Posted by The Rolling Stones
Are you ready for tour? The Stones will tour across North America later this summer across a number of different cities. Keep up to date with all things tour related & more through their mailing list – http://RollingStones.lnk.to/EmailSignUp
The Rolling Stones
4,104,730 Followers
Never miss another The Rolling Stones concert. Get alerts about tour announcements, concert tickets, and shows near you with a free Bandsintown account.
Follow
No upcoming shows
Send a request to The Rolling Stones to play in your city
Request a Show
Similar Artists On Tour
Latest Post
The Rolling Stones
16 days ago
Black Friday starts now! Get up to 40% off select items. Discount added in cart. Some exclusions apply.: https://therollingstonesshop.com//?utm_source=bandsintown&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=BFCM
The Rolling Stones merch
The Rolling Stones Stars Tee
$52.00
iPhone 16 Keith Richards Mick Jagger ...
$17.99
iPhone 16 Rolling Stones Official Log...
$19.99
iPhone 16 Rolling Stones Classic Tong...
$19.99
iPhone 16 Rolling Stones Official Log...
$19.99
Keith Richards Mick Jagger Rolling St...
$35.99
Keith Richards Mick Jagger Rolling St...
$19.99
Mick Jagger 1971 Rolling Stones Live ...
$26.99
Mick Jagger 1971 Rolling Stones Live ...
$35.99
iPhone 15 Mick Jagger Mick Taylor The...
$17.99
Mick Jagger Mick Taylor The Rolling S...
$37.99
Mick Jagger Mick Taylor The Rolling S...
$23.99
Mick Jagger Of The Rolling Stones Liv...
$27.99
Mick Jagger Of The Rolling Stones Liv...
$19.99
Mick Taylor Mick Jagger The Rolling S...
$23.99
Mick Taylor Mick Jagger The Rolling S...
$19.99
The Rolling Stones Charlie Mick And K...
$26.99
The Rolling Stones Charlie Mick And K...
$27.99
The Rolling Stones Charlie Mick And K...
$35.99
The Rolling Stones Live On Stage By E...
$23.99
View All
Live Photos of The Rolling Stones
View All Photos
concerts and tour dates
Fan Reviews
Gary
July 18th 2024
Possibly the best concert I have seen. Brilliant performance of a long song set. They perform with incredible energy and it is obvious that they are enjoying what they are doing. 5 stars for the Stones. Two stars for Levi’s Stadium. Parking setup is pathetic, traffic flow poor, stadium was not configured for the audience’s best viewing.
Santa Clara, CA@Levi's Stadium
Heeday
June 30th 2024
What can I say!? They get better and better every time I see them! That’s not how things go normally with aging acts, but it surely doesn’t apply to these guys! They are the legends for almost 6 decades for a reason!! Also, it’s well worth mentioning that they made a quick tribute to their idols growing up, such as Willie Dixon, Muddy Waters and even the Chess Records, and I couldn’t thank them enough for putting some spotlights to their influences right here in Chicago where blues is still alive and kicking!!
Chicago, IL@Soldier Field
Vincent
June 29th 2024
How can these men continue to provide 1st class musical entertainment tour after tour?
Outstanding evening of musical memories.
20 song setlist with 3 from the newest album.
Unfortunately, with such a vast smorgasbord of hits, some are not represented. No 'Shattered' no 'Miss You' nothing from my personal favorite album, "Black and Blue."
This was my 17yr old Daughter's 4th Stones show, my twenty-eighth and we are anxious for our next already!
Chicago, IL@Soldier Field
View More Fan Reviews
About The Rolling Stones
The Rolling Stones, formed in London England circa 1962, are one of the world's most popular rock music groups, selling over 68 million RIAA certified albums in the U.S alone. They were inducted into the rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1989 and have performed in approx 40 countries.
