Charlie is My Darling: Charlie Watts, 1941 - 2021
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Charlie is My Darling: Charlie Watts, 1941 - 2021
By TeezBeez Shop · Jan. 15, 2021
Within a few years of making their debut in 1964, people were calling the Rolling Stones the Greatest Rock 'n' Roll Band in the World, as if it had been their birthright. And despite a great many creative peaks and valleys over the decades, in the 2020s plenty of folks were still happy to call them that. They created consistently compelling, innovative music through the 1960s, and if they were more hit and miss in the '70s and '80s, the fact they could knock out albums like Sticky Fingers (1971), Exile on Main St.(1972), Some Girls (1978), Tattoo You (1981) and Undercover (1983) when the spirit moved them reminded fans that they never truly lost the touch, and as recently as 2016's raw, committed Blue & Lonesome and their enthusiastically received tours of the 2010s, they sounded as if they wanted to be certain the world knew no one could ever count them out as a force to be reckoned with.
Throughout the Stones' history, the twin focal points with most fans were Mick Jagger, the swaggering, lascivious, and kinetic vocalist and frontman, and Keith Richards, the guitarist who defined the notion of rhythm as lead and spent decades as rock's leading poster boy for charmingly reckless behavior. However, to a vocal minority and fans and an impressive number of fellow musicians, the true source of the band's magic could be found at the back of the stage, behind the drums. Charlie Watts, who died on August 24, 2021 at the age of 80, was always an implacable presence in concert, always focused and right in the zone, and he laid out arguably the most satisfying backbeat in rock 'n' roll history. From the late '60s onward, many rock drummers believed the prime indicators of talent were the ability to hit hard, throw as many exotic rudiments into a song as possible, and toss a few extended solos into the set. Charlie Watts had no use for any of that. What Watts brought to the Stones was a style that rolled just as much as it rocked. He gave their performances a swing that few of their peers could match, and their music had a groove that was the product of an unerring instinct about where to put the two and four on the snare, and fills that accented the songs and lifted them up, rather than nailing them down. Ginger Baker's work in Cream may have exemplified one school of thought about rock drumming, but Watts saw his job as a drummer not as a place to compete with his bandmates, but to support, complement, and augment when they were doing. As Watts once told a journalist, "I don’t like drum solos. I never take them. I admire some people who do them, but generally, I don’t like them. It’s not something I sit and listen to. I prefer drummers in the band playing with the band."
Charlie's bandmates similarly appreciated his talents and philosophy, and the way he interacted with other musicians. Keith Richards once said, "Everybody thinks Mick and Keith are the Rolling Stones. If Charlie wasn’t doing what he’s doing on drums, that wouldn’t be true at all. You’d find out that Charlie Watts is the Stones." And plenty of other musicians took note of Watt's style and how it worked with the Stones. Joan Jett paid tribute in a social media post that read in part, "He most elegant and dignified drummer in rock and roll. He played exactly what was needed -- no more -- no less. He is one of a kind." And former Sleater-Kinney drummer Janet Weiss said of his work, "The saying 'you're only as good as your drummer' never meant more."
Watts is also probably the only great drummer who discovered his instrument via the banjo. The son of a truck driver, Charlie was born in London in 1941 and grew up in Wembley. In his early teens, he developed a keen interest in music and wanted to play. He bought a banjo, but quickly discovered he didn't like having to learn the fingerings necessary to play. As he told a reporter for the New Yorker, "So I took the neck off, and at the same time I heard a drummer called Chico Hamilton, who played with Gerry Mulligan, and I wanted to play like that, with brushes. I didn't have a snare drum, so I put the banjo head on a stand." His parents sensed his potential and got him a cheap drum kit, which gave him the incentive to save his money and get better gear. Soon Watts was buying as many jazz records as he could afford, and was playing jazz with local groups (though many preferred old school "trad jazz" to the more modern stuff that turned his head) as well as more lucrative wedding gigs on weekends. Watts didn't intend to make music his full-time job -- he was pursuing a career as a graphic artist and designer and making a decent living at it -- but he was a good enough drummer that word spread, and he was invited to join Blues Incorporated, a rhythm & blues group led by Alexis Korner. Watts eventually accepted the offer, even though as a jazz snob he wasn't well versed in R&B, and when the embryonic version of the Rolling Stones that was starting to haunt London blues and jazz clubs heard him at work, they knew he was the drummer they needed. Watts demanded a greater salary than the Stones were initially willing to pay, but in 1963 they offered him five pounds a week to take over as their drummer, and he accepted. It was a financial sacrifice the Stones knew they needed to make to succeed; in his autobiography, Keith Richards wrote, "We starved ourselves to pay for him! Literally. We went shoplifting to get Charlie Watts."
Over the years, change would come to the Rolling Stones -- Brian Jones would be fired from the band in 1969, shortly before his death by drowning, and Mick Taylor would take his place, only to quit the group in 1975, with Ron Wood becoming his permanent replacement the following year. At the end of 1992, Bill Wyman stepped down as the Stones' bassist, and Darryl Jones quietly took his place for recording and touring, though he has yet to be made an official member of the band (he's doubtless paid well enough to take away the sting). Despite occasional periods of tension, the Stones stayed together through it all, and became respected venerable elder statesmen of rock, regularly selling out stadiums around the world even as they slipped well past conventional retirement age. And through it all, Charlie Watts was their foundation, his presence as dependable as his backbeat, looking greyer but otherwise losing none of his focus or authority behind the kit. (Watch the documentary Gimme Shelter, which deals with the Stones' 1969 American tour and the disastrous Altamont Speedway concert, and note that even as Hell's Angels wander about the stage, chaos rains down all around them, and an audience member is being stabbed to death, Charlie never misses a beat.) On August 19, 2019, he drove the Stones through a show in Miami, Florida, playing the final song as rain poured down (a hurricane was expected to sweep through the area the following day, so the band moved the show up from the original date). The COVID-19 pandemic scuttled plans for a number of concerts in 2020, and on August 3, 2021, it was announced that Watts would be sitting out the rescheduled dates, set to begin in September, due to health issues, with Steve Jordan (a friend of the band who had played on Keith Richards' solo project) as his temporary replacement. On August 24, the world learned Watts' absence from the group would be permanent.
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