Brand New Beat: The Wild Rise of Rolling Stone Magazine

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Univ of California Press, Apr 7, 2026 - Biography & Autobiography - 368 pages

How the iconic publication's unruly first decade rewrote the rules of journalism. 

Rolling Stone's first decade was truly rock and roll: chaotic, wild, and unpredictable. Brand New Beat charts the origins and evolution of the magazine during its formative early years in San Francisco. Founded in 1967 by a 21-year-old college dropout, Rolling Stone and its editors were steeped in the Bay Area's counterculture and viewed rock and roll as the animating spirit of a social revolution. Reaching beyond music, the magazine delved into the tempestuous culture and politics of the time.

Acclaimed author Peter Richardson takes readers inside the iconic magazine during an era of legendary events, major cultural figures, and unforgettable music. Showing how Rolling Stone became a journalistic juggernaut—nurturing music-focused writers like Cameron Crowe, Lester Bangs, and Greil Marcus as well as New Journalism giants Hunter S. Thompson and Tom Wolfe—this book reveals how Rolling Stone both exemplified and critiqued the counterculture. Always more than the definitive rock magazine, Rolling Stone leveraged the power of popular music to deliver groundbreaking coverage of historic events, setting a new standard for the next generation of American journalism.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
Hippies
13
Counter Culture
29
Plan B
44
Early Days
69
Staffing Up
89
Wild West
105
Keep Growing
123
Boys Club
193
After the Revolution
215
The Establishment
240
The Beat Goes On
261
Random Notes
275
Acknowledgments
281
Bibliography
305
Index
321

New Morning
142
Gonzo
161

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About the author (2026)

Peter Richardson is author of Savage Journey: Hunter S. Thompson and the Weird Road to Gonzo as well as critically acclaimed books about the Grateful Dead, Ramparts magazine, and radical author and editor Carey McWilliams. His essays appear in The Nation, The New Republic, the Los Angeles Times, and elsewhere.

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