Rolling Stones music video Out Of Tears
Rolling Stones music video Love Is Strong
Rolling Stones music video Harlem Shuffle
Rolling Stones music video Mixed Emotions
Rolling Stones music video Sympathy For The Devil (Fatboy Slim Remix)
Rolling Stones music video Don't Stop
Rolling Stones music video Harlem Shuffle
Rolling Stones music video Mixed Emotions
Rolling Stones music video Ruby Tuesday (Live)
Rolling Stones music video Highwire
Rolling Stones music video Love Is Strong
Rolling Stones music video Almost Hear You Sigh
Rolling Stones music video She Was Hot
Rolling Stones music video Too Much Blood
Rolling Stones music video Jumpin' Jack Flash
Rolling Stones music video Out Of Tears
Rolling Stones music video Paint It, Black (From The Ed Sullivan Show 1966)
Rolling Stones music video Ruby Tuesday (From The Ed Sullivan Show 1967)
Rolling Stones music video Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby, Standing In The Shadow? (From The Ed Sullivan Show 1966)
Rolling Stones music video Time Is On My Side (From The Ed Sullivan Show 1964)
Rolling Stones music video (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction (From The Ed Sullivan Show 1966)
Rolling Stones music video I Go Wild
Rolling Stones music video You Got Me Rocking
Rolling Stones music video Start Me Up
Rolling Stones music video Hang Fire
Rolling Stones music video One Hit (To The Body)
Rolling Stones music video Rock And A Hard Place
Rolling Stones music video One Hit (To The Body)
Rolling Stones music video Like A Rolling Stone
Rolling Stones music video Gimme Shelter
Rolling Stones music video Highwire
Rolling Stones music video Undercover Of The Night
Rolling Stones music video Out Of Tears
Rolling Stones music video Almost Hear You Sigh
Rolling Stones music video Sympathy For The Devil (Fatboy Slim Radio Remix)
Rolling Stones music video Doom And Gloom (Benny Benassi Remix)
Rolling Stones music video Doom And Gloom (Benny Benassi Remix) (Uncensored Version)
Rolling Stones music video Rock And A Hard Place
Rolling Stones Feat. Will.I.Am music video Rain Fall Down (Will.I.Am Remix)
Rolling Stones music video Mixed Emotions
Rolling Stones music video One Hit (To The Body)
Rolling Stones music video Memory Motel
Rolling Stones music video Harlem Shuffle
Rolling Stones music video Rock And A Hard Place
Rolling Stones music video Plundered My Soul
Rolling Stones music video Mixed Emotions
Rolling Stones music video Undercover Of The Night
Rolling Stones music video Sympathy For The Devil 2003 (The Neptunes Remix)
Rolling Stones music video Anybody Seen My Baby?
Rolling Stones music video Saint Of Me
Rolling Stones music video Rain Fall Down (Will.I.Am Remix)
Rolling Stones music video Streets Of Love
Rolling Stones music video Don't Stop
Rolling Stones music video Undercover Of The Night
Rolling Stones music video Start Me Up
Rolling Stones music video Too Much Blood
Rolling Stones music video Sympathy For The Devil 2003 (The Neptunes Remix)
Rolling Stones music video Going To A Go-Go
Rolling Stones music video Brown Sugar
Rolling Stones music video Time Is On My Side
Rolling Stones music video Anybody Seen My Baby
Rolling Stones music video Angie
Rolling Stones music video Plundered My Soul
Rolling Stones music video Start Me Up
Daft Punk - Kevin Rudolf Feat. Lil' Wayne - The Rolling Stones music video Robot Rock - Let It Rock - Sympathy For The Devil (The Neptunes Remix)
Rolling Stones music video Harlem Shuffle
Rolling Stones music video Start Me Up
Rolling Stones music video Rock And A Hard Place
Rolling Stones music video Sympathy For The Devil (Fatboy Slim Radio Remix)
The Rolling Stones were in the vanguard of the British Invasion of bands that became popular in the US in 1964–65. At first noted for their longish hair as much as their music, the band are identified with the youthful and rebellious counterculture of the 1960s. They were instrumental in making blues a major part of rock and roll, and of changing the international focus of blues culture to the less sophisticated blues typified by Chess Records artists such as Muddy Waters, writer of "Rollin' Stone", the song after which the band is named. After a short period of musical experimentation that culminated with the poorly received and largely psychedelic album Their Satanic Majesties Request (1967), the group returned to their bluesy roots with Beggars' Banquet (1968) which – along with its follow-ups, Let It Bleed (1969), Sticky Fingers (1971), and Exile on Main St. (1972) – is generally considered to be the band's best work, and are considered the Rolling Stones' "Golden Age". Musicologist Robert Palmer attributed the "remarkable endurance" of the Rolling Stones to being "rooted in traditional verities, in rhythm-and-blues and soul music" while "more ephemeral pop fashions have come and gone".
The band continued to release commercially successful records through the 1970s and selling many albums with Some Girls (1978) and Tattoo You (1981) being their two most sold albums worldwide. In the 1980s, a feud between Jagger and Richards about band's musical direction almost caused the band to split but they managed to patch their relationship and had a big comeback with Steel Wheels (1989) which was followed by a big stadium and arena tour. The band's tradition of supporting albums with big stadium tours continued through the 1990s and 2000s. The band made what were then the four highest-grossing concert tours of all time (Voodoo Lounge Tour (1994–95), Bridges to Babylon Tour (1997–99), Licks Tour (2002–03), and A Bigger Bang Tour (2005–07)).
The Rolling Stones were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1989, and the UK Music Hall of Fame in 2004. Rolling Stone magazine ranked them fourth on the "100 Greatest Artists of All Time" list, and their estimated album sales are above 250 million. They have released twenty-nine studio albums, eighteen live albums and numerous compilations. Let It Bleed (1969) was their first of five consecutive number one studio and Live albums in the UK. Sticky Fingers (1971) was the first of eight consecutive number one studio albums in the US. In 2008 the band ranked 10th on the "Billboard Hot 100 All-Time Top Artists" chart. In 2012, the band celebrated their 50th anniversary.