To me, Charlie Watts was the secret essence of the whole thing. | | | | | Charlie Watts backstage at Wembley Empire Pool, London, April 8, 1964. (Jeremy Fletcher/Redferns/Getty Images) | | | | "To me, Charlie Watts was the secret essence of the whole thing." | | | | Charlie Is My Darling F***. He was, by a preponderance of accounts, the nicest man in rock and roll, the most impeccably dressed, self-effacing to a fault, the center of gravity of the most important rock and roll band that ever was, and therefore the center of gravity of everything, a master of pockets and of swing, uninterested in the trappings of rock and roll fame or the debauchery of his bandmates, and this is the Platonic ideal of a rock and roll groove. Unless it's this. Or maybe this. He liked to play a little behind the beat, and there are small disagreements as to how and why that might have come to be, which may be one of the only things we'll ever disagree on vis-à-vis CHARLIE WATTS of the ROLLING STONES, who died Tuesday at age 80, bringing to an end one of the greatest careers rock ever witnessed, if not bringing to an end rock itself. Unlike most drummers, who everyone else in the band automatically follows, Watts tended to follow the lead of rhythm guitarist KEITH RICHARDS, leaving him maybe a hundredth of a second behind in the process, according to the New York Times' BEN SISARIO, whose source is Richards biographer VICTOR BOCKRIS, who got it from BILL WYMAN, who's in a position to know. Rolling Stone's (the magazine, not the band) ROB SHEFFIELD, on the other hand, says the rest of the band actually spent much of its time following and trying to keep up with Watts. "There are entire Stones albums — BLACK AND BLUE comes to mind, so does EMOTIONAL RESCUE — where the concept is the Stones just listening to Charlie play," Sheffield writes. That's a good sentence and a good concept. But who really followed who? I'd like think the answer to this minor contradiction is: Yes. Because the point is everyone was listening to everyone and Charlie Watts was always somewhere in the middle, the heart of rock and roll beating politely but determinedly behind a small, bare-bones drumkit that he declined to upgrade over the course of nearly 60 years, swinging a rhythm and blues groove, or maybe playing syncopated disco. He was self-taught and had a variety of quirks that every drummer who tried to copy him messed up in some way or another, such as his habit of never playing the snare and hi-hat at the same time, which he said he didn't even know he was doing until sometime in the 1980s. My favorite Watts memorial tweet came from DEERHOOF's GREG SAUNIER, who summed up much of this information thusly: "o to listen that intently to my bandmates and that little to myself." He would've rather been listening to jazz, though, which almost certainly explains where the swing came from (and provides one more reason why most of his copycats came up short). He never had much interest in playing repetitive rock songs ("the regularity of it" is how he once described it) to screaming fans in arenas and stadiums. "I've always had this illusion," he said in 1996, "of being in the BLUE NOTE or BIRDLAND with CHARLIE PARKER in front of me. It didn't sound like that, but that was the illusion I had." He used his downtime from the Stones—in later years there was a lot of that—to play in jazz bands of his own design, with some stellar players. That may have been where he was happiest. And most at ease. I read accounts Tuesday of Watts wandering through London record stores alone, with no entourage or fuss, and casually setting up his own drumkit in New York. A musician at work. Which is all he ever wanted to be and all, in the end, he was. MusicSET: "Charlie Watts Was the Swinging Backbeat of Rock and Roll. All of It." | | | Matty Karas (@troubledoll), curator |
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| REDEF MusicSET: Charlie Watts Was the Dapper Backbeat of Rock and Roll. All of It. | by Matty Karas | He was the heartbeat of the Rolling Stones, "the secret essence of the whole thing," which means he was the heartbeat of rock and roll, the secret essence of *that* whole thing. Actually, maybe it wasn't a secret. Because no one else ever came close. | | | | The Guardian |
| 'It just feels safer': the Australian musicians pivoting from an industry in crisis | by Kelly Burke | With some of the country's leading artists and music workers finding new jobs in the pandemic, could there be a talent drain on the horizon? | | | | Interview Magazine |
| Doja Cat Tells Missy Elliott How She Charted Her Own Path to Pop Stardom | by Missy Elliott and Doja Cat | The wildly imaginative provocateur has mostly left behind a very online chapter in career that was sometimes messy, but always intriguing. These days, she lets her talent do the talking. | | | | Variety |
