Huge respect for Bill Wyman keeping the legacy of Brian alive. Like the part when he's drawing our attention to the flute part in Ruby Tuesday. The song would sorely lacking without that flute.
Thank You for telling us Mr Wyman. Although I have to say, at 63 years young as I am. I have never bought a Stones record. But after this I might. I really liked when Brian played the sitar. Thank Bill, may all good things come your way.
Thank you, Bill, for keeping the spirit of Brian alive. He was The Rolling Stones and deserves more than the footnote he gets in the band's history. You're a good man and I'm glad you're happy and enjoying life, although I do miss that stoic look. 🙂
That is such a perfect way of describing your feelings about Bill. I was going to write something, but I couldn't add anything to what you've already written. Thanks.
Brian had a special charisma none other members could match.. he got all the groupies..as a musician.. Hendrix.. Clapton..Page..Townshend..Beck..etc..all praised his skills and influence... when he went to Monterey with Nico..all eyes were on him!! In the sixties Brian Jones was a fucking cultural icon!!
@@stevebrothers9470 No. I have a much better idea. Let's agree that Bill is just repeating the lies that that egocentric narcissist Brian told him about how the band started and we can move on from there.
@@stevebrothers9470 this Willard the rat seems to think it all happened with just the four of them isolated on a remote desert island or something. Like Wyman never spoke to all the other musicians in that community that watched it all happen. Like he never spoke with even the other band members. One guy said he not only lives under the bridge, he owns it.
Apart for Charlie Watts, I think there is a consensus about BJ being the best musician of the group. I once had a bandmate like that: You just gave the man any instrument, no matter how exotic, and he'd ended up playing it like a pro after a 5 minutes exploration. I guess BJ must have been one of these.
Like Syd Barrett in Pink Floyd and Peter Green in Fleetwood Mac, Brian, Syd & Peter where the creators and original leaders of the bands only for whatever reason for them to lose their grip and fade away. Glad Bill is speaking up for Brian.
They were gifted musicians but not gifted businessmen or backstabbers. After they got the money machines rolling they were pushed aside or lost their minds.
Excellent tribute to Brian Jones. Apparently Brian had subtle talent. He could create riffs, melodies and original supporting touches that made a composition so strong. Mick was an explosion----a performing powerhouse.
Every riff that Brian ever played in a Jagger / Richards song was written by The riff master Keith Richards as an intrinsic parts of the songs he conceived and wrote. Brian had no creative imagination whatsoever. He could take direction pretty well when he was sober though..
The thing about Bill that lends him credit as an historian of the Rolling Stones was that he was a prolific diary writer and kept diaries throughout his time with the band. While other members rely on their memory which we all know can be sketchy years later, Wyman can always refer to his writings that were made when events happened.
I remember in 1965 hearing as an 11 year old the first few seconds of the fuzzy guitar on Satisfaction and thinking, "Holy shit, that is great ". I am 71 now, and it still effects me the same way.
Yes this about Brian Jones is true. If there was something off menu. Generally it is someone outside the bands ider. The acts were designated in the instruments they played and the dress was uniform code. I'm not sure the Beatles broke out this way so early. I am 60 plus I am totally influenced by pop. The stones were it so were the Beatles.
Jones was the swagmeister 3000. Great documentary with clips of Brian interviews I’ve never seen. And this is grand of Bill Wyman to call out the very important contributions of Brian’a creation of the group, their sound, songs and promotion. Kudos to both the video creator, and to Billy Wyman.
@@Der_hermetische_Arzt BRian had low character but played an important artistic role to the founding stones but Note that Mick and Keith wrote the songs that defined the Stones
Way to go, Bill! Set the record straight. You're greatly appreciated for the truth amongst all the BS. The Rolling Stones' legacy will forever rest on the blues band vision of Brian Jones!
I recall in 63-64 as a young 8/9 year old kid watching the Stones I noticed Brian Jones stood out on stage and on early album covers.. I always preferred the Blues playing Rolling Stones… That was Brian Jones 😎
Since I was a child I followed rock, I learned to love the music of the sixties and I became a faithful follower of Brian Jones. Bill always seemed so loyal, honest and direct. His opinions are respectable and he did attend his friend's funeral, not like the others. , who try to erase the legacy of the eternal rock angel.
Thank you, this is so interesting to finally hear Bills voice, I love his 🇬🇧 accent, he and his fantastic bass playing were always in the background on vids, the bass is my favorite instrument. Keith played bass on Sympathy for the Devil, Street Fighting Man, Stray Cat Blues & Jumpin’ Jack Flash. A favorite band & Keith is my best-loved member. R.I.P. Brian Jones🤍🤍🤍
@@williardbillmore5713 John Lennon was asked is Ringo The Worlds Best Rock drummer? Lennon said "Ringo isn't even the Best drummer in the Beatles" (referring to Paul of course)
@@tomwheeler6760 And I was referring to Keith... ...Of course... In many of their biggest hits Keith would know exactly what the song needed for a bass line...Bill would often not be feeling it and he would say to Keith. Well why don't you just do it yourself. Keith always kept his own Fender Precision bass at hand in the studio and he often would...nailing the perfect bass part for the song.
@@williardbillmore5713 Right I got it, I was aware that Keith was a good Bass player. At one point as you may well be aware of there was a possibility? slight probably? of John Lennon, Eric Clapton, Mitch Mitchell, and Keith on Bass forming a Ban called The Dirty Mac.
@@tomwheeler6760 It was a one off performance in the TV special that never aired put on by the Rolling Stones called The Rock and Roll circus. TheDirty Mac played the Beatles, Yer Blues and then much caterwauling by Yoko Ono Fun fact The name Dirty Mac was a take off on the band Fleetwood Mac. Here is a link to the TH-cam of that supergroup, The Dirty Mac. th-cam.com/video/JeFwaWFTGYU/w-d-xo.html
Bill was NOT an original Rolling Stone. The first bass player for the Stones was Dick Taylor ...Wyman was not even in the band until almost 1963. He did not even know them when Brian joined Keith's band in April 62. everything he says Brian did in the early days is pure fiction. Look it up ...I'm telling the truth..
@@GuitarMatt I don't understand what that last bit was about, Matt, But Bill made up some ridiculous claims about what Brian did in the early Stones when Bill wasn't even there. Brian did Not found the band.
@GuitarMatt Willie Bull More aka The ANTI-Brian! has No Idea who Wyman knew, or what, or when? just because Wyman wasn't officially in the Band until Dec. 7 1962, and to Correct WB/Keith Richards? Mr. Omniscient The Stones were formed on July 12, 1962! not April of 62 (I did look it Up! Willie Billy/Bully! from several sources) So Wyman being in The Band 5 months later means, he didn't know any of the several people (from the London Blues Club Venues) involved in these things? Really? most likely Bill was acquainted with most of the Characters integral in the Beginnings of The Stones Keith, Mick, Brian, Ian Stewart, Dick Taylor, Tony Chapman etc. Tony was The Stones first drummer in Mid 62 he told Bill The Stones needed a Bass player, Charlie Watts was offered the job in 62 but initially turned it down but later accepted and became The Stones Permanant Drummer in Jan. of 63 So I guess Willard would say Charlie had No idea either as to who, or how the Stones became The Stones? (how Brian was their spokesman, Promoted them, Booked The Gigs, handled the money etc.) since he wasn't an official member until about 6 months after their July 12th 62 formation. Not Bloody likely he, and Especially Bill weren't well aware of what went on. WB Loves to say "Brian Never wrote anything whatsoever! Not even 1 song! and had virtually no creativity, or really any significant musical skills other than repeating the 2 same notes. Brian could Only follow what Keith had written for him, and just what he was directed by KR to do, if Brian was sober enough to understand?" How Absurd, What an Arrogant Hateful Disturbed, Unhinged OCD Clown Willard is! And he likes to call everyone who doesn't agree with him 100% A Liar! Well hes The Big LIAR! he never mentions Brian writing The Complete Original Soundtrack to The Movie A Degree of Murder! which went to the Cannes Film Festival in which Brians German Girlfriend Anita Pallenberg Starred in, Brian playing most of the Instruments, also Featuring a small part by Jimmy Page with his Violin Bow on Electric Guitar before he used it (in the Yardbirds, and latter Zepelin on the Dazed and Confused song) Also Ian Stewart played some piano on the Project. Jimmy said "It was a real Thrill to work with Brian Jones because He was such a Creative Musician" And also Keith Richards pf all people said "for a project that someone never tried before to write a whole piece of music for a film it was good" Brian actually wrote 4-5 songs The Stones even recorded but never released "Wake Up In The Morning" "Sure I do" "I Want You To Know" "Dust My Pyramids" and Lyrics to "Thank You For Being There" But Brian who was kind of a tortured soul, on one hand quite cold, selfish, and cruel, but also very shy, sensitive, and paranoid. Were the songs any good? maybe who knows? But it Proves Willard T. Rat a Liar!
@@tomwheeler6760 Oh, WOW, you are such a GENIUS (coming from a 1973 kid). Hey, DORK,. I was listening to the Stones as early as the early eighties as a little kid. Go pop your PIGEON CHEST around someone else, you POSEUR!
@@tomwheeler6760 Brian knew that he would never go anywhere alone . He needed Mick and Keith. They were the hottest performers around at the time so he joined their band The blue Boys. He spent the rest of his career as a poser.
"Brian was a brilliant, fluent multi-instrumentalist, he was the one who founded the Rolling Stones and he had the creative vision that helped them to evolve organically from a mop-top blues-pop group into the mystical rock gods they became--something that many people today might not realise."--Mick Fleetwood
Mick and Keith founded the Blue Boys with Dick Taylor, shortly after their chance encounter on platform #2 at the Dartford train station in October of 61. The Blue Boys BECAME the Rolling Stones after Brian Joined the Blue Boys and they agreed to change their name. The only group that Brian founded was the 27 Club.
