- Mick Jagger
Sir Michael Phillip "Mick" Jagger CBE (born July 26, 1943) is an English rock musician, actor, songwriter, record and film producer and businessman. He is best known as the lead singer of the English rock band The Rolling Stones. - Keith Richards
Keith Richards (born 18 December 1943) is an English guitarist, songwriter, singer and a founding member of The Rolling Stones in 1962. With songwriting partner and Stones lead vocalist Mick Jagger, he has written and recorded hundreds of songs including "Satisfaction", "Jumpin' Jack Flash", "Miss You" and "Start Me Up". As a guitarist Richards is mostly known for his innovative rhythm playing. - Ron Wood
Ronald David "Ronnie" Wood (born June 1, 1947 in Hillingdon, London) is an English rock guitarist and bassist best known as a member of The Rolling Stones, Faces, and The Jeff Beck Group. - Brian Jones
Lewis Brian Hopkin Jones was the founding member, lead and rhythm guitarist and backing singer in the English rock group, The Rolling Stones. Jones was known for his multi-instrumental skills, fashionable mod image, and his drug excesses. His death at age 27 made him one of the first members of music's infamous 27 Club. - Charlie Watts
Charles Robert "Charlie" Watts (born 2 June 1941) is the drummer of The Rolling Stones. He is also a jazz bandleader and commercial artist. Sometimes referred to as "The Wembley Whammer" when introduced by Mick Jagger during a concert. - Bill Wyman
Bill Wyman (born William George Perks on 24 October 1936) was the bassist for the English rock and roll band The Rolling Stones from its founding in 1962 until 1993. - Joan Baez
Joan Chandos Baez (born January 9, 1941) is an American folk singer and songwriter known for her highly individual vocal style. She is a soprano with a three-octave vocal range and a distinctively rapid vibrato. Many of her songs are topical and deal with social issues. - Jason Mraz
Jason Thomas Mraz (born June 23, 1977) is an American singer-songwriter, born and raised in Mechanicsville, Virginia, a suburb of Richmond. His last name is from the Slavic word "mraz", meaning "frost". Mraz is an eclectic artist with multiple and varied stylistic influences, including pop, rock, folk, jazz, country, and hip hop/rap. He has played with various artists, including The Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, Dave Matthews Band, Paula Cole, John Popper, Makana, … - Mick Taylor
Michael "Mick" Kevin Taylor (born 17 January, 1949 in Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire) is an English musician best known as the former guitarist for The Rolling Stones. - Billy Preston
William Everett Preston was an American soul musician from Houston, Texas, raised mostly in Los Angeles, California. In addition to his successful, Grammy-winning career as a solo artist, Preston collaborated with some of the greatest names in the music industry, including the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, Little Richard, Ray Charles, George Harrison, Elton John, Eric Clapton, Bob Dylan, Sam Cooke, Sammy Davis Jr., Sly Stone, Aretha Franklin, the Jackson 5, Quincy Jones, … - Leon Russell
Leon Russell (born Claude Russell Bridges on April 2 1942 in Lawton, Oklahoma) is a singer, songwriter, pianist, and guitarist. Russell attended Will Rogers High School in Tulsa, Oklahoma. He is occasionally referred to as "The Master of Space and Time," a title he acquired around the time of his collaborations with Joe Cocker. First known mostly as a session musician, Russell has played with artists as varied as Jerry Lee Lewis, … - Ian Stewart
Ian AR Stewart was a Scottish keyboardist. Stewart played piano in the original line-up of The Rolling Stones. He predates Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Bill Wyman and Charlie Watts as members of the band. Because the band's manager Andrew Loog Oldham did not think Stewart's looks were good enough for publicity purposes, Stewart officially "left the group" but continued until his death as their road manager and pianist. - Andrew Loog Oldham
Andrew Loog Oldham (born January 29 1944) is an English rock and roll producer, impresario and author. He was best known as the manager of The Rolling Stones in the 1960s, taking a flamboyant style inspired by his role model and friend Phil Spector. A celebrated and self-proclaimed hustler who spent teenage summers swindling tourists in French resort towns, … - Graham Parker
