For other uses, see Jagger (disambiguation).
| Mick Jagger |

Mick
Jagger August
6, 2006
|
| Background information |
| Birth name |
Michael Phillip Jagger |
| Born |
July 26, 1943 (1943-07-26) (age 64) |
| Origin |
Dartford, Kent, England |
| Genre(s) |
Rock and Roll, Country,
R&B, Reggae, Blues |
| Occupation(s) |
Singer, Songwriter, Instrumentalist,
Record producer |
| Years active |
1962 - present |
Associated
acts |
The Rolling Stones |
| Website |
MickJagger.com |
Sir Michael Phillip "Mick" Jagger CBE (born July 26, 1943) is an English rock
musician, actor,
songwriter,
record
and film
producer and businessman. He is one the world's most
famous celebrities and is best known as the frontman of the English
rock band The Rolling Stones.
|
Contents
- 1 Early
life
- 2 The
Rolling Stones
- 2.1 The
London years
- 2.2 International
success
- 2.3 Stage
presence and mannerisms
- 3 Criticism
and controversy
- 4 Acting
and film production
- 5 Private
life and public image
- 5.1 Relationships
- 5.2 You're
So Vain
- 5.3 Knighthood
- 5.4 Religion
- 5.5 UFO
- 6 Appearances
in popular culture
- 7 Trivia
- 8 Solo
discography
- 8.1 Soundtracks
- 8.2 Singles
- 9 Filmography
- 10 Footnotes
- 11 External
links
|
Early life
Jagger was born into a middle-class family at Livingstone
Hospital, East Hill, Dartford, Kent, England. His father, Basil Fanshawe ("Joe")
Jagger (6
April 1913 –
11
November 2006),
and his paternal grandfather, David Ernest Jagger, were both teachers;
his mother, Eva Ensley Mary Scutts
(13
April 1913 –
18 May 2000), an Australian
immigrant to England, was an active member of the Conservative Party. Jagger
was the older of two sons and was raised to follow in his father's
career path. According to Jagger in the book According to the
Rolling Stones, "I was always a singer. I always sang as a
child. I was one of those kids who just liked to
sing. Some kids sing in choirs; others like to show off in front of the
mirror. I was in the church choir and I also loved listening to singers
on the radio - the BBC or Radio Luxemburg - or watching them on TV and
in the movies."
Academically successful, he attended Dartford Grammar School
where he passed 3 A-levels, before entering the London School of
Economics on a scholarship. He studied for a degree in
accounting and finance, but attended for less than a year and did not
graduate, leaving to pursue a musical career. School legend has it that
Jagger was asked to leave the London School of Economics after an
incident in which he rode a motorcycle inside the library.
His decision to drop out of university in 1962 in favour of
music was not approved by his mother and was reluctantly accepted by
his father. Jagger has stated in interviews he could not blame his
parents for their mistrust of his choice; even he doubted a life-long
career in music was possible. He had two bands in his early years,
Little Boy Blue and the Blue Boys, which played "skiffle" music;
according to Jagger, this was "more like a coffee-house version of folk
music."
As a student, Jagger frequented a London club called "the
Firehouse". At the age of 19, Jagger began performing as a singer. Like
Keith
Richards and other members of The Rolling Stones, Jagger had
no formal musical training and did not know how to read music. He
frequented clubs such as the famous Marquee Club or The
Ealing Club, and admired the same type of blues musicians that Brian
Jones and Keith Richards favoured. "I had a number of friends
who had their own record collections, so we used to go round to their
houses and listen to them there... We played everything and anything -
that's how you learn... It was all a bit like trainspotting," Jagger
has said. Elmore
James was one of the band's early favourites, as well as anything from Chess
Records in Chicago.
While Jagger knew Keith Richards as a schoolmate, the
songwriters reunited when Richards saw Jagger with a blues record under
his arm and asked him where he had purchased it. The two, combined with
Jones, Bill
Wyman, Ian Stewart, and Charlie
Watts, formed the Rolling Stones, basing their name on the Muddy
Waters tune "Rollin' Stone." Stewart was dropped
from the band for not fitting the image desired by manager Andrew
Loog Oldham, but still toured with the band as a pianist until his
death in 1985. It was Oldham who insisted that Jagger call himself
"Mick" rather than "Mike", a name he continued to use among friends;
for example, John Lennon calls him Michael
in the 1968 film The Rolling
Stones Rock and Roll Circus.