Interviewer--- What were you doing before you joined? ( The band) Brian---"um well I was just sort of bumming around waiting for something to happen really. I had quite a few jobs and uh I was trying to get a band going but it was unsuccessful until I met up with Mick and Keith" Brian Jones explaining to an interviewer about not being able to start a band and instead joining Keith's band, The Blue Boys.
@@williardbillmore5713 Lol actually Robert Johnson was the Founding Member of the so called 27 Club, I think you are the Only Semi living member of that Club WilLARD
@@tomwheeler6760 That is true, Johnson was the first well known musician to die at the tender age of 27... But Brian's death marked the first time it was called the 27 club especially when Hendrix Joplin and Morrison died shortly after him. Fun fact; "King of the Delta Blues" Robert Johnson's recording career lasted only seven months. It has been said that Johnson was murdered by the husband of one of his many mistresses. with poisoned whisky. Johnson, Jones, Hendrix, Joplin, Morrison and Winehouse all were big whiskey drinkers. I am only ten years shy of living three times longer than they did. I am 71. I don't drink whiskey.
I Thoroughly Agree.....Brian was the Foundation Stone of the Rollers ...big fan since buying my first vinals in the 60's ... without him R.S.s wouldn't have existed.......true that
For me, there are three distinct entities for the band. There is The Rolling Stones, with Brian Jones, The Stones, with Mick Taylor, and early on with Ronnie Wood, and Stones and Friends, up to the present era. They all had something, but the original band had the most diverse and inventive material, much of that thanks to Brian's ability to color their songs through a variety of musical sounds and instruments. Bill Wyman remains the one member of the surviving members who not only knows the truth about the band but acknowledges it publically. Losing Bill also altered the band's sound immensely and not in a particularly positive way.
Bill was not a member of the early Stones He was not there when he says Brian founded the Stones. He tells whooper lies about what happened at a time when he didn't even know them.
No. It is an absurd notion...Especially when Keith and Mick were already in an established blues band for seven months before Brian even ran the advert. The Blue Boys were complete with impressive demo tapes of blues songs like Rollin Stone blues.. Mick new what he had and he knew what Keith had too. They were both in demand and everybody on the scene knew the confidence and charisma Mick had on stage and the eclectic guitar skills Keith had to draw on. It is a tale that holds no water that they auditioned for anybody.
@@jamesbowen8960 Utter and complete nonsense..,Where do you people get this crap from? Keith had ten years playing guitar in all genres including classical, Jazz, R&B and popular rock and roll. Brian got his first guitar for his 17th birthday three years before they met and he only played the blues on it. Who do you think taught who how to play rock rhythm guitar? Keith had to keep the parts he wrote for Brian to play simple or he wouldn't even try to play them. Jagger studied Little Walter's harmonica style years before he met Brian. Mick"s playing is more melodic and lyrical and Brian played a chugging overdriven rhythmical Chicago style .Very little in common . Brian taught neither of them anything. Brian was very much the student ...at least when he was sober.
I don’t understand why people still try to debate this. It was Brian who placed the ad to start a band. They responded to his ad. Stu was the first. He met mick and Keith and much agreed to come along with Keith. End of story it was Brian who was the catalyst. Not saying mick and Keith wouldn’t have started a band but it wouldn’t have been this exact combination. Brian Jones named it he band as well. These are facts that can’t be debated. He chose the music he signed the contracts he got the gigs etc. it’s not diminishing Mick and Keith at all it’s just asking to get the history right and to give credit where credit is due and that is simply to acknowledge that the Stones wouldn’t exist as an entity if it weren’t for Brian Jones. Also yes I know the he part about the Ealing Jazz club and playing with Alexis Korner Blues Incorporated, Elmo Lewis, Little boy blue and the blue boys, dust my broom, Charlie drumming for Alexis etc. all of these factors considered it was still Brian who started the band!!!
There should be no debate as to the fact that Brian started the band, he was the acknowledged leader of the band, and the most accomplished musician of the band. These are facts. But bands evolve and as the band evolved Brian's role was diminished. Ultimately it was drugs that pushed him out of the band, though, not the change in group dynamics.
The Brian Jones era was the Stones at their most creative and diverse, and we have Jones to thank for that influence. When Mick Taylor joined they became much more of a conventional rock group, they still did good stuff but their musical range became much narrower, and the Ron Wood era saw them settle into an even narrower, comfortable pattern that they rarely broke out of afterwards. These days you know exactly what you're getting from a Stones concert or the rare studio album; when Brian was in charge every album was an adventure into uncharted territory.
The flute/recorder at the beginning of Ruby Tuesday would be testament in itself, but the credits keep coming. A little to late, but that's the way time works I guess🤔
Yep! Bll your right the early Stones were brilliant live and there early Albums have a special vibe because of Brian. R.I.P. Brian like so many creative people had his demons like most Green, Barrett, Moon , Lynnet , and the so called 27 club fell to chasing the Dragon and burning the candle at both ends,, I know I was in the Art and Music scene from late 60ts to middle 70ts, its a Road less travelled with many casualties and ego frictions . I survived many of my friends didn't.. PS, I had my wedding reception in Bill's London Restaurant Sticky Fingers.
Brian was wonderful, a highly gifted musician, in those early days, but we have to face it, as time went on Brian self-destructed in an unbelievably short amount of time. Just look at pictures of beautiful Brian in 63-64 compared to the Brian of 69. He let his dissatisfaction with the band--and probably a lot of other psychological pathology--overcome him and drowned in booze and drugs metaphorically and then literally in a pool.
Yes and he let the band down by not showing up for recordings and performances --and he left the band in 1969. It seems crystal clear that mick jagger is the one that picked up the pieces and pulled it all together -- of course with major support from Keith and Charlie.
Brian Jones was such a talent, too bad they didn’t appreciate him more in the band! Sadly his life ended, when he could’ve just created another band. He could’ve been in just about any group, on the level of Jimmy page. Rest in peace, Brian! 🙏
Sadly, excellent musicians that can't write songs are a dime a dozen. Sure, being a visionary and having great studio ideas can help, but ultimately it is the writers who forms and lead, some of them unwillingly, successful RnR bands.
Keith Richards claimed it was Ian Stewart's band who says it was Brian Jones who started the band. It's a brief clip just look it up here on TH-cam. Case closed.
I love Keith, but I truly feel Brian was the heart, soul and brains of the early Stones. Keith was kind of shy in the early days, but he sure did open up as one of the best guitarist, songwriters and smartest guys in rock. Seems like you can ask Keith anything and he always has the perfect answer. Really sad about Brian, he such a brilliant artist. My favorite era is still all the albums with Brian. I also feel Bill left at the right time before The Stones kind of morphed into a mega business. Put on any early Stones album and you can hear the little things that Brian did that we remember about those songs.
Keith was by his own admission from a Very Cold Emotionless family (I heard him say this with his own voice) Not surprising he is a Cold Fish himself. He was a Rat that stole Anita Pallenberg away from Brian while the 3 of them were in Morocco and Brian who had Bad Asthma ended up in the Hospital. Now before Hater billmore aka The Anti Brian chimes in saying "she cried to Keith about Brian beating her up" that may be true? or not? But if it was? then you tell her Leave him, and find someone else! But Not Me! You don't do that to your Friend, if you are really a friend? Sorry Mick, and Keef have very little credibility, especially now that Brian is not around to defend himself.
@@KittyGrizGriz Sure she did, as did Keith thats the point, you don't get together with your friends girlfriend especially while he is incapacitated unless she overpowered, and kidnapped Keith and there was nothing he could do about it. Do you believe that? I've experienced this personally when my wife left me wanting to be with my friend. (Denying it all the time, as did he) All he had to do was say ok you're not happy with Tom, so leave him and find someone else, but I'm not going to be the one that stabs him in the back. Just put yourself in Brian's or my place. Would you do that to a friend? or if a friend did that to you would you really be able to stay friends with that person? People these days have No concept what Real Friendship, or Loyalty is. So my wife and "friend" got married, then a few months later wrote me apology letters asking me to forgive them because what they did was Totally Wrong! I said well if you're really Sorry? how about giving me back the $50,000, and Nice Pickup Truck you took from Our marriage, just to show good faith that your apology is for real? Oh well we couldn't do that. Lol oh ok then your "regret" an "apology" is just Crap!!
The Jones stones were the best stones. Mick Taylor dod a pretty good job too, but when Taylor left the great stones were over in my opinion. But Jones really knew how to make a song sound special and Mick and Keith never give him any credit .Same for Mick Taylor
@@billhorstkamp98 Not many would argue with your assessment, Bill. The Stones popularity and success soared just after they rid themselves of Jones and hired a real creative and talented guitarist. Unbelievably though there are still some Saint Jones worshipers who will try to tell you that their drunken idol with the fluffy blonde hair was a better musician...Ha ha ha ha ha They can be a funny lot...
I have been a stones fan since 62 Mick sometimes forgets that without Brian, he would still be sitting on the platform @ Dartford train station with a box of 7 inch records .
The records Mick had that October day in 1961 were 12 inch albums and Brian had very little to do with the Rolling Stones success. Jones was a poser and a hanger on.. Mick and Keith formed the Rolling Stones. The plaque on the Dartford train station correctly says so.
Actually, Mick and Keith, long-separated childhood friends, happened to meet again on that station platform. Each was carrying a Chuck Berry album. Or multiple Chuck Berry albums. I forget which. Brian was the more naturally-talented player, of a wide variety of instruments. But couldn't write original hit-quality songs. The world is relatively full of people who can play and/or sing hit songs, written by other people, note for note, and relatively empty of people who can write original hit songs.
@@Richard-g4u1r So true... Either they have it or they don't ...According to Keith it was Mick who was carrying the hard to find albums that included, Rockin' at the Hops by Chuck Berry, and The Best of Muddy Waters which ironically had the song "Rollin Stone" on it. One verse of that song goes; Well, my mother told my father Just before , I was born "I got a boy child's comin', he's gonna be *He's gonna be a "Rollin' Stone" Sure 'nough, he's a "Rollin' Stone" Sure 'nough, he's a "Rollin' Stone"* How prophetic is that?
