned by Mick Jagger, Robert Frank's documentary Cocksucker Blues , was not released for the general public because it shows the touring life unvarnished with sex and drug scenes and the band feared it could jeopardize future entries to the USA. Jagger therefore went to court, with the result that, according to the judgment, the film may only be shown a few times a year in the presence of the director.

On 18 January 1973, the Stones gave the Forum in Inglewood ( California ), a benefit concert for the victims of the earthquake in 1972 in Nicaragua .

Because Keith Richards had come into conflict with the law over drugs, the French government banned the Rolling Stones from entering France during their European tour. The band then gave one of two concerts in Brussels on October 17, 1973 especially for French fans. They were able to travel to the Belgian capital using special trains rented from RTL Radio . Recordings of the two appearances made for a live album were only officially released in November 2011 under the title The Brussels Affair '73 . Previously, records of it circulated only as widespread piracy .

The album Goats Head Soup was released for the 1973 tour . The follow-up album It's Only Rock 'n Roll (1974) was the first album that Mick Jagger and Keith Richards produced under the pseudonym The Glimmer Twins . Ron Wood , member of the Faces , was involved in the idea for the title song , in whose house the first version of the piece was recorded and the acoustic guitar and backing vocals contributed to the version that was finally published.

Ron Wood was soon to play an even bigger role in the band's history, as Mick Taylor left the group in December 1974 and Wood was his successor.

1975–1982: The first years with Ron Wood

From left to right : Ron Wood and Mick Jagger and Bill Wyman , Stadium in Chicago , 1975

For the first time Ron Wood stood on stage with the Rolling Stones in 1975 during an elaborately designed US tour, where he initially supported them as a guest guitarist. The appearance of the Rolling Stones, perceived by the audience as uninspired, fueled rumors of the band's breakup.

The last of five concerts in the forum in Inglewood near Los Angeles , which took place on July 13, 1975, was released in April 2012 as a download album LA Friday (Live 1975) . The concert film LA Forum (Live in 1975) from 2014 also shows one of these five appearances.

Ron Wood's integration went well:

“With Mick (Taylor) the fronts were marked out insofar as he was responsible for the solos and I played the rhythm guitar. It's different with Ronnie, we can play to each other. "

- Keith Richards
Mick Jagger, The Hague 1976

On the album Black and Blue (1976) Wood worked for the first time as a band member.

Since the end of the sixties, the Stones stood out as a band not only because of their music, but also because of their scandals. Keith Richards in particular made a name for himself through his drug use. At that time he was living in a relationship with the photo model Anita Pallenberg , who, like him, was addicted to heroin . 1977 Richards was in Toronto ( Canada ) arrested for drug possession. In connection with the subsequent trial, in which he could face up to seven years in prison, he renounced heroin. He was sentenced to a fine and gave a free concert in Oshawa with the specially composed band New Barbarians and with the Rolling Stones in 1979 due to a condition of the court in favor of a foundation for the blind, the Canadian National Institute for the Blind (CNIB) .

In Black and Blue studio albums followed Some Girls (1978) Emotional Rescue (1980) and Tattoo You (1981) with subsequent tours. The concerts mostly only took place in stadiums.

In 1978 the Stones toured the United States from June 10th to July 26th. A concert held on July 18 at the Will Rogers Memorial Center in Fort Worth, Texas was filmed on film directed by Lynn Lenau Calmes. The film was only released in theaters in 2011 under the title Some Girls - Live In Texas '78, as well as on DVD and Blu-ray, the latter also together with the live album or soundtrack of the same name .

From left to right: Mick Jagger, Keith Richards and Ron Wood, Lexington (Kentucky) 1981

From September 25 to December 19, 1981, the Rolling Stones completed the largest and most successful tour in the music industry to date; Over 2 million visitors brought the Stones an income of around 50 million dollars. The album Still Life , released in June 1982, contains recordings from this tour. The concert event was also documented for the cinema: Hal Ashby had the tour's concerts filmed. The film was released in Germany under the title Rocks Off ; in the USA under the title Let's Spend the Night Together . Included are photographs of concerts at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe ( Arizona ) and in the Brandan Byrne Arena in the Meadowlands Sports Complex in East Rutherford ( New Jersey ).

A '38th birthday to Keith Richards on 18 December 1981 at the Coliseum in Hampton ( Virginia given) Stadium concert was broadcast live on television as one of the first pay-per-view broadcasts transmitted. The recording contains a scene in which a young male concert-goer runs across the stage during the song (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction and Mick Jagger and Keith Richards are within a few steps of getting closer. Richards interrupts his guitar playing to stop the man by striking him with the Fender Telecaster he is using . The guitar may hit the man on the top of the head as the man tries to avoid the instrument, although this is not clearly recognizable in the image recording. After a brief scuffle, Richards continues the concert with that same Telecaster and the escaping man is caught up with the stage or security staff. Keith Richards justified his intervention later by saying that he had seen the concert-goer heading towards Mick Jagger with unclear intentions, which is why he wanted to protect the singer from a possible physical attack. The 1981 current studio album Tattoo You is represented by the titles Start Me Up , Hang Fire , Little T&A , Black Limousine , Neighbors and Waiting On a Friend . In February 2012, a recording of the concert was released as a download music album Hampton Coliseum (Live 1981) . The television recording itself was first released on DVD and Blu-ray in October 2014.

Keith Richards (l.) And Ron Wood (r.), Turin 1982

In the summer of 1982, the band performed in Europe for the first time since 1976. The concerts took place in Europe for the first time, except for the concerts in Frankfurt am Main and Berlin, exclusively in football stadiums. The tour was extremely successful (the tickets for the six concerts in Germany were sold within one day, so that additional concerts took place) and also set new records in terms of audience numbers.

A sound recording of the last concert of the tour, which the rock group gave in Leeds on July 25, 1982 , was released in November 2012 as the download album Live at Leeds - Roundhay Park 1982 .

1983–1988: Differences between Mick Jagger and Keith Richards

In the 1980s there were massive tensions within the band due to differences between Keith Richards (who is considered the actual musical head of the band) and Mick Jagger, who did not want to tour with the Stones at all (neither for the LP Undercover , released in 1983, nor on the occasion of the 1986s Publication Dirty Work ), because he wanted to devote himself to his solo career. Jagger released the albums She's the Boss (February 1985) and Primitive Cool (September 1987) and also went into business for himself with subsequent concerts, during which, however, he mainly played Stones pieces, which accordingly enraged Richards. Jagger's obvious plan to become a superstar as a solo artist could not be implemented.

Probably out of spite, Keith Richards went to the recording studio to record his first solo album with some musician friends (including Steve Jordan and Ivan Neville), which was released on October 3, 1988 under the title Talk Is Cheap . With the X-Pensive Winos he went on a tour through eleven cities in the USA in November / December 1988, where he almost exclusively played his solo songs (exceptions e.g. Happy and Before They Make Me Run ).

Before the release of the album Dirty Work (March 1986), the Stones signed a new contract with CBS Records that brought them $ 25 million. Most of the songs on Dirty Work sound harsh and some are deliberately unfinished. Richards does the vocals on two songs ( Sleep Tonight and Too Rude ).
In memory of Ian Stewart, who died in 1985, a 30-second recording can be heard at the end of the second page in which he plays his typical boogie-woogie piano. The single Harlem Shuffle reached the top ten of the charts in both the UK and the USA.

1989–1993: From the end of the disputes to the exit of Bill Wyman

In January 1989 Mick Jagger and Keith Richards met with a few guitars and keyboards for a few drinks in Barbados; they put an end to their quarrels and wrote songs for a new album. For the admission of the band - including Mick Taylor, Ronnie Wood and Ian Stewart - in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on January 18, 1989, they interrupted their stay on the island.

The Stones recorded the album Steel Wheels (released August 29, 1989) in June and July . The previously released single Mixed Emotions reached the top ten of the charts in both the UK and the USA. On August 31, 1989, the Stones began touring again for the first time in seven years. They were supported by keyboardists Chuck Leavell and Matt Clifford, saxophonist Bobby Keys , Lisa Fischer , Cindi Mizelle and Bernard Fowler as background singers and the Uptown Horns. The organizers guaranteed the Stones for the US tour, which ran under the title Steel Wheels , an income of 70 million dollars.

The European tour ran in 1990 under the title Urban Jungle . There were two concerts with the Steel Wheels stage from the USA tour in Berlin-Weißensee . To make the stage to Europe, two Boeing 747s were needed. For the first time in a long time, the Stones presented their fans with several songs from the 1960s, such as Paint It Black , Ruby Tuesday and 2000 Light Years from Home . The staging of the concerts with backdrops, inflatable puppets, video walls and light effects reached new dimensions and was at least as good as the music. The live album Flashpoint , released in April 1991, included recordings from this tour as well as two new studio recordings, Sex Drive and Highwire, in which they took a critical stance on the Gulf War , which added to the list of songs that the BBC released from the radio program were banished.

