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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:05,400 --> 00:00:07,040 Ladies and gentlemen... 2 00:00:07,040 --> 00:00:08,480 CHEERING AND APPLAUSE 3 00:00:08,480 --> 00:00:11,200 ..the Rolling Stones! 4 00:00:11,200 --> 00:00:13,520 CHEERING AND APPLAUSE 5 00:00:13,520 --> 00:00:18,000 In September 2021, the Rolling Stones did something 6 00:00:18,000 --> 00:00:21,160 they hadn't done since 1963... 7 00:00:22,480 --> 00:00:26,840 ..perform without their drummer, Charlie Watts. 8 00:00:26,840 --> 00:00:30,080 CHEERING 9 00:00:30,080 --> 00:00:32,760 For the Stones and their fans, 10 00:00:32,760 --> 00:00:35,200 it's an event packed with emotion. 11 00:00:36,600 --> 00:00:41,520 Every concert on the tour begins with the same moving tribute - 12 00:00:41,520 --> 00:00:44,720 the sound of Charlie's steady beat, 13 00:00:44,720 --> 00:00:48,720 something that powered the band for nearly 60 years. 14 00:00:48,720 --> 00:00:50,840 DRUMBEAT CONTINUES 15 00:00:50,840 --> 00:00:52,200 CYMBALS CRASH 16 00:00:52,200 --> 00:00:54,800 CHEERING AND APPLAUSE 17 00:00:54,800 --> 00:00:59,080 I just want to say to you all that it's really quite emotional seeing 18 00:00:59,080 --> 00:01:03,600 those...seeing those pictures of Charlie up on the screen. 19 00:01:03,600 --> 00:01:06,760 And... CHEERING 20 00:01:06,760 --> 00:01:10,480 This is our...this is our first tour that we've ever done without him. 21 00:01:10,480 --> 00:01:12,760 CHEERING 22 00:01:14,640 --> 00:01:20,280 Cos we all miss Charlie so much on the stage and off the stage. 23 00:01:20,280 --> 00:01:23,440 And we'd like to dedicate this tour to Charlie. 24 00:01:23,440 --> 00:01:25,640 So, here's to you, Charlie. 25 00:01:25,640 --> 00:01:27,040 CHEERING 26 00:01:27,040 --> 00:01:30,680 MUSIC: Waiting On A Friend by The Rolling Stones 27 00:01:30,680 --> 00:01:34,840 Charlie Watts. You know, I'm still dealing with it. 28 00:01:38,200 --> 00:01:41,400 You know, I miss Charlie on many levels. 29 00:01:41,400 --> 00:01:43,480 Like, I miss... 30 00:01:43,480 --> 00:01:48,320 ..wanting to play him this new groove and, erm, want to say 31 00:01:48,320 --> 00:01:51,040 how badly England's done in the Test match yesterday! 32 00:01:51,040 --> 00:01:53,360 You know, I miss him really a lot. 33 00:01:53,360 --> 00:01:57,640 I'm just waiting on a friend. 34 00:01:57,640 --> 00:02:00,600 When Charlie passed, 35 00:02:00,600 --> 00:02:02,680 we're mind blown. 36 00:02:02,680 --> 00:02:07,200 We have the spirit of Charlie playing with us all the time. 37 00:02:07,200 --> 00:02:12,160 Charlie Watts was the driving force behind everything the Stones did, 38 00:02:12,160 --> 00:02:13,840 their heartbeat. 39 00:02:13,840 --> 00:02:18,400 His drumming shaped the music we have loved for six decades. 40 00:02:18,400 --> 00:02:23,400 He laid down the feel for songs that are now my age. 41 00:02:24,680 --> 00:02:27,720 Oh! I'm going to start crying. 42 00:02:28,880 --> 00:02:32,800 No matter how fast Mick went across the stage 43 00:02:32,800 --> 00:02:34,240 doing the pony or whatever, 44 00:02:34,240 --> 00:02:36,280 he was right there with him. 45 00:02:38,480 --> 00:02:42,760 It was a real shock when he passed. 46 00:02:42,760 --> 00:02:46,280 The realisation that there possibly is an end to a band 47 00:02:46,280 --> 00:02:49,520 that's been going on and on and on for so many decades. 48 00:02:52,400 --> 00:02:55,720 I can't imagine the Stones without Charlie Watts. 49 00:02:55,720 --> 00:02:57,160 Charlie was the engine. 