He was very abusive to his girlfriends. He had 3 children that he never paid any attention to and treated them as though they did not exist. So special
I remember him from when I was a kid in the 60s playing that tear drop Vox which totally mesmerized me. He was a big rock star like we don't have today. The Stones music had a much more rich and colorful sound due to his many instruments he played. He was an expert on sounds from Dulcimer to Flute to Harmonica to Harpsichord to Piano to Sitar and ten other instruments. He was a musical genius who would have returned to the group had he lived. I think the Stones still today are riding on his wave,
I so, so agree with you here. Brian deserves credit on a few songs. I think he was just getting his life together towards the end of his life. He loved it in East Sussex. And yes, I think he would've returned to the group a lot fresher and even more creative.
Brian was an early champion of great African - American music. He was a very articulate and passionate musician whose love of the genre, got Jimi Hendrix his record deal in the UK through his considerable contacts in the industry. Jimi never forgot Brian's kindness, and later helped Brian out when he fell on hard times. Brian Jones was a class act. Without him, the Stones wouldn't exist.
@@swoovey YES, i have a couple of favorite celebrities interview of mine which I considered it to be unintentional asmr. Two of my most favourite is probably this interview of Pattie Boyd held by Ronnie Wood : ruclips.net/video/MoJD6Htw9nw/видео.htmlsi=WvxIaJ4ylZkbUQJD and this interview of Vashti Bunyan showing her apartment and sang a sweet melody : ruclips.net/video/sVLavhf10UM/видео.htmlsi=B_t3-fjODHvIEP8-
@@swoovey this is not an interview but here's a video of Jim Morrison reading poetry and the video oozed out asmr energy as his voice is really soft, combined with the atmosphere in the background : ruclips.net/video/1uSPCJvrNag/видео.htmlsi=yukIvUJ53QnkqhJI
@@blackmichael75 I’m from the same English county as him, and it borders Wales, but neither of us have a regional accent. I have a more RP accent, which is basically a very formal accent that isn’t bound to a particular region, but more so just England. It’s not the upper class one, but it’s the one you hear most news presenters speak in.
Very articulate thoughtful young man. Love the feedback I get from some very interesting people around the world who are touched by music, the stones and Brian. J. God bless you all.
Y'all don't know how many times I've lulled myself to sleep with this video. His voice is heaven. Such a gentle voice, I wouldn't be surprised if someone mistakened him for an angel.
i love how much credit he gave to black artists, saying that english groups weren’t that interesting bc they were mostly copying things that had been done before by black americans that didn’t get enough attention
The irony of course is that out of all the English groups from the '60s the Rolling Stones were the biggest thieves of African-American RnB. So he's over-compensating, and blame-shifting, really.
@@j.harrison6744 i wouldn’t say thieves. They had their own style and were inspired by blues. There’s nothing wrong, and they always respected their influences
@@Dick_Z_Normas They added visuals and excitement among young people, that's the only way they made it interesting. If your attention span is too short to actually listen to the music and listen to how well the instruments work together you wouldn't be saying this. Why do idiots on the internet think they have the right to comment about stuff they know little to nothing about
@@j.harrison6744 Why do you use the word? They had nothing to gain from "over-compensating, and blame-shifting" They definitely weren't gonna get cancelled & people wouldn't stop listening to their music I'd they didn't credit black artists, but literally all of them, not just Brian, show great appreciation for black artists. They also played with black artists & whenever they needed a replacement with bass, sax, even drums, they hiredblack musicians
This was a just couple of months before Satisfaction which basically changed the dynamics of the band. Before its release Brian was the founder and band leader. Afterwards the Jagger/Richards combo, together with Andrew Oldham, quickly assumed supremacy and Brian's influence declined, until just four years later he was an ex Stone and dead with it. A tragic tale really.
I am only 45 years old but I like ALL FACETS of the stones. I will play the BRIan jones years LPS in FULL and enjoy them for what they are!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I wish i grew up around all that stuff, what a buzz it must have been, so many things happening, it was like the world was waking up, its great fun listening to these recordings, love the stones a lot but they really lost something when Brian died, he created a really unique sound, great guy and a top group.
irishelk I agree with you completely. No Jones, no Stones. I did grow up then. I was a teenager in the 1960s and they were very exciting times. A lot of good groups generating very good music. Classic songs toppled off trhe top of the charts by yet more classics. Sadly it didn't last very long, and was all but over by the end of the 60s, but for a short while things were really jumping. I think you shoe great taste.