After the contract with CBS Records ended, the Stones found a new sales partner in Virgin Records in 1991 (at a fee of 38.1 million euros).

In 1993 Bill Wyman left the band for personal reasons. Bassist Darryl Jones played on the following records and tours, although he is not an official member of the band.

The Stones continued their world tours during which they performed in huge stadiums. In the opinion of critics, however, the gigantomania and perfectionism of these fully organized major tours stifled any spontaneity. The extensive marketing of these tours (e.g. sponsorship by Volkswagen or American Express ) also met with criticism.

1994–1999: Voodoo Lounge and Bridges to Babylon

Love is strong announced the new LP as a single on July 4, 1994, as well as another world tour. Voodoo Lounge was released on July 11, 1994 and became one of the Stones' best-selling albums; the Voodoo Lounge tour became the most successful tour in music history to date. The stage presentation set new standards: the center of the stage structure was a chrome-flashing, fire-breathing pillar modeled on the neck and head of a cobra. During the concerts, various giant rubber dolls were inflated to full stage height, including a. the Hindu goddess Durga, a Dominican monk, the voodoo figure Baron Samedi, a goat's head, an alarm clock, Elvis Presley, a cobra, the Mother of God and a one-armed baby. Not only the musicians were shown on oversized video walls, but also computer-animated representations such as the ride of a lightly clad woman on a “stone's tongue”. For the song Honky Tonk Women , old black-and-white recordings of women were shown, who - for the standards of the time - were showing themselves quite frivolously. In early 1995 the band received the newly created Grammy Award for Best Rock Album for Voodoo Lounge .

During the Voodoo Lounge tour, the Stones also gave a few concerts in clubs like the Paradiso in Amsterdam. Recordings of these as well as new studio recordings of well-known Stones songs based on acoustic guitars are included in the album Stripped , released on November 13, 1995 .

On September 22, 1997 the Stones released Anybody Seen My Baby from the album Bridges to Babylon , which was released on September 27, 1997. The tour began on September 23, 1997 - as usual - in the USA and also took the Stones to Europe in 1998, the start of the tour being delayed because Keith Richards allegedly fell off a ladder in his library. The set was characterized by a huge, circular video screen as well as golden busts and statues. At the beginning of the show, a thunderous explosion was simulated, at the end of which Keith Richards (with lizard sunglasses and an imitation leopard coat) played his distinctive riffs to the opening song (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction .

Live recordings of the Bridges to Babylon tour were released on the album No Security on November 2, 1998. For the first time a tour followed a live album: From January 25th to April 20th, 1999 the no-security tour through North America took place.

In order to make up for the concerts that were canceled in 1998 (including some additional appearances), the Stones continued the Bridges-to-Babylon tour in Europe from May 29th to June 20th, 1999 .

2000–2003: 40th anniversary

To mark its 40th anniversary, the Rolling Stones began the Forty Licks Tour on September 3, 2002 in Boston , which in turn took them around the world. On September 30, 2002, the double CD Forty Licks was released . The album includes songs by the Stones from all periods (including the Decca period) for the first time; it offers such a comprehensive overview of the greatest hits. The album also includes four new songs.

For the first time since the early 1970s, the Rolling Stones played on the Forty Licks Tour not only in stadiums, but also in selected clubs and smaller halls such as the Kronebau of Circus Krone in Munich . Excerpts from these concerts are included on the box "Four Flicks", which was published on November 3, 2003 and contains one of the different stadium, arena and theater shows on three DVDs. The fourth DVD documents the preparations for the tour (including rehearsals by the band), and some stops on the tour are also included in Licks around the World .

Between two performances in Europe, the Stones flew to Canada at the end of July 2003 to take part in an open-air concert in Toronto, the proceeds of which were used to fight the SARS epidemic . This is documented on the “SARStock” DVD. The event was also attended AC / DC and Justin Timberlake part. Due to the SARS epidemic, the concerts planned for spring 2003 in Hong Kong were canceled ; they were made up on November 7th and 9th, 2003.

2004-2008: A Bigger Bang and Shine a Light

Stage of the “A Bigger Bang” tour at Twickenham Rugby Ground, 2006
Milan 2006, on bass guitar Darryl Jones (far right)

On May 10, 2005, the Stones announced a new world tour at a mini-concert in front of hundreds of fans and journalists on the square in front of New York's Juilliard College of Music . They presented the title Oh No, Not You Again from the upcoming new album to the public . A Bigger Bang , the group's first studio album since Bridges to Babylon (1997), was released on September 5th. At the start of the tour, the single Streets of Love was released on August 22nd . The American tour started on August 21 in Boston.

The recording of a previously announced, surprisingly announced club concert at the Phoenix Concert Theater in Toronto on August 10 was released in October 2012 as a download album entitled Light the Fuse - A Bigger Bang Tour, Toronto Live 2005 .

The Rolling Stones' biggest concert took place on February 18, 2006 in the Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro . Around 1.2 million spectators crowded the beach in the Copacabana district in front of a monstrous stage. Attending the concert was free; However, the city paid $ 750,000 for the performance, which was also funded by sponsorship money.

As part of the A Bigger Bang Tour, the Stones performed for the first time on April 8, 2006 in Shanghai (Grand Stage). In front of 8,000 spectators, at the request of the Chinese government, the group refrained from playing songs with sexual content ( Honky Tonk Women , Brown Sugar , Let's Spend the Night Together ). The start of the Bigger Bang European tour was delayed due to a head injury to Keith Richards, which he sustained when he fell from a tree in the Fiji Islands. On July 11, 2006, the European tour began in Milan; it ended on September 6, 2006 with a concert in Horsens (Denmark). On September 20, 2006 the Stones went on a tour through North America again.

The last part of their A Bigger Bang tour, which has been running since 2005, began on June 5, 2007 in Belgium and ended on August 26, 2007 in London. With this tour they made more than half a billion dollars.

The box set The Biggest Bang , comprising four DVDs, was released on June 27, 2007 , including recordings of concerts in Rio de Janeiro and Austin ( Texas ).

At the end of July 2007, new chart rules from Media Control brought their number one hit Paint It Black back to the singles charts at number 49 after 38 years . The Top 100 now also includes titles that are only available as downloads, not as maxi CD are available.

According to press reports, the Rolling Stones paid just $ 7.2 million in taxes over the past twenty years on revenues of $ 450 million - a rate of around 1.5 percent.

Premiere of Shine a Light at the Berlinale 2008

Martin Scorsese's concert film Shine a Light about the Rolling Stones opened the Berlinale on February 7, 2008 in the presence of the band and the director . It was released in theaters on April 4th. The film shows recordings that were made during two concerts by the band on October 29 and November 1, 2006 at New York's Beacon Theater . The first appearance was part of a charity event by Bill Clinton on the occasion of his sixtieth birthday. While preparing for this concert, Ahmet Ertegün , founder of the record label Atlantic Records , suffered a cerebral hemorrhage in a fall and died on December 14, 2006 after a long coma. The film is dedicated to him in the credits.

Also on April 4, 2008, the live album of the same name was released as the soundtrack for the film. It was released by the Universal Music Group , with which the Rolling Stones had signed a contract initially limited to this album. A little later, when their contract with EMI Music ended, the band made a long-term decision to use Universal Music as the record company for their future releases.

2009-2011

Extensions Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out! , Exile on Main St. and Some Girls

Over the next few years, the Rolling Stones devoted themselves to various audio and visual material from their past, which they are now bringing onto the market for the first time. They didn't get back together as a band until the end of 2011. The live album Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out! from 1970 on the occasion of the fortieth anniversary of the Rolling Stones concerts documented on it in Madison Square Garden as part of a box set that also contains five previously unpublished concert recordings.

Another reissued album, the 1972 studio album Exile on Main St , came onto the German market as an expanded edition on May 14, 2010. The album contains ten additional, until then officially unreleased songs and alternative recordings, for which archive material was used and partially revised. Plundered My Soul was released on April 16 as a vinyl single and as a download. The documentary Stones in Exile of Stephen Kijak on the production phase of the album 1971/72 celebrated on May 11 in the presence of the executive producers Mick Jagger, Keith Richards and Charlie Watts premiered in Museum of Modern Art in New York . It was also shown at the Quinzaine des Réalisateurs at the Cannes Film Festival . In June it was released on DVD in stores.

A restored and revised version of the concert film Ladies & Gentlemen: The Rolling Stones by Rollin Binzer from 1974 was shown worldwide in one-off screenings in selected cinemas in September 2010, and on September 23 at German and Austrian locations of the UCI Kinowelt . The film shows concert recordings from the tour in 1972, which is the release of Exile on Main St. joined. It was released on DVD and Blu-ray on October 8th.

