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Brian Jones biography

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Quick Facts

  • NAME: Brian Jones
  • OCCUPATION: Guitarist
  • BIRTH DATE: February 28, 1942
  • DEATH DATE: July 03, 1969
  • PLACE OF BIRTH: Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England, United Kingdom
  • PLACE OF DEATH: Hartfield, East Sussex, England, United Kingdom
  • Full Name: Lewis Brian Hopkin Jones
  • AKA: Brian Jones

Best Known For

Brian Jones was a guitarist for rock-and-roll band the Rolling Stones.


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Synopsis

In 1962, Brian Jones formed the Rolling Stones with pianist Ian Stewart, singer Mick Jagger, and Jagger's friend and guitarist Keith Richards. During the Rolling Stones' early days, Jones served as leader, entertainer, and manager for the band,

but he became alienated by the band and became dependent on drugs and alcohol and drowned in his pool a month after being asked to leave the band. He died in England in 1969.

Early Years

Famed musician Brian Jones was born Lewis Brian Hopkin Jones on February 28, 1942, in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England. Born during World War II to Welsh parents, Jones suffered from asthma as a child and throughout his life. His father and mother both played music, and by the time he was in high school, Brian had learned to play the piano, clarinet, saxophone and guitar. Though Jones was incredibly bright, he was a lazy student. He quit school and left home shortly after a scandal in which he fathered an illegitimate baby boy who was subsequently given up for adoption.

Career with the Rolling Stones

Jones soon moved to London to play blues guitar in local bars. In the spring of 1962, he formed the Rolling Stones with pianist Ian Stewart, singer Mick Jagger, and Jagger's childhood friend and guitarist Keith Richards. Bassist Bill Wyman and jazz-influenced drummer Charlie Watts soon joined the band.

During the Rolling Stones' early days, Jones served as leader, entertainer and manager for the band. As the most photogenic band member, his antics and fashion sense were quickly adopted by the swingers of 1960s London . In 1963, the band hired manager Andrew Loog Oldham, who helped them cultivate a rough, somewhat menacing persona. Oldham's arrival also marked the decline of Jones as ringleader. Jagger and Richard, who did much of the songwriting, soon moved into the spotlight.

Though he was chiefly known as a guitarist, especially for the guitar weaving he did with Richards, Jones played numerous instruments during his years with the Stones: sitar, tamboura, dulcimer, keyboards, recorder, harmonica, xylophone and marimba, among others. By the mid 1960s, Jones was feeling increasingly alienated by the band and became more and more dependent on drugs and alcohol. He was first arrested for drug use in May of 1967, and by May of 1968, he was recording his final substantial contributions with the Stones.

Final Years

On June 8, 1969, following the recording of Let it Bleed, Jones was asked to leave the band. A month later, on July 3, 1969, Brian Jones was found at the bottom of his swimming pool at his home in Hartfield, East Sussex, England. The death was ruled an accident. He was 27 years old.

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