50 00:02:59,000 --> 00:03:01,640 The best drummer England has ever produced. 51 00:03:01,640 --> 00:03:04,080 CHEERING AND APPLAUSE 52 00:03:09,320 --> 00:03:11,760 Mr Watts, walk in and hit your mark. 53 00:03:11,760 --> 00:03:13,320 Yeah. Go on. What? 54 00:03:13,320 --> 00:03:15,480 Say your words. 55 00:03:15,480 --> 00:03:18,200 It's all about me. And I'm the star. 56 00:03:18,200 --> 00:03:19,840 For once. 57 00:03:19,840 --> 00:03:20,880 KEITH: Yeah! 58 00:03:22,200 --> 00:03:24,880 LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE 59 00:03:24,880 --> 00:03:26,960 INTRODUCTION IN GERMAN 60 00:03:30,160 --> 00:03:32,400 Honky Tonk Woman! 61 00:03:35,280 --> 00:03:38,360 The way it kicks in 62 00:03:38,360 --> 00:03:41,360 with just a kick and a snare. 63 00:03:41,360 --> 00:03:44,760 MUSIC: Honky Tonk Women by The Rolling Stones 64 00:03:50,680 --> 00:03:53,000 When you hear the intro to that... 65 00:03:53,000 --> 00:03:55,680 INTRO PLAYS 66 00:03:55,680 --> 00:03:59,680 ..it just becomes a physical reaction 67 00:03:59,680 --> 00:04:02,040 that overtakes your body. 68 00:04:05,880 --> 00:04:11,640 I met a gin-soaked bar-room queen in Memphis 69 00:04:14,320 --> 00:04:20,520 She tried to take me upstairs for a ride 70 00:04:22,480 --> 00:04:23,800 She had to... 71 00:04:23,800 --> 00:04:28,440 When I first heard Honky Tonk Women, I thought, "Man, that's funky." 72 00:04:29,920 --> 00:04:33,400 Charlie is a huge part of that because when there's something 73 00:04:33,400 --> 00:04:36,920 that is funky, a lot of it emanates from the drums. 74 00:04:38,720 --> 00:04:45,440 It's the honky tonk women... 75 00:04:45,440 --> 00:04:48,920 Charlie and I, we were very orientated towards dance, 76 00:04:48,920 --> 00:04:52,240 and so that's what brought us together - cos it's about beats. 77 00:04:52,240 --> 00:04:55,320 What do drummers do? They lay down a beat to dance. 78 00:04:55,320 --> 00:05:00,920 I laid a divorcee in New York City... 79 00:05:00,920 --> 00:05:03,560 Charlie sounded like an American drummer. 80 00:05:03,560 --> 00:05:05,600 He had that American feel. 81 00:05:05,600 --> 00:05:07,000 That's what it was. 82 00:05:08,080 --> 00:05:12,760 If I closed my eyes with Charlie, I'd figure it was a black drum. 83 00:05:12,760 --> 00:05:17,360 Keith knew from the very beginning that they'd found someone 84 00:05:17,360 --> 00:05:20,600 who was unique and so special. 85 00:05:20,600 --> 00:05:26,920 Not only his performance, but in his character, as well. 86 00:05:26,920 --> 00:05:33,800 It's the honky tonk women... 87 00:05:33,800 --> 00:05:40,000 The marriage between Keith and Charlie made up its own instrument. 88 00:05:40,000 --> 00:05:42,520 The space they gave each other, 89 00:05:42,520 --> 00:05:44,880 the way the instruments fell, 90 00:05:44,880 --> 00:05:46,600 it was like a tapestry. 91 00:05:47,920 --> 00:05:53,680 I usually look at Charlie and he'll give me a grin because it's clicking 92 00:05:53,680 --> 00:05:56,840 and it's almost like you don't even want to touch the strings 93 00:05:56,840 --> 00:05:59,440 because they're doing it themselves, you know, and anyway, 94 00:05:59,440 --> 00:06:00,920 they'd be too hot. 95 00:06:03,200 --> 00:06:06,120 The great thing about Charlie is he knew every number 96 00:06:06,120 --> 00:06:08,920 could fall apart just like that - 97 00:06:08,920 --> 00:06:10,480 when you least expect it. 98 00:06:10,480 --> 00:06:12,960 And that's what makes it so magic. 99 00:06:15,200 --> 00:06:18,280 The element of risk is what drives our band. 100 00:06:21,000 --> 00:06:25,760 Gimme, gimme, gimme the honky tonk blues 101 00:06:28,520 --> 00:06:33,840 Honky tonk women... 