In November 2011, the concert film Some Girls - Live In Texas '78 was released on DVD and Blu-ray. The film, which shows a recording of a concert on July 18, 1978 at the Will Rogers Memorial Center in Fort Worth, Texas, had previously been shown in several cinemas. The live album of the same name was distributed on CD along with the DVD or Blu-ray and contains the soundtrack. The film and live album include the songs When the Whip Comes Down , Beast of Burden , Miss You , Shattered , Respectable , Far Away Eyes and the cover song Just My Imagination (Running Away with Me) from the 1978 studio album Some Girls . The publication was in the context of a new edition of this studio album, which was released on CD on November 18th as an expanded edition with additional pieces based on unused studio recordings. With the exception of the song So Young , which had already appeared in a different version on the CD maxi single Love Is Strong for the 1994 album Voodoo Lounge , the twelve new titles are officially unreleased works. This repeats the concept that was used the previous year for the new edition of Exile on Main St.

For the Bootleg Series , whose first album The Brussels Affair '73 was also released in November 2011, see the section Bootleg Series • Restoration of Charlie Is My DarlingFrom the Vault .

Keith Richards' autobiography Life

Keith Richards 'autobiography Life , published on October 26, 2010, sparked months of media interest in the critical and sometimes crude remarks Richards' about Mick Jagger, as well as speculation about a resulting, again tense relationship between the two. In addition to the statement that Mick Jagger had become more and more unbearable in the 1980s, headlines were also made by the remark that Jagger had a small penis (in English: tiny todger  ), with which Richard's friend Anita Pallenberg "was not having fun" when, as Richards assumes, she had a brief affair with the singer at the time of the filming of Performance . In an interview excerpt published by Rolling Stone in March 2012 , Keith Richards confirmed that Mick Jagger had actually felt offended by individual sections of his book and their presence in the media, which he regrets. Richards enjoyed important conversations he and the singer had had during the previous year. "He apologized to me personally," said Jagger later and welcomed this, since otherwise the matter would have stood unspoken between them. However, Richards then distanced himself from an apology to the press, stating that his words only served to get Mick Jagger to resume work with the band. He did not withdraw any of the statements from his book.

Resumption of band activities

No actual work by the Rolling Stones, but a song produced with the participation of all band members and Bill Wymans appeared on the boogie and blues album Boogie 4 Stu by British pianist Ben Waters in April 2011, in honor of the sixth Rolling Stone, who died in 1985 ' Ian Stewart initiated. The piece, a cover of Bob Dylan's Watching the River Flow , is the first song Ron Wood, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts and Mick Jagger recorded with Bill Wyman since 1991. However, their contributions were recorded separately from one another in different locations. Other musicians worked on the title, including Ben Waters on the piano. Charlie Watts, Ron Wood, Bill Wyman and Keith Richards can be heard on other tracks on the album.

In view of the upcoming 50th anniversary of the Rolling Stones in July 2012 (based on the band's first appearance under their name in the Marquee Club ), questions about the concerts planned for the anniversary increased from 2011 in the press and among fans. Until 2012, however, the Rolling Stones had no specific plans in this regard. A first resumption of the band work took place in December 2011 when Keith Richards arranged a casual jam session with Charlie Watts and Ron Wood in London. He had speculated that Mick Jagger, whom he welcomed in the press to the jam, would also be in their studio - which he ultimately did. During this multi-day meeting, the four of them made music together live for the first time since the end of the A Bigger Bang tour in 2007. In the run-up to the session, Ron Wood had announced that he and Charlie Watts wanted to support the “healing process” in the relationship between Jagger and Richards: “Something has to be clarified. They have to agree to work together again, and Charlie and I will help with that. ”Bill Wyman, who had not played with the Rolling Stones since leaving the band in 1992, was there. Richards had already announced the jam in November and considered inviting former members Bill Wyman and Mick Taylor to participate in the anniversary plans.

2012-2020

Bootleg Series • Restoration of Charlie Is My DarlingFrom the Vault

Follow the Bootleg Series
No. title
1 The Brussels Affair '73
2 Hampton Coliseum (Live 1981)
3 LA Friday (Live 1975)
4th Live at the Tokyo Dome
5 Light the Fuse - A Bigger Bang Tour,
Toronto Live 2005
6th Live at Leeds - Roundhay Park 1982

In 2012, the Rolling Stones Bootleg Series, which began at the end of 2011, was continued in parallel to publications and events on the occasion of the band's anniversary . The Brussels Affair '73 , the first album in a series of six previously unofficial recordings of Rolling Stones concerts, has been on the recently launched US music internet service Google Music since November 2011 . The albums in this series published as downloads were available exclusively from Google Play , into which Google Music was integrated in March 2012, or before that from Android Market . Customers from countries in which Google Play is not available, the Rolling Stones Archive , a website also launched in November 2011 , offers the concerts for sale in cooperation with Google Music. The Rolling Stones announced that this website will open "the door to their archives". It is operated by Bravado, Universal Music's merchandising company . The Brussels Affair '73 contains recordings of two concerts from October 17, 1973 in the Forest National in Brussels .

Second, download album was released in February 2012, Hampton Coliseum (Live 1981) , the inclusion of a December 18, 1981 in Hampton ( Virginia given and) live televised concert (see above ).

LA Friday (Live 1975) followed in April. The album documents an appearance on July 13, 1975 at the Forum in Inglewood near Los Angeles . The album title comes from a bootleg recording of the concert that, although July 13th was a Sunday and not a Friday ("Friday"), has been erroneously distributed under this name since the 1970s. The songs If You Can't Rock Me , It's Only Rock 'n' Roll , Fingerprint File and the cover song Ain't Too Proud To Beg are pieces from the 1974 album It's Only Rock 'n Roll . Keyboardist Billy Preston sings two of his own pieces, Outta Space and That's Life , as a guest musician .

Episode four of the series came out in July. Live at the Tokyo Dome contains the recording of a concert on February 26, 1990 in the Tokyo Dome in Tokyo with Sad Sad Sad , Almost Hear You Sigh , Rock and a Hard Place , Mixed Emotions and Can't Be Seen from the 1989 album Steel Wheels .

The historically most recent concert recording in the series, Light the Fuse - A Bigger Bang Tour, Toronto Live 2005 , was available from mid-October. It is a recording of a surprise concert on August 10, 2005 at the Phoenix Concert Theater in Toronto before the start of the A Bigger Bang tour . The band played songs from the new album A Bigger Bang ( Rough Justice , Back of My Hand , Infamy and Oh No, Not You Again ) and cover versions of Otis Reddings Mr. Pitiful and Bob Marley's Get Up, Stand Up .

The sixth part and conclusion of the Bootleg Series was Live at Leeds - Roundhay Park in November 1982 . The album presents a recording from the last appearance of the 1982 European tour on July 25th in Leeds , the very last concert with the pianist Ian Stewart, who died in 1985.

The Brian Jones era was devoted to something else. A restored and expanded version of the documentary Charlie Is My Darling (directed by Peter Whitehead , 1966), directed by Mick Gochanour , premiered as Charlie Is My Darling - Ireland 1965 on September 29, 2012 at the New York Film Festival . On November 2, 2012, the work was released on DVD and Blu-ray as well as together with the soundtrack and other live recordings from 1965 as part of a box set.

Episodes of From the Vault
No. title
1 Hampton Coliseum (Live in 1981)
2 LA Forum (Live in 1975)
3 The Marquee Club (Live in 1971)

In 2014, a series of concert film releases called From the Vault began . The first part of the series was released on October 31, Hampton Coliseum (Live in 1981) with the television recording of the concert in Hampton on December 18, 1981 (see above ). This performance was already included as a music download in the Bootleg Series of 2011/12. Optionally, the music was also sold on CD or LP together with the film.

Part two of From the Vault followed a little later on November 14th. The concert film LA Forum (Live in 1975) shows one of the five appearances in the Forum in Inglewood in 1975. Officially, these are recordings from July 12th, but bootleg fans date them to July 11th. The available with the film live album corresponds to them in substance derogation of the 2012 published Bootleg Series episode LA Friday (Concert of July 13).

On June 19, 2015, The Marquee Club - Live In 1971 was the third release in the series. Also available in combination with a sound carrier, this concert film is dedicated to a short appearance by the Rolling Stones in the London Marquee Club on March 26, 1971.

In the same year two more concert films were released. First live in Leeds in 1982, the end of the European tour at the time. This open air concert from Roundhay Park in Leeds on July 25, 1982 was also to be the Stones' last live performance for the next seven years. It was not until the Steel Wheels world tour of 1989 and 1990 that they appeared again in public. One of ten shows that took place between February 14th and 27th, 1990 in the Tokyo Dome was recorded as part of this tour. This concert in Japan's capital was released on November 6, 2015 under the title Live at the Tokyo Dome and, like the Leeds performance, consists of a DVD and two CDs.

The 6th part of the From-the-Vault series was released on September 29, 2017. This is a concert that the Rolling Stones will give on May 20, 2015 at the Fonda Theater in Los Angeles as the unofficial start of their North American tour gifts. In front of an audience of 1,300, they played all ten tracks from their legendary Sticky Fingers album from 1971 live for the first time, along with six other pieces . The album contains a DVD and a CD.

