In 1968, the Rolling Stones wanted to promote their seventh album Beggar’s Banquet when director Michael Lindsay-Hogg suggested the idea of a circus-style variety show featuring clowns, fire eaters, ...
This time capsule captures the vibrant energy of one of rock's most remarkable moments. On December 10, 1968, and the early morning hours of the 11th, The Rolling Stones, The Who, The Dirty Mac (John ...
The hopes and optimism of rebellious youth were on full display in the swinging London of 1968. The idea of music changing the world seemed not only possible but inevitable. Rock’s royalty gathered ...
HUDSON N.Y. — In 1968, music history was made when British American filmmaker Michael Lindsay-Hogg captured the Beatles in a recording studio for the documentary “Let It Be,” culminating in the ...
A year after the Rolling Stones‘ Rock and Roll Circus multimedia box set, ABKCO has released “Sympathy for the Devil” from the remastered video. Rock and Roll Circus also featured performances by the ...
1968 was a crucial year for the Stones: These archival releases find the group in fighting form, and "Circus" features a previously unreleased John Lennon version of "Revolution." In 1968, the Rolling ...
A 1968 concert featuring the Rolling Stones performing at the “Rock and Roll Circus.” In 1968, the Stones headlined “Rock and Roll Circus,” a planned TV special that mated aerialists, fire-eaters and ...
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