MICK JAGGER has opened up about how his Rolling Stones co-star Keith Richards had a completely different persona on stage, admitting the guitarist was ...
"Sometimes I think I use it as a weapon and say, 'Oh, he's shy'," Keith laughed. "I don't know how to define shyness," the guitarist added. "Sometimes when I have, I've never felt more embarrassed in my life. The programme also saw Keith's bandmates sharing fond memories and stories about the rock star. "I don't know when it comes to shyness, so I don't really know where to put it." In a four-part BBC special titled My Life as a Rolling Stone, Keith Richards opened up about his childhood, to how he dealt with becoming famous.
KEITH RICHARDS will forever be a pinnacle of rock 'n' roll, along with his iconic pairing with Mick Jagger.Get to know more about the Rolling Stones'
She took musical elements from her father and became a DJ in New York City, while she carried on the beautiful looks of her mother and is now also a model. Keith was not only just a rockstar, but he also took on the film industry when he appeared in three films of the Pirates of the Caribbean series. As a member of the Rolling Stones, Keith was honoured in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1989 and later on in the UK Music Hall of Fame in 2004. Keith admitted in his autobiography that having Marlon around him on tour was what kept him going following the death of his newborn. Keith is one of the founding members of the iconic band the Rolling Stones, and he's the lead guitarist. He is the only child of Doris Maud Lydia and Herbert William Richards who worked in a factory and was wounded in the Second World War.
ROLLING STONES legend Keith Richards has admitted how 'envious' he was of The Beatles when they started on the London music scene and confessed without the ...
Richards added: “Without The Beatles, The Stones would never have been there. The Holy Grail was to make records, to be able to get into a studio. But we knew we had to be a pop band.” And why he was playing The Beatles wasn’t because he didn’t want to listen to anything else. Back in the early 1960s, The Rolling Stones knew they had to stand out by writing their own songs. Mick Jagger remembered: “The Beatles suddenly explode and there you are going, ‘Oh, yeah.