Tuesday, March 28, 2017

Rolling Stones Drummer Charlie Watts Plots New Big Band Record...

Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts will release a new live album with the Danish Radio Big Band featuring standards, originals and Rolling Stones covers. Charlie Watts Meets the Danish Radio Big Band arrives April 21st via Impulse!/Verve and is available to pre-order.
Watts and the Danish Radio Big Band recorded the LP in 2010 at the Concert Hall of Denmark in Copenhagen after just four days of rehearsals. The seven-track album boasts a Bossa Nova-inspired take on the Stones' "Satisfaction," renditions of "You Can't Always Get What You Want" and "Paint It Black" and a version of Watts' 2000 piece with the Jim Keltner Project, "Elvin Suite."
Watts' relationship with jazz is fittingly inextricable with Denmark. Before the Rolling Stones took off, Watts traveled to Denmark for his day job and embedded himself in the country's flourishing jazz and blues scene while he was there.
Throughout his career, the drummer has worked on numerous jazz side projects. In 1986, he released a record with the 32-piece Charlie Watts Orchestra and during the Nineties crafted several LPs with the Charlie Watts Quintet. That outfit expanded into a Tentet in 2004, while more recently he formed a group, the ABC&D of Boogie Woogie, with pianists Axel Zwingenberger and Ben Waters and bassist Dave Green.
Last year, the Rolling Stones released their first album in 11 years, Blue and Lonesome, a collection of blues covers.
Charlie Watts Meets the Danish Radio Big Band Track List
1. "Elvin Suite, Pt. 1"
2. "Elvin Suite, Pt. 2"
3. "(Satis) Faction"
4. "I Should Care"
5. "You Can't Always Get What You Want"
6. "Paint It Black"
7. "Molasses"

http://www.rollingstone.com

Friday, March 24, 2017

The Quiet One: Bill Wyman documentary in production ...

 



A documentary detailing the life and times of Bill Wyman is in production, with Oliver Murray directing Bill’s life story including unseen footage and photos by Bill.

Titled The Quiet One, the in-production documentary is being produced in collaboration with Bill, and looks set to chart the highs and lows of Bills career. “My life has been an extraordinary adventure,” Bill told Deadline. “The time feels right to delve into the archive and tell my story before I croak.”
According to the full report on Deadline:
Jamie Clark, Jennifer Corcoran of My Accomplice and Jason Bick are producing. Submarine Entertainment’s Dan Braun will executive produce, with archive production by James RM Hunt and Paul Bell of Dog and Duck Films (Amy, Senna).
“Bill Wyman is legendary not only because of the fact that he was a founding member of the Rolling Stones but also because he had unfettered access to the extraordinary world of rock ‘n’ roll over several decades,” said Jonathan Sehring and Lisa Schwartz, co-presidents of IFC Films/Sundance Selects. “We are thrilled to be partnering with Oliver Murray, My Accomplice and Dan Braun to let the world see this amazing behind-the-scenes imagery of the rock ‘n’ roll era.”
Find out more on Deadline.

Monday, March 20, 2017

Chuck Berry died from natural causes...

Chuck Berry died from natural causes.
The rock 'n' roll legend passed away at his home in Missouri on Saturday (18.03.17) at the age of 90, but there will be no post-mortem examination carried out because the 'Roll Over Beethoven' singer's personal doctor will sign his death certificate and state there were no suspicious circumstances, TMZ reports.
Following the news of Chuck's death, a host of stars took to social media to pay tribute to the iconic singer and his influence.
Sir Mick Jagger posted: ''I am so sad to hear of Chuck Berry's passing. I want to thank him for all the inspirational music he gave to us ...
''He lit up our teenage years, and blew life into our dreams of being musicians and performers ... His lyrics shone above others & threw a strange light on the American dream. Chuck you were amazing&your music is engraved inside us forever (sic)''
His Rolling Stones bandmate Ronnie Wood described the musician as his biggest inspiration.
He said: ''He was one of the best and my inspiration, a true character indeed.''
Beatles legend Ringo Starr tweeted alongside a photo of Chuck: ''R I P. And peace and love Chuck Berry Mr. rock 'n' roll music (sic)''
And Beach Boys singer Brian Wilson felt the 'Johnny B. Goode' singer's passing will affect all rock music lovers.
He posted: ''I am so sad to hear about Chuck Berry passing - a big inspiration! He will be missed by everyone who loves Rock 'n Roll. Love & Mercy''
The jacksons recalled Chuck's influence on rock'n'roll music in a social media post.
They wrote: ''Chuck Berry merged blues & swing into the phenomenon of early rock'n'roll. In music, he cast one of the longest shadows. Thank You Chuck.''
Chuck - whose real name was Charles Edward Anderson Berry Sr. - is survived by his wife Themetta 'Toddy' Suggs and his four children, Charles Berry Jr., Ingrid Berry, Aloha Berry and Melody Exes Berry-Eskridge.

