As Fairey notes on his website: “One of the first things I asked Mick was, ‘don’t you think the tongue HAS to be included?’ He responded, ‘yeah I guess it ought to be.’ Case closed. The commemorative 50 th anniversary logo is a celebration of the original. Just last year, the Rolling Stones celebrated their 50th anniversary, and the band tapped graphic designer, Shepard Fairey, who created Obama’s “HOPE” portrait. In a Rolling Stone magazine article, Pasche explained, “Face to face with him, the first thing you were aware of was the size of his lips and his mouth.” But the logo-after attaining global recognition and building a storied history over the decades-has become synonymous with youth, musical rebellion, and an anti-establishment attitude, making it more of a cultural movement than a static design.Īnd the lips and tongue logo most certainly lives on. Pasche’s inspiration for the design is rooted in those early encounters with Jagger. The lips and tongue logo first appeared on the inner sleeve of the band’s 1971 album Sticky Fingers. This led to conversations between Jagger and Pasche about a logo and other potential work for the band’s own label, Rolling Stones Records, inaugurated after the group’s contract ended with Decca in 1970. Jagger visited Pasche’s degree show at the college and was very impressed. So in 1969, lead singer Mick Jagger asked the Royal College of Art in London to help him find a design student to create images for the band.
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At the time Pasche took the reins, the band had grown disappointed by the concepts presented by their record label, Decca Records. The pop art-style logo was designed by John Pasche in 1970 and has remained in place without modification ever since. David Barrie, director of The Art Fund, the U.K.’s preeminent art charity, calls it “one of the most visually dynamic and innovative logos ever created.” The design was voted the greatest band logo of all time in an online poll conducted by Gigwise in 2008.
![the rolling stones logo the rolling stones logo](https://www.esloganmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/john_pasche_rolling_stones.jpg)
The British band’s lips and tongue logo is “one of the world’s most instantly recognizable symbols of rock and roll,” according to London’s Victoria and Albert Museum of decorative arts and design. But the Rolling Stones have arguably the most powerful logo that has stood the test of time. The Beatles, AC/DC, Nirvana, and The Grateful Dead, among others, are outstanding rock and roll bands with memorable logos to match.