“He was the missing piece.” Read the raw Keith Richards quote on why bringing Ronnie Wood into The Rolling Stones was the gamble that finally saved their fractured mid-seventies sound.
“He was the missing piece.” Read the raw Keith Richards quote on why bringing Ronnie Wood into The Rolling Stones was the gamble that finally saved their fractured mid-seventies sound.
Philadelphia’s grit met the raw power of The Rolling Stones in 1975. Discover why that night at the Spectrum remains a high-water mark for rock ‘n’ roll’s most explosive era.
A mechanical lotus, 100 restless drummers, and a song banished for six years. Step inside The Rolling Stones’ 1975 MSG gig, where bizarre theatrics triggered an unthinkable Eric Clapton encore.
Toronto 1975 wasn’t polite—The Rolling Stones turned Maple Leaf Gardens into controlled chaos, and the story behind that night still feels like it’s hiding something.
June 14, Cleveland 1975 wasn’t just loud—it got wild fast. The Rolling Stones turned a stadium night into something nobody quite controlled, and that setlist still raises questions today.
The Rolling Stones didn’t release everything for a reason… but ‘Munich Reggae’ sounds like they stopped mid-idea and decided that was good enough to keep.
The Rolling Stones hit Boston in 1975 with a tour built on oversized ambitions, abandoned plans, and enough spectacle to make subtlety surrender.
A giant inflatable lotus. Ronnie Wood still proving himself. Thousands losing their minds. The Rolling Stones turned St. Paul into pure rock ’n’ roll theater in 1975.
June 8, 1975: The Rolling Stones hit Milwaukee’s County Stadium and suddenly 45,000 people are watching Ronnie Wood’s U.S. debut unfold mid-chaos, mid-riffs, mid-everything.
1975, the Alamo, and a £4,000 photo shoot—The Rolling Stones turn a historic monument into a surreal backstage set nobody saw coming.