50th Anniversary Publications: The Rolling Stones: 50 , Crossfire Hurricane and Grrr!

To mark the 50th anniversary of the band, The Rolling Stones: 50 , an anniversary illustrated book created with the help of the Rolling Stones, went on sale on July 9, 2012 . It contains photographs from the band's history as well as accompanying texts by the band members. For the first time in the world, the book was presented on July 6th in the Stones Fan Museum in Lüchow (Wendland) . To mark the publication of the book, a retrospective photo exhibition was held from July 13th to September 2nd at Somerset House in London . At the opening ceremony on July 12th, the 50th anniversary of the Rolling Stones' first appearance, all band members presented themselves together in public for the first time since 2008. Bill Wyman and Mick Taylor also came as guests.

In September 2012, the Rolling Stones announced as part of a major advertising campaign, the Augmented Reality set in, for November a new HITS compilation titled Grrr! on. The revealed during the campaign her album cover shows one of Walton Ford painted gorilla with out stretched Rolling Stones tongue, using the free mobile app uview as 3D - animation , could 'come to life. The band's website commented on the use of the app: "The use of one of the most modern forms of mobile technology currently available consolidates the Rolling Stones' status as one of the most innovative bands in the world, which is as relevant as ever." Under the name "GRRRegory" The gorilla received its own Twitter account, which was used to distribute news about the band from October.

Brett Morgen's documentary about the band's history entitled Crossfire Hurricane - The Rise of the Stones (based on a passage from the song Jumpin 'Jack Flash ) had its world premiere on October 18, 2012 at the London Film Festival . It was broadcast live in selected digital cinemas in Europe, including recordings of the band members from the red carpet. Bill Wyman had himself photographed on the carpet next to his former colleagues, Mick Taylor was among the guests. Jagger was the producer on the film, Richards, Watts and Wood served as executive producers, and Wyman as historical advisor. Crossfire Hurricane went on sale on DVD and Blu-ray on January 4, 2013 .

Doom and Gloom , a new song from the new hit album Grrr! , was pre-released as a download single on October 11, 2012. The compilation, released on November 9th, includes One More Shot , a second song recorded in August of that year. The first new compositions by the Rolling Stones since A Bigger Bang (2005) have been released, apart from the 2010 and 2011, partly completed titles for the extended editions of albums that have already been released. The music video for Doom and Gloom, starring Noomi Rapace , was released in mid-November.

50 & Counting Tour

In autumn 2012 the Rolling Stones announced five anniversary concerts in Great Britain and the USA for the end of the year. To warm up, they surprisingly gave a club concert at Le Trabendo in Paris on October 25th - their first concert since 2007. There they played the new song Doom and Gloom for the first time in front of an audience. This was followed on October 29th by a private concert at the Théâtre Mogador in Paris exclusively for the French investment house Carmignac Gestion and its invited guests.

Under the motto “50 & Counting ...”, the first two of the five concerts took place on November 25th and 29th in the O₂ Arena in London . This was followed by a performance at New York's Barclays Center on December 8 and two concerts at the Prudential Center in Newark (New Jersey) on December 13 and 15 . Mick Taylor and Bill Wyman were invited as guest musicians to the shows in London, who joined their former bandmates for individual songs (Taylor: Midnight Rambler , Wyman: Honky Tonk Women and It's Only Rock 'n' Roll ). While Mick Taylor also played in Newark, Bill Wyman had expected greater participation in the performances and refused to travel to the United States for only two songs per concert. Accordingly, they also rated their experience of performing with the Rolling Stones again differently:

“I was there for five minutes and then gone. I was a little disappointed about that. [...] I realized that years later you can't really go back to something from the past because it's not the same. "

- Bill Wyman

“I didn't realize how much I missed being with them until we played together again [.] […] As soon as I got on stage, I felt completely at home and in my element.
Playing with them for eleven minutes every evening gave me a whole new level of energy as a person and as an artist. "

- Mick Taylor

Jeff Beck , Mary J. Blige , Eric Clapton , Florence Welch , Gary Clark Jr. , John Mayer , Bruce Springsteen , Lady Gaga and The Black Keys were also guests on stage during the course of the events . Various local choirs were used for the piece You Can't Always Get What You Want , so the band took up this element of the original song arrangement from the studio album Let It Bleed for the first time live. For the stage design, Mark Fisher was inspired by the band logo: At the beginning of each concert, the stage background was taken up by inflatable, metallic-looking lips, while a bridge from the stage that simulated the outline of a tongue led into the audience, so that within this' Zunge 'resulted in a VIP auditorium. A similar idea Fishers had already implemented in 2005 for the appearance of the Rolling Stones at the Super Bowl . The last concert on December 15th was broadcast internationally via pay-per-view live on television and the Internet. In between their own performances, the Rolling Stones took part in the 12-12-12 benefit concert in New York on December 12th for the benefit of the victims of Hurricane Sandy . The concerts earned the Rolling Stones the prize for the best live band of 2012 at the NME Awards ceremony in February 2013.

Mick Taylor (left) and Keith Richards, Hyde Park London 2013

In May and June 2013 the group continued their 50 & Counting appearances with a tour of North America, accompanied by Mick Taylor as a regular guest guitarist. In addition to every time at Midnight Rambler , Taylor also occasionally appeared in the songs (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction , Can't You Hear Me Knocking and Sway , and at the warm-up club concert at the Echoplex in Los Angeles also with Love in Vain . Other guest musicians at individual concerts included Tom Waits , Katy Perry , Dave Grohl , Taylor Swift and Aaron Neville as well as other local choirs at the performances of You Can't Always Get What You Want .

The 50 & Counting tour ended with three open-air concerts in Great Britain in June / July 2013 , starting with the Rolling Stones' debut at the Glastonbury Festival on June 29. For the occasion, the band played a modification of their song Factory Girl from the album Beggars Banquet , which they performed under the title Glastonbury Girl with a new text tailored to the festival. This was followed by two concerts in London's Hyde Park on July 6th and 13th as part of the British Summer Time Festival - 44 years after their first and to date only concert on the premises in July 1969, Mick Jagger with one or other allusion. For Honky Tonk Women , he wore a white tunic similar to the one he had dressed in 1969, and a jacket with a butterfly motif in memory of the butterflies released at the time, while he sang Miss You and butterfly animations could be seen on the screens. This and other stage clothing for Mick Jagger's tour - including a cloak with ostrich feathers that covers the fur of the gorilla from Grrr! - Should imitate album covers - were based on designs by his partner, the designer L'Wren Scott . At all three festival appearances, Mick Taylor had his short guest appearance with the band, which was established during the tour. A download album called Hyde Park Live was released on July 22nd , which contains a compilation of live recordings of the two previously given London concerts. The concert film Sweet Summer Sun - Hyde Park Live , based on the performances, was released on DVD and Blu-Ray on November 8th, after having previously been shown in a few screenings in some cinemas worldwide, including in Germany (from October 23rd) , Austria (from October 30th) and German-speaking Switzerland (November 4th). In the package with the film, the music was also offered on CD and LP. On January 1, 2014 iTunes also released a download single for Sweet Summer Sun , which includes the previously unreleased performance of Beast of Burden at the Hyde Park concerts.

14-on-fire tour

The Rolling Stones went on tour again on February 21, 2014. As on the previous tour, Mick Taylor was a guest guitarist at the concerts entitled "14 on Fire". Following an Asian stage, during which the band performed in Abu Dhabi , Tokyo, China and Singapore , performances in Australia and New Zealand were planned. Due to the suicide of Mick Jagger's partner L'Wren Scott on March 17, 2014, the Rolling Stones postponed their concerts there, scheduled for mid-March to early April, to October and November.

Before that, they toured Europe, where 14 events took place from May to July: appearances in Oslo , Stockholm , Roskilde , Tel Aviv , Paris , Lisbon , Madrid , Rome , at the Dutch Pinkpop Festival , at the Belgian TW Classic Festival , in Vienna's Ernst-Happel- Stadion , in Zurich's Letzigrund as well as on the Waldbühne Berlin and in the ESPRIT arena in Düsseldorf.

A sore throat that Mick Jagger suffered during the made-up tour of Australia forced the band to cancel their concert at Hanging Rock for the second time, this time without replacement. Since Bobby Keys , who had been a permanent member of the touring band for decades, could not go on this stage for health reasons, the Rolling Stones hired saxophonist Karl Denson for this . Keys died a few days after the band finished their concerts in Australia as a result of his serious illness.

Zip code tour

In the period from May 24th to July 15th, the Rolling Stones embarked on a North American stadium tour. The tour name "Zip Code" plays linguistically both with the ZIP code of the United States Postal Service and with a detail from the cover picture of the album Sticky Fingers from 1971, which was published in June 2015 as an extended edition. Its original cover shows a pair of jeans with a functional zipper (eng .: 'zip').

