All language subtitles for The.Stones

af Afrikaans
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bn Bengali
bs Bosnian
bg Bulgarian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch
en English
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French
fy Frisian
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
el Greek
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
km Khmer
ko Korean
ku Kurdish (Kurmanji)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Lao
la Latin
lv Latvian
lt Lithuanian
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
ne Nepali
no Norwegian
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt Portuguese
pa Punjabi
ro Romanian
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
st Sesotho
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhala
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
te Telugu
th Thai
tr Turkish
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
or Odia (Oriya)
rw Kinyarwanda
tk Turkmen
tt Tatar
ug Uyghur
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:11,000 --> 00:00:13,440 This programme contains some strong language. 2 00:00:27,280 --> 00:00:29,320 A child is a thing to be loved. 3 00:00:30,960 --> 00:00:33,400 A child is the manifestations of both parents, 4 00:00:33,400 --> 00:00:36,160 and both parents see themselves in the child. 5 00:00:37,560 --> 00:00:39,640 The child is part of them. 6 00:00:39,640 --> 00:00:41,760 He is their flesh and blood. 7 00:00:41,760 --> 00:00:43,800 And for good many years, 8 00:00:43,800 --> 00:00:46,520 he is a reflection of their personality. 9 00:00:48,280 --> 00:00:52,360 So when he grows up, one day he's going to assert his own personality, 10 00:00:52,360 --> 00:00:55,040 which might very well differ from the personalities 11 00:00:55,040 --> 00:00:56,960 and outlooks of his parents. 12 00:00:56,960 --> 00:00:59,640 Immediately, his parents feel very upset. 13 00:00:59,640 --> 00:01:02,560 You know, they don't see themselves in him any more. 14 00:01:02,560 --> 00:01:05,080 And when these parents don't see themselves in him, 15 00:01:05,080 --> 00:01:07,160 they feel they've lost him. 16 00:01:07,160 --> 00:01:10,520 But really, he's become a human being in his own right. 17 00:01:14,280 --> 00:01:17,120 Brian's troubled relationship with his parents 18 00:01:17,120 --> 00:01:19,760 would affect him throughout his life. 19 00:01:19,760 --> 00:01:22,800 His parents disapproved of his lifestyle. 20 00:01:23,800 --> 00:01:27,320 They wanted Brian to have a proper job like his father. 21 00:01:30,400 --> 00:01:33,880 At the age of just 19, he formed the Rolling Stones. 22 00:01:35,600 --> 00:01:37,680 They were the first of their kind 23 00:01:37,680 --> 00:01:39,920 and drove people crazy with their long hair 24 00:01:39,920 --> 00:01:42,600 and their contempt for convention and authority. 25 00:01:43,840 --> 00:01:47,040 Let's introduce you Stone by Stone to the Rolling Stones. 26 00:01:47,040 --> 00:01:48,800 Hello, I'm Mick Jagger. 27 00:01:48,800 --> 00:01:51,120 Charlie Watts... Who? Charlie Watts. 28 00:01:51,120 --> 00:01:52,800 Brian Jones. 29 00:01:52,800 --> 00:01:55,160 Keith Richards. Bill Wyman. 30 00:01:55,160 --> 00:01:58,040 On the question of hair, boys, you're pretty long in the hair. 31 00:01:58,040 --> 00:02:00,120 What's the point of long hair these days? 32 00:02:00,120 --> 00:02:03,280 I believe it's going out in England and it's going out in Australia. 33 00:02:03,280 --> 00:02:07,920 We still like it. You thought of anything different, like plaiting your hair or anything like this? 34 00:02:07,920 --> 00:02:10,440 Ha-ha. Funny man. We've got a comedian here, I see. 35 00:02:10,440 --> 00:02:14,600 I believe some of the Eastern States groups have even suggested that you're effeminate. 36 00:02:14,600 --> 00:02:17,320 What have you got to say about this? Well, darling... 37 00:02:17,320 --> 00:02:19,200 Well, we're not, you know. 38 00:02:24,400 --> 00:02:27,960 I met Brian on a train as a schoolboy, aged 14. 39 00:02:27,960 --> 00:02:31,120 I was surprised how open and friendly he was, 40 00:02:31,120 --> 00:02:34,000 with a soft spoken middle class accent. 41 00:02:34,000 --> 00:02:37,240 He said he was a train spotter and this was his favourite line - 42 00:02:37,240 --> 00:02:39,120 The Great Western. 43 00:02:39,120 --> 00:02:42,280 I remember the shock when hearing he had died tragically 44 00:02:42,280 --> 00:02:44,640 just six years later. 45 00:02:44,640 --> 00:02:48,160 He seemed at the time to have the world at his feet. 46 00:02:51,400 --> 00:02:53,480 CHEERING 47 00:02:51,400 --> 00:02:53,480 Thank you very much. 48 00:02:54,840 --> 00:02:57,400 # Everybody wants somebody 49 00:02:57,400 --> 00:02:59,960 # Everybody wants somebody 50 00:02:59,960 --> 00:03:02,480 # Everybody needs somebody 51 00:03:02,480 --> 00:03:04,120 # Everybody... # 52 00:03:04,120 --> 00:03:05,920 I loved Mick and Keith. 53 00:03:06,880 --> 00:03:09,480 And Mick always was in awe of Brian. 54 00:03:09,480 --> 00:03:13,480 He absolutely loved him and I think he wanted to be Brian. 55 00:03:13,480 --> 00:03:15,560 # Everybody wants somebody 56 00:03:15,560 --> 00:03:19,000 # Everybody needs somebody... # 57 00:03:19,000 --> 00:03:22,120 Cos he had all the girls and he had all the fan mail. 58 00:03:22,120 --> 00:03:23,840 # Someone to love 59 00:03:23,840 --> 00:03:25,640 # Someone to kiss... # 60 00:03:25,640 --> 00:03:27,800 And Mick was trying really hard... 61 00:03:28,760 --> 00:03:31,240 ..to get girlfriends, I think, at that time. 62 00:03:31,240 --> 00:03:33,040 # Someone to please 63 00:03:33,040 --> 00:03:34,840 # Sometimes a squeeze... # 64 00:03:36,080 --> 00:03:39,000 That was what I remember, that he was very impressed 65 00:03:39,000 --> 00:03:43,280 with the way that Brian could just draw women to him. 66 00:03:43,280 --> 00:03:45,360 # I need you, you, you... # 67 00:03:45,360 --> 00:03:49,040 To Brian and Keith, it was like a brother relationship. 68 00:03:49,040 --> 00:03:52,480 I saw Keith so fascinated with the way Brian played 69 00:03:52,480 --> 00:03:56,200 and Brian showing him certain guitar things. 70 00:03:57,680 --> 00:03:59,640 # I need you 71 00:03:59,640 --> 00:04:02,120 # Yes, I do... # 72 00:04:02,120 --> 00:04:04,440 And so they were very close. 73 00:04:04,440 --> 00:04:08,280 They were all rowing together in this musical journey. 74 00:04:08,280 --> 00:04:11,600 Ladies and gentlemen, it's all about to happen. 75 00:04:11,600 --> 00:04:14,560 Let's hear it for the fantastic Rolling Stones! 76 00:04:14,560 --> 00:04:16,480 CHEERING 77 00:04:20,200 --> 00:04:21,800 # I'm all right 78 00:04:21,800 --> 00:04:23,400 # I'm all right 79 00:04:23,400 --> 00:04:25,160 # I'm all right 80 00:04:26,360 --> 00:04:27,960 # I'm all right 81 00:04:27,960 --> 00:04:29,760 # I'm all right 82 00:04:29,760 --> 00:04:31,280 # Whoa, whoa, whoa 83 00:04:31,280 --> 00:04:32,800 # Come on down 84 00:04:32,800 --> 00:04:34,720 # Come on down 85 00:04:34,720 --> 00:04:36,400 # Come on down... # 86 00:04:46,200 --> 00:04:49,080 Brian then, was as popular and famous as Mick. 87 00:04:49,080 --> 00:04:52,160 He was the heart and soul of the early Stones. 88 00:04:52,160 --> 00:04:55,360 Yet most people today haven't even heard of him. 89 00:05:00,840 --> 00:05:03,280 Brian answered most of the fan mail. 90 00:05:04,440 --> 00:05:07,080 "Dear Doreen, many thanks for your letter 91 00:05:07,080 --> 00:05:10,000 "and the great interest you've shown in the band. 92 00:05:10,000 --> 00:05:13,040 "The band is really an amalgamation of two bands, 93 00:05:13,040 --> 00:05:16,400 "the one being an R&B band I formed the year ago 94 00:05:16,400 --> 00:05:21,040 "and the other being a group run by Mick and Keith in south east London. 95 00:05:21,040 --> 00:05:22,920 "We have, I might add, 96 00:05:22,920 --> 00:05:25,720 "a habit of breaking audience attendance records." 97 00:05:25,720 --> 00:05:27,560 CHEERING AND APPLAUSE 98 00:05:31,480 --> 00:05:34,800 In the early days, who got all the fan mail? 99 00:05:34,800 --> 00:05:36,440 Brian. 100 00:05:36,440 --> 00:05:39,760 The secretaries told me, "Well, we get about 100 letters. 101 00:05:39,760 --> 00:05:42,080 "About 60 of them are for Brian, 102 00:05:42,080 --> 00:05:46,240 "about 25 are for Mick, about ten for Charlie and Keith. 103 00:05:46,240 --> 00:05:49,640 "And there's about the same for you, you know, and that's it, you know? 104 00:05:49,640 --> 00:05:51,560 "But Brian gets all the fan mail." 105 00:05:52,840 --> 00:05:55,520 He was brilliant, a brilliant musician. 106 00:05:55,520 --> 00:05:58,640 He shocked everybody with the quality of his playing. 107 00:05:59,920 --> 00:06:02,640 We all dedicated ourselves to the band 108 00:06:02,640 --> 00:06:04,840 and Brian more so than anybody else, 109 00:06:04,840 --> 00:06:07,680 because it was his band in the beginning. 110 00:06:07,680 --> 00:06:11,760 So it meant the world to him more than it did to the rest of us. 111 00:06:13,280 --> 00:06:16,360 Brian did everything. He wrote in the music papers. 112 00:06:16,360 --> 00:06:18,720 He discussed things about the origins 113 00:06:18,720 --> 00:06:21,840 of what is actually the blues and what is R&B. 114 00:06:21,840 --> 00:06:25,080 There's all those letters and things. I've got copies of them. 115 00:06:26,960 --> 00:06:29,320 When Brian advertised for a band, 116 00:06:29,320 --> 00:06:33,080 he chose every single person to come into his band. 117 00:06:34,640 --> 00:06:36,680 Let's recap on the Rolling Stones. 118 00:06:36,680 --> 00:06:39,320 How did you all get together in the first place? 119 00:06:39,320 --> 00:06:42,120 Actually, I answered an advert for a bass player, so... 120 00:06:42,120 --> 00:06:46,880 But the rest of them got together individually in jazz clubs and formed a sort of a group. 121 00:06:46,880 --> 00:06:49,040 How long ago was that? Two years. 122 00:06:49,040 --> 00:06:53,080 And what were you doing when you answered the advertisement? Engineering, actually. 123 00:06:53,080 --> 00:06:55,000 And we'll move on now to Brian. 124 00:06:55,000 --> 00:06:58,880 How long have you been with the Rolling Stones? Are you one of the original members? 125 00:06:58,880 --> 00:07:00,920 Yes, one of the original members. 126 00:07:00,920 --> 00:07:03,160 What were you doing before you joined? 127 00:07:03,160 --> 00:07:06,760 Well, just sort of bumming around, waiting for something to happen, really. 128 00:07:06,760 --> 00:07:10,000 I had quite a few jobs and I was trying to get a band going, 129 00:07:10,000 --> 00:07:13,200 but it was unsuccessful until I met up with Mick and Keith 130 00:07:13,200 --> 00:07:15,360 and then that was a successful band. 131 00:07:15,360 --> 00:07:18,840 Well, can you think back to your first engagement? Where was that? 132 00:07:18,840 --> 00:07:20,360 Erm... 133 00:07:20,360 --> 00:07:22,400 Marquee, Oxford Street, London. 134 00:07:22,400 --> 00:07:25,160 And may I ask how much you got paid for that assignment? 