The
Rolling Stones, having outlasted nearly all of their 1960s
contemporaries, continue to belt out hits well into middle age. Original
members included lead singer Mick Jagger (Michael Philip Jagger, born
July 26, 1943, in Dartford, Kent, England); guitarist Keith Richard
(surname sometimes listed as Richards, born December 18, 1943, in
Dartford, Kent, England); guitarist Brian Jones (Lewis Brian
Hopkins-Jones, born February 28, 1942, in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire,
England, drowned, July 3, 1969); drummer Tony Chapman; bass player Dick
Taylor; and pianist Ian Stewart. Drummer Charlie Watts (Charles Robert
Watts, born June 2, 1941, in Islington, England) replaced Chapman c.
1962; bass guitarist Bill Wyman (William Perks, born October 24, 1936
[some sources say 1941]) replaced Dick Taylor c. 1962; guitarist Mick
Taylor (born January 17, 1948, in Hertfordshire, England) replaced
Jones, July 1969; guitarist Ron Wood (born June 1, 1947, in London,
England) replaced Mick Taylor, 1975; bass guitarist Darryl Jones
replaced Bill Wyman, 1993. Current members include Jagger, Richard,
Watts, Wood, and Jones.
Often billed as "the world's greatest rock and roll band," the Rolling Stones have earned the title; if not for their musical prowess, then certainly for their longevity. Formation of the group began back as early as 1949 when Keith Richard and Mick Jagger, both from Dartford,
England, went to school together. It would take another eleven years,
however, before their paths would cross again. To their amazement, they
discovered that both of them had grown up listening to the same great
American bluesmen and rockers like Chuck Berry and Bo Diddley. The two formed a friendship that was based around one common interest: music.
At
the time, Jagger was attending London's School of Economics while
Richard was struggling at Sidcup Art College. Soon they found out about a
local musician named Alexis Korner who held blues jams at the Ealing
Club. After Jagger began to sing for Korner's
Blues Incorporated, he decided to join a group that Richard was putting
together. Other members included Ian Stewart, Dick Taylor, Tony
Chapman, and a guitar player named Brian Jones.
Jones was quite
different from the rest of the lads. Although only one year older than
Jagger and Richard, he had already parented two illegitimate children by
the time he was sixteen. And while Richard was more into the Berry
school of rock guitar, Jones was pure blues and often referred to
himself as Elmo Lewis (in reference to the slide guitarist, Elmore
James).
Charlie Watts was already making a fair living drumming for a jazz combo
when he was persuaded to replace Tony Chapman. The oldest member, a
rocking bassist, Bill Wyman, hooked up immediately after to complete the
rhythm section. With the shrewd
talents of manager/publicist Andrew Loog Oldham, they began opening for
Blues Inc. at London's Marquee Club in 1963, billed as " Brian Jones
and The Rollin' Stones" (after a Muddy Waters tune). Dick Taylor was no
longer in the band at this time.
With hair longer than any other
group and an attitude that made the Beatles look like choir boys, the
Stones took full advantage of their image as "the group parents love to
hate." "That old idea of not letting white children listen to black
music is true," Jagger told Jonathan Cott, "cause if you want white
children to remain what they are, they mustn't." Their negative public
image was constantly fueled by Oldham, who also decided that Stewart's neanderthal presence did not fit in with the rest of the band and so delegated him to the background, never seen but often heard.
Oldham
quickly secured the Stones a contract with Decca Records and in June of
1963 they released their first single, a cover of Chuck Berry's "Come
On" backed with "I Want to Be Loved." Reaction was good and it would
only take another six months for the group to make it big. Continuing
their eight-month residence at the Crawdaddy Club in Richmond, they
released their version of the Beatles "I Wanna Be Your Man" followed by
Buddy Holly's "Not Fade Away," which made it to Number 3 in Great
Britain. Their fourth single would climb all the way to the top in their
homeland, "It's All Over Now" by Bobby Womack. Their next hit, "Little
Red Rooster," likewise reached Number 1 but was banned in the United
States.
