Friday, August 2, 2019
Rolling Stones Essays -- Music
To a college student, or even to a professor, putting a time frame for the Rolling Stones is a task which requires envisioning a world before every memory one has ever made. ââ¬Å"Timelessâ⬠would be an appropriate adjective, but ââ¬Å"the 1950sâ⬠serves just as well. The band did not start as its line-up consists of today. Hardly, if any, bands have ever started like that. The Rolling Stones started as a small teen band named, ââ¬Å"Little Boy Blue and the Blue Boysâ⬠, with Mick Jagger singing and Keith Richards playing guitar. The music they played was all covers; they played songs which came from the musicians which they enjoyed. At this time, there were not any new movements arising which were primarily British. In this post-World War II era, the biggest new genres emerging were jazz, country/western, and R&B (rhythm and bass). With these being primarily American genres, many adults in Britain did not want their children listening to this unfamiliar new music. H owever, the Rolling Stones were always a group attracted to the idea of rebellion. Such influential figures were Buddy Holly, Muddy Waters, and St.-Louis native Chuck Berry. One thing the Rolling Stones were always known for, their stage act, started in 1962. As ââ¬Å"Little Boy Blue and the Blue Boysâ⬠became ââ¬Å"The Rollinââ¬â¢ Stonesâ⬠, Mick Jagger, the front man of the group, slowly gained confidence. Stephen Davis in his 40-year span of the Rolling Stones entitled, ââ¬Å"Old gods almost dead. The 40-Year Odyssey of the Rolling Stonesâ⬠, describes Mickââ¬â¢s act as: ââ¬Å"tossing his hair, rolling his eyes, dipping his shoulders, suggestive hand gestures, tight little spins, acting out the risquà © lyrics with is eyes and especially his lipsâ⬠(Davis 24). Eventually the shows in packed 400-person clubs would end ... ...off for years. First Jagger disproved of Richardsââ¬â¢ drug use in the 70s. Then in the 80s Richards disproved of Jaggerââ¬â¢s leadership. Ever since the early 90s it has been strictly business-work between the two, until finally 2004, when they worked on their latest album, A Bigger Bang. Richards explains, ââ¬Å"We were tight together, good some good stuff working. There was less of the moodinessâ⬠¦I mean, if you work with a guy for forty-odd years, itââ¬â¢s not all going to be plain sailing, is it? Youââ¬â¢ve got to go through the [tough times]; itââ¬â¢s like a marriageâ⬠(Richards 536). The two have shared a similar love of music since the age of 8, and now, both in their late 60s, the two return to this love of music to move past the wounds formed 3 decades ago. This power of music, above all else, proves that what this band stands for spans more than just 4 decades- it is timeless.
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