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The Rolling Stones: Some Girls
Review by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 10 June 1978
THESE LAST two or three years, the Stones haven't really been that important to rock and roll. ...
The Rolling Stones: Some Girls
Review by Kris Needs, ZigZag, July 1978
AH, THE NEW Stones album. For me the most feverishly-anticipated event between the first album in 1963 and Black and Blue two years ago was ...
The Rolling Stones: Some Girls
Review by Peter Silverton, Sounds, 10 June 1978
WHICHEVER WAY you look at it, this is an important album of the first order. Important primarily because it's the first album (excluding Love You ...
The Rolling Stones: Stones Still Hungry After All These Years
Review by Geoffrey Himes, Unicorn Times, 1 July 1978
THE ROLLING STONES first crawled into our collective hearts as a teenage working class street punk band. And now, here are Keith Richard and Mick ...
The Rolling Stones: Dirty Work
Review by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 29 March 1986
IN THE 1970s, The Rolling Stones were a distinctly unlovely proposition: fronted by a jet-setter and a junkie and churning out a series of tedious ...
The Rolling Stones: Emotional Rescue (Rolling Stones)****
Review by Peter Silverton, Sounds, 28 June 1980
"IMAGE IS so important to rock stars. Mick Jagger is the rock star with the longest running image. He's the one all the young white ...
The Rolling Stones: Rolling Stones: Live Licks
Review by Terry Staunton, Record Collector, January 2005
THEIR SEVENTH concert record, if you’re counting ...
The Rolling Stones, Ronnie Wood: The Rolling Stones: Glimmer Twins Held Responsible
Interview by Barbara Charone, Creem, July 1978
"WE CAN DO a lot more with this particular band than any other incarnation of the Rolling Stones," Keith Richard threatened during the Stones' 1975 ...
The Rolling Stones: Mick Jagger: Sympathy for the Old Devil
Comment by Charles Shaar Murray, Independent on Sunday, 27 July 2003
"YOU'RE A FUNNY little fella," the gangster played by James Fox tells the reclusive rock star played by Mick Jagger in Donald Cammell and Nicolas ...
The Rolling Stones: Ol' Rubber Lips Isn't Telling...
Book Review by Charles Shaar Murray, The Independent, 15 August 2003
According to The Rolling Stones (Weidenfeld and Nicholson)The Rolling Stones' history is wild and controversial, full of sex, drugs, bust-ups, scandal and death. Disappointing, then, ...
The Rolling Stones, Ronnie Wood: Ronnie Wood: New Stone Tries a Solo
Report and Interview by Dave Schulps, Trouser Press, July 1979
WHEN TP FIRST interviewed Ron Wood, back in the fall of 1974, the Faces' guitarist and ex-Beckite was more than happy to answer questions about ...
The Rolling Stones Shine A Light Concert Film Opens April 4th
Report by Harvey Kubernik, Rock's Backpages, April 2008
ON APRIL 4th director Martin Scorsese's concert documentary on the Rolling Stones, Shine A Light, was released and distributed in the U.S. by Paramount Classics ...
The Rolling Stones: Back Door Men
Interview by John Pidgeon, Melody Maker, 16 September 1978
Charlie Watts and Bill Wyman aren't exactly garrulous types. But behind the... er... stony facade lies a commitment which has kept them pumping up the ...
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