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Ian Stewart biography

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  • PLACE OF DEATH: Fife, Scotland
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Ian Stewart was a Scottish musician, co-founder and former band member of The Rollings Stones.


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Ian Stewart was a Scottish musician, co-founder and former band member of The Rollings Stones. He was dismissed as a band member in 1963 but stayed on as their manager and occasional pianist. A lover of boogie-woogie music, the blues, and big-band jazz, Stewart met Mick Jagger as a member of Alexis Korner's Blues Incorporated. He died of heart failure in 1985.

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Musician. Born on July 18, 1938, in Pittenweem, Fife, Scotland. Ian Stewart was one of the founding members of the Rolling Stones. Taking up the piano as a child, Stewart developed a passion for boogie woogie music, a blues style that started in the 1930s.

In 1962, Stewart answered an advertisement for musicians placed by Brian Jones. Jones was an up-and-coming guitarist who appeared sometimes under the stage name "Elmo Lewis" and with Alexis Korner's Blues Incorporated. Blues Incorporated featured a number of rising guest stars, such as Mick Jagger, Eric Clapton, and Eric Burdon.

Jones and Stewart soon joined forces with singer Mick Jagger and guitarists Keith Richards and Dick Taylor as well as a few other musicians. After spending some rehearsing, a new band emerged, one that Jones named the Rollin' Stones after a similarly titled song by Muddy Waters.

At the time, Stewart was working as a shipping clerk for a chemical company. He was a little older than his bandmates and more interested in the blues than rock and roll music. In July 1962, the band played their first gig together. It took them less than a year to land a deal with Decca Records, which their new manager, Andrew Loog Oldham, helped arrange.

Oldham, who had done some public relations work for the Beatles, wanted to present the Rolling Stones (as they were now called) as rough-and-tumble bad boys. He felt that the husky Stewart did not fit that image. By July 1963, Stewart had been forced out of the group. He was, however, invited to serve as their road manager and to play at their performances and on their recordings.

Stewart decided to stick around. As Keith Richards later explained in According to the Rolling Stones, Stewart's decision took a "big heart, but Stu had one of the largest hearts around. . . . I think that Stu was bemused by the whole rock'n'roll circus. He enjoyed it without having to be torn apart, sign autographs and go to photo shoots."

In addition to working with the Rolling Stones, Stewart pursued his own musical interests. He had his own boogie-woogie band, Rocket 88, with Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts. The group released a self-titled album in 1981, which featured songs by W. C. Handy, Pete Johnson, and Alexis Korner.

Stewart died of heart failure on December 12, 1985, in London. Members of the Rolling Stones said good-bye to their sometime collaborator and friend at his funeral eight days later. After the funeral, some attendees, including Mick Jagger and Keith Richards

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