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Why time is
still on their side
John Mulvey
How, one wonders, will
The Rolling Stones celebrate their 40th birthday? A group hug
and shared tears are hardly the style of these most
unsentimental of men. A cake might be a bit tame, given their
historically exotic tastes, though a replica of the one that
adorned the cover of 1969’s Let It Bleed - baked by Delia Smith,
no less - would have a certain resonance. With the band back on
one of their massive and improbable tours, however, it’s a safe
bet Mick Jagger will be watching his figure too closely to
indulge.
An argument, perhaps, is more their style. One about the whole
idea of their birthday, for instance. As a flood of
compilations, reissues, memoirs, live shows and gilded souvenir
cash-ins commemorate their anniversary, Jagger has questioned
the veracity of the whole business. Officially sanctioned
history points to July 12, 1962, as the start of their
extraordinary career - a gig at London’s Marquee Club. But with
an unusually conscientious flourish, Jagger disputes the date,
suggesting sometime in 1963 - when drummer Charlie Watts arrived
to complete the first classic line-up - as more apt. A dispute
about the very fundaments of their existence seems fitting.
Or how about a juicy personality clash between Jagger and Keith
Richards? The animosity between these two songwriting partners
has only added to the legend of the Stones over the years.
Often, it hinges on their battling aesthetics: Jagger the social
climber, the moderniser, the shameless celebrity butterfly;
Richards the recalcitrant old buffer, stubbornly loyal to
rock’n’roll tradition, disdainful of his foil’s pretensions.
Another entertaining feud kicked off recently, when Mojo
magazine asked Richards his opinion of Jagger’s knighthood.
"What did I feel when I heard about the knighthood?" he said.
"Cold, cold rage at his blind stupidity. It was enraging, I
threatened to pull out of the tour - went berserk, bananas! But,
quite honestly, Mick’s f****d up so many times what’s another
f**k up?"
Not a subject, then, for the old devils to discuss over post-gig
canapés. But what is, realistically? What can these men have
left to say to each other after 40 years together? No-one works
with the same people for that long in the real world, let alone
in the emotionally heightened, perpetually adolescent sphere of
rock’n’roll.
There are many remarkable things about The Rolling Stones, but
it’s an inevitable fact that, in 2002, the one that’s most
striking is their absurd longevity. In July 1962 The Beatles
were yet to release a record, Bob Dylan was three years from
discovering electricity, Liam Gallagher was ten years off being
born, and rock’n’roll was meant to be merely a passing fad.
That it has been sustained for so long - become embedded in our
culture, even - is due, in an enormous amount, to The Rolling
Stones. It’s not just the excellence of their music, or their
business genius. No, The Rolling Stones set a template for
rock’n’roll that was much bigger than music. Rock’n’roll was
inexorably hooked up with sex and drugs. It articulated
adolescent rage, rebellion, boredom and pettiness better than
any other art form. It at least pretended to be dirty,
provocative, confusing, not a little menacing.
And it found its purest embodiment in their skinny, uptight
white bodies. The Beatles might have been charming, easier to
assimilate and, fractionally, musically superior. But the Stones
were far more successful at capitalising on the principle of a
counterculture. They were A Threat. Five young men who were
taken to court for urinating in the street, who were regarded
with fear and despair by right-thinking parents and who, with
the canny assistance of their manager until 1967, Andrew Loog
Oldham, made nastiness marketable. What could be easier to pull
off and yet so radical, so appealing and so lucrative?
"I always imagined The Rolling Stones lasting, one was just not
aware of in which form," says Oldham from his home in Bogota,
Colombia. "They were very professional and dedicated from the
first moment. I told them who they were and they became it. They
wore the bad boy tag like a suit of armour, and drew a veil over
how professional they really were."
But, as Oldham writes in the second volume of his compelling
autobiography, 2Stoned: "Violence and anger would become
permanent fixtures." Elements which were not, of course, always
controllable. Drug busts, the death of guitarist Brian Jones
(found floating in his pool in 1969), the violent murder of a
black fan by Hell’s Angels acting as security during the 1969
show at Altamont - these were hardly desirable career details.
But truly great bands tend to have a mythological momentum
wherein contrivance and accident become intertwined. And so
tragedy and brutality only stoked the legend of The Rolling
Stones.
By then, too, they were too big a business to be stopped. Had
become so big, in fact, that it’s hard to imagine the
international market ever allowing them to stop. The sales of
new product might have dribbled away in the early 1980s, but the
justifiably-named World’s Greatest Rock’n’Roll Band have
continued to be omnipresent ever since: refracted through the
surliness and conspicuous consumption of every band who has ever
decided to be self-consciously rock’n’roll; through the regular
globe-straddling tours; and, naturally, through that glorious
and milkable back catalogue.
The Rolling Stones’s 40th anniversary is being marked by a
substantial revamping of that auspicious archive. First up is
Forty Licks, which endeavours, with some success, to boil down
their gargantuan oeuvre onto a couple of hit-stuffed,
consistently thrilling CDs. It’s followed in October by 22
albums from the 1960s that have been diligently restored and
remastered. Cutting through the record-collector hype that
surrounds the whole project, there remains something elemental
about much of this music which still makes it gripping. It’s the
sound of tension and power, of five Englishmen moving through
homages to American bluesmen and coming to terms with the huge
possibilities opening up to them. The riffs - Gimme Shelter,
Satisfaction, Start Me Up - are unforgettable. Jagger,
meanwhile, is busy creating his own grand romance: a mixture of
superhuman virility and teasing camp. "I was born in a crossfire
hurricane," he claims in Jumpin’ Jack Flash - unlikely for a son
of Dartford, Kent. "But what can a poor boy do except to sing
for a rock and roll band?" he mugs heroically in Street Fighting
Man, ever the expedient revolutionary. Critically, the Stones
proved that the blues and its derivatives were not dependent on
sincerity. Few singers have ever sounded so charged and
engaging, and yet so obviously removed from the hurt they
describe.