There's a great book by Paul Trynka called Sympathy for the Devil about Brian and how brilliant a musician he was and so versatile. Recommended to read.
Anyone with good common sense, can clearly see Brian Jones was the original True Leader ! In the beginning, Brian didn't care for Mick Jagger's singing. Mick and Keith don't know how lucky they were to join Brian's band !!! Love Bill Wyman for being a stand up MAN !
Nonsense. “The band is really an amalgamation of two bands. The one being an R&B band I formed about a year ago, and the other being a group run by Mick and Keith in S.E. London. I was introduced to Keith and we decided to pool our resources, so with Stu from my band, and Mick from Keith’s we became the nucleus of the ‘Stones.’” ---Brian Jones 1963 Read Brian's words as he tells how the band got together.
I loved that xylophone in Under My Thumb . . . I could never keep my eyes off Brian!! I was 16 at the time of his death, & it's always haunted me because I never knew much abt him . . I still love him & respect his musical genius now more than ever❣️ Ty, Bill
I bought my first super 45's of the Rolling Stones in october 1964.I read all the interviews of the Stones for years.First one of Jagger in NME or MM at the very beginning he said: "Don't call us a r'n'r band,we're a R'n'b band" Brian Jones was certainly not the only one to like blues. Before the Stones ,Keith and Mick with Dick Taylor,when they were sixteen ,had a band named The Blues Boys. Bill Wyman played in r'n'r cover bands ,playing for US soldiers .Charlie played jazz. They knew bout blues but not like Keith and Mick .The future Glimmer Twins just love Jimmy Reed and Muddy Waters.And Ian Stewart was great
Very cool interview. I never realized that the flute in Ruby Tuesday was Brian. That was one of the defining components. So...where did Mick and Keith come into the band? Was that an ad also, or did Brian already know them?
Not much that's new here. I'm sure that anyone who's followed the Stones since their beginnings knows how important Brian's contributions were to the original band. Of course, there are plenty of Stones fans who only know them as post-70-year-old geezers.
Thanks - I'm so glad to have heard this perspective on Brian Jones' influence, creativity. But the 12 minutes should have been edited down to 6 - it's SO repetitive "and Bill Wyman wants you to know" etc so many times. We got it.
I don't doubt that Brian was the one who formed the band and his talent as a musician was undeniable, but without Mick as the front man he is, and the songs written by Mick and Keith which were the hits that took them to the top, the band could have easily folded by the mid sixties.
Correct. If the band had followed Brian's vision for the band, of only covering other artists blues songs in a handful of clubs in and around London we never would have heard of them. Ironically Brian hated that Mick and Keith wrote the hit songs that made him wealthy and famous. Mick and Keith formed the Blue Boys and after Brian joined them in April of 62 they changed the name to The Rolling Stones. Brian founded NOTHING.
@@williardbillmore5713 I think, to be fair: Mick and Keith wanted a band as well Brian did. They met together to be "banded" together. Without Mick and Keith nor without Brian there wouldn't be The Rolling Stones. And: Brian was a great great instrumentalist, but his personalilty, his character was splitted. On one side he was a nice boy on the other hand he was aggressive. He defraud the others with his higher salary secretly. He was not always nice to Charlie (he once told) and so on. So Brian missed the personal contact after years to Mick and Keith, also to Charlie and Bill, what I have read in all the years of being a fan (for 47 years 🫶). So I do love The Rolling Stones in every decade!!! And I do love Brian's instruments playing!
No Jones= much better Stones. They had their best success just after Brian left the band. BTW the Rolling Stones were founded by Mick and Keith. Brian joined their band.
@@tomwheeler6760 That would have been really funny... But it just wasn't in the cards. Brian could not have lived much longer than he did. His heart, liver and lungs were too far too damaged and diseased from nearly a decade of alcohol and drug abuse. At autopsy his liver was found to be twice it's normal size.
Love Bill Wyman Strongly recommend viewing the documentary about Bill Wyman called The Quiet One. To see him reduced to tears saying how much he treasured Ray Charles' music was very moving. It used to be up here on TH-cam for free...
Great expose and coming straight from the horse's mouth, in the guise of Bill Wyman. The quiet Stone if you will. Fascinating and interesting; thanks for uploading - liked and subscribed.
Just try to imagine Paint it Black or Ruby Tuesday or Lady Jane or 2000 Light Years from Home or The Last Time or No Expectations or any of dozens of other early Stones songs without Brian.
@@williardbillmore5713 that’s true. I’ve only seen the stones with MickTaylar and then Ron Wood I never saw Brian in concert. But I’ve heard those songs without Brian and you really don’t miss him
@@billhorstkamp98 There was a time , when they did Paint It Black, Ronny played an electric sitar. But in more recent performances Ron plays a Fender Stratocaster and Keith plays a modified Telecaster that sounds even more like a real sitar. From Keith's clever and expressive intro that he always played right through to the last refrain it's all there. In the original recording Brian only doubled up on exactly what Keith played on guitar anyway. Jones is not missed at all.
I will never forget the day when my older brother brought home that first Rolling Stones album. "Yes! There is someone else out there other than the Beatles!" The Stones "taught" me how to play guitar. The Stones led me to the Blues Masters. I saw them once, July 1972. My older brother has seen them numerous times, to include with Brian Jones, and the last time a couple of weekends ago. The Glimmer Twins are the only ones left but hey, we still have TH-cam!
3:40 - 3:45..Here is the truth!!! From Bill Wyman, Thank you Bill for telling all this! WITHOUT Brian there were no Stones! Anyway all of them sre are incredible! I like the ROLLING STONES, but BRIAN JONES was special! Always remembered 🙏👏
Bill was recruited several months after the Stones started already so how would he know how it started initially? Keith and Mick wrote the first of their original songs which made them stars overnite after. Wyman has an agenda here.The architect of the band was Ian Stewart actually who got them all together . Wymans actual name is Perks.
@@williardbillmore5713 Cheers, I'm just tired of so much disinformation and smoke an mirrors around. Jones was a very disfunctional and abusive person more and more so Jagger and Richards had to step up if they were going to get anywhere or survive.
Brian and Jack Nitzsche wrote and arranged the part Brian played in Keith's song Ruby Tuesday. Brian never played anything like that in his entire life on his own.
Yo have it wrong... Without Jones they were much more successful and popular. They really didn't hit their peak until the mid to late 70s. Contrary to Bill Wyman's lies. Brian did not found form or create the Rolling Stones Mick and Keith did.
@@williardbillmore5713 So, you know about the beginning of the Rolling Stones back in England BETTER than Bill Wyman who was there and an actual member of the original Rolling Stones? Is that it? I hope realize that you sound like a delusional idiot. LOL
@Psychedelicdreamin No Jones = better Stones. In the weeks months and years after they finally got rid of Brian their popularity soared and their world wide appeal exploded with creativity and critical.acclaim. Jones had been holding them back from reaching their full creative potential. The numbers don't lie, but you do. Jones had absolutely nothing to do with the creation of Ruby Tuesday.
@Psychedelicdreamin The Rolling Stones didn't rise to fame until the 70s. Jones had nothing to do with the writing of ANY songs the Stones did. He was not capable of an original musical idea. He was a poser and a phoney.
@Psychedelicdreamin Jones was a very mediocre rhythm guitar player , though adequate for the most part. Fortunately he was a rabid copyist and he could follow direction on the guitar, at least in the early days.. Keith could always come up with a part that was simple enough for Jones to play that would fill out the songs. Everything else Brian did was posing and faking his way along trying desperately to gain attention in a band he could never really be a star in because of his lack of improvisational talent and inability to sing. The Stones were always playing catch up with the Beatles throughout the 60s. If they had a real guitar player like Wood or Taylor and a strong second harmony, when they started in the early days they could have just as easily been on top, setting the pace. BTW I was 11 years old in 1963. I lived it too. I learned their guitar parts right off the radio. The easy Brian parts first then later the Richards guitar improvisations and his spot on vocal harmonies. I never knew who did what until I caught them on TV but the easiest repeating parts always turned out to be whatever Brian played. It didn't take long to figure out that he couldn't sing at all.
I was a significant freak, 5 years old, with three older brothers, and I started listening to RnR in 1955. Stones came out in '63, and although I am a Beatles fan, I think Stones was perfect. Brian was a pretty boy; I couldn't miss him. He was front and center. He got really screwed, and many of us knew that. His death is never forgotten. Wyman got it right.
The very first album, was on Brian's conduct. The sound was huge, the choice of songs tasteful, and it's still a hell of an album. Bill's sound wrapped entirely the son. It wa the Jones, Watts & Wyman 's combo, plus two nice blokes.
@@williardbillmore5713 No actually it isn’t. You post like you were actually there. You weren’t. You still fail to explain Brian’s ad or Geoff Bradford and Bryan Knight. They answered Brian’s ad as well. Brian was the catalyst that is the legend of The Rolling Stones. You can’t take that away from him because it’s cemented in stone though you try. Brian stated that two bands came together. Because of him! That is how history has recorded it. Just accept it and quit posting on every single video about Brian. You lose all credibility when you troll and no one will take you seriously. You are obsessed with the man.
The band wasn't even together the first seven months, so there really isn't that much Wyman missed except for a lot of hustling, scuffling, and starving. They really didn't GET "together" as THE full original band we "oldies" know until January of 1963 when Charlie Watts finally joined as the final member. Jones has also said that he was the "undisputed leader" at first, and most outside accounts agree with this; Giorgio Gomelski, a manager hopeful who later managed the Yardbirds, drummer Ginger Baker, recording engineer Glyn Johns, Ian Stewart himself, etc. He may have been trying to keep the peace when he stated his comment about an "amalgamation of two bands," although that wasn't an entirely inaccurate statement. Even Andrew Oldham who disliked Jones intensely has said something to the effect that it was Brian's life mission to form the Rolling Stones and it was his (Oldham's) life mission to manage them. So, although he may chafe from how he perceived the way that he and Brian were treated (Charlie was largely exempt except for the money 'cause he just wanted to play drums and had no interest in writing songs) and occasionally exaggerate, I'd say that Wyman's account is pretty much based on fact; more so than Keith anyway (who REALLY had/has a tendency to exaggerate.)