Blues fan Thanks haha, i get a lot of replies from people who grew up in the 60s, i still like certain things from now, but there seemed to be a certain richness in life back then, maybe its because there wasn't a tv in every household, so the quality had to be put into things, im 23 and i feel like im in the wrong time, im obsessed with 60s music, because it was real music, with life and excitement and it makes you feel good to be young.
irishelk Not only TVs, we didn't even have fridges then, either. We kept milk cool by putting bottles of it in buckets of cold water. Things were very different. Our road was quiet enough for all the neighbourhood children to play on it, including ball games like tennis and football. Cars were infrequent, everyone travelled everywhere by bus or bicycle. People were fitter, slimmer and knew everyone else in the community. Nowadays people don't know who their neighbours are, everyone clogs up all the roads with cars - then they pay to go to a gym for exercise! In the early part of the 1960s we didn't even have washing machines, let alone tumble driers. People boiled up their washing in special boilers, then squeezed the water out of them with a mangle and hung the washing out on a washing line in the garden to dry. It was harder work, physically but there were fewer mental health problems in society. You're absolutely right about the vitality of the music. People worked hard then, but after a short rest they played hard too. And the music of the 1960s was very exciting until about 1967, when psychedelic music started tainting it. But I know what you mean about feeling that you were born in the wrong era. I have felt it myself. After the great music of the early 1960s came the copycat glam rock rubbish of the 1970s, which aped the style but not the quality of the 60s music. Progressive music became so tedious it was soporific. Punk gave it a shot in the arm that expelled a lot of the worst offenders and reintroduced some vitality, but often without quality. The 1980s electro-pop were worse still and its's gone downhill ever since. In many of those later periods of music I have felt like an anachronism, as you do now. However, I can offer you a crumb of comfort. It will pass. Everything does. If you hate the music of today, the chance is that in three or four years it will be completely different again. In the meantime, you can revert to your favourite music of the past. Good luck.
Tomei conhecimento quando então, numa entrevista concedida pó Pelé famoso jogador brasileiro de futebol,cujo o mesmo havia sido então, enfático perante o repórter: SOUBE QUE FALECEU UM DOS MEMBROS DO CONJUNTO MUSICAL DA INGLATERRA,THE ROLLING STONES. Sentenciou Pelé Brian faleceu em junho de 1969 com 26 anos de vida, coincidentemente aconteceu um amistoso neste mesmo ano e mês, entre Brasil x Inglaterra no estádio do Maracanã. Nesta partiida houve 1 minuto de silêncio em homenagem póstuma ao Brian a pedido de Pelé, até porque, muitos jogadores ingleses naquela ocasião foram adeptos das canções dos Stones. Estive naquela noite de quarta &feira, assistindo a vitória do Brasil diante da Inglaterra, aliás, a Inglaterra saiu na frente no placar,com o gol de Colen Bell. As duas equipes tiveram as seguintes formações: Inglaterra; Gordon Banks; Willians, Labone, Bobby Moore e Wright; Alan Ball,Colen Bell e Bobby Charlton; Francis Lee,Hurst e Peters Técnico: Sir Alf Ramsey Brasil: Gilmar; Carlos Alberto, Djalma Días, Joel e Rildo; Wilson Piazza e Gerson; Jairzinho, Tostão, Pelé e Edu
I just learned about him this week. I was listening to The Animal's song Monterey over and over again, and his name was mentioned in it. Sad story. But he was indeed rock royalty. I'm glad he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame with the other Stones.
Here's Brian providing a cooperative, intelligent and coherent interview to some clueless journalist circa '65. Does anybody really think the so-called Glimmers would sound as if they had their shit together at this time frame? No Jones No Stones
Mark Roberts He was obviously a quite talented musician, but had no ability in the critical area I referenced, not to mention his terrible reaction to becoming famous. He did sound a bit of a nightmare generally as a person too. Then again Ry Cooder thought the band were ‘reptilian’ when he worked with them briefly, so he wasn’t unique in being generally obnoxious. I still love the Stones though, was pretty obsessed with them when younger. Brian sounded like a complete pain in the arse though.
@@richardsykes9692 Bob, if you had studied the life and talent of Brian Jones, this cat is not quite sure you would be so harsh. The best way to describe Brian, and why he was the way he was, is because his life was a Greek Tragedy. His immense talent has been berated by the Douche Bag Trio (Jagger, Richard(s) & Oldham) for over fifty years and many buy into the propaganda. Do you read books? If you are interested, I'll provide what is now considered to be the "reference" source and you will be surprised.
