Image of Stones Touring Party

Published: 25 March 2010
Entertainment
Paperback / softback
ISBN: 9781845135157
RRP: £9.99

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Electronic book text

Stones Touring Party

A Journey Through America with the Rolling Stones

Robert Greenfield

‘A compelling account of the Stones trashing America during 1972… Greenfield was allowed the kind of access journalists can only dream of today’ The Times

The Stones’ 1972 tour of the States was perhaps their best – and certainly most notorious – ever. Their previous visit in 1969 had ended in the nightmare of Altamont; now, three years later, they had just recorded their two finest albums, Sticky Fingers and Exile on Main Street, and were musically in their prime – if also personally at their most dissolute and debauched.
Robert Greenfield, one of America’s finest writers, went along for the ride and came back with a riveting account of high living, excess and rock & roll fury, from the Playboy Mansion to the jail cells of Rhode Island. This was an extended tour Party, capital P, to which all America’s hip, rich and glitzy were invited, from Truman Capote to Stevie Wonder, Annie Liebowitz to Hugh Hefner. The result has been acclaimed as one of the all-time classic music books.
Published for some years by Helter Skelter under the title A Journey Through America with the Rolling Stones, it is now reissued by Aurum under its original title with a new introduction by the author.

Robert Greenfield is also the author of Exile on Main Street: A Season in Hell with the Rolling Stones and biographies of Timothy Leary and Jerry Garcia. He lives in California.

Robert Greenfield

Image of Robert Greenfield

Robert Greenfield is an author, journalist and screenwriter. He is a former associate editor at Rolling Stone (1970-72) where he interviewed artists including Neil Young, Elton John and the Rolling Stones, and has...

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Reviews

‘One of the greatest rock books ever written'

GQ

‘The best book ever written about the Stones, if not music in general’

Independent

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‘As riveting now as it was four decades ago.’

Andy Fyfe

Q

‘a first-hand account, that becomes compulsive reading. If you only read one account of a rock tour, this should be the one’

Jim Stewart

The Beat

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‘A compelling account of the Stones trashing America during 1972… Greenfield was allowed the kind of access journalists can only dream of today’

The Times

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