Everything about Ian Stewart Musician totally explained
Ian AR Stewart (
18 July,
1938 –
12 December,
1985) was a Scottish
keyboardist and founding member of
The Rolling Stones. In May 1963 Stewart left the group's official line-up, but he remained with them in the capacity of road manager and piano player until his death.
Role in the Rolling Stones
Born in
Pittenweem,
Fife,
Scotland, and raised in
Sutton, Surrey, Stewart (who was often called Stu) started playing piano when he was about six years old. He also took up banjo, and played with various Sutton-area amateur groups on both instruments. Stewart, who loved
rhythm & blues,
boogie-woogie and
blues as well as
big-band jazz, was the first person to respond to
Brian Jones's advertisement in
Jazz News of
2 May 1962 seeking musicians interested in forming a rhythm & blues group.
Mick Jagger and
Keith Richards joined them in June, and the group (with
Dick Taylor on bass and either
Mick Avory or
Tony Chapman on drums) played their first gig under the name The Rollin' Stones at the
Marquee Club on
12 July 1962. By January 1963
Bill Wyman and
Charlie Watts had also joined, replacing a series of off-and-on bassists and drummers.
In early May 1963, the band's new manager,
Andrew Loog Oldham, informed the Rolling Stones that Stewart should no longer be part of the onstage line-up, saying that six members would be too many for a popular group and that Stewart's appearance didn't fit the band's image. He proposed that Stewart could stay with the band as road manager, and could continue to play piano on recordings.
Stewart accepted this demotion. Keith Richards has said: "[Stu] might have realised that in the way it was going to have to be marketed, he'd be out of sync, but that he could still be a vital part. I'd probably have said, 'Well, fuck you', but he said 'OK, I'll just drive you around.' That takes a big heart, but Stu had one of the largest hearts around."
As the Rolling Stones' career started to take off, Stewart became the band's full-time road manager, loading the gear into his battered van, driving the group to their gigs, replacing frayed guitar strings and doggedly setting up Charlie Watts' drums the way he himself would play them. "I never ever swore at him," Watts says, with rueful amazement. He also played piano (and occasionally organ) on most of the band's albums in the first decades of their career, as well as providing essential criticism. Shortly after Stewart's death Mick Jagger said: "Stu was the one guy we tried to please. We wanted his approval when we were writing or rehearsing a song. We'd want him to like it."
Stewart was only one of the Rolling Stones' keyboard players;
Jack Nitzsche,
Nicky Hopkins,
Billy Preston and
Ian McLagan are among the others who supplemented his keyboard work in the studio and on stage. In 1975 Stewart began to join the band on stage again, playing piano on numbers of his own choosing throughout the Rolling Stones' tours in 1975-76, 1978 and 1981-82.
Stewart remained aloof from the excesses of the band's lifestyle. "I think he looked upon it as a load of silliness," said guitarist
Mick Taylor. "I also think it was because he saw what had happened to Brian. I could tell from the expression on his face when things started to get a bit crazy during the making of
Exile on Main Street. I think he found it very hard. We all did."
Stewart was an avid golfer, and as the Rolling Stones road manager he showed a strong preference for hotels with golf courses - much to the band's frustration. Richards recalls: "We'd be playing in some town where there's all these chicks, and they want to get laid and we want to lay them. But Stu would have booked us into some hotel about ten miles out of town. You'd wake up in the morning and there's the
links. We’re bored to death looking for some action and Stu's playing
Gleneagles."
Other work
Stewart was an active keyboard player outside of his work with the Rolling Stones. He contributed to
Led Zeppelin's "
Rock and Roll" from
Led Zeppelin IV and "
Boogie With Stu" from
Physical Graffiti, two numbers in the traditional rock & roll vein, both featuring Stu's intensely rhythmic
boogie-woogie style. Another notable release was
Howlin' Wolf's 1971
London Sessions album, an all-star recording featuring
Eric Clapton,
Ringo Starr,
Klaus Voorman,
Steve Winwood, and Rolling Stones bandmates Bill Wyman and Charlie Watts in addition to Stewart.
Stewart also played with the commercially obscure back-to-the-roots band
Rocket 88, a late-70s/early-80s venture which included Charlie Watts,
Alexis Korner (the founding father of the British blues/trad jazz scene in the early sixties),
Cream frontman
Jack Bruce on stand-up acoustic bass, Bob Hall sharing piano duties with Stewart, and a horn and brass section taken from what he called "British Jazz Legends", including Colin Smith, John Picard,
Dick Morrissey and Don Weller, among others. Though they only released one album (a concert disc recorded in Germany), Rocket 88 allowed Stewart to play the boogie-woogie music that he loved and championed.
Death and posthumous recognition
Stewart contributed to the Rolling Stones' 1983 album
Undercover, and was present during the 1985 recording sessions for
Dirty Work (released in 1986). In early
December 1985, Stewart began having respiratory problems. On
12 December he went to a clinic to have the problem examined; he suffered a
heart attack and died while in the waiting room.
The Stones paid tribute to their friend, road manager and piano player by playing a tribute gig for him with
Rocket 88 in February 1986, and by including a 30-second boogie-woogie piano solo played by Stewart at the end of the
Dirty Work album.
When the Stones were inducted into the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1989, they requested that Stewart's name be included as a member of the band.
Basis for fictional detective Rebus
According to a
Sunday Herald article
in March 2006, Ian Stewart was taken as the basis for a famous fictional detective:
Rankin has subsequently written the lyrics to a song recorded by
Aidan Moffat & The Best-Of's about Ian Stewart. The song is titled "The Sixth Stone" and is the first official release by the new band of Aidan Moffat, formerly of
Arab Strap. It is included on
Chemikal Underground's
Ballads Of The Book compilation, which has Scottish authors and poets writing lyrics for contemporary Scottish bands.
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