This one sits at 40% confidence — treat it as a pinch of salt until more sources weigh in. The story comes from a single Reuters signal filed May 6th (reut.rs/4tnPcMR), which gives it respectable provenance but no corroboration yet from anywhere else. Go read the original before you anchor on any specific detail here.
The Rolling Stones formed in 1962. Do that arithmetic slowly. Sixty-three years of recording, surviving each other, surviving the music industry's three or four complete reinventions — and now, according to Reuters on May 6th, the band is celebrating the imminent arrival of their 25th studio album. Twenty-five. Most bands never reach five. Many that reach ten are running on nostalgia fumes and tribute-circuit bookings by fifteen. The Stones absorbed the deaths of founding members, the acrimonious departures of others, and the kind of internal tensions that have dissolved lesser bands into litigation and silence. They kept making records anyway. Their last studio album, Hackney Diamonds in 2023, was their first collection of original material in eighteen years and landed with genuine critical warmth — not the polite applause reserved for heritage acts, but actual interest. Whatever comes next carries that momentum with it.
If confirmed, here is what this means: a band at their twenty-fifth album is no longer making music to prove something. That freedom tends to produce either coasting or something genuinely strange, and the Stones — at this point in their history, without Charlie Watts, with Mick Jagger in his eighties — have little obvious incentive to play it safe. For the wider music industry, there is a secondary signal worth reading: legacy acts with real catalogues are proving more creatively durable than the streaming era's orthodoxies suggested. Labels, younger artists, and the people who fund tours are all watching. A culturally credible new Stones record shifts the calculus on what late-career output can still mean commercially and artistically.
Watch for official announcements from the band's own channels or Universal Music, and any corroborating coverage from music press beyond Reuters — that second source is what moves this from rumour to confirmed release.
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