The public announcement of the tour name raised the question of the extent to which the band would play tracks from the album on their tour and whether they would even play all of the pieces included at every concert. Mick Jagger, however, expressed concerns that the large number of slow songs on the album could be unsuitable for stadium concerts. On May 20, 2015, the band started the tour with a surprisingly scheduled club concert at the Henry Fonda Theater in (ZIP code) 90028 Hollywood ( Los Angeles ). There she actually played the complete track list of Sticky Fingers , which was not repeated during the rest of the tour. After an additional private appearance at the Belly Up Club in Solana Beach and concerts in fourteen US cities, the tour ended on July 15, 2015 at the Festival d'été de Québec in Québec, Canada . The tour counted a total of around 880,000 spectators. Mick Taylor, who had been a guest guitarist on the two previous concert tours, was no longer there.

América-Latina-Olé tour and appearances in the USA

On February 3, 2016, the Rolling Stones began their América-Latina-Olé tour through South America in Santiago de Chile . Finally, on March 25, 2016, they gave a free open-air concert in the Ciudad Deportivo sports park in Havana , Cuba. 200,000 people were admitted, over 300,000 others listened outside. This was not only the Rolling Stones' first appearance in the country, but also the first open-air concert by a British rock band there and the largest rock concert in Cuba's history to date.

In 2016, the documentary The Rolling Stones Olé, Olé, Olé !: A Trip Across Latin America was created about this tour . Directed by Paul Dugdale .

On October 7 and 14, 2016, the band took part in the Desert Trip Festival , where the Rolling Stones as well as Paul McCartney , The Who , Bob Dylan , Neil Young and Roger Waters performed over two weekends . After the festival, two more concerts were scheduled in Las Vegas, the first of which was canceled because of Jagger's larynx .

Blue & Lonesome

On December 2, 2016, the band released their 23rd studio album, Blue & Lonesome , which for the first time exclusively contains cover versions . The songs are all decades old and some of them are blues standards. In addition to Mick Jagger , who also plays the blues harp on numerous pieces , Keith Richards , Ronnie Wood and Charlie Watts , Eric Clapton , Darryl Jones , Matt Clifford, Chuck Leavell and Jim Keltner were also involved in the creation. It's the first album since Dirty Work (1986) that Jagger didn't play guitar on, and the first since It's Only Rock 'n Roll (1974) that Richards didn't add lead vocals. The album received a Grammy Award for the best traditional blues album of the year.

No Filter Tour 2017

On September 9, 2017, the band started their No Filter Tour with a concert in Hamburg's Stadtpark in front of 82,000 spectators, followed by others in Germany, Central and Western Europe.

Living in a ghost town

In April 2020, the Rolling Stones released the single Living in a Ghost Town (digital only) during the COVID-19 pandemic . They had recorded the song right before the exit restrictions, but it was already written in 2019. After the digital release, the song was also released on CD and vinyl on June 26th and it went straight to number 1 in the German charts (previously the song only had reached place 22 through downloads). This is the Stones 'first number one hit in Germany since 1968 with the song Jumpin' Jack Flash .

Release of previously unknown songs

On July 22, 2020, it was reported that the Rolling Stones recorded a song called Scarlet in 1974 , which has only just been released and for which there has not yet been a bootleg . In October 1974 the Stones wanted to record a follow-up to their album Goats Head Soup, which was released the previous year, at the Island Studio in London. At a jam session was Jimmy Page , guitarist of Led Zeppelin , invited to the studio. Likewise, there were Ric Grech of Traffic , Bruce Rowland of Fairport Convention and Ian Stewart . The result was the reggae-heavy track Scarlet , named after Page's daughter. This is one of three previously unreleased tracks that are included on the deluxe edition of Goats Head Soup , which is due to be released in September 2020. Scarlet was featured in a music video on You Tube , starring Paul Mescal dancing through Claridge’s Hotel in London . In addition to Scarlet , the two previously unreleased songs Criss Cross and All The Rage will appear on the new Goats Head Soup release . A music video was also produced for Criss Cross , which was shown on You Tube.

Tours

overview

year Beginning The End Region / extent Surname
1963 September 29th November 3rd Great Britain
1964 6th January January 27th England
February 8 7th March Great Britain
June 5th 20th June United States
5th September October 11th Great Britain
October 24th 15th of November United States
1965 6th January January 8th Ireland
22nd of January February 16 Australia, Asia
5. March March 18th England
26th of March 3rd of April Scandinavia
April 23 May 29th North America
15th June 18th of June Scotland
June 24th June 29th Scandinavia
September 3 September 4th Ireland
September 11 17th of September Germany, Austria
September 24th October 17th Great Britain
October 29th 6th of December North America
1966 February 18 2nd March Australia
26th of March April 5th Europe
June 24th 29th of July North America
September 23rd 9th October Great Britain
1967 25th March 17th April Europe
1969 November 7th 6th of December United States
1970 August 30th 9th October Europe
1971 4th of March March 13th Great Britain Farewell tour
1972 3rd of June July 26th North America
1973 21th January 27th of February Australia, Asia Winter tour
September 1 October 19th Europe
1975 June 1st 8th August North America Tour of the Americas
1976 April 28 23rd June Europe Tour of Europe '76
1978 June 10th July 26, 1978 North America
1981 25th of September 19. December United States US tour 1981
1982 May 26 July 25th Europe European Tour 1982
1989 August 31 20th of December North America The Steel Wheels Tour
1990 14th of February 27th of February Japan
May 18 August 25 Europe The Urban Jungle Tour
1994 August 1st December 18th North America The Voodoo Lounge Tour
1995 January 14th 17th April world
3rd of June August 30th Europe
1997 September 23rd 12th of December North America (1st stage) Bridges To Babylon Tour
1998 January 5th February 15th North America (2nd stage)
March 12th April 13th Japan, South America
17th April 26th of April North America (3rd stage)
June 13th September 19th Europe
1999 January 25th 20th of April America No security tour
May 29th 20th June Europe (continued) Bridges To Babylon Tour
2002 September 3 30th of November USA (1st stage) Licks tour
2003 January 8th February 8 USA (2nd stage)
February 18 7th of April Australia, Asia
June 4th October 2nd Europe
2005 August 21 3rd of December America (1st stage) A Bigger Bang Tour
2006 10. January the 14th of March America (2nd stage)
March 22 April 18 Australia, Asia
July 11th September 3 Europe (1st stage)
September 20th 25. November America (3rd stage)
2007 June 5th 26th of August Europe (2nd stage)
2012 25. November 15th December London and USA (3-City Concert Series) 50 & Counting ... Tour
2013 May 3rd June 24th North America
2014 21st of February March, 15 Asia 14 on Fire Tour
May 26 3rd of July Europe
October 25 22nd of November Australia
2015 May 24th 15th of July North America Zip code tour
2016 3 February 25th March South America América Latina Olé Tour
October 7th October 22nd United States
2017 the 9th of September October 25 Europe No filter tour

Color coding of the respective band members
Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Brian Jones, Charlie Watts, Bill Wyman
Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Mick Taylor, Charlie Watts, Bill Wyman
Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Ron Wood, Charlie Watts, Bill Wyman
Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Ron Wood, Charlie Watts

Note : Ron Wood was already fully involved in the 1975 concerts, but officially he was still a guest guitarist. For the sake of clarity, he is marked here as a band member for 1975.