Mark Roberts You only have to see some of the narcissistic gurning to camera from some of the early b/w footage to see the guy was weird. The petty class snobbery (in its hideous British manifestation) seems obvious in his strained, affected & pretentious interview clips as well. I can see why people would be attracted by some sort of ‘devilish’ charisma he could exude, but in the end anybody can see he was an obnoxious little bugger. I used to have the first biography that came out about 40 years ago or so, I was totally obsessed with the band then. Anyway, it’s juvenile drivel really, a bit embarrassing to be banging on about this at my age!
Wasn’t spot on! Little Sister 1961! He had great soul! Early Elvis was the greatest maybe Brian was jealous as he was 5’4” and not as Good looking and a ginger!
@EnglanE Read Exactly. Three years later he made his comeback with "In The Ghetto", "Suspicious Minds", "If I Can Dream", "I Just Can't Help Believing". 70's Elvis was perhaps the most passionate of his entire career.
Elvis may have been a good performer, but for some of us that doesn''t mean you are a passionate artist. Elvis hardly wrote a single one of his songs, after all.
They would have kicked him out anyway, most likely. They couldn't stand him in the end. Brian seemed to have a lot of mental issues and intense mood swings. Very intelligent and a musical genius and definitely the most talented Stone, in my opinion.
he was right about elvis and was truthful about what british pop really was at the time the beatles went to meet elvis the stones went to chess records to meet real musicians and then wrote a song about it
Brian Jones was founder and guiding spirit of the Rolling Stones -- Stones were able to continue without Brian but after Sticky Fingers, Stones went into decline -- or just treaded water -- creatively.
Two guitars in a band can redundant in the studio. I think Keith (w/Mick) wrote the songs and as a guitarist Keith knew what he needed for his songs. Brian was keen to pick up other instruments. Similarly , George Harrison moved to sitar and lost interest in guitar for a brief period.
Alot of Stones fans seem to ignore that the Stones really got their influence mainly from the same black artist that were generally ignored here in the states. It took a white english group to make black music popular with a white audience. Even Hendrix was ignored here and had to go to England and come back with white English players to be recognized.
Brian foi campeão olímpico de natação bem antes de ser um Stone. Quando Mick, Charlie e Keith i quando estiveram em sua mansão comunicando seu afastamento definitivamente do conjunto Simplesmente Brian caiu em depressão, exatamente,num momento de pura reflexão por ter sido então, ótimo nadador. Imediatamente, lançou,-se para um mergulho na piscina, entretanto, estáva drogado, . Possivelmente Brian tentou minimizar seu sofrimento, quando então, naquele instante não fazia parte dos Stones Muitos comentam sobre essa história mas, porém contundentemente estive recentemente em Cheltheham visitando o túmulo de Brian, sendo então,com a informação fidedgina cuja a versão legítima foi em razão de frustração por ter desligado-se do grupo na forma que aconteceu
He was a little harsh on Elvis, who did indeed have some "relevance" left. He must have been looking at the Elvis of the moment, doing those mediocre movies and soundtracks.
RIP Brian Jones. The more I look into him, the Stones, the music industry as a whole, especially in the 60’s: damn. The surviving Stones trash Brian as difficult, morose. But the Beatles loved him, he was brilliant, talented (loves classical music), played something like 65 instruments, and drowned in his own pool, and everyone is willing to accept an excellent swimmer like Brian drowned due to his own negligence (drugs & liquor). What a crock. As I pull back the veneer of shiny lights, rock n roll, and the jet set lifestyle, the reality is starting to come into view.
Soft Voice, yeah love the song you are playing. Miss that sound today in 2024.The Radio Stations dont play that music anymore. What you hear today is a shame they all think of themselfs as big stars. Its impossible for me to listen to that crab. The times they are a changing.
Everyone got the right to say what he thinks. Me, I think the Stones really started with Taylor and Ron Wood. Ronnie is for me the best of the three.To be the guitar partner of Keith.Not necessary the best guitar player but Ron is a real Rolling Stones. Brian is the one who put the add. But when I'm listening to the Tami show, and when I look to what Keith is doing, it's very basic. But when I look to what Brian plays, it looks so simple, like a beginner.
It should be noted that Brian's own mother reportedly never showed him true love and affection when he was growing up, which may have affected his attitude.
Such an articulate interesting guy, he seems very genuine. He didn’t stand a chance up against the egos of Mick and Keith. Where was he being interviewed though, in train station waiting room?
Brian was a true rock star before the term became diluted. His star burned bright hot but fizzled out too soon. He was the founding father of The Rolling Stones but unfortunately, he was also the founding father of the 27 Club. R.I.P.