Wymans stories about what happened in the early band he was not a member of are fantasies, lies and Myths he concocted mostly after Brian died. They have no basis in fact and are a complete fabrication. The Rolling Stones were formed by Mick and Keith. Jones did not even have a band for anyone to join in 1962. He joined the Blue Boys...Keith's band. The Stones found regular work at several local clubs following their successful debut at the Marquee Club. Brian's words,1963; Our first residency was at the Ealing Club..., which we still do most weeks, unless we are playing elsewhere.“We are doing a series of Saturday dates at the Poole, Dorset, starting next week. We play the Ken Coyler Club and every Sunday evening play the Station Hotel, Richmond which has been described as one of the most hip sessions,. “We have, I may add, a habit of breaking attendance records.
I TOTALLY believe Brian was a force in the band. But it cannot be overstated: he didn't write songs, drugs did him in and quite likely he was unfortunate to have a weak constitution.
I'm a big time Stones fan from the get go. Flipping the 45 single of "Not Fade Away" over in 1964 and hearing that slide guitar on Ringo's "I Wanna Be Your Man" was a paradigm shift in my musical appreciation. My take: 1.The Stones had a heavyweight rhythm section with Bill and Charlie along with the highly skilled fluid interplay by Brian and Keith on guitar. 2. Add to that Mick and Keith's uncanny knack of writing amazing material. 3. And then by pure chance they just happened to have the best 60s studio musician in the world ... Brian Jones. That my friends = some of the most incredible music of the 60s.
@@billhorstkamp98 Bill may actually believe at least some of what he says Brian did. Bill and Brian were very close and they even roomed together when they toured. In the six years they were together I believe that the egocentric and narcissistic Brian told Bill a crock of lies about how it was his band and that he auditioned and chose each one of them and that he lorded over them, choosing their name and telling them what to play or not play. Bill was not around in the early days of the band. It was almost 1963 before he joined and he either believed Brian or chose to repeat his lies after he died because he felt sorry for him. None of what Bill claims about Brian is supported by any other source. Even Bill's famous complaint about the plaque at the Dartford train station that says that Mick and Keith went on to form the Stones was dismissed when Bill's claim that Brian formed the band was investigated by the Dartford City Council. Initially the City Council said that they would amend the wording to satisfy Bill, but once they investigated Bill's claims they decided to leave the wording as it was. The plaque was never changed and still is displayed at the platform with it's original and accurate wording. Mick and Keith founded the band that became the Rolling Stones and nothing Bill could do will ever take that away from them.
"No one’s ever spotted the fact that Brian Jones took two, sometimes three songs and layered them. People writing about the album have missed it because they have no clue what Joujouka music is. Listen to the women singing with flute and drum underneath them, that’s two songs playing at the same time. That’s why Brian deserves to have his name on the cover. He was making a cut-up of the music to recreate what he felt there.”--Frank Rynne, manager of the Master Musicians of Joujouka
Oldham was smart and he knew what direction to take them to. If they would have stayed in Brian’s way of thinking, they’d be done by 1966, just like all of the other British cover bands
I love and appreciate Brian’s skills. That said, Brian Jones is mostly responsible for his downfall. Drugs have a way of eroding the talent of individuals. I believe Brian started the 27 Club, a very sad club.
Brian could really make a song work ! : ) For me, compared to their later more country rock stuff - the Stones were great up to `66 - strong, catchy tunes ! : )
@Jay-Incognito Well, what did the “men” in this situation you described do? They get a free pass from silly judgement too, of course so coming from a man, eh? ☺️
Anyone who was listening to the Stones in their early formative years knows how much Jones contributed to their early success and how much his contribution put them on the road to superstardom. The world reaction to Jones' death was testament to his place in the history of the Rolling Stones.
Huge respect for Bill Wyman keeping the legacy of Brian alive. Like the part when he's drawing our attention to the flute part in Ruby Tuesday. The song would sorely lacking without that flute.
Thank You for telling us Mr Wyman. Although I have to say, at 63 years young as I am. I have never bought a Stones record. But after this I might. I really liked when Brian played the sitar. Thank Bill, may all good things come your way.
The best one from the Brian era was Flowers.
Bravo Brian Jones 👏👏 You are the BEST of the Best 🙏🙏 The original Golden Stone!! With the brilliant talents !!!!!🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
Thank you, Bill, for keeping the spirit of Brian alive. He was The Rolling Stones and deserves more than the footnote he gets in the band's history. You're a good man and I'm glad you're happy and enjoying life, although I do miss that stoic look. 🙂
That is such a perfect way of describing your feelings about Bill. I was going to write something, but I couldn't add anything to what you've already written. Thanks.
Brian had a special charisma none other members could match.. he got all the groupies..as a musician.. Hendrix.. Clapton..Page..Townshend..Beck..etc..all praised his skills and influence... when he went to Monterey with Nico..all eyes were on him!! In the sixties Brian Jones was a fucking cultural icon!!
He had charisma as well as talent. That is something the others didn't have, not even Jimi Hendrix, who was naturally shy.
Bless you Bill. ❤
Bill is a liar.
@@williardbillmore5713you are the liar. Seek professional help. It’s obvious you need it.
@@williardbillmore5713 No, he told the truth. Let's move on.
@@stevebrothers9470 No. I have a much better idea. Let's agree that Bill is just repeating the lies that that egocentric narcissist Brian told him about how the band started and we can move on from there.
@@stevebrothers9470 this Willard the rat seems to think it all happened with just the four of them isolated on a remote desert island or something. Like Wyman never spoke to all the other musicians in that community that watched it all happen. Like he never spoke with even the other band members. One guy said he not only lives under the bridge, he owns it.
Brian's contributions to the early hits were often what I remembered.
Those are the very contributions that created the mystique that has taken them into 2024
Great band don't get me wrong but be real about what's real.
They certainly added the unforgettable flavor to some of their best songs.
@@RobertShames You Can't Handle The Real!!
Exactly. He was what made them interesting early on
Brian Jones’s was after real authentic blues he was a perfectionist… Dylan called one of best folk blues guitarist he’d heard… good enough for me!
I second it, bluecheer.
Jimmy Page said he was a brilliant musician. The video is on here.
@@diehard-schenker-fan7233
Jimmy Page told the TRUTH !!
I've always been partial to the early stuff with Brian. Much deeper😮 more meaningful textures, musically. 😊
Right ON!
Apart for Charlie Watts, I think there is a consensus about BJ being the best musician of the group. I once had a bandmate like that: You just gave the man any instrument, no matter how exotic, and he'd ended up playing it like a pro after a 5 minutes exploration. I guess BJ must have been one of these.
No question.🙂
@@martinportelance138mick Taylor was the best musician.
Like Syd Barrett in Pink Floyd and Peter Green in Fleetwood Mac, Brian, Syd & Peter where the creators and original leaders of the bands only for whatever reason for them to lose their grip and fade away.
Glad Bill is speaking up for Brian.
You are wrong. The Rolling Stones were created by Mick and keith. Brian joined THEIR band. Brian created NOTHING.
They were gifted musicians but not gifted businessmen or backstabbers. After they got the money machines rolling they were pushed aside or lost their minds.
Pæease don't compare Brian Jones to Peter Green. Greeny was a blues guitar virtuoso, who wrote songs, had a great blues voice and did lead a band!!
And like all 3, the band's most enduring music was created after their departure
@@thomasjensen3214 I’m not comparing them.
Excellent tribute to Brian Jones. Apparently Brian had subtle talent. He could create riffs, melodies and original supporting touches that made a composition so strong. Mick was an explosion----a performing powerhouse.
Jones never had an original musical idea in his entire career. Jones was a copyist.
@@williardbillmore5713 Willie the Rat BullMore OCD Much!
Every riff that Brian ever played in a Jagger / Richards song was written by The riff master Keith Richards as an intrinsic parts of the songs he conceived and wrote.
Brian had no creative imagination whatsoever. He could take direction pretty well when he was sober though..
He wrote Ruby Tuesday and never got credit.
@@jamesbowen8960 True
The thing about Bill that lends him credit as an historian of the Rolling Stones was that he was a prolific diary writer and kept diaries throughout his time with the band. While other members rely on their memory which we all know can be sketchy years later, Wyman can always refer to his writings that were made when events happened.
Plus Bill lived a very clean life so would remember more clearly.
I remember in 1965 hearing as an 11 year old the first few seconds of the fuzzy guitar on Satisfaction and thinking, "Holy shit, that is great ". I am 71 now, and it still effects me the same way.
Recording with Brian Jones, adding all of the instrumentation that made the tapestry work so well was what put the Rolling Stones on the map
You got that right ! :)
Yes this about Brian Jones is true. If there was something off menu. Generally it is someone outside the bands ider. The acts were designated in the instruments they played and the dress was uniform code. I'm not sure the Beatles broke out this way so early. I am 60 plus I am totally influenced by pop. The stones were it so were the Beatles.
Stones got on a roll after Brian. I went along for the ride.@@jamespell8091
Jones was the swagmeister 3000. Great documentary with clips of Brian interviews I’ve never seen. And this is grand of Bill Wyman to call out the very important contributions of Brian’a creation of the group, their sound, songs and promotion. Kudos to both the video creator, and to Billy Wyman.
Bill wyman has always been there for Brian
After 1969?
I already liked Bill Wyman, now I like him even more.
I love Bill's loyalty to Brian, no matter what certain people in this comments section say.