Tour appearances in Germany, Austria and German-speaking Switzerland

year Appearances in chronological order
1965 September 11: Münster ( Halle Münsterland ); September 12: Essen ( Grugahalle ); September 13: Hamburg ( Ernst-Merck-Halle ); September 14: Munich (Circus Krone, Kronebau ); September 15: West Berlin ( Waldbühne ); September 17th: Vienna ( City Hall )
1967 March 29: Bremen ( city ​​hall ); March 30: Cologne ( sports hall ); March 31: Dortmund ( Westfalenhalle ); April 1: Hamburg (Ernst-Merck-Halle); April 2nd: Vienna (City Hall); April 14: Zurich ( Hallenstadion )
1970 September 14: Hamburg (Ernst-Merck-Halle); September 16: West Berlin ( Deutschlandhalle ); September 18: Cologne (sports hall); September 20: Stuttgart ( Höhenpark Killesberg, Hall 6 ); September 27: Vienna (City Hall); October 5th and 6th: Frankfurt a. M. ( festival hall ); October 7th: Essen (Grugahalle)
1973 September 1st: Vienna (City Hall); September 3: Mannheim ( ice stadium ); September 4th: Cologne (sports hall); September 23: Innsbruck ( Olympiahalle ); 25. u. September 26: Bern ( Festhalle ); September 28: Munich ( Olympiahalle ); September 30: Frankfurt a. M. (festival hall); October 2: Hamburg (Ernst-Merck-Halle); 9., 10. u. October 11th: Essen (Grugahalle); October 19: West Berlin (Deutschlandhalle)
1976 28. u. April 29: Frankfurt a. M. (festival hall); April 30: Münster (Münsterlandhalle); May 2nd: Kiel ( Ostseehalle ); May 3: West Berlin (Deutschlandhalle); May 4th: Bremen (town hall); June 1st: Dortmund (Westfalenhalle); June 2nd: Cologne (sports hall); June 15: Zurich (Hallenstadion); 16. u. June 17th: Munich (Olympiahalle); June 19: Stuttgart ( Neckarstadion ); June 23: Vienna (City Hall)
1982 6. u. June 7th: Hanover ( Lower Saxony Stadium ); June 8: West Berlin (Waldbühne); 10. u. June 11th: Munich ( Olympiastadion ); 29. u. June 30th, July 1st: Frankfurt a. M. (festival hall); July 3: Vienna ( Prater Stadium ); 4. u. July 5th: Cologne ( Müngersdorfer Stadion ); July 15: Basel ( St. Jakob Stadium )
1990 23. u. May 24th: Hanover (Lower Saxony Stadium); 26. u. May 27: Frankfurt a. M. ( Waldstadion ); 30. u. May 31: Cologne (Müngersdorfer Stadion); 2. u. June 3: Munich (Olympiastadion); June 6: West Berlin ( Olympiastadion ); June 27: Basel ( St. Jakob football stadium ); July 31: Vienna (Prater Stadium); 13. u. August 14: East Berlin ( Weißensee Radrennbahn ); August 16: Gelsenkirchen ( Parkstadion )
1995 June 20: Cologne (Müngersdorfer Stadion); June 22nd: Hanover (Lower Saxony Stadium); 29. u. July 30: Basel (St. Jakob football stadium); August 1st: Zeltweg ( Austria Ring ); August 3: Munich (Olympiastadion); August 12th: Schüttorf ( festival area ); August 15: Leipzig ( festival meadow ); August 17th: Berlin (Olympiastadion); August 19: Hockenheim ( Hockenheimring ); August 22nd: Mannheim ( Maimarkt area ); August 25: Wolfsburg ( VW factory premises )
1998 June 13: Nuremberg ( Zeppelin Field ); June 24th: Düsseldorf ( Rheinstadion ); June 26th: Hanover ( Expo exhibition grounds ); July 9: Frauenfeld ( Grosse Allmend horse racing track ); July 11: Wiener Neustadt (airfield); July 13: Munich (Olympiastadion); July 27th: Gelsenkirchen (Parkstadion); August 26th: Berlin (Olympic Stadium); August 28: Leipzig (Festwiese); August 30th: Hamburg ( trotting track at Volkspark Bahrenfeld ); September 2nd: Bremen ( Weserstadion ); September 10: Berlin (Waldbühne); September 12: Mannheim (Maimarkt area)
1999 May 29: Stuttgart ( Cannstatter Wasen ); May 31: Imst ( Brennbichl festival area ); June 20: Cologne (Müngersdorfer Stadion)
2003 June 4th: Munich (Olympiahalle); June 6th: Munich (Olympic Stadium); June 8th: Munich (Circus Krone, Kronebau); June 13th: Oberhausen ( O-Vision Future Park ); June 15: Berlin (Olympiastadion); June 18: Vienna ( Ernst Happel Stadium ); June 20: Leipzig (Festwiese); June 22nd: Hockenheim (Hockenheimring); July 24th: Hamburg ( AOL-Arena ); August 8th: Hanover ( EXPO area Messe Ost ); October 2: Zurich ( Letzigrund Stadium )
2006 July 14: Vienna (Ernst Happel Stadium); July 16: Munich (Olympiastadion); July 19: Hanover ( AWD-Arena ); July 21: Berlin (Olympiastadion); July 23: Cologne ( Rheinenergiestadion ); August 3: Stuttgart ( Gottlieb Daimler Stadium ); August 5th: Dübendorf ( military airfield )
2007 June 13: Frankfurt a. M. ( Commerzbank-Arena ); August 13: Düsseldorf ( LTU Arena ); August 15: Hamburg ( HSH Nordbank Arena )
2014 June 1: Zurich ( Letzigrund ); June 10: Berlin (Waldbühne); June 16: Vienna (Ernst Happel Stadium); June 19: Düsseldorf ( ESPRIT arena )
2017 September 9: Hamburg ( Stadtpark ); September 12: Munich ( Olympic Stadium ); September 16: Spielberg ( Red Bull Ring ); September 20: Zurich ( Letzigrund ); October 9: Düsseldorf ( ESPRIT arena )
2018 June 22nd: Berlin (Olympiastadion); June 30th: Stuttgart (Mercedes-Benz-Arena)

Discography

To date there has been no complete edition of the Rolling Stones' musical work, for example in the form of a multiple CD box that also contains unpublished pieces. With the release of Forty Licks in 2002, the most famous songs from both eras (1964 to 1970 and after 1971 to today) are included for the first time. The album Rarities , released in 2005, did not contain the rarities fans expected.

Most live albums are not completely recorded live. Many songs were subsequently changed through overdubs and arrangements in such a way that in some cases they only reproduced the concert situation to a limited extent.

Until the release of Their Satanic Majesties Request , the Rolling Stones record company had produced different versions of the records for the UK and US markets. The album Around & Around , which was released in September 1964, was produced exclusively for the German market . Due to this division into different markets, the British (UK) and American (US) sound carriers up to the album Between the Buttons differ in terms of the titles they contain.

Studio albums:

literature

  • Steve Appleford: Rip this joint. The Rolling Stones. The story for every song . Rockbuch Verlag Buhmann & Haeseler, Schlüchtern 2002, ISBN 3-927638-11-0 .
  • Olaf Boehme / Gerd Coordes: Licks World Tour 2002/03 . Books On Demand, Norderstedt 2005, ISBN 3-8334-2857-0 .
  • Olaf Boehme / Gerd Coordes: On Stage 2005-2007 . Edition Olaf Boehme, Bautzen 2008, ISBN 978-3-00-023711-9 .
  • Olaf Boehme / Gerd Coordes: Shine A Light . Edition Olaf Boehme, Bautzen 2009, ISBN 978-3-00-027259-2 .
  • Stanley Booth: The Rolling Stones - The Dance with the Devil . Hannibal Verlag, Vienna 1998, ISBN 978-3-85445-149-5 . (Original edition: The True Adventures Of The Rolling Stones )
  • Roy Carr: The Rolling Stones. An illustrated documentation . Melzer, Dreieich 1978, ISBN 3-8201-0023-7 .
  • Gerd Coordes / Wolfgang Thomas: The Rolling Stones over Germany . Thomas, Siegen 1998, ISBN 3-00-002394-1 .
  • Sam Cutler : Live there - My life with the Rolling Stones, Grateful Dead and other crazy characters. Hannibal Verlag, Höfen 2012, ISBN 978-3-85445-399-4 (Original edition: You Can't Always Get What You Want - My Life With The Rolling Stones, The Grateful Dead And Other Wonderful Reprobates. )
  • Jim Derogatis with Greg Kot: Beatles against Rolling Stones - The great Rock'n'Roll rivals . Hannibal Verlag, Höfen 2011, ISBN 978-3-85445-347-5 (Original edition: Beatles VS. The Rolling Stones )
  • Georg Diez: Opponent: Beatles - Rolling Stones . Fischer, Frankfurt 2002, ISBN 3-596-14469-8 .
  • Bill German: Under Their Thumb. How a Nice Boy from Brooklyn Got Mixed Up with The Rolling Stones (and Lived to Tell About It) . Villard Books, New York 2009, ISBN 978-1-4000-6622-3 .
  • Geoffrey Giuliano: Not Fade Away: "Rolling Stones" Collection . Paper Tiger, 1995, ISBN 1-85028-367-2 .
  • Reuel Golden: Rolling Stones . Taschen , Cologne 2014, ISBN 978-3-8365-5218-9 .
  • Ernst Hofacker : Rolling Stones: Confessin 'the Blues - The Music of the Rolling Stones 1964–2008. Bosworth Music GmbH, Berlin 2008, ISBN 978-3-86543-354-1 .
  • Ernst Hofacker: Rolling Stones. 100 pages. Philipp Reclam jun., Ditzingen 2018, ISBN 978-3-15-020523-5 .
  • Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts, Ronnie Wood and others a .: According to The Rolling Stones - Das Buch , Ullstein, Munich 2003, ISBN 3-550-07573-1 .
  • Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts, Ron Wood: The Rolling Stones: 50 . Translated from the English by Bernd Gockel. Prestel, Munich 2012, ISBN 978-3-7913-4717-2 .
  • Christoph Maus: Rolling Stones Worldwide I. Anthology Of Singles & EP Releases 1963-1971 . Maus of Music, Hamburg 2006, ISBN 978-3-9809137-3-7 .
  • Christoph Maus: Rolling Stones Worldwide II. Anthology Of Singles & EP Releases 1971-2008 . Maus of Music, Hamburg 2008, ISBN 978-3-9809137-4-4 .
  • Klaus Miethke, Rainer Peschen: FAQ compendium STONES . ComRock Publishing, 2005.
  • Barry Miles: The Rolling Stones - The Complete Chronicle 1960 to Today . Heel-Verlag, Königswinter 1995, ISBN 3-89365-459-3 .
  • Rainer Peschen: Still A Live, German Stones-Fanzine . ComRock-Publishing, 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2006.
  • Hans-Ulrich Prost / Gerd Röckl: The Rolling Stones . Bastei-Lübbe-Verlag, Bergisch Gladbach 1978, ISBN 3-404-00929-0 .
  • Keith Richards: Life . Heyne, Munich 2010, ISBN 978-3-453-16303-4 .
  • Tony Sanchez: The Rolling Stones - their life, their music, their affairs . Moewig Verlag, Munich 1980, ISBN 3-8118-6604-4 .
  • The Rolling Stones. Songbook. 155 songs [1963–1977] with sheet music. German by Teja Schwaner, Jörg Fauser and Carl Weissner . With 75 alternative translations by Helmut Salzinger . Two thousand and one, Frankfurt am Main 1977.
    • Helmut Salzingr: The Rolling Stones half: - German. In: The Rolling Stones. Songbook. 1977, pp. 924-953.
  • Frank Steffan : Rolling Stones - The Documentation , Edition Steffan, ISBN 978-3-923838-18-9 .
  • Frank Steffan: Rolling Stones - Myth, Legend, Phenomenon , Edition Steffan, ISBN 978-3-923838-19-6 .
  • Paul Trynka: Sympathy For The Devil - The Birth of the Rolling Stones and the Death of Brian Jones . Hannibal Verlag, Höfen 2015, ISBN 978-3-85445-483-0 . (Original edition: Sympathy For The Devil - The Birth Of The Rolling Stones And The Death Of Brian Jones )
  • Willi Winkler : Mick Jagger and the Rolling Stones . Rowohlt, Reinbek 2002, ISBN 3-498-07348-6 .
  • Ronnie Wood: The Autobiography . Heyne, Munich 2007, ISBN 978-3-453-15506-0 .
  • Bill Wyman and Ray Coleman: Stone alone . Goldmann, Munich 1992, ISBN 3-442-41390-7 .
  • Bill Wyman: Bill Wyman's Rolling Stones story . Dorling Kindersley , Starnberg 2002, ISBN 3-8310-0391-2 .
  • Author collective: The Rolling Stones. Music and business . Edition Peters, Leipzig (GDR) 1986, license number 415-330A-17/86 LVS 8384 EP 10270.
  • Photo book: Rolling Stones - 40 × 20 . Heel-Verlag, Königswinter 2002, ISBN 3-89880-172-1 .