Sunday, March 19, 2017

THE PHOTO OF THE WEEK.

At the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Boston, 2012.

Saturday, March 18, 2017

Rock 'n Roll legend Chuck Berry has died at 90...

ST. CHARLES COUNTY, MO. - According to the St. Charles County Police Department, legendary musician Chuck Berry has died.
He was 90 years old.
Police said Saturday they responded to a medical emergency on Buckner Road around 12:40 p.m. Inside the home, first responders observed an unresponsive man and administered lifesaving techniques. The 90-year-old man, later identified as Charles Edward Anderson Berry Sr., better known as legendary musician Chuck Berry, could not be revived and was pronounced deceased at 1:26 p.m.
Berry is widely viewed as among the most influential artists on rock 'n' roll with hits like Johnny B Goode, Never Can Tell, and Roll Over Beethoven.  Berry influenced artists like the Rolling Stones, The Beatles, Paul McCartney, Bob Dylan, Neil Young, The Who and Pink Floyd.
The Beatles had hits with Berry compositions such as Roll Over Beethoven, Rock and Roll Music and Sweet Little Sixteen, and McCartney called Berry “one of greatest poets America has ever produced”  in an introduction to the 2014 release of Berry’s complete studio recordings.
Young played with Berry and Richards at Berry’s 1986 induction into the first class of the Rock ’N’ Roll Hall of Fame, in which Richards said in his induction speech for his hero, “I lifted every lick he ever played.”
Last October 18 Berry turned 90. The date also marked the 30th anniversary of two concerts staged for Barry’s 60th birthday in St. Louis by Stones guitarist Keith Richards. Oscar-nominated director Taylor Hackford filmed those concerts as the centerpiece for his documentary, Chuck Berry: Hail! Hail! Rock 'n' Roll.
Hackford also celebrated Berry’s 80th birthday by releasing a five-disk DVD set with a behind-the-scenes look at those concerts and complete interviews with rock 'n' roll pioneers who attested to Berry’s greatness and eccentricities.
“I think Chuck Berry should be saluted every time there’s a concert,” said Hackford, who is now finishing a film with Robert De Niro called The Comedian. “He is totally unique and his influence just goes everywhere. But, the Rolling Stones are going to do what they’re going to do and they’re a great, great band. They cut their teeth on Chuck Berry and that was clear. They have many times talked about that influence.”
Prolific Berry Continued To Make Music into his 90s

Just this past October, on his 90th birthday Berry announced plans to team with Dualtone Records to release his first studio album in 38 years next year.  Berry announced the new album, Chuck, on his 90th birthday. He said the album is dedicated to Themetta Berry, his wife of 68 years.
"This record is dedicated to my beloved Toddy," Berry said in a media release. "My darlin' I'm growing old! I've worked on this record for a long time. Now I can hang up my shoes!"