The Rolling Stones
Jagger was not an immediate success as lead singer of The
Rolling Stones. By his own admission, he was a stiff and awkward school
boy in front of an audience, but in the same way the Stones learned how
to play and write songs – through imitating other artists – Jagger
developed a stage presence. When the Stones began to play live gigs
throughout England with other artists, such as Ike and Tina
Turner, Jagger learned from other singers how to work an audience and
quickly developed his own unique style. As his songwriting and
recording career emerged, Richards became his main collaborator, which
cemented a close friendship. Brian Jones became more of an isolated
figure in the band, as he was unable to contribute to the songwriting
process.
The London years
In 1967, Jagger and Richards were arrested and charged with
drug possession after a highly-publicised raid on Richards' country
house, during which it was alleged that singer Marianne Faithfull was
found naked except for a fur rug wrapped around her. The raid was later
revealed to have been prompted by a tip-off to the London Drug Squad by
journalists working for the News
of the World, which at the time was running a
series of lurid reports about the alleged use of illegal drugs by
British pop stars.
In one of these reports, Jagger was alleged to have spent an
evening at a London club in the company of a journalist, during which
he openly discussed his drug-taking and invited others back to his flat
"for a smoke". When the report was published, it became obvious that
the hapless journalist had mistaken Brian Jones for Jagger – whereupon
Jagger promptly sued the paper News of the World
for defamation.
However this legal action was stymied by his and Richards'
subsequent arrest. The trial made front-page news around the world.
Despite Jagger claiming that the pills allegedly found in his
possession had been prescribed to him, both were found guilty.
The severity of the sentences handed down (imprisonment with
hard labour) caused a major public outcry. It was also the subject of
the famous editorial by William Rees-Mogg, editor of The Times,
titled "Who breaks a
butterfly upon a wheel?" In it, Rees-Mogg asserted that it was Jagger's
and Richards' celebrity that made them targets and that their sentences
for first offences were harsher than "any purely anonymous young man"
would have received. Their convictions were overturned on appeal, and
they subsequently were released, though the other person arrested with
them, noted London art dealer Robert Fraser, served six months.
It was during this period that Jagger and Richards took over
as the effective leaders of The Rolling Stones, as founder Brian Jones
became more and more incapacitated by his spiralling drug use and lack
of songwriting ability. Jones was fired from the band in June 1969 and
accidentally drowned in his swimming pool July 3rd (though rumours
persist that he was murdered).
International success
After the band's acrimonious split with their second manager, Allen B.
Klein, Jagger took control of their business affairs and has managed
them ever since in collaboration with his friend and colleague, Prince Rupert
Löwenstein. Decades after the band's creation, The Rolling Stones
continue to perform and to court controversy. The release of their 2005
album A Bigger Bang
included the song "Sweet Neo Con" in which Jagger's lyrics openly
attack the presidency of George W. Bush. In February 2006,
they appeared during the Super Bowl broadcast, and Jagger was
asked to omit words that had sexual connotations from two songs which
would be heard by a vast family audience. He did not comply with this
request, but his microphone was momentarily dipped. The Stones went on
to make their first visit to Puerto Rico, playing to a sell-out
audience of 20,000 at the new Jose Miguel Agrelot
Coliseum. Tickets to the concert were being sold for up to $1,000, more
than twice the top published price of $460. On 8 April 2006, the Stones
performed in Shanghai,
their first ever show in mainland China. Jagger has also signed on to appear
regularly as himself in a television sitcom based on the theme of a
small group of inept thieves who want to rob him. The sitcom's working
title was Let's Rob Mick Jagger but was later
renamed The Knights of Prosperity;
on January
3, 2007
Jagger guest starred in the premiere episode.
Stage presence and mannerisms
Often regarded one of the greatest front men in the history of
rock and roll, Jagger posseses an inimitable stage presence. A tireless
performer, he frequently runs and skips across the stage while singing.
From the late sixties through the mid-seventies he often appeared to be
possessed by the music. In the last decade he's grown more likely to
prance than run, but even in his sixties, Jagger can't seem to stand
still.
His interaction with the other members of The Rolling Stones
is usually limited. However, he occasionally gets Keith
Richards and Ronnie Wood into playful headlocks.
Direct interaction with individual audience members is usually limited
to the occasional high five when he passes from the b-stage
to the main stage and visa versa.
