Here is my list of the best contributions by Mick, Keith & Brian,
and also a few from Bill, Charlie, Mick T. and last but not least, Ronnie.
Also the best from the sixth Stone, Ian 'Stu" Stewart.
TOP TEN
VOCALS
Angie
Winter
Ruby Tuesday
Wild Horses
Sympathy For The Devil
Let It Bleed
Jumping Jack Flash
Moonlight Mile
You Can't Always Get What You Want
Brown Sugar |
MICK
JAGGER
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The Stones for the most part are not known so much for their ballads, as they are for
harder rock tunes, but that is really unfair. My top four picks for best vocals by Mick
are ballads. I always felt Mick sang his best on 'Angie' since the first time I heard the
song. Then you have 'Winter', the way Mick sings this one just makes you want to grab your
lover and sit down next to a warm fire. With 'Ruby Tuesday', a song Mick didn't even
write, well, he sure sings it like he did, his voice was meant for that song. Of
course when it comes to shouting, or just belting out a song, who's better than Mick?
Could anyone else have sang 'Sympathy For The Devil' the way Mick does and give us the
same feeling most of us get from that song? I think not! Then of course there's 'Jumpin'
Jack Flash', like 'Sympathy...' its in the way he pronounces each word when he sings it
that helps make the song so great!
KEITH RICHARDS
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TOP TEN
Sympathy For The Devil - Lead & Bass Guitars
Satisfaction - Lead Guitar
Jumpin' Jack Flash - Lead & Bass Guitars
Happy - Lead Vocals Plus Lead & Bass Guitars
Monkey Man - Lead & Rhythm Guitars
Stray Cat Blues - Lead Guitar
Coming Down Again - Lead Vocals & Guitar
Dead Flowers - Guitar & Vocal Harmony
Wild Horses - Guitar & Backing Vocals
You Got the Silver - Lead Vocals & Guitars
*Honorable Mention - All his backing vocals on songs from the 60s & 70s |
Mr. Keef Riffhard, aka Mr Cool. Most people say he 's one of rocks best all-time rhythm
guitar players. Maybe, but to me anyway he's really one of rocks all time best LEAD guitar
players. Is there a better, more biting guitar solo than his on 'Sympathy For the Devil'?
Or his lead on 'Jumping Jack Flash', 'Stray Cat Blues' or 'Satisfaction'? Hell, that's
just naming a few. Then you got his acoustic guitar playing which also is tops on songs
like 'Wild Horses', 'Dead Flowers' and 'No Expectations'. He also plays a damn good bass,
too! You just can not miss the sound of Keith's guitar on most of their songs. It's a
sound that defines the Rolling Stones.
TOP
TEN
Ruby Tuesday - Recorder, Piano & Vocal
Harmony
Paint It Black - Sitar & Tamboura
Under My Thumb - Marimbas
No Expectations - Slide Guitar
Little Red Rooster - Slide Guitar & Harp
2000 Light Years From Home - Mellotron
Last Time - Lead Guitar
Lady Jane - Dulcimer
I Am Waiting - Dulcimer
Get Off Of My Cloud - Lead Guitar
*Honorable Mention - His harp on so many songs!
(Link
to list of the differennt instruments Brian played with the Stones) |
BRIAN JONES
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It's hard to believe Brian was in the Stones for only 7 or so years when you consider
the impact he left. The truth is, there would not have been any Rolling Stones in the
first place if Brian had not been around. But that's another story. There may not be
another individual other than Brian Jones who help change and defined the sound heard in
rock music. Take the song 'Ruby Tuesday' for example, did you ever hear a recorder in a
rock song before Brian added it to this classic? Or the marimbas on 'Under My Thumb'? Or
the dulcimer in both 'Lady Jane' and 'I Am Waiting'? Also, how many white guys were
playing the slide guitar before Mr. Jones? Then you got the sitar in 'Paint It Black',
okay, his friend George Harrison may have beat him to it by a few weeks as the first sitar
played in a rock song ('Norwegian Wood'), but Brian played his sitar in a way no sitar had
ever been played before. Then all the different instruments he played on the
non-rock song "Gomper" can't be forgotten, either, even if it doesn't land in my
Top 10 list for him.
