TRENDING
The Rolling Stones’ Six-Decade Career: Looking Through Their Past, Darkly
Published
1 hour agoon
The title of the U.S. version of the Rolling Stones’ first album was England’s Newest Hit Makers – but that was 62 years ago. Their latest is Foreign Tongues, a gutsy, vital rock n’ roll album from a band that helped define it. In between, the Stones released 25 albums, went through three guitarists and have had enough drama to fill several books and documentaries. Leaving no stone unturned, Billboard rolled back the pages to shine a light through the past, darkly.
Related
The Rolling Stones Sound Off: Mick Jagger & Keith Richards on Songwriting, AI & Their Musical Rock Mount Rushmore
Gracie Abrams Says 'Daughter From Hell' Is a 'Thank-You Note' To Her Mom
Olivia Rodrigo Holds Off Rolling Stones For Australia's Chart Crown
Street Fighting Band
Reviewing the band’s U.S. debut single, “Not Fade Away,” in the April 11, 1964, issue, Billboard hailed “another hot GB group that proves how deep the R&B roots have gone over there.” “The Redcoats Are Coming” declared a June 6, 1964, headline of an impending Stones tour; in that same issue, a full-page ad trumpeted, “Watch the Rolling Stones crush The Beatles!” In smaller text: “This space has been given, in the public interest, by an advertiser.”
Paint It, Wack
By the Nov. 22, 1969, issue, the Stones had notched five No. 1s on the Hot 100 (of an eventual eight), but Billboard had a heart of stone when it came to their tour. The show worked, “but more because of who they were than what they did,” we wrote. “[Mick] Jagger’s theatrics became trite at times to an audience much older than the teeny boppers who flocked to see him in 1966.” And we must have been out of our heads in the June 12, 1971, issue, where we erroneously reported that “Wild Horses” featured “Keith Richards taking the lead” vocal.
The Last Time?
Billboard was hip to the Stones by the release of Some Girls, saluting their “diffuse yet coherent sense of rhythm and urban angst” in the June 17, 1978, magazine. In the same issue, Billboard embraced what has now become a 45-year tradition: predicting the end of the band. “Also note major tour. Possibly the last.”
Sympathy for the Regional Promoter
The Dec. 9, 1989, Billboard reported on the band’s game-changing Steel Wheels tour, for which the group embraced sponsorships and “a national promotion arrangement,” which “alarmed top regional tour promoters.” In a Billboard interview, Jagger dismissed the concerns: “I like seeing the most efficient way of doing business … It’s not a charity.” Richards agreed — “What do they want, a pension?” — but admitted to being amused by the flood of Stones-branded clothing. “I’m in the rag trade here,” he said.
As Years Go By
Drummer Charlie Watts died in 2021 at age 80, but the band had been reckoning with his mortality during sessions for 2005 album A Bigger Bang as Watts endured cancer treatment. “There’s suddenly Mick and I looking at each other and going, ‘Possibly we’re the only two left of the originals,’” Richards said in the Aug. 6, 2005, issue. But “you don’t talk about that sh-t, you know?” By then, the Glimmer Twins were getting along glowingly. “There are too many pluses for an odd minus to get in the way,” Richards continued. “Maybe it’s called growing up.”
A version of this story originally appeared in the Oct. 21, 2023, issue of Billboard.
You may like
-
Alicia Keys, Bruce Springsteen, Dionne Warwick, Barry Manilow and More to Participate in Clive Davis Funeral
-
Marc Nathan, Longtime Promotion and A&R Exec, Dies at 70
-
Paul McCartney Warns Proposed AI Copyright Law Could ‘Rip Off’ Artists
-
Kix Brooks to Step Down as Host of ‘American Country Countdown,’ Ryan Fox Taking Over Duties
-
London’s Historic Maida Vale Studios Set For Revamp By Hans Zimmer
-
PRS Breaks the Billion-Pound Barrier as Revenue Rises 12%
Battlefield 6 Strategies That Work in Every Match
The Rolling Stones’ Six-Decade Career: Looking Through Their Past, Darkly
MSG Claims Wired Manipulated Stolen Data For False Narrative Over Rappers & LGBTQIA Community
Yella Beezy Faces Death Penalty As Prosecutors Use His Music Against Him
Hurricane Chris Claps Back At 50 Cent With AI Video
T Staggs Talks Southern Soul Era, Vol. 2 and Turning Real Life Into Music
Exclusive Interview With Killa Bone
Exclusive Interview With Positive Society
Exclusive Interview with Robert Flournoy
Exclusive Interview with Humble Hefe
Future – Radio (Official Music Video)
OneShotAce – More To Life ft. Lihtz (Official Video)
NoCap – Leverage [Official Music Video]
Tay-K – Everywhere I Go / Erupt (Official Video)
Yella Beezy – Sweet Nothings ft. K Camp (Official Music Video)
TRENDING
Battlefield 6 Strategies That Work in Every Match
Winning in Battlefield 6 takes more than great aim. Learn six timeless strategies that help you dominate every match, from...
The Rolling Stones’ Six-Decade Career: Looking Through Their Past, Darkly
The title of the U.S. version of the Rolling Stones’ first album was England’s Newest Hit Makers – but that...
MSG Claims Wired Manipulated Stolen Data For False Narrative Over Rappers & LGBTQIA Community
**********es.com or call +1 212 414 0207 This image may not be published in any way that is, or might...
Yella Beezy Faces Death Penalty As Prosecutors Use His Music Against Him
Yella Beezy is about to face a courtroom where his own music becomes the prosecution’s weapon, and a nationally recognized...
Hurricane Chris Claps Back At 50 Cent With AI Video
Hurricane Chris fired back at 50 Cent with an AI-generated image that’s got Shreveport talking again. Hours after the G-Unit...


