20th Century Blues Review — The Rolling Stones

The Rolling Stones

The Rolling Stones: When Rock Returned to the Blues

A vintage-style magazine cover featuring The Rolling Stones performing alongside Muddy Waters and Buddy Guy in Chicago, 1981. The title reads '20th Century Blues Review' with the subtitle 'Back to the Blues!' and highlights the legendary jam session. The image showcases musicians passionately engaged in a blues performance.

The story of the Rolling Stones cannot be told without the blues. From their earliest days, the band positioned itself not as a rebellion against American music, but as an extension of it—loud, electric, and unapologetically reverent. Their very name, borrowed from a song by Muddy Waters, signaled allegiance. The Stones were not chasing novelty; they were following a current that began in the Mississippi Delta and surged north to Chicago.

Illustration of a live music performance at the Checkerboard Lounge in Chicago, featuring musicians singing and playing electric guitars in a blues jam setting, with a nostalgic ambiance.

That lineage came full circle on November 22, 1981, inside a small South Side club called Checkerboard Lounge. While touring the United States, the Rolling Stones slipped into the venue—not as headliners, but as fans—to watch Muddy Waters perform. What followed became one of the most significant unscripted moments in modern music history.

Mick Jagger performing with Muddy Waters and other musicians on stage during a blues jam session.

During the set, Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, and Ronnie Wood joined Muddy Waters onstage. Soon after, Buddy Guy and Junior Wells stepped in as well. What could have felt like a publicity stunt instead became something far rarer: a genuine blues jam, loose and unpolished, driven by respect rather than spectacle.

The performance captured that night—later released as Live at the Checkerboard Lounge, Chicago 1981—documents more than a collaboration. It records a moment when rock musicians willingly stepped out of the spotlight and back into the tradition that shaped them. Songs like “Hoochie Coochie Man” and “Got My Mojo Workin’” were not reinterpreted; they were returned to their source, played with the raw urgency that first made them powerful.

A dynamic collage depicting iconic musicians performing on stage, showcasing the Rolling Stones alongside blues legends like Muddy Waters and Buddy Guy, captured in a vibrant musical atmosphere.

For the Rolling Stones, this night reaffirmed their role as translators between worlds. They did not dilute the blues—they amplified it, introducing generations of rock fans to the artists who defined electric Chicago blues. The Checkerboard session made the lineage visible: Muddy Waters to Buddy Guy, Buddy Guy to the Stones, and onward to the global stage.

A painting depicting a live performance with Mick Jagger singing passionately into a microphone, flanked by Keith Richards and Ronnie Wood playing electric guitars, while a drummer is visible in the background.

The legacy of that night endures because it was unforced. There were no choreographed moments, no polished arrangements, no hierarchy. Just musicians sharing a language older than any one of them. In an era when rock increasingly drifted toward excess, the Stones chose humility—standing shoulder to shoulder with the men who taught the world how electricity could carry feeling.

A group of musicians, including individuals singing and playing electric guitars, perform together on stage in a lively and intimate setting, showcasing a blend of rock and blues.

Volume Three of 20th Century Blues Review honors that truth. Rock did not replace the blues. On that Chicago stage in 1981, it came home.

A vintage magazine cover featuring Muddy Waters, showcasing his guitar playing and smiling expression, with bold text highlighting his legacy in blues music.

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3 responses to “20th Century Blues Review — The Rolling Stones”

  1. […] 20th Century Blues Review 20th Century Blues Review — Volume Three […]

  2. […] Muddy Waters: The Man Who Electrified the Blues 20th Century Blues Review — Volume Three […]

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