| Charlie Watts |

|
| Born |
2
June 1941 (1941-06-02)
(age 66)
London,
England |
| Alias(es) |
Charles Robert
Watts (birth name) |
| Genre(s) |
Rock and Roll
Blues
rock
Jazz
Roots
Rock |
| Affiliation(s) |
The Rolling Stones |
| Label(s) |
Decca
Rolling Stones Virgin
Records |
| Years active |
1962 - Present |
Charles Robert "Charlie" Watts (born 2 June 1941) is the drummer of The Rolling Stones. He
is also a jazz
bandleader and commercial artist. Sometimes referred
to as "The Wembley
Whammer" when introduced by Mick Jagger during a concert.
|
Contents
- 1 Early
life
- 2 Musical
career
- 2.1 With
the Rolling Stones
- 3 Private
life and public image
- 4 Solo
records
- 5 External
links
|
Early life
Watts was born to a driver and his wife Jessica Mort Watts at University College
Hospital, London,
England
and raised in Islington,
a London borough. In his early days, he attended Tylers Croft Secondary Modern School and
Harrow Art School. In 1960, he was working with a local band when he
met Alexis Korner, who convinced
him to join his own band, Blues Incorporated.
Later the same year, the band picked up lead singer Mick
Jagger, as well as guitarists Brian
Jones and Keith Richards.
Shortly afterwards, Watts left Blues Incorporated, citing its
hectic schedule. A trained commercial artist, Watts found work at the
advertising firm of Charles Hobson and Grey. However, in late 1962,
three ex-members of Blues Incorporated (now calling themselves The
Rollin' Stones) persuaded Watts to return. Watts kept his day job until
the Stones secured a long-term gig at the Crawdaddy Club near London. In January
1963 he quit his 9 to 5 job to join the group officially and devote his
life to music. Watts remains a member of the Stones to this day.
Musical career
Watts has been involved in many activities outside his
high-profile life as a member of the Rolling Stones. In 1964, he published a
cartoon tribute to Charlie Parker entitled Ode to a High
Flying Bird. Although he has made his name in rock, his personal tastes
focus on jazz; in the late 70s, he joined fellow-Stone Ian "Stu" Stewart in the
back-to-the-roots boogie-woogie fun band Rocket
88, which featured many of the UK's top jazz, rock and
R&B musicians. In the 1980s, he toured worldwide with a big
band that included such names as Evan Parker, Courtney
Pine, and Jack Bruce, who was also a
member of Rocket 88. In 1991, he organized a jazz quintet as another
tribute to Charlie Parker. 1993 saw the release of Warm And
Tender, by the Charlie Watts Quintet, which included vocalist
Bernard Fowler.
This same group then released Long Ago And Far Away
in 1996. Both records included a collection of American Song Book
standards. After a successful collaboration with Jim Keltner on The
Rolling Stones "Bridges to Babylon", Charlie and Jim released a
techno/instrumental album called simply Charlie Watts/Jim
Keltner Project. Featuring the names of his favorite jazz
drummers, Charlie stated that even though the tracks bore such names as
the Elvin Suite in honor of the late Elvin Jones and Max Roach, they
weren't copying their style of drumming, but rather, capturing a
feeling by those artists. Watts' latest solo outing has been released
in 2004. Watts At Scott's, was recorded with his
group, The Charlie Watts Tentet, at the famous jazz club in London,
Ronnie Scott's.
With the Rolling Stones
Besides his musical creativity, he contributed graphic art to
early records such as the Between the Buttons
record sleeve and was responsible for the famous 1975 tour announcement
press conference in New York City. The band surprised the
throng of waiting reporters by driving and playing "Brown Sugar" on the
back of a flatbed truck in the middle of Manhattan traffic; a gimmick AC/DC copied later
the same year and U2
would later emulate in the 1990s. Watts remembered this was a common
way for New
Orleans jazz
bands to promote upcoming dates. Moreover, with Jagger, he designed the
elaborate stages for tours, first contributing to the lotus
flower shaped design of that 1975 Tour of the
Americas, as well as the 1989–1990 Steel Wheels/Urban
Jungle Tour.
There are many instances where Jagger and Richards have lauded
Watts as the key member of the Rolling Stones. Richards went so far to
say in a 2005
Guitar Player magazine interview that the Rolling
Stones would not be, or could not continue as the Rolling Stones,
without Watts. An example of Watts' importance was demonstrated in 1991 when Bill
Wyman left the band after years of deliberation. After
auditioning several bassists, Jagger and Richards asked Watts to choose
the new bass player; he selected the respected session musician Darryl
Jones, who was a sideman
to both Miles
Davis and Sting.
In business, Watts, along with Richards and Jagger, owns a piece of the
Rolling Stones corporate entities, something that does not apply to Mick
Taylor, Ron Wood or even Bill
Wyman.