Satisfaction
The Rolling Stones already
had two albums out in England by the time they broke the U.S. Top 10
with "The Last Time," written by Jagger and Richard. And in the summer
of 1965 they had a worldwide Number 1 hit with "Satisfaction." Propelled
by Richard's fuzz-tone riff
and Jagger's lyrics of a man who couldn't get enough, the song
immediately secured a seat in rock history. Oldham had played up the
outlaw image of the band to the point where they became the image, and
he was no longer needed.
Allan Klein took over as manager and in
1966, after having relied on other artist's songs, they released their
first all-originals LP, Aftermath. The band was plagued with drug busts during the psychedelic era and in 1967 recorded their reply to the Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, titled Their Satanic Majesties Request.
The album paled in comparison to the Beatles' masterpiece and is noted
mainly as the last album Brian Jones truly worked on, having become too
involved in drugs.
With Jones largely out for the count, Richard came into his own on 1968's Beggar's Banquet.
His acoustic guitar sounded as full as an orchestra on "Street Fighting
Man," and one of the most deadly electric solos of all time can be
found on "Sympathy for the Devil." It was obvious the Stones didn't need
Jones dragging them down anymore and he officially quit (or was booted
out) on June 9, 1969. Less than one month later he was found drowned in a
swimming pool with the official cause listed as "death by misadventure."
Two
days later, the Stones had their replacement in Mick Taylor, former
guitarist for John Mayall's Bluesbreakers. His first gig was a free
concert in memory of Jones at Hyde Park. Taylor's influence would bring
the level of musicianship up a few notches until he quit in 1975. Their
first album after he joined was still mostly a Richard album, however. Let It Bleed was released to coincide
with an American tour and contained two haunting tunes, "Midnight
Rambler" and "Gimme Shelter." The latter became the title of the movie
documenting the Stones' free concert at Altamont, California, at which
Hell's Angels members (hired as security guards) stabbed a youth to
death right in front of the stage. The group also released an album from
that tour, Get Yer Ya Ya's Out.
Exiles
In 1971 The Stones formed their own label, Rolling Stones Records, and began to expand their musical horizons. Sticky Fingers
contained jazz with "Can't You Hear Me Knockin," while the
country-flavored "Dead Flowers" continued the trend of "Honky Tonk
Women." Their next album, Exile on Main Street, oddly enough, was
dismissed by critics when it came out, but over the years has come to
be regarded as probably their finest recording. With Richard hanging out
with Gram Parsons, the country influence was stronger than ever but the
album also contains gospel ("I Just Want To See His Face"), blues
("Shake Your Hips"), and full-tilt rock ("Rip This Joint"). It is four
sides of vintage Stones at their tightest, and loosest.
Their next two albums, Goat's Head Soup and It's Only Rock and Roll,
contain both outstanding tracks and what some critics considered real
dogs. "Time Waits For No One," with a beautiful solo by Taylor, shows
just how much the Stones had changed, yet tracks like "Star Star" reveal
just the opposite: the bad boys of rock just couldn't grow up. Five
years was enough for Taylor and in 1975 he decided to walk away from one
of the most sought-after positions in rock. "The fact is I was becoming
stagnant and lazy with the Stones. l really got off on playing with them, but it wasn't enough of a challenge," he told Rolling Stone.
Rumors
about who would take Taylor's place included such guitar greats as Roy
Buchanan, Jeff Beck, Peter Frampton, and Rory Gallagher, but the obvious
choice was Faces guitarist, Ron Wood. Wood fit the Stones mold
perfectly, with the same musical roots and a look that was almost a
carbon copy of Richard. Wood pinch-hit for Taylor on the 1975 tour of
America, bounding back and forth with the Faces before finally joining
the Stones full-time. The first full album he contributed to was Black and Blue in 1976. Once again the Stones stretched out by dabbling in reggae
("Cherry Oh"), disco ("Hot Stuff"), and a smoky lounge lizard treatment
on "Melody." The group's future was in doubt in 1977 when Richard was
busted in Toronto for heroin
dealing, but his sentence did not include any jail time. "Drugs were
never a problem," he told Edna Gundersen. "Policemen were a problem."