http://www.ksdk.com

Thursday, March 16, 2017

In Memoriam - Harmonica Legend James Cotton 1935 – 2017

The world has lost one James Cotton has died. Cotton, known for his work with Sonny Boy Williamson II, Muddy Waters and as a solo performer, passed away today of pneumonia at St. David’s Medical Center in Austin at the age of 81.
of the greatest harmonica players it has ever known as
James Cotton was born on a cotton plantation in Mississippi on July 1, 1935. By the age of nine he was already a working musician. Sonny Boy Williamson II taught Cotton directly and recruited James to tour with him and Howlin Wolf. Cotton was recorded by Sun Records in 1953 and then spent 12 years touring and recording with Muddy Waters. The harmonica legend was featured on Muddy’s famed 1960 At Newport LP for Chess Records and his work on “Got My Mojo Working” remains one of the great performances in the history of the harmonica.
After parting ways with Muddy, the Mississippi native formed The James Cotton Band in 1966 and toured the world relentlessly. Cotton, known as “Mr. Superharp,” recorded nearly 30 solo albums, won a Grammy, scored six Living Blues awards and was a 2006 inductee into the Blues Hall Of Fame. In more recent years he recorded for Alligator Records and was awarded the Festival International de Jazz de Montreal’s 2015 B.B. King Award for his seven decades of contributions to the blues. Our thoughts are with James Cotton’s family.

https://www.jambase.com

Monday, February 27, 2017

Exclusive: Mick Jagger Says Working on New Songs for Next Rolling Stones Album Following Blues Hit...


The Rolling Stones are not done, by a long shot.
Mick Jagger told me a few nights ago that the next Stones album will not be covers but new songs. “I’m working on on new songs now.”
The Stones had a huge hit this winter with “Blue and Lonesome,” their album of blues covers. “B&L” was their biggest hit in years, and sustained itself on the charts much longer than anyone would have guessed.
Now, building on that momentum, Mick says the new album will be new. The Stones are eying their 55th anniversary next, after a triumphant 50th celebration that has almost never ended.
Mick brought three of his kids to the Vanity Fair Oscar party last night, and has never seemed in a better mood. He laughed when I asked him about a Tweet he put out the other day. A rumor started that he was bringing rising star Priyanka Chopra to the stars. “I’m not even going to the Oscars!” Mick Tweeted. And he didn’t.
But a new Stones album? Bring it on. I don’t care how old they are. It’s a sound I will never tire of!

By:   http://www.showbiz411.com

Tuesday, February 21, 2017

Videos: Bill Wyman and Charlie Watts – animated New York WNEW-FM 102.7 radio interviews ...


Fresh from the radio archives – watch these brilliant Radio.com animations of Bill Wyman and Charlie Watts being interviewed on touring with the Rolling Stones and the the future of the Stones.

When Bill was with the Rolling Stones, the band conducted hundreds of radio interviews – including these classics with New York’s WNEW-FM rock ‘n’ roll radio station in 1977, brought to life with Radio.com. The archived interviews have been turned into animations, so you can relive those interviews!
In this video from the vaults of WNEW-FM 102.7 – New York’s Rock’ n Roll station, Radio.com presents an interview from 1977, where the Rolling Stones’ rhythm section, Charlie Watts and Bill Wyman, discuss the future of the band.
And, in this video from the vaults of WNEW-FM 102.7 – New York’s Rock’ n Roll station, Radio.com Minimation presents an archival interview from 1977, where Charlie Watts and Bill Wyman of the Rolling Stones talk about the spectacle of their concerts included such high tech gimmicks as ramps and swings on stage. Things have changed a bit in the years since!

http://billwyman.com
 

Sunday, February 19, 2017

So, Apparently Mick Jagger Wrote A Book…Too Bad You’ll Never Get To Read It..

Today in “ThinRolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger apparently wrote a memoir in the early 1980s, “baring his soul” and divulging all sorts of fun tales from life backstage and on the road as the frontman of one of the biggest bands to walk the earth. There’s just one problem: we’ll never get to read it. 


Here’s why: according to London publisher John Blake, the 75,000 page manuscript and a few of Jagger’s handwritten notes were acquired from a “mutual friend” about three years ago and he claims that the ‘delicious, heady’ memoir was turned down by publishers in the early 80s for being a little low in the sex, drugs, and rock and roll content they were looking for. Blake reached out to Jagger through his manager Joyce Smyth, who confirmed the authenticity of the memoir after receiving a copy and denied Blake’s request to publish the book:

“John Blake writes to me from time to time seeking permission to publish this manuscript,” she said, via her law firm.
“The answer is always the same: He cannot, because it isn’t his and he accepts this. Readers will be able to form a view as regards the matters to which John Blake refers when Sir Mick’s autobiography appears, should he choose to write it.”
Unfortunately for Rolling Stones fans, a Mick Jagger memoir doesn’t look to be on the horizon any time soon; he’s too busy reveling with his bandmates in the success of the band’s latest release Blue & Lonesome and with new son Deveraux on the scene, it’s pretty safe to say that Mick’s time is more or less occupied for the foreseeable future.
We are dying to know about the time he bought that country house while high on psychedelics, though…

http://societyofrock.com

Friday, February 17, 2017

That time the ‘world’s dumbest’ terrorist blew up the Rolling Stones’ equipment ...



