News

The Rolling Stones are painting it black for Charlie. The iconic British rock band will change their infamous lips-and-tongue logo from red to black to memorialize late drummer Charlie Watts.
John Pasche in his garden in 2010 with the Rolling Stones logo he created. (The black and white 1970 original logo was used to create subsequent versions.) ...
The Rolling Stones’ relationship to black music, and to race itself, is among the most complex and controversial of any white artists in the history of rock and roll.
It began life as a tiny emblem, something to adorn a 45 rpm single or the band's letterhead. It quickly became ubiquitous and, ultimately, the most famous logo in rock-and-roll. For more than 50 y… ...
The Stones are taking their iconic red logo and painting it black in honor of their late drummer Charlie Watts. ... A billboard with the Rolling Stones logo near the 40th Street Bridge in Pittsburgh.
The Rolling Stones’ Sticky Fingers logo became one of the most popular images of the 1970s — even if it wasn’t created by Andy Warhol. Here’s what we know about some of the history behind ...
Some brilliant photographs of the Rolling Stones looking clean cut before they hit the big time are going on sale. The collection of black and white images is available for £1,500.