![]() ![]() To keep things clear we are only listing the number of prints that are available in a particular edition at a particular price. After the next 20% sells the price will increase again and so on, until the edition sells out completely. After 20% of an edition sells the price will increase. With Limited Edition prints and photographs the price typically increases as the edition sells down. ONCE AN EDITION SELLS OUT IT WILL NEVER BE REPRINTED! 20” x 24” print (the image size is 15” x 20” plus a white border) in a hand-numbered edition of only 50 prints.16” x 20” print (the image size is 12” x 18” plus a white border) in a hand-numbered edition of only 75 prints.11” x 14” print (the image size is 8” x 12” plus a white border) in a hand-numbered edition of only 250 prints. ![]() ![]() This photograph is currently being made available in three sizes and editions as follows: The majority of these images have never been seen or published and most are available here as Limited Edition fine art prints for the FIRST TIME! Thanks to his unequaled access and gifted eye for composition, Bob Bonis captured thousands of unguarded, candid and iconic photographs of the two most important groups in the history of popular music. This is a Limited Edition fine art photograph, derived from the original negative or slide, and is printed on professional grade Fujicolor Crystal Archive paper by the master printers at Duggal Visual Solutions in New York. Tour Manager for both The Beatles and the Rolling Stones from 1964 through 1966. This photograph was taken by Bob Bonis, who was the U.S. Fortunately their US Tour Manager, Bob Bonis, accompanied them on this trip and captured some of the only photographs documenting this historic event and seminal moment in their long history. Soon afterwards they would meet Brian Jones, who along with Ian Stewart were forming a band and enlisted Mick and Keith to join. Soon they were playing those records all over town, until the day they put two and two together and the singer joined forces with the guitarist-forging one of the most revolutionary rock duos of all time. Even when Keith transferred to another school in 1954, their paths would cross again in 1961 at a chance encounter at a Dartford, Kent train station, when Mick had some American rhythm and blues records that he had mail ordered from Chess Records in tow, and Keith remarked, “Oh, yeah, these are really interesting.” And so it began. Mick Jagger and Keith Richards grew up one street away from each other in Dartford, Kent, England, and, starting in September 1950, would have many a play date when not attending Wentworth Primary School. Recordings from Chess records were actually the spark that led to the formation of the Rolling Stones. Their manager and producer Andrew Loog Oldham cheered them up by surprising them with a trip on their four days off between shows to visit and record at Chess Records studios. After a well-received first US show in San Bernardino, California they played two very disheartening shows in San Antonio, Texas where they performed alongside monkey and juggling acts and country star George Jones to an unreceptive small audience. The Rolling Stones (Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Brian Jones, Bill Wyman and Charlie Watts) arrive in America for the first time-ever on June 1, 1964, just a three days after their first album – England’s Newest Hitmakers – The Rolling Stones – was released. ![]()
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