That time the ‘world’s dumbest’ terrorist blew up the Rolling Stones’ equipment


Despite what recent political rhetoric would have you believe, terrorism is hardly the sole property of Muslims from the Middle East. Timothy McVeigh and his pals blew up the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, the left-wing Red Army Faction in Germany killed as many as 34 people in multiple incidents, and the Weather Underground destroyed the sub-basement furnace room of a townhouse on West 11th Street in 1970. One can multiply the examples.
Indeed, depending on the time and place, there have been terrorist incidents where the most likely suspects—the suspects many would have instantly guessed—were radical French separatists in Canada. Such a case occurred in the summer of 1972 during the Rolling Stones’ legendary American Tour that year, when a bomb destroyed part of a truck and several speakers of the group’s gear several hours before a gig.


New Musical Express, July 22, 1972

Rolling Stone reported at the time:

The two equipment vans had arrived from Toronto and were parked on a ramp at the Montreal Forum. The dynamite blast that exploded under the ramp blew out a slew of windows in a nearby apartment and the cones of 30 speakers inside one of the trucks.
“Whoever it was was the world’s dumbest bomber,” said press agent Gary Stromberg. “First he put the bomb under the ramp instead of the truck, and the other truck was the one with most of the stuff inside.”

Air Canada bumped luggage from a flight out of Los Angeles to accommodate the replacement cones, and the show was able to go on just 45 minutes later than planned. However, some sort of unrelated snafu left 3,000 disappointed Stones fans outside the venue without a ticket—they proceeded to engage in significant civil unrest, including pelting the building and police with rocks, wine, beer bottles, and bricks. Jagger himself was hit by a flying bottle inside the venue.
In his essential book S.T.P.: A Journey Through America with the Rolling Stones, Robert Greenfield provides this account:

Later that night the phone rings in Peter Rudge’s room. He picks it up, talks for a while, then begins making phone calls. “Rudge-O here,” he tells Gary Stromberg. “This is rather important. Could you come down to the hall? We’ve been bombed.”
Some person (or persons) has placed one to three sticks of dynamite underneath one of the trucks. Fortunately, it is the one that holds the steel loading ramp, so all it does is blow a four-by-eight hole in the bottom of the truck, disintegrate the ramp, and destroy all the cones in the speakers. The driver, who usually sleeps in the rig, is off somewhere, which saves him from at least a heart attack, if not actual death. All of the windows are broken in the apartment buildings on the street facing the Forum where the truck is parked.
The street is roped off. The police are making diagrams and gathering shards and pieces and a very French Sergeant de Detectif is in charge. Rudge persists in calling him “captain.” Someone says to him, “Certainly this is the work of one of your French separatists.”
“OH NO M’SEIU!” he replies with classic Gallic outrage. “C’est une American draft dodgeur. Zey are all over. Zey come up here with impunity.”
-snip-
The bomb at the Forum was just the first of four timed to go off at intervals during the day. They wake Jagger up to tell him about it. “Who did it?” he asks sleepily. No one knows. “Well,” he yawns, “why the fuck didn’t they leave a note?”
But he’s shook. The French separatists, it is well known, are cray-zee. They’ll stop at nothing, and all day long he keeps referring to the event uneasily, worried that they plan to pull something off at the show. But the show itself goes off peacefully, the bomb squad having turned the building upside down more than once. Outside the hall, the kids and the cops get down to it and fourteen people are injured, thirteen arrested, and a TV news cruiser is set on fire. UPI, in an inspired piece of fiction, reports that the Stones leave the Forum by means of a helicopter that takes off from the roof and circles the crowd announcing, “THEY HAVE LEFT THE BUILDING: GO HOME” in both French and English.