After 1978's classic Some Girls, the next Stones' records seem indistinguishable
from each other. The songs are vehicles for Richard's guitar hooks with
nothing equaling the emotion of previous hits like "You Can't Always
Get What You Want" or "Moonlight Mile." Only the hit "Start Me Up" stands out from this period.
Everyone Was Hating Each Other
During the 1980s, rumors swirled constantly that the Rolling Stones would break up. Jagger would do nothing to dispel
the rumors. Richard was reportedly not too happy when Jagger took time
off to work on his solo album (even though Wyman and Wood both have
records outside the group). Then Jagger refused to tour to support the
Stones' Dirty Work LP, instead hitting the road to promote his own She's The Boss. "Touring Dirty Work would have been a nightmare," Jagger told Rolling Stone,
"It was a terrible period. Everyone was hating each other so much;
there were so many disagreements. It was very petty; everyone was so out
of their brains, and Charlie was in seriously bad shape … It would have
been the worst Rolling Stones tour. Probably would have been the end of
the band." Richard, who had himself toured with Wood's New Barbarians
in 1979, was outraged that Jagger would make the Stones a second choice.
"I felt like I had failed. l couldn't keep my band together," he told
the Detroit Free Press. Pursuing his own solo project, he stated
that the Stones will "have to wait for me. They kind of pushed me into
this solo thing, which I really didn't want, and now they're paying a
price." Richard released his own album, Talk Is Cheap, with plenty of barbs for Jagger. "I'm enjoying myself too much to all of a sudden stop," Richard said.
And
for a while in the 1980s, it seemed that the Stones had in fact broken
up. Jagger was pursuing his solo career, barely speaking to Richard. The
partners took turns sniping at each other through the press. As Jagger related in Rolling Stone,
"Everyone was bored playing with each other. We'd reached a period when
we were tired of it all. Bill [Wyman] was not enthusiastic to start
with - there's a guy that doesn't really want to do much…. You've got
Charlie overdoing it in all directions … Keith the same. Me the same …
We just got fed up with each other. You've got a relationship with
musicians that depends on what you produce together. But when you don't
produce … You get difficult periods, and that was one of them."
Still the World's Greatest Rock and Roll Band
But
rumors of the band's breakup had to be put on hold in 1989, when the
Stones announced plans for a new album and a world tour. A favorite with
critics, Steel Wheels quickly sold over two million copies. The tour,
however, which was sponsored by Anheuser-Busch, was attacked by many for
being blatantly over-commercialized. Despite the criticism, the Steel Wheels Tour - which reportedly raked in over $140 million - was a hit with music reviewers and fans. The 1990 Rolling Stone readers' and critics' polls selected the Stones as best band and artist of the year, and cited Steel Wheels as 1989's best tour.
The group's ability to overcome internal dissension
and the toll of more than 25 years in rock and roll's fast lane to put
together the industry's success story of the year surprised some
observers, but not the Stones themselves. "The Stones, it's a weird
thing, it's almost like a soap opera," Richard told Rolling Stone.
"We needed a break to find out what you can and can't do on your own. I
had to find myself a whole new band… . But then I realized maybe that's
the way to keep the band together: leaving for a bit… . I never doubted
the band, personally - but I'm an incredible optimist where this band is concerned. It never occurred to me that they might not be able to cut it. Absolutely not."
But
Steel Wheels was to be Bill Wyman's last album and tour with the Stones
- he announced his retirement in 1993. With Darryl Jones replacing
Wyman, the Stones next released Voodoo Lounge, an album that in
many ways was meant to recall the classic Stones sound of the early
1970s. The announcement for the subsequent tour was greeted with
complaints from some critics that the Stones were simply too old, just
going through the motions. But that album would go on to sell four
million copies, and the supporting tour, which featured 22 songs from
the band's 30-year history, went on to become the highest grossing tour
of all time.