135 00:07:25,160 --> 00:07:29,400 20 quid, which was good, because six months later, we were still working for 10 quid. 136 00:07:29,400 --> 00:07:31,280 # It's all right 137 00:07:31,280 --> 00:07:33,120 # It's all right, children 138 00:07:33,120 --> 00:07:35,040 # It's all right 139 00:07:35,040 --> 00:07:36,960 # It's all right, children 140 00:07:36,960 --> 00:07:38,680 # It's all right 141 00:07:40,800 --> 00:07:42,720 # Come on around, baby 142 00:07:42,720 --> 00:07:44,840 # Come on around, baby 143 00:07:44,840 --> 00:07:46,760 # Come on around, baby 144 00:07:46,760 --> 00:07:48,640 # Come on around, baby 145 00:07:48,640 --> 00:07:51,360 # Come on around, baby... # 146 00:07:51,360 --> 00:07:53,520 Mick used to stand in front of us. 147 00:07:53,520 --> 00:07:55,520 Mick's got the maracas 148 00:07:55,520 --> 00:07:58,040 and the audience just joining in and all that. 149 00:08:04,120 --> 00:08:06,040 # Do you feel it, baby 150 00:08:06,040 --> 00:08:07,800 # Yeah, yeah, yeah 151 00:08:07,800 --> 00:08:09,600 # Do you feel it now 152 00:08:09,600 --> 00:08:11,040 # My, my, my... # 153 00:08:11,040 --> 00:08:15,560 It just got right into your body and it was like a tribal gathering. 154 00:08:15,560 --> 00:08:17,680 # All right, all right, all right 155 00:08:17,680 --> 00:08:19,880 # All right, all right, all right 156 00:08:19,880 --> 00:08:22,040 # All right, all right, all right 157 00:08:22,040 --> 00:08:24,680 # All right, all right, all right 158 00:08:24,680 --> 00:08:26,880 # All right, all right, all right. # 159 00:08:31,360 --> 00:08:33,480 CHEERING AND APPLAUSE 160 00:08:34,920 --> 00:08:37,120 The blues were everything to Brian. 161 00:08:37,120 --> 00:08:40,720 He saw the Stones as promoting unknown black blues music. 162 00:08:40,720 --> 00:08:45,720 "Dear Doreen, you raised the point in your letter about blues material. 163 00:08:45,720 --> 00:08:48,880 "You must appreciate that blues are not easy to put over 164 00:08:48,880 --> 00:08:51,200 "to the average club audience. 165 00:08:51,200 --> 00:08:54,440 "They prefer something more in the twisting and jumping run. 166 00:08:56,240 --> 00:08:58,720 "Once again, thank you for your interest 167 00:08:58,720 --> 00:09:00,720 "in rhythm and blues and ourselves. 168 00:09:02,120 --> 00:09:04,960 "It's wonderful music and deserves more recognition. 169 00:09:04,960 --> 00:09:08,520 "Yours sincerely, Brian Jones for Rolling Stones." 170 00:09:09,480 --> 00:09:13,280 Mick and Keith moved into the flat that Brian had. 171 00:09:13,280 --> 00:09:17,880 And Brian and Keith slept in a double bed in the front room 172 00:09:17,880 --> 00:09:21,240 and Mick slept in a single bed in the middle room. 173 00:09:21,240 --> 00:09:24,480 And then there was a kitchen, which was a disaster. 174 00:09:24,480 --> 00:09:27,840 And it was a very severe winter that year, '62, 175 00:09:27,840 --> 00:09:31,600 and we used to give him shillings to put in the bloody meter 176 00:09:31,600 --> 00:09:34,040 for the one little electric fire. 177 00:09:34,040 --> 00:09:36,920 Brian used to say, "What's the point of getting out of bed 178 00:09:36,920 --> 00:09:40,840 "when it's so fucking cold? We might as well stay in bed!" 179 00:09:40,840 --> 00:09:43,520 So they used to get the guitars and stay in bed 180 00:09:43,520 --> 00:09:45,600 and play guitar in bed. 181 00:09:45,600 --> 00:09:48,160 Luckily, we had nothing else to do. 182 00:09:48,160 --> 00:09:52,480 And since we were down to thieving potatoes out of supermarkets anyway 183 00:09:52,480 --> 00:09:55,480 and selling beer bottles back to the off-licence, 184 00:09:55,480 --> 00:09:58,960 there was nothing else to do except push on, you know, and just... 185 00:09:58,960 --> 00:10:02,440 I mean, it had to get better, even if it didn't get fantastic. 186 00:10:02,440 --> 00:10:04,360 You know, it was difficult. 187 00:10:04,360 --> 00:10:07,280 But I mean, it was fun too, since we were determined 188 00:10:07,280 --> 00:10:10,160 that we were going to stick together and play. 189 00:10:10,160 --> 00:10:11,760 Despite everything, 190 00:10:11,760 --> 00:10:14,360 Brian was always tried to keep his parents' approval. 191 00:10:14,360 --> 00:10:17,800 "Dear Mum and Dad, many thanks for your letters 192 00:10:17,800 --> 00:10:21,120 "and a thousand apologies for not writing back before now. 193 00:10:21,120 --> 00:10:23,640 "Being leader and spokesman for the Stones 194 00:10:23,640 --> 00:10:25,960 "means I'm always busy and tied up. 195 00:10:25,960 --> 00:10:29,680 "If it's possible, I would like to see you next Monday or Tuesday. 196 00:10:29,680 --> 00:10:33,400 "But I warn you, my hair is pretty long, although not untidy." 197 00:10:36,040 --> 00:10:38,120 "Success seems to be on its way, 198 00:10:38,120 --> 00:10:41,120 "though none of us are too happy about 'Come On'." 199 00:10:46,320 --> 00:10:49,240 # Everything is wrong since me and my baby parted 200 00:10:49,240 --> 00:10:52,160 # All day long I'm walking cos I couldn't get my car started 201 00:10:52,160 --> 00:10:54,200 # Laid off from my job and... # 202 00:10:54,200 --> 00:10:56,560 "This record does not do justice to the group." 203 00:10:56,560 --> 00:10:59,960 Brian would invite his mother and father to the Stones concerts. 204 00:10:59,960 --> 00:11:01,800 But they never came. 205 00:11:03,080 --> 00:11:06,040 And Brian taught Keith to play with him. 206 00:11:06,040 --> 00:11:08,200 You know, all the linking notes. 207 00:11:08,200 --> 00:11:09,880 There they go. 208 00:11:09,880 --> 00:11:13,000 See, one's going up and the other one's coming down. 209 00:11:13,000 --> 00:11:15,400 When one's coming down, he's going up. 210 00:11:18,720 --> 00:11:21,960 And it's so beautiful. It's so perfect what they're doing. 211 00:11:23,480 --> 00:11:27,800 We did a song called Mona, which is a Bo Diddley song. 212 00:11:27,800 --> 00:11:31,040 And you got... You'll have to excuse me, that's my bloody... 213 00:11:31,040 --> 00:11:33,960 It's switched itself off now, thank goodness. 214 00:11:36,120 --> 00:11:39,560 He learned to play along with the tremolo. 215 00:11:39,560 --> 00:11:42,560 You know, the - doo, doo, doo, doo, doo, doo, doo, doo, doo, doo. 216 00:11:42,560 --> 00:11:44,320 And in time. 217 00:11:44,320 --> 00:11:46,880 And so you'll hear it on Mona here. 218 00:11:51,640 --> 00:11:54,440 # Doo-doo-doo-doo-doo-doo-doo-doo. 219 00:11:57,720 --> 00:11:59,040 See? 220 00:11:59,040 --> 00:12:00,880 No-one was doing that then. 221 00:12:02,600 --> 00:12:05,080 # Doo-doo-doo-doo-doo-doo. # 222 00:12:08,880 --> 00:12:10,760 He was a fucker, you know. 223 00:12:10,760 --> 00:12:13,280 He would be really horrible sometimes. 224 00:12:13,280 --> 00:12:16,840 He had one side of him, which I have to say was really, 225 00:12:16,840 --> 00:12:21,400 I wouldn't say evil, but he was really cruel sometimes. 226 00:12:23,880 --> 00:12:26,600 There's photos of us being photographed 227 00:12:26,600 --> 00:12:30,200 and Brian's over the top of me dropping cigarette ash on my head. 228 00:12:32,160 --> 00:12:34,400 But he used to do things like that. 229 00:12:34,400 --> 00:12:37,200 And not only to me, but to everybody. 230 00:12:37,200 --> 00:12:41,040 He always had to prove himself. He was embarrassed about his size. 231 00:12:42,000 --> 00:12:44,120 And if he didn't get his way, 232 00:12:44,120 --> 00:12:46,720 he kind of used to get very aggressive 233 00:12:46,720 --> 00:12:50,240 and then he'd be all apologetic and, "Sorry, man, I didn't mean it." 234 00:12:50,240 --> 00:12:53,480 He'd stubbed that cigarette out on the back of your hand in the car... 235 00:12:54,840 --> 00:12:59,320 ..and you'd always forgive him because he was such a nice, sweet guy. 236 00:13:00,760 --> 00:13:04,160 Brian had immense opposition from his father. 237 00:13:05,400 --> 00:13:08,760 His dad didn't like him trying to be a musician. 238 00:13:08,760 --> 00:13:12,960 They just thought, get a proper job. You know, the same old thing. 239 00:13:14,160 --> 00:13:16,080 Up to a certain point, 240 00:13:16,080 --> 00:13:19,120 Brian was a perfectly normal, conventional boy, 241 00:13:19,120 --> 00:13:23,480 who was well behaved and was well liked. 242 00:13:23,480 --> 00:13:26,640 Liked, I suppose, because he was well behaved. 243 00:13:26,640 --> 00:13:32,000 He did his studies and he was quite a model schoolboy. 244 00:13:33,320 --> 00:13:37,240 And then there came this peculiar change in his early teens, 245 00:13:37,240 --> 00:13:41,080 at the time, I suppose, he began to become a man, 246 00:13:41,080 --> 00:13:45,800 where he began to get some resentment of authority. 247 00:13:46,960 --> 00:13:49,880 It was a rebellion against parental authority 248 00:13:49,880 --> 00:13:53,600 and it was certainly a rebellion against the school authority. 249 00:13:53,600 --> 00:13:59,040 He often used to say, why should he do something he was told 250 00:13:59,040 --> 00:14:02,080 just because the person who was telling him was older? 251 00:14:03,840 --> 00:14:07,000 From being an A grade student, Brian rebelled. 252 00:14:07,000 --> 00:14:10,680 He failed in his studies and put all his energy into music 253 00:14:10,680 --> 00:14:12,680 and picking up girls. 254 00:14:12,680 --> 00:14:15,600 He played occasionally clarinet in the school orchestra, 255 00:14:15,600 --> 00:14:19,240 but Brian was not really interested in anything else at the school. 256 00:14:19,240 --> 00:14:22,560 Not in athletics. Not in any sports. 257 00:14:25,720 --> 00:14:27,560 Not in the cadet force, 258 00:14:27,560 --> 00:14:30,120 not in debating societies or anything like that. 259 00:14:32,520 --> 00:14:36,200 He kept himself to himself quite a bit at school, I would say. 260 00:14:40,760 --> 00:14:43,280 In the beginning of the '60s, it was one society, 261 00:14:43,280 --> 00:14:47,640 just this mono culture, and it was our generation who went beyond that. 262 00:14:49,160 --> 00:14:52,680 It's a level of sort of middle class tightness, 263 00:14:52,680 --> 00:14:55,480 which you don't possibly see so much any more. 264 00:14:56,520 --> 00:14:59,240 He had a pretty bad relationship with his parents, 265 00:14:59,240 --> 00:15:03,040 who were very respectable, very straight, very posh. 266 00:15:03,040 --> 00:15:05,960 But he used to say he just couldn't stand it. 267 00:15:08,080 --> 00:15:12,120 The problem with Brian was that he came from a very, very bourgeois family... 268 00:15:13,880 --> 00:15:16,560 ..who saw themselves as better than the neighbours 269 00:15:16,560 --> 00:15:18,880 and better than this and better than that. 270 00:15:48,680 --> 00:15:54,360 All the time, his fanaticism for jazz music was coming to the fore. 271 00:15:54,360 --> 00:15:58,320 It was a great disappointment to us and a source of considerable anxiety 272 00:15:58,320 --> 00:16:03,720 when he became so wrapped up in his love of jazz music 273 00:16:03,720 --> 00:16:07,480 that in spite of everything we could do or say, 274 00:16:07,480 --> 00:16:09,880 he went off and did it. 275 00:16:09,880 --> 00:16:12,520 # Wop-bop-a-loo-mop alop-bom-bom 276 00:16:12,520 --> 00:16:14,600 # Tutti frutti, oh rutti 277 00:16:14,600 --> 00:16:17,200 # Tutti frutti, woo 278 00:16:17,200 --> 00:16:19,640 # Tutti frutti, oh rutti 279 00:16:19,640 --> 00:16:22,360 # Tutti frutti, oh rutti 280 00:16:22,360 --> 00:16:24,920 # Tutti frutti, oh rutti 281 00:16:24,920 --> 00:16:27,000 # Awop-bop-a-loo-mop alop-bom-bom... # 282 00:16:44,400 --> 00:16:46,640 # Tutti frutti, oh rutti 283 00:16:46,640 --> 00:16:49,200 # Tutti frutti, woo 284 00:16:49,200 --> 00:16:51,760 # Tutti frutti, oh rutti 285 00:16:51,760 --> 00:16:54,400 # Tutti frutti, oh rutti 286 00:16:54,400 --> 00:16:56,520 # Tutti frutti, oh rutti... # 287 00:16:56,520 --> 00:16:59,360 Frustrated by his parents' disapproval, 288 00:16:59,360 --> 00:17:03,960 Brian adopted Val's family and spent all his time playing blues music. 