The group was formed by Brian Jones, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. Mick Jagger and Keith Richards met as schoolmates in Dartford, Kent. They took their name from a Muddy Waters song called "Rollin' Stone Blues", and made their live debut in July 1962 at London's Marquee Club (minus Bill Wyman and Charlie Watts). They start playing pubs and clubs around the city and suburbs. Bill Wyman joined later that year (the popular story is that he was asked because he had his own amplifier), replacing Dick Taylor, who started the The Pretty Things.
In January 1963, Charlie Watts joined the Stones. The band gigged constantly, with residencies at venues like Ealing Jazz Club, Ken Colyer's Studio 51, and Eel Pie Island in Twickenham. Their weekly peformances at the Crawdaddy at Richmond's Station Hotel resulted in ecstatic press reviews, and in April Andrew Loog Oldham saw them there and signed them to his management company the next day. He started the "Would you let your daughter marry a Rolling Stone" press campaign, which set the tone for their career, which has included drug arrests, and many notorious incidents.
In May 1963, the Stones were signed to Decca Records, supposedly by the same man who had turned down the Beatles. A month later "Come On", the first Rolling Stones single, was released, and reached number two in the U.K. charts.
The fifth and some say founding member of the group, Brian Jones, left officially on 8th June 1969, issuing a statement saying that he wanted to form a new group, possibly with Steve Marriott. On 3rd July 1969, around midnight Jones was found at the bottom of his swimming pool at his home in Sussex, England. The coroner reported "Death by misadventure", noting his liver and heart were heavily enlarged by drug and alcohol abuse. Some said it was suicide, others attributed foul play, even blaming Jagger and Richards for Jones state of mental depression.
He was replaced by Mick Taylor, formerly in John Mayall's Bluesbreakers. Another former bandmember to mention would have to be Ian Stewart (b. July 18, 1938 - d. December 12, 1985), who officially was in Brian Jones new group prior to even Mick or Keith, but according to legend was squeezed out of the band at Andrew Loog Oldham's suggestion in the early 1960's. Stu was considered by many as the 6th member, and still regularly played piano onstage with the group for many years, steadily at every gig on every tour until 1971, and on & off through 1982 when he was also employed as "road manager".
In 1971 the Stones, whose contract with Decca had expired, launched their Rolling Stones Records label originally distributed through Atlantic, an arrangement which lasted a decade.
In December 1974 Taylor left the group in order to pursue a solo career. He was replaced in 1975 by Faces guitarist Ronnie Wood.
The Stones became one of the world's most popular touring groups, routinely playing huge sports arenas and stadiums, pioneering mobile recording, corporate sponsorships, and setting records for ticket prices.
Bill Wyman left the fold, and was replaced shortly before the group began the Voodoo Lounge stadium tour in 1993. Current bassist Darryl Jones, born in 1961 only a year before the group started, is not an "official" band member, but has played bass in the band for more than 15 years.
All the "official" members have also undertaken solo projects of various kinds. There are many more sources of material, including numerous books on the Stones rather than this short wiki.
The group was formed by Brian Jones, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. Mick Jagger and Keith Richards met as schoolmates in Dartford, Kent. They took their name from a Muddy Waters song called "Rollin' Stone Blues", and made their live debut in July 1962 at London's Marquee Club (minus Bill Wyman and Charlie Watts). They start playing pubs and clubs around the city and suburbs. Bill Wyman joined later that year (the popular story is that he was asked because he had his own amplifier), replacing Dick Taylor, who started the The Pretty Things.
In January 1963, Charlie Watts joined the Stones. The band gigged constantly, with residencies at venues like Ealing Jazz Club, Ken Colyer's Studio 51, and Eel Pie Island in Twickenham. Their weekly peformances at the Crawdaddy at Richmond's Station Hotel resulted in ecstatic press reviews, and in April Andrew Loog Oldham saw them there and signed them to his management company the next day. He started the "Would you let your daughter marry a Rolling Stone" press campaign, which set the tone for their career, which has included drug arrests, and many notorious incidents.