Web links

Commons : The Rolling Stones  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Kurt Kister : With the fighting power of the cockroach. sueddeutsche.de, December 18, 2003, accessed on August 3, 2012 .
  2. Master of added value. wiwo.de, July 12, 2012, accessed on August 3, 2012 .
  3. 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time. Rolling Stone , December 18, 2015, accessed August 8, 2017 .
  4. Keith Richards: Life . Phoenix, London 2011. pp. 86-89.
  5. ^ A b c d Robert Greenfield: Keith Richard: The Rolling Stone Interview. In: rollingstone.com. P. 1 , accessed on February 3, 2013 (English, interview from Rolling Stone of August 19, 1971).
  6. Keith Richards: Life . Phoenix, London 2011. p. 96.
  7. a b c d Paul Cashmere: Dick Taylor Talks Rolling Stones To Pretty Things. In: noise11.com. The Noise Network, September 29, 2012, accessed February 11, 2013 .
  8. Keith Richards: Life . Phoenix, London 2011. p. 100.
  9. a b c d e Robert Greenfield: Keith Richard: The Rolling Stone Interview. In: rollingstone.com. P. 2 , accessed on January 4, 2013 (English, interview from Rolling Stone of August 19, 1971).
  10. The Rolling Stones: July 12, 1962. (No longer available online.) Official Website, June 19, 2015, archived from the original on June 19, 2015 ; Retrieved June 19, 2015 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.rollingstones.com
  11. ^ Eddy Bonte: Interview with "Kink" Mick Avory. The Story that Bill Wyman Got Wrong: Mick Avory's true involvement in the Rolling Stones Saga. Series of articles Footnotes to the Rolling Stones Story . (No longer available online.) In: eddybonte.be. August 15, 2007, archived from the original on June 16, 2014 ; accessed on January 1, 2013 (English, interview). Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. See also: Mick Avory of The Kinks. (No longer available online.) In: retrosellers.com. May 2001, archived from the original on March 4, 2016 ; accessed on January 2, 2013 (English, interview). Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.eddybonte.be  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.retrosellers.com
  12. Bill Wyman's Rolling Stones Story. P. 37.
  13. Keith Richards: Life . Phoenix, London 2011. p. 108.
  14. See Muddy Waters - Rollin 'Stone Blues / Walking Blues. [r6291846]. In: Discogs . Retrieved March 12, 2015 . versus Muddy Waters - Rollin 'Stone / Walking Blues. [r4013959]. In: Discogs. Retrieved March 12, 2015 . - See Muddy Waters - The Best Of Muddy Waters. [r5151424]. In: Discogs. Retrieved March 12, 2015 . versus Muddy Waters - The Best Of Muddy Waters. [r1911721]. In: Discogs. Retrieved March 12, 2015 . - See Also: Finding the Track "Rollin 'Stone Blues" on Muddy Waters Releases . In: Discogs, accessed March 12, 2015, English.
  15. ^ A b Richie Unterberger: Dick Taylor. In: richieunterberger.com. Retrieved January 2, 2013 (English, transcript of an interview from 1999).
  16. Video Diary. The Day I Joined The Stones. (No longer available online.) In: billwyman.com. November 2, 2009, archived from the original on December 13, 2012 ; accessed on January 3, 2013 (English, video). Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.billwyman.com
  17. Richards p. 114
  18. NikCohn: AWopBopaLooBop ALopBamBoom - Nik Cohn's Pop History . German first edition, Rowohlt Taschenbuch Verlag, Reinbek near Hamburg 1971. ISBN 3-499-11542-5 . In: Chapter The Rolling Stones, p. 122 ff.
  19. ^ Wieland Harms: The Unplugged Guitar Book. 20 of the most beautiful songs for acoustic guitar. Gerig Music, ISBN 3-87252-249-3 , p. 24.
  20. Nico Zentgraf: 1964. Entry 640420A . In: The Complete Works of the Rolling Stones. Retrieved January 13, 2013 .
  21. Ready Steady Go! Season 1, episode 39: Golden Rose TV-festival, Montreux, Switzerland . Rediffusion ITV, April 24, 1964.
  22. ^ Thom Duffy: Claude Nobs Talks Montreux Jazz Festival, His Long Career in 1996 Billboard Interview. In: billboard.biz. January 10, 2013, accessed on January 13, 2013 (English, interview with Claude Nobs ). - Urs Maurer: From the Rolling to the Stones. In: swissinfo.ch . Swiss Radio and Television Company , October 2, 2003, accessed on January 13, 2013 . - Rolling Stones. (No longer available online.) In: montreuxmusic.com. Archived from the original on March 27, 2014 ; Retrieved July 11, 2013 (English, website on Montreux's affinity for music; report by a concert-goer named Cathy; [2009/2010]). Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / montreuxmusic.com
  23. Chicago Landmarks: Chess Records Office and Studio ( Memento of the original from September 3, 2009 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.ci.chi.il.us
  24. Con le mie lacrime at Discogs (English)
  25. ^ Hayes & Laughton, Gospel Records 1943–1969. P. 706 and p. 228.
  26. ^ The Encyclopedia of Popular Music, Fourth Edition published 2006 by Oxford University Press, Oxford, New York, Volume 7, p. 116
  27. Spiegel online - Legendary Stones concert "The battle raged for four hours"
  28. ^ The Rolling Stones - Confessin 'the Blues, Das Gesamtwerk 1963–2013, Ernst Hofacker, 4th revised edition 2013, Bosworth Edition, bosworth.de, Berlin, p. 12 f.
  29. English original: "death by misadventure"; see: Police to review death of Rolling Stones' Brian Jones. In: telegraph.co.uk. August 30, 2009, accessed February 5, 2013 .
  30. These publications that suspect Thorogood as a perpetrator include: Geoffrey Giuliano: Paint It Black. The Murder of Brian Jones . Virgin, London 1994, ISBN 1-85227-424-7 . - Terry Rawlings: Who Killed Christopher Robin? The Truth behind the Murder of Brian Jones . Boxtree, London 1994. ISBN 0-7522-0989-2 . - Anna Wohlin with Christine Lindsjöö: The Murder of Brian Jones. The Secret Story of My Love Affair with the Murdered Rolling Stone . Blake, London 1999, ISBN 1-85782-316-8 . - Scott Jones: Has the riddle of Rolling Stone Brian Jones's death been solved at last? . In: dailymail.co.uk . November 29, 2008. The idea is also pursued in the British film Stoned by Stephen Woolley (2005), which is based on Giuliano's book.
  31. Robyn Doreian: You Can't Always Get What You Want - Sam Cutler ( Memento of the original from July 9, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (PDF; 1.3 MB). The Sun-Herald, October 19, 2008 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.samcutler.com
  32. Rolling Stones Biography ( Memento of the original from September 24, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. on Swanseasound.co.uk @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.swanseasound.co.uk
  33. John Pasche Design: Homepage ( Memento of the original dated February 11, 2008 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.johnpasche.com
  34. Joe Levy (Ed.): Rolling Stone. The 500 best albums of all time . Translated from the English by Karin Hofmann. Wiesbaden: White Star Verlag 2008, p. 22 f. See also online: 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. 7. The Rolling Stones, 'Exile on Main Street'. In: rollingstone.com. Retrieved January 27, 2013 .
  35. Stephen Gaunson: Cocksucker Blues: The Rolling Stones and Some Notes on Robert Frank . In: Senses of Cinema . October 11, 2010 (issue 56), accessed on August 29, 2012 (English, Australian online journal on film; the article makes contradicting statements (once or five times) regarding the number of annual screenings of the film. Both statements also come in other sources.).
  36. a b LA Friday '75. In: Rolling Stones Archive. Retrieved April 3, 2012 .
  37. a b Title according to album cover on stonesarchive.com , accessed April 4, 2012.
  38. a b Tim Quirk: Rolling Stones LA Friday (Live, 1975). In: Magnifier. Google, April 3, 2012, accessed April 3, 2012 (Google's music blog).