"They started out as The Rollin’ Stones," explains Andrew Loog
Oldham, "six blues-struck musos glued to a music born of
slavery, share-cropping and blacks. They grabbed hold of it with
their educated little white middle class fingers and honed it
into their own. Mick and Keith learnt to write and the Stones
notched up a batch of mid-1960s singles that define the time. I
became redundant to them, Brian died and they moved into the
excess and self-adulation that the Seventies begot and made more
music that defined the time.
"More importantly, they mastered one side of the proceedings
that I deal with in 2Stoned, and that is that today’s artists
don’t need a Svengali, they have to be one. Look at Eminem,
Madonna, Cher, Tom Cruise, Mel Gibson ... any of the current
artists who can take a town or open a film. They know exactly
who they are and how to do it - as do The Rolling Stones."
It’s strange how a desire to do whatever you want can pan out.
As stroppy post-adolescents, The Rolling Stones epitomised a
certain petulant negation of establishment values. Put simply,
they wanted their own way. With age, that same insistence on
complete control became codified as a bullet-proof business
plan. As Oldham says: "The Rolling Stones are definitely part of
the establishment, or in more specific terms, providers of the
establishment … They use the system. CDs are just another item
in the list of goods they have for sale, so don’t talk to me
about their new single. It’s just a surface, seductive
invitation to a catalogue extended by the masters of the game."
This is how these ruthless players can appear to be against the
system while simultaneously running it - by making disaffection
a copyrighted commodity. In the hands of middle-aged gentlemen,
it sometimes seems a little ludicrous, but then, so much does
about the Stones. Take Jagger’s irregular grapplings with
fashion, for instance, that usually result in a hiply produced,
commercially catastrophic solo album like last year’s Goddess In
The Doorway. Or his comically inexhaustible libido, and the
carelessness with which he greets another tabloid exposé of his
love life.
"When Mick Jagger had his solo recording out," recalls Oldham,
"I stated that the ambition that had been attractive in the
1960s could turn - in the light of his and Paul McCartney’s solo
efforts - when one is over 50 into an embarrassing disease.
Tough, but light compared to what Keith Richards had to say. It
goes hand in hand with the art. But a musician is entitled to
play or sing, it’s their lifeblood and reason to be living. He
or she can only spend so many days of the year being comfortable
at home."
Or take rock’s most miraculous survivor, Keith Richards, and his
increasingly deranged take on outlaw style: the bits of feather
in his hair that make him look, presumably intentionally, like a
Home Counties Sitting Bull. Or his clownish, geezerly sidekick
Ron Wood, the enthusiastic new boy who’s only been in the band
for 30 years. These are not, by most standards, men growing old
gracefully.
But perhaps this is one of the most radical innovations of The
Rolling Stones. They force us to look at ageing in a new light:
they aren’t merely dallying with the affectations of youth,
they’re staying loyal to the tenets of a youth culture - a
look-at-me decadence, a rebel theatre, an idiosyncratic style -
that they helped to invent.
Look at them in a new picture in the booklet that comes with
Forty Licks, where the four current members are wedged onto a
sofa. Richards, on the left, is pretending to be asleep, his
head resting on Wood’s shoulder. Loyally, Wood has one eye open
and is equally slouched. Drummer Charlie Watts looks as urbane
and detached as ever, a thin smile of private amusement on his
lips. And Jagger, on the right, is hilarious: sat bolt upright,
staring with prurient disgust at Richards. Here, their
differences are cultivated, and internal conflict becomes yet
another marketing tool. Here’s the last gang in town, one that
has stuck together through thick and thin, but only after
protracted negotiations between each other’s people.
So, are The Rolling Stones merely the picture in rock’n’roll’s
attic, wrinkling up while the genre they helped create sustains
its youthfulness? It does seem wrong to call them the music’s
consciences, or guardians: after all, they’d never take on a job
with such hazy financial rewards.
But at this point, it looks very much like they’ll go on
forever. Wise businessmen don’t abandon one of the strongest
brand names on the planet, after all. As the 40th anniversary
tour trolls round the States and begins its tentative movements
across the rest of the planet, plenty of people will call The
Rolling Stones a travesty of their former selves. But really,
they’re perpetuating their legend, not debasing it. For if one
of their principles is that rock’n’roll is innate, a calling,
then it’s necessary for them to be seen to pursue it until the
absolute end. They’re the proof that this music refuses to fade
away, in spite of how transient it has appeared at times over
the past 40 years.
And finally, they’re a band that demand analysis but
simultaneously transcend it: there’s only so much you can
intellectualise about something so immediate and, still,
exhilarating.
"We have so much time to fret and gossip when The Rolling Stones
are off the road," concludes Andrew Loog Oldham. "But once they
are back on it, it’s theirs and that’s all there is to say. And
this time they’ve really grabbed the tit and heart of America.
They are a forgiven Enron: pure materialanza; able, because of
the force and the memory, to entertain a post-9/11 America that
Bruce Springsteen, because of the home-grown luggage, can only
console."
Forty Licks is out on Virgin. The Rolling Stones Remastered
Series of 22 albums is released by ABCKO on 21 October. 2Stoned
by Andrew Loog Oldham is published by Secker & Warburg on 10
October .
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