During concerts, items such as clothing that are thrown onto
the stage by members of the audience are usually kicked off. He
frequently changes his upper body clothing during concerts, but usually
keeps the same trousers
on throughout the show.
Criticism and controversy
Jagger has come under fire throughout most his career, but the
majority has come from music industry insiders and fans, as opposed to
opponents of rock and roll.
The most damning contention is related to the Stones' Altamont
Free Concert at Altamont Speedway in California.
By some accounts, the Hells Angels were hired to be security
by the Rolling Stones on recommendation from the Grateful
Dead for $500 and free beer, a story Dick Carter, the speedway owner
and Ralph 'Sonny' Barger Angels'
Oakland chapter head both vehemently denied. According to Stones' road
manager Sam Cutler, "the only agreement there ever was...the Angels
would make sure nobody fucked with the generators, but that was the
extent of it. But there was no 'They're going to be the police force'
or anything like that. That's all bollocks."
Whatever the case, the presence of the Angels became extremely
controversial as they injured several fans, killing one – Meredith
Hunter, an eighteen-year-old black man. It was also suggested that the
Angels supplied drugs at the concert.
Rumour held that the Stones, and Jagger in particular, not
only did not try to stop the violence, but encouraged it by singing "Sympathy for the Devil" while
Hunter died. This is strictly an urban legend, as "Sympathy for the
Devil" was played four songs prior to the stabbing of Meredith
Hunter; the Stones were playing "Under My Thumb" when Hunter was
killed. Nevertheless, due to media pressure, they dropped "Sympathy for
the Devil" from most of their 1970s US live set lists. Other unfounded
rumours circulated that Jagger, despite his blues-based band and
songs such as "Brown Sugar" and "Sweet
Black Angel" (the latter being a tribute to Black
Panther Party activist Angela Davis), was racist and did not
want a black fan at his concert. However, concert tapes clearly show
Jagger trying to calm the audience and end the violence; he has also
been a vocal anti-racist.
Acting and film production
Jagger also has an acting career, most notably in Nicolas
Roeg's Performance
(1968) and as Australian bushranger Ned
Kelly (1970). In the early 1980s, Jagger was
cast as a main character in Werner Herzog's Fitzcarraldo,
however numerous delays in the film's notoriously difficult production
resulted in him being unable to continue due to schedule conflicts with
a band tour; some of the footage of his work is shown in the
documentary Burden of Dreams.
More recently he appeared as a persistent heavy in Freejack
(1992) and in art films such as Bent
(1997) and The Man From Elysian
Fields (2002).
In 1995, Mick Jagger founded Jagged Films with Victoria
Pearman, "to start my own projects instead of just going in other
people's and being involved peripherally or doing music".
Its first release was the World War II drama Enigma
in 2001.
In late February, 2007 Paramount
Pictures announced that Jagger will be
teaming up with Academy-Award-winning director Martin
Scorsese to co-Produce a new film titled "The Long Player."
Private life and public image
Relationships
 |
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Mick Jagger has become well known over the years for his high
profile relationships, such as that with Chrissie Shrimpton from 1963
to 1966 or with Marianne Faithfull from
1966 to 1970. He has seven children by four different women, and has
been the subject of many scandals over the years.
Mick Jagger's first child was born when he was 27. The mother,
fellow singer Marsha Hunt, gave
birth to daughter Karis Jagger on 4 November
1970. The
couple were not married and did not remain together for long after the
birth as Jagger became acquainted with activist Bianca
Perez-Mora Macias.
In May 1971, Jagger married de Macias, later known as Bianca
Jagger. Bianca, born in Managua, Nicaragua, in 1945, was a social and
political activist who had studied Political
Science and French Literature, and was
virtually unknown before her marriage to Jagger. Later that same year,
Bianca gave birth to her first child and Jagger's second. Jade
Jagger, born on 21 October 1971, lived with her parents in France and London. With
Bianca, Jagger entered the world of high international celebrity, as
evidenced by the jet
set hangers-on to their 1972 American
Tour and afterwards. They were regulars among the high-flyers that
frequented Studio 54, the then red hot disco in Manhattan. Mick and
Bianca separated in 1979 and divorced in 1980.