During the four decades of performing with the Rolling Stones,
Watts has proven to be one of the most influential drummers in popular
music despite his modesty; he is a gifted and powerful drummer, often
cited by many younger drummers as a seminal influence on their own
style. In 1989, The Rolling Stones, including Watts, were inducted into
the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame. Also, in the July 2006 issue of Modern
Drummer, Charlie Watts was voted into the Modern Drummer Hall of Fame,
along with the likes of Steve Gadd, Keith
Moon, Buddy
Rich and other greats.
Private life and public image
On October
14, 1964,
Watts married Shirley Ann Shepherd, whom he had met before the band had
its first big hit; they are still together. They had one daughter,
Seraphina Watts, born in 1968.
Watts has expressed a love-hate relationship to touring. In
Canada's Macleans magazine, he told interviewer
Brian Johnson that he has had a compulsive habit for decades of
actually sketching every new hotel room he occupies – and its
furnishings – immediately upon entering it. He stated he keeps every
sketch, but still doesn't know why he feels the compulsion to do this.
Watts' personal life has outwardly appeared to be
substantially quieter than those of his bandmates and many of his rock
and roll colleagues. Although he is often thought to be a reserved and
steady influence on the Rolling Stones, he has suffered from a variety
of touring life hazards. Published ancedotes from Bill Wyman and Keith
Richards have described Watts in the 1970s passing out after being
awake for several days from too much good cheer, falling into a full
spaghetti dinner. He also punched and threatened a drunken Mick Jagger
in a hotel in the mid-1980s. Jagger phoned Watts' hotel room asking
where "his drummer" was, and Watts met him down the stairs and punched
him, saying "Don't ever call me your drummer again. You're my fucking
singer."
Ever faithful to his wife Shirley, Watts consistently refused
sexual favors from groupies on the road and discussed his
regular bouts of insomnia incurred from not sharing his bed
with his wife in Robert Greenfield's STP: A Journey Through
America With The Rolling Stones, a document of their 1972 American
Tour. When the group held court at the Playboy
Mansion during that tour, Watts famously took advantage of Hugh
Hefner's renowned game room rather than frolic with the women. It was
not until he finally sought treatment for alcoholism and drug
addictions in the late 1980s, which included several years of heroin and amphetamine
use, that his wife and daughter Seraphina began regularly joining him
on Rolling Stones tours.
Since the 1990s, he has admitted to another addiction; this
one less damaging. Shopping in high fashion stores has become common
for Watts. His personal wardrobe has attracted so much attention, the
British newspaper The Telegraph named him one of
the World's Best Dressed. In 2006 Vanity Fair elected Watts into the
International Best Dressed List Hall of Fame, joining such alumni as
his style icon, Fred Astaire.
In June 2004, Watts was diagnosed with throat
cancer, and underwent a course of radiotherapy. The cancer has since gone
into remission and he is once again recording and touring with the
Stones.
The Rolling Clones, a tribute
band, released a 2007 CD, "Remakes and Outfakes", which was mastered by
Charlie Watts at Technovoice Studios.
Solo records
Watts has released jazz/big-band records, employing a wide
variety of vocalists and musicians.
- February 1987: Live at Fulham Town Hall
(Charlie Watts Orchestra)
US #14 [6 wks] (Billboard Top Jazz Albums)
- February 1991: From One Charlie
(Charlie Watts Quintet)
- August 1992: Tribute to Charlie Parker with
Strings (Charlie Watts Quintet)
US #19 [10 wks] (Billboard Top Jazz Albums)
- December 1993: 'Warm & Tender (Charlie
Watts)
US #6 [15 wks] (Billboard Top Jazz Albums)
- June 1996: 'Long Ago & Far Away' (Charlie Watts)
UK #86 [2 wks]; US #10 [13 wks] (Billboard
Top Jazz Albums)
- May 2000: Charlie Watts/Jim Keltner Project
(Charlie Watts and Jim Keltner)
- August 2004: Watts at Scott's (Charlie
Watts)
External links
| v • d • e The
Rolling Stones
|
| Mick
Jagger • Keith
Richards • Charlie Watts •
Ron Wood
Brian
Jones • Bill
Wyman • Mick
Taylor • Ian Stewart
See
also
Chuck
Leavell • Darryl
Jones • Andrew
Loog Oldham • Allen
Klein • Nicky
Hopkins • Bobby Keys
• Jimmy
Miller • Jim
Price • Billy
Preston
Related
articles
Discography •
The
Glimmer Twins • Jagger/Richards
• Nanker
Phelge • Rolling Stones Records •
Rock and
Roll Circus
Categories
The Rolling Stones •
Members •
Albums •
Singles •
Songs •
Tours •
Films
|