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24FPS
Brian is in the foundation cement of the band. He was the visual one, the dandy, which fell to Mick after Brian's death. He was also the dark one, the one getting deeply into drugs, which fell to Keith after Brian's death. His musical knowledge of R&B and the blues gave them early credibility. Brian's musical abilities stretched them out across the pop singles landscape of the 1960s and allowed them to exit the cubbyhole of just another British Invasion band. His rebel attitude, his prowling sexuality, were all there before anyone ascribed them to Keith and Mick. Any real fan knows what Brian contributed, and know his downfall too. He is literally the fuse that lit the Rolling Stones.
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buttons67
I love brian jones discussions, i think he is underrated often and sometimes see the comparisens between him and taylor as meaningless. I think the band during the jones era were far more versatile and had more growth about them than in any other era, im not knocking taylor or wood btw, they were an integral part of the stones history too but i do find it sad when there is no mention of jones within the stones themselves, it would be nice occasionally if he got a mention during a concert. Jones provided so much in the early to mid 60,s period that was so important to the stones image, and thier output both from the amount of work they released and concerts they played was at a much higher rate than anything since.
without brian there would be no rolling stones and it was obvious when he went the stones lost something live which they could really only get back with backing musicians in later years.
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24FPSQuote
buttons67
I love brian jones discussions, i think he is underrated often and sometimes see the comparisens between him and taylor as meaningless. I think the band during the jones era were far more versatile and had more growth about them than in any other era, im not knocking taylor or wood btw, they were an integral part of the stones history too but i do find it sad when there is no mention of jones within the stones themselves, it would be nice occasionally if he got a mention during a concert. Jones provided so much in the early to mid 60,s period that was so important to the stones image, and thier output both from the amount of work they released and concerts they played was at a much higher rate than anything since.
without brian there would be no rolling stones and it was obvious when he went the stones lost something live which they could really only get back with backing musicians in later years.
One thing they lost was sensitivity in their music. The bludgeoning rock songs most people associate with the Stones came later. Brian's ethereal talent was unique and added an emotional depth to their music. Each guitarist, Jones, Taylor, and Wood are part of very different eras to the band's work, as different as 'Bubber' Miley' to the 1920s Duke Ellington, as Paul Gonsalves is
to the 1950s Duke Ellington.
Brian's sensitive strain in the Stones' music was later expressed in Bill Wyman's bass playing. (Both Brian and Bill being water signs, Keith and Mick fire.) Old time fans yearn for this strain in today's version of the Stones, but it is absent, and only comes out in rare playings of songs like Moonlight Mile, or As Tears Go By.
Brian was a canary in a coal mine, the first of the rock and roll version of the 27 Club. He dove head first into the drug scene of the 60s, with no one at first aware of the danger. Brian was always ahead of his time, even in death. Unfortunately the pioneers are often overlooked. And yes, he did enough damage to his own reputation. But who else except Brian could have picked up a simple recorder/flute and made Ruby Tuesday the haunting, harrowing song that it is?
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Turner68Quote
24FPSQuote
buttons67
I love brian jones discussions, i think he is underrated often and sometimes see the comparisens between him and taylor as meaningless. I think the band during the jones era were far more versatile and had more growth about them than in any other era, im not knocking taylor or wood btw, they were an integral part of the stones history too but i do find it sad when there is no mention of jones within the stones themselves, it would be nice occasionally if he got a mention during a concert. Jones provided so much in the early to mid 60,s period that was so important to the stones image, and thier output both from the amount of work they released and concerts they played was at a much higher rate than anything since.
without brian there would be no rolling stones and it was obvious when he went the stones lost something live which they could really only get back with backing musicians in later years.
One thing they lost was sensitivity in their music. The bludgeoning rock songs most people associate with the Stones came later. Brian's ethereal talent was unique and added an emotional depth to their music. Each guitarist, Jones, Taylor, and Wood are part of very different eras to the band's work, as different as 'Bubber' Miley' to the 1920s Duke Ellington, as Paul Gonsalves is
to the 1950s Duke Ellington.
Brian's sensitive strain in the Stones' music was later expressed in Bill Wyman's bass playing. (Both Brian and Bill being water signs, Keith and Mick fire.) Old time fans yearn for this strain in today's version of the Stones, but it is absent, and only comes out in rare playings of songs like Moonlight Mile, or As Tears Go By.
Brian was a canary in a coal mine, the first of the rock and roll version of the 27 Club. He dove head first into the drug scene of the 60s, with no one at first aware of the danger. Brian was always ahead of his time, even in death. Unfortunately the pioneers are often overlooked. And yes, he did enough damage to his own reputation. But who else except Brian could have picked up a simple recorder/flute and made Ruby Tuesday the haunting, harrowing song that it is?
you're so right about his work on "ruby tuesday". i wonder if brian doesn't get the credit he deserves because rock became so guitar-centric and his contributions were so much broader than that.
for people who are saying he was a dick it sounds like he was but who knows we didn't know him and being nice was never a qualification for being a musician.
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Turner68
... brian doesn't get the credit he deserves because rock became so guitar-centric and his contributions were so much broader than that.
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Rockman
Is Brian the one with the blond hair ?
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Rockman
not here reacle ... dirt floor with potato sacks coverin' the windows ...
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Turner68
As a newcomer to IORR I have to say I'm surprised at the near-hero worship of Mick Taylor, who in my mind was a great live solo player but never quite gelled with the band after the 69-70 tour, and the nearly complete absence of discussion of Brian Jones.
Brian - like Mick, Keith, Bill, and Charlie - was a true innovator, helped created rock-n-roll as we know it, and constantly pushed the Stones to innovate, not just in guitar solos but in marimba, sitar, etc., always exploring new sounds.
Even on the 2013 tour, they played more songs that were recorded while Brian was in the band than any of the other guitarists.
Does anyone else think Brian is underrated on this board?
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JamesMadison
Pray tell me, what is Ronnie Woods greatest accomplishment with the Stones? He has great stage presence, gets along with Keith and Mick, but what recording does he play on that he knocks it out of the park, his one grand slam home run?
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NikkeiQuote
JamesMadison
Pray tell me, what is Ronnie Woods greatest accomplishment with the Stones? He has great stage presence, gets along with Keith and Mick, but what recording does he play on that he knocks it out of the park, his one grand slam home run?
Hey Negrita?
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JamesMadison
Pray tell me, what is Ronnie Woods greatest accomplishment with the Stones? He has great stage presence, gets along with Keith and Mick, but what recording does he play on that he knocks it out of the park, his one grand slam home run?
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JamesMadison
Aren't those just Rolling Stones' hits? Give me his one time all time great effort and I will give it a listen.
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DandelionPowdermanQuote
JamesMadison
Aren't those just Rolling Stones' hits? Give me his one time all time great effort and I will give it a listen.
Hits?
Try Whip from Sucking In The 70s first. Then Little Red Rooster from LYL. The latter is perhaps the best slide work on any Stones record.
Try Summer Romance for a nice raunchy studio solo.
Only Undercover is close to a hit on the list I posted. Do you by any chance have the El Mocambo bootleg?
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Turner68
how did this thread become about Ron Wood?
for a great guitar solo by Brian Jones, check out "I Wanna Be Your Man"
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Turner68
how did this thread become about Ron Wood?
for a great guitar solo by Brian Jones, check out "I Wanna Be Your Man"
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Nikkei
Here you go then. It's on me.