After he separated from Bianca Jagger, Jagger became involved
with English-American
supermodel
Jerry
Hall in the late 1970s. Jerry Hall was rumoured to be the 'other woman'
who broke up the marriage between Mick and Bianca while she was engaged
to Bryan Ferry at the time. Hall became Jagger's companion and Ferry
wrote the song "Cry, Cry, Cry" about her. In 1984, Hall gave birth to
the couple's first child, Elizabeth Scarlett Jagger.
Elizabeth was born on 2 March 1984, in London and became known as 'Lizzy'.
Hall had appeared on several of his album covers, and they had planned
to marry. Partners Hall and Jagger then had their second child
together, James Leroy Augustin Jagger in 1985. It was also this year
that Jagger famously claimed that marrying Hall would give him
'claustrophobia'. However, despite this claim the two were married in
1990 while holidaying in Bali. This marriage has since been disputed
since it was not properly conducted and may not have been legally
valid. Nevertheless, Jagger and Hall soon after had a third child
together, Georgia May Ayeesha Jagger. Their
youngest child, son Gabriel Luke Beauregard was born in 1997. Jerry
Hall separated from Mick Jagger in 1999 after model Luciana
Gimenez claimed she was pregnant with Jagger's child. She further filed
for divorce when a DNA
test proved this to be true. It had been rumoured an affair took place
between the two earlier although nothing had come of it. Luciana and
Jagger's son Lucas Jagger was born in 1999.
While attempting to divorce Mick Jagger, it was found that
Jerry Hall had never actually been married to Jagger at all. Their
Hindu wedding on a beach in Bali was, in fact, not recognised under
English Law, therefore eliminating the possibility of divorce. Instead
Hall had the marriage annulled in 1999, officially ending the 22-year
partnership. To this day, Hall has maintained Mick Jagger is a good
father and friend of hers. She has claimed he owns a flat next door and
that they get along better than ever before. After their divorce,
Jagger did not continue a relationship with Gimenez, but he did
continue to support her and see his son. She lives with her son in New York and Brazil.
In more recent years, Jagger has been touring the world and
producing albums, both solo and with The Rolling Stones. However, in
2005, he arrived at the Grammy Awards with fashion stylist L'Wren
Scott and called her his "main point of interest". She has been seen on
his current A Bigger Bang Tour and lives in Hollywood.
He is one of the world's richest musicians with a fortune well
beyond 675 million dollars.
You're So Vain
Jagger was reportedly romantically involved with singer and
songwriter Carly Simon at some point in the late
1960s. In
1973, she wrote and recorded the number one hit You're
So Vain about a prior boyfriend whom she
claimed was "so vain/I betcha think this song is about you". Since
Simon was newly married, many suspected it was about either Warren
Beatty, Cat Stevens, Kris
Kristofferson or Mick Jagger, who sang harmony on the song. Jagger has
never commented on the rumour, nor has Simon ever put it to rest. She
has denied it being all four on different occasions but also hinted at
it being Beatty and Jagger. It was assumed the song was not about
Jagger when Carly Simon joined Janet Jackson in 2000 for a remix of
the song called "Son of a Gun," which sampled "You're So Vain". In the
song, Simon says "The apricot scarf was worn by Nick/there's nothing in
the words that refer to Mick".
Knighthood
At age 60, despite having spent most of his life an icon of
rock rebelliousness, Mick Jagger was knighted
on 12
December 2003,
for his "services to popular music".
The lack of fuss over his knighthood marked a shift in British
attitudes since 1965, when some outraged dignitaries returned their
medals in protest after the Beatles were made Members of the Order of
the British Empire (MBE).
Rolling Stone Keith Richards dissented and said: "I
thought it was ludicrous to take one of those gongs from the
establishment... it's not what the Stones is about, is it? I don't want
to step out on stage with someone wearing a fucking coronet and
sporting the old ermine. I told Mick, it's a fucking paltry honour."
[1]
Jagger laughed off the criticism from Richards. "I
think he would probably like to get the same honour himself",
Jagger said. "It's like being given an ice cream — one gets
one and they all want one. It's nothing new. Keith likes to make a
fuss."
The announcement of Jagger's honour did elicit some angry
letters to The Daily Telegraph. A Canadian woman
whose husband, mother and grandfather all received honours wrote: "By
giving a knighthood to a rogue like Mick Jagger, the prime minister has
denigrated all the worthy recipients of honours from Her Majesty the
Queen."
Jagger sported a designer suit with leather lapels and black
suede and leather sneakers for the formal investiture. He denied that
he had betrayed his unconventional past, which epitomised the "sex,
drugs and rock 'n' roll" lifestyle.