102 00:06:33,840 --> 00:06:38,000 Honky Tonk Women is the culmination of everything The Rolling Stones 103 00:06:38,000 --> 00:06:40,360 developed on their rise to fame. 104 00:06:44,920 --> 00:06:47,720 CHEERING AND APPLAUSE 105 00:06:47,720 --> 00:06:49,720 The Rolling Stones and Honky Tonk Women. 106 00:06:49,720 --> 00:06:52,680 I like the fella that plays the drums. 107 00:06:52,680 --> 00:06:54,880 Charlie. REPORTER: You like him? 108 00:06:54,880 --> 00:06:57,280 Yeah. CHEERING ECHOES 109 00:07:17,920 --> 00:07:20,960 CHARLIE: Ever since I've been with The Rolling Stones, 110 00:07:20,960 --> 00:07:24,200 this has nothing to do with me, by the way, 111 00:07:24,200 --> 00:07:26,440 people have come to look at us. 112 00:07:26,440 --> 00:07:29,080 FANS SHRIEKING 113 00:07:29,080 --> 00:07:31,240 We've had a following. 114 00:07:31,240 --> 00:07:33,280 It's been quite incredible. 115 00:07:36,240 --> 00:07:38,840 What I call the Beatles period, 116 00:07:38,840 --> 00:07:42,480 which was exactly what was happening to them, was happening to us. 117 00:07:42,480 --> 00:07:44,640 SHRIEKING 118 00:07:44,640 --> 00:07:48,840 How do you think being a success has influenced you as a person? 119 00:07:51,200 --> 00:07:55,920 Well, I no longer think, unfortunately, about spending £5. 120 00:07:57,520 --> 00:08:00,480 That really is the only difference it's made to me. 121 00:08:02,080 --> 00:08:03,960 I loved it. 122 00:08:03,960 --> 00:08:07,960 As far as the excitement in the crowd, it was fantastic. 123 00:08:09,120 --> 00:08:11,160 And, you know, when you see a balcony 124 00:08:11,160 --> 00:08:14,080 in one of these beautiful old theatres in the north of England 125 00:08:14,080 --> 00:08:15,840 bouncing up and down... 126 00:08:17,240 --> 00:08:20,040 ..it's incredible and you're looking at the audience. 127 00:08:25,680 --> 00:08:30,480 During that period, we never played more than two songs. 128 00:08:30,480 --> 00:08:32,320 They would announce "The Rolling Stones", 129 00:08:32,320 --> 00:08:36,160 the curtains would open. The whole place would go mad. 130 00:08:36,160 --> 00:08:38,320 And within about three songs... 131 00:08:39,400 --> 00:08:42,800 ..they'd break the whole thing up and we'd have to get off. 132 00:08:45,000 --> 00:08:48,760 Apart from going in studios, we didn't play a great deal 133 00:08:48,760 --> 00:08:50,960 cos we actually never got through a set! 134 00:08:54,440 --> 00:08:57,000 Do you think it's changed your attitude to people? 135 00:09:01,040 --> 00:09:03,800 No. I think it changed people's attitude to me. 136 00:09:05,440 --> 00:09:08,240 But really, when the music stopped... 137 00:09:12,320 --> 00:09:15,120 ..I wish I could have turned it off. 138 00:09:15,120 --> 00:09:17,040 I hated it. 139 00:09:17,040 --> 00:09:19,880 I hated being chased by girls and all that. 140 00:09:22,160 --> 00:09:25,240 It used to really embarrass me. 141 00:09:25,240 --> 00:09:29,200 It's always been "That's what The Rolling Stones do." 142 00:09:29,200 --> 00:09:30,240 Not me. 143 00:09:31,480 --> 00:09:33,840 I think The Rolling Stones are great, 144 00:09:33,840 --> 00:09:37,080 but I kind of don't see me in it somehow. 145 00:09:40,600 --> 00:09:43,920 Charlie always had an ambivalent relationship with stardom 146 00:09:43,920 --> 00:09:45,640 and the Stones. 147 00:09:45,640 --> 00:09:48,160 But what sets Charlie apart from his bandmates 148 00:09:48,160 --> 00:09:50,920 actually makes him their perfect partner - 149 00:09:50,920 --> 00:09:53,840 the anchor in any rock and roll storm. 