Sour Grapes... Mick and Keith Made Bill Rich
@@DeanCarson-d8nbullshit,it was Brian did you not hear what Bill said or are you deaf as well as being dumb
That‘s not the reason why Bill is loyal to Brian. Some people are slaves to money, but Bill is a man of Character.
@@Der_hermetische_Arzt BRian had low character but played an important artistic role to the founding stones but Note that Mick and Keith wrote the songs that defined the Stones
@@Der_hermetische_Arztvery correct 👍
Way to go, Bill! Set the record straight. You're greatly appreciated for the truth amongst all the BS. The Rolling Stones' legacy will forever rest on the blues band vision of Brian Jones!
Always enjoy hearing what Bill has to say.
Stones fan here,
My favorite era is the Jones stones. Mr. Bill Wyman the man is an absolute jewel 💎
I recall in 63-64 as a young 8/9 year old kid watching the Stones I noticed Brian Jones stood out on stage and on early album covers.. I always preferred the Blues playing Rolling Stones… That was Brian Jones 😎
Bill Wyman is the official historical expert in all things Stones.
Not after 1993
@@FuturePast2019F anything after 1978.
@@doctorskull8197 You saw Stones back then?
And young girls.
Since I was a child I followed rock, I learned to love the music of the sixties and I became a faithful follower of Brian Jones. Bill always seemed so loyal, honest and direct. His opinions are respectable and he did attend his friend's funeral, not like the others. , who try to erase the legacy of the eternal rock angel.
Thank you, this is so interesting to finally hear Bills voice, I love his 🇬🇧 accent, he and his fantastic bass playing were always in the background on vids, the bass is my favorite instrument.
Keith played bass on Sympathy for the Devil, Street Fighting Man, Stray Cat Blues & Jumpin’ Jack Flash. A favorite band & Keith is my best-loved member.
R.I.P. Brian Jones🤍🤍🤍
Bill wasn't the best bass player...Hell, Bill wasn't even the best bass player in the Rolling Stones.
@@williardbillmore5713 John Lennon was asked is Ringo The Worlds Best Rock drummer? Lennon said "Ringo isn't even the Best drummer in the Beatles" (referring to Paul of course)
@@tomwheeler6760
And I was referring to Keith...
...Of course...
In many of their biggest hits Keith would know exactly what the song needed for a bass line...Bill would often not be feeling it and he would say to Keith. Well why don't you just do it yourself.
Keith always kept his own Fender Precision bass at hand in the studio and he often would...nailing the perfect bass part for the song.
@@williardbillmore5713 Right I got it, I was aware that Keith was a good Bass player. At one point as you may well be aware of there was a possibility? slight probably? of John Lennon, Eric Clapton, Mitch Mitchell, and Keith on Bass forming a Ban called The Dirty Mac.
@@tomwheeler6760 It was a one off performance in the TV special that never aired put on by the Rolling Stones called The Rock and Roll circus.
TheDirty Mac played the Beatles, Yer Blues and then much caterwauling by Yoko Ono
Fun fact The name Dirty Mac was a take off on the band Fleetwood Mac.
Here is a link to the TH-cam of that supergroup, The Dirty Mac.
th-cam.com/video/JeFwaWFTGYU/w-d-xo.html
It's about time BRIAN JONES had defense from an original Rolling Stone. Thank you to Bill Wyman
Bill was NOT an original Rolling Stone. The first bass player for the Stones was Dick Taylor ...Wyman was not even in the band until almost 1963. He did not even know them when Brian joined Keith's band in April 62. everything he says Brian did in the early days is pure fiction.
Look it up ...I'm telling the truth..
@@GuitarMatt I don't understand what that last bit was about, Matt, But Bill made up some ridiculous claims about what Brian did in the early Stones when Bill wasn't even there.
Brian did Not found the band.
@GuitarMatt Willie Bull More aka The ANTI-Brian! has No Idea who Wyman knew, or what, or when? just because Wyman wasn't officially in the Band until Dec. 7 1962, and to Correct WB/Keith Richards? Mr. Omniscient The Stones were formed on July 12, 1962! not April of 62 (I did look it Up! Willie Billy/Bully! from several sources) So Wyman being in The Band 5 months later means, he didn't know any of the several people (from the London Blues Club Venues) involved in these things? Really? most likely Bill was acquainted with most of the Characters integral in the Beginnings of The Stones Keith, Mick, Brian, Ian Stewart, Dick Taylor, Tony Chapman etc. Tony was The Stones first drummer in Mid 62 he told Bill The Stones needed a Bass player, Charlie Watts was offered the job in 62 but initially turned it down but later accepted and became The Stones Permanant Drummer in Jan. of 63 So I guess Willard would say Charlie had No idea either as to who, or how the Stones became The Stones? (how Brian was their spokesman, Promoted them, Booked The Gigs, handled the money etc.) since he wasn't an official member until about 6 months after their July 12th 62 formation. Not Bloody likely he, and Especially Bill weren't well aware of what went on.
WB Loves to say "Brian Never wrote anything whatsoever! Not even 1 song! and had virtually no creativity, or really any significant musical skills other than repeating the 2 same notes. Brian could Only follow what Keith had written for him, and just what he was directed by KR to do, if Brian was sober enough to understand?" How Absurd, What an Arrogant Hateful Disturbed, Unhinged OCD Clown Willard is! And he likes to call everyone who doesn't agree with him 100% A Liar! Well hes The Big LIAR! he never mentions Brian writing The Complete Original Soundtrack to The Movie A Degree of Murder! which went to the Cannes Film Festival in which Brians German Girlfriend Anita Pallenberg Starred in, Brian playing most of the Instruments, also Featuring a small part by Jimmy Page with his Violin Bow on Electric Guitar before he used it (in the Yardbirds, and latter Zepelin on the Dazed and Confused song) Also Ian Stewart played some piano on the Project. Jimmy said "It was a real Thrill to work with Brian Jones because He was such a Creative Musician" And also Keith Richards pf all people said "for a project that someone never tried before to write a whole piece of music for a film it was good" Brian actually wrote 4-5 songs The Stones even recorded but never released "Wake Up In The Morning" "Sure I do" "I Want You To Know" "Dust My Pyramids" and Lyrics to "Thank You For Being There" But Brian who was kind of a tortured soul, on one hand quite cold, selfish, and cruel, but also very shy, sensitive, and paranoid. Were the songs any good? maybe who knows? But it Proves Willard T. Rat a Liar!
@@tomwheeler6760 Oh, WOW, you are such a GENIUS (coming from a 1973 kid). Hey, DORK,. I was listening to the Stones as early as the early eighties as a little kid. Go pop your PIGEON CHEST around someone else, you POSEUR!
@@tomwheeler6760 Brian knew that he would never go anywhere alone . He needed Mick and Keith. They were the hottest performers around at the time so he joined their band The blue Boys.
He spent the rest of his career as a poser.
"Brian was a brilliant, fluent multi-instrumentalist, he was the one who founded the Rolling Stones and he had the creative vision that helped them to evolve organically from a mop-top blues-pop group into the mystical rock gods they became--something that many people today might not realise."--Mick Fleetwood
Mick and Keith founded the Blue Boys with Dick Taylor, shortly after their chance encounter on platform #2 at the Dartford train station in October of 61. The Blue Boys BECAME the Rolling Stones after Brian Joined the Blue Boys and they agreed to change their name.
The only group that Brian founded was the 27 Club.
Interviewer--- What were you doing before you joined? ( The band)
Brian---"um well I was just sort of bumming around waiting for something to happen really. I had quite a few jobs and uh I was trying to get a band going but it was unsuccessful until I met up with Mick and Keith"
Brian Jones explaining to an interviewer about not being able to start a band and instead joining Keith's band, The Blue Boys.
@@williardbillmore5713 Lol actually Robert Johnson was the Founding Member of the so called 27 Club, I think you are the Only Semi living member of that Club WilLARD
@@tomwheeler6760
That is true, Johnson was the first well known musician to die at the tender age of 27... But Brian's death marked the first time it was called the 27 club especially when Hendrix Joplin and Morrison died shortly after him.
Fun fact; "King of the Delta Blues" Robert Johnson's recording career lasted only seven months.
It has been said that Johnson was murdered by the husband of one of his many mistresses. with poisoned whisky.
Johnson, Jones, Hendrix, Joplin, Morrison and Winehouse all were big whiskey drinkers.
I am only ten years shy of living three times longer than they did. I am 71.
I don't drink whiskey.
@@williardbillmore5713The so called 27 club if we must be vulgar, was initiated by a REAL bluesman, Robert Johnson in 1938.
Jones my favoite Stone
I actually love the early blues tunes they performed and recorded. Little Red Rooster was awesome as was King Bee.
I Thoroughly Agree.....Brian was the Foundation Stone of the Rollers ...big fan since buying my first vinals in the 60's ... without him R.S.s wouldn't have existed.......true that
TRES Cool/Heavy Le Blues de Brian!
For me, there are three distinct entities for the band. There is The Rolling Stones, with Brian Jones, The Stones, with Mick Taylor, and early on with Ronnie Wood, and Stones and Friends, up to the present era. They all had something, but the original band had the most diverse and inventive material, much of that thanks to Brian's ability to color their songs through a variety of musical sounds and instruments. Bill Wyman remains the one member of the surviving members who not only knows the truth about the band but acknowledges it publically. Losing Bill also altered the band's sound immensely and not in a particularly positive way.
Bill was not a member of the early Stones He was not there when he says Brian founded the Stones. He tells whooper lies about what happened at a time when he didn't even know them.
@@williardbillmore5713 Is that you Millard Fillmore? lol
@@tomwheeler6760
Congratulations, Tom...You have figured out the president who is the origin of my screen eponym.
No one else has.
I think the best version of the stones was with Mick Taylor as lead guitarist
@@williardbillmore5713 no not true lol I knew😊
Good on you bill
Yes ! :)
Can you imagine running a want ad and Jagger and Richard’s show up!
