Bob Spitz proves Rolling Stones are rock’s greatest band in biography

Bob Spitz proves Rolling Stones are rock’s greatest band in biography


By early 1963, the Station Hotel in London had become an epicenter of the burgeoning British blues scene. On a blustery, snowy night that February, the Rolling Stonesโ€™ classic early lineup took the stage for one of the first times, dazzling the audience with ferocious renditions of blues standards like Muddy Watersโ€™ โ€œI Want to Be Lovedโ€ and Jimmy Reedโ€™s โ€œBright Lights, Big City.โ€

Multi-instrumentalist Brian Jones, the bandโ€™s founder and leader, synchronized guitars with Keith Richards, who favored a distinctive slashing and stinging style. Drummer Charlie Watts, the groupโ€™s newest member, a jazz aficionado and an accomplished percussionist, propelled the music forward with a rock-solid beat.

Anchoring the rhythm section with him was bassist Bill Wyman, who was recruited more for his spare VOX AC30 amp that the guitarists could plug into than for his musical skills. The stoic bassist proved a strong and innovative player. Together, he and Watts would go on to form one of rockโ€™s most decorated rhythm sections.

Ian Stewartโ€™s energetic boogie-woogie piano style rounded out the sound. Months later, manager Andrew Loog Oldham kicked him out of the band for being โ€œugly,โ€ although Stewart continued to record, tour and serve as the bandโ€™s road manager until his death in 1985.

The Rolling Stones rehearse on a stage under lights in 1964

This April 8, 1964, file photo shows the Rolling Stones during a rehearsal. The members, from left, are Brian Jones, guitar; Bill Wyman, bass; Charlie Watts, drums; Mick Jagger, vocals; and Keith Richards, guitar.

(Associated Press)

Fronting the group was Mick Jagger. Channeling the music like a crazed shaman, Jagger shimmied and sashayed, owning the stage like few lead singers have before or since. By the end of the night, the Stones had the crowd in a frenzy. Although only 30 people had made it to the gig because of the treacherous weather conditions, the hotelโ€™s booker had seen enough: He offered the Stones a regular gig.

โ€œThe Rolling Stones had caught fire. The music they were playing and the way they played it struck a chord with a young crowd starved for something different, something their ownโ€ฆ It was soul-stirring, loud and uncompromising,โ€ writes Bob Spitz in โ€œThe Rolling Stones: The Biography,โ€ his magisterial work that charts the 60-year journey of โ€œthe greatest rock and roll band in the world.โ€

Spitz, the author of strong biographies on the Beatles and Led Zeppelin, as well as Ronald Reagan and Julia Child, captures the drama, trauma and betrayals that have kept the Stones in the publicโ€™s consciousness for more than six decades. Itโ€™s all here: The Stonesโ€™ evolution from a blues cover band to artistic rival of the Beatles; the musical peaks โ€” โ€œAftermath,โ€ โ€œLet It Bleedโ€ and โ€œExile on Main Streetโ€ as well as misfires like โ€œDirty Workโ€; Keithโ€™s descent into a debilitating heroin addiction that nearly destroyed him and the band; the death of the โ€˜60s at the ill-fated Altamont free concert; Marianne Faithfull, Anita Pallenberg, Bianca Jagger, Jerry Hall and other lovers, partners and muses; the breakups, makeups and crackups; and perhaps most important, the unbreakable bond between Jagger and Richards at the center of it all.

Although Spitz unearths little new information, he excels at presenting the Stones in glorious Technicolor. Spitz homes in on the telling details and anecdotes that give the bandโ€™s story a deep richness and poignancy.

Take โ€œSatisfaction,โ€ the Stonesโ€™ 1965 classic and first U.S. chart topper. The oft-told story is that Richards woke up in the middle of the night, grabbed the guitar that was next to his bed, and recorded the iconic riff and the phrase โ€œI canโ€™t get no โ€ฆ satisfactionโ€ on a cassette recorder in his Clearwater, Fla., hotel room before falling back asleep. But as Spitz notes, the song initially went nowhere in the studio. That is until Stewart purchased a fuzz box for Richards a few days later, which gave the tune a raunchier sound that perfectly matched Jaggerโ€™s lyrics of frustration and alienation. A classic was born.

Piercing the Stones mythology

Spitzโ€™s deep reporting often pierces the mythology surrounding the band. Contrary to the popular belief of many fans, for instance, Jones bears much of the responsibility for the rift with his bandmates and his tragic demise.

