Brand New Beat
The Wild Rise of Rolling Stone Magazine
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of California Press
Published:7th Apr '26
Should be back in stock very soon

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.
"Uncovers the West Coast Rise and Turbulent Times of Rolling Stone."
"A captivating record of a magazine that chronicled the revolution as it happened."
* Publishers Weekly *"Brims with dishy details . . . It’s discomfiting when what you live through and participate in — even tangentially — gets turned into 'history.' It’s less weird if the result rings true. Brand New Beat more than makes the grade, at least for this former fact-checker."
* Golden State *“A tidy, well-outlined summary of why, in its heyday, Rolling Stone mattered.”
* Austin American Statesman *“A bouncy, almost academic history . . . —shot through with very specific details of Northern California’s wild-ass, utopian, self-indulgent counterculture of the mid-’60s—to its 1977 move to New York City, embedding that history with reporting that mirrors the spirit of those particularly chaotic years.”
* Alta JournISBN: 9780520399396
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
368 pages