In May 1963, the Stones were signed to Decca Records, supposedly by the same man who had turned down the Beatles. A month later "Come On", the first Rolling Stones single, was released, and reached number two in the U.K. charts.
The fifth and some say founding member of the group, Brian Jones, left officially on 8th June 1969, issuing a statement saying that he wanted to form a new group, possibly with Steve Marriott. On 3rd July 1969, around midnight Jones was found at the bottom of his swimming pool at his home in Sussex, England. The coroner reported "Death by misadventure", noting his liver and heart were heavily enlarged by drug and alcohol abuse. Some said it was suicide, others attributed foul play, even blaming Jagger and Richards for Jones state of mental depression.
He was replaced by Mick Taylor, formerly in John Mayall's Bluesbreakers. Another former bandmember to mention would have to be Ian Stewart (b. July 18, 1938 - d. December 12, 1985), who officially was in Brian Jones new group prior to even Mick or Keith, but according to legend was squeezed out of the band at Andrew Loog Oldham's suggestion in the early 1960's. Stu was considered by many as the 6th member, and still regularly played piano onstage with the group for many years, steadily at every gig on every tour until 1971, and on & off through 1982 when he was also employed as "road manager".
In 1971 the Stones, whose contract with Decca had expired, launched their Rolling Stones Records label originally distributed through Atlantic, an arrangement which lasted a decade.
In December 1974 Taylor left the group in order to pursue a solo career. He was replaced in 1975 by Faces guitarist Ronnie Wood.
The Stones became one of the world's most popular touring groups, routinely playing huge sports arenas and stadiums, pioneering mobile recording, corporate sponsorships, and setting records for ticket prices.
Bill Wyman left the fold, and was replaced shortly before the group began the Voodoo Lounge stadium tour in 1993. Current bassist Darryl Jones, born in 1961 only a year before the group started, is not an "official" band member, but has played bass in the band for more than 15 years.
All the "official" members have also undertaken solo projects of various kinds. There are many more sources of material, including numerous books on the Stones rather than this short wiki.
Show More
Genres:
Rock, Classic Rock
No upcoming shows
Send a request to The Rolling Stones to play in your city
Request a Show
Similar Artists On Tour
Latest Post
The Rolling Stones
16 days ago
Black Friday starts now! Get up to 40% off select items. Discount added in cart. Some exclusions apply.: https://therollingstonesshop.com//?utm_source=bandsintown&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=BFCM
Live Photos of The Rolling Stones
View All Photos
The Rolling Stones merch
The Rolling Stones Stars Tee
$52.00
iPhone 16 Keith Richards Mick Jagger ...
$17.99
iPhone 16 Rolling Stones Official Log...
$19.99
iPhone 16 Rolling Stones Classic Tong...
$19.99
iPhone 16 Rolling Stones Official Log...
$19.99
Keith Richards Mick Jagger Rolling St...
$35.99
Keith Richards Mick Jagger Rolling St...
$19.99
Mick Jagger 1971 Rolling Stones Live ...
$26.99
Mick Jagger 1971 Rolling Stones Live ...
$35.99
iPhone 15 Mick Jagger Mick Taylor The...
$17.99
Mick Jagger Mick Taylor The Rolling S...
$37.99
Mick Jagger Mick Taylor The Rolling S...
$23.99
Mick Jagger Of The Rolling Stones Liv...
$27.99
Mick Jagger Of The Rolling Stones Liv...
$19.99
Mick Taylor Mick Jagger The Rolling S...
$23.99
Mick Taylor Mick Jagger The Rolling S...
$19.99
The Rolling Stones Charlie Mick And K...
$26.99
The Rolling Stones Charlie Mick And K...
$27.99
The Rolling Stones Charlie Mick And K...
$35.99
The Rolling Stones Live On Stage By E...