Graham Parker and the Rumour (Parker, with Brinsley Schwarz and Martin Belmont on guitars, Bob Andrews on keyboards, Andrew Bodnar on bass and Steve Goulding on drums) formed in the summer of 1975 and began doing the rounds of the British pub rock scene. The band was also augmented at times by a four-man horn section known as The Rumour Brass: John "Irish" Earle (sax), Chris Gower (trombone), Dick Hanson (trumpet), and Ray Bevis (sax). - Chuck Leavell
Chuck Leavell (born April 28, 1952) is an American pianist and keyboardist, who was a member of The Allman Brothers Band during the height of their popularity, a founding member of the jazz-rock combo Sea Level, a frequently-employed session musician, and later, the keyboardist for The Rolling Stones. - Don Was
Don Was (born Don Fagenson on September 13, 1952 in Detroit, Michigan) is an American musician, bassist and record producer. Fagenson graduated from Oak Park High School in the Detroit suburb of Oak Park, then attended the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor but dropped out after the first year. A journeyman musician, he grew up listening to the Detroit blues sound and the jazz music of John Coltrane and Miles Davis. - Ian McLagan
Ian McLagan (born on 12 May, 1945, in Hounslow, Middlesex) is an English keyboards player, best known as a member of Small Faces in the 1960s, and Faces in the 1970s.Instrument = Keyboards | Genre = Rock 'n' Roll<br>Rhythm and Blues<br>Hard Rock<br>Blues Rock | Occupation = | Associated_acts = Small Faces<br>Faces<br>The Rolling Stones<br>Bump Band<br>Billy Bragg and the Blokes }} Since then he has been in demand as a session musician and also leads his own Bump Band, … - Bobby Keys
Bobby Keys (b. December 18, 1943 in Slaton, Texas) (sometimes credited as Bobby "Keyes") is an American saxophone player and together with Jim Price and Jim Horn formed the most in-demand horn section of the 1970s. They appear on albums by The Who, George Harrison's "All Things Must Pass", Eric Clapton, and Joe Cocker's "Mad Dogs and Englishmen". Keys started touring at age fourteen with Bobby Vee and fellow Texan Buddy Holly. - Jack Nitzsche
Bernard Alfred "Jack" Nitzsche (Chicago, April 22 1937 - Hollywood, August 25 2000) was an Academy Award-winning film score composer. - Keith Emerson
Keith Noel Emerson (born 2 November 1944 in Todmorden, Yorkshire) is a British keyboard player and composer. Formerly a member of The T-Bones, V.I.P.s, P.P. Arnold's backing band, and The Nice (which evolved from P.P.Arnold's band), he started Emerson Lake and Palmer (ELP), one of the early supergroups, in 1970. Following the breakup of ELP, circa 1979, Emerson had modest success with Emerson, Lake & Powell in the 1980s. ELP reunited during the early 90s. - Jimmy Miller
James 'Jimmy' Miller was a Brooklyn-born record producer who produced albums for the Spencer Davis Group (and co-wrote the song "I'm A Man" with Steve Winwood as well as the lyrics for the Traffic song 'Medicated Goo'), Traffic, Blind Faith, Bobby Whitlock, Kracker and the Rolling Stones (all albums from "Beggars Banquet" to "Goats Head Soup"), New York City's shock/punk rockers The Plasmatics and Motörhead. - Gg Allin
GG Allin (29 August 1956 - 28 June 1993) was a punk singer and bandleader who performed and recorded with many groups during his career. He is best remembered for his notorious live performances that typically featured wildly transgressive acts such as Allin defecating and urinating onstage, rolling in excrement, committing self-injury, performing naked, taunting people to perform fellatio on him, and violent actions toward the audience. - Patti
"FIRST BETTY~SCREEN PRINTING". - Johnathan Nelson
I went to high school in murfreesboro, AR class of 2002. then went to the navy and was stationed in key west, fl till august of 2006. Now that I am finally out of the navy I am going to college in morrilton, AR working toward a degree in business. - Karim Hanna
I'm Kar. - Buck
I enjoy a diet high in fiber. New leather chaffes my hide and new apples turn my stomach. - Paul Skrzypczak
- Vincent Brienza
My favorite color is green. - Jade Jagger
Jade Sheena Jezebel Jagger and is the only child resulting from the marriage of Rolling Stone Mick Jagger and Bianca Jagger. Jade is of English-Nicaraguan ancestry, and spent her early years living with her parents on London’s fashionable Cheyne Walk. After her parents’ divorce in 1980, Jagger spent most of her time living in Manhattan with her jet-set mother and was often dropped off at the Factory to be babysat by Bianca’s friend, pop artist Andy Warhol. - Dick Taylor