After Brian died they still had the momentum and Mick Taylor took them to a new level; not necessarily better, but different. Mick left, we all hung out for the new album, 'Black and Blue', musical crap, great cover pose and that about sums them up. Musically, all they have done from then on is to take boredom to a whole new level.
His voice is a pure ASMR. Gosh, I could hear him talk for hours.
Same
sameeee
ASMR??
Agreed beautiful voice.
❤
This was a man that genuinely loved music
Charming Accent. Brian was a special Man.
But he was brutally and he hit his girlfriend!
He was very abusive to his girlfriends.
He had 3 children that he never paid any attention to and treated them as though they did not exist. So special
SAYS ONLY ANITA PALLENBERG....SO SHE COULD GO TO KEITH RICHARDS....SUCH A HELLION & A CUNT.
HE WAS FOUNDER MEMBER OF THE MOST IMPORTANT BAND . That's why he's special.
BETSYSUEU agree. Anita did.not always tell the truth....
Brian Jones was very clear thinking and reflective. It’s a pleasure hearing him speak
Yes!!
Unfortunately dark powers got the upperhand of his band..
I remember him from when I was a kid in the 60s playing that tear drop Vox which totally mesmerized me. He was a big rock star like we don't have today. The Stones music had a much more rich and colorful sound due to his many instruments he played. He was an expert on sounds from Dulcimer to Flute to Harmonica to Harpsichord to Piano to Sitar and ten other instruments. He was a musical genius who would have returned to the group had he lived.
I think the Stones still today are riding on his wave,
I so, so agree with you here. Brian deserves credit on a few songs. I think he was just getting his life together towards the end of his life. He loved it in East Sussex. And yes, I think he would've returned to the group a lot fresher and even more creative.
Brian was an early champion of great African - American music.
He was a very articulate and passionate musician whose love of the genre, got Jimi
Hendrix his record deal in the UK through his considerable contacts in the industry.
Jimi never forgot Brian's kindness, and later helped Brian out when he fell on hard
times.
Brian Jones was a class act. Without him, the Stones wouldn't exist.
Brian is my favoriite Stone.
His voice is so relaxing that sometimes i listen to his interviews to fall asleep
Have you got any good interviews to share?
@@swoovey YES, i have a couple of favorite celebrities interview of mine which I considered it to be unintentional asmr. Two of my most favourite is probably this interview of Pattie Boyd held by Ronnie Wood : ruclips.net/video/MoJD6Htw9nw/видео.htmlsi=WvxIaJ4ylZkbUQJD and this interview of Vashti Bunyan showing her apartment and sang a sweet melody : ruclips.net/video/sVLavhf10UM/видео.htmlsi=B_t3-fjODHvIEP8-
@@swoovey this is not an interview but here's a video of Jim Morrison reading poetry and the video oozed out asmr energy as his voice is really soft, combined with the atmosphere in the background : ruclips.net/video/1uSPCJvrNag/видео.htmlsi=yukIvUJ53QnkqhJI
Brian had the upper class accent. Very soft and well spoken.
It's not really an upper class accent at all. It actually sounds slightly Welsh.
@@blackmichael75 I’m from the same English county as him, and it borders Wales, but neither of us have a regional accent. I have a more RP accent, which is basically a very formal accent that isn’t bound to a particular region, but more so just England. It’s not the upper class one, but it’s the one you hear most news presenters speak in.
@@blackmichael75 Well he had Welsh family, hence Jones but I don't think he has any sort of lingering Welsh accent
@@Jipwell That's exactly right. He had received pronunciation.
Very articulate thoughtful young man. Love the feedback I get from some very interesting people around the world who are touched by music, the stones and Brian. J. God bless you all.
Y'all don't know how many times I've lulled myself to sleep with this video. His voice is heaven. Such a gentle voice, I wouldn't be surprised if someone mistakened him for an angel.
Brian had a great ear for adding the memorable hooks to the songs, no matter what the instrument….guitar, recorder, harmonica, sitar, etc.
I wish someone similar to Brian could talk to me about music and never shut up about it, it’s really nice to hear this.
i love how much credit he gave to black artists, saying that english groups weren’t that interesting bc they were mostly copying things that had been done before by black americans that didn’t get enough attention
The irony of course is that out of all the English groups from the '60s the Rolling Stones were the biggest thieves of African-American RnB. So he's over-compensating, and blame-shifting, really.
@@j.harrison6744 i wouldn’t say thieves. They had their own style and were inspired by blues. There’s nothing wrong, and they always respected their influences
The British bands of the era made American black music more interesting. Face it, alot of original blues music sounded downright boring.
