How is it that the Rolling Stones’ gross, old band members are still alive and touring?

It’s a combination of several factors that have contributed to the Rolling Stones’ longevity, even though some might be surprised by their continued activity given their age and past reputations. 

Here are some key reasons (from Google Ai):

  • Passion and Purpose: The band members genuinely enjoy performing and sharing their music with audiences. This passion fuels their desire to continue touring and creating. Research suggests that having a strong purpose in life can lead to improved well-being and a lower risk of premature death, according to Booming Encore.
  • Adaptability and Resilience: The Stones have navigated changes in the music industry and their lineup over the years, remaining relevant by consistently touring, exploring different musical avenues like the blues, and adapting to modern rock tour practices. This adaptability has helped them maintain their enduring appeal.
  • Mick Jagger’s Business Acumen and Healthy Habits: Mick Jagger has been a driving force behind the band’s continuation, acting as a smart business person who understood the value of the Rolling Stones’ brand. He has also prioritized maintaining his health and fitness, which allows him to perform physically demanding shows.
  • Chemistry and Interpersonal Dynamics: While they’ve had their ups and downs, the core members have managed to stay together and work effectively as a unit. According to Ronnie Wood, part of their secret might be not over-familiarizing themselves with each other outside of work.
  • Strong Catalog and Continued Popularity: The Rolling Stones have a vast collection of iconic songs that continue to resonate with old and new fans. Their enduring popularity ensures they can continue to fill stadiums and generate revenue from tours.
  • Luck and Genetics: While their healthy habits and smart choices play a role, some might also credit a degree of luck and favorable genetics for their continued longevity. 

It is important to remember that not all original or past members of the Rolling Stones are still alive. Notable deceased members include Brian Jones (drowned in 1969), Ian Stewart (died of a heart attack in 1985), and Charlie Watts (died in 2021).  

In summary, the Rolling Stones’ ability to continue their career despite their age stems from a combination of their enduring passion for music, their adaptability, their strong work ethic, the dedication of key members like Mick Jagger, and their sustained popularity with fans. 

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The Rolling Stones Still Have Fans Under Their Thumb

Stones pic 1

The Rolling Stones performing in 2019 

Photo Credit: Taylor Hill/Getty Images

By Bill Lucey – 03/08/2020 – from his website DailyNewsGems

“If wrinkles must be written upon our brows, let them not be written upon the heart. The spirit should not grow old.”

― James A. Garfield, 20th U.S. President

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My cmnt: I have never been a fan of the Rolling Stones. I don’t like their music, their performances nor their personalities. On top of that they are ugly, even for British rock stars. But I do have to give credit where credit is due. These 80+ year old geezers are still performing and drawing huge crowds. I have to admit that I never expected that.

My cmnt: This website DailyNewsGems is full of interesting articles. I recommend checking it out.

My cmnt: I also credit Jagger for fathering 8 children with five different women. That’s a lot of child support that he has paid out over the years. See the post below this one from People magazine about that. Why credit him? Well, that’s a lot of beautiful women that he made willing to undergo the unpleasant task of having sex with the ugliest rich man alive, without a condom, and to conceive and bear his child, just to have expensive child support for 18 years and not have to ever work again. That’s not as easy as it sounds.

Here’s a famous hit from the Stones called “Gimme Shelter”. While I admit their instrumentation is good Jagger’s singing is almost always horrible.

My cmnt: Even as promiscuous as Mick Jagger was (and is) he’s still a piker compared to the truly talented and esthetically pleasing Ray Charles who has fathered 12 children with ten different women only two of whom he was married to. Most of Ray Charles’ $75 million dollar fortune at his death went to his foundation. He did leave a measly $500,000 to each child who will mostly have to make a living off his famous name as none of them inherited his exceptional talent.

Here’s Ray Charles singing Leon Russell’s classic hit “A Song for You”.

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The Rolling Stones, the ageless English rock band, and once considered the greatest rock n’ roll band in the world, are set to embark on a 15-city North American tour beginning May 8 in San Diego and ending July 9 in Atlanta.

They’ll be performing at First Energy Stadium (the home of the Cleveland Browns) on June 19.