$23.99
View All
concerts and tour dates
Fan Reviews
Gary
July 18th 2024
Possibly the best concert I have seen. Brilliant performance of a long song set. They perform with incredible energy and it is obvious that they are enjoying what they are doing. 5 stars for the Stones. Two stars for Levi’s Stadium. Parking setup is pathetic, traffic flow poor, stadium was not configured for the audience’s best viewing.
Santa Clara, CA@Levi's Stadium
Heeday
June 30th 2024
What can I say!? They get better and better every time I see them! That’s not how things go normally with aging acts, but it surely doesn’t apply to these guys! They are the legends for almost 6 decades for a reason!! Also, it’s well worth mentioning that they made a quick tribute to their idols growing up, such as Willie Dixon, Muddy Waters and even the Chess Records, and I couldn’t thank them enough for putting some spotlights to their influences right here in Chicago where blues is still alive and kicking!!
Chicago, IL@Soldier Field
Vincent
June 29th 2024
How can these men continue to provide 1st class musical entertainment tour after tour?
Outstanding evening of musical memories.
20 song setlist with 3 from the newest album.
Unfortunately, with such a vast smorgasbord of hits, some are not represented. No 'Shattered' no 'Miss You' nothing from my personal favorite album, "Black and Blue."
This was my 17yr old Daughter's 4th Stones show, my twenty-eighth and we are anxious for our next already!
Chicago, IL@Soldier Field
View More Fan Reviews
About The Rolling Stones
The Rolling Stones, formed in London England circa 1962, are one of the world's most popular rock music groups, selling over 68 million RIAA certified albums in the U.S alone. They were inducted into the rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1989 and have performed in approx 40 countries.
The group was formed by Brian Jones, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. Mick Jagger and Keith Richards met as schoolmates in Dartford, Kent. They took their name from a Muddy Waters song called "Rollin' Stone Blues", and made their live debut in July 1962 at London's Marquee Club (minus Bill Wyman and Charlie Watts). They start playing pubs and clubs around the city and suburbs. Bill Wyman joined later that year (the popular story is that he was asked because he had his own amplifier), replacing Dick Taylor, who started the The Pretty Things.
In January 1963, Charlie Watts joined the Stones. The band gigged constantly, with residencies at venues like Ealing Jazz Club, Ken Colyer's Studio 51, and Eel Pie Island in Twickenham. Their weekly peformances at the Crawdaddy at Richmond's Station Hotel resulted in ecstatic press reviews, and in April Andrew Loog Oldham saw them there and signed them to his management company the next day. He started the "Would you let your daughter marry a Rolling Stone" press campaign, which set the tone for their career, which has included drug arrests, and many notorious incidents.
In May 1963, the Stones were signed to Decca Records, supposedly by the same man who had turned down the Beatles. A month later "Come On", the first Rolling Stones single, was released, and reached number two in the U.K. charts.
The fifth and some say founding member of the group, Brian Jones, left officially on 8th June 1969, issuing a statement saying that he wanted to form a new group, possibly with Steve Marriott. On 3rd July 1969, around midnight Jones was found at the bottom of his swimming pool at his home in Sussex, England. The coroner reported "Death by misadventure", noting his liver and heart were heavily enlarged by drug and alcohol abuse. Some said it was suicide, others attributed foul play, even blaming Jagger and Richards for Jones state of mental depression.
He was replaced by Mick Taylor, formerly in John Mayall's Bluesbreakers. Another former bandmember to mention would have to be Ian Stewart (b. July 18, 1938 - d. December 12, 1985), who officially was in Brian Jones new group prior to even Mick or Keith, but according to legend was squeezed out of the band at Andrew Loog Oldham's suggestion in the early 1960's. Stu was considered by many as the 6th member, and still regularly played piano onstage with the group for many years, steadily at every gig on every tour until 1971, and on & off through 1982 when he was also employed as "road manager".