No, as pointed out by Keith, there was not any instrument that
Brian could not play, and he played them better than most, and all with heart. Mick
Taylor did a superb job while in the Stones and Ronnie still fits in fine today, but
nobody ever replaced Brian Jones in the band, and although the Stones continued to be
great after he was gone, they still are not the same without him.
CHARLIE
WATTS
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TOP DRUMMING Get Off Of
My Cloud
Honky Tonk Women
Paint It Black
Satisfaction
Midnight Rambler
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Charlie hates being a rock star and cannot understand why all Stones fans love him so
much. There is just something about him that attracts him to us "normal
folks". For me anyway, I'll go back to the early sixties. Remember the way he
played his drums during that time? Back then rock drummers did not stand out so much. When
you think of Charlie, the term "hard rock drummer " may not come to mind,
but for the early sixties that was really how his sound was. By the mid and late sixties
we had Keith Moon , John Boham and others who drummed harder, but Charlie was one of the
first rockers to let his drums stand out and help set the way. Through the years his beat
has held up steady and like it or not Charlie, your fans still think you're the best!
BILL'S BEST
19th Nervous Breakdown - Heavy Bass
Sympathy For The Devil - Maracas
Jumpin' Jack Flash - Organ, wrote guitar riff
2000 Light Years From Home - Cool Bass
Miss You - Bass Downtown Suzie - Vocals, Bass, wrote song
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BILL WYMAN
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There have been lots of bass players in the history of rock n roll, some real bad, some
real good, but few better than Bill. To think that the only reason that he made it into
the band was because of his amp! But from the first Stones album and on to his last (Steel
Wheels), he played a steady beat that went just great with Charlie's drums. I'm not
surprised that the Stones still have not replaced him. Keith was reportedly pissed
when Bill retired from the band, well he wasn't the only one. Lots of us fans would love
to have him back. To Bill I say this: if its just the flying thing that made you
leave, why not at least still help out in the studio? I would love to see you back
as a Stone as would other fellow Stones fans and most important, so would the Boys, even
if they haven't said it lately.
MICK TAYLOR
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TOP GUITAR SOLOS
Time Waits For No One
Winter
Can't You Hear Me Knocking
Moonlight Mile
Sway |
The only problem the Stones ever had with Mick Taylor was his stay in the band was too
short. But during the short time he was a Stone they put out some of their best stuff, in
part thanks to him. He played his guitar different than the way Brian or Keith did, and
that gave the band a sound that they never before had, a sound that fit in well and is
still missed today.
TOP SONGS
Far Away Eyes - Pedal Steel Guitar & Backing Vocals
Beast of Burden - Acoustic & Electric Guitars
Shattered - Bass, Bass Drum, Lead Guitar & Pedal Steel Guitar plus Backing
Vocals
It's Only Rock'n Roll - Guitar & Inspiration
When the Whip Comes Down - Guitar, Pedal Steel Guitar & Backing Vocals |
RONNIE
WOOD
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For the Stones, Ron Wood's arrival was just what the doctor ordered. With Ronnie the
band got back some of what they lost when Brian died. When Ron joined up, Keef
was able to reestablish the fine art of guitar weaving that he hadn't been able to perform
since the Brian Jones days. You also gotta love his steel and slide guitars all over the
Stones records.To those who say Ronnie's best work was while he was in Faces, I say listen
to Some Girls, Voodoo Lounge or even Bridges To Babylon. Ronnie
may not be an original Stone, but he fits in great and
is a Rolling Stone thru and
thru.
TOP STU Let It
Bleed - Piano
Short And Curlies - Piano
Time Is On My Side - Organ
Stewed and Keef (Brian's Blues) - Piano
Untitled piano solo that closes Dirty Work |
IAN "STU" STEWART
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Who was the one Stone who got screwed the most? No, not Brian, it was Stu. The man was
an original Stone, the first member to join up with Brian, before Mick, Keith, Bill
and Charlie came along. Stu played honky tonk boogie woogie piano second to none! But
there was one problem. Andrew Oldham, the Stones manager at the time, did not like
his looks and told the others that he had to go. Baaad move! It was decided that he could
stay on as their road manager and session piano player. Lucky for the Stones he agreed to
it. Stu's piano added to the great sound of the Stones that we all still love today. He
passed away on December 12, 1985 and is greatly missed.
To view lists just like the ones above - but
complied from Stones fans, click here.
For more info on the Stones, read their Bio over at my Classic Rock Site.
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