I recall, vividly, telling someone I worked with at The Plain Dealer 26 years ago (1994) that the Rolling Stones were on their last leg.

Here we are in 2020 and they’re still kicking.

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My cmnt: At the time of this post (mid 2025) these douche bags are STILL around!! Below’s a photo from 2025. And supposedly they’re planning a tour in 2026 when most people their age would be scoping out a good nursing home.

My cmnt: They had to have made a pack with the Devil – women, drug use, fame, fortune and long life in exchange for their souls.

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The last time they performed in Northeast Ohio was 18 years ago.

The Stones have been rocking for 58 years. Their first paid gig was at the Marquee Club in London on July 12, 1962, when the band consisted of Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Brian Jones, Ian Stewart, Dick Taylor, and Mick Avory.

Only the animated Jagger, the bands frontman and Richards, a blues rhythm guitarist (both 76 years old) are the original members still plying their trade well into the 21st century. Charlie Watts replaced Mick Avery on drums in January, 1963 and guitarist Ronnie Wood became an official member of the Rolling Stones in February, 1976.

One lingering question that members of the iconic band have had to confront for almost 40 years now is whether they’re too old to be performing. Their age factor has become even more pronounced now that the band members are well into their 70s, when others their age might be limited to watering plants or confined to an assisted living facility.

With lucrative corporate sponsorships fueling their tours, the Stones are bringing in buckets of hard cash, performing usually in front of packed stadiums, with fans all too willing to plunk down $500-$700 a ticket.

Just last year, for example, the Stones performed at 17 shows in the United States, grossing $177.8 million.  Many argue the Stones are well beyond being just a rock n’ roll band, they’re a profitable corporation, and have been for a number of years.

Victor Coelho and John Covach, editors of “The Cambridge Companion to the Rolling Stones,” point out that promoters are guaranteeing “enormous artist fees in return for revenue streams from licensing and the sale of official merchandise – not just T-shirts and tour posters, but intimate apparel, high-end Globetrotter luggage, and even a franchise of the Trivial Pursuit Collector’s Edition board game.”

In 2002, Money Magazine reported that since 1989, the Rolling Stones had generated more than $1.5 billion in gross revenues, including sales of records, song rights, merchandising, sponsorship money, and touring–enabling them to make more money than U2, Bruce Springsteen, Michael Jackson, or Britney Spears.

So, the question is, are the Stones still about rock n’ roll or is it more about a big fat payday?

Dave Bauder, television and music critic for the Associated Press, says he gives the Stones heaps of credit “for staying in shape, keeping up their chops and delivering shows that are satisfying to their fans.  They perform the hits and do some deep dives into their catalog to keep things fresh. That’s no small thing. If they mailed it in, they wouldn’t be playing stadiums anymore.”

“I am romantic or naive enough to believe they really do it for the love of the music,’’ Glenn Gass, Professor of Music at Indiana University told me. “Their legacy, their addiction to having an audience, the sense of purpose everyone needs in life. What else would Keith Richards do?”

Gass additionally points out the Stones have other contemporaries who don’t let wrinkled skin push them to the exit door. Paul McCartney, Bob Dylan, and Fleetwood Mac, among others, are prime examples.

“I think they love their band and their songs and the thrill of each show,” Gass said. “I think I would enjoy playing “Start Me Up” when I was 80! especially if I could do it in a stadium full of excited fans. And I think they view it as a life’s work, not finished until they are, like Muddy Waters and their other blues heroes and role models. I’m sure they would not do it if they were not getting paid, but I really don’t think money is the real draw. Asking why the Stones keep playing is sort of like why asking why Stravinsky kept composing until he was 90, or Picasso kept painting.”

Jack Hamilton, Assistant Professor of Media Studies at the University of Virginia and author of “Just around Midnight: Rock and Roll and the Racial Imagination” also subscribes to the opinion that rock n’ roll still courses through the Stones veins, even at their advanced age.

“I think they seem to genuinely like touring,’’ Hamilton observes. “I’m sure the money plays a part in that. In Keith Richards’ autobiography he definitely gives the sense that he still just loves playing music and wouldn’t know what to do if he retires. In terms of performance level, I don’t think they’re what they were at their absolute peak but it seems like their fans still enjoy it, given the amount of money they are making.”

