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Turner68Quote
Redhotcarpet
And I think it's perfectly normal and fitting. The band wrote the soundtrack of a lifestyle. Brian's lifestyle and later Keiths and Micks. It's not that important who wrote what from a producers or a managers perspective. The goal was to sell as many records and tickets as possible. Brian, Mick and Keith sold the material. It didn't matter if Cooder, Taylor, Wyman or Jones or somebody else, Miller, made huge contributions because in the end it's the product that counts. Selling also meant that their credibility relied on a counterpoint to Lennon/McCartney. All songs must be credited Jagger/Richards even if Wyman comes up with a riff. But we should be able to say this now 50 years later.
you don't know what you're talking about. the royalties from songwriting are enormous - roughly equal to the performance royalties, and split among fewer people. songwriting credit on JJF is worth millions over the past 50 years. anyone who has a reasonable claim would have come forward. certainly the financial implications are large enough that they wouldn't say "ooh let's have two names separated by a slash just like lennon/mccartney, let's randomly pick to see who should it be..."
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Stoneage
Didn't they? Bill leaving meant that they only had to share the ever increasing money pool on 4 instead of 5 members...
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NaturalustQuote
Rockman
And Bill's penned so many classics since he left the Stones
Well to be fair Mick and Keith have not penned any since Bill left the Stones either, imo. Perhaps Bill was the magic catalyst?
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SweetThing
Yes, I understand... I doubt Bill had a lot to offer in the songwriting department, and though it is possible on occasion he did, (sort of like Ronnie's or even..the germ on JJF), the fact is, The Glimmers were both outstanding and prolific. Bill's resentment is a bit unreasonable I think in so much as he is perhaps implying at times he should've been given more opportunities. But sour grapes over, for arguments sake, the JJF riff is not strange to me. If I read Ronnie right, *his* notion is don't write too much, because it might well be your song then, and have to be given credit, so it won't be used. Maybe just contribute something brilliant -
INTRODUCE it formally - as a genesis of a song...THEN let Jagger write the lyrics to the point where MAYBE you don't get CREDIT at that point... or maybe you do.. LOL... and this is coming after Taylor and Wyman's experiences, and the Glimmers are more mature, and vastly richer, etc. It paints a pretty good picture in my mind at least of what the deal is.
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Rockman
Well to be fair Mick and Keith have not penned any since Bill left the Stones either, imo. Perhaps Bill was the magic catalyst?
WELL Naturalust to put it another way ... Bill didn't actually pen many classics before HE left either
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liddas
As I see it, when Bill, MT, Ronnie etc., you name him, claim that they deserve to be "credited" for certain contributions, most of the time they don't refer to proper "songwriting credits" in its legal meaning.
Very simply, I think that they only want their contribution to be recognized by Mick and Keith. On books, interviews etc.
Any economic claim is largely (and I mean LARGELY) compensated by the fact of being in the same band with a singer called Mick Jagger.
So did Bill "write" JJF's riff? Properly write? No way. But I am sure that he might have inspired it playing something similar on the piano/organ (by the way, this is what he himself has always said).
Would it have been nice from Mick/Keith acknowledge the inspiration? Probably yes.
But that's it.
Rock and roll songwriting credits, from a legal point of view, are impossible to pinpoint, so it is all up to how the members of the band agree to split the cake.
How many HUGE hits were created by "anonymous" contributions by sesssion players?
Just think how much Herbie Flowers received for his Walk on the Wild side bass line.
If Bill complains, what should James Jamerson have said?
C
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71TeleQuote
Rockman
Well to be fair Mick and Keith have not penned any since Bill left the Stones either, imo. Perhaps Bill was the magic catalyst?
WELL Naturalust to put it another way ... Bill didn't actually pen many classics before HE left either
Are you trying to tell me Downtown Suzie isn't a "classic", Rockman?
Shame.
Keith hasnt properly written anything. Jjf riff was written by/ composed/ played by wyman. Satisfaction riff was "written" by/ keith. Nicky hopkins played/ maybe wrote stuff on piano- some of it propably was played by keith on guitar. The sax solo on waiting on a friend was based on nickys piano melody which also is the melody mick sings in falsetto. Hopkins made a huge input on that song. Bill played a riff on keys, keith played that riff on guitar.Quote
liddas
As I see it, when Bill, MT, Ronnie etc., you name him, claim that they deserve to be "credited" for certain contributions, most of the time they don't refer to proper "songwriting credits" in its legal meaning.
Very simply, I think that they only want their contribution to be recognized by Mick and Keith. On books, interviews etc.
Any economic claim is largely (and I mean LARGELY) compensated by the fact of being in the same band with a singer called Mick Jagger.
So did Bill "write" JJF's riff? Properly write? No way. But I am sure that he might have inspired it playing something similar on the piano/organ (by the way, this is what he himself has always said).
Would it have been nice from Mick/Keith acknowledge the inspiration? Probably yes.
But that's it.
Rock and roll songwriting credits, from a legal point of view, are impossible to pinpoint, so it is all up to how the members of the band agree to split the cake.
How many HUGE hits were created by "anonymous" contributions by sesssion players?
Just think how much Herbie Flowers received for his Walk on the Wild side bass line.
If Bill complains, what should James Jamerson have said?
C
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Rockman
Well to be fair Mick and Keith have not penned any since Bill left the Stones either, imo. Perhaps Bill was the magic catalyst?
WELL Naturalust to put it another way ... Bill didn't actually pen many classics before HE left either
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stonehearted
<<I assume that Bill Wyman was a big part of the end result of most of the Stones songs he plays on. He deserves that credit.>>
He deserves arranger's credit, which involves musical structure. Songwriting, on the other hand, involves a title, words, phrases, verses, ideas, and subject matter, as well as basic melody and countermelody. All of this the songwriter brings to the table, or sessions as it were, and the musicians or band add their chops and contribute to the arrangement of the song.
More than musical credit, though, I believe what bothered Bill most about his tenure with the Stones was that he never got a hug or a pat on the back. In interviews, like in the pre-Some Girls tour 20/20 television special of 1978, he's always talking of the Stones like it's "family", and it was to his great disappointment to find that it wasn't really, at least not in the sense that he had hoped.
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Redhotcarpet
Turner 68, i dont know what you meant by that. Noone says bill wrote jjf. He wrote the riff. Ron wood wrote the hey negrita riff. He eas already a signed famous co partner of rod stewart, a rock star, ehen he joined the stones. He was willing to take the heat. He says himself that he had to fight for credits. He traded iorr for stoyn or was it black limo?
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RedhotcarpetKeith hasnt properly written anything. Jjf riff was written by/ composed/ played by wyman. Satisfaction riff was "written" by/ keith. Nicky hopkins played/ maybe wrote stuff on piano- some of it propably was played by keith on guitar. The sax solo on waiting on a friend was based on nickys piano melody which also is the melody mick sings in falsetto. Hopkins made a huge input on that song. Bill played a riff on keys, keith played that riff on guitar.Quote
liddas
As I see it, when Bill, MT, Ronnie etc., you name him, claim that they deserve to be "credited" for certain contributions, most of the time they don't refer to proper "songwriting credits" in its legal meaning.
Very simply, I think that they only want their contribution to be recognized by Mick and Keith. On books, interviews etc.
Any economic claim is largely (and I mean LARGELY) compensated by the fact of being in the same band with a singer called Mick Jagger.
So did Bill "write" JJF's riff? Properly write? No way. But I am sure that he might have inspired it playing something similar on the piano/organ (by the way, this is what he himself has always said).
Would it have been nice from Mick/Keith acknowledge the inspiration? Probably yes.
But that's it.
Rock and roll songwriting credits, from a legal point of view, are impossible to pinpoint, so it is all up to how the members of the band agree to split the cake.
How many HUGE hits were created by "anonymous" contributions by sesssion players?
Just think how much Herbie Flowers received for his Walk on the Wild side bass line.
If Bill complains, what should James Jamerson have said?
C
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DandelionPowderman
Listen to Keith hum the piano line on She's A Rainbow to Nicky on the Satanic tapes, Carpet, and then tell me again he hasn't written anything.
Watch the Sitting On A Fence-sequence in CIMD while you're at it.
You gotta stop making things up.
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DandelionPowderman
Listen to Keith hum the piano line on She's A Rainbow to Nicky on the Satanic tapes, Carpet, and then tell me again he hasn't written anything.
Watch the Sitting On A Fence-sequence in CIMD while you're at it.
You gotta stop making things up.
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ouroux58
I remember seeing Mick crying outside the studio, after a night of recording for dirty work in Paris.
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nickQuote
ouroux58
I remember seeing Mick crying outside the studio, after a night of recording for dirty work in Paris.
How did you see that?
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NaturalustQuote
DandelionPowderman
Listen to Keith hum the piano line on She's A Rainbow to Nicky on the Satanic tapes, Carpet, and then tell me again he hasn't written anything.
Watch the Sitting On A Fence-sequence in CIMD while you're at it.
You gotta stop making things up.
So Keith wrote the melody line to Nicky's great piano work on She's a Rainbow? That's pretty impressive. Including the tempo change it includes?
Which Satanic tapes are you referring to? Thanks.