The Rolling Stones Discover America

Exclusive Inside Story of Their American Tour

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By Michael Lydon

Read by Michael Lydon

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Format

Audiobook Download (Unabridged)

Format:

Audiobook Download (Unabridged)

A founding editor of Rolling Stone and acclaimed journalist gives a backstage pass to the most important band in rock’n’roll history during the height of their fame.

In 1969 Michael Lydon, a founding editor of Rolling Stone and a leading member of rock writing's first generation, got a dream assignment: to cover the Rolling Stones' hopscotch tour across America that ended at Altamont. His long, intimate piece on the tour, The Rolling Stones Discover America, captures the highs and lows of the grueling tour and has become a classic of rock 'n' roll journalism — one that the Maysles brothers studied to guide the editing of their film, Gimme Shelter.

Nobody used the term "embedded reporter" in those days, but that's how Lydon lived on the tour, staying in the Stones' HQ house above LA's Sunset Strip and in suites at New York's Plaza Hotel, flying in private jets to Dallas, Chicago, Philadelphia, and Boston, gambling in Las Vegas, hanging out backstage at the LA Forum and Manhattan's Madison Square Garden, smoking pot with "The Boys" in late-night bull sessions, and night after night digging the overpowering, sensuous, and beautiful music. "This was the peak of my rock 'n' roll reporting career," Lydon has said. "I knew I was where every hippie in America wanted to be, and I jumped into the tour with my eyes and ears wide open, a big grin on my mug."

In The Rolling Stones Discover America, Lydon also describes his own nervousness living so close to stardom. "The Stones were good guys and hard-working musicians," he says, "but they were the sun kings of the tour universe. The rest of us were minor planets spinning about them in fixed and distant orbits. It's a miracle I managed to keep my feet on the ground, keep taking notes, and get the story down on paper — but I'm glad I did."

On Sale
Dec 3, 2013
Publisher
Hachette Audio
ISBN-13
9781478953272

Michael Lydon

About the Author

Writer and musician Michael Lydon, a pioneering reporter of 60s rock ‘n’ roll, is a founding editor of Rolling Stone who profiled Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, Jim Morrison, the Grateful Dead, and BB King for the New York Times, Atlantic Monthly, Village Voice, and other periodicals. The Rolling Stones Discover America, now an Amazon Kindle Single and a Hachette audio book, is Lydon’s eyewitness account of being embedded in the Stones’ month-long 1969 tour of America that led to the disastrous concert at Altamont.

A Yale graduate who lives in New York City, Lydon has written many books, among them Rock Folk, Boogie Lightning, and Ray Charles: Man and Music, the definitive biography of the Genius. Lydon also teaches writing at St. John’s University and often performs as a singer-songwriter at Manhattan clubs and coffeehouses with pianist-composer Ellen Mandel and the jazz combo featured on his CD, Love at First Sight.

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