@@Dick_Z_Normas They added visuals and excitement among young people, that's the only way they made it interesting.
If your attention span is too short to actually listen to the music and listen to how well the instruments work together you wouldn't be saying this.
Why do idiots on the internet think they have the right to comment about stuff they know little to nothing about
@@j.harrison6744 Why do you use the word? They had nothing to gain from "over-compensating, and blame-shifting"
They definitely weren't gonna get cancelled & people wouldn't stop listening to their music I'd they didn't credit black artists, but literally all of them, not just Brian, show great appreciation for black artists.
They also played with black artists & whenever they needed a replacement with bass, sax, even drums, they hiredblack musicians
What a shame. He sounded so intelligent with a lovely speaking voice.
Beautiful voice and so refined
Highly intelligent, musically diverse talents, can play many instruments..Easy going... what a loss!
Brian's harmonica in 2120 South Michigan Ave. is unbelievable.
Brian Jones was one of the greatest rock stars ever. He was great on so many levels!
He really was 🌷
Love his speaking voice.
Lovely to hear you, Brian.
This was a just couple of months before Satisfaction which basically changed the dynamics of the band. Before its release Brian was the founder and band leader. Afterwards the Jagger/Richards combo, together with Andrew Oldham, quickly assumed supremacy and Brian's influence declined, until just four years later he was an ex Stone and dead with it. A tragic tale really.
I grew up in the States and Black artists were a major part of my childhood. Brian is in my soul.
I absolutely adore Brian Jones. He was an undeniable genius and a huge influence on my life.
No Jones NO Stones fact !
I am only 45 years old but I like ALL FACETS of the stones. I will play the BRIan jones years LPS in FULL and enjoy them for what they are!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
um, no. Fuck off
@@briantaylor2.023 na
Stones ended with Beggar's. Just trash after '68.
@@JErnst-pl5xk um well i was alive back then and thats not true...i dont think you existed yet so you cant really judge on that ffs!
Wow ❤ that voice, Brian was gorgeous
Was fasziniert sie so an Brian Jones? Er war der größte, ich liebe ihn
i really love his voice and him as person...
Brians harmonica solo on 2120 S. Michigan Avenue is *phenomenal*
He was very insightful and intelligent........
I wish i grew up around all that stuff, what a buzz it must have been, so many things happening, it was like the world was waking up, its great fun listening to these recordings, love the stones a lot but they really lost something when Brian died, he created a really unique sound, great guy and a top group.
irishelk I agree with you completely. No Jones, no Stones. I did grow up then. I was a teenager in the 1960s and they were very exciting times. A lot of good groups generating very good music. Classic songs toppled off trhe top of the charts by yet more classics. Sadly it didn't last very long, and was all but over by the end of the 60s, but for a short while things were really jumping. I think you shoe great taste.
Blues fan Thanks haha, i get a lot of replies from people who grew up in the 60s, i still like certain things from now, but there seemed to be a certain richness in life back then, maybe its because there wasn't a tv in every household, so the quality had to be put into things, im 23 and i feel like im in the wrong time, im obsessed with 60s music, because it was real music, with life and excitement and it makes you feel good to be young.
irishelk
Not only TVs, we didn't even have fridges then, either. We kept milk cool by putting bottles of it in buckets of cold water. Things were very different. Our road was quiet enough for all the neighbourhood children to play on it, including ball games like tennis and football. Cars were infrequent, everyone travelled everywhere by bus or bicycle. People were fitter, slimmer and knew everyone else in the community. Nowadays people don't know who their neighbours are, everyone clogs up all the roads with cars - then they pay to go to a gym for exercise! In the early part of the 1960s we didn't even have washing machines, let alone tumble driers. People boiled up their washing in special boilers, then squeezed the water out of them with a mangle and hung the washing out on a washing line in the garden to dry. It was harder work, physically but there were fewer mental health problems in society. You're absolutely right about the vitality of the music. People worked hard then, but after a short rest they played hard too. And the music of the 1960s was very exciting until about 1967, when psychedelic music started tainting it. But I know what you mean about feeling that you were born in the wrong era. I have felt it myself. After the great music of the early 1960s came the copycat glam rock rubbish of the 1970s, which aped the style but not the quality of the 60s music. Progressive music became so tedious it was soporific. Punk gave it a shot in the arm that expelled a lot of the worst offenders and reintroduced some vitality, but often without quality. The 1980s electro-pop were worse still and its's gone downhill ever since. In many of those later periods of music I have felt like an anachronism, as you do now. However, I can offer you a crumb of comfort. It will pass. Everything does. If you hate the music of today, the chance is that in three or four years it will be completely different again. In the meantime, you can revert to your favourite music of the past. Good luck.
