Welcome to the Rolling Stones' YouTube channel! Check out the unseen and rare live footage, official promo videos, exclusive versions of songs, and the latest news and performance from the band.
Hot off the (virtual) press! Welcome to the Black and Blue weekly news! Each special edition we’re spotlighting a track from the 2025 reissue - and first up: Shame Shame Shame steps out of the vault and onto the front page! Read all about it and swipe for more..
Black and Blue 2025: rollingstones.lnk.to/BlackandBlueReissue
Following last week’s announcement of the reissue of Black and Blue - Take a trip back to 1976 — the year the album originally dropped. Punk was breaking out of the underground. Apple was born from a garage in California and the Stones were already on album no.13! This was all off the back of their epic Tour of the Americas 1975! Where were you when you first heard Black and Blue?
New York photographer Bob Gruen caught the Stones in their rawest glory during the Some Girls tour in 1978. This shot freezes Mick mid-theatrical- gesture — while Keith stays locked into his Telecaster ⚡️
📸 Primrose Hill, late 1966. Gered Mankowitz captures the Stones in a dreamlike haze, 5:30am after a long night of recording in the studio - images from this session became the cover of Between the Buttons, released in January 1967.
Photographer Lynn Goldsmith captured the Rolling Stones in the late ’70s - on stage, backstage, and everywhere in between!
Her photographs of the Stones stand out for their immediacy: no heavy staging, just raw performance and fleeting glimpses of life on the road…this shot of Keith remains one of her most iconic Stones images.
📸: London, 1963. Captured by Terry O’Neill, here are the Rolling Stones on the rise and ready to shake up the world…Just five young men on a street corner, but within a year they’d be storming the charts, and within a few more, redefining rock’n’roll forever..
Roundhouse, March ’71 – No ticket. No pass. Just a camera and a lot of front. Photographer Pete Smith blagged his way in and caught the Stones live in London — shooting handheld from the floor over people’s heads with a 135mm lens, wide open, and two rolls of Tri-X. This is one of the iconic shots he walked away with that night 🙌
"To me, Exile On Main St. was probably the best Rolling Stones album as far as the connection between the band members. We were coming up with song ideas like crazy. And the ideas were catching on. Everybody was going flat-out." - Keith Richards
The Rolling Stones
Hot off the (virtual) press!
Welcome to the Black and Blue weekly news! Each special edition we’re spotlighting a track from the 2025 reissue - and first up: Shame Shame Shame steps out of the vault and onto the front page! Read all about it and swipe for more..
Black and Blue 2025: rollingstones.lnk.to/BlackandBlueReissue
1 day ago | [YT] | 1,551
View 20 replies
The Rolling Stones
Following last week’s announcement of the reissue of Black and Blue - Take a trip back to 1976 — the year the album originally dropped. Punk was breaking out of the underground. Apple was born from a garage in California and the Stones were already on album no.13! This was all off the back of their epic Tour of the Americas 1975! Where were you when you first heard Black and Blue?
1 week ago | [YT] | 2,613
View 93 replies
The Rolling Stones
New York photographer Bob Gruen caught the Stones in their rawest glory during the Some Girls tour in 1978. This shot freezes Mick mid-theatrical-
gesture — while Keith stays locked into his Telecaster ⚡️
1 week ago | [YT] | 8,047
View 113 replies
The Rolling Stones
A moment caught between reflection and reality, captured by Bent Rej
3 weeks ago | [YT] | 7,156
View 64 replies
The Rolling Stones
📸 Primrose Hill, late 1966.
Gered Mankowitz captures the Stones in a dreamlike haze, 5:30am after a long night of recording in the studio - images from this session became the cover of Between the Buttons, released in January 1967.
4 weeks ago | [YT] | 7,585
View 100 replies
The Rolling Stones
Photographer Lynn Goldsmith captured the Rolling Stones in the late ’70s - on stage, backstage, and everywhere in between!
Her photographs of the Stones stand out for their immediacy: no heavy staging, just raw performance and fleeting glimpses of life on the road…this shot of Keith remains one of her most iconic Stones images.
1 month ago | [YT] | 6,471
View 82 replies
The Rolling Stones
📸: London, 1963. Captured by Terry O’Neill, here are the Rolling Stones on the rise and ready to shake up the world…Just five young men on a street corner, but within a year they’d be storming the charts, and within a few more, redefining rock’n’roll forever..
1 month ago | [YT] | 11,151
View 184 replies
The Rolling Stones
Roundhouse, March ’71 – No ticket. No pass. Just a camera and a lot of front. Photographer Pete Smith blagged his way in and caught the Stones live in London — shooting handheld from the floor over people’s heads with a 135mm lens, wide open, and two rolls of Tri-X. This is one of the iconic shots he walked away with that night 🙌
1 month ago | [YT] | 8,520
View 104 replies
The Rolling Stones
"To me, Exile On Main St. was probably the best Rolling Stones album as far as the connection between the band members. We were coming up with song ideas like crazy. And the ideas were catching on. Everybody was going flat-out." - Keith Richards
📸: Dominique Tarle
2 months ago | [YT] | 6,916
View 249 replies
The Rolling Stones
Charlie’s good tonight 💛
📸: Bent Rej
2 months ago | [YT] | 9,529
View 124 replies
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