1975, the Alamo, and a £4,000 photo shoot—The Rolling Stones turn a historic monument into a surreal backstage set nobody saw coming.
Periodista/ traductor freelance - Freelance journalist/ translator
1975, the Alamo, and a £4,000 photo shoot—The Rolling Stones turn a historic monument into a surreal backstage set nobody saw coming.
Before a single chord, Tel Aviv was already buzzing with pressure and protests—then The Rolling Stones arrived, greeted in Hebrew, and turned 50,000 people into a headline-making storm.
Some June 4 gave us ‘Sympathy for the Devil’. Others brought surprise guests, lost recordings, and strange detours. This date keeps turning up where Rolling Stones history gets interesting.
The Rolling Stones came to Vancouver in 1972 to play rock and roll. Local newspapers seemed far more interested in the trouble they might cause. Guess who got the bigger story?
Hours before facing 50,000 fans, The Rolling Stones slipped away to one of the world’s most sacred sites in 2014. What happened at Jerusalem’s Western Wall might surprise you.
The Rolling Stones turned FBI paranoia into a funky groove—’Fingerprint File’ sounds like a dance track, until you realize it’s basically a surveillance nightmare in disguise.
Fireworks over Minneapolis in 2015… but the real blast was The Rolling Stones still tearing through ‘Satisfaction’ like it’s 1965, with a choir in the middle of the chaos.
San Antonio didn’t just get a concert in 1975—it got puppet costumes, chaos onstage, and a Rolling Stones show that had the vice squad watching from the sidelines.
June 3 alone? The Rolling Stones jumping from orchestral experiments to stadium chaos, surprise guests, and Jerusalem visits—same band, wildly different worlds across decades.
Keith Richards in 1989 talking survival—no myth, no filter. After decades of chaos with The Rolling Stones, he’s still standing… but how exactly did he pull it off?