Rolling Stones tribute band set to play in Nashville Thursday

“Satisfaction: The International Rolling Stones Tribute Show” comes to the stage at Brown County Playhouse in Nashville on Thursday.

Maybe Mick Jagger lied.

Because the Brown County Playhouse schedule clearly indicates that you can get satisfaction — right at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the venue at 70 S. Van Buren St. in Nashville.

All courtesy of an ensemble performing “Satisfaction: The International Rolling Stones Tribute Show”.

With band members who dress and look measurably like the classic lineup of Jagger, Keith Richards, Ronnie Wood and Charlie Watts, some have fittingly referred to the show as Jumpin’ Jack Flashback.

And members are hardly your average mimicking band. They have been featured in Rolling Stone, on “CBS Sunday Morning”, and a host of other media.

The band has played the nation’s top casinos, performing arts centers, music halls and other venues. Performing up to 150 shows a year, this production showcases what its promotional material calls “the most authentic cast and costuming of its kind.”

In 2005, the production became the first ever Rolling Stones show to debut on the Las Vegas strip as part of Legends In Concert Show.

Three years later, the band was chosen by Paramount Pictures and the IMAX Corporation to perform promotional concerts nationwide for the Rolling Stones concert film “Shine a Light” by Martin Scorsese.

By 2010, the group was approved by the Rolling Stones to perform long term engagements with the Walt Disney Corporation. They also embarked on the first-ever tour of Russia with sold-out shows in Moscow and St. Petersburg.

Just a few years ago, Satisfaction teamed up with Abbey Road to form a new touring production entitled “Beatles vs. Stones-A Musical Showdown.” The show follows both bands from 1964 forward into the future with alternating sets and a once-in-a-lifetime finale.

Plus, Satisfaction debuted a new three-act production in 2018 featuring a historical journey of The Rolling Stones while recreating some of the group’s most famous tours from 1965 through 1982 complete with authentic costumes, instruments and multimedia story.

Major media has marveled. The Washington Post called the show “a spot-on portrayal of the Rolling Stones.”

For more information and tickets, visit browncountyplayhouse.org.