289 00:17:03,960 --> 00:17:06,560 Val Corbett, yes, I knew her very well. 290 00:17:10,640 --> 00:17:14,320 She was rather stylish and I thought she was rather nice. 291 00:17:15,720 --> 00:17:17,960 Brian was quite besotted with her 292 00:17:17,960 --> 00:17:20,800 and she, of course, was besotted with him. 293 00:17:20,800 --> 00:17:23,800 They were obviously made for each other. 294 00:17:28,440 --> 00:17:31,680 The next thing we heard was that Val was pregnant 295 00:17:31,680 --> 00:17:34,960 and she at first was terribly pleased 296 00:17:34,960 --> 00:17:38,080 because she and Brian were going to leave Cheltenham, 297 00:17:38,080 --> 00:17:41,080 go and live in London and get a place together. 298 00:17:43,000 --> 00:17:46,800 And suddenly it dawned on her that wasn't going to happen. 299 00:18:18,120 --> 00:18:23,400 On December the 22nd, 1960, Brian, aged 17, was kicked out of his home. 300 00:18:23,400 --> 00:18:26,120 His father would later refer to this as 301 00:18:26,120 --> 00:18:28,480 "my most drastic of all actions, 302 00:18:28,480 --> 00:18:31,600 "which I shall never forget or cease to worry over." 303 00:18:54,320 --> 00:18:56,360 Brian, now rejected by his parents, 304 00:18:56,360 --> 00:18:58,880 moved in with Pat and her sister, Betty, 305 00:18:58,880 --> 00:19:01,720 and was looked after by their parents. 306 00:19:01,720 --> 00:19:04,280 This became a pattern of Brian's behaviour - 307 00:19:04,280 --> 00:19:08,080 adopting other families, getting the daughters pregnant and then leaving. 308 00:19:08,080 --> 00:19:11,120 This would happen at least five times. 309 00:19:11,120 --> 00:19:13,240 Do you feel bitter at all? 310 00:19:14,560 --> 00:19:16,520 I'm not actually bitter. 311 00:19:16,520 --> 00:19:18,600 I feel quite sorry for Brian in a way, 312 00:19:18,600 --> 00:19:20,600 because the kind of person he is, 313 00:19:20,600 --> 00:19:23,840 you can never be happy, could never have true friends. 314 00:19:23,840 --> 00:19:28,360 The only friends he has probably like him because of what he is. 315 00:19:28,360 --> 00:19:32,320 I think if he was turned out on to the streets, nobody would want to know Brian. 316 00:19:32,320 --> 00:19:35,480 He's not the kind of person that you take to 317 00:19:35,480 --> 00:19:37,440 because he's so cynical. 318 00:19:37,440 --> 00:19:39,440 He's got no feelings for anybody. 319 00:19:39,440 --> 00:19:42,040 He just uses people for his own good. 320 00:19:42,040 --> 00:19:44,720 And when he's finished, he throws them aside. 321 00:19:44,720 --> 00:19:46,720 So I just feel sorry for him. 322 00:19:48,480 --> 00:19:51,400 Brian's own life mirrored the rebellious spirit of the Stones 323 00:19:51,400 --> 00:19:53,560 more than any other member. 324 00:19:53,560 --> 00:19:55,600 Expelled from two schools. 325 00:19:55,600 --> 00:19:57,560 Thrown out of his home. 326 00:19:57,560 --> 00:19:59,680 A reckless personal life. 327 00:19:59,680 --> 00:20:01,960 The blues was Brian's salvation. 328 00:20:20,880 --> 00:20:23,000 # Oh, a child's coming 329 00:20:23,000 --> 00:20:26,440 # He's going to be, going to be a rollin' stone 330 00:20:26,440 --> 00:20:29,600 # He's going to be a rollin' stone... # 331 00:20:41,520 --> 00:20:43,600 # Well, I feel 332 00:20:43,600 --> 00:20:45,800 # Yes, I feel. # 333 00:20:47,720 --> 00:20:49,360 CHEERING 334 00:21:10,040 --> 00:21:11,840 Tell us something about him, Brian. 335 00:21:11,840 --> 00:21:13,440 When we started playing together, 336 00:21:13,440 --> 00:21:16,280 we started playing because we wanted to play rhythm and blues. 337 00:21:16,280 --> 00:21:18,680 And Howlin' Wolf was one of our greatest idols. 338 00:21:18,680 --> 00:21:22,800 And it's a great pleasure to finally be booked on this show tonight... Thanks to Howlin' Wolf. 339 00:21:22,800 --> 00:21:26,200 So I think it's about time you shut up and we had Howlin' Wolf onstage. 340 00:21:26,200 --> 00:21:28,720 I agree! Let's get him on. Howlin' Wolf! 341 00:21:28,720 --> 00:21:30,840 It was a huge deal for those guys 342 00:21:30,840 --> 00:21:33,720 because they'd just never really been on TV. 343 00:21:33,720 --> 00:21:36,920 To be there are peak time in America, 344 00:21:36,920 --> 00:21:39,440 that was an incredibly big deal. 345 00:21:41,480 --> 00:21:44,360 # How many more years 346 00:21:45,480 --> 00:21:48,400 # Have I got to let you dog me around? 347 00:21:50,800 --> 00:21:53,520 # How many more years 348 00:21:55,160 --> 00:21:58,200 # Have I got to let you dog me around? # 349 00:21:59,160 --> 00:22:02,240 It's an incredible moment and there are still people 350 00:22:02,240 --> 00:22:06,560 who put it as one of the greatest TV moments of the 1960s. 351 00:22:14,880 --> 00:22:17,440 There's a great period in the first couple of years 352 00:22:17,440 --> 00:22:19,800 where he seemed to have real insight. 353 00:22:19,800 --> 00:22:22,160 And I'm talking about 1961, 1962. 354 00:22:22,160 --> 00:22:24,520 # I'll try to show it if you're driving me back 355 00:22:26,320 --> 00:22:28,520 # Your love for me has got to be real 356 00:22:30,120 --> 00:22:32,200 # For you to know just how I feel 357 00:22:33,720 --> 00:22:35,960 # Love for real and not fade away... # 358 00:22:37,920 --> 00:22:42,760 So you worked out both the keys of open tunings of blues, 359 00:22:42,760 --> 00:22:45,360 which is D slash E, which is open D or E, 360 00:22:45,360 --> 00:22:48,160 which is Elmore James, and he was open G, 361 00:22:48,160 --> 00:22:50,880 which is Muddy Waters and Robert Johnson. 362 00:22:58,640 --> 00:23:01,040 # I'm going to tell you how it's going to be 363 00:23:02,760 --> 00:23:05,200 # You're going to give your love to me 364 00:23:06,440 --> 00:23:08,600 # Love to last more than one day... # 365 00:23:08,600 --> 00:23:11,120 So what did we do for the fifth single? 366 00:23:11,120 --> 00:23:14,680 We wanted to do a blues and everybody said, 367 00:23:14,680 --> 00:23:18,400 "Don't do it because you'll destroy your career. 368 00:23:18,400 --> 00:23:22,760 "No-one's ever done a blues record for a single in England." 369 00:23:22,760 --> 00:23:24,720 You know, it's the worst thing. 370 00:23:24,720 --> 00:23:28,720 Like they said to Ray Charles, "Don't do a country album because it will destroy you." 371 00:23:28,720 --> 00:23:31,080 And it was the greatest thing he ever did. 372 00:23:31,080 --> 00:23:33,280 Well, when we did Little Red Rooster... 373 00:23:34,280 --> 00:23:37,040 ..they said, you know, "You're going to kill yourself." 374 00:23:37,040 --> 00:23:40,440 It came out on the Friday and on the Monday it was number one. 375 00:23:40,440 --> 00:23:41,960 And Brian... 376 00:23:43,320 --> 00:23:45,960 ..controlled the whole band. I'll start again. 377 00:23:49,560 --> 00:23:51,440 That's Brian with a slide. 378 00:23:55,760 --> 00:23:57,680 See, he's doing it. 379 00:23:57,680 --> 00:24:00,120 # I am the little red rooster... # 380 00:24:00,120 --> 00:24:02,400 What is anybody else doing? 381 00:24:06,480 --> 00:24:08,720 See, he's making the song. 382 00:24:10,160 --> 00:24:13,800 # Everybody wants somebody 383 00:24:13,800 --> 00:24:18,360 # Everybody needs somebody 384 00:24:18,360 --> 00:24:20,920 # To love... # 385 00:24:20,920 --> 00:24:22,960 So we were completely unique. 386 00:24:24,280 --> 00:24:26,000 # Someone to kiss 387 00:24:26,000 --> 00:24:27,440 # Oh, yeah 388 00:24:27,440 --> 00:24:29,240 # Sometimes a miss 389 00:24:29,240 --> 00:24:31,160 # Someone to please 390 00:24:32,400 --> 00:24:34,120 # And sometimes a squeeze 391 00:24:35,520 --> 00:24:37,680 # I need you, you, you 392 00:24:37,680 --> 00:24:40,440 # I need you, you, you 393 00:24:40,440 --> 00:24:42,280 # I need you... # 394 00:24:42,280 --> 00:24:44,840 Bo Diddley couldn't believe how good we were. 395 00:24:44,840 --> 00:24:46,640 # You, you, you 396 00:24:47,600 --> 00:24:49,800 # Sometimes I feel like 397 00:24:49,800 --> 00:24:52,200 # I get a little sad inside 398 00:24:52,200 --> 00:24:54,520 # When my baby mistreats me 399 00:24:54,520 --> 00:24:57,040 # I kind of get a little bit mad 400 00:24:57,040 --> 00:24:58,840 # I need you... # 401 00:24:58,840 --> 00:25:01,920 AUDIENCE: Rolling Stones! Rolling Stones! Rolling Stones! 402 00:25:15,440 --> 00:25:18,920 # Oh, Carol, don't let him steal your heart away 403 00:25:20,800 --> 00:25:24,320 # I'm going to learn to dance if it takes me all night and day 404 00:25:26,880 --> 00:25:29,960 # Climb into my machine so we can groove on out 405 00:25:32,160 --> 00:25:35,480 # I know some swinging little joint where we can jump and shout 406 00:25:37,360 --> 00:25:39,280 # It's not too far back... # 407 00:25:39,280 --> 00:25:41,880 There was rioting whenever the Stones played. 408 00:25:41,880 --> 00:25:44,840 It was an outpouring of emotion against the authorities 409 00:25:44,840 --> 00:25:47,800 and the traditional ways of doing things. 410 00:25:49,600 --> 00:25:52,600 # A little cutie takes your hat and you can thank her ma'am... # 411 00:25:52,600 --> 00:25:55,440 The way the Stones looked and dressed, 412 00:25:55,440 --> 00:25:58,720 their hair and sexuality, was a whole new feeling. 413 00:26:01,480 --> 00:26:05,480 Everyone fancied both Brian and Mick, both male and female. 414 00:26:05,480 --> 00:26:08,800 They had this extraordinary androgynous quality. 415 00:26:08,800 --> 00:26:11,840 # I'm going to learn to dance if it takes me all night and day... # 416 00:26:19,040 --> 00:26:20,880 SCREAMING AND SHOUTING 417 00:26:48,960 --> 00:26:53,960 Brian met Linda Lawrence in 1962 and was adopted into her family. 418 00:26:53,960 --> 00:26:55,800 I only saw him. 419 00:26:56,760 --> 00:26:58,480 Yeah, and heard him. 420 00:26:58,480 --> 00:27:00,480 The sound was what I was connecting to 421 00:27:00,480 --> 00:27:03,400 and it was the harmonica and the slide guitar. 422 00:27:05,200 --> 00:27:08,440 The first time I'd ever heard that kind of music 423 00:27:08,440 --> 00:27:11,120 or felt that kind of feeling, it was just... 424 00:27:11,120 --> 00:27:12,760 Just amazing. 425 00:27:13,960 --> 00:27:18,320 Yeah, a whole feeling came over me that I'd never felt before. 426 00:27:20,520 --> 00:27:22,800 # My days are pretty rough 427 00:27:22,800 --> 00:27:26,480 # I want you to come back, come back, come back... # 428 00:27:26,480 --> 00:27:28,360 It was instant. 429 00:27:28,360 --> 00:27:30,560 Like, if you can call it love. 430 00:27:30,560 --> 00:27:34,840 At the time, I wouldn't have known what that was, but now I do. 431 00:27:37,120 --> 00:27:39,480 There was a point that came where he said, 432 00:27:39,480 --> 00:27:43,560 "Can I come stay with you in Windsor with your parents?" 