150 00:09:59,400 --> 00:10:02,720 And what he brings in character and playing style 151 00:10:02,720 --> 00:10:05,760 is writ large on their first American trip. 152 00:10:07,080 --> 00:10:09,440 They want to replicate the success of the Beatles 153 00:10:09,440 --> 00:10:11,040 just three months earlier. 154 00:10:11,040 --> 00:10:14,160 But with Charlie on board, there's a twist. 155 00:10:15,400 --> 00:10:20,400 All the British Invasion bands had a deep love for the Blues 156 00:10:20,400 --> 00:10:23,040 and rhythm and blues, 157 00:10:23,040 --> 00:10:27,040 but not all of them had an appreciation of jazz. 158 00:10:28,240 --> 00:10:32,360 Jazz is a key component to rock and roll music. 159 00:10:32,360 --> 00:10:34,480 It's not always talked about. 160 00:10:36,680 --> 00:10:39,800 The Rolling Stones' deep appreciation of jazz 161 00:10:39,800 --> 00:10:41,640 is down to Charlie Watts. 162 00:10:42,960 --> 00:10:46,840 And while the rest of the band worship at the feet of the blues... 163 00:10:48,960 --> 00:10:51,320 ..Charlie has a different church. 164 00:10:52,440 --> 00:10:54,800 CHARLIE: We landed in New York. 165 00:10:54,800 --> 00:10:57,520 I went to a jazz club 166 00:10:57,520 --> 00:10:59,960 at the Village Vanguard or Birdland. 167 00:11:01,720 --> 00:11:05,040 I saw two artists at Birdland. 168 00:11:05,040 --> 00:11:09,360 One was Charlie Mingus's band, which was pretty amazing. 169 00:11:10,880 --> 00:11:13,200 And the other was Sonny Rollins. 170 00:11:14,200 --> 00:11:16,520 That was America. 171 00:11:16,520 --> 00:11:18,080 I didn't care about the rest of it. 172 00:11:20,000 --> 00:11:23,120 Jazz is Charlie's first and enduring love. 173 00:11:23,120 --> 00:11:26,680 Even as his rhythms for the Stones quickly earn him a reputation 174 00:11:26,680 --> 00:11:29,720 as one of the greatest rock drummers of all time, 175 00:11:29,720 --> 00:11:33,000 jazz is never far away. 176 00:11:33,000 --> 00:11:35,480 MUSIC: Rocks Off by The Rolling Stones 177 00:11:35,480 --> 00:11:38,320 Oh, yeah 178 00:11:46,160 --> 00:11:47,720 I hear you talking 179 00:11:47,720 --> 00:11:51,960 When I'm on the street 180 00:11:51,960 --> 00:11:54,040 Your mouth don't move 181 00:11:54,040 --> 00:11:58,680 But I can hear you speak... 182 00:11:58,680 --> 00:12:00,840 Well, when you're talking about the song Rocks Off, 183 00:12:00,840 --> 00:12:03,080 which is one of my personal favourites, 184 00:12:03,080 --> 00:12:07,160 the fills, if you listen to the fills, they were in odd places. 185 00:12:07,160 --> 00:12:10,240 Is he checking out for sure... 186 00:12:10,240 --> 00:12:12,440 So whatever he's responding to, 187 00:12:12,440 --> 00:12:16,200 he's in the moment, having a musical conversation. 188 00:12:16,200 --> 00:12:20,640 I'm always hearing voices on the street... 189 00:12:20,640 --> 00:12:22,120 That's jazz. 190 00:12:22,120 --> 00:12:25,040 That's jazz because it's so spontaneous. 191 00:12:25,040 --> 00:12:28,400 Can't hardly speak 192 00:12:30,640 --> 00:12:34,080 I was making love last night 193 00:12:34,080 --> 00:12:37,280 To a dancer friend of mine 194 00:12:37,280 --> 00:12:39,560 I can't seem to stay in step 195 00:12:39,560 --> 00:12:45,080 Come every time that she pirouettes over me... 196 00:12:46,600 --> 00:12:50,480 To me, the essence of what we do as a band and where Charlie 197 00:12:50,480 --> 00:12:53,800 comes from is, basically, you go back to the word "jazz". 