“Time is not on the Stones’ side:  for all the loyalty they have gained since the 1960’s, they’re not immune to anti-incumbent fervor, especially when they pretend to have nothing more on their minds than sexual prowess,” New York Times music critic Jon Pareles wrote on August 3, 1994 , in his lukewarm review of the band’s first tour since 1990 at RFK Stadium in Washington D.C.

Mick Jagger was confronted with the question whether he (and the Stones) are too old to play as far back as 1981. When told by a New York Times reporter that many believe the Stones are “too old to rock and roll,” Jagger shot back that such a ludicrous observation is a “bunch of rubbish.”  “I’m sure we’ll be carrying on for years; it’s quite easy to,” Jagger told the New York Times. “People think that because you’re white and it’s rock and roll, somehow it’s different. But all the performers I love and admire, who are mostly black, went on until they literally died,” citing Louis Armstrong and Lena Horne. “Sometimes they weren’t very beautiful dying, but a lot of them had health problems that I’m not going to have because I didn’t grow up in poverty the way they did. I can’t foresee the Stones breaking up in the foreseeable future.”

Journalist and author Bob Spitz, writing for the New York Times in 1989, asked Keith Richards if he’s ever “considered whether the Rolling Stones might, in the near future, find it more prudent to retire than lapse into self-parody.”  The iconic Rolling Stones guitarist was quick to shoot down such a suggestion. “Look around,” Richards told Spitz, “and you’ll see that there’s very little out there with our feel for the music. Nobody cooks. Today, everything is computerized. The kids think it’s O.K. to sit in a little room by themselves and push buttons to get Boom-PAH. But their music’s not going to go anywhere except for that. “There are absolutely no dynamics involved, no feeling, no passion, Richards explained. “You can’t get those things out of a machine.”

The fact that the Rolling Stones are still together and still performing at such a high level (by anyone’s standards) well into the 21st century is amazing in itself. Their journey from 1962 through 2020 has been filled with mines and traps, to be sure, they stumbled along the way in certain periods of their career–but they always managed to pick themselves up, regroup, and keep plowing forward.

Stones 2

The Rolling Stones are shown during rehearsal on April 8, 1964 at an unknown location. The British band members, from left, are, Brian Jones, guitar; Bill Wyman, bass; Charlie Watts, drums; Mick Jagger, vocals; and Keith Richards, guitar.

Photo Credit: Associated Press

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Their first steps on American soil wasn’t a pleasant one.

In giving readers a taste of the types of reviews the Stones received in 1964 during their first American tour, Jack Hamilton, writing for Slate Magazine  wrote, “huge swaths of American coverage focused on their physical appearance, particularly their hair. The Los Angeles Times compared the band to cavemen, chimpanzees, and “very ugly Radcliffe girls.” The New York Times ran two lengthy articles on “androgynous” hairstyles and reported that Cleveland, citing destructive effects on “the community’s culture,” would soon prohibit rock-and-roll performances at that city’s Public Hall.”

Similarly, in 1964, Hamilton noted that the Chicago Tribune greeted the British rockers with a chilly welcoming, which read: “Thank you, Rolling Stones. You have been able to convince the world that no one, not even the Beatles, could be more repulsive than you.”

To fully appreciate the Rolling Stones, it’s fascinating to look at how they evolved over almost six decades.

After a string of pop hits in the early 1960s, the Rolling Stones, musically, reached a major turning point in the release of the song, “Jumpin’ Jack Flash” in 1968, with its inflection of Delta Blues. It was at this point when music critics contend that Keith Richards began to take over the sound of the band.

About the same time as “Jumpin Jack Flash” the band was struggling, mightily, keeping band member, Brian Jones, knee-deep in drug addictions and arrests in the fold. The band was left with little choice but to fire him (June 8, 1969), from a band, ironically enough, he created. Jones drowned in his pool less than a month later.

Many observed that as the Stones segued from rhythm and blues toward a more rock and roll sound, Jones felt he lost control of his band. In 1968, the Stones hired a new producer from the United States: Jimmy Miller who began to give the band a more trans-Atlantic sound.