433 00:27:43,560 --> 00:27:45,760 And I said, "Yeah." 434 00:27:45,760 --> 00:27:48,000 Yeah, my parents loved him. 435 00:27:51,800 --> 00:27:54,720 # Somebody stop this pain in my heart 436 00:27:58,040 --> 00:28:01,600 # My, my, my, my, my, my 437 00:28:01,600 --> 00:28:03,640 # Don't you know, one day 438 00:28:05,280 --> 00:28:07,440 # My days are pretty rough 439 00:28:07,440 --> 00:28:09,240 # Won't you love me? 440 00:28:09,240 --> 00:28:10,760 # Love me. # 441 00:28:20,600 --> 00:28:23,080 Most of the time it was all about music 442 00:28:23,080 --> 00:28:25,720 and what records he's going to get. 443 00:28:25,720 --> 00:28:29,120 And how he was going to play this and, you know... 444 00:28:29,120 --> 00:28:33,600 And I would often put the records on over and over again 445 00:28:33,600 --> 00:28:36,360 so that he could get the riffs and things. 446 00:28:36,360 --> 00:28:40,600 Put it back on and have a listen and get the sound. 447 00:28:48,840 --> 00:28:51,280 Seeing them get more and more popular 448 00:28:51,280 --> 00:28:54,320 and more and more people coming to see them, 449 00:28:54,320 --> 00:28:56,440 it was very exciting. 450 00:28:58,160 --> 00:28:59,880 SCREAMING 451 00:29:15,080 --> 00:29:18,200 And we got very, very much in love. 452 00:30:00,320 --> 00:30:03,400 He was loved by so many people. I didn't mind that. 453 00:30:03,400 --> 00:30:06,080 I knew he loved me, so I didn't care. 454 00:30:06,080 --> 00:30:08,040 And I knew we were young. 455 00:30:08,040 --> 00:30:09,920 I just knew he loved me. 456 00:30:09,920 --> 00:30:11,320 And I... 457 00:30:11,320 --> 00:30:13,520 I felt like it's OK. 458 00:30:13,520 --> 00:30:15,880 You know, he'll be back. 459 00:30:53,920 --> 00:30:55,680 Brian's rivalry with Mick 460 00:30:55,680 --> 00:30:58,000 for leadership of the Stones was growing. 461 00:30:58,000 --> 00:31:00,000 Mick was the natural frontman 462 00:31:00,000 --> 00:31:02,880 and Brian's insecurity played into this. 463 00:31:02,880 --> 00:31:05,880 A visible friction grew up between them. 464 00:31:05,880 --> 00:31:08,440 It began to dominate Brian's thinking. 465 00:31:27,200 --> 00:31:30,800 Brian sent me to a modelling course for a little while in London 466 00:31:30,800 --> 00:31:34,160 and I had taken the hairdressing course. 467 00:31:34,160 --> 00:31:37,240 So I was really into hair and I was saying, 468 00:31:37,240 --> 00:31:40,240 "Just grow your hair, don't cut it", you know. 469 00:31:40,240 --> 00:31:44,520 And then when it did get quite long, I would trim it, 470 00:31:44,520 --> 00:31:47,880 but not cut it, and make that shape. 471 00:31:47,880 --> 00:31:49,960 He was like a gentleman. 472 00:31:49,960 --> 00:31:52,560 He was all dressed in his white shirt and his jacket 473 00:31:52,560 --> 00:31:54,680 and he was open doors. 474 00:31:54,680 --> 00:31:59,200 It was that kind of... Very gentlemanly and gentle spoken. 475 00:32:00,480 --> 00:32:03,080 He had a family, obviously. 476 00:32:03,080 --> 00:32:06,040 And after a while, we drove down. 477 00:32:06,040 --> 00:32:08,640 He wanted me to meet his parents. 478 00:32:09,880 --> 00:32:13,280 And I know he didn't take many people down to meet his parents, 479 00:32:13,280 --> 00:32:15,520 so I knew it was something special. 480 00:32:15,520 --> 00:32:19,440 Did you feel that Brian cared a lot what his parents thought? 481 00:32:19,440 --> 00:32:21,160 Oh, very much. 482 00:32:21,160 --> 00:32:23,920 That was the whole thing, that he really did want them 483 00:32:23,920 --> 00:32:27,600 to like what he was doing and, you know, be proud of him. 484 00:32:27,600 --> 00:32:31,000 That was the whole point, I think, of us going there. 485 00:32:32,640 --> 00:32:35,200 They wanted him to have a different career. 486 00:32:35,200 --> 00:32:40,800 Something more like what his father had been doing - a good paying job. 487 00:32:40,800 --> 00:32:45,200 But Brian kind of saw that and he kind of rebelled 488 00:32:45,200 --> 00:32:47,440 and stepped out of it. 489 00:32:52,360 --> 00:32:55,120 # I warned you baby from time to time 490 00:32:55,120 --> 00:32:57,600 # You don't listen so pay me no mind 491 00:32:57,600 --> 00:32:59,480 # About moving on 492 00:32:59,480 --> 00:33:01,520 # Yeah, I'm moving on... # 493 00:33:03,240 --> 00:33:05,120 We became the love generation 494 00:33:05,120 --> 00:33:07,280 and the music was going to be the opening. 495 00:33:08,240 --> 00:33:10,600 # Mister Engineer with your throttle in hand 496 00:33:10,600 --> 00:33:13,080 # Take me back to that Southern land 497 00:33:13,080 --> 00:33:14,800 # It's called moving 498 00:33:14,800 --> 00:33:17,200 # Keep a rolling on 499 00:33:18,400 --> 00:33:20,240 # You're flying too high 500 00:33:20,240 --> 00:33:22,280 # For my old sky I'll move on. # 501 00:34:27,600 --> 00:34:31,040 Dawn Molloy was the mother of Brian's fifth child. 502 00:34:31,040 --> 00:34:33,040 I was 18. 503 00:34:33,040 --> 00:34:36,120 I don't think I'd ever been in love before. 504 00:34:36,120 --> 00:34:38,840 Every time I saw him, my heart skipped a beat. 505 00:34:38,840 --> 00:34:40,840 And every time we saw me, he... 506 00:34:40,840 --> 00:34:43,720 It was obvious that he wanted me. 507 00:34:45,680 --> 00:34:48,440 Being a Catholic, I was very... 508 00:34:49,400 --> 00:34:50,800 ..inhibited. 509 00:34:50,800 --> 00:34:53,040 He kind of got that out of me. 510 00:34:53,040 --> 00:34:56,800 Not to be ashamed of my body and what I could do. 511 00:34:58,560 --> 00:35:01,360 He was very, very sexy. 512 00:35:03,440 --> 00:35:07,200 Yeah, the way he made love, he just was insatiable. 513 00:35:07,200 --> 00:35:09,160 He made me feel... 514 00:35:10,280 --> 00:35:11,680 ..amazing. 515 00:35:11,680 --> 00:35:13,440 He just made me feel... 516 00:35:14,400 --> 00:35:16,200 ..loved and special. 517 00:35:17,360 --> 00:35:19,920 He was an amazing teacher 518 00:35:19,920 --> 00:35:22,960 of how you should make love to a woman. 519 00:35:25,880 --> 00:35:28,640 My parents, they had such a thing against... 520 00:35:29,600 --> 00:35:32,120 ..long-haired pop stars. 521 00:35:33,080 --> 00:35:35,040 "Oh, this music's no good." 522 00:35:35,040 --> 00:35:38,200 You know how it is. They didn't want any of it. 523 00:35:39,680 --> 00:35:42,320 I never dreamed he'd come to our apartment. 524 00:35:42,320 --> 00:35:44,520 There he was, on the doorstep. 525 00:35:44,520 --> 00:35:46,640 "Good evening, Mrs Malloy." 526 00:35:46,640 --> 00:35:48,520 And kissed her hand. 527 00:35:48,520 --> 00:35:50,320 I mean, who does that? 528 00:35:50,320 --> 00:35:51,760 It's just... 529 00:35:53,280 --> 00:35:54,960 He had suave. 530 00:35:56,320 --> 00:35:58,400 They liked him in the end. 531 00:35:58,400 --> 00:36:02,200 Then my mum said, "Well, why don't you go down to your bedroom? 532 00:36:02,200 --> 00:36:04,360 "Show Brian your bedroom." 533 00:36:05,920 --> 00:36:08,840 # I'm going to tell you how it's going to be... # 534 00:36:08,840 --> 00:36:11,320 And then he turned around and asked my parents 535 00:36:11,320 --> 00:36:13,320 if he could take me on tour. 536 00:36:13,320 --> 00:36:15,840 There's no way my dad is going to let me go. 537 00:36:15,840 --> 00:36:17,560 But my dad said, 538 00:36:17,560 --> 00:36:21,440 "Well, you know, as long as you're in a different room 539 00:36:21,440 --> 00:36:24,120 "and you take care of her, it's OK." 540 00:36:33,760 --> 00:36:35,920 The security wasn't around, 541 00:36:35,920 --> 00:36:40,080 so you could just walk into a hotel and the girls were everywhere. 542 00:36:40,080 --> 00:36:43,400 We went to our room and there's this girl there 543 00:36:43,400 --> 00:36:46,720 and she's just sitting on the bed stark naked. 544 00:36:46,720 --> 00:36:49,880 And then we went into the bathroom and there's another one. 545 00:36:49,880 --> 00:36:53,160 And they're willing to give everything to them. 546 00:36:54,840 --> 00:36:57,760 The police had no idea what hit them. 547 00:36:57,760 --> 00:37:00,440 They were completely taken by surprise. 548 00:37:00,440 --> 00:37:02,480 And it was terrifying. 549 00:37:08,880 --> 00:37:10,720 I could see all their feet, 550 00:37:10,720 --> 00:37:13,160 trampling on people in stiletto heels, 551 00:37:13,160 --> 00:37:15,120 going for his arms and stuff. 552 00:37:15,120 --> 00:37:17,280 I thought I was going to die. 553 00:37:17,280 --> 00:37:21,360 It was like being in a tube train and you can't move. 554 00:37:22,480 --> 00:37:24,280 I think Mick lost some hair. 555 00:37:24,280 --> 00:37:27,480 They pulled... Literally pulled hair out of his head. 556 00:37:27,480 --> 00:37:32,120 And I started to fall back and I fell back and Mick caught me. 557 00:37:33,120 --> 00:37:36,280 Brian was looking for me, so he came around the corner 558 00:37:36,280 --> 00:37:38,640 and saw me in the arms of Mick. 559 00:37:38,640 --> 00:37:40,120 And then... 560 00:37:41,080 --> 00:37:42,720 ..Brian lost it. 561 00:37:42,720 --> 00:37:46,560 "Keep your hands off my fucking girl! You're not having all my girlfriends!" 562 00:37:46,560 --> 00:37:48,240 And all that kind of stuff. 563 00:37:48,240 --> 00:37:51,440 Mick said, "Hey, I'm just holding her, you know. She just fell. 564 00:37:51,440 --> 00:37:53,320 "Don't be a dick", you know? 565 00:37:53,320 --> 00:37:56,400 And then Bill said, "Yeah, sometimes you get like that. 566 00:37:56,400 --> 00:37:58,840 "You just have to leave him, he'll be fine." 567 00:38:00,440 --> 00:38:02,640 Everybody went through their... 568 00:38:03,600 --> 00:38:05,520 ..star trip, you know. 569 00:38:05,520 --> 00:38:11,240 And I think Brian was the only one that it changed 570 00:38:11,240 --> 00:38:15,480 in a really deep way and probably not for the better. 571 00:38:15,480 --> 00:38:18,400 It was very difficult for him, you know, 572 00:38:18,400 --> 00:38:22,440 and not made any easier probably by the rest of us, you know, 573 00:38:22,440 --> 00:38:26,160 because nobody had the time to look after somebody else. 574 00:38:26,160 --> 00:38:31,880 If one of them isn't quite strong enough to deal with that situation 575 00:38:31,880 --> 00:38:34,720 there's very little you can do to help him. 576 00:38:37,440 --> 00:38:40,760 They were all a little wary, I think, of Brian 577 00:38:40,760 --> 00:38:42,840 because he could be kind of moody. 578 00:38:42,840 --> 00:38:45,120 But I think they put that on him 579 00:38:45,120 --> 00:38:47,560 because he was supposed to be the leader 580 00:38:47,560 --> 00:38:49,880 and he was no longer the leader. 581 00:38:58,160 --> 00:39:02,240 Mick ruled the roost as far as what they were going to play 582 00:39:02,240 --> 00:39:06,240 and the fact that he could write music and Brian couldn't. 583 00:39:06,240 --> 00:39:09,560 I think there may have been a little jealousy there. 584 00:39:09,560 --> 00:39:12,840 The fact that Mick and Keith were so close. 585 00:39:13,800 --> 00:39:15,760 # Yeah, yeah, yeah 586 00:39:15,760 --> 00:39:17,560 # I feel all right 587 00:39:17,560 --> 00:39:19,440 # I feel all right, children... # 588 00:39:21,400 --> 00:39:24,480 I think they were a little bit lost until Andrew came along. 589 00:39:24,480 --> 00:39:26,720 And then Andrew kind of laid down the law 590 00:39:26,720 --> 00:39:29,680 and said what he wanted to do, which was all very well. 591 00:39:29,680 --> 00:39:33,400 And I thought that was a good idea to have a manager, 592 00:39:33,400 --> 00:39:35,560 but I don't think Brian realised 593 00:39:35,560 --> 00:39:38,760 that he would be handing everything over to him. 594 00:39:46,680 --> 00:39:49,920 They had two different ideas of what they wanted to do. 595 00:39:49,920 --> 00:39:55,000 Brian loved Howlin' Wolf and he wanted to stay as a blues group. 