| Man Photographed as Baby on 'Nevermind' Cover Sues Nirvana, Alleging Child Pornography | by Chris Willman | Spencer Elden, the man whose unusual baby portrait was used for one of the most recognizable album covers of all time, filed a lawsuit Tuesday alleging that the nude image constituted child pornography. | | | | Brain Pickings |
| How Pythagoras and Sappho Radicalized Music and Revolutionized the World | by Maria Popova | The story of the invention of the love song, the world's first algorithm, and the mathematics of transcendence. | | | | Trapital |
| What's Next for Kendrick Lamar and TDE After His Final Album with the Record Label? | by Dan Runcie | Kendrick Lamar and TDE have had one of the longest partnerships between a hip-hop label and its flagship artist. TDE CEO Anthony "Top Dawg" Tiffith called it a victory lap. It's been 17 years, which is a long, long time. | | | | iHeartRadio |
| Questlove Supreme: Ty Dolla $ign | by Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson and Ty Dolla $ign | Singer, songwriter and producer Ty Dolla $ign shares some of his words of wisdom and talks growing up in the L.A. music scene, his creative process and working with everyone from Babyface and Skrillex to up-and-comer Tish Hyman. | | | | Music Business Worldwide |
| Spotify is giving podcasters perks that will make independent music artists very jealous | by Tim Ingham | US podcasters can now charge subscriptions and download a database of email addresses. | | | | CNN |
| Afghan pop star Aryana Sayeed details harrowing exit from her country | by Lisa Respers France | An Afghan pop star is sharing her harrowing story of fleeing her country. | | | | DownBeat |
| RETRO READ: The Charlie Watts Interview | by Bill Beuttler | Charlie Watts has drummed for the Rolling Stones for going on a quarter century-a dream gig for most drummers. But it wasn't until recently that Watts began living out his own dream gig. | | | | | The Guardian |
| Turnstile: can hardcore punk's biggest band conquer the mainstream? | by James McMahon | With their major-label deal and collaborations with Dev Hynes, the Baltimore five-piece are pushing at rock music's boundaries.. | | | | Afropop Worldwide |
| Fania Records In the Reissue Era: An Interview with Bruce McIntosh | by Ben Richmond | Fania Records is coming back to the vinyl stacks. The pioneering salsa label's back catalog is now being managed by Craft Recordings' Craft Latino imprint, and they've already re-released albums from Willie Colón, Ray Barretto and Celia Cruz among others, all classics, mostly already sold out. | | | | The New York Times |
| Larry Harlow, a Salsa Revolutionary | by Ed Morales | The musician, who died on Friday, was a true originator of the genre. An outsider, he lived a Latin music life by immersing himself in Afro-Caribbean culture. | | | | Pitchfork |
| An Extremely Rare Interview With Electronic Music Innovator Shackleton | by Shawn Reynaldo | The singular producer emerges from the shadows to dispel a few myths, look back on his role in the evolution of dubstep, and discuss his first new solo album in nine years. | | | | Westword |
| Elderbrook's Creative Trip to Red Rocks | by Adam Perry | Alexander Kotz started making music in the image of Mumford & Sons; then he shifted to electronica and took on the name Elderbrook. | | | | BBC |
| Edge of Seventeen: An anthem that stuns each new generation | by Nick Levine | Forty years ago, Stevie Nicks struck out from Fleetwood Mac, launched a solo career – and created a truly iconic song in the process. | | | | InsideHook |
| John Darnielle Loves Talking About Records Almost as Much as He Loves Making Them | by Mike Conklin | The Mountain Goats singer holds forth on Bonnie Raitt, Depeche Mode and ... the Mountain Goats. | | | | Afropop Worldwide |
| The Lyres of East Africa | by Miguel Merino | Known by names like krar, kisara, tambur, simsimiyya and masinkob, the lyres of East Africa represent some of the world's oldest string instruments. The Otaak Band is dedicated to uplifting and advancing these traditions. Otaak founder Miguel Merino tells the story with audio from his work in Egypt during the pandemic. | | | | Holler |
| Introducing: Sierra Ferrell | by Matt Wickstrom | An interview with Sierra Ferrell, following the release of her debut album "Long Time Coming" via Rounder Records. | | | | Filmed my Martin Scorsese, from the perspective of Charlie Watts. | | | Music | Media | Sports | Fashion | Tech | | "REDEF is dedicated to my mother, who nurtured and encouraged my interest in everything and slightly regrets the day she taught me to always ask 'why?'" | | | | | Jason Hirschhorn | CEO & Chief Curator | | | | | | | |
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