I remember the day he died...i was almost 13 and was in my drugstore reading magazines and saw the headlines in the paper...i just cried 😢
Então você nasceu em 1966
Tomei conhecimento quando então, numa entrevista concedida pó Pelé famoso jogador brasileiro de futebol,cujo o mesmo havia sido então, enfático perante o repórter:
SOUBE QUE FALECEU UM DOS MEMBROS DO CONJUNTO MUSICAL DA INGLATERRA,THE ROLLING STONES. Sentenciou Pelé
Brian faleceu em junho de 1969 com 26 anos de vida, coincidentemente aconteceu um amistoso neste mesmo ano e mês, entre Brasil x Inglaterra no estádio do Maracanã.
Nesta partiida houve 1 minuto de silêncio em homenagem póstuma ao Brian a pedido de Pelé, até porque, muitos jogadores ingleses naquela ocasião foram adeptos das canções dos Stones. Estive naquela noite de quarta &feira, assistindo a vitória do Brasil diante da Inglaterra, aliás, a Inglaterra saiu na frente no placar,com o gol de Colen Bell. As duas equipes tiveram as seguintes formações:
Inglaterra; Gordon Banks; Willians, Labone, Bobby Moore e Wright; Alan Ball,Colen Bell e Bobby Charlton; Francis Lee,Hurst e Peters Técnico: Sir Alf Ramsey
Brasil: Gilmar; Carlos Alberto, Djalma Días, Joel e Rildo; Wilson Piazza e Gerson; Jairzinho, Tostão, Pelé e Edu
he had nice voice.
So lovely
A very talented musician! His harmonica playing is outstanding!
his voice
I just learned about him this week. I was listening to The Animal's song Monterey over and over again, and his name was mentioned in it. Sad story. But he was indeed rock royalty. I'm glad he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame with the other Stones.
I'm in love with his voice. Very soft, soothing & relaxing
2120 SM Avenue...one,of the best harp solos ever! Great track!
seemed so charming and articulate
Here's Brian providing a cooperative, intelligent and coherent interview to some clueless journalist circa '65. Does anybody really think the so-called Glimmers would sound as if they had their shit together at this time frame? No Jones No Stones
Mick & Keith wrote the songs, they tried to involve Jones but he had no aptitude.
@@richardsykes9692 Sorry man, but you know not of what of what you type. So many opinions voiced by so many with so little fact expressed
Mark Roberts He was obviously a quite talented musician, but had no ability in the critical area I referenced, not to mention his terrible reaction to becoming famous. He did sound a bit of a nightmare generally as a person too. Then again Ry Cooder thought the band were ‘reptilian’ when he worked with them briefly, so he wasn’t unique in being generally obnoxious. I still love the Stones though, was pretty obsessed with them when younger. Brian sounded like a complete pain in the arse though.
@@richardsykes9692 Bob, if you had studied the life and talent of Brian Jones, this cat is not quite sure you would be so harsh. The best way to describe Brian, and why he was the way he was, is because his life was a Greek Tragedy. His immense talent has been berated by the Douche Bag Trio (Jagger, Richard(s) & Oldham) for over fifty years and many buy into the propaganda. Do you read books? If you are interested, I'll provide what is now considered to be the "reference" source and you will be surprised.
Mark Roberts You only have to see some of the narcissistic gurning to camera from some of the early b/w footage to see the guy was weird. The petty class snobbery (in its hideous British manifestation) seems obvious in his strained, affected & pretentious interview clips as well. I can see why people would be attracted by some sort of ‘devilish’ charisma he could exude, but in the end anybody can see he was an obnoxious little bugger. I used to have the first biography that came out about 40 years ago or so, I was totally obsessed with the band then. Anyway, it’s juvenile drivel really, a bit embarrassing to be banging on about this at my age!
Such an intelligent person.
Sexy and sensual voice, MASTER BRIAN JONES, FOREVER LIDER OF ROLLING STONES.
That's why he was good with the ladies.
I love what Brian says about Elvis Presley! Absolutely spot on.
In 1966, yes. But 2 years later it was a completely different story.
Wasn’t spot on! Little Sister 1961! He had great soul! Early Elvis was the greatest maybe Brian was jealous as he was 5’4” and not as Good looking and a ginger!
james fitzgerald fuck up
@EnglanE Read Exactly. Three years later he made his comeback with "In The Ghetto", "Suspicious Minds", "If I Can Dream", "I Just Can't Help Believing". 70's Elvis was perhaps the most passionate of his entire career.