596 00:39:55,000 --> 00:39:57,360 Andrew wanted them to be pop. 597 00:40:00,000 --> 00:40:04,080 MUSIC: Little Red Rooster by The Rolling Stones 598 00:40:21,280 --> 00:40:25,800 And I think Andrew and Brian just didn't hit it off. 599 00:40:25,800 --> 00:40:29,000 And I think they just got into loggerheads. 600 00:40:29,000 --> 00:40:30,520 Pop sold. 601 00:40:30,520 --> 00:40:33,960 And obviously Andrew wanted to make money. 602 00:40:33,960 --> 00:40:35,480 Thank you. 603 00:40:35,480 --> 00:40:37,160 "Dear Melinda, 604 00:40:37,160 --> 00:40:39,080 "Mick is the head of the group. 605 00:40:39,080 --> 00:40:41,640 "At one time I was, but Mick took over. 606 00:40:41,640 --> 00:40:44,280 "Don't ask me why. We just thought it would be better, 607 00:40:44,280 --> 00:40:45,960 "as he is a good leader. 608 00:40:45,960 --> 00:40:49,200 "Mick's birthday was on the 26th of July. 609 00:40:49,200 --> 00:40:51,280 "I must rush, dear, honestly. 610 00:40:51,280 --> 00:40:53,440 "Brian Jones." 611 00:40:53,440 --> 00:40:57,520 I guess he was a little jealous of Mick because he was... 612 00:40:57,520 --> 00:41:00,160 He had all the fame sort of thing. 613 00:41:00,160 --> 00:41:04,040 But I don't think Brian realised that he had just as much too. 614 00:41:04,040 --> 00:41:06,120 FANS SCREAM 615 00:41:11,880 --> 00:41:13,720 # Oh, Carol 616 00:41:13,720 --> 00:41:16,040 # Don't let him steal your heart away 617 00:41:17,800 --> 00:41:19,360 # I'm gonna learn to dance 618 00:41:19,360 --> 00:41:22,040 # If it takes me all night and day 619 00:41:24,040 --> 00:41:27,280 # Climb into my machine so we can groove on out... # 620 00:41:30,440 --> 00:41:35,320 MUSIC DROWNED BY SCREAMS 621 00:41:41,320 --> 00:41:43,360 I think he would've liked to have been like Mick, 622 00:41:43,360 --> 00:41:44,880 but then no-one's like Mick. 623 00:41:44,880 --> 00:41:48,520 He has this charisma about him, he has amazing energy. 624 00:41:48,520 --> 00:41:51,520 # A little cutie takes your hat and you can thank her, ma'am... # 625 00:41:53,920 --> 00:41:57,040 SCREAMING 626 00:42:03,960 --> 00:42:08,160 I understand, Brian, because I think he was a lost person. 627 00:42:11,160 --> 00:42:14,800 The success of the Stones was unbelievable. 628 00:42:14,800 --> 00:42:18,360 But at a time when Brian could have celebrated the success 629 00:42:18,360 --> 00:42:21,640 of the band he had founded, he was locked in conflict 630 00:42:21,640 --> 00:42:23,720 with problems of his own creation. 631 00:42:26,200 --> 00:42:29,000 The reason I found out about Linda was because I was told 632 00:42:29,000 --> 00:42:30,480 to go to Torquay. 633 00:42:30,480 --> 00:42:33,000 And then Stu told me, no, I couldn't go in and see him 634 00:42:33,000 --> 00:42:35,000 because Linda was there with the baby. 635 00:42:35,000 --> 00:42:37,400 I'm like, "What... Whose baby?", you know? 636 00:42:37,400 --> 00:42:39,000 He said, "Well, Brian's." 637 00:42:39,000 --> 00:42:41,480 # Well, you know my lovin' not fade away... # 638 00:42:41,480 --> 00:42:44,640 Fame is a very strange thing. 639 00:42:44,640 --> 00:42:47,120 And he wanted that as well. 640 00:42:47,120 --> 00:42:48,840 And so that was the choice 641 00:42:48,840 --> 00:42:51,160 he had to make. 642 00:42:51,160 --> 00:42:52,880 And... 643 00:42:52,880 --> 00:42:54,040 And he did. 644 00:42:54,040 --> 00:42:56,040 FANS SCREAM, GUITAR CHORDS 645 00:42:58,680 --> 00:43:01,040 I was at all the gigs. 646 00:43:01,040 --> 00:43:03,000 The other girlfriends weren't allowed to come, 647 00:43:03,000 --> 00:43:05,040 but I would always be at the gig. 648 00:43:08,640 --> 00:43:12,440 The last one that I was at before I had Julian 649 00:43:12,440 --> 00:43:14,320 was the Bo Diddley concert. 650 00:43:14,320 --> 00:43:18,360 # Hey, Bo Diddley Hey, Bo Diddley 651 00:43:18,360 --> 00:43:22,120 # Hey, Bo Diddley Hey, Bo Diddley 652 00:43:22,120 --> 00:43:26,160 # Hey, Bo Diddley Hey, Bo Diddley 653 00:43:26,160 --> 00:43:30,040 # Hey, Bo Diddley Hey, Bo Diddley 654 00:43:30,040 --> 00:43:34,040 # I got a girl lived on a hill Hey, Bo Diddley... # 655 00:43:34,040 --> 00:43:36,840 I bonded so well with Bo Diddley 656 00:43:36,840 --> 00:43:38,280 and it was all fantastic. 657 00:43:38,280 --> 00:43:41,040 They thought that Brian and I were getting married. 658 00:43:41,040 --> 00:43:43,960 I thought we were getting married. 659 00:43:43,960 --> 00:43:47,040 So it was a bit of a shock when Andrew Oldham came in and said, 660 00:43:47,040 --> 00:43:51,440 "You can't have girlfriends and wives and, you know, it's..." 661 00:43:51,440 --> 00:43:53,560 Because I knew that he loved me 662 00:43:53,560 --> 00:43:56,400 and it was really hard to understand. 663 00:43:56,400 --> 00:44:00,680 And I kept saying to myself, "Well, I have to let go 664 00:44:00,680 --> 00:44:02,800 "and he'll be back." 665 00:44:06,560 --> 00:44:08,200 And my dad, when he left, said, 666 00:44:08,200 --> 00:44:11,040 "And there's no-one to look after him now." 667 00:44:12,320 --> 00:44:13,800 Brian tormented himself because 668 00:44:13,800 --> 00:44:15,240 he couldn't write songs 669 00:44:15,240 --> 00:44:16,880 like Mick and Keith, 670 00:44:16,880 --> 00:44:20,400 whose compositions had moved the band on to a whole new level. 671 00:44:20,400 --> 00:44:21,640 Say hi to Brian. 672 00:44:21,640 --> 00:44:24,480 Brian is one of the writers of most of the things, right? 673 00:44:24,480 --> 00:44:27,360 No, I'm not, actually... Well, I'm not really a writer. 674 00:44:27,360 --> 00:44:29,320 Ah, we do write a lot of stuff together - 675 00:44:29,320 --> 00:44:31,280 it comes out under the Nanker Phelge pseudonym - 676 00:44:31,280 --> 00:44:33,880 but Mick and Keith write more...many of our... Thank you, Bill. 677 00:44:33,880 --> 00:44:35,800 They're a little more industrious than we are. 678 00:44:35,800 --> 00:44:38,720 In writing the songs that you write, do you sometimes think that you have 679 00:44:38,720 --> 00:44:40,600 a special inspiration for the way that you... 680 00:44:40,600 --> 00:44:43,360 Well, you'd better ask - about writing songs - better address those 681 00:44:43,360 --> 00:44:46,040 questions to Mick and Keith because they'll tell me more about it. 682 00:44:46,040 --> 00:44:48,840 But the ones we've written together are just things we've worked out 683 00:44:48,840 --> 00:44:51,160 together in the studio, with somebody, you know, anyone 684 00:44:51,160 --> 00:44:53,760 that's had an idea. If you had to do it all over again, do you think 685 00:44:53,760 --> 00:44:56,240 you'd go the same route again? As far as, you know, now that you 686 00:44:56,240 --> 00:44:58,840 realise the demands that are put on you as a tremendous success? 687 00:44:58,840 --> 00:45:00,680 I'd do it 100 times over, if I could. I love it. 688 00:45:00,680 --> 00:45:01,720 Good. Thank you so much. 689 00:45:01,720 --> 00:45:04,520 Let me swing over here and talk to Keith and to Mick. 690 00:45:04,520 --> 00:45:07,240 These are the two that are supposed to be all the writing talent. 691 00:45:07,240 --> 00:45:09,800 You fellows get together and do most of the writing, right? 692 00:45:09,800 --> 00:45:12,160 Yeah, that's right. A lot of it. You know, some of it. 693 00:45:12,160 --> 00:45:15,160 Do you have a particular inspiration for some of your songs that seem 694 00:45:15,160 --> 00:45:16,520 to springboard them out? 695 00:45:16,520 --> 00:45:18,800 Well, I don't know. Ask Keith. 696 00:45:18,800 --> 00:45:20,760 I don't really think so, no. 697 00:45:20,760 --> 00:45:23,520 It just happens, you know? It just happens. 698 00:45:29,240 --> 00:45:31,560 Mick and Keith are wonderful songwriters. 699 00:45:31,560 --> 00:45:32,920 I mean, they're just great. 700 00:45:32,920 --> 00:45:34,280 Extraordinary. 701 00:45:34,280 --> 00:45:37,080 I mean, I couldn't admire them more. 702 00:45:37,080 --> 00:45:40,000 They tended to write more about sex. 703 00:45:41,120 --> 00:45:44,120 So from '64, '84... 704 00:45:44,120 --> 00:45:48,280 Like, for 20 years they were just turning them out. 705 00:45:48,280 --> 00:45:51,320 I mean, they're classic rock and roll songs. 706 00:45:51,320 --> 00:45:56,000 I'd rate it as extraordinary. 707 00:45:56,000 --> 00:45:59,080 You see, the trouble was by 1963, 708 00:45:59,080 --> 00:46:03,160 when Mick and Keith were writing the songs and all that, 709 00:46:03,160 --> 00:46:06,200 Andrew was trying to promote Keith 710 00:46:06,200 --> 00:46:09,760 and kind of dismiss Brian, get Brian out of the way. 711 00:46:09,760 --> 00:46:14,760 And so what he did was he stopped me, Charlie and Brian 712 00:46:14,760 --> 00:46:18,560 from doing any interviews with any of the newspapers, any interviews 713 00:46:18,560 --> 00:46:21,680 at all, and gave them all to Mick and Keith. 714 00:46:21,680 --> 00:46:26,000 And I think when we talked on the phone ages ago, you mentioned 715 00:46:26,000 --> 00:46:29,000 that he did something with Jimi Hendrix. 716 00:46:30,080 --> 00:46:31,560 Erm... Yes. 717 00:46:31,560 --> 00:46:33,920 Some playing. Yeah. 718 00:46:35,360 --> 00:46:36,840 No-one knows that. 719 00:46:42,800 --> 00:46:44,200 What do I say? 720 00:46:46,000 --> 00:46:50,960 GUITAR INSTRUMENTAL 721 00:47:17,640 --> 00:47:20,840 And I got Brian trying to write a song with that guy, 722 00:47:20,840 --> 00:47:24,680 Michael Aldred, of Ready Steady Go! 723 00:47:24,680 --> 00:47:29,480 But they're unique things that I just happened to get, and... 724 00:47:29,480 --> 00:47:32,840 ..they shouldn't be... Was the song good? 725 00:47:32,840 --> 00:47:36,640 Yeah, they were putting a song together. It was OK, yeah. 726 00:47:36,640 --> 00:47:39,640 But he never had the courage to record it. 727 00:47:40,680 --> 00:47:42,400 LAUGHTER 728 00:47:42,400 --> 00:47:45,160 BRIAN: Oh, fucking hell, turn it off! 729 00:47:47,320 --> 00:47:49,800 SONG PLAYS ON TAPE 730 00:48:08,960 --> 00:48:11,920 HE STOPS PLAYING GUITAR 731 00:48:08,960 --> 00:48:11,920 BRIAN: No. It's difficult... 732 00:48:11,920 --> 00:48:14,040 Oh, let's get... 733 00:48:14,040 --> 00:48:15,760 Bleurgh! 734 00:48:17,640 --> 00:48:21,240 He never played me a song he'd written, so it was quite hard 735 00:48:21,240 --> 00:48:25,720 to know really if he wanted to do songs with us that he'd written. 736 00:48:25,720 --> 00:48:29,360 I think he did, but he was very shy and all that, I think he found it 737 00:48:29,360 --> 00:48:32,680 rather hard to lay it down to us, you know, that "This was a song and 738 00:48:32,680 --> 00:48:34,120 "it went like this." 739 00:48:34,120 --> 00:48:37,800 And we probably sort of didn't even think - because he didn't do it, 740 00:48:37,800 --> 00:48:41,440 we didn't try and bring it out of him, probably, 741 00:48:41,440 --> 00:48:42,880 which was... 742 00:48:44,000 --> 00:48:46,760 ..I suppose a bit insensitive of us. 743 00:48:50,440 --> 00:48:54,440 MUSIC: Ne Cherche Pas by Zouzou 744 00:49:33,280 --> 00:49:36,040 BLUES GUITAR 745 00:50:27,120 --> 00:50:30,040 MUSIC: You Know My Name by The Beatles 746 00:51:24,200 --> 00:51:27,480 Each member of the band had a had a court. 