Start Me Up The #2 Tribute to The Rolling Stones In The USA
Start Me Up, The #2 Tribute to The Rolling Stones in the USA will be appearing with Always Tina September 6 at the Fallbrook Mission Theater in Fallbrook California. Come party with us and dance the night way with two of the mystic iconic music acts ever!
The band’s name was inspired by a Muddy Waters track
In April 1962, Jagger and Richards ventured to the Ealing Club in London to check out a set by Alexis Korner’s Blues Incorporated. The band’s jazz-influenced drummer, Charlie Watts, was sure-handed, but the 19-year-olds were particularly taken with slide guitar work of Brian Jones—then performing under the name “Elmo Lewis,” after his blues hero Elmore James.
Jagger and Richards began performing with Blues Incorporated, but Jones, determined to forge his own blues-based act, soon pried them away for his fledgling band. They were joined by Taylor, and an ad placed in Jazz News brought in a keyboardist named Ian Stewart.
That summer, when Korner pulled Blues Incorporated out of their regular gig at London’s Marquee Club due to a scheduling conflict, he suggested Jones, Jagger, and the rest as replacements. Their group still without a name, Jones drew inspiration from a Muddy Waters track titled “Rollin’ Stone,” and the rest is history.
On July 12, 1962, the band debuted as the Rolling Stones, with Jagger as lead singer, Richards and Jones on guitar, Taylor on bass, Stewart on keyboards and Mick Avory—later of The Kinks—on drums.
Although the Marquee owner invited the Rolling Stones back for regular gigs, the months ahead would be trying ones for the band’s members. Jagger, Richards, and Jones found a place together in the Chelsea section of London, living in squalor as they stretched the leftover money from Jagger’s scholarship between the three of them.
In December, after Taylor threw in the towel and returned to art school, The Stones gave a tryout to bassist Bill Wyman of The Cliftons. A few years older than the others and less familiar with their R&B influences, Wyman nevertheless played well enough to earn approval, helping his cause by donating his amplifiers to the under-equipped band.
Early in the new year, another important piece was secured when Watts stepped in to give the group a reliable drummer. On January 14, 1963, the now recognizable early lineup of the Rolling Stones—Jagger, Richards, Jones, Watts, Wyman, and Stewart—played in public for the first time at the Flamingo Club in Soho.
The band got their next boost from Soviet-born promoter Giorgio Gomelsky, who booked The Stones for a residency at the Crawdaddy Club in Richmond, London, beginning in February 1963. It was here that the group developed its first significant following, with students from the area pouring in to see this energetic R&B band and its whirling frontman. Local newspapers caught on to the act, with another budding group of rock royalty, The Beatles, even dropping by to see what the fuss was about.
In late April, 19-year-old promoter Andrew Loog Oldham caught wind of the sensation. Convinced the group’s combination of sound and sex appeal would catch fire—and with Gomelsky out of the country—he quickly moved in with his partner, Eric Easton, and signed The Stones to a management contract. By mid-May, a deal with Decca Records was in place as well.
Along with Gomelsky, the heavyset Stewart came out on the short end of the talks, as he was dropped from live performances (though he was allowed to remain as a session musician and road manager). It was part of the driving management style of Oldham, who urged the band to think big and quit their day jobs once and for all.
On June 7, 1963, the Stones released their debut single, a cover of Chuck Berry’s “Come On.” With their own acclaimed compositions soon to come, as well as lineup changes that would see the tragic departure of Jones but never the tandem of Jagger-Richards, The Stones were on their way to setting the rock ’n’ roll standard with their string of unforgettable hits and staggering longevity.
Sixty years later, the Rolling Stones have released dozens of hit songs, with eight reaching No. 1 in the charts. They’re also the highest-grossing touring band or artist in the world, having grossed $2.2 billion in concert revenue and sold 22.1 million tickets over the band’s career. Their new record Hackney Diamonds is the band’s 31st studio album.