In 1971 the Stones, whose contract with Decca had expired, launched their Rolling Stones Records label originally distributed through Atlantic, an arrangement which lasted a decade.
In December 1974 Taylor left the group in order to pursue a solo career. He was replaced in 1975 by Faces guitarist Ronnie Wood.
The Stones became one of the world's most popular touring groups, routinely playing huge sports arenas and stadiums, pioneering mobile recording, corporate sponsorships, and setting records for ticket prices.
Bill Wyman left the fold, and was replaced shortly before the group began the Voodoo Lounge stadium tour in 1993. Current bassist Darryl Jones, born in 1961 only a year before the group started, is not an "official" band member, but has played bass in the band for more than 15 years.
All the "official" members have also undertaken solo projects of various kinds. There are many more sources of material, including numerous books on the Stones rather than this short wiki.
The group was formed by Brian Jones, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. Mick Jagger and Keith Richards met as schoolmates in Dartford, Kent. They took their name from a Muddy Waters song called "Rollin' Stone Blues", and made their live debut in July 1962 at London's Marquee Club (minus Bill Wyman and Charlie Watts). They start playing pubs and clubs around the city and suburbs. Bill Wyman joined later that year (the popular story is that he was asked because he had his own amplifier), replacing Dick Taylor, who started the The Pretty Things.
In January 1963, Charlie Watts joined the Stones. The band gigged constantly, with residencies at venues like Ealing Jazz Club, Ken Colyer's Studio 51, and Eel Pie Island in Twickenham. Their weekly peformances at the Crawdaddy at Richmond's Station Hotel resulted in ecstatic press reviews, and in April Andrew Loog Oldham saw them there and signed them to his management company the next day. He started the "Would you let your daughter marry a Rolling Stone" press campaign, which set the tone for their career, which has included drug arrests, and many notorious incidents.
In May 1963, the Stones were signed to Decca Records, supposedly by the same man who had turned down the Beatles. A month later "Come On", the first Rolling Stones single, was released, and reached number two in the U.K. charts.
The fifth and some say founding member of the group, Brian Jones, left officially on 8th June 1969, issuing a statement saying that he wanted to form a new group, possibly with Steve Marriott. On 3rd July 1969, around midnight Jones was found at the bottom of his swimming pool at his home in Sussex, England. The coroner reported "Death by misadventure", noting his liver and heart were heavily enlarged by drug and alcohol abuse. Some said it was suicide, others attributed foul play, even blaming Jagger and Richards for Jones state of mental depression.
He was replaced by Mick Taylor, formerly in John Mayall's Bluesbreakers. Another former bandmember to mention would have to be Ian Stewart (b. July 18, 1938 - d. December 12, 1985), who officially was in Brian Jones new group prior to even Mick or Keith, but according to legend was squeezed out of the band at Andrew Loog Oldham's suggestion in the early 1960's. Stu was considered by many as the 6th member, and still regularly played piano onstage with the group for many years, steadily at every gig on every tour until 1971, and on & off through 1982 when he was also employed as "road manager".
In 1971 the Stones, whose contract with Decca had expired, launched their Rolling Stones Records label originally distributed through Atlantic, an arrangement which lasted a decade.
In December 1974 Taylor left the group in order to pursue a solo career. He was replaced in 1975 by Faces guitarist Ronnie Wood.
The Stones became one of the world's most popular touring groups, routinely playing huge sports arenas and stadiums, pioneering mobile recording, corporate sponsorships, and setting records for ticket prices.
Bill Wyman left the fold, and was replaced shortly before the group began the Voodoo Lounge stadium tour in 1993. Current bassist Darryl Jones, born in 1961 only a year before the group started, is not an "official" band member, but has played bass in the band for more than 15 years.
All the "official" members have also undertaken solo projects of various kinds. There are many more sources of material, including numerous books on the Stones rather than this short wiki.
Show More
Genres:
Rock, Classic Rock
Get the full experience with the Bandsintown app.