Jones quick replacement was Mick Taylor, a young talented blues guitarist. Music historians assert that the addition of Taylor brought the Stones “level of musicianship up a few notches until he quit in 1975,’’ and musically ushered in a period when the Stones had never been stronger. The addition of Taylor gave the Stones their first “true lead guitarist.”

Taylor left the Stones in 1975.

The 1980s would mark a decade when the Stones would barely be seen at all; except briefly for tours in 1981 and then eight years later, in 1989.

It was during this decade that Mick Jagger and Keith Richards were at each other’s throats for control of the band. And it was also during this period, when members of the band ventured out with brief solo projects, including Jagger and Richards.

Their induction into the Rock n’ Roll Hall of Fame in 1989, according to music historians, brought the Stones back into relevancy, which coincided with the history of rock n’ roll becoming part of many curriculums at American colleges.

With the release of the album “Steel Wheels,” in 1989, the Rolling Stones acquired a sharper understanding of the economics of the music industry and the public’s insatiable thirst for classic rock and roll bands.

That’s when the Stones developed a lucrative business model with the hiring of Canadian promoter Michael Cohl, who according to The Guardian came up with a new strategy: central booking. “He offered a set fee for the Steel Wheels tour to the band, then booked every show himself, cutting out local promoters. He also upped the merchandise operation, sought corporate sponsors and maximized every revenue stream a tour could offer.”

Additionally, an essential ingredient of the Rolling Stones appeal over the last few decades centers on their global outreach.

According to Victor Anand Coelho, Professor Music at Boston University, “The last few years saw the Stones playing to a million fans in Brazil; and a history making show in Cuba, marking a cultural breakthrough, not just a concert.” “The upcoming tour,” Coelho explained, “is carefully planned to include cities that have been missed on previous tours, or as with the case of Cleveland, where the Stones have not appeared for over two decades.”

Further describing the staying power of the Stones, Coelho expressed to me that “while fans will not hear the long searing solos of the Mick Taylor period, the interplay between Richards and Wood continues to be tight and inventive, and Jagger and the rest of the band are in excellent shape physically.”

Imagine, in just a couple of months, the original bad boys of rock will be exploring the highways and byways of North America with its bouncy frontman, Mick Jagger, (fully recovered from a heart valve replacement) brandishing his signature rolling of his shoulders, wagging his finger, throwing off his clothes, and clapping his hands high over his head, only four years shy of his 80th birthday.

Only in America!

–Bill Lucey

WPLucey@gmail.com

March 8, 2020

Rolling Stones Fast Facts

  • Many claim the formation of the Rolling Stones can be traced back to 1949 when Keith Richards and Mick Jagger, both from Dartford, England, went to school together.
  • The band was originally called Little Boy Blue and the Blue Boys. It was Brian Jones, the band’s lead guitarist, who came up with “Rollin’ Stones” in tribute to a Muddy Waters song by the same name. The Stones manager subsequently convinced them to call themselves, “The Rolling Stones,” adding a “g” at the end of Rollin.
  • June 7, 1963: First single, “Come On’’ (a Chuck Berry song) released in England.
  • The 1963 single, “I Wanna Be Your Man” was written for the Stones by John Lennon and Paul McCartney.
  • March 6, 1964: First U.S. single, “Not Fade Away’’ (a Buddy Holly song) released.
  • June 5, 1964, first U.S. tour, kicked off in San Bernardino, California.
  • October 25, 1964: First appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show.
  • In the summer of 1965, recorded a worldwide Number 1 smash hit, “Satisfaction.”
  • In 1967, Allen Klein replaced Andrew Loog Oldham as the new manager of the Stones.
  • Keith Richards threw an acid party at his Redlands estate (country house in West Wittering) on February 12, 1967. The police were tipped off there was drugs at the house, including acid. Richards and Jagger were arrested for possession of drugs.
  • June 13, 1969: Mick Taylor introduced as the newest member of the Rolling Stones.
  • The Stones stopped touring for a long stretch after the tragic free concert at the Altamont Speedway in northern California, (December 6, 1969) where four people died; a disastrous night, when the Stones foolishly hired members of the Hells Angels (motorcycle club) as bodyguards.
  • Due to crippling taxes in the U.K., The Stones moved to the South of France in 1971.
  • In 1971, formed their own label, Rolling Stones Records.
  • March 26, 1971: Unveil their new logo, officially called “Tongue and Lips,” designed by artist John Pasche in 1969 after Mick Jagger approached the Royal College of Art. The original artwork resides at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.
  • February 28, 1976: Ronnie Wood announced as an official member of the Rolling Stones.
  • During the bands 1981 tour, it was the first time they embraced a corporate sponsor. The fragrance maker, Jovan, reportedly paid one million dollars to have their name associated with the tour.
  • Movie director Martin Scorsese has used “Gimme Shelter’’ in four of his films.
  • Inducted into the Rock n’ Roll Hall of Fame in 1989.
  • First concert over the Internet came in 1994.
  • The Stones 1994 world tour set records, bringing in more than $300 million.
  • Mick Jagger was knighted in 2003-he is known as Sir Michael Philip Jagger
  • Current ages of the Rolling Stones: Mick Jagger, 76, lead guitarist Keith Richards, 76, guitarist Ronnie Wood, 72, and drummer Charlie Watts, 78. (now 2025 – add five years to each!!)