Dick Taylor (born Richard Clifford Taylor, 28 January 1943, in Dartford, Kent, England) was an early bass player for Rolling Stones. He left to become an art student at Sidcup Art College and while there formed The Pretty Things in September 1963. Taylor now lives on the Isle of Wight, England. - Anita Pallenberg
Anita Pallenberg (born January 25, 1944 in Rome, Italy) is a model, actress and fashion designer. She was the common-law wife of Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards from 1967 to 1980. The daughter of an Italian artist and a German secretary, Anita became fluent in four languages at an early age. Before settling in London, she lived in Germany and New York City, where she was involved with the Living Theater (starring in the play "Paradise Now", … - Allen Klein
Allen Klein (born December 18, 1931) is an American businessman and record label executive. He is best known (and somewhat notorious) for his tenacious management of rock and roll performers in the 1960s, and the acquisition and control of their works. - Michael Cohl
Michael Cohl (born c. 1948) is a Canadian concert promoter. He is the president of Toronto-based music promotional company The BCL Group (Ballard Cohl Labatt). Although he started out in the business at the age of 18 running a strip club, he made his reputation in 1989 by buying the concert, sponsorship, merchandising, radio, television, and film rights to The Rolling Stones' Steel Wheels Tour. The tour became the most financially successful rock tour in history. - Mose Allison
Mose John Allison, Jr. (born November 11, 1927) is an American jazz pianist and singer. He was born in Tippo, Mississippi, in rural Tallahatchie County, in the heart of the Mississippi Delta. He played piano in grammar school and trumpet in high school. He went to college at the University of Mississippi and Louisiana State University. He received a BA in English. After serving in the U.S. Army, he moved to New York City and launched his jazz career. - Arthur Alexander
Arthur Alexander, born in Sheffield, Alabama, was perhaps one of the biggest stars to arise out of the American country-soul scene. Jason Ankeny, music critic for All Music Guide, said Alexander was a "country-soul pioneer" and though largely unknown, "his music is the stuff of genius, a poignant and deeply intimate body of work on par with the best of his contemporaries." Working with Spar Music in Florence, Alabama, … - Terry Reid
Terry Reid (born 13 November 1949, Huntingdon, England) is a rock singer and guitarist noted for his soulful voice in the same vein as contemporaries Paul Rodgers and Rod Stewart. After leaving school at the age of 15, Reid joined Peter Jay's Jaywalkers after being spotted by the band's drummer, Peter Jay. At the time Reid was playing for a local band, The Redbeats. - Glyn Johns
Glyn Johns is a recording engineer and record producer. He has worked with such artists as The Eagles, The Beatles, The Steve Miller Band, The Ozark Mountain Daredevils, Led Zeppelin, The Rolling Stones, The Who, Georgie Fame, Family, Eric Clapton, The Clash, Midnight Oil and the Blue Öyster Cult, plus Linda Ronstadt, Emmylou Harris, New Model Army, Belly, Helen Watson and many others. After an ill-fated singing career in the 1960s with the band The Presidents, … - Patti Hansen
Patti Hansen (born 1956http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0361039/)was a major supermodel in the 1970s and early 1980s - appearing regularly on the covers and in the pages of American "Vogue", "Glamour", and "Harper's Bazaar". She was born and raised in the Tottenville section of Staten Island, New York. A scout for the Wilhelmina modeling agency discovered her at a Staten Island hot dog stand when she was a teenager. - Blondie Chaplin
Terence William 'Blondie' Chaplin (born 7 July 1951) is a musician from Durban, South Africa best known for his brief stint in the early 1970s as a singer and guitarist for The Beach Boys. Chaplin was also listed as a co-producer, sang lead vocals with fellow South African musician Ricky Fataar (drummer) and composed, with Fataar, "Here She Comes" and "Hold On Dear Brother" on the twenty-third official Beach Boys album, Carl and the Passions - "So Tough", released in 1972. - Bianca Jagger
Bianca Jagger is a prominent international human rights advocate. For over twenty years she has campaigned for social and economic justice and environmental protection throughout the world. She was born in Nicaragua, Bianca Perez-Mora Macias , on May 2 1950. In the mid-sixties she left her native country armed with a French Government scholarship to study Political Science in Paris.
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