This difficult stretch of the tour was by no means over with. The very next day, in Rhode Island, the Stones’ entourage got into a fight with photographer Andy Dickerman, landing Jagger and Richards in jail.
New Musical Express image courtesy of the Library and Archives of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum in Cleveland, Ohio.

Friday, February 10, 2017

Jamie Wood excited to share tour memories with Ronnie Wood's twins...

 

Jamie Wood can't wait to share his childhood memories of being a ''backstage kid'' at his dad Ronnie Wood's Rolling Stones gigs with his twin step-sisters.
Jamie is the eldest son of the legendary rock group's guitarist Ronnie - who he adopted when with his ex-wife Jo Wood, Jamie's mother - already has plans to tell the musician's eight-month-old girls Gracie Jane and Alice Rose all about growing up on the road when they are old enough to take it all in.
In an interview with The Times newspaper, he said: ''I often wonder what they will think of me when they hear the stories of the 70s and 80s when I was a kid backstage.''
Jamie also said that he gets on really well with his father's wife Sally.
The 42-year-old restaurateur said: ''I love Sally. Sally is a good woman.''
As for his own kids, Jamie is having problems with his ''nightmare'' 18-month-old son, but admits it is more than likely his ''own fault'' because he lets the toddler sleep in bed with him and his model wife Jodie.
Jamie - who also has older children Leo and Kobe with Jodie and a 17-year-old son, Charlie, from a previous relationship - said: ''He's a nightmare child; doesn't eat properly, doesn't sleep properly. It's probably my fault because I do like to have cuddles so I bring him into the bed.''
Jamie previously revealed that he convinced his wife to be a stay at home mother because he wanted their kids to have stability at home.
He said: ''My wife used to be a model and an actress, but I made her stop. She got pregnant and I said, 'You're not going off on to a movie set for three months, it's not happening. If you are going to have a family, you have a family.''
Ronnie also has son Jesse, 40, with his first wife the late Krissy Findlay, and Leah, 38 and Tyrone, 33, with second wife Jo.
Contactmusic

Friday, February 3, 2017

Luciana Morad apologised to Jerry Hall for Jagger affair...

 

LUCIANA MORAD wrote to Jerry Hall to apologise for her affair with Sir Mick Jagger.
Mick's 20-year relationship with Jerry, 60, ended after she discovered he had gotten Luciana pregnant in 1998 and the 47-year-old actress admitted she still regrets the hurt she caused Jerry.
She told the Daily Mail: ''I sympathise with other people. I have to.
''Sometimes, we all do things that may hurt other people and might regret it and I think that is part of growing up. I never intended to hurt anyone and if I did, I feel sorry about that.
''I feel bad about Jerry. I never meant to hurt her but now that I am a wife myself I understand so much more. So yes, I would hate if that happened to me.
''You know, I wrote to Jerry a few years ago, a letter that said: 'Please forgive me.' She didn't write back. I didn't really expect her to. But I wanted her to know that I was sorry.'
''I never saw myself as a home-wrecker. Sometimes, you can't help who you fall in love with - and I was really in love with Mick at the time.
''But I cried every day throughout my pregnancy. Everything that was going on was so awful. All the attention and heartbreak. The things people were saying about me. But then Lucas arrived and he was my consolation.
''But I was hurt. It was hard being judged.''
And while Jerry has not yet forgiven her, Luciana has a great relationship with Mick, 73, who she says is a great father to Lucas, 17.
She said: ''Mick and I are still best friends, we really are. He is still very attractive, but don't get me wrong, not in a sexual way.
''Lucas is steady and quiet, like his Dad.''
Luciana has been married to Marcelo de Carvalho since 2006 and the couple have a son Lorenzo, who was born in 2011, together.
Contactmusic

Thursday, February 2, 2017

The Rolling Stones are set to rock Dublin’s Croke Park this summer in massive outdoor Irish gig...