–Researched and Compiled by Bill Lucey

Source: The Rolling Stones.” Encyclopedia of World Biography, “The Rolling Stones: 50 Years of Rock” by Howard Kramer; “101 Amazing Rolling Stones Facts” by Jack  Goldstein; “The Cambridge Companion to the Rolling Stones,” by Victor Coelho (Editor).

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Mick Jagger’s 8 Children: All About His Sons and Daughters

Get to know the legendary rock star’s eight kids: Karis, Jade, Elizabeth, James, Georgia May, Lucas, Gabriel and Deveraux

By Emily J. Shiffer – Updated on May 19, 2025 09:38AM EDT – People magazine

Comments

Georgia May Jagger, Mick Jagger and model Elizabeth Jagger attend the 2017 Vanity Fair Oscar Party hosted by Graydon Carter at Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts on February 26, 2017 in Beverly Hills, California
Credit : Kevin Mazur/VF17/WireImage

My cmnt: Mick is obviously happy and proud to have beautiful, young daughters into his 80s. The one on the left has perfected that phony, unsmiling, bored look while the one on the right is happily soaking it all in.

Rock ‘n roll legend Mick Jagger may be an uber-famous musician, but he is also the father to eight children.

The Rolling Stones singer welcomed his first child, daughter Karis, 54, with actress Marsha Hunt in 1970. The following year, he wed ex-wife Bianca Jagger and had daughter Jade, 53. Jagger also shares four children — daughters Elizabeth, 41, and Georgia May, 33, and sons James, 39, and Gabriel, 27 — with ex-wife Jerry Hall, whom he was married to from 1990 to 1997. He welcomed son Lucas, 26, with model Luciana Morad Gimenez in 1999. And in 2016, Jagger’s youngest child, son Deveraux, 8, whom he shares with girlfriend Melanie Hamrick, was born.

In October 2023, the rockstar opened up about fatherhood during an interview with The Guardian.

“You get a bit out of practice — it’s not like riding a bike. The more children you have, the more laissez-faire you get about them, to be honest,” he told the outlet. “It’s fun to have children, at any age. But if you’re working, and always away, you don’t get to enjoy it as much.”

Here’s everything to know about Mick Jagger’s children.

Karis Hunt Jagger, 54

Karis Jagger attend the launch of Jade Jagger's new fine jewelry collection at Chateau Marmont on April 14, 2016 in Los Angeles, California
Chris Weeks/Getty

Jagger shares his oldest daughter, Karis Hunt Jagger, with former American actress Marsha Hunt. She was born on Nov. 4, 1970. Karis graduated from Yale with a history degree in 1992 before working as a film production assistant. She married husband Jonathan Watson in 2000, and has since welcomed two children, Mazie and Zak.

Karis is an executive producer of Netflix’s High on the Hog: How African American Cuisine Transformed America.

And although her personal Instagram profile is private, she shares a public account with her friend and fellow executive producer Fabienne Toback, where the two document their lives. “Two women of color sharing their love of food, friendship and culture (and film),” their profile reads.