The most musically adventurous member of the group โ€” he plays sitar on โ€œPaint It Blackโ€ and dulcimer on โ€œLady Janeโ€ โ€” Jones wasnโ€™t a songwriter. That stoked his jealousies and insecurities, along with frontman Jagger stealing the spotlight from him. A monster of a man, Jones impregnated multiple teenage girls and physically and emotionally abused several women, including Pallenberg. Perhaps thatโ€™s why she left him for Richards. Over time, Jones made fewer contributions in the studio and onstage, becoming a catatonic drug casualty. The Stones fired Jones in June 1969 but would have been justified doing so a couple years earlier. He drowned in his pool less than a month later.

Author Bob Spitz

Author Bob Spitz

(Elena Seibert)

Similarly, Stones lore has long romanticized the making of โ€œExile on Main Streetโ€ in the stifling, dingy basement of Richardsโ€™ rented Villa Nellcรดte in the South of France, where the Stones had decamped to avoid British taxes. In this telling, Richards, deep in the throes of heroin addiction, somehow managed to come up with one indelible riff after another built around his signature open G tuning โ€” taught to him by Ry Cooder โ€” leading the band to create one of the best albums in rock history. Thatโ€™s not entirely accurate, according to Spitz.

Yes, Richards came up with the licks for โ€œRocks Off,โ€ โ€œHappyโ€ and โ€œTumbling Dice.โ€ But itโ€™s equally true that a strung-out Richards missed myriad recording sessions, invited dealers, hangers-on and other distractions to Nellcรดte, and repeatedly failed to turn up to write with Jagger. Far from completing the album in the druggy haze of a French basement, the band spent six months on overdubs at Sunset Sound in Los Angeles, where Jagger contributed many of his vocals.

Beatles vs. Stones

One of the more interesting themes Spitz develops is the symbiotic relationship between the Beatles and Stones, with the Fab Four mostly overshadowing them โ€” until they didnโ€™t.

John Lennon and Paul McCartney wrote โ€œI Wanna Be Your Manโ€ and gave it to the Stones, whose 1963 rendition, with Jones on slide guitar, became the groupโ€™s first UK Top 20 hit. The Lennon-McCartney songwriting partnership inspired Jagger and Richards to begin penning their own songs. In early 1964, the Beatles came to the U.S. for the first time, making television history with their appearance on โ€œThe Ed Sullivan Showโ€ and playing Carnegie Hall. A few months later, the Stones kicked off their inaugural American tour at the Swing Auditorium in San Bernardino. In 1967, the Beatles released โ€œSgt. Pepperโ€™s Lonely Hearts Club Band,โ€ a psychedelic masterpiece. The Stones responded with โ€œTheir Satanic Majesties Request,โ€ a psychedelic mess.

The Rolling Stones: The Biography cover

The Rolling Stones: The Biography cover

As the Beatles began to splinter, Spitz writes, the Stones sharpened their focus. The band released โ€œBeggars Banquetโ€ in late 1968 and โ€œLet It Bleedโ€ the following year, albums every bit as innovative and visionary as โ€œThe White Albumโ€ and โ€œAbbey Road.โ€ For the first time, the two groups stood as equals.

When the Beatles broke up in 1970, the Stones kept rolling. With Jones replaced by virtuoso guitarist Mick Taylor โ€” whose fluid, melodic style served as a tasty foil to Richards โ€” they produced what many consider their finest works, โ€œSticky Fingersโ€ and โ€œExile on Main Street.โ€ More impressively, the band, with Taylorโ€™s successor, Ronnie Wood, has continued to dazzle audiences with incendiary live shows, touring as recently as 2024 behind the late-career triumph โ€œHackney Diamonds.โ€ The Beatles, by contrast, retired from the road in 1966 and devoted their energies to the studio.

Hundreds of books have been written about the Rolling Stones, but few sparkle quite like Spitzโ€™s. For anyone who loves or even likes the Stones, itโ€™s indispensable.

Like most of the bandโ€™s biographers, Spitz gives short shrift to the post-โ€œExileโ€ period after 1972. He curtly dismisses 2005โ€™s strong โ€œA Bigger Bangโ€ and 2016โ€™s โ€œBlue & Lonesome,โ€ a back-to-basics album of blues covers, as โ€œadequate endeavors that signaled a band living on borrowed time.โ€ That critique is both off target and under-developed. Spitz ignores the bandโ€™s legendary live album, โ€œBrussels Affair,โ€ recorded in 1973, or why the band waited decades before officially releasing it.

These are small quibbles. Spitz has written a book worthy of its 704-page length; another 50 or so pages covering the later years would have made it even stronger. To quote the Rolling Stones: โ€œI know itโ€™s only rock โ€˜n roll, but I like it, like it, yes, I do.โ€

Marc Ballon, a former Times, Forbes and Inc. Magazine reporter, teaches an advanced writing class at USC. He lives in Fullerton.

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