
Conversations with Tyler Bob Spitz on the Rolling Stones, Bruce Springsteen, and the Art of Biography
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May 13, 2026 Bob Spitz, veteran biographer and music-world insider, discusses the Rolling Stones' roots, what they added to the blues, and why albums like Beggars Banquet and Let It Bleed matter. He talks Charlie Watts and Brian Jones, Mick and Keith's longevity, the Stones versus the Beatles, and why popular music’s cultural sway has faded.
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Brian Jones' Early Genius Then Decline
- Brian Jones was a musical savant who shaped early Stones textures but declined into noncontribution as his ego and decline set in.
- Spitz recounts sessions where Jones asked what to play, showing his diminished role before he left.
Art Colleges Fueled British Rock
- UK art colleges were incubators for rock because they gathered nonacademic creative youth who formed bands in cloakrooms and practiced together.
- Spitz links many British rock figures like John Lennon and Keith Richards to art-school networks.
Mick And Keith's Division Of Labor Explains Longevity
- The Stones endured because Mick Jagger and Keith Richards had complementary roles and rarely interfered with each other.
- Spitz credits Mick’s drive to keep the band performing and Keith’s contentment with musical leadership for their longevity.

