English rock band · 1962–present

The Rolling Stones

The English rock band that turned the Chicago blues into the dominant sound of the second half of the twentieth century. Formed in London in 1962 by Brian Jones, named off a Muddy Waters song, and built around the songwriting partnership of Mick Jagger and Keith Richards that followed — the longest-running working band in rock and roll. The first stable lineup of Jagger, Richards, Jones, Bill Wyman, and Charlie Watts came together in early 1963; pianist Ian Stewart was sidelined as a band member by manager Andrew Loog Oldham but remained on every record they made for the next two decades.

Their early years were a methodical study of American rhythm and blues, recorded with deliberate roughness and marketed as the dirty alternative to the Beatles. By the middle of the decade Jagger–Richards were writing internationally chart-topping originals — (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction, Get Off of My Cloud, Paint It Black — and the band's reputation as the most important rock and roll group in the world had begun to settle around them. Brian Jones, the band's founder, drowned at his home on July 3, 1969, twenty-five days after he had been asked to leave. Mick Taylor replaced him for five years and four albums; Ronnie Wood replaced Taylor at the end of 1974 and has remained ever since.

The catalogue covers more than sixty years and twenty-six studio albums. Beggars Banquet, Let It Bleed, Sticky Fingers, Exile on Main St., and Some Girls are the records most often cited as the high-water marks. Charlie Watts, the band's drummer for fifty-eight years, died on August 24, 2021. Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, and Ronnie Wood released the album Hackney Diamonds in October 2023, more than sixty years after their first recording session, and toured behind it through 2024.

Mick JaggerKeith RichardsRonnie WoodCharlie WattsBrian JonesBill WymanMick TaylorIan Stewart
Active
1962–present
Formed in
London, UK
Albums
26 studio
On this site
15 articles

Articles on The Rolling Stones

15 pieces · most recent first
2026 · June 2026

The Rolling Stones – Jealous Lover

More Than Six Decades In, the Rolling Stones Brought Back Mick Jagger's "Emotional Rescue" Falsetto — and a Keyboard Sound Meant to Summon a Bandmate Who Died Thirty Years Ago

1969 · June 2026

The Rolling Stones – Gimme Shelter (Live)

The Singer Whose Voice Defines One of the Greatest Rock Recordings Ever Was a Last-Minute Second Choice — Phoned After Midnight, in Curlers, and Credited Under the Wrong Name

00s + · May 2026

The Rolling Stones – Can’t You Hear Me Knocking

The Band Thought They Had Finished the Song. Mick Taylor Kept Playing Anyway. The Tape Was Still Rolling. Five Decades Later, the Accident That Resulted Has Become One of the Most Celebrated Jams in Rock — and Took the Band Thirty-One Years to Work Up the Nerve to Play Live.

00s + · March 2026

The Rolling Stones – Bob Wills Is Still The King (Live)

Mick Jagger In A City Park, Singing A Country Song That Was Never Really About Bob Wills

70s · December 2025

The Rolling Stones – Brown Sugar

Cut In Three Days Before Altamont Changed Everything

1969 · August 2025

Rolling Stones – Honky Tonk Women (Hyde Park, 1969)

A song Mick Jagger and Keith Richards wrote on a Brazilian ranch in January 1969 became the bridge between two eras of the Rolling Stones — Brian Jones's last week as a working member, Mick Taylor's first as his replacement, and the soundtrack to one of the largest public memorials in rock history, in front of half a million people at Hyde Park.

60s · July 2025

Rolling Stones – Paint It Black

60s · July 2025

Rolling Stones – Mercy, Mercy

60s · June 2025

Rolling Stones – It’s All Over Now

70s · June 2025

The Rolling Stones – Beast of Burden (Live)

60s · April 2025

The Rolling Stones – (I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction

The Riff That Was Already Snoring When Keith Woke Up

60s · September 2024

The Rolling Stones – I Wanna Be Your Man

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