747 00:51:27,480 --> 00:51:31,440 And the way the hierarchy worked was the Stones would always 748 00:51:31,440 --> 00:51:34,320 have to go to the Beatles' places. 749 00:51:34,320 --> 00:51:37,040 So the Beatles would never go to their house. 750 00:51:37,040 --> 00:51:40,000 You know, that was the order of things, 751 00:51:40,000 --> 00:51:43,280 a very strict class system at work. HE LAUGHS 752 00:53:59,680 --> 00:54:02,480 FANS SCREAM 753 00:54:42,920 --> 00:54:45,000 I think he liked drinking and I think he liked drugs 754 00:54:45,000 --> 00:54:47,560 but they weren't very good for him. 755 00:54:47,560 --> 00:54:50,520 I don't think they're good for anyone, but he didn't... 756 00:54:50,520 --> 00:54:53,200 He wasn't strong enough, mentally or physically, 757 00:54:53,200 --> 00:54:54,360 to take any of it. 758 00:54:54,360 --> 00:54:55,960 And of course he did everything... 759 00:54:55,960 --> 00:54:58,840 Brian was one of those people that did everything to excess. 760 00:55:54,480 --> 00:55:58,240 And remember, no matter what anyone says... 761 00:55:58,240 --> 00:56:00,440 ..rock on. 762 00:56:00,440 --> 00:56:06,160 # I can't get no satisfaction 763 00:56:06,160 --> 00:56:10,960 # I can't get no satisfaction... # 764 00:56:42,480 --> 00:56:45,640 The trouble with Brian was he wasn't very well a lot of the time. 765 00:56:45,640 --> 00:56:47,640 So he was often ill. 766 00:56:50,720 --> 00:56:53,000 We'd be on tour and Brian would get sick, and he'd be in 767 00:56:53,000 --> 00:56:56,560 hospital for five days and we had to play without him. 768 00:56:56,560 --> 00:56:59,360 Just the four of us, you know. 769 00:56:59,360 --> 00:57:01,080 Bass, drum, guitar. 770 00:57:01,080 --> 00:57:04,560 And you're playing all them songs that need more than one guitar, 771 00:57:04,560 --> 00:57:06,160 and you've only got one guitar. 772 00:57:08,360 --> 00:57:10,840 So I had to double-up on bass, the bass playing, 773 00:57:10,840 --> 00:57:12,160 and help Keith out, you know, 774 00:57:12,160 --> 00:57:14,960 and Keith had to play a bit more than he would normally play, 775 00:57:14,960 --> 00:57:17,400 playing partly rhythm, partly lead. 776 00:57:17,400 --> 00:57:19,240 It was tough, you know. 777 00:57:20,680 --> 00:57:25,240 So he was very unreliable at times in the later period of his life. 778 00:57:25,240 --> 00:57:27,840 You know, the last...maybe three years. 779 00:57:29,200 --> 00:57:32,520 Brian used to get very paranoid about being made fun of. 780 00:57:32,520 --> 00:57:36,440 You know, he always said, "They're talking about me and they're..." 781 00:57:36,440 --> 00:57:39,120 You know, when we were waiting in a... 782 00:57:39,120 --> 00:57:42,160 When we were staying over in a hotel or something. 783 00:57:50,360 --> 00:57:54,280 The classic example that I had of that was at the hotel in New York 784 00:57:54,280 --> 00:57:56,320 when Dylan was coming to visit him. 785 00:57:56,320 --> 00:57:58,200 You know, he was very friendly with Dylan. 786 00:57:58,200 --> 00:58:00,720 So Mick and Keith - Brian's room was next to mine, 787 00:58:00,720 --> 00:58:02,240 so Mick and Keith came into my room. 788 00:58:02,240 --> 00:58:04,760 They said, "Oh...", and they were very devilish. 789 00:58:04,760 --> 00:58:07,680 And Keith goes over and grabs a water glass that I had, 790 00:58:07,680 --> 00:58:11,040 and he puts it against the wall so he could listen in to Brian's room. 791 00:58:11,040 --> 00:58:14,560 And Mick goes over to the house telephone, my phone in the room, 792 00:58:14,560 --> 00:58:16,440 and calls Brian's room. 793 00:58:16,440 --> 00:58:18,920 And then immediately he says, "Hello, Mr Jones. 794 00:58:18,920 --> 00:58:21,240 "You have Mr Zimmerman for Mr Jones." 795 00:58:21,240 --> 00:58:24,400 And he was imitating putting Dylan on the phone. 796 00:58:24,400 --> 00:58:26,920 And then when he was on the phone, he says, "Oh, Brian, I think 797 00:58:26,920 --> 00:58:29,240 "you're the best guy in the group," that kind of... 798 00:58:29,240 --> 00:58:31,640 And Brian's like, "Shut up, you guys! I know you're..." 799 00:58:31,640 --> 00:58:34,040 And that was the kind of stuff that was going on. 800 00:58:34,040 --> 00:58:37,560 MUSIC: There But For Fortune by Marianne Faithful 801 00:58:37,560 --> 00:58:41,080 # Show me the train.... # 802 00:58:41,080 --> 00:58:43,000 Already there had been shit going on. 803 00:58:43,000 --> 00:58:45,960 You know, Brian was in very bad shape. 804 00:58:45,960 --> 00:58:48,000 He couldn't get into the States. 805 00:58:48,000 --> 00:58:50,640 And they didn't know what to do, and this and that and the other, 806 00:58:50,640 --> 00:58:53,240 you know, of just scrambling all the way along. 807 00:58:53,240 --> 00:58:55,640 It wasn't as bad as it was going to get later. 808 00:58:55,640 --> 00:58:59,200 Well, I read an interesting thing Keith said about this, 809 00:58:59,200 --> 00:59:03,000 that they started making fun of Brian so as not to get mad at him. 810 00:59:03,000 --> 00:59:04,840 Ah... Because it was a way... 811 00:59:04,840 --> 00:59:07,320 But I mean, of course, for somebody who's paranoid, 812 00:59:07,320 --> 00:59:09,800 this is just about the worst thing you can do. 813 00:59:09,800 --> 00:59:13,480 But I mean that was Mick and Keith's, apparently, 814 00:59:13,480 --> 00:59:15,040 attitude to this thing, you know? 815 00:59:15,040 --> 00:59:17,400 Well, because, you know, I mean if anybody had really let 816 00:59:17,400 --> 00:59:21,000 their feelings go, they would've killed him. Mm-hm. 817 00:59:21,000 --> 00:59:23,040 And he would have killed them too. Mm-hm. 818 00:59:23,040 --> 00:59:24,960 I mean, it was that bad. 819 00:59:27,240 --> 00:59:30,480 I think Marianne sympathised with Brian. 820 00:59:30,480 --> 00:59:35,320 And Marianne of course was not in much better shape because of drugs. 821 00:59:35,320 --> 00:59:39,960 She knew him very well and had, you know, had an affair with him. 822 00:59:39,960 --> 00:59:44,600 Marianne felt that she had become a real drag on Mick. 823 00:59:45,880 --> 00:59:51,760 And there's a horrible conversation where she overhears Ahmet Ertegun 824 00:59:51,760 --> 00:59:56,800 saying to Mick, "You've got to get rid of Marianne, 825 00:59:56,800 --> 01:00:00,080 "you know, if the band is going to function. 826 01:00:00,080 --> 01:00:04,040 "It's having a really negative effect." 827 01:00:04,040 --> 01:00:08,360 And so in that sense I think she absolutely identified with Brian. 828 01:00:13,320 --> 01:00:16,800 Anita Pallenberg was a massive influence on Brian. 829 01:00:16,800 --> 01:00:21,960 She was credited with transforming both Brian and the Stones. 830 01:01:13,920 --> 01:01:18,080 She was an incredibly interesting person, who'd done a lot, 831 01:01:18,080 --> 01:01:21,560 and was on the make, in the way that he was. 832 01:01:21,560 --> 01:01:26,840 And she craved new experiences, you know, in the way that he was. 833 01:01:26,840 --> 01:01:29,680 But I think he was thinking of leaving the band. 834 01:01:29,680 --> 01:01:32,280 I think he probably could have and probably should have left 835 01:01:32,280 --> 01:01:35,440 the band for his own, you know, health and sanity. 836 01:01:35,440 --> 01:01:38,520 But I think, by teaming up with Anita, he knew they'd be 837 01:01:38,520 --> 01:01:40,480 a real phenomenon, which they were. 838 01:01:40,480 --> 01:01:44,440 And that really launched his kind of last great... 839 01:01:44,440 --> 01:01:45,840 Last great ride. 840 01:01:46,840 --> 01:01:48,320 Oui, oui, je le comprends. 841 01:01:51,160 --> 01:01:55,520 There was such sort of...erotic power to their pairing 842 01:01:55,520 --> 01:01:57,560 and such glamour. 843 01:01:57,560 --> 01:01:59,960 And also, you know, he wants to be glamorous. 844 01:01:59,960 --> 01:02:03,360 He wanted to be seen as a main player in the Stones, 845 01:02:03,360 --> 01:02:05,600 and she'd helped that happen. 846 01:02:05,600 --> 01:02:09,000 She and Brian were, you know, like a little unit, 847 01:02:09,000 --> 01:02:13,960 whispering, talking to each other, giggling, speaking in sort of 848 01:02:13,960 --> 01:02:18,840 a code that, you know, intimate couples can have sometimes. 849 01:02:18,840 --> 01:02:22,960 And I think they were doing a lot of acid and just hanging out. 850 01:02:22,960 --> 01:02:27,480 She was staggeringly beautiful, 851 01:02:27,480 --> 01:02:33,040 had extraordinary physical and sexual confidence. 852 01:02:33,040 --> 01:02:37,880 You know, when she walked in a room, you know, guys' eyes popped out 853 01:02:37,880 --> 01:02:40,560 and tongues rolled out, like in a cartoon. 854 01:03:09,640 --> 01:03:12,120 The Rolling Stones, they were, as Marianne would put it, 855 01:03:12,120 --> 01:03:14,080 were a bunch of yobs. 856 01:03:14,080 --> 01:03:15,800 They were very talented, 857 01:03:15,800 --> 01:03:18,960 but they weren't educated or sophisticated. 858 01:03:21,360 --> 01:03:26,200 Marianne and Anita connected them with all the European intellectuals 859 01:03:26,200 --> 01:03:28,080 and film-makers. 860 01:03:28,080 --> 01:03:31,480 We were the right women for that time to enable whatever 861 01:03:31,480 --> 01:03:33,360 had to happen to happen. 862 01:03:33,360 --> 01:03:36,480 And probably the same is true of Brian and Anita 863 01:03:36,480 --> 01:03:39,160 and Keith and Anita. 864 01:03:39,160 --> 01:03:42,640 They seemed to be a proto-aristocracy. 865 01:03:42,640 --> 01:03:44,880 Mick at one point said, 866 01:03:44,880 --> 01:03:48,040 "Well, the only thing left is me and the Queen." 867 01:03:49,360 --> 01:03:51,120 SITAR MUSIC 868 01:03:52,680 --> 01:03:55,720 Brian and Anita would spend time at the vast Guinness estate 869 01:03:55,720 --> 01:03:57,000 in Ireland. 870 01:04:02,040 --> 01:04:04,840 This is Mick go-karting at Leslie Castle, 871 01:04:04,840 --> 01:04:08,040 a massive Irish estate that has been in the Leslie family 872 01:04:08,040 --> 01:04:10,320 for 1,000 years. 873 01:04:10,320 --> 01:04:12,800 A whole new world opened up to them. 874 01:04:15,920 --> 01:04:19,080 I think it was the great changing of the old order, wasn't it? 875 01:04:21,040 --> 01:04:24,000 I loved the sort of mixture, 876 01:04:24,000 --> 01:04:27,480 the juxtaposition then of the Stones and the Beatles 877 01:04:27,480 --> 01:04:30,000 and the royals and the thing, you know? 878 01:04:30,000 --> 01:04:31,080 It suddenly was all... 879 01:04:31,080 --> 01:04:35,200 Everybody and anybody were part of the same thing. 880 01:04:35,200 --> 01:04:36,360 It was excellent. 881 01:04:39,000 --> 01:04:42,160 It was my sister Victoria's birthday, and that was a sort of 882 01:04:42,160 --> 01:04:47,880 wonderful melting pot with the Kennedys and Princess Margaret 883 01:04:47,880 --> 01:04:52,320 and the Beatles and the Stones and then all my relations. 884 01:04:53,640 --> 01:04:55,720 Brian definitely came. 885 01:04:55,720 --> 01:04:58,200 Brian was the most sort of sociable at that time. 886 01:04:58,200 --> 01:05:00,840 He was much the most sort of gregarious. 