The Rolling Stones 'live' in Middlesbrough, 1963
By Paul Delplanque on May 27, 11
Love them or loath them, The Rolling Stones are still rolling and even now attract huge audiences around the world. Next to The Beatles they are without doubt the greatest band to come out of the 1960s, selling millions of records world-wide. Back in 1963 the new band had been going for about a year and were about to embark on their first tour of the United Kingdom. The place they chose to kick-off that tour was none other than Middlesbrough, it was the very first time the band had played outside the London area.

The Rolling Stones live on stage during their 1963 Autumn tour which kicked off
in Middlesbrough. It is interesting to see how prominent Brian Jones was in the line-up
of the band, at this stage Brian was the 'leader' of the group. Image courtesy of Mirror.pix
Back in those days the dynamics of the band called The Rolling Stones, was different from how most of us came to know them. Later the group was dominated and led by song writing team Mick Jagger and Keith Richard but in 1963 this had not developed. The band was led then by guitarist Brian Jones, it was Brian who decided what they would play and how the songs would be arranged. The emphasis was on Chicago style Rhythm and Blues played by American artists such as Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf and Jimmy Reed. Mick and Keith favoured the music of Chuck Berry, which also appealed to Brian, this style of vibrant beat driven music was virtually unknown in Britain at the time.

The advert from the Evening Gazette for the Rolling Stones appearance
at The Outlook Club on Corporation Road, Middlesbrough 1963
The band had taken some months to come together with the personnel who would make up the famous group but by the autumn of 1962 Mick, Keith, Brian, Charlie and Bill were regularly playing the clubs of London together. By the summer of 1963 they had proper management and a recording deal with Decca and the time was ripe to venture outside London to play to a modest crowd of people at the Outlook Club in the industrial North-eastern town of Middlesbrough on Saturday July 13, 1963.

Early in their career there was an attempt to present The Rolling Stones
in a 'clean cut' image...fortunately this did not last. Image courtesy of the Birmingham Mail
It was a small crowd indeed who crammed into the little club on Corporation Road that summer's night to see not only The Rolling Stones but another new band called The Hollies. So tracking down people who were actually there proved difficult, but thanks to readers Chris Bailey and Stan Laundon we managed to find a couple of eye witnesses.

Images of the band on stage in the North-east in the early 1960s are rare, this one is at
Newcastle City Hall from their tour in 1964. By that time fans tended to be hysterical,
such scenes did not happen at the Stones appearance at the Outlook Club
Mike Gutteridge remembers: "We arrived late and just caught the last number of the Hollies and just before the Stones went on I received a signed copy of 'Come On' from Brian Jones. I distinctly remember looking at this guy with glossy blonde hair as he signed the copy to 'Mike of the Bachelor Boys'. We stood in front of the Stones for the whole of their set. As the stage was no more than a foot high, it was probably the best view anyone has ever had of a Stones gig. When the club had cleared, we all sat on the stage drinking orange juice talking to Jagger and Richards. We asked them about their Chelsea boots and Jagger was very animated in discussing how fashionable they were. I think I had my Clarke's finest on that night! I then asked Richards about the intro to 'Down the Road a Piece' (a Chuck Berry number that was just a knockout). He took me through all the moves on his Epiphone Riviera. It was the Stones first booking out of London and I class myself very lucky to have experienced that special moment of Rock history."

Another shot of the 1964 Newcastle concert with a young lass being carried off stage.
At the Outlook it was all about the music.
Tony O'Connor was also there that night and recalls: "I never forgot it. Why? Because Mick Jagger and The Stones were different then, with their introduction of American style blues, it was exciting to listen to. I've been a blues fan ever since."
Chris Bailey was not there that night but frequently went to the club. Chris remembers, 'The Outlook 'crowd' represented the new 'modernist' face of the early '60's, in a town populated by other young people committed to the Brylcreem jar, or the 'beehive' hairdo of the 1950's.' So apparently the Outlook was where the Teesside 'in-crowd' hung out.

A publicity card for the band given away when they appeared in Stockton in 1964
This was so early in the Rolling Stones career that they had no hits to play because they had only just released their first record 'Come On' a few weeks before on June 7, 1963. So without Jumping Jack Flash, Honky Tonk Women or Satisfaction to play, what was the Rolling Stones repertoire that hot night in Middlesbrough? Fortunately due to the encyclopaedic mind of Bill Wyman we have some idea, he said in his book 'Rolling with the Stones' that they would have played songs such as, 'Cops and Robbers, Jaguar and Thunderbird, Money, Bye-Bye Johnny, Down the Road a Piece, Road Runner, Memphis Tennessee and maybe even 'Come On', which by that time the band hated and would not play unless threatened by their manager.

At the time it was rumoured that the Rolling Stones never washed, but you
could not have hair like that without spending ages washing and blow drying,
how naive we were!
So that was the story of how the 'Greatest Rock and Roll Band In The World' started their very first tour right here on Teesside, although in those days they would not have appreciated being described as a Rock and Roll band, because they considered themselves Rhythm and Blues purists.
'Incidentally,' Chris Bailey adds, 'the Rolling Stones were paid £65 for their appearance at The Outlook, this presently converts to around £950 and the £10/- admission charge, to around £7.50.' Still, great value for Stones fans!

How most parents and maiden aunts viewed the Rolling Stones in their early years,
surly, unkempt and a downright bad influence. Now parents and maiden aunts
make up most of their audience
Their wild reputation had not been established then, but it was cleverly, if not brilliantly manufactured by their then manager, Andrew Loog Oldham. So if you consider the Rolling Stones to be unwashed, smelly and scruffy then you are still influenced by an image that was created nearly 50 years ago to hide the fact that Mick, Keith, Brian , Bill and Charlie all came from respectable backgrounds. Unlike a group of wild working class Liverpudlians who had been playing strip joints in Hamburg, but by 1963 were presented as loveable mop tops. You know who we mean!

Weren't they lovable in 1963? Not in Hamburg and Liverpool
in 1962 they weren't...then they were wilder than The Stones
were ever supposed to be.
We thank Chris Bailey, Stan Laundon, Mike Gutteridge and Tony O'Connor for their recollections and help with this feature.
To read more about the Outlook Club visit
picturestockton Stan Laundon has a great website dedicated to the 1960s Teesside music scene click
here to visit Stan Laundon Bands
gazettelive.co.uk Just a buncha kids playing to a buncha other kids...