Monday, March 30, 2015

Mick-s, always in good companies...

Much controversy was sparked when Mick Jagger was photographed embracing dancer Melanie Hamrick on a Zurich balcony just 11 weeks after his girlfriend L'Wren Scott's March 2014 suicide.
And, after several months of not being publicly seen together, Rolling Stone Mick, 71, and ballerina Melanie, 27, showed they're still very much on good terms as they stepped out together recently.
The pair were spotted entering a waiting luxury, chauffeur-driven vehicle separately as they discreetly exited an upscale building in the Manhattan area of New York City.
With a patterned scarf wrapped around his neck and a mauve sweater resting on his shoulders, the star kept his head down as he raced to the car in a black jacket and matching trousers.


Meanwhile, a smiling Melanie was seen toting a blue leather handbag as she stepped out in a black jacket with grey skinny jeans and black ankle boots.
Her raven tresses rested on her shoulders as she prepared to be whisked away into the bustling city with the significantly older star.




The pair are thought to have first met backstage at a Rolling Stones concert in Tokyo on March 6, 2014 - two weeks before L'Wren was found dead after hanging herself.
Last year, friends told the New York Post how shocked they were when it was revealed that Melanie was dating the legendary rocker - especially as she was thought to be still engaged to longtime love, José Manuel Carreño, at the time.
Mick and Melanie were pictured on the balcony of his sprawling penthouse at the five-star Dolder Grand Hotel in Zurich in June, looking as though they had just got out of bed.




Mick, who himself took up ballet several years ago to keep fit, was in a blue V-necked sweater, while Melanie grinned next to him in a short-sleeved top with slashed sleeves.
During the afternoon he ventured out bare chested and alone, apparently to talk on the phone. Five hours later he was seen wearing a smart, striped shirt and trousers as the dancer stood beside him clutching a glass of water.
The following morning they looked more dishevelled as she stole a kiss from him while sat outside the £2,250-a-night suite.

Friends of Melanie did not know why she was in Zurich, believing she flew to Switzerland alone.
One said: 'Ever since the photos emerged Mel has kept her head down hardly stepping out from her apartment. Talk has been rife about their fling with many believing it wasn't just a coincidence the two were in Zurich together.'
In June, L'Wren's brother and closest living relative defended Mick after he was pictured with Melanie.


Randy Bambrough told the New York Daily News in a statement that he and the Rolling Stones singer remain good friends and that he has never doubted Mr Jagger's commitment to his sister.
'I continue to have a very warm relationship with Mick and have never questioned his love for L'Wren and how important she was in his life,' Randy said.
He also quashed speculation that Mick and Melanie were friendly enough last March to contribute to his sister's death.
'Usually I ignore these stories, but to suggest that my sister committed suicide because of a false accusation that Mick was involved with another woman is completely ridiculous,' he told the newspaper.



http://www.dailymail.co.uk

Friday, March 27, 2015

The day The Rolling Stones visited Gibson Guitar in Kalamazoo ...


KALAMAZOO, MI -- When The Rolling Stones decided to visit Kalamazoo in July of 1975, Tom Fetters didn't have much time to plan.
"I received a phone call in the morning from our office in Chicago," said Fetters, who was chief operating officer of Gibson Guitar Corp.'s original plant at 225 Parsons St. in Kalamazoo. "They said The Rolling Stones would like a factory tour that day and I was to rent a limo and go to a private hangar at the Kalamazoo airport. They were coming in on their private plane."
That happened in mid-July of 1975, when Gibson was owned by Chicago-based musical instrument company Norlin Inc.
"It was really a spur-of-the-moment deal," said Fetters.
The visit was not to be announced and Fetters said he was told not to tell anyone. But he estimated that about 200 Rolling Stones fans were outside the airport terminal looking for the band when he arrived and drove past them. He said he assumes the band's publicist leaked information to generate the attention.
Fetters led the tour after picking up guitarists Keith Richards and Ronnie Wood along with four or five members of The Rolling Stones' entourage at the Kalamazoo County Airport.
What happened to Mick Jagger, Charlie Watts and Bill Wyman, the other members of the band? Fetters said he was told the band was on the plane. But he said he never saw the others and they never surfaced for the plant tour.
At that time, Wood was a new addition to the band, replacing Mick Taylor.
Fetters said no one was outside the Parsons Street plant on Kalamazoo's north side when the limo arrived and no one at the factory knew about the visit until the entourage walked in. After that, he said, "We didn't get much production done that day."
"They (workers) all wanted to come talk to them, particularly our female employees," Fetters said. "We would allow them to do that."
The Rolling Stones were, and continue to be, one of rock 'n' roll's premier bands. They were in the midst of their "Tour of the Americas '75" summer tour and Fetters said he was told they had played in Chicago the night before their visit and were heading out to play other Midwest dates, including Detroit.
Setlist.fm shows the band played Chicago Stadium from July 22-24; Bloomington, Ind., on July 26; and Detroit's Cobo Arena on July 27-28.
The band's hit song "It's Only Rock 'n' Roll (But I Like It)" was released late in 1974. And the 1970s were days when drinking, drugs and wild parties were everyday events in the music industry.
Jack French is pretty diplomatic when he describes Keith Richards' condition.
"We didn't get much production done that day." - Tom Fetters, former Gibson chief operating officer
"He struggled," French said with a laugh. "He'd walk a few feet and then fall down."
French has been an instrument repairman for 54 years, with Gibson from 1961 until 1984 when the company closed in Kalamazoo and moved all of its production to Nashville, Tenn. He has continued since 1985 with Heritage Guitar Co., a business started by former Gibson guitar makers who decided not to relocate to Tennessee.
French remembers that Richards was escorted by a couple of Gibson "higher-ups."
"They would pick him up when he fell and they helped hold him up," French said. "But he kept falling down."
He said, "I'll never forget that he was wearing leather pants. I raced motorcycles back then and I knew leather pants were good."
He said he remembers thinking the pants might help protect Richards when he fell.
Fetters was also diplomatic in his descriptions.
"I just remember that on the way, they had a request," he said. "We had to stop and get them some chocolate milk and other things because their stomachs were bothering them."
"They were rather ragged," Fetters said of their physical condition, but they "were very interested in the process required to manufacture guitars and they interacted directly with the people on the manufacturing floor."
The tour lasted about 90 minutes. The best part, Fetters said, may have been Richards and Wood playing guitars in the sound-proof booth that was part of the factory's final testing area.
They were relaxed and lit cigarettes in what was a no-smoking environment, he said. "But nobody was going to tell them they couldn't light up," he said.
Fetters, now 75, is retired and lives near Burlington, Vt. He worked for Gibson from 1971 to 1976 and relocated with his family back to his home state of Vermont. He owned and later sold a factory that made the little wooden pieces for Milton Bradley's game Scrabble.
French, now 72, said there were so many famous people coming and going to the original Gibson factory during the 1960s and 1970s that he has a tough time remembering what happened when.
"It often happened," Fetters agreed about celebrity visits. "One reason was we had a department of 40 to 50 people who customized guitars and a lot of time people would want to have their guitars customized and they would actually come pick them up."