  39. The Rolling Stones: In my own words . Palmyra Publishing House.
  40. a b Lynn Lenau Calmes [director]: Some Girls. Life in Texas '78 . Eagle Rock Entertainment 2011, DVD. Eagle Vision EDE499164, EAN 5034504991644 (also as Blu-ray, Eagle Vision EDE051264, EAN 5051300512644, both distributed by Edel Distribution).
  41. a b The Rolling Stones [performers], Lynn Lenau Calmes [director]: Some Girls. Life in Texas '78 . Eagle Rock Entertainment 2011, DVD and CD. Eagle Vision EDE490654, EAN 5034504906549 (also as Blu-ray and CD, Eagle Vision EDE051284, EAN 5051300512842, both distributed by Edel Distribution).
  42. a b 1981: Hampton Coliseum. In: Rolling Stones Archive. Retrieved April 30, 2012 (English).
  43. a b c Tim Quirk: Rolling Stones Bootleg Series: Hampton, '81. In: Magnifier. Google, February 7, 2012, accessed March 5, 2012 .
  44. The Rolling Stones - (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction - Hampton Live 1981 OFFICIAL. In: YouTube. The Rolling Stones (aka TheRollingStones / Rolling Stones Official), February 9, 2012, accessed March 5, 2012 (video showing the performance of (I can't get no) Satisfaction , see the incident from 1:11 minutes).
  45. Magnifier: The Rolling Stones Pt. 2. In: YouTube. Google Music (aka googlemusic), January 27, 2012, accessed March 5, 2012 (English, video from Google Music's music blog Magnifier for the Hampton Coliseum album (Live 1981) , see Keith Richards' comments on the incident in the minutes 0: 57-2: 27).
  46. a b Title according to album cover on stonesarchive.com , accessed on March 10, 2012.
  47. a b The Rolling Stones - From The Vault - Hampton Coliseum - Live In 1981 - new at Eagle Vision! In: germusica.com. October 7, 2014, accessed November 11, 2014 .
  48. ^ A b Nico Zentgraf: 1982. In: The Complete Works of The Rolling Stones. 1962 - 2012. Retrieved November 28, 2012 .
  49. a b c Tim Quirk: Rolling Stones Bootleg Series: Leeds '82. In: Magnifier. Google, November 13, 2012, accessed November 13, 2012 .
  50. ^ Wieland Harms: The Unplugged Guitar Book. 20 of the most beautiful songs for acoustic guitar. Gerig Music, ISBN 3-87252-249-3 , p. 24.
  51. IORR The Rolling Stones Fan Club - Inflatable Giant Dolls on VL Stage, accessed June 23, 2015 .
  52. a b Light the Fuse. In: Rolling Stones Archive. Retrieved October 27, 2012 .
  53. a b Nico Zentgraf: 2005. Entry 005810A . In: The Complete Works of the Rolling Stones. Retrieved October 27, 2012 .
  54. a b Title according to album cover on stonesarchive.com , accessed October 23, 2012.
  55. a b Tim Quirk: Rolling Stones: "We're A Club Band". In: Magnifier. Googe, October 16, 2012, accessed October 23, 2012 .
  56. ^ Spiegel Online: Rolling Stones - The 558 Million Dollar Tour .
  57. sueddeutsche.de: The tax haven of the Rolling Stones - sympathy for Holland .
  58. www.nytimes.com: Ahmet Ertegun, Music Executive, Dies at 83 . Accessed January 1, 2011.
  59. ↑ Partner swap. Rolling Stones change record label. In: Focus Online. July 26, 2008. Retrieved July 12, 2012 . See also: Ulrich Friese: Rolling Stones argue with EMI. In: faz.net. January 18, 2008, accessed July 12, 2012 .
  60. ^ The Rolling Stones: Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out! The Rolling Stones in concert . 40th Anniversary Deluxe Box Set, 3 CDs, 1 DVD, 1 book and other material. Universal Music 2009. ABKCO 00187 7102392, EAN 0018771023920.
  61. Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out! The Rolling Stones In Concert. ABKCO and Universal Music celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Rolling Stones Ya-Ya album with a Deluxe and Super Deluxe Box Set. (PDF) In: medienagentur-hh.de. Stefan Michel, medienAgentur, accessed on June 25, 2012 (PDF, 148 KB; press release from medienAgentur with the announcement of the box set).
  62. ^ The Rolling Stones: Exile on Main Street . Deluxe Edition, 2 CDs. Universal Music 2010. Polydor 273 429-5, EAN 0602527342955.
  63. ^ Matthias Reichel: The Rolling Stones. Exile On Main Street (Deluxe Edition). In: cdstarts.de. Retrieved March 30, 2012 .
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  65. ^ The Rolling Stones: Plundered My Soul . Universal Music 2010, 7 ″ vinyl. Polydor 273 547-7, EAN 602527354774.
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  69. Stephen Kijak [Director]: Stones in Exile . Eagle Rock Entertainment 2010, DVD. Eagle Vision EDE497864, EAN 5034504978645 (distributed by Edel Distribution ).
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  76. The Rolling Stones [performers]: Some Girls . Deluxe Edition. Universal Music 2011, 2 CDs. Polydor 278405 5.
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  87. '[...] I said that I regret if I caused you any, you know, inconvenience or pain, or something. It was ... 'Richards laughs. 'I'd say anything to get the band together, you know? I'd lie to my mother. ' [...] 'I say what I say and that's it. I wouldn't retract a thing, man. ' ”(German:“ 'I said, I'm sorry if I caused you any, well, inconvenience or grief or something. It was…' Richards laughs. I would say anything to bring the band together, I know You? I would lie to my mother. '[…]' I say what I say, and that's it. I wouldn't take a thing back, man. '”) See: Mikal Gilmore: Love and War Inside the Rolling Stones . In: rollingstone.com. May 7, 2013, p. 4 , accessed on August 4, 2013 (English).
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  100. "In collaboration with Google Music [...] Please Note: This download is not available to customers in the United States, United Kingdom, Italy, Spain, France, or Germany." - 'In cooperation with Google Music [...] Note: This download is not available to customers in the United States, United Kingdom, Italy, Spain, France, or Germany. ' ( The Rolling Stones Live At Leeds Roundhay Park 1982 - MP3 Download. (No longer available online.) In: stonesarchivestore.com. Bravado International Group, archived from the original on June 14, 2013 ; retrieved on December 8, 2012 (Download Notes -Album Live at Leeds in the online shop of the Stones Archive , the same applies to all other music downloads of the Bootleg Series offered there at this point in time, December 9, 2012. ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this note. ) @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.stonesarchivestore.com
  101. Original English quote: "The Rolling Stones have unlocked the door to their archive" ( The Rolling Stones launch StonesArchive.com and release The Brussels Affair worldwide. (No longer available online.) In: rollingstones.com. November 17, 2011, archived from the original on 6 January 2014 , accessed July 12, 2012 . information: The archive link is automatically inserted and not yet tested Please review the original and archive link under. instructions and then remove this notice. ) @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.rollingstones.com
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  122. ^ Original English quote: "The use of one of the most advanced forms of mobile technology currently around solidifies The Rolling Stones as one of the most innovative bands in the world and as relevant as they have always been." ( GRRR! The Rolling Stones announce . greatest hits album (. no longer available online) In: . rollingstones.com September 4, 2012, archived from the original on March 29, 2013 , accessed on September 5, 2012 . Info: The archive link is automatically inserted and not yet tested. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this note. ) @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.rollingstones.com
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