No. It is an absurd notion...Especially when Keith and Mick were already in an established blues band for seven months before Brian even ran the advert. The Blue Boys were complete with impressive demo tapes of blues songs like Rollin Stone blues.. Mick new what he had and he knew what Keith had too. They were both in demand and everybody on the scene knew the confidence and charisma Mick had on stage and the eclectic guitar skills Keith had to draw on.
It is a tale that holds no water that they auditioned for anybody.
I'll take "Things That Never Happened" for 300 Alex...
Let them show up elsewhere.
Brian Jones taught them both how to play. Mick learned harmonica from Brian.
@@jamesbowen8960 Utter and complete nonsense..,Where do you people get this crap from?
Keith had ten years playing guitar in all genres including classical, Jazz, R&B and popular rock and roll. Brian got his first guitar for his 17th birthday three years before they met and he only played the blues on it. Who do you think taught who how to play rock rhythm guitar?
Keith had to keep the parts he wrote for Brian to play simple or he wouldn't even try to play them.
Jagger studied Little Walter's harmonica style years before he met Brian. Mick"s playing is more melodic and lyrical and Brian played a chugging overdriven rhythmical Chicago style .Very little in common . Brian taught neither of them anything. Brian was very much the student ...at least when he was sober.
I don’t understand why people still try to debate this. It was Brian who placed the ad to start a band. They responded to his ad. Stu was the first. He met mick and Keith and much agreed to come along with Keith. End of story it was Brian who was the catalyst. Not saying mick and Keith wouldn’t have started a band but it wouldn’t have been this exact combination. Brian Jones named it he band as well. These are facts that can’t be debated. He chose the music he signed the contracts he got the gigs etc. it’s not diminishing Mick and Keith at all it’s just asking to get the history right and to give credit where credit is due and that is simply to acknowledge that the Stones wouldn’t exist as an entity if it weren’t for Brian Jones. Also yes I know the he part about the Ealing Jazz club and playing with Alexis Korner Blues Incorporated, Elmo Lewis, Little boy blue and the blue boys, dust my broom, Charlie drumming for Alexis etc. all of these factors considered it was still Brian who started the band!!!
Exactly. But Williard still stays in denial and fantasy land.
There should be no debate as to the fact that Brian started the band, he was the acknowledged leader of the band, and the most accomplished musician of the band. These are facts. But bands evolve and as the band evolved Brian's role was diminished. Ultimately it was drugs that pushed him out of the band, though, not the change in group dynamics.
@@erichschorr2609 Yup
Ich wünsche hier allen Musikfreunden schöne Ostertage 🐇🐑🌿☀...
Das Gleiche gilt für dich und deine Familie, Wilma.
The Brian Jones era was the Stones at their most creative and diverse, and we have Jones to thank for that influence. When Mick Taylor joined they became much more of a conventional rock group, they still did good stuff but their musical range became much narrower, and the Ron Wood era saw them settle into an even narrower, comfortable pattern that they rarely broke out of afterwards. These days you know exactly what you're getting from a Stones concert or the rare studio album; when Brian was in charge every album was an adventure into uncharted territory.
The flute/recorder at the beginning of Ruby Tuesday would be testament in itself, but the credits keep coming.
A little to late, but that's the way time works I guess🤔
Yep! Bll your right the early Stones were brilliant live and there early Albums have a special vibe because of Brian. R.I.P.
Brian like so many creative people had his demons like most Green, Barrett, Moon , Lynnet , and the so called 27 club fell to chasing the Dragon and burning the candle at both ends,, I know I was in the Art and Music scene from late 60ts to middle 70ts, its a Road less travelled with many casualties and ego frictions .
I survived many of my friends didn't..
PS, I had my wedding reception in Bill's London Restaurant Sticky Fingers.
Brian was wonderful, a highly gifted musician, in those early days, but we have to face it, as time went on Brian self-destructed in an unbelievably short amount of time. Just look at pictures of beautiful Brian in 63-64 compared to the Brian of 69. He let his dissatisfaction with the band--and probably a lot of other psychological pathology--overcome him and drowned in booze and drugs metaphorically and then literally in a pool.
Wasn't he already missing occasional gigs by '65?
Yes and he let the band down by not showing up for recordings and performances --and he left the band in 1969. It seems crystal clear that mick jagger is the one that picked up the pieces and pulled it all together -- of course with major support from Keith and Charlie.
Brian Jones was such a talent, too bad they didn’t appreciate him more in the band!
Sadly his life ended, when he could’ve just created another band. He could’ve been in just about any group, on the level of Jimmy page.
Rest in peace, Brian! 🙏
Too bad Keith stole his girl
Sadly, excellent musicians that can't write songs are a dime a dozen. Sure, being a visionary and having great studio ideas can help, but ultimately it is the writers who forms and lead, some of them unwillingly, successful RnR bands.
Brian was working to start another band,, but all that was cut short when Frank Thorogood murdered Brian by drowning him in his pool.
@@FuturePast2019 Too bad Brian was beating Anita up on more occasions so she turned to Keith who was in love with her as well
@@thomasjensen3214 You believe that? "Every time they had a fight, Brian would come out bandaged and bruised"
Very much appreciated. 🦉🎶🌝
🎶Prince Jones🎶
💕🕯️ 🌌 RIP🎶
Keith Richards claimed it was Ian Stewart's band who says it was Brian Jones who started the band. It's a brief clip just look it up here on TH-cam. Case closed.
I love Keith, but I truly feel Brian was the heart, soul and brains of the early Stones. Keith was kind of shy in the early days, but he sure did open up as one of the best guitarist, songwriters and smartest guys in rock. Seems like you can ask Keith anything and he always has the perfect answer. Really sad about Brian, he such a brilliant artist. My favorite era is still all the albums with Brian. I also feel Bill left at the right time before The Stones kind of morphed into a mega business. Put on any early Stones album and you can hear the little things that Brian did that we remember about those songs.
Keith was by his own admission from a Very Cold Emotionless family (I heard him say this with his own voice) Not surprising he is a Cold Fish himself. He was a Rat that stole Anita Pallenberg away from Brian while the 3 of them were in Morocco and Brian who had Bad Asthma ended up in the Hospital. Now before Hater billmore aka The Anti Brian chimes in saying "she cried to Keith about Brian beating her up" that may be true? or not? But if it was? then you tell her Leave him, and find someone else! But Not Me! You don't do that to your Friend, if you are really a friend? Sorry Mick, and Keef have very little credibility, especially now that Brian is not around to defend himself.
Mick Jagger's favorite Stones album? Aftermath. Brian's finest hour.
Keith was the,,,♥️,,,of the Stones.
@@tomwheeler6760I believe Anita had a “decision” in this, she obviously wasn’t kidnapped aka stolen.
@@KittyGrizGriz Sure she did, as did Keith thats the point, you don't get together with your friends girlfriend especially while he is incapacitated unless she overpowered, and kidnapped Keith and there was nothing he could do about it. Do you believe that? I've experienced this personally when my wife left me wanting to be with my friend. (Denying it all the time, as did he) All he had to do was say ok you're not happy with Tom, so leave him and find someone else, but I'm not going to be the one that stabs him in the back. Just put yourself in Brian's or my place. Would you do that to a friend? or if a friend did that to you would you really be able to stay friends with that person? People these days have No concept what Real Friendship, or Loyalty is. So my wife and "friend" got married, then a few months later wrote me apology letters asking me to forgive them because what they did was Totally Wrong! I said well if you're really Sorry? how about giving me back the $50,000, and Nice Pickup Truck you took from Our marriage, just to show good faith that your apology is for real? Oh well we couldn't do that. Lol oh ok then your "regret" an "apology" is just Crap!!
Brian's contribution on "Mother's Little Helper" coolest riffs played on a 12-string guitar with slide and the tambura that distinct sound RIP
The Jones stones were the best stones. Mick Taylor dod a pretty good job too, but when Taylor left the great stones were over in my opinion. But Jones really knew how to make a song sound special and Mick and Keith never give him any credit .Same for Mick Taylor
Taylor Wyman and Jones were all credited for the songs that they wrote. In Brian's case the number of them was ZERO
I think when it comes to musicianship, Mick Taylor was the most talented Rolling Stone guitarist ever. I don’t think that’s really an argument.
@@billhorstkamp98 Not many would argue with your assessment, Bill.
The Stones popularity and success soared just after they rid themselves of Jones and hired a real creative and talented guitarist.
Unbelievably though there are still some Saint Jones worshipers who will try to tell you that their drunken idol with the fluffy blonde hair was a better musician...Ha ha ha ha ha
They can be a funny lot...
The Taylor years ....nothing more has to be said.
@@neh60 Love the Taylor Stones too but after that the great Stones were over, and if you read Keiths book, he gives no credit to anyone.
Excellent project ❤ perfect pictures great job 👏 🔥
Brian's contribution to Ruby Tuesday makes that song a classic. But Alexis Korner's Blues Incorporated was active in London in 1961.
Ruby whatever was 66.
@@JeffreyWilliams-dr7qe Recorded November 66. Released January 67
Thank you for posting this. You rarely hear Brian Jones clips. Bill Wyman tells it. His book " Stone Alone " is a good read.
I have been a stones fan since 62
Mick sometimes forgets that without Brian, he would still be sitting on the platform @ Dartford train station with a box of 7 inch records .
The records Mick had that October day in 1961 were 12 inch albums and Brian had very little to do with the Rolling Stones success. Jones was a poser and a hanger on..
Mick and Keith formed the Rolling Stones. The plaque on the Dartford train station correctly says so.
Actually, Mick and Keith, long-separated childhood friends, happened to meet again on that station platform. Each was carrying a Chuck Berry album. Or multiple Chuck Berry albums. I forget which. Brian was the more naturally-talented player, of a wide variety of instruments. But couldn't write original hit-quality songs. The world is relatively full of people who can play and/or sing hit songs, written by other people, note for note, and relatively empty of people who can write original hit songs.