887 01:05:00,840 --> 01:05:05,560 So it was it was the informality, I think, of it that was part of 888 01:05:05,560 --> 01:05:07,680 the whole thing of the '60s. 889 01:05:07,680 --> 01:05:13,600 Never mind who was there, whether it was rock stars or royalty 890 01:05:13,600 --> 01:05:18,400 or scrubbers from the East End. 891 01:05:18,400 --> 01:05:20,360 It really didn't make any difference. 892 01:05:24,040 --> 01:05:27,120 Brian's best friend at the time was Tara Browne. 893 01:05:27,120 --> 01:05:29,960 He was the Guinness heir and owner of Dandie Fashions 894 01:05:29,960 --> 01:05:31,520 on the King's Road. 895 01:05:34,680 --> 01:05:38,160 The so-called Swinging London was actually a very small group 896 01:05:38,160 --> 01:05:41,640 of people, and Brian and Tara were right at the centre. 897 01:05:45,360 --> 01:05:49,240 Tara was immortalised in the Beatles song A Day in the Life 898 01:05:49,240 --> 01:05:51,560 when he had a tragic car accident. 899 01:05:51,560 --> 01:05:56,040 # He blew his mind out in a car 900 01:05:57,000 --> 01:06:02,240 # He didn't notice that the lights had changed 901 01:06:02,240 --> 01:06:05,920 # A crowd of people stood and stared... # 902 01:06:09,200 --> 01:06:12,000 Brian was devastated by Tara's death, 903 01:06:12,000 --> 01:06:14,200 the first of that intimate circle. 904 01:06:16,880 --> 01:06:19,840 Brian would later date his girlfriend, Suki Poitier, 905 01:06:19,840 --> 01:06:24,280 who was with Tara in the accident but miraculously survived. 906 01:06:25,880 --> 01:06:28,480 And we all wore the Dandie Fashions look, 907 01:06:28,480 --> 01:06:31,120 which was so much the spirit of the time. 908 01:06:38,720 --> 01:06:42,640 Anita was pushing him to dress more outrageously. 909 01:06:42,640 --> 01:06:45,760 He was the archetypal dandy, 910 01:06:45,760 --> 01:06:48,760 more than anyone, you know, in '66, '67. 911 01:06:59,000 --> 01:07:01,520 At that point you can see the power dynamics shift 912 01:07:01,520 --> 01:07:04,680 within the band, where Keith is coming back to Brian again. 913 01:07:06,960 --> 01:07:09,040 BRIAN PLAYS THE PIANO 914 01:07:12,040 --> 01:07:15,760 So for a period, yeah, he was back with Keith, because he was cool 915 01:07:15,760 --> 01:07:20,000 and happening, and obviously at that time they did Ruby Tuesday. 916 01:07:21,760 --> 01:07:25,840 He was doing all that stuff without asking anyone. 917 01:07:25,840 --> 01:07:30,080 He'd pick up a flute or just anything that was handy 918 01:07:30,080 --> 01:07:35,000 and just create something out of it which wasn't there originally. 919 01:07:35,000 --> 01:07:39,480 And it embellished the song so much that it became the catch. 920 01:07:39,480 --> 01:07:42,480 MUSIC: Ruby Tuesday by The Rolling Stones 921 01:07:42,480 --> 01:07:46,440 HE HUMS ALONG WITH FLUTE PART # Or in the darkest night 922 01:07:46,440 --> 01:07:48,400 # No-one knows... # 923 01:07:48,400 --> 01:07:51,040 BILL: # Do, doo! # Can you hear him? 924 01:07:51,040 --> 01:07:53,960 # She comes and goes... # 925 01:07:53,960 --> 01:07:56,720 # Do, do, do... # 926 01:07:56,720 --> 01:07:58,800 # Goodbye, Ruby... # 927 01:07:58,800 --> 01:08:00,320 He just finds a flute, 928 01:08:00,320 --> 01:08:02,520 and he finds a little thing he can play on it. 929 01:08:04,920 --> 01:08:08,960 Brian's self-loathing came out in the way he treated other people. 930 01:08:08,960 --> 01:08:13,320 He and Anita particularly were known for spiking people's drinks. 931 01:08:13,320 --> 01:08:17,280 Anita would encourage him for that kind of outrageous behaviour. 932 01:08:17,280 --> 01:08:19,600 They would just mock people who hadn't... 933 01:08:19,600 --> 01:08:22,200 Who weren't turned on in the same way that they were. 934 01:08:22,200 --> 01:08:25,320 So that was a thing - "We're the hip kids - we can make fun 935 01:08:25,320 --> 01:08:27,120 "of other people." 936 01:08:27,120 --> 01:08:30,400 For instance, Linda Lawrence came. 937 01:08:30,400 --> 01:08:33,880 I think she was short of money for young Julian. 938 01:08:35,160 --> 01:08:38,960 I think they were up in the flat, Brian and Anita, 939 01:08:38,960 --> 01:08:42,720 and they just laughed at her and wouldn't let her come in. 940 01:09:27,840 --> 01:09:32,120 So whilst he could still make things happen in the studio, 941 01:09:32,120 --> 01:09:36,320 he still was holding some power even whilst he was this kind of liability 942 01:09:36,320 --> 01:09:38,040 at the same time. 943 01:09:38,040 --> 01:09:42,400 You know, he was pretty dominant in terms of the sounds. 944 01:09:42,400 --> 01:09:46,720 You know, they needed to get a bit more exotic. 945 01:09:46,720 --> 01:09:48,960 Paint It Black, he's embellished it again. 946 01:09:48,960 --> 01:09:50,880 MUSIC: Paint It Black by The Rolling Stones 947 01:09:50,880 --> 01:09:51,960 Bass pedals. 948 01:09:51,960 --> 01:09:54,680 There's Brian. 949 01:09:51,960 --> 01:09:54,680 HE IMITATES SITAR 950 01:09:56,280 --> 01:10:01,920 # I see a line of cars and they're all painted black... # 951 01:10:01,920 --> 01:10:06,240 HE HUMS THE TUNE 952 01:10:06,240 --> 01:10:09,800 Your head goes into, like... 953 01:10:09,800 --> 01:10:12,520 You're suddenly in the Middle East 954 01:10:12,520 --> 01:10:14,040 or Far East... 955 01:10:14,040 --> 01:10:19,400 That made me realise that there was a very inventive guy there. 956 01:10:19,400 --> 01:10:22,040 I mean, he was really a... 957 01:10:22,040 --> 01:10:23,560 ..bit of a genius. 958 01:10:29,440 --> 01:10:33,680 The Volker Schlondorff film Mord und Totschlag was a big deal 959 01:10:33,680 --> 01:10:35,360 for Anita and for Brian. 960 01:10:35,360 --> 01:10:40,040 It was a starring role for Anita, with a really good director, 961 01:10:40,040 --> 01:10:44,240 and it was really pretty like their own - Brian and Anita's - 962 01:10:44,240 --> 01:10:47,280 relationship, where there was this constant provocation 963 01:10:47,280 --> 01:10:49,440 and escalation of provocation. 964 01:10:56,960 --> 01:10:58,840 Hau ab jetzt. 965 01:15:19,000 --> 01:15:22,000 When Keith went with Anita, Brian decided to start going out 966 01:15:22,000 --> 01:15:25,080 with Linda Keith, who used to be Keith's girlfriend. 967 01:15:26,440 --> 01:15:28,360 All their relationships were 968 01:15:28,360 --> 01:15:31,160 always slightly incestuous. 969 01:15:31,160 --> 01:15:33,560 Marianne, you know, 970 01:15:33,560 --> 01:15:37,160 when she gave up with Mick, she went with Brian... 971 01:15:38,320 --> 01:15:41,080 ..and then she went with Keith. 972 01:15:41,080 --> 01:15:43,960 So she went with three of them. 973 01:15:43,960 --> 01:15:48,520 Anita went with Brian, she went with Mick, she went with Keith. 974 01:15:48,520 --> 01:15:51,040 It was all very mixed up, you know? 975 01:15:51,040 --> 01:15:55,440 Girls would end up being with another member of the band. 976 01:15:57,760 --> 01:15:59,360 Seeing the state of Brian, 977 01:15:59,360 --> 01:16:03,240 his parents finally reached out to help him. 978 01:16:03,240 --> 01:16:07,960 What I firmly believe was the turning point in Brian's life 979 01:16:07,960 --> 01:16:12,200 was when he lost the only girl he ever really loved. 980 01:16:13,520 --> 01:16:17,800 When his mother and I saw him for the first time for some months 981 01:16:17,800 --> 01:16:22,720 after this happening, we were quite shocked by the changes 982 01:16:22,720 --> 01:16:24,360 of his appearance, and in our opinion 983 01:16:24,360 --> 01:16:26,800 he was never the same boy again. 984 01:16:26,800 --> 01:16:31,440 He changed suddenly and alarmingly 985 01:16:31,440 --> 01:16:38,000 from a bright, enthusiastic young man to a quiet and morose 986 01:16:38,000 --> 01:16:40,600 and inward-looking young man. 987 01:16:44,000 --> 01:16:48,040 Brian and Linda Keith's relationship was tempestuous and drug-fuelled, 988 01:16:48,040 --> 01:16:51,920 with Brian recovering from Anita and Linda from Keith. 989 01:16:53,280 --> 01:16:58,920 Linda ended up taking an overdose in Brian's flat, which she survived. 990 01:16:58,920 --> 01:17:01,320 Brian wrote this to her... 991 01:17:01,320 --> 01:17:04,920 "Dearest darling Linda, I'm presently very smashed. 992 01:17:05,960 --> 01:17:08,240 "Please be with me. 993 01:17:08,240 --> 01:17:10,200 "I'm so lonely by myself. 994 01:17:10,200 --> 01:17:13,680 "I need you so badly and I love you so much. 995 01:17:13,680 --> 01:17:16,000 "Please understand what fucked us up before, 996 01:17:16,000 --> 01:17:19,000 "a terrible combination of events. 997 01:17:19,000 --> 01:17:21,120 "Please let's start again. 998 01:17:21,120 --> 01:17:25,880 "Please marry me. Please, please, please. 999 01:17:25,880 --> 01:17:28,160 "All my love, Brian." 1000 01:17:34,920 --> 01:17:36,960 It was a painful year, you know? 1001 01:17:39,000 --> 01:17:41,640 '67 was a year of change for everybody. 1002 01:17:41,640 --> 01:17:45,360 I mean, '67 was the explosion of the drug culture. 1003 01:17:55,680 --> 01:18:00,520 The whole infamous Stones drug bust all followed in the wake of 1004 01:18:00,520 --> 01:18:02,920 News Of The World stories that prided themselves 1005 01:18:02,920 --> 01:18:06,720 in actually busting Mick Jagger and proclaiming him a drug user. 1006 01:18:06,720 --> 01:18:09,480 The problem was it wasn't Mick. It was Brian. 1007 01:18:10,880 --> 01:18:14,400 He was hanging in a nightclub called Blazing and boasting 1008 01:18:14,400 --> 01:18:16,520 about being a druggy hipster. 1009 01:18:17,600 --> 01:18:20,960 He actually told the reporter he didn't do LSD much these days 1010 01:18:20,960 --> 01:18:24,440 now that everybody had taken it up and, you know, he was doing 1011 01:18:24,440 --> 01:18:26,120 it before anybody else. 1012 01:18:27,280 --> 01:18:30,400 For Mick, Brian was the villain of the piece. 1013 01:18:32,840 --> 01:18:38,480 The only person who was really, really out of it on drugs was Brian. 1014 01:18:38,480 --> 01:18:40,000 This was like the last straw, 1015 01:18:40,000 --> 01:18:42,760 the straw that broke the camel's back with Brian. 1016 01:18:42,760 --> 01:18:45,640 And I think it brought up a lot of bad feelings that were already 1017 01:18:45,640 --> 01:18:47,920 there about Brian. 1018 01:18:47,920 --> 01:18:50,840 Mick didn't know he'd end up in prison. 1019 01:18:50,840 --> 01:18:52,440 It was just dreadful. 1020 01:18:52,440 --> 01:18:55,360 But it was very frightening, because you saw the sort of the power 1021 01:18:55,360 --> 01:18:57,440 of the state, the power of the status quo, 1022 01:18:57,440 --> 01:19:01,240 the whole thing coming down on them - for nothing. 1023 01:19:02,880 --> 01:19:06,800 Mick was very, very, very desperate and just in... 1024 01:19:06,800 --> 01:19:08,920 It was a horrible thing. 1025 01:19:08,920 --> 01:19:10,960 I don't think he ever thought this sort of thing 1026 01:19:10,960 --> 01:19:13,840 would ever happen to him in his life. 1027 01:19:13,840 --> 01:19:19,120 And I must say, to my shame, I wasn't very compassionate at all. 1028 01:19:19,120 --> 01:19:21,760 If you need to cry, you cry. 1029 01:19:21,760 --> 01:19:26,040 It was a real moment of truth and vulnerability. 1030 01:19:26,040 --> 01:19:29,520 Needless to say, he never, ever showed it again. 1031 01:20:59,200 --> 01:21:02,280 The phone rings and it's Brian. 1032 01:21:02,280 --> 01:21:05,800 And he said, "I'm not going... I'm not going to come tomorrow." 