"I don't think the establishment as we knew it exists
any more", he told reporters. "Honours are very
nice, as long as you don't take it all too seriously".
Jagger came to the ceremony with his 90-year-old father Joe —
who decades earlier chided his son's passion for "jungle music" — and
daughters Karis, 32, and Elizabeth, 19.
Jagger's father, Joe, died on 11
November 2006
after suffering from pneumonia. His death, at the age of 93,
caused Mick Jagger to depart the second leg of the North
American A Bigger Bang Tour
for the funeral.
Religion
Mick Jagger has sung about religious concepts over the years
with The Rolling Stones ("Sympathy for the Devil",
"Blinded by Rainbows", "Saint of Me") and in solo projects. For
example, his Wandering Spirit and Goddess
in the Doorway albums carry this theme. In 1999, Jagger
joined the Kabbalah religion and Hollywood
Centre with wife Jerry Hall. The mystic Jewish sect was so popular with
the Jaggers that they held an evening to promote the church, which Ron Wood, Bill
Wyman and Rav
Berg attended.
In Jagger's song "Joy" on Goddess in the Doorway,
Jagger proclaims "I was looking for the buddha when I found Jesus
Christ." The song is a duet with U2's Bono.
Jagger and Hall later lost interest in the church. Jerry Hall
proclaimed in a 2004 interview, "We couldn't go through the door of
miracles unless we gave them 10 percent of our money." Jagger's father,
Joe, was buried as a Roman Catholic. It has also been stated that Mick
was brought up as a Roman Catholic.
UFO
In his book Alien Rock: The Rock 'n' Roll
Extraterrestrial Connection, Michael C. Luckman wrote that
Mick Jagger and Keith Richards claimed to
had experienced close
encounters with UFOs.
In an interview with BANG Showbiz, Luckman said that:
Mick Jagger has been very involved with the subject of UFOs
for many years. In 1968, he went camping in Glastonbury with his then
girlfriend, singer Marianne Faithfull, and
encountered a rare, luminous cigar-shaped mothership. Around the same
time Mick had a UFO detector installed at his British estate. The alarm
kept on going off whenever he left home, indicating the presence of
strong electromagnetic activity in the immediate area.
—Michael C.
Luckman,
Appearances in popular culture
- In 1972, a new fossil snail was named Anomphalus jaggerius
in honour of Jagger. Similarly, in 1995, a new fossil trilobite
species in the genus Aegrotocatellus, Latin for sick
puppy, was given the name Aegrotocatellus jaggeri.
- The influential artist Andy Warhol immortalized Jagger in a
series of color screen prints that are still highly-valued in 2007.
Warhol designed the cover of the band's "Sticky
Fingers" album.
- The British satire programme Spitting
Image had a Mick Jagger puppet.
- Jagger has been portrayed by Phil
Cornwell in Stella Street,
and Luke de Woolfson in Stoned (2005).
- Jagger played a role in an episode of The
Simpsons called "How I Spent My
Strummer Vacation" along with fellow Rolling Stone Keith
Richards. They taught the camp members how to be rock stars.
- Gilda Radner, as Candy
Slice in a Saturday Night Live sketch from
February 1979, paid musical homage to Mick Jagger in a wild song
entitled "Gimme Mick", admitting herself to be Jagger's "biggest
funked-up fan". Jagger also appeared on two SNL sketches in the season
27 (2001-2002) episode hosted by Hugh Jackman; a Donatella Versace
sketch where Jagger impersonated Karl Lagerfield, and a sketch where
the real Mick Jagger has a conversation with his reflection (played by Jimmy
Fallon) over what to do during his next musical performance on the
show. The latter sketch ("Mick Jagger's Reflection") is included in the
SNL special, "The Best of Jimmy Fallon" as the opening sketch.
Trivia
- Jagger is an avid cricket fan.
- He confessed before the Super
Bowl XL Half Time Show that he had never really wanted to do it.
- Jagger is reported to be related to Joseph
Jagger, the engineer who in 1875 used his knowledge of the quirks of
the roulette
wheels at a Monte Carlo casino to win the
equivalent of over $4 million and fame as "The Man Who Broke the Bank
at Monte Carlo".
- His height is reportedly 5'10" (1.78 m)
- In the late seventies he, like other famous
musicians such as David Bowie and Liberace, guest starred several times
on "Lives...of the curious."
- Jagger is renowned for his prominent lips, a
feature which The Rolling Stones have frequently used on artwork and
promotional material.
- In 1995, Jagger was elected Honorary President
of the students union of the college he dropped out of, the LSE
Students Union, narrowly beating a joint nomination for Yitzhak
Rabin and Yasser Arafat with Mother
Teresa in third position. When presented with the title he was informed
that he had an "open offer to continue his degree in Accounting and
Finance" at any point, which he declined.
- Jagger starred in an early version of Werner
Herzog's Fitzcarraldo as
the title character's assistant, but when Herzog decided to reshoot the
movie with Klaus Kinski as Fitzcarraldo, Jagger's
character was cut.
- Discovered the rock band Living
Colour, after catching the band perform at CBGB's. Jagger
would later produce several tracks on their debut album, Vivid, provide
backing vocals on the single Glamour Boys, and invite the band to
open the U.S. leg of the Stones' Steel Wheels tour in 1989.
- Has been portrayed by the British painter
Francis Bacon in a set of paintings.
Solo discography
- She's the Boss
(25
February 1985)
UK #6 [11 wks]; US #13 [29 wks]
- Primitive Cool
(14
September 1987)
UK #26 [5 wks]; US #41 [20 wks]
- Wandering Spirit
(8
February 1993)
UK #12 [4 wks]; US #11 [16 wks]
- Goddess in the Doorway
(19
November 2001)
UK #44 [4 wks]; US #39 [8 wks]
- The Very Best Of Mick
Jagger (10 September 2007)
Soundtracks
- Alfie
(18
October 2004)
US #171 [2 wks]
- Ruthless People
(1987) U.S. #2
- Bent (1997)
(sings "Streets of Berlin" co-written with Philip
Glass)
Singles
- "Memo from Turner" (November 1970) #32 UK
- "Don't Look Back" (September 1978) #43 UK; #81
US (with Peter
Tosh)
- "State of Shock" (June 1984) #14 UK; #3 US
(Jacksons & Mick Jagger)
- "Just Another Night" (February 1985) #32 UK;
#12 US [US Mainstream Rock #1]
- "Lucky in Love" (April 1985) #91 UK; #38 US
[US Mainstream Rock #5]
- "Lonely at the Top" (April 1985) [US
Mainstream Rock #9]
- "Dancing in the Street"
(with David
Bowie) (August 1985) #1 UK; #7 US [US Mainstream Rock #3]
- "Ruthless People" (July 1986) #51 US [US
Mainstream Rock #14]
- "Let's Work" (September 1987) #31 UK; #39 US
[US Mainstream Rock #7]
- "Throwaway" (November 1987) #67 US [US
Mainstream Rock #7]
- "Say You Will" (December 1987) [US Mainstream
Rock #39]
- "Sweet Thing" (January 1993) #24 UK; #84 US
[US Mainstream Rock #34]
- "Wired All Night" (March 1993) [US Mainstream
Rock #3]
- "Don't Tear Me Up" (April 1993) #86 UK [US
Mainstream Rock #1]
- "God Gave Me Everything" (October 2001) [US
Mainstream Rock #24]
- "Visions of Paradise" (March 2002) #43 UK
- "Old Habits Die Hard" (October 2004) (Mick
Jagger & Dave Stewart) #45 UK
Filmography
Jagger has appeared in the following movies:
- Performance
(1968)
- Ned
Kelly (1970)
- Umano non umano (1972)
- Wings of Ash (1978) – pilot
for a dramatisation of the life of Antonin
Artaud
- Running Out of Luck (1987)
- Freejack (1992)
- Bent (1997)
- Mein liebster
Feind (aka My Best Fiend) (1999)
- Enigma
(2001) – cameo only, plus co-producer
- The Man From Elysian
Fields (2001)
- Mayor of the Sunset Strip
(2003)
Footnotes
External links
Mick Jagger
noquotend -->
| 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
|
| Persondata |
| NAME |
Jagger, Mick |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES |
Sir Michael Philip "Mick" Jagger |
| SHORT DESCRIPTION |
English
rock
musician, actor, songwriter |
| DATE OF BIRTH |
26
July 1943 |
| PLACE OF BIRTH |
Dartford,
Kent, England |
| DATE OF DEATH |
|
| PLACE OF DEATH |
|