@@Richard-g4u1r So true... Either they have it or they don't
...According to Keith it was Mick who was carrying the hard to find albums that included, Rockin' at the Hops by Chuck Berry, and The Best of Muddy Waters which ironically had the song "Rollin Stone" on it.
One verse of that song goes;
Well, my mother told my father
Just before , I was born
"I got a boy child's comin', he's gonna be
*He's gonna be a "Rollin' Stone"
Sure 'nough, he's a "Rollin' Stone"
Sure 'nough, he's a "Rollin' Stone"*
How prophetic is that?
@@williardbillmore5713 love Muddy Waters
@@williardbillmore5713 You don't know what you are talking about.
Brian Jones needs to be posthumously inducted, into the Rock-'n'-Roll Hall of Fame.
As an individual musician in his own standing.
I was in England in 1958----Blues was not unheard of. People were talking blues.
not electric blues
There's a great book by Paul Trynka called Sympathy for the Devil about Brian and how brilliant a musician he was and so versatile. Recommended to read.
Except that it’s extremely distorted and written in revenge to Keith’s autobiography. It’s full of made-up stories to glorify Brian .
Brain was also gifted with a high IQ. He doesn't get the credit he deserves.
He never applied his IQ to anything worthwhile. Jones was incredibly lazy.
Wait - BILL played those bass pedals on “Paint It, Black”.
✌️
That's what I thought I'd read.
Paint It Black - written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. And that famous riff? that's Keith.
Anyone with good common sense, can clearly see Brian Jones was the original True Leader ! In the beginning, Brian didn't care for Mick Jagger's singing. Mick and Keith don't know how lucky they were to join Brian's band !!! Love Bill Wyman for being a stand up MAN !
Thank you Sandy!!
Brian was a druggy
@@elenikorkodelaki2695
You are most welcome always, Eleni. ;)
Nonsense.
“The band is really an amalgamation of two bands. The one being an R&B band I formed about a year ago, and the other being a group run by Mick and Keith in S.E. London. I was introduced to Keith and we decided to pool our resources, so with Stu from my band, and Mick from Keith’s we became the nucleus of the ‘Stones.’” ---Brian Jones 1963 Read Brian's words as he tells how the band got together.
@@shadrach6299Really none of your business.
I loved that xylophone in Under My Thumb . . . I could never keep my eyes off Brian!! I was 16 at the time of his death, & it's always haunted me because I never knew much abt him . . I still love him & respect his musical genius now more than ever❣️ Ty, Bill
I bought my first super 45's of the Rolling Stones in october 1964.I read all the interviews of the Stones for years.First one of Jagger in NME or MM at the very beginning he said:
"Don't call us a r'n'r band,we're a R'n'b band"
Brian Jones was certainly not the only one to like blues.
Before the Stones ,Keith and Mick with Dick Taylor,when they were sixteen ,had a band named The Blues Boys.
Bill Wyman played in r'n'r cover bands ,playing for US soldiers .Charlie played jazz. They knew bout blues but not like Keith and Mick .The future Glimmer Twins just love Jimmy Reed and Muddy Waters.And Ian Stewart was great
The Blue Boys never broke up. After Brian and Ian joined them in April of 62 they changed their name to the Rolling Stones.
Very cool interview. I never realized that the flute in Ruby Tuesday was Brian. That was one of the defining components.
So...where did Mick and Keith come into the band? Was that an ad also, or did Brian already know them?
Mick met Brian at the Ealing Jazz Club, when Brian played Robert Johnson's "Dust My Broom." Later Mick brought Keith to meet Brian.
Not much that's new here. I'm sure that anyone who's followed the Stones since their beginnings knows how important Brian's contributions were to the original band. Of course, there are plenty of Stones fans who only know them as post-70-year-old geezers.
Thanks - I'm so glad to have heard this perspective on Brian Jones' influence, creativity. But the 12 minutes should have been edited down to 6 - it's SO repetitive "and Bill Wyman wants you to know" etc so many times. We got it.
Brian had such style always thgt they were jealous or whatever red rooster STILL one of my favs
Eversince he was number ONE for me. A real shock when he died. I am a follower since the begining.
I don't doubt that Brian was the one who formed the band and his talent as a musician was undeniable, but without Mick as the front man he is, and the songs written by Mick and Keith which were the hits that took them to the top, the band could have easily folded by the mid sixties.
Correct. If the band had followed Brian's vision for the band, of only covering other artists blues songs in a handful of clubs in and around London we never would have heard of them.
Ironically Brian hated that Mick and Keith wrote the hit songs that made him wealthy and famous.
Mick and Keith formed the Blue Boys and after Brian joined them in April of 62 they changed the name to The Rolling Stones. Brian founded NOTHING.
@@williardbillmore5713 Brian formed the band. Keith and Mick, Stu others have said so. You are delusional and need medical help.
@@williardbillmore5713 I think, to be fair: Mick and Keith wanted a band as well Brian did. They met together to be "banded" together. Without Mick and Keith nor without Brian there wouldn't be The Rolling Stones.
And: Brian was a great great instrumentalist, but his personalilty, his character was splitted. On one side he was a nice boy on the other hand he was aggressive. He defraud the others with his higher salary secretly. He was not always nice to Charlie (he once told) and so on. So Brian missed the personal contact after years to Mick and Keith, also to Charlie and Bill, what I have read in all the years of being a fan (for 47 years 🫶). So I do love The Rolling Stones in every decade!!! And I do love Brian's instruments playing!
I always loved Brian’s sitar on Paint it Black.
'No Jones, No Stones' as simple as that.
No Jones= much better Stones. They had their best success just after Brian left the band.
BTW the Rolling Stones were founded by Mick and Keith. Brian joined their band.
@@williardbillmore5713 I dont agree mate, but there you are. Each to his own. Amazingly good band giving me such wonderful memories when a young teen!
@@rowley1950 Same here... But they could have done better if they hadn't chosen a malignant narcissist, psychopathic drunk as their second guitarist.
@rowley1950 If Brian had lived he might have formed another Band called The Rolling Jones! or The Trolling Stones!
@@tomwheeler6760 That would have been really funny...
But it just wasn't in the cards.
Brian could not have lived much longer than he did.
His heart, liver and lungs were too far too damaged and diseased from nearly a decade of alcohol and drug abuse. At autopsy his liver was found to be twice it's normal size.
Love Bill Wyman
Strongly recommend viewing the documentary about Bill Wyman called The Quiet One. To see him reduced to tears saying how much he treasured Ray Charles' music was very moving. It used to be up here on TH-cam for free...
It's wild to try to imagine the direction of the stones had Brian stayed around.
Great expose and coming straight from the horse's mouth, in the guise of Bill Wyman. The quiet Stone if you will. Fascinating and interesting; thanks for uploading - liked and subscribed.
Just try to imagine Paint it Black or Ruby Tuesday or Lady Jane or 2000 Light Years from Home or The Last Time or No Expectations or any of dozens of other early Stones songs without Brian.
I have heard most of those songs performed without Brian and they do not lose a thing.
@@williardbillmore5713 LOL Brian LIVES! in your Hateful Willie T. Rat Head Too Funny!
@@williardbillmore5713 that’s true. I’ve only seen the stones with MickTaylar and then Ron Wood I never saw Brian in concert. But I’ve heard those songs without Brian and you really don’t miss him
@@billhorstkamp98 There was a time , when they did Paint It Black, Ronny played an electric sitar. But in more recent performances Ron plays a Fender Stratocaster and Keith plays a modified Telecaster that sounds even more like a real sitar. From Keith's clever and expressive intro that he always played right through to the last refrain it's all there.
In the original recording Brian only doubled up on exactly what Keith played on guitar anyway.
Jones is not missed at all.
It's easy to imagine Gimme Shelter, Happy, Sympathy for the Devil or Dead Flowers without Brian though.
I will never forget the day when my older brother brought home that first Rolling Stones album. "Yes! There is someone else out there other than the Beatles!" The Stones "taught" me how to play guitar. The Stones led me to the Blues Masters. I saw them once, July 1972. My older brother has seen them numerous times, to include with Brian Jones, and the last time a couple of weekends ago. The Glimmer Twins are the only ones left but hey, we still have TH-cam!
3:40 - 3:45..Here is the truth!!! From Bill Wyman, Thank you Bill for telling all this! WITHOUT Brian there were no Stones! Anyway all of them sre are incredible! I like the ROLLING STONES, but BRIAN JONES was special! Always remembered 🙏👏
Bill is a liar.
Bill was recruited several months after the Stones started already so how would he know how it started initially? Keith and Mick wrote the first of their original songs which made them stars overnite after. Wyman has an agenda here.The architect of the band was Ian Stewart actually who got them all together . Wymans actual name is Perks.
@@mattbarbarich3295 You are correct on all counts, Matt.
@@williardbillmore5713 Cheers, I'm just tired of so much disinformation and smoke an mirrors around. Jones was a very disfunctional and abusive person more and more so Jagger and Richards had to step up if they were going to get anywhere or survive.
@@mattbarbarich3295 Mick and Keith rose to the occasion and they changed all our lives with their musical genius.
Nice to see Bill on here, since he is still around to describe the stories of the Stones.
Think of the recorder in Ruby Tuesday. Brian.
Brian and Jack Nitzsche wrote and arranged the part Brian played in Keith's song Ruby Tuesday.
Brian never played anything like that in his entire life on his own.
The Rolling Stones were at their peak in the early years with Brian Jones. There would have been no Stones without Jones.
Yo have it wrong... Without Jones they were much more successful and popular. They really didn't hit their peak until the mid to late 70s.
Contrary to Bill Wyman's lies. Brian did not found form or create the Rolling Stones Mick and Keith did.
@@williardbillmore5713 So, you know about the beginning of the Rolling Stones back in England BETTER than Bill Wyman who was there and an actual member of the original Rolling Stones? Is that it?
I hope realize that you sound like a delusional idiot. LOL
@Psychedelicdreamin No Jones = better Stones.
In the weeks months and years after they finally got rid of Brian their popularity soared and their world wide appeal exploded with creativity and critical.acclaim. Jones had been holding them back from reaching their full creative potential.
The numbers don't lie, but you do. Jones had absolutely nothing to do with the creation of Ruby Tuesday.
@Psychedelicdreamin
The Rolling Stones didn't rise to fame until the 70s. Jones had nothing to do with the writing of ANY songs the Stones did. He was not capable of an original musical idea.
He was a poser and a phoney.
@Psychedelicdreamin Jones was a very mediocre rhythm guitar player , though adequate for the most part. Fortunately he was a rabid copyist and he could follow direction on the guitar, at least in the early days.. Keith could always come up with a part that was simple enough for Jones to play that would fill out the songs.
Everything else Brian did was posing and faking his way along trying desperately to gain attention in a band he could never really be a star in because of his lack of improvisational talent and inability to sing.
The Stones were always playing catch up with the Beatles throughout the 60s. If they had a real guitar player like Wood or Taylor and a strong second harmony, when they started in the early days they could have just as easily been on top, setting the pace.
BTW I was 11 years old in 1963.
I lived it too. I learned their guitar parts right off the radio. The easy Brian parts first then later the Richards guitar improvisations and his spot on vocal harmonies. I never knew who did what until I caught them on TV but the easiest repeating parts always turned out to be whatever Brian played. It didn't take long to figure out that he couldn't sing at all.
Lifetime performer here. Glad I watched this. Liked and shared.
When Brian passed away, i stopped with the Stones. Brian had soul.
Love him too but come on
Exile , Sticky Fingers
Bill you waved to me when gigin on Hastings Pier GOD BLESS YOU x
I was a significant freak, 5 years old, with three older brothers, and I started listening to RnR in 1955. Stones came out in '63, and although I am a Beatles fan, I think Stones was perfect. Brian was a pretty boy; I couldn't miss him. He was front and center. He got really screwed, and many of us knew that. His death is never forgotten. Wyman got it right.
The very first album, was on Brian's conduct. The sound was huge, the choice of songs tasteful, and it's still a hell of an album. Bill's sound wrapped entirely the son. It wa the Jones, Watts & Wyman 's combo, plus two nice blokes.
Not sure why Williard's blathering is a pinned comment, lol.
I thought the same! I can't explain it.. Its to crazy..like Willard is!!
@@elenikorkodelaki2695He’s bat shit crazy. Plus he comes off like he’s smarter than everyone. He must be a real joy to be around.
It is pinned because every word of it is true.
@@williardbillmore5713 No actually it isn’t. You post like you were actually there. You weren’t. You still fail to explain Brian’s ad or Geoff Bradford and Bryan Knight. They answered Brian’s ad as well. Brian was the catalyst that is the legend of The Rolling Stones. You can’t take that away from him because it’s cemented in stone though you try. Brian stated that two bands came together. Because of him! That is how history has recorded it. Just accept it and quit posting on every single video about Brian. You lose all credibility when you troll and no one will take you seriously. You are obsessed with the man.
@@williardbillmore5713 ONLY for you.. Relax!
The Brian Jones era was the best era. It was the most artistic and explorative. After he passed, they pumped out bar room music ... just my .02 cents
The band wasn't even together the first seven months, so there really isn't that much Wyman missed except for a lot of hustling, scuffling, and starving. They really didn't GET "together" as THE full original band we "oldies" know until January of 1963 when Charlie Watts finally joined as the final member. Jones has also said that he was the "undisputed leader" at first, and most outside accounts agree with this; Giorgio Gomelski, a manager hopeful who later managed the Yardbirds, drummer Ginger Baker, recording engineer Glyn Johns, Ian Stewart himself, etc. He may have been trying to keep the peace when he stated his comment about an "amalgamation of two bands," although that wasn't an entirely inaccurate statement. Even Andrew Oldham who disliked Jones intensely has said something to the effect that it was Brian's life mission to form the Rolling Stones and it was his (Oldham's) life mission to manage them. So, although he may chafe from how he perceived the way that he and Brian were treated (Charlie was largely exempt except for the money 'cause he just wanted to play drums and had no interest in writing songs) and occasionally exaggerate, I'd say that Wyman's account is pretty much based on fact; more so than Keith anyway (who REALLY had/has a tendency to exaggerate.)
Wymans stories about what happened in the early band he was not a member of are fantasies, lies and Myths he concocted mostly after Brian died.
They have no basis in fact and are a complete fabrication. The Rolling Stones were formed by Mick and Keith. Jones did not even have a band for anyone to join in 1962. He joined the Blue Boys...Keith's band.
The Stones found regular work at several local clubs following their successful debut at the Marquee Club.
Brian's words,1963; Our first residency was at the Ealing Club..., which we still do most weeks, unless we are playing elsewhere.“We are doing a series of Saturday dates at the Poole, Dorset, starting next week. We play the Ken Coyler Club and every Sunday evening play the Station Hotel, Richmond which has been described as one of the most hip sessions,. “We have, I may add, a habit of breaking attendance records.
Bill's bass playing was perfect for the Stones or any other band. His playing is GREAT !!
I TOTALLY believe Brian was a force in the band. But it cannot be overstated: he didn't write songs, drugs did him in and quite likely he was unfortunate to have a weak constitution.
I agree on Brian Jones role, its the season to crap on mick and keith
Actually you are overstating it. Brian should have received co credit, and he helped arrange the songs they brought in.
who wrote those flute notes and the marimba notes of out of time etc.? was it brian? was he the co-composer of many songs?
He should have received co credit on multiple songs.
Frontman extraordinaire = Mick
Writing phenomena = Keith and Mick
Masterful musician and artistic genius = Brian
I'm a big time Stones fan from the get go. Flipping the 45 single of "Not Fade Away" over in 1964 and hearing that slide guitar on Ringo's "I Wanna Be Your Man" was a paradigm shift in my musical appreciation. My take:
1.The Stones had a heavyweight rhythm section with Bill and Charlie along with the highly skilled fluid interplay by Brian and Keith on guitar.
2. Add to that Mick and Keith's uncanny knack of writing amazing material.
3. And then by pure chance they just happened to have the best 60s studio musician in the world ... Brian Jones.
That my friends = some of the most incredible music of the 60s.
Bill Wyman is only honest Stone, now that Charlie Watts is gone.
and Ronnie Wood
Bill Wyman lies like a rug. He was not in the band when Brian joined. Everything he says Brian did before Bill joined are made up lies.
@@williardbillmore5713 why do you think Bill Wyman would lie about these things? I’m really curious. What’s your opinion?
@@billhorstkamp98 bill wyman is very great stone
@@billhorstkamp98 Bill may actually believe at least some of what he says Brian did.
Bill and Brian were very close and they even roomed together when they toured. In the six years they were together I believe that the egocentric and narcissistic Brian told Bill a crock of lies about how it was his band and that he auditioned and chose each one of them and that he lorded over them, choosing their name and telling them what to play or not play. Bill was not around in the early days of the band. It was almost 1963 before he joined and he either believed Brian or chose to repeat his lies after he died because he felt sorry for him. None of what Bill claims about Brian is supported by any other source.
Even Bill's famous complaint about the plaque at the Dartford train station that says that Mick and Keith went on to form the Stones was dismissed when Bill's claim that Brian formed the band was investigated by the Dartford City Council. Initially the City Council said that they would amend the wording to satisfy Bill, but once they investigated Bill's claims they decided to leave the wording as it was.
The plaque was never changed and still is displayed at the platform with it's original and accurate wording.
Mick and Keith founded the band that became the Rolling Stones and nothing Bill could do will ever take that away from them.
"No one’s ever spotted the fact that Brian Jones took two, sometimes three songs and layered them. People writing about the album have missed it because they have no clue what Joujouka music is. Listen to the women singing with flute and drum underneath them, that’s two songs playing at the same time. That’s why Brian deserves to have his name on the cover. He was making a cut-up of the music to recreate what he felt there.”--Frank Rynne, manager of the Master Musicians of Joujouka
Oldham was smart and he knew what direction to take them to. If they would have stayed in Brian’s way of thinking, they’d be done by 1966, just like all of the other British cover bands
Oldham was good at marketing. Not so good at holding a band together, in fake he basically sabotaged it by playing favorites.
The Brian Jones era is my favorite era of the Rolling Stones music.
I love and appreciate Brian’s skills. That said, Brian Jones is mostly responsible for his downfall. Drugs have a way of eroding the talent of individuals. I believe Brian started the 27 Club, a very sad club.
bill is so under appreciated as a bassist he was great.
You look at the live TV...things ..Mick is actually....cued on Brian. Brian is the solidity......... ect.
Brian could really make a song work ! : )
For me, compared to their later more country rock stuff -
the Stones were great up to `66 - strong, catchy tunes ! : )
Most of their best singles were recorded when Brian was in the band. The best Stones albums were made when Mick Taylor was with them.
Brian was the first to wear women’s clothing a trend that many rock stars of the 60’s copied
thanks to Anita Pallenberg-
@@floglobe Always a strong, woman in the background. Yes.
@Jay-Incognito Well, what did the “men” in this situation you described do? They get a free pass from silly judgement too, of course so coming from a man, eh? ☺️
@Jay-Incognito Oh why don’t you get lost and pick on someone else. Your kind, bore me.
@Jay-Incognito Thank goodness! 👏 👏
Anyone who was listening to the Stones in their early formative years knows how much Jones contributed to their early success and how much his contribution put them on the road to superstardom. The world reaction to Jones' death was testament to his place in the history of the Rolling Stones.
I don't believe Keith and Mick needed to be persuaded into the blues. They were already there before meeting Brian.
Not in pure sense like brian