THE Rolling Stones are set to rock Croke Park this summer, the Irish Sun can reveal.
Mick Jagger and company will strut their stuff at GAA Headquarters in June — further bolstering a summer of Satisfaction for Irish music fans as three of the biggest bands in the world play the famous venue.
The Rolling Stones are set to rock Croke Park this summer
The Rolling Stones are set to rock Croke Park this summer
Croker already has two sell-out shows confirmed — with Coldplay headlining on July 8 while tickets for U2’s July 22 gig were snapped up in a matter of minutes.
And the Irish Sun understands the Rolling Stones are now close to signing on the dotted line for a top-of-the-bill appearance in June.
But with Croke Park limited to hosting just three gigs per year, it will be a case of You Can’t Always Get What You Want for U2 fans as the move will end any chance of the hometown heroes announcing a second show at the venue.
A source said: “The Stones haven’t been here since 2007, so they’re going to be a massive draw.” Jagger and Co famously played Slane Castle ten years ago.
And the wrinkly rockers are now poised to follow in the footsteps of Bruce Springsteen, U2 and the Red Hot Chili Peppers as acts who have jammed at Croke Park as well.
Croke Park Stadium will host some Rock legends this summer
Croke Park Stadium will host some Rock legends this summer
The Irish Sun revealed before Christmas how Jagger and the lads were planning a new money-spinning European tour this summer despite a collective age of 289.
They did a circuit of South America last year, also playing Las Vegas and headlining Desert Trip in California.
Oslo, Barcelona, Vienna, Paris and Nijmegen in Holland are also rumoured to be on the agenda alongside the Dublin gig.
Formed in London in 1962, the Stones went on to become one of the biggest and most provocative rock and roll bands of all time.
Jagger, Keith Richards, Ronnie Wood and Charlie Watts returned to the studio last year and released their 25th album, Blue & Lonesome, in December.
The band just released a new album Blue & Lonesome
The band just released a new album Blue & Lonesome
The all-covers blues album, their first release in over a decade, received positive reviews and a number of European summer tour dates have been rumoured — including a show at Stade de France in Paris.
And it seems Irish fans will get their chance to see great-grandfather Jagger in full flow in front of Hill 16 this summer as well.
Jagger, 73, became a dad for the eighth time in December when his current partner Melanie Hamrick, 29, gave birth to their first son — Deveraux — in New York.
With the Stones joining an ever-growing list of big names jetting in, Dublin will be the rock and roll capital of Europe in 2017 as U2, Coldplay, Radiohead, Green Day, Ed Sheeran and Fleet Foxes are among the international super acts taking to the stage.
And Guns N’ Roses will play just down the road in Slane, Co Meath, for the second time.
But U2 fans who had been holding out hope for a possible second Croke Park gig are to be disappointed.
U2 look not to be playing a second gig in Croke Park after the announcement of The Rolling Stones gigs
U2 look not to be playing a second gig in Croke Park after the announcement of The Rolling Stones gigs
Bono, The Edge, Larry and Adam will headline the northside stadium on Saturday, July 22, but there will be no other date added.
Croke Park chiefs confirmed yesterday the issue preventing a second gig centres on the moving of equipment from Spain to Ireland in time for a Friday night show.
U2 play the Olympic Stadium in Barcelona on Tuesday, July 18.
A source said: “It’s a logistical issue, the equipment can’t be gotten over from Barcelona in time for a Friday gig.
“They are then playing Paris on the following Tuesday.”

www.thesun.ie

Tuesday, January 31, 2017

Ronnie Wood; Keith Richards & Rod Stewart Killburn 1974 DVD Proshot (2017)



Ronnie’s Art On Display in Wolverhampton...

     
A selection of rare and popular art by Ronnie is on display as part of the second series of the Private Collection at Castle Fine Art in Wolverhampton, closing on the 5th February.
Taken from Ronnie’s personal archive of work, the carefully curated collection comprises of some of the most sought after limited editions of his work in his artistic career to date.
Ian Weatherby-Blythe, Managing Director of Washington Green Fine Art Group Ltd, said: “The original release of The Private Collection was a pivotal factor in Ronnie Wood’s artistic career, with some of his most popular works being continuously admired and sought after.
There is a true sense of eclecticism in this exhibition, from the materials used to the icons depicted, yet all master the connection between art and music.”
In his own words, Ronnie “applies musical theory to [his] art. [He] builds limited edition, silk screen prints in much the same way as studio overdubs, the more defined ones are things that stand out in the mix.”
You can find out more about the exhibition here.
View some of Ronnie’s original art here.

Rolling Stones"Cocksucker Blues DVD Documentary by Robert Frank"