Monday, March 23, 2015

Ronnie Wood Furious Over Kanye West Glastonbury Slot...


The guitarist, who performed with his band at the iconic
event in 2013, is adamant the hip-hop star has no place at the traditional rock music Mecca, and is convinced he will receive a lukewarm response when he takes to the stage in June (15).
Wood tells British newspaper the Daily Mirror, "It p**ses me off so I try not to think about it too much. Glastonbury is the home of rock music and, look, Kanye isn't rock.
"He's a great entertainer and he knows how to captivate an audience with all his swearing, but when it comes to what that festival is about, it's the wrong choice. Good luck to the man - I don't know if he'll survive when he's on that stage. People who go there for rock music are starting to get very angry about all these rappers and R 'n' B singers taking over."
West is due to perform on Glastonbury's Pyramid Stage in the Saturday night headline slot on 27 June (15), but his inclusion on the bill has angered many music fans, and a petition set up on Change.org calling for his set to be axed has attracted more than 100,000 signatures.

.contactmusic.com

Thursday, March 19, 2015

Ronnie Wood to Release His 1965 ‘Rock & Roll Diary’...



In 1965, Ronnie Wood was a 17-year-old guitarist playing with a group called the Birds and soaking in the Swinging London scene. Moving in the fashionable crowd around him were Jeff Beck, Pete Townshend, Eric Clapton, Keith Moon, Marianne Faithfull and many other emerging musicians of the era.
He wrote down everything he saw and experienced in his journal.
As Wood's career took off, first with the Faces and later with the Rolling Stones, he forgot about his journal and considered it lost.
Fifty years later, he’s found it, and he’s releasing it to the public.
Titled How Can It Be? A Rock & Roll Diary, Wood’s journal will be published by Genesis Publications in a new signed limited edition.

“This diary shows what an amazing schedule I had,” Wood says. “We’d be traveling the length and breadth of the country every day. With youth on our side, it was a continuing adventure.
"Our overspilling energy was enough to take care of work every night of the week. It was enough to chase the girls, enough to write songs, enough to rehearse and enough to travel. It was all go, all the time.
“I suppose my own private world is in the diary.”
The book will reproduce the 1965 handwritten diary in facsimile, down to its scuffs and scratches. It includes an extensive new manuscript in which Wood shares his memories further and reflects on the words he wrote 50 years ago.
In addition, Wood is creating a series of original and exclusive artworks to illustrate his words throughout the book. How Can It Be? A Rock & Roll Diary also uncovers rare and unseen photographs and ephemera.
The book will be released in a limited edition of just 1965 copies. Each copy will be signed by Ronnie Wood. No price has been provided, but you can indicate your interest in pre-ordering the book at www.RonnieWoodBook.com. Add your name to the list and you will be contacted closer to publication date.
http://www.guitarplayer.com





Ronnie Wood - Stars Honour Ian Mclagan At Austin Music Awards...



The legendary keyboard player, who played with Rolling Stones star Wood in the Small Faces and the Faces, died at a hospital in his adopted hometown of Austin in December (14) after suffering a stroke at the age of 69.
MCLagan was remembered at the music prizegiving in the city in an hour-long tribute segment, which featured performances from stars including Van Zandt and Griffin, and a video message from Wood.
MCLagan's son Lee attended the event on his father's behalf and received a standing ovation as he told the crowd, "My dad would be thrilled to be (here)... He loved this place with all his heart. I hope he gave you a good time, 'cause you gave him a home."
Other performers at the ceremony included Gary Clark, Jr., while the night's big winner was Austin native Gina Chavez, who won four prizes for her Latin-style music.

(PHOTOS)--- Rolling Stones rocker Keith Richards, 71, puts in a colourful appearance at lunch with daughter Theodora .

 Keith Richards , Patti Hensen and Alexandra Richards are going celebrate the 30th birthday of Theodora Richards.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk














Meanwhile... We are still waiting for a pronouncement by www.rollingstones.com