Rolling Stone Magazine celebrates its first decade with a program of satire, social commentary, dance and song.Rolling Stone Magazine celebrates its first decade with a program of satire, social commentary, dance and song.Rolling Stone Magazine celebrates its first decade with a program of satire, social commentary, dance and song.
Photos
Charlotte Crossley
- Self
- (as The Harlettes)
Edward M. Davis
- Self
- (as Chief Ed Davis)
William Guest
- Self
- (as The Pips)
Ula Hedwig
- Self
- (as The Harlettes)
Merald Knight
- Self
- (as The Pips)
Storyline
Did you know
- ConnectionsEdited into The Kids Are Alright (1979)
- SoundtracksWhole Lotta Shakin' Going On
Written by Curly Williams and Sunny David
Performed by Bette Midler and Jerry Lee Lewis
Featured review
I remember seeing this when it originally shown and thinking there had to be a better way to celebrate Rolling Stone's anniversary. I was in college and had been reading RS for a couple of years (I can still remember the Linda Rondstadt issue and thinking there will never be a more beautiful woman in rock and roll) and it was so good at combining politics, culture and music. It was such a better magazine when it was based in San Fransisco and took a real anti-establishment view of things. Now it is part of the establishment. The days of barely getting an issue out the door before deadline or the great issue they put out on Elvis' death are long gone.
The tenth anniversary print issue of RS was very good with the writers & editors picking their favorite albums and songs during the magazine's existence (Exile On Main Street was picked most often I think) and it was a good look back at an interesting 10 years. But the only memorable part of this show was Simon and Garfunkel's Bridge Over Troubled Water. The rest of the show was barely a notch above a bad 60's variety show and would have been mercilessly slogged by magazines like RS. They would have been better off doing a VH1 Behind The Music type show.
I give it a 3 just for the S&G number but the rest was not up to the standards of the magazine circa 1977.
The tenth anniversary print issue of RS was very good with the writers & editors picking their favorite albums and songs during the magazine's existence (Exile On Main Street was picked most often I think) and it was a good look back at an interesting 10 years. But the only memorable part of this show was Simon and Garfunkel's Bridge Over Troubled Water. The rest of the show was barely a notch above a bad 60's variety show and would have been mercilessly slogged by magazines like RS. They would have been better off doing a VH1 Behind The Music type show.
I give it a 3 just for the S&G number but the rest was not up to the standards of the magazine circa 1977.
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Top Gap
By what name was Rolling Stone Magazine: The 10th Anniversary (1977) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer