For information about how to use this forum please check out forum help and policies.
He was at the right place at the right time. He joined the Stones too late to take part in and be a part of their major achievements but he joined the band soon enough to become a real member instead of just a sideman. Joining the band opened up a career for him that was/is way beyond his musical capabilities. That's why I call him a lucky man.Quote
slewanOr the Stones were lucky to have him involved at some point. It's an understatement to talk about luck, Mick pushed for him to leave the Faces who had come to an end anyway.Quote
Hairball
No offense to Ronnie, but his songwriting capability and musical ideas in general leaves a bit to be desired imo. Sure there are a few gems throughout the decades ( with the Faces, the Stones, and solo),
but those gems are very few and far between. His main focus since quitting drugs and alcohol a decade or so ago has been painting and his art career, though even his painting skills leave a bit to be desired.
I guess you could say he's a jack of all trades, and a master of none as the old saying goes. His role with the Stones has always been an adequate sideman whether studio or live (even though he's offically a "Stone").
The bottom line - glad he's happy and relatively healthy considering all he's been through with drugs, alcohol, and various serious health issues, and when all is said and done thats really what matters most.
Luckily things never happen... luck can only help.
he's some joker that got lucky.
Quote
Testify
He was at the right place at the right time. He joined the Stones too late to take part in and be a part of their major achievements but he joined the band soon enough to become a real member instead of just a sideman. Joining the band opened up a career for him that was/is way beyond his musical capabilities. That's why I call him a lucky man.
Quote
ProfessorWolfQuote
DoxaQuote
ProfessorWolf
another question given how hard seemingly this album was to complete did they ask for or use any songs brought by ronnie
and if so will we be seeing any credit given to him
They haven't give Ronnie a credit since what? DIRTY WORK? and supposedly used his song ideas either plus along the years Ronnie or anyone else has only talked about Mick and Keith's songs, so I guess it is unlikely that we will see a Ron Wood credition there.
For some reason, since the re-union in 1989 Ronnie has been left out from the creative heart of the Stones, dominated by Mick and Keith's courts. Odd man out? A pawn sacrified by both sides?
- Doxa
but do you think given mick and keith's repeated encounters with brickwalls in the creation of this album that they have likley been more open to ronnie's contributions this time?
i personally think some songs in the vein of his i feel like playing album could exist very nicely on a stones album after mick and keith give them there own personal touches
Quote
LeonidPQuote
Testify
He was at the right place at the right time. He joined the Stones too late to take part in and be a part of their major achievements but he joined the band soon enough to become a real member instead of just a sideman. Joining the band opened up a career for him that was/is way beyond his musical capabilities. That's why I call him a lucky man.
Yeah, he's awful, don't know how he passed the audition, not just of the Stones but w/ Faces, Jeff Beck, The Birds - they all must have horrible taste. He just fit the suit! a la Greg Brady as Johnny Bravo!
Quote
BungoQuote
HairballQuote
slewanQuote
Hairball
No offense to Ronnie, but his songwriting capability and musical ideas in general leaves a bit to be desired imo. Sure there are a few gems throughout the decades ( with the Faces, the Stones, and solo),
but those gems are very few and far between. His main focus since quitting drugs and alcohol a decade or so ago has been painting and his art career, though even his painting skills leave a bit to be desired.
I guess you could say he's a jack of all trades, and a master of none as the old saying goes. His role with the Stones has always been an adequate sideman whether studio or live (even though he's offically a "Stone").
The bottom line - glad he's happy and relatively healthy considering all he's been through with drugs, alcohol, and various serious health issues, and when all is said and done thats really what matters most.
he's some joker that got lucky.
He was at the right place at the right time. He joined the Stones too late to take part in and be a part of their major achievements but he joined the band soon enough to become a real member instead of just a sideman. Joining the band opened up a career for him that was/is way beyond his musical capabilities. That's why I call him a lucky man.
Might have been interesting if Ronnie had joined up with Ringo who has also been called lucky throughout the years.
The Ronnie and Ringo Show...has a nice ring to it....
They could fill out the group with Garfunkel and Oates.
Quote
rollmopsQuote
LeonidPQuote
Testify
He was at the right place at the right time. He joined the Stones too late to take part in and be a part of their major achievements but he joined the band soon enough to become a real member instead of just a sideman. Joining the band opened up a career for him that was/is way beyond his musical capabilities. That's why I call him a lucky man.
Yeah, he's awful, don't know how he passed the audition, not just of the Stones but w/ Faces, Jeff Beck, The Birds - they all must have horrible taste. He just fit the suit! a la Greg Brady as Johnny Bravo!
Ronnie Wood is a great musician. To make it at that level and stay at that level for so long is not based on luck...
Quote
DoxaQuote
ProfessorWolfQuote
DoxaQuote
ProfessorWolf
another question given how hard seemingly this album was to complete did they ask for or use any songs brought by ronnie
and if so will we be seeing any credit given to him
They haven't give Ronnie a credit since what? DIRTY WORK? and supposedly used his song ideas either plus along the years Ronnie or anyone else has only talked about Mick and Keith's songs, so I guess it is unlikely that we will see a Ron Wood credition there.
For some reason, since the re-union in 1989 Ronnie has been left out from the creative heart of the Stones, dominated by Mick and Keith's courts. Odd man out? A pawn sacrified by both sides?
- Doxa
but do you think given mick and keith's repeated encounters with brickwalls in the creation of this album that they have likley been more open to ronnie's contributions this time?
i personally think some songs in the vein of his i feel like playing album could exist very nicely on a stones album after mick and keith give them there own personal touches
I already gave a reply in my post above, but let me do it again... Namely, I started to think your question more thoroughly and that got me going and I just couldn't stop. Namely, the 'wonder' of creativity is one of those topics that interests me most in the Stones (and in general). Here are the results...
I said this album is a 'Mick and Keith' s baby' and probably their last joint artistic statement under the name of The Rolling Stones. And as it has been for decades, The Rolling Stones as an artistic unit equals Mick and Keith. No rocket science or that disputable claim.
All respect to Ronnie, but he is just a second fiddle player here. The question is not if his ideas weren't great or his songs even better than Mick and Keith's, but that those do not constitute what the Stones are. Mick and Keith's ideas do that. Be them good or not, they define what the Stones are. Asking Ronnie to write would be like Dylan asking someone - say, his guitar player - to give him ideas or songs, since he has problems in providing them by himself. But, of course, he is not that desperate to record something just to get something out. Neither are Mick and Keith. It's them or nothing.
Yeah, there were times a long ago when Ronnie actually got his ideas and songs through. But those were different times and the band dynamics were different. Then albums mattered and there were deadlines.
Ronnie was the guy with whom Keith or Mick changed ideas with/sparred with (when not together or when they, after their solo ventures, founded 'trusted men' for the job). Also seemingly the recording sessions were a bit more free-going as they seem to be nowadays. The band might have lived in and around the studio for months. In those cirmumstances the ideas are more easily changed.
And most of all: there were always deadlines fronting them, and them being awere that their career (wealth, superstardom, that is) depended on them putting albums out once in a while. The money was there. So they were more willing to be open to ideas from other band members in order to have potential material from which to choose songs for all that important albums. To give them a credit or not is another issue.
But all that is gone now. We are wittnessing a luxury project that probably for the first time in the history of the Stones is done just for the sake of art itself.
And I am serious with the latter romantic notion! Let me open up it a bit. (Here comes a lecture).
Think of it: their career is not anyway depending on having an album of originals out. They do and have done just well without it (they are as hot concert draw as ever). There has not been a deadline. No contractual obligation. There is not money there that would be that significant to them (we know where the real money is).
Then the function and prospects of new music is anything but promising for an ambitious ego to be motivated by it: the knowledge of their new releases no matter how they sell having not that big effect on even on their hardcore fans for decades, not to mind the masses, is not that encouraging to release anything either. The example of their contempories who have been more active in releasing new music just confirms the sad fact. The experience (of Mick's, at least) says that the new songs will not work in concerts. The possibility to have 'hits' - the songs people actually listen to - has not been realistic for them for ages.
The outer pressure supposedly based on them not releasing 'album of originals' for years and all that blah blah blah is just - let's be honest - us hardcore fans projecting our wishes upon them and on media - no one outside us expects anything from them. The claim of 'you are a nostalgia act if no new album' etc. belong to the same fan projection, not realizing or wanting to accept that it is not 20th Century any more. The idea of releasing an album for the sake of image or 'legacy' is just a naive bullshit. No artist ever releases anything just for the sake of releasing something.
The bottom line is: it is all up to their inner muse. Mick and Keith's. She is calling the shots here.
As we have painfully seen, they haven't been that productive or motivated/determinate to get 'quick' results without an outer pressure. Is that a good or a bad sign, hard to say.
In a positive scenario, they work under artistic freedom with no constraints and having the luxury to take all the time they need to end up with 'perfect' results, inspired and determinated solely by their muse. They have had time reflect their stuff, work and pick up suitable songs, avoid hasty compromises, Mick and Keith, after trial and error, finally on the same page, both satisfied with the results. Not just 'good' , but 'great'.
In a negative scenario, they have been just lazy and without any real spark or true inspiration. Knowing that 'this is just a hobby, a side project with no any real relevance to anything', the real gear - the ambition and determination behind their truly awesome products - is missing. It is just old men occasionally having fun in the studio mostly for nostalgic reasons. The project finally ended when there was finally enough of material to release something. The only pragmatic merit of the album is to name a tour according to it, and probably, out of obligation, play a tune or two from it to audiences that, out of obligation, trying to hide their disinterest.
But the funny thing with the Stones and with the art in general is: one cannot predict the quality of the result by means: it could be that the first scenario proceeds a mediocre album, while the latter a masterpiece.. (the means for TATTOO YOU, as I argued dozens of pages ago in this thread, weren't that optimal either.. BLUE & LONESOME is another funny anomaly)
The bottom line, let me restate it, is: Is the artistic ambition alone enough to kick the best out of Mick and Keith? It's all up to their inner muse.
Taking these rather extraordinary cirmumstances, is interesting to see how the finished product to be and sound like.
Now I deserve a beer (well, anyone else who was able to follow me here as well)
I think you're right doxa, nobody really knows what takes the best out of you
- Doxa
Quote
DoxaQuote
ProfessorWolfQuote
DoxaQuote
ProfessorWolf
another question given how hard seemingly this album was to complete did they ask for or use any songs brought by ronnie
and if so will we be seeing any credit given to him
They haven't give Ronnie a credit since what? DIRTY WORK? and supposedly used his song ideas either plus along the years Ronnie or anyone else has only talked about Mick and Keith's songs, so I guess it is unlikely that we will see a Ron Wood credition there.
For some reason, since the re-union in 1989 Ronnie has been left out from the creative heart of the Stones, dominated by Mick and Keith's courts. Odd man out? A pawn sacrified by both sides?
- Doxa
but do you think given mick and keith's repeated encounters with brickwalls in the creation of this album that they have likley been more open to ronnie's contributions this time?
i personally think some songs in the vein of his i feel like playing album could exist very nicely on a stones album after mick and keith give them there own personal touches
I already gave a reply in my post above, but let me do it again... Namely, I started to think your question more thoroughly and that got me going and I just couldn't stop. Namely, the 'wonder' of creativity is one of those topics that interests me most in the Stones (and in general). Here are the results...
I said this album is a 'Mick and Keith' s baby' and probably their last joint artistic statement under the name of The Rolling Stones. And as it has been for decades, The Rolling Stones as an artistic unit equals Mick and Keith. No rocket science or that disputable claim.
All respect to Ronnie, but he is just a second fiddle player here. The question is not if his ideas weren't great or his songs even better than Mick and Keith's, but that those do not constitute what the Stones are. Mick and Keith's ideas do that. Be them good or not, they define what the Stones are. Asking Ronnie to write would be like Dylan asking someone - say, his guitar player - to give him ideas or songs, since he has problems in providing them by himself. But, of course, he is not that desperate to record something just to get something out. Neither are Mick and Keith. It's them or nothing.
Yeah, there were times a long ago when Ronnie actually got his ideas and songs through. But those were different times and the band dynamics were different. Then albums mattered and there were deadlines.
Ronnie was the guy with whom Keith or Mick changed ideas with/sparred with (when not together or when they, after their solo ventures, founded 'trusted men' for the job). Also seemingly the recording sessions were a bit more free-going as they seem to be nowadays. The band might have lived in and around the studio for months. In those cirmumstances the ideas are more easily changed.
And most of all: there were always deadlines fronting them, and them being awere that their career (wealth, superstardom, that is) depended on them putting albums out once in a while. The money was there. So they were more willing to be open to ideas from other band members in order to have potential material from which to choose songs for all that important albums. To give them a credit or not is another issue.
But all that is gone now. We are wittnessing a luxury project that probably for the first time in the history of the Stones is done just for the sake of art itself.
And I am serious with the latter romantic notion! Let me open up it a bit. (Here comes a lecture).
Think of it: their career is not anyway depending on having an album of originals out. They do and have done just well without it (they are as hot concert draw as ever). There has not been a deadline. No contractual obligation. There is not money there that would be that significant to them (we know where the real money is).
Then the function and prospects of new music is anything but promising for an ambitious ego to be motivated by it: the knowledge of their new releases no matter how they sell having not that big effect on even on their hardcore fans for decades, not to mind the masses, is not that encouraging to release anything either. The example of their contempories who have been more active in releasing new music just confirms the sad fact. The experience (of Mick's, at least) says that the new songs will not work in concerts. The possibility to have 'hits' - the songs people actually listen to - has not been realistic for them for ages.
The outer pressure supposedly based on them not releasing 'album of originals' for years and all that blah blah blah is just - let's be honest - us hardcore fans projecting our wishes upon them and on media - no one outside us expects anything from them. The claim of 'you are a nostalgia act if no new album' etc. belong to the same fan projection, not realizing or wanting to accept that it is not 20th Century any more. The idea of releasing an album for the sake of image or 'legacy' is just a naive bullshit. No artist ever releases anything just for the sake of releasing something.
The bottom line is: it is all up to their inner muse. Mick and Keith's. She is calling the shots here.
As we have painfully seen, they haven't been that productive or motivated/determinate to get 'quick' results without an outer pressure. Is that a good or a bad sign, hard to say.
In a positive scenario, they work under artistic freedom with no constraints and having the luxury to take all the time they need to end up with 'perfect' results, inspired and determinated solely by their muse. They have had time reflect their stuff, work and pick up suitable songs, avoid hasty compromises, Mick and Keith, after trial and error, finally on the same page, both satisfied with the results. Not just 'good' , but 'great'.
In a negative scenario, they have been just lazy and without any real spark or true inspiration. Knowing that 'this is just a hobby, a side project with no any real relevance to anything', the real gear - the ambition and determination behind their truly awesome products - is missing. It is just old men occasionally having fun in the studio mostly for nostalgic reasons. The project finally ended when there was finally enough of material to release something. The only pragmatic merit of the album is to name a tour according to it, and probably, out of obligation, play a tune or two from it to audiences that, out of obligation, trying to hide their disinterest.
But the funny thing with the Stones and with the art in general is: one cannot predict the quality of the result by means: it could be that the first scenario proceeds a mediocre album, while the latter a masterpiece.. (the means for TATTOO YOU, as I argued dozens of pages ago in this thread, weren't that optimal either.. BLUE & LONESOME is another funny anomaly)
The bottom line, let me restate it, is: Is the artistic ambition alone enough to kick the best out of Mick and Keith? It's all up to their inner muse.
Taking these rather extraordinary cirmumstances, is interesting to see how the finished product to be and sound like.
Now I deserve a beer (well, anyone else who was able to follow me here as well)
- Doxa
Quote
retired_dogQuote
DoxaQuote
ProfessorWolfQuote
DoxaQuote
ProfessorWolf
another question given how hard seemingly this album was to complete did they ask for or use any songs brought by ronnie
and if so will we be seeing any credit given to him
They haven't give Ronnie a credit since what? DIRTY WORK? and supposedly used his song ideas either plus along the years Ronnie or anyone else has only talked about Mick and Keith's songs, so I guess it is unlikely that we will see a Ron Wood credition there.
For some reason, since the re-union in 1989 Ronnie has been left out from the creative heart of the Stones, dominated by Mick and Keith's courts. Odd man out? A pawn sacrified by both sides?
- Doxa
but do you think given mick and keith's repeated encounters with brickwalls in the creation of this album that they have likley been more open to ronnie's contributions this time?
i personally think some songs in the vein of his i feel like playing album could exist very nicely on a stones album after mick and keith give them there own personal touches
I already gave a reply in my post above, but let me do it again... Namely, I started to think your question more thoroughly and that got me going and I just couldn't stop. Namely, the 'wonder' of creativity is one of those topics that interests me most in the Stones (and in general). Here are the results...
I said this album is a 'Mick and Keith' s baby' and probably their last joint artistic statement under the name of The Rolling Stones. And as it has been for decades, The Rolling Stones as an artistic unit equals Mick and Keith. No rocket science or that disputable claim.
All respect to Ronnie, but he is just a second fiddle player here. The question is not if his ideas weren't great or his songs even better than Mick and Keith's, but that those do not constitute what the Stones are. Mick and Keith's ideas do that. Be them good or not, they define what the Stones are. Asking Ronnie to write would be like Dylan asking someone - say, his guitar player - to give him ideas or songs, since he has problems in providing them by himself. But, of course, he is not that desperate to record something just to get something out. Neither are Mick and Keith. It's them or nothing.
Yeah, there were times a long ago when Ronnie actually got his ideas and songs through. But those were different times and the band dynamics were different. Then albums mattered and there were deadlines.
Ronnie was the guy with whom Keith or Mick changed ideas with/sparred with (when not together or when they, after their solo ventures, founded 'trusted men' for the job). Also seemingly the recording sessions were a bit more free-going as they seem to be nowadays. The band might have lived in and around the studio for months. In those cirmumstances the ideas are more easily changed.
And most of all: there were always deadlines fronting them, and them being awere that their career (wealth, superstardom, that is) depended on them putting albums out once in a while. The money was there. So they were more willing to be open to ideas from other band members in order to have potential material from which to choose songs for all that important albums. To give them a credit or not is another issue.
But all that is gone now. We are wittnessing a luxury project that probably for the first time in the history of the Stones is done just for the sake of art itself.
And I am serious with the latter romantic notion! Let me open up it a bit. (Here comes a lecture).
Think of it: their career is not anyway depending on having an album of originals out. They do and have done just well without it (they are as hot concert draw as ever). There has not been a deadline. No contractual obligation. There is not money there that would be that significant to them (we know where the real money is).
Then the function and prospects of new music is anything but promising for an ambitious ego to be motivated by it: the knowledge of their new releases no matter how they sell having not that big effect on even on their hardcore fans for decades, not to mind the masses, is not that encouraging to release anything either. The example of their contempories who have been more active in releasing new music just confirms the sad fact. The experience (of Mick's, at least) says that the new songs will not work in concerts. The possibility to have 'hits' - the songs people actually listen to - has not been realistic for them for ages.
The outer pressure supposedly based on them not releasing 'album of originals' for years and all that blah blah blah is just - let's be honest - us hardcore fans projecting our wishes upon them and on media - no one outside us expects anything from them. The claim of 'you are a nostalgia act if no new album' etc. belong to the same fan projection, not realizing or wanting to accept that it is not 20th Century any more. The idea of releasing an album for the sake of image or 'legacy' is just a naive bullshit. No artist ever releases anything just for the sake of releasing something.
The bottom line is: it is all up to their inner muse. Mick and Keith's. She is calling the shots here.
As we have painfully seen, they haven't been that productive or motivated/determinate to get 'quick' results without an outer pressure. Is that a good or a bad sign, hard to say.
In a positive scenario, they work under artistic freedom with no constraints and having the luxury to take all the time they need to end up with 'perfect' results, inspired and determinated solely by their muse. They have had time reflect their stuff, work and pick up suitable songs, avoid hasty compromises, Mick and Keith, after trial and error, finally on the same page, both satisfied with the results. Not just 'good' , but 'great'.
In a negative scenario, they have been just lazy and without any real spark or true inspiration. Knowing that 'this is just a hobby, a side project with no any real relevance to anything', the real gear - the ambition and determination behind their truly awesome products - is missing. It is just old men occasionally having fun in the studio mostly for nostalgic reasons. The project finally ended when there was finally enough of material to release something. The only pragmatic merit of the album is to name a tour according to it, and probably, out of obligation, play a tune or two from it to audiences that, out of obligation, trying to hide their disinterest.
But the funny thing with the Stones and with the art in general is: one cannot predict the quality of the result by means: it could be that the first scenario proceeds a mediocre album, while the latter a masterpiece.. (the means for TATTOO YOU, as I argued dozens of pages ago in this thread, weren't that optimal either.. BLUE & LONESOME is another funny anomaly)
The bottom line, let me restate it, is: Is the artistic ambition alone enough to kick the best out of Mick and Keith? It's all up to their inner muse.
Taking these rather extraordinary cirmumstances, is interesting to see how the finished product to be and sound like.
Now I deserve a beer (well, anyone else who was able to follow me here as well)
- Doxa
Excellent essay, Doxa. There is not a single thought I would argue with, in fact I mentioned many aspects already in my own various posts buried somewhere in this thread.
But this may be one of the most, if not the most important statement in connection with the making of the new album that summarizes the reasoning behind its creation perfectly:
"We are wittnessing a luxury project that probably for the first time in the history of the Stones is done just for the sake of art itself."
They're not doing this due to whatever outside pressure or commercial reasonings or because their hardcore fan base demands an album - they're doing this purely for themselves - simply because they're up for it.
And I judge this as a good sign for its actual content...
Quote
rollmops
Ronnie Wood is a great musician. To make it at that level and stay at that level for so long is not based on luck. I don't agreed on emphasing the "luck" element in long, competitive and uncertain careers in any field. Successful individuals push the element of luck in the careers not to sound arrogant and it is their choice. For me when i look at someone who has been successful for a long time I don't see "luck"; it has been disolved by long time work.
Rockandroll,
Mops
Quote
Rip ThisQuote
rollmops
Ronnie Wood is a great musician. To make it at that level and stay at that level for so long is not based on luck. I don't agreed on emphasing the "luck" element in long, competitive and uncertain careers in any field. Successful individuals push the element of luck in the careers not to sound arrogant and it is their choice. For me when i look at someone who has been successful for a long time I don't see "luck"; it has been disolved by long time work.
Rockandroll,
Mops
bravo....had to be said....and should be repeated...RW is a great musician. His body of work speaks for itself.
That's for sure, today without him the Stones couldn't do concerts due to Keith's physical limitations.Quote
Rip ThisQuote
rollmops
Ronnie Wood is a great musician. To make it at that level and stay at that level for so long is not based on luck. I don't agreed on emphasing the "luck" element in long, competitive and uncertain careers in any field. Successful individuals push the element of luck in the careers not to sound arrogant and it is their choice. For me when i look at someone who has been successful for a long time I don't see "luck"; it has been disolved by long time work.
Rockandroll,
Mops
bravo....had to be said....and should be repeated...RW is a great musician. His body of work speaks for itself.
Quote
Doxa
......
But let me repeat my core point: never before they have make music just for the fun of it, out of pure artistic expression. It always has had a function. .
- Doxa
Quote
tommyturbo76Quote
Doxa
......
But let me repeat my core point: never before they have make music just for the fun of it, out of pure artistic expression. It always has had a function. .
- Doxa
Against that point, I think Bruce Springsteen said it best. "I can live with the fame. It's the music that I can't live without."
Quote
Stoneage
One interesting thing with Sir Michael is that he likes to add social or somewhat political twists in his lyrics, especially on his solo work,
but when asked about politics in interviews he is very wary, instantly ready to skip to the next question.