DAYS OF RAGE: The Rolling Stones Road To Altamont | Violent 1960s-era of U.S | Feature Documentary

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Published 2023-11-01
The decade that began with peace and love was shattered in the late 1960s amidst riots, assassinations and a war that wouldn’t end. #TheRollingStones became the voice of this new era, which came to a horrific end at the Altamont festival.

Directed by Tom O'Dell
Starring: Sam Cutler (Stones’ tour manager), Ronnie Schneider (tour producer), Gered Mankowitz (Stones’ photographer), Michael Lydon (Altamont reporter), Joel Selvin (author), Charles Kaiser (author), Mark Paytress (author), Anthony DeCurtis (Rolling Stones Magazine contributing editor), Keith Altham Stones’ publicist), Peter Richardson (author)
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All Comments (21)
  • @jsunyata7062
    I'm 69. Best documentary on the Stones and the 60's I've ever seen. We are an insignificant planet in the vastness of the cosmos, but no other planet can claim our musical acts of the 60's and 70's.
  • @arneberg9072
    Imagine, still after 50 years doc's like this appers and hold your fascination ----
  • I grew up during the 60's and 70's and I remember all of what went on at the time. I've always loved the Rolling Stones and still do amongst other bands too. It was definitely quite a time to grow up in 😎
  • The stones longevity in rock history still around in 2024 is remarkable 😊
  • @We_Seek_Truth
    I can't believe that event was forced on without restrooms and fresh water. What a disaster.
  • @marksimon2650
    Incredible! I hadn't seen anything (outside the actual film, "Gimmie Shelter"), that had put the Altamont affair into it's proper perspective, and as a companion piece to the movie, this documentary is required viewing, however painful the truth it tells is. And a special thank you to and for the involvement of those directly connected to the event... Mark Simon (USN, 1981-1989)
  • @user-qm7nw7vd5s
    Amazing, how such quality documentaries show up free on YouTube! 👍
  • @adamwatson6916
    Brian Jones mellotron playing on We Love You and 2000 Light Years from Home is brilliant .
  • @leaningpol4350
    This is really well made with a lot of footage by the stage at Altamont that I haven't seen before. Five stars.
  • @ZERO-HEARD
    This is the very best music documentary I have ever seen !! In my life , Rolling Stone’s has and always will be my favorite band in my life !!,
  • @clarkleach6733
    What the man said about the Stones' 1969 show in Los Angeles still being one of the best 50 years later: My wife and I saw them in 1989 in their one and only appearance in Upstate South Carolina, and I would lay odds that their 1989 show trumped the '69 one --- and that is saying a lot. Best band of all time, which is also saying a lot. Hoping the Stones are still here in 2069.
  • @michael1415
    This was a fantastic documentary, very well put together and highly informative. It's always amazed me how the Grateful Dead have constantly managed to be spared their share of responsibility for the Altamont debacle when, after all, they were the ones who, in the first place, recommended the Hells Angels, maybe not the chapeter that wound up at Altamont, but how could the Stones know about the San Francisco chapter vs the San Jose chapter vs the Oakland chapter. The Dead (and their manager Rock Scully) knew about this and the various differences among chapters and should have been more involved. But they weren't. Then, at the festival itself, and this is critical, after arriving to perform in their alloted slot, the Grateful Dead, taking stock of the violence that had taken place up to that point, walked out on the event and left the premisis altogether, leaving a 2 hour gap before the Stones came on. The Dead, on their own home turf, with an audience that was their crowd, their people, bolted like cowards, fearing further violence. They could have had a soothing effect on the crowd if they'd performed. It may or may not have worked, but their unwillingness to try was reprehensible. They knew the Stones were now alone and didn't have the option of walking out. As bad as things were at the moment of the Dead's exit, there's no telling how much worse things might have degenerated had the Stones, too, walked out. The Grateful Dead's bailing essentially gave the message that the cared only about saving themselves. They didn't care about the state of affairs at Altamont. They didn't care about the pile of crap they were handing the Stones, leaving them to hold the bag when the time came to find blame for a festival gone awry. If this concert had been in London, on the Stones' home turf, and they had walked out on the Grateful Dead under similar circumstances, nobody would have hesitated to blame the Stones for chickening out, and rightfully so. Well, at Altamont, this is what the Grateful Dead did. Have they ever answered for this? Have any of their fellow California musicians that performed that day ever answered the question about the impact of the bailing by the Grateful Dead? These other bands all bailed themselves, but at least they performed. In the end, The Grateful Dead high-tailed it out of Altamont to save their own skins, the Stones be damned and the rest of the crowd as well.
  • @the4thway51
    The 60s ending with a bang and all that led up to it.. Well made and with new insights.
  • Stones were on fire in the 70s and still rolling today. To say they lost their mojo at Altamont is rubbish.
  • @MarkCox21125150
    Excellent ! This was extremely well done and balanced. A+++
  • @TheTempest1944
    EXCELLENT movie!!! Thank you, very much, for making this..!
  • @5150show
    Incredible movie , incredible band