Jade Sheena Jezebel Jagger, 53

Jade Jagger attends Alice McCall Fall 2017 Collection Launch Vip Dinner at Albert's on February 23, 2017 in London, England
David M. Benett/Dave Benett/Getty

Jagger’s second child (and first with ex-wife Bianca Jagger), Jade Sheena Jezebel Jagger, was born on Oct. 21, 1971. Bianca and Jagger married in 1971 and divorced in 1978.

Jade is a former model and jewelry designer. She is also a mother of three: she shares daughters Assisi and Amba with former partner Piers Jackson, and son Ray with her husband Adrian Fillary. Jade is also grandmother to Assisi’s children Ezra, Romy and River.

“The ties that bind us are stronger than ever, not just within our immediate family, but the Jagger clan as a whole,” Jade wrote in an essay for British Vogue in 2021. “My father now has eight children with five partners — a globetrotting support network that seems to be ever expanding. In any given year, the whole lot of us might decamp to the Caribbean for a holiday or hit the road in Europe for a Rolling Stones tour — family gatherings where traditional roles lose all meaning amid the chaos and laughter. As a general rule, we’re too busy trying to find a restaurant that will accommodate several dozen screaming Jaggers for the evening to worry about someone’s place in the family tree.”

In July 2021, Jade shared a post on Instagram that paid tribute to her siblings, and included selfies with Georgia May and Lucas.

“Siblings are the best when u come from a dynasty like mine @georgiamayjagger @lucasjagger @turbogeist @karisjagger @lizzyjagger @mickjagger @jadejaggerjewellery,” she captioned the post.

Elizabeth Scarlett Jagger, 41

Elizabeth Jagger attends the 2019 Vanity Fair Oscar Party hosted by Radhika Jones at Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts on February 24, 2019 in Beverly Hills, California
Dia Dipasupil/Getty

Jagger welcomed his third child and first with then-girlfriend Jerry Hall, Elizabeth Scarlett Jagger, on March 2, 1984. Hall married Jagger on Nov. 21, 1990, in a Hindu ceremony in Bali, Indonesia, though they divorced in 1999.

Elizabeth is a model and made her runway debut in 1998 for Thierry Mugler alongside her mother. She is also passionate about civil and women’s rights, and has advocated for the Equal Rights Amendment on Instagram.

The model also appears to be close to her tight-knit family, especially little sister Georgia May. The sister duo spent time together in December 2019 at a gala in Australia, where Elizabeth posted pictures on Instagram of themselves posing with a polaroid of their mom. And in June 2018, she shared a photo for Father’s Day on Instagram alongside her father and sisters Karis, Jade and Georgia May.

James Leroy Augustin Jagger, 39

James Jagger attends the 'Jeremiah Terminator LeRoy' Premiere during 2018 Toronto International Film Festival at Roy Thomson Hall on September 15, 2018 in Toronto, Canada
Sonia Recchia/Getty

Jagger shares his oldest son, James Leroy Augustin Jagger, with Hall. James was born on Aug. 28, 1985. Like his musician father, James also has a talent and love for music: He sang and played guitar in the punk-rock band Turbogeist.

In recent years, he has focused on acting. In 2016, he had a lead role on the HBO series Vinyl, which was executive produced by his father and Martin Scorsese.

He shared with Billboard that his famous dad “wasn’t there any time I was working, so it didn’t feel like I was working for him in any sort of way. I didn’t feel uncomfortable.”

Since then, he has also starred in other shows and movies.

James privately married his wife, artist Anoushka Sharma, in February 2016. The couple later had a small, discreet, hilltop ceremony in April 2016 in the Catskills, a region in Upstate New York.

Georgia May Ayeesha Jagger, 33

Georgia May Jagger attends The Fashion Awards 2022 at Royal Albert Hall on December 5, 2022 in London, England
David M. Benett/Dave Benett/Getty

Georgia May Jagger was born on Jan. 12, 1992, to Jagger and Hall.

At 16 years old, Georgia May signed to a modeling agency, and has been working as a model ever since. She has worked with many fashion brands, including Missoni, Pandora, Wrangler and Vivienne Westwood, to name a few.

