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Interview Only w/ Bob Spitz - What Makes The Rolling Stones “The World’s Greatest Rock Band”
Description
Acclaimed music biographer Bob Spitz — author of definitive biographies of The Beatles and Led Zeppelin and now The Rolling Stones: The Biography, his five-year deep dive into the world's greatest rock and roll band — joins the Chuck Toddcast for a deeply enjoyable conversation about why the Stones have endured for over six decades and what their longevity says about the state of music itself. Spitz argues that the Stones gave us the foundation of the rock and roll sound and that, in many ways, there is no rock and roll today — modern musicians are producers more than performers, and now in their 80s the Stones are essentially one of the last bands keeping the form alive. He explains why their decision to flirt with politics in the 60s and then back off actually helped them endure, traces their close friendship with The Beatles , and describes Mick and Keith's strange but enduring marriage as the central engine of the band — held together by their shared love of playing live.
The conversation digs into the surprising musical and cultural backstory of how the Stones became the Stones — including the fascinating history of how white British kids embraced the blues more than American kids did. Spitz pays beautiful tribute to drummer Charlie Watts as the heart and soul of the group — a jazz lover who only played rock because it paid the bills and who, along with Ian Stewart, kept the band in line for decades — and discusses the profound effect of losing him on the band's chemistry. He explains why the Stones keep playing well into their 80s, why great guitarists are now a rare commodity with no real innovators emerging, and why Mick has stayed in such great shape. Spitz offers his verdict on the Stones' place in music history — they've come to understand themselves as the greatest rock band, and he agrees — and reveals what's next for him: a book about John Lennon's second act. He closes with a fascinating thought experiment posed by Chuck: if Mick Jagger had been killed and John Lennon had lived, would the trajectories of the two bands have completely switched?
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Timeline:
(Timestamps may vary based on advertisements)
00:00 Bob Spitz (Rolling Stones Biographer) joins the Chuck ToddCast
02:00 How long have you been thinking about writing this biography?
03:15 Keith Richards biography was a phenomenal book, but only Keith’s view
04:30 The Stones longevity as a group makes them more compelling
06:00 The Stones gave us the foundation of the rock and roll sound
07:15 There is no rock and roll today, musicians are producers now
09:15 In their 80’s, the Stones are still keeping rock and roll alive
10:30 The Stones flirted with being political, then backed off
11:15 Their lack of taking a stand actually helped them endure
12:45 The Stones became great friends with the Beatles
14:00 Mick Jagger & Paul McCartney explored joint business ventures
15:30 Without Paul or Mick, both bands may not have been financially viable
16:15 Mick & Keith seemed like a strange marriage, but they made it work
18:15 The music kept the band together, they love to play and perform
19:30 You have to see the Stones in concert to truly appreciate them
20:45 They’ve had countless “Farewell Tours” and always come back
22:00 Mick has kept in great shape, his father was a fitness celebrity
23:30 Fans pitted the Beatles vs. The St