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Binding: Hardcover Dewey Decimal Number: 787.87166092 EAN: 9780312366520 ISBN: 0312366523 Label: St. Martin's Press Manufacturer: St. Martin's Press Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 384 Publication Date: October 02, 2007 Publisher: St. Martin's Press Release Date: October 30, 2007 Sales Rank: 82335 Studio: St. Martin's Press
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For the first time, a member of the world’s most famous rock ‘n’ roll band tells his—and their—story. Raw, unsanitized, nasty and fascinating. An incredible journey. The first of his family to be born on dry land, Ronnie Wood came from a family of water gypsies and was raised in a council flat near Heathrow Airport. Growing up only wanting to paint and play music, Wood was always talented. And in the 1960’s, he was often in the right place at precisely the right time—becoming the guitar player for everyone from the Birds to Jeff Beck to the Faces and then to Rod Stewart . But Wood and his guitar-playing became super-charged when he joined The Rolling Stones. They were rock royalty from their earliest days, and from the first time Wood performed with the band, careening down New York City’s Fifth Avenue on a flatbed truck Wood has been at the center of the court and in the middle of the ferment. No band has ever combined the Stones’ success--both artistically and materially—with their longevity. No other band has ever survived the creativity and clashes of such big personalities. But with success came excess—and as mayhem and hysteria followed Ronnie on his adventures through the extremes of rock ‘n roll, the drugs got harder and his relationships—especially with Mick Jagger, Keith Richards and the women in his life—became increasingly complex. A fascinating portrait not just of the Stones, but of the greatest rockers of the 1960’s and beyond—from Eric Clapton to Rod Stewart, Jimmy Page to Keith Moon, Jimi Hendrix to Pete Townshend—RONNIE is a rich, revelatory book. Readers have never had a view of the rock world like this before.
Customer Reviews Average Rating:  Rating: - An Enjoyable Read Ronnie takes us all the way through his life.Interesting stories that are well told, funny & insightful.As well as his fellow members in the Stones, you get an idea on the personalities of other rock musicians which Ronnie shares with you & which you will also have a chuckle at.A well told interesting & enjoyable read.
Rating: - not without some merit This is a fun read. Just don't trust any of the dates past 1978. The chronology is definitely jumbled. Perhaps this is understandable considering the copious amounts of drugs that he admits to consuming. However, the fact that no editor corrected statements like Woody saying he did a show with Dennis Wilson in 1985 (he died in '83) is almost shameful...
Rating: - THE LOW SPARK OF HIGH HEELED BOYS. THE WOODMANS LONG JOURNEY WEAVES US THROUGH THE LABARYNTHS OF ROCKS HALCION DAYS - ETCHED WITH CANDID IF NOT GRAPHIC FLASH BACKS TO THE MUSICS EARLIEST INFLUENCES TO WHAT HAS NOW BECOME TO ALL, QUINTISENSUAL CLASSIC ROCK.
RONNIE IS FOR THOSE WHO LIVED THROUGH THE LATE 60'S ONWARDS - AN ENGROSSING READ!.
THE CONSUMATE JAMSTERSABILITY TO ADAPT HIS CHOPS TO SO MANY STYLES OF ROCK LUMINARIES THAT FINALLY CULMINATES TO HIS ASCENT INTO ... Read More
Rating: - Quite nice First get me right here: as much as I do NOT like the Stones that much, this is a very nice and funny little autobiography by one of its members. He has had a much more interesting career as a member of the Faces and the Jeff Beck group among other things. However the very sympathetic way in which he recounts his past experiences make even the Stoens years interesting (OK, I guess they ARE an important group after all). The book is written with a great deal of wit and he comes over really well in this ... Read More
Rating: - Ronnie - the "other" Rolling Stone Why this man is not classified as one of the true Rolling Stones is beyond me.
Ronnie: The Autobiography |