Elvis may have been a good performer, but for some of us that doesn''t mean you are a passionate artist. Elvis hardly wrote a single one of his songs, after all.
brian jones was a true artist a genius as far as i am concerned wish he was alive stones would have been a much better band
They would have kicked him out anyway, most likely. They couldn't stand him in the end. Brian seemed to have a lot of mental issues and intense mood swings. Very intelligent and a musical genius and definitely the most talented Stone, in my opinion.
@@SoftTangerineDreams Em termos instrumentais concordo plenamente
@@SoftTangerineDreams So true that he could'nt finish to wtote one song.
He forced the Stones to part company with him.
He took too many drugs which brought out the worst of his character.
Tragic none the less.
1:52 my Grandad's cousin was their manager ❤ LOVE YOU BRIAN
Seria o russo nascido na Lituânia antiga União Soviética de nome Giorgio Gomelky
he was right about elvis and was truthful about what british pop really was at the time
the beatles went to meet elvis
the stones went to chess records to meet real musicians and then wrote a song about it
T
I agree on Elvis at that time but this was before his 'Come Back Special' that showed us what he could really do when he wanted to do it.
Brian Jones was founder and guiding spirit of the Rolling Stones -- Stones were able to continue without Brian but after Sticky Fingers, Stones went into decline -- or just treaded water -- creatively.
Too bad Brian couldn't tread water.
Sorry.
slide4180 nah ill give you that, that was a solid roast
@@slide4180 hahahahah
Are you kidding me, what about exhile? Goats head soup? Some girls? Tattoo you? Those are good fuckin albums
@@slide4180
Disrespectful about Brian.
This proves that keef claiming Brian didn’t have interest in the guitar anymore as fantasy
ziggy pop I dunno , if you Look at BB and LIB keef desperately tried to get Brian smashing the guitar weaving with him again
In 65,Brian's still interested by guitar. But around 68,it was not true.
Two guitars in a band can redundant in the studio. I think Keith (w/Mick) wrote the songs and as a guitarist Keith knew what he needed for his songs. Brian was keen to pick up other instruments. Similarly , George Harrison moved to sitar and lost interest in guitar for a brief period.
Yup. I agree. All. Whiny little Napoleons. Ampsmade to bomb. Bullets made from guitar boook
Wow. Who wrote that? And I didn't know that I could reply to my self? 😎
I never had anything to do with the Stones, but my god does he habe a charming voice and way of speaking...
Lovely voice ...a beautiful and understated gentleman...RIP Brian x
Alot of Stones fans seem to ignore that the Stones really got their influence mainly from the same black artist that were generally ignored here in the states. It took a white english group to make black music popular with a white audience. Even Hendrix was ignored here and had to go to England and come back with white English players to be recognized.
Love listening to him talk❣️ RIP Brian ❤😢. I agree with his analysis of Elvis!!!
Great, fantastic and immortal Brian Jones!!! Respect forever!!!
I hope you are jamming some along Charlie right now
2120 South Michigan Avenue gets lost in the shuffle but is a brilliant instrumental.
Love it. Brian again
No wonder they lost it......
Brian's finest solo work-wow. That and the slide on No Expectations.
And let's not forget Bill Wyman who as far as I'm concerned wrote the song.
His British accent 😍
English accent. ☺
Brian speak well very proper . Good upbringing.
Sounds like a completely different person, than on those 67-68 interviews
Erudite manner of speaking. English gutter press vilified Brian Jones
Faded away much to soon. The missed musical legacy heartbreaking.
dis donc pas de connerie
I wish he could had a chance to play the Moog synth on either a solo or a Stones album.
He did; played it incredibly on the Stones single "We Love You" and on their album Satanic Majesties Request.
That sounded to me more like a mellotron.
It’s so cool that he grew up in the town right next to mine
Relaxing voice
Thank you for sharing 💕 RIP Brian 🕯️
His fifth kid was born March 24th, just one week before this interview.
Brian was a musical genius and founder of the stones.Many,many people think he was murdered.
Brian foi campeão olímpico de natação bem antes de ser um Stone. Quando Mick, Charlie e Keith i quando estiveram em sua mansão comunicando seu afastamento definitivamente do conjunto Simplesmente Brian caiu em depressão, exatamente,num momento de pura reflexão por ter sido então, ótimo nadador. Imediatamente, lançou,-se para um mergulho na piscina, entretanto, estáva drogado, . Possivelmente Brian tentou minimizar seu sofrimento, quando então, naquele instante não fazia parte dos Stones Muitos comentam sobre essa história mas, porém contundentemente estive recentemente em Cheltheham visitando o túmulo de Brian, sendo então,com a informação fidedgina cuja a versão legítima foi em razão de frustração por ter desligado-se do grupo na forma que aconteceu
He was a little harsh on Elvis, who did indeed have some "relevance" left. He must have been looking at the Elvis of the moment, doing those mediocre movies and soundtracks.