198 00:12:59,760 --> 00:13:03,040 Charlie Watts first discovers the music he loves the most 199 00:13:03,040 --> 00:13:06,760 as a young boy growing up in post-war Wembley Park. 200 00:13:09,760 --> 00:13:12,080 INDISTINCT CHATTER 201 00:13:12,080 --> 00:13:13,480 Here we go. 202 00:13:13,480 --> 00:13:15,560 Watch out, he's joined us! 203 00:13:19,080 --> 00:13:21,960 We grew up together from the age of four 204 00:13:21,960 --> 00:13:24,360 and listened to all this music. 205 00:13:25,920 --> 00:13:30,120 It was funny because we started becoming interested in music 206 00:13:30,120 --> 00:13:31,440 in tandem, really. 207 00:13:32,920 --> 00:13:36,800 We moved into prefabs in Wembley Park, literally, next door. 208 00:13:36,800 --> 00:13:38,480 You know, if you came out of my front door, 209 00:13:38,480 --> 00:13:41,200 straight into Charlie's, you know. 210 00:13:41,200 --> 00:13:44,240 ARCHIVE: Aluminium bungalows are being erected here at the rate of 211 00:13:44,240 --> 00:13:46,120 one every 35 minutes. 212 00:13:46,120 --> 00:13:47,800 The house seems to spring up, 213 00:13:47,800 --> 00:13:49,840 and before you smoke your third cigarette, 214 00:13:49,840 --> 00:13:52,080 the curtains are going up in the living room. 215 00:13:54,920 --> 00:13:57,960 There were neat rows of prefabs. 216 00:13:57,960 --> 00:14:00,040 It's all the same size. 217 00:14:00,040 --> 00:14:02,680 There was a great feeling of community living there. 218 00:14:02,680 --> 00:14:05,560 Nobody was any better off than anybody else, 219 00:14:05,560 --> 00:14:07,840 so it was a fantastic place for kids to live. 220 00:14:09,440 --> 00:14:11,240 With holes in the fences, 221 00:14:11,240 --> 00:14:15,040 the boys can go back and forth between each other's houses... 222 00:14:15,040 --> 00:14:17,040 JAZZ MUSIC PLAYS 223 00:14:18,080 --> 00:14:22,960 ..where these young Londoners discover a taste for American jazz. 224 00:14:24,080 --> 00:14:27,040 Charlie was into bebop before I was. 225 00:14:27,040 --> 00:14:30,960 I would go into Charlie's bedroom. He's like, "I got a new record." 226 00:14:30,960 --> 00:14:32,640 Charlie, Dizzy, here they are. 227 00:14:32,640 --> 00:14:37,960 This is Charlie Parker and the famous Dizzy Gillespie. 228 00:14:37,960 --> 00:14:40,120 OK, fellas, let's go. 229 00:14:40,120 --> 00:14:42,360 MUSIC PLAYS 230 00:14:51,880 --> 00:14:53,800 I heard Charlie Parker playing. 231 00:14:53,800 --> 00:14:55,280 That's what I liked. 232 00:14:56,320 --> 00:15:00,520 That's where he set everything was from Charlie Parker. 233 00:15:02,480 --> 00:15:06,520 His love of Charlie Parker was absolutely immeasurable. 234 00:15:07,840 --> 00:15:10,000 It sounded like music from outer space. 235 00:15:12,240 --> 00:15:14,840 It transported you to another world... 236 00:15:17,200 --> 00:15:18,960 ..New York in the '40s... 237 00:15:20,640 --> 00:15:22,000 ..52nd Street. 238 00:15:23,080 --> 00:15:24,760 It was total magic. 239 00:15:26,400 --> 00:15:27,840 '50s America. 240 00:15:27,840 --> 00:15:29,800 They are the people I love. 241 00:15:29,800 --> 00:15:33,240 I was in '50s America, really, where my thing is, 242 00:15:33,240 --> 00:15:35,920 and I still kind of look like that in a way. 243 00:15:35,920 --> 00:15:38,560 JAZZ MUSIC ECHOES 244 00:15:38,560 --> 00:15:43,000 ANNOUNCER: Charlie Parker, the alto sax and... 245 00:15:48,600 --> 00:15:52,480 The first drummer I wanted to be, ever, was Chico Hamilton... 246 00:15:54,040 --> 00:15:57,320 ..who was with Gerry Mulligan on Walking Shoes. 