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The Rolling Stones
"Descrizione"
by GStream (2688 pt)
2026-Jan-17 11:29

The Rolling Stones, complete biography, British rock, cultural revolution, concerts, and discography


Profile

The Rolling Stones are a British rock band founded in London in 1962, considered one of the longest-running, most influential, and most recognizable bands in the history of modern music. The historic core lineup consists of Mick Jagger (vocals), Keith Richards (guitar), Charlie Watts (drums), and Ronnie Wood (guitar), with Brian Jones as a central figure in the early phase.

The Rolling Stones represent the archetype of the rock band as a total cultural phenomenon: not only music, but attitude, imagery, language, and generational continuity. Their history spans more than six decades of social and musical transformations, while maintaining a recognizable and coherent identity.

Historical context and the band’s formation (early 1960s)

In the early 1960s, the United Kingdom experienced a profound cultural transformation. A new generation came into contact with:

  • African American blues and rhythm and blues,

  • American rock’n’roll,

  • post-war youth ferment.

The Rolling Stones were born as a direct response to this context. Unlike other British groups more oriented toward pop melody, they focused from the outset on a raw, blues-oriented, and deliberately anti-conventional repertoire.


Brian Jones and the blues phase (1962–1964)

In the band’s first incarnation, Brian Jones was the main artistic driver. The early repertoire was strongly anchored to:

  • Chicago blues,

  • rhythm and blues,

  • covers of African American artists.

In this phase, the Rolling Stones built an identity alternative to the more “clean-cut” image of other British groups, adopting a more transgressive image and a dirtier, more direct sound.


Jagger–Richards: the rise of a songwriting partnership (1964–1966)

Over time, the central role of the Mick Jagger / Keith Richards partnership emerged as the band’s creative engine. The group began writing original material, developing:

  • essential and recognizable riffs,

  • provocative lyrics,

  • simple but highly effective structures.

This phase marks the shift from the Rolling Stones as blues interpreters to the Rolling Stones as authors and innovators of rock.


Stylistic expansion and psychedelia (1966–1967)

In the second half of the 1960s, the group absorbed psychedelic and experimental influences. The use of non-conventional instruments, complex arrangements, and visionary atmospheres broadened their language.

It was a period of exploration, in which the band experimented without losing its link to blues roots, preparing the ground for a more mature turn.


Return to roots and creative maturity (1968–1972)

Between the late 1960s and the early 1970s, the Rolling Stones reached one of the highest phases of their career.

Key characteristics of this period:

  • a return to a more essential, earthbound rock,

  • strong centrality of groove and rhythm,

  • more complex and ambiguous lyrics,

  • drier, more powerful production.

These years are often considered the band’s “classic” era, when their rock language reached an almost definitive balance.


Concerts, excess, and the mythic dimension

Alongside their studio development, the Rolling Stones built an unprecedented live reputation. Their concerts became mass events, characterized by:

  • strong physical energy,

  • Jagger’s stage charisma,

  • constant interaction with the audience,

  • increasingly monumental scale.

In this period, the myth of the Rolling Stones as the embodiment of rock excess took shape, with a narrative that fused music, provocation, and lifestyle.


The 1970s: internationalization and consolidation

During the 1970s the band became a global institution. Despite lineup changes (notably Brian Jones’s departure and later Mick Taylor’s exit), the Rolling Stones maintained:

  • a strong sonic identity,

  • the ability to adapt to shifts in taste,

  • the centrality of the concert as the core of the experience.

Their rock opened to funk, reggae, and soul influences without losing recognizability.


The 1980s and 1990s: continuity and management of the myth

In the 1980s and 1990s, while many historic bands disbanded or lost relevance, the Rolling Stones pursued a strategy of controlled continuity.

Key elements of this phase:

  • major world tours,

  • careful stewardship of their historic catalog,

  • less frequent but coherent studio output,

  • transformation of the band into a transgenerational cultural symbol.


From 2000 onward: active longevity

In the 21st century, the Rolling Stones continued to release music and perform live, demonstrating unprecedented longevity in rock.

Even after the death of Charlie Watts in 2021, the band maintained an active presence, confirming their identity as a collective project that goes beyond individual members.


Musical style (discursive analysis)

The Rolling Stones’ language is built on:

  • electric blues as the primary root,

  • essential, cyclical guitar riffs,

  • centrality of rhythm and groove,

  • voice as a narrative and provocative instrument,

  • lyrics oscillating between irony, ambiguity, and social critique.

Their style is not based on technical complexity, but on expressive effectiveness and the ability to create an immediately recognizable sonic identity.

Early period and British blues (1964–1966)

Studio albums

YearAlbumMain tracks
1964The Rolling StonesRoute 66 · I Just Want to Make Love to You
1965Out of Our Heads(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction · The Last Time
1966AftermathPaint It, Black · Under My Thumb

Transition and psychedelia (1967)

Studio albums

YearAlbumMain tracks
1967Between the ButtonsLet’s Spend the Night Together · Ruby Tuesday
1967Their Satanic Majesties RequestShe’s a Rainbow · 2000 Light Years from Home

Golden era – classic rock and artistic maturity (1968–1972)

Studio albums

YearAlbumMain tracks
1968Beggars BanquetSympathy for the Devil · Street Fighting Man
1969Let It BleedGimme Shelter · You Can’t Always Get What You Want
1971Sticky FingersBrown Sugar · Wild Horses
1972Exile on Main St.Tumbling Dice · Happy

1970s period – evolution and experimentation (1973–1978)

Studio albums

YearAlbumMain tracks
1973Goats Head SoupAngie · Dancing with Mr. D
1974It’s Only Rock ’n RollIt’s Only Rock ’n Roll · Time Waits for No One
1976Black and BlueFool to Cry · Hot Stuff
1978Some GirlsMiss You · Beast of Burden

1980s period – continuity and internal tensions (1981–1989)

Studio albums

YearAlbumMain tracks
1981Tattoo YouStart Me Up · Waiting on a Friend
1983UndercoverUndercover of the Night · She Was Hot
1986Dirty WorkHarlem Shuffle · One Hit (to the Body)
1989Steel WheelsMixed Emotions · Rock and a Hard Place

Modern era and artistic longevity (1994–present)

Studio albums

YearAlbumMain tracks
1994Voodoo LoungeLove Is Strong · You Got Me Rocking
1997Bridges to BabylonAnybody Seen My Baby? · Out of Control
2005A Bigger BangRough Justice · Streets of Love
2016Blue & LonesomeJust Your Fool · Ride ’Em On Down
2023Hackney DiamondsAngry · Sweet Sounds of Heaven

Live albums and special projects (selection)

YearAlbumNote
1970Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out!Historic live album from the golden era
1995StrippedIntimate and acoustic performances
2012GRRR!50th anniversary compilation

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