In addition to modeling, Georgia May is also a co-owner of BLEACH London, a haircare brand and hair salon boasting locations in London and Los Angeles. She shared an Instagram post of herself and Hall celebrating the launch of the brand’s new Reincarnation Shampoo and Conditioner in Los Angeles in September 2022.

Georgia May is currently in a relationship with Cambryan Sedlick and shares snaps of their life together on Instagram. The couple regularly posts photos from their travels, including trips to ParisLas Vegas and Lake Como, where the model wrote that she’s “accepted [her] fate as a tourist.”

In September 2024, Georgia and Sedlick became parents for the first time when they welcomed their son Dean Lee Jagger Sedlick. “We are so in Love and happy and can’t stop staring at him,” the new mom wrote on Instagram.

Gabriel Luke Beauregard Jagger, 27

Gabriel Jagger attends the launch of new positive media platform 'whynow' at Petersham Nurseries on March 12, 2020 in London, England
David M. Benett/Dave Benett/Getty

Gabriel Luke Beauregard Jagger is Jagger’s fourth child with model Jerry Hall (and sixth overall). He was born on Dec. 9, 1997.

On July 17, 2021, Gabriel married his wife, Swiss socialite Anouk Winzenried, in a small ceremony in London.

The couple met in Mustique, and made an engagement announcement via Tatler, which read, “The engagement is announced between Gabriel, son of Jerry Murdoch of Texas, and Mick Jagger of London, and Anouk, daughter of Janine and Andrea Winzenried of Switzerland.”

The magazine also shared that Gabriel is a journalist who trained at The Times, and now runs his own media website, Why Now.

In March 2020, Jagger posted on his Instagram about the site’s launch with a photo of himself and Gabriel. “Proud to see my son Gabriel’s website is coming along, you can now watch a couple of videos for free before signing up for more at whynow.co.uk @whynowworld,” he captioned the picture.

Lucas Maurice Morad-Jagger, 26

Lucas Jagger attends the Louis Vuitton Fall/Winter 2022/2023 show as part of Paris Fashion Week on January 20, 2022 in Paris, France
Pascal Le Segretain/Getty

Jagger shares son Lucas Maurice Morad-Jagger with Brazilian lingerie model Luciana Gimenez Morad. Lucas was born on May 17, 1999.

Lucas has a flair for fashion, and was featured in commON magazine in August 2022. He also attended Paris Fashion Week in January 2022.

He is also a frequent traveller, having spent time in Budapest, Hungary, and Milan, Italy, in the summer of 2022. In June, he caught his father’s Rolling Stones show in Madrid and shared it with his Instagram followers. And in 2021, he posted shots from a father-son trip and a visit with sister Georgia May.

When he was 21 years old, Lucas underwent ear surgery to have a cholesteatoma removed.

Deveraux Octavian Basil Jagger, 8

Mick Jagger son Devereaux
Melanie Hamrick Insatgram

Jagger’s eighth child, Deveraux Octavian Basil Jagger, was born on Dec. 8, 2016. The Rolling Stones frontman shares his youngest kid with his current partner, American ballerina Melanie Hamrick. (At the time Deveraux was born, Hamrick was 29 and Jagger was 73.)

Hamrick has posted lots of snaps of Deveraux over the years. He enjoys petting sheepboat adventures and watching his father hit the stage with his mom.

In a May 2022 Instagram post, Hamrick shared a photo showing Devereaux dressed up like Spiderman and enjoying riding a horse named Rubi. “Riding through life with my little Spider-Man Dev! ❤️ Had such a beautiful day with beautiful horses and our friend Rubi 🙏🏼,” she captioned the post.

On Mother’s Day 2023, Hamrick posted a sweet video of Deveraux dancing to a song by Imagine Dragons.

“My wonderful, wild, sweet, beautiful Dev!! I am beyond blessed and thankful to be his Mama! ❤️❤️❤️ Happy Mother’s Day !!!!! ❤️ 💐🌸🌺🌷☀️,” she wrote in the caption.

Hamrick opened up about her family’s travel plans in a June 2023 interview with The Times Magazine.

“We want to travel as long as we can until school gets us,” she said, noting that her son has a tutor who travels with them. She added that she and Jagger prefer to live “just full nomad” with their son.

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