247 00:16:00,600 --> 00:16:02,640 I had a banjo, took the neck off it, 248 00:16:02,640 --> 00:16:07,160 and started playing on this banjo skin with a pair of brushes. 249 00:16:07,160 --> 00:16:11,640 Then my dad bought me a set of drums from a guy who played in a pub. 250 00:16:13,120 --> 00:16:16,960 This is Lil, Charlie's mum, talking about Charlie. 251 00:16:16,960 --> 00:16:20,120 "Charlie always wanted a drum set and used to wrap out tunes 252 00:16:20,120 --> 00:16:23,440 "on the table with pieces of wood or a knife and fork. 253 00:16:23,440 --> 00:16:26,840 "We bought him his first drum set for Christmas when he was 14. 254 00:16:26,840 --> 00:16:28,800 "It cost £12. 255 00:16:28,800 --> 00:16:31,680 "He took to it straight away and often used to play jazz records 256 00:16:31,680 --> 00:16:33,280 "and join in on his drums. 257 00:16:33,280 --> 00:16:34,920 "The neighbours were very good. 258 00:16:34,920 --> 00:16:36,680 "They never complained." 259 00:16:36,680 --> 00:16:38,560 LAUGHTER 260 00:16:38,560 --> 00:16:40,080 I was the neighbour! 261 00:16:40,080 --> 00:16:41,960 LAUGHTER 262 00:16:41,960 --> 00:16:43,040 Fantastic. 263 00:16:45,480 --> 00:16:49,680 With his heroes Chico Hamilton, Max Roach and Elvin Jones 264 00:16:49,680 --> 00:16:50,880 accompanying him... 265 00:16:52,560 --> 00:16:57,000 ..it isn't long before a teenage Charlie joins his first band - 266 00:16:57,000 --> 00:16:59,280 The Joe Jones All Stars. 267 00:17:01,520 --> 00:17:06,240 Edgeware Jazz Club on the 21st of August, 1959. 268 00:17:06,240 --> 00:17:08,280 JAZZ MUSIC PLAYS 269 00:17:10,680 --> 00:17:14,680 This is the first recording, ever, of Charlie. 270 00:17:14,680 --> 00:17:16,760 MUSIC PLAYS 271 00:17:20,600 --> 00:17:23,160 DRUMBEAT 272 00:17:26,640 --> 00:17:29,720 You can hear his great swing, even there. 273 00:17:29,720 --> 00:17:32,320 MUSIC CONTINUES 274 00:17:41,000 --> 00:17:43,800 The Charlie Watts sound is taking shape. 275 00:17:44,920 --> 00:17:49,160 But it's about to make a giant leap forward thanks to late night trips 276 00:17:49,160 --> 00:17:52,160 to the heart of swinging London. 277 00:17:52,160 --> 00:17:56,720 It was quite a thing to go to jazz clubs. 278 00:17:56,720 --> 00:17:58,400 There was a few of them - 279 00:17:58,400 --> 00:18:01,920 the Marquee Club, Ronnie's old place, 280 00:18:01,920 --> 00:18:03,920 the Flamingo. 281 00:18:05,280 --> 00:18:09,720 These clubs in the heart of Soho are a slice of New York in London, 282 00:18:09,720 --> 00:18:13,120 and for Charlie, yearning the excitement and glamour 283 00:18:13,120 --> 00:18:16,600 of Manhattan's 52nd Street - the street of jazz - 284 00:18:16,600 --> 00:18:18,440 they're intoxicating. 285 00:18:20,200 --> 00:18:21,600 Hey, fellas. 286 00:18:21,600 --> 00:18:24,040 Let's hear it through from the top, shall we? 287 00:18:25,880 --> 00:18:30,920 16, I used to go and stare at these people, like Phil Seamen. 288 00:18:30,920 --> 00:18:33,320 I wanted to be that. 289 00:18:33,320 --> 00:18:38,600 Phil Seaman was England's answer to Art Blakey, in a way. 290 00:18:41,640 --> 00:18:43,840 He was THE great jazz drummer. 291 00:18:47,600 --> 00:18:49,760 Charlie would never call himself a jazz drummer, 292 00:18:49,760 --> 00:18:52,120 but he had a jazz drummer's sensibility, 293 00:18:52,120 --> 00:18:55,560 and that inflected his playing. 294 00:18:57,480 --> 00:19:03,080 He had a looseness about his delivery that he just couldn't 295 00:19:03,080 --> 00:19:06,000 get out of local talent. 296 00:19:06,000 --> 00:19:10,120 We were all learning. The rock beat was only being invented, basically, 297 00:19:10,120 --> 00:19:