He was so cool back then. The mystery original Stone.
he was so cute and genuinely appassionated ❤️
What Jones says about Presley pretty much sums up what happened to himself also, when he lost interest in the Stones.
Somewhat true. Ironically both were white men who loved black music and did drugs.
@@bryandiaz7054 Not just black music.
I was thinking exactly that xD
his voice im in loveee
RIP Brian Jones. The more I look into him, the Stones, the music industry as a whole, especially in the 60’s: damn. The surviving Stones trash Brian as difficult, morose. But the Beatles loved him, he was brilliant, talented (loves classical music), played something like 65 instruments, and drowned in his own pool, and everyone is willing to accept an excellent swimmer like Brian drowned due to his own negligence (drugs & liquor). What a crock. As I pull back the veneer of shiny lights, rock n roll, and the jet set lifestyle, the reality is starting to come into view.
The problem with music today is that the artists care more about their personality & they don’t love the actual MUSIC anymore
My mom saw him talking to the dancer Nureyev in a London bookstore in 1967.
More like Great Britain Jones, summed up the entire British invasion.
Wow he sounds totally Welsh here, especially when he says 'particular'. South Wales if I'm being specific! 🏴
THIS VOICEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE I CANT 😩❤️
A fave track.
This man was a true king 👑
Soft Voice, yeah love the song you are playing. Miss that sound today in 2024.The Radio Stations dont play that music anymore. What you hear today is a shame they all think of themselfs as big stars. Its impossible for me to listen to that crab. The times they are a changing.
Love his voice ❤️
Very well-spoken. Almost aristocratic.
Well said lad,,,,,
J'aime beaucoup la voix douce de Brian Jones ✨ merci le génie artistique musical Une métaphore 🎸🎹🎼
Brian Jones Is The Rolling Stones After Brian Died
There Were No More Rolling Stones
The mass majority of Rolling Stones hits after the "Brian Jones era" say otherwise. You moron
silly!
Agree.
Everyone got the right to say what he thinks. Me, I think the Stones really started with Taylor and Ron Wood. Ronnie is for me the best of the three.To be the guitar partner of Keith.Not necessary the best guitar player but Ron is a real Rolling Stones.
Brian is the one who put the add. But when I'm listening to the Tami show, and when I look to what Keith is doing, it's very basic. But when I look to what Brian plays, it looks so simple, like a beginner.
The soul had gone without Brian
#BRIANJONESTHEONLYSTONE😎
He seems such an articulate and thoughtful person here. It’s hard to reconcile this with his total neglect of his various children and their mothers.
- Well, he did attract the ladies.
It should be noted that Brian's own mother reportedly never showed him true love and affection when he was growing up, which may have affected his attitude.
@@septimiusseverus343 Too bad
Personaggio carismatico..
Such an articulate interesting guy, he seems very genuine. He didn’t stand a chance up against the egos of Mick and Keith. Where was he being interviewed though, in train station waiting room?
And the Kinks were fantastic Ray Davies Brilliant song writer
Great criticism of Presley!
I would love to see have heard the music Brian would have got into had he not been murdered. Maybe more world music.
He was not murdered.
The interviewer is klas burling, the man who Dylan would infuriate the next year.
briaannn 💓💓💓💗💗💗💖💖💖❤️❤️💕💕💕💞💞💞
Brian was a true rock star before the term became diluted. His star burned bright hot but fizzled out too soon. He was the founding father of The Rolling Stones but unfortunately, he was also the founding father of the 27 Club.
R.I.P.
I love you Brian My Favorite 💕❤️
His voice was clear
cielos su voz es hermosa, tan varonil, tan bonita, me encanta oirlo hablar, aunque no entienda mucho de lo que dice
The man.
I can sleep to his voice 😴
After Brian died they still had the momentum and Mick Taylor took them to a new level; not necessarily better, but different. Mick left, we all hung out for the new album, 'Black and Blue', musical crap, great cover pose and that about sums them up. Musically, all they have done from then on is to take boredom to a whole new level.
Não gosta do álbum homenageando o BLUES!
Brian Jones i Love you!!!!!!💋
Can't hear any Gloucestershire accent in his voice, though can hear a little bit of Welsh. Must have got that from his parents.