1033 01:21:05,800 --> 01:21:08,720 And I said... I said, "Huh? Why?" 1034 01:21:08,720 --> 01:21:10,960 And he said, "Because they are so mean to me." 1035 01:21:10,960 --> 01:21:13,120 And I said, "Who's so mean?" 1036 01:21:13,120 --> 01:21:17,120 He said, "Mick and Keith, they are making my life hell." 1037 01:21:17,120 --> 01:21:21,520 Naively, I said, "Well, what would the Rolling Stones be without you?" 1038 01:21:21,520 --> 01:21:23,840 And anyway, I'm thinking, "What the fuck do we do with four 1039 01:21:23,840 --> 01:21:27,600 "Rolling Stones if we really are looking at five Rolling Stones?" 1040 01:21:27,600 --> 01:21:31,040 And so then he stopped, 1041 01:21:31,040 --> 01:21:35,000 he listened and he stopped crying, 1042 01:21:35,000 --> 01:21:37,000 and he said, "It's just been a hard day." 1043 01:21:37,000 --> 01:21:38,640 And also, you don't know how much he's... 1044 01:21:38,640 --> 01:21:40,720 I think he was drinking a lot. 1045 01:21:40,720 --> 01:21:44,200 I convinced him to come the next day. 1046 01:21:44,200 --> 01:21:46,720 There was something kind of childlike about him, 1047 01:21:46,720 --> 01:21:49,560 because then he had dressed kind of like a wizard. 1048 01:21:49,560 --> 01:21:54,720 Then when they got onstage at two in the morning, he was... 1049 01:21:54,720 --> 01:21:58,400 I would say he was drunk because he looked it, 1050 01:21:58,400 --> 01:22:04,360 and he could play the maracas and he could play the slide... 1051 01:22:05,520 --> 01:22:09,080 ..he could hardly play the guitar in the regular way. 1052 01:22:11,800 --> 01:22:14,680 He looked dreadful, really. 1053 01:22:14,680 --> 01:22:16,520 His big bags under his eyes. 1054 01:22:16,520 --> 01:22:19,560 I mean, really, bags under his eyes for a guy of 26. 1055 01:22:24,040 --> 01:22:25,800 He was just gone. 1056 01:22:25,800 --> 01:22:27,640 Well, he wouldn't turn up half the time. 1057 01:22:27,640 --> 01:22:29,920 When he did turn up, he was not in any condition 1058 01:22:29,920 --> 01:22:31,960 to do anything, had to baby him. 1059 01:22:31,960 --> 01:22:34,200 And it was very sad. 1060 01:22:35,640 --> 01:22:39,200 I saw him as another person with incredibly low self-esteem 1061 01:22:39,200 --> 01:22:43,760 who needed help not to be destroyed and ground underfoot. 1062 01:22:43,760 --> 01:22:47,600 And that's when I kind of realised what was going on 1063 01:22:47,600 --> 01:22:50,080 and how it was going to affect me. 1064 01:22:52,400 --> 01:22:57,440 That kind of ruthlessness, you know, the bit where they would pretend 1065 01:22:57,440 --> 01:23:00,680 to be recording Brian and not have him plugged in, 1066 01:23:00,680 --> 01:23:02,080 that was really terrible. 1067 01:23:17,760 --> 01:23:20,080 CROWD CLAMOURS 1068 01:23:22,840 --> 01:23:27,360 Both Marianne and Brian, they were victims of the Stones. 1069 01:23:27,360 --> 01:23:29,600 She realised she was no longer useful... 1070 01:23:30,960 --> 01:23:36,680 ..and he was especially horrified to be ostracised from his band. 1071 01:24:05,680 --> 01:24:09,880 A rock group is sort of like a, you know, a primitive tribe. 1072 01:24:09,880 --> 01:24:14,760 People are often killed in tribes, psychically, if they're expelled. 1073 01:24:14,760 --> 01:24:16,880 And a rock group is sort of like that. 1074 01:24:16,880 --> 01:24:21,760 I mean, their whole lifeblood comes from that bond. 1075 01:24:21,760 --> 01:24:27,120 Once they're of no use, that is...oddly fatal. 1076 01:24:28,520 --> 01:24:31,560 Like, nobody wants to talk to them or deal with them. 1077 01:24:31,560 --> 01:24:34,440 They just go off into the woods and die. 1078 01:24:37,360 --> 01:24:39,800 I felt like he was very much the underdog. 1079 01:24:39,800 --> 01:24:44,680 He was lost and, you know, I just felt for him. 1080 01:24:44,680 --> 01:24:46,400 I felt that he had been... 1081 01:24:48,080 --> 01:24:50,760 ..badly treated. 1082 01:24:50,760 --> 01:24:52,760 I remember he had a dog. 1083 01:24:53,960 --> 01:24:55,400 She was a spaniel. 1084 01:24:55,400 --> 01:24:56,640 Such a sweet dog. 1085 01:24:57,680 --> 01:25:01,880 She was maybe about five years old, and she looked about 20 1086 01:25:01,880 --> 01:25:06,920 because she'd eaten a cake with acid and she'd gone on a trip 1087 01:25:06,920 --> 01:25:10,680 that had lasted sort of months and months. 1088 01:25:10,680 --> 01:25:13,760 You know, sad things that happen. 1089 01:25:16,920 --> 01:25:20,880 Charlie phoned me up, phone went about three in the morning 1090 01:25:20,880 --> 01:25:24,160 and he just said, "Brian died." 1091 01:25:26,920 --> 01:25:28,920 I couldn't believe it, you know? 1092 01:25:28,920 --> 01:25:33,960 It was such a blow that, you know, you just don't accept it for weeks. 1093 01:25:34,960 --> 01:25:36,680 You can't really believe it's true. 1094 01:25:36,680 --> 01:25:38,080 And I mean, I don't... 1095 01:25:38,080 --> 01:25:40,040 I don't think we slept after that, 1096 01:25:40,040 --> 01:25:41,920 we just laid and talked and... 1097 01:25:43,080 --> 01:25:45,040 Just couldn't understand it. 1098 01:25:48,440 --> 01:25:52,000 I think he'd been doing what he always used to do, 1099 01:25:52,000 --> 01:25:56,160 and that was taken downers and doing heavy alcohol, 1100 01:25:56,160 --> 01:25:58,680 and fell asleep in the pool. 1101 01:25:58,680 --> 01:26:00,800 It was basically that simple. 1102 01:26:04,480 --> 01:26:06,200 He got much nicer to... 1103 01:26:06,200 --> 01:26:09,840 Just before he died, you know, the last few years of his life, 1104 01:26:09,840 --> 01:26:14,080 I felt even sorrier for him for what we did to him then. 1105 01:26:14,080 --> 01:26:17,640 We took his one thing away, which was being in a band. 1106 01:26:21,840 --> 01:26:24,680 It really knocked us back. 1107 01:26:24,680 --> 01:26:29,560 I mean, been with that cat for seven or eight years nonstop, you know? 1108 01:26:30,640 --> 01:26:33,640 To have him suddenly removed completely. 1109 01:26:37,080 --> 01:26:39,920 Although it was a shock when it actually happened, 1110 01:26:39,920 --> 01:26:42,600 nobody was really that surprised too. 1111 01:26:42,600 --> 01:26:45,360 There are people... I'm sure that everybody's got those things 1112 01:26:45,360 --> 01:26:47,640 about certain people everybody knows people that... 1113 01:26:47,640 --> 01:26:50,240 ..you just have that feeling that they're not going to be... 1114 01:26:50,240 --> 01:26:52,880 they're not going to be 70 years old ever, you know? 1115 01:26:53,920 --> 01:26:55,600 Not everybody makes it. 1116 01:27:15,640 --> 01:27:17,560 I was just 20, 1117 01:27:17,560 --> 01:27:21,880 and we were all incredibly shocked by Brian's death. 1118 01:27:21,880 --> 01:27:26,000 It was the first drug-alcohol casualty of our generation. 1119 01:27:27,760 --> 01:27:30,920 We felt his death marked the end of the '60s, and the concert 1120 01:27:30,920 --> 01:27:34,800 in the park which we all went to was very much the end of the '60s 1121 01:27:34,800 --> 01:27:39,880 and a sort of mass funeral for everything that had gone before. 1122 01:27:39,880 --> 01:27:42,680 You just knew there was going to be a massive change, 1123 01:27:42,680 --> 01:27:46,080 and Brian's death somehow was an emblem for that. 1124 01:27:53,480 --> 01:27:58,040 I flew to London immediately from Munich when I heard about it. 1125 01:27:59,280 --> 01:28:03,480 I was there, and stayed with Anita and Keith in their house. 1126 01:28:06,960 --> 01:28:09,840 We were talking and sitting and hugging. 1127 01:28:13,040 --> 01:28:17,160 There was a mourning and sadness around all of them. 1128 01:28:20,000 --> 01:28:25,080 It was a very emotional thing, the way they organised 1129 01:28:25,080 --> 01:28:30,040 this farewell and goodbye, as if to say, 1130 01:28:30,040 --> 01:28:34,000 "Now you're still - or again - one of us." 1131 01:28:37,760 --> 01:28:39,520 And Mick was very upset. 1132 01:28:39,520 --> 01:28:42,320 APPLAUSE 1133 01:28:44,000 --> 01:28:47,720 I just want to say something that was written by Shelley, 1134 01:28:47,720 --> 01:28:51,200 and I think it goes with what happened to Brian. 1135 01:28:53,160 --> 01:28:58,280 Peace, peace! He is not dead, he does not sleep. 1136 01:28:58,280 --> 01:29:01,160 He has awakened from the dreams of life. 1137 01:29:01,160 --> 01:29:03,040 APPLAUSE 1138 01:29:03,040 --> 01:29:06,240 Brian was so sensitive, really, 1139 01:29:06,240 --> 01:29:10,560 because Brian was so sensitive to everything, you know what I mean? 1140 01:29:10,560 --> 01:29:14,360 I suppose there was a kind of feeling that I knew that Brian would... 1141 01:29:14,360 --> 01:29:17,120 If anyone was going to die, Brian was going to die. 1142 01:29:20,000 --> 01:29:24,640 I mean, I always knew that Brian wouldn't really live that long. 1143 01:29:27,120 --> 01:29:29,800 But he just... He lived his life very fast. 1144 01:29:37,080 --> 01:29:39,920 He was... He was kind of like a butterfly. 1145 01:29:51,160 --> 01:29:55,920 40 years after Brian died, a box of old letters addressed to Brian 1146 01:29:55,920 --> 01:30:00,080 were discovered in the attic of Linda Lawrence's family house. 1147 01:30:00,080 --> 01:30:03,120 In it was this letter from Brian's father. 1148 01:30:04,960 --> 01:30:09,760 "My dear Brian, we have had unhappy times 1149 01:30:09,760 --> 01:30:15,560 "and I have been a very poor and intolerant father in so many ways. 1150 01:30:17,000 --> 01:30:20,320 "You grew up in such a different way from that 1151 01:30:20,320 --> 01:30:22,320 "in which I expected you to. 1152 01:30:22,320 --> 01:30:25,560 "I was quite out of my depth. 1153 01:30:25,560 --> 01:30:29,680 "In my most drastic of all actions, 1154 01:30:29,680 --> 01:30:34,000 "which I shall never forget or cease to worry over, 1155 01:30:34,000 --> 01:30:37,720 "I felt it was the only way to save my home 1156 01:30:37,720 --> 01:30:40,640 "and bring you to terms with yourself. 1157 01:30:41,800 --> 01:30:46,120 "I don't suppose you will ever forgive me, but all I ask 1158 01:30:46,120 --> 01:30:50,640 "is just a little of that affection I think you once had for me. 1159 01:30:53,520 --> 01:30:56,360 "This is a very private and personal note. 1160 01:30:56,360 --> 01:30:58,040 "Don't trouble to reply. 1161 01:31:02,320 --> 01:31:04,440 "Love, Dad." 1162 01:31:10,920 --> 01:31:12,920 MUSIC: Rollin' Stone by Muddy Waters 1163 01:31:21,720 --> 01:31:24,280 # I'll be a rollin' stone 1164 01:31:24,280 --> 01:31:26,480 # You gonna be a rollin' stone 1165 01:31:28,200 --> 01:31:29,800 # You gonna be a rollin' stone 1166 01:31:31,440 --> 01:31:33,320 # Oh, darn 1167 01:31:34,680 --> 01:31:36,800 # Sure 'nough, he gon' 1168 01:31:38,120 --> 01:31:39,760 # Oh, yeah 1169 01:31:49,800 --> 01:31:52,480 # Well, I feel 1170 01:31:52,480 --> 01:31:55,720 # Yes, I feel 1171 01:31:55,720 --> 01:32:01,360 # Feel that I could lay down, oh, time ain't long 1172 01:32:02,720 --> 01:32:06,480 # I'ma catch the first thing smokin' back 1173 01:32:06,480 --> 01:32:08,520 # Back down the road I'm goin' 1174 01:32:10,000 --> 01:32:11,520 # Back down the road I'm goin' 1175 01:32:13,040 --> 01:32:14,720 # Back down the road I'm goin' 1176 01:32:16,400 --> 01:32:19,240 # Oh, God, oh... # 146854

Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.