The years when a Rolling Stones breakup seemed a certainty
have passed. As a change of pace from their usual mammoth concert
tours, the Stones made a brief sweep of Europe, playing in far smaller
venues, typically of less than 1,000 seats, such as the Paradiso in
Amsterdam. For that tour, the Stones presented a more stripped down,
more acoustic set, featuring songs like the Stones chestnut "The Spider
and the Fly," "Shine a Light," from Exiles, and the Bob Dylan classic "Like a Rolling Stone. " From that tour, the group released the live album "Stripped."
The experience seemed to bring new life to the band, and more certainty to the band's future, although the band remains noncommittal. "I don't think Charlie's wildly enthusiastic, nor am I," Jagger told Rolling Stone,
"But I dare say the Rolling Stones will do more shows together … I
don't know exactly what framework [that] would take … But I'm sure there
will be Rolling Stones music and there will be Rolling Stones songs."
Selected recordings on London Records include England's Newest Hit Makers - The Rolling Stones, 1964; 12x5, 1964; The Rolling Stones Now!, 1965; Out of Our Heads, 1965; December's Children, 1965; Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass), 1966; Got Live If You Want It!, 1966; Between the Buttons, 1967; Flowers, 1967; Their Satanic Majesties Request, 1967; Beggar's Banquet, 1968; Through the Past Darkly, 1969; Let It Bleed, 1969; Get Yer Ya Yas Out, 1970. On Rolling Stone Records, except as noted: Sticky Fingers, 1971; Hot Rocks: 1964-1971, London Records, 1972; Exile on Main Street, 1972; More Hot Rocks (Big Hits & Fazed Cookies), London Records; Goat's Head Soup, 1973; It's Only Rock 'n' Roll, 1974; Made in the Shade, 1975; Metamorphosis, ABKCO, 1975; Black and Blue, 1976; Love You Live, 1977; Some Girls, 1978; Emotional Rescue, 1980; Sucking in the Seventies, 1981. On Virgin Records: Tattoo You, 1981; Undercover, 1983; Dirty Work, 1986; Steel Wheels, 1989; Voodoo Lounge, 1993; Stripped, 1995; The Rolling Stones Rock & Roll Circus, ABKCO, 1996.
Further Reading
Contemporary Musicians: Profiles of the People in Music, Gale Research, Detroit, Michigan.
Charone, Barbara, Keith Richards, Life as a Rolling Stone, Dolphin, 1982.
Christgau, Robert, Christgau's Record Guide, Ticknor & Fields, 1981.
Dalton, David, The Rolling Stones, The First Twenty Years, Knopf, 1981.
Allan Kozinn, Pete Welding, Dan Forte & Gene Santoro, The Guitar, Quill, 1984.
The Guitar Player Book, Grove Press, 1979.
The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Rock, compiled by Nick Logan and Bob Woffinden, Harmony, 1977.
David Dalton & Lenny Kaye, Rock 100, Grosset & Dunlap, 1977.
Rock Revolution, Popular Library, 1976.
The Rolling Stone Illustrated History of Rock & Roll, edited by Jim Miller, Random House/Rolling Stone Press, 1976.
The Rolling Stone Interviews, St. Martin's Press/Rolling Stone Press, 1981.
The Rolling Stone Record Guide, edited by Dave Marsh with John Swenson, Random House/Rolling Stone Press, 1979.
Sanchez, Tony, Up and Down With the Rolling Stones, Signet, 1979.
What's That Sound?, edited by Ben Fong-Torres, Anchor, 1976.
Detroit Free Press, December 4, 1988.
Detroit News, September 27, 1988.
Guitar Player, February 1980; April 1983; May 1986: January 1987.
Guitar World, March 1985; March 1986.
Metro Times (Detroit), December 7, 1988.
Oakland Press, December 4, 1988.
Rolling Stone,
May 6, 1976; May 20, 1976; May 5, 1977; November 3, 1977; November 17,
1977; June 29, 1978; September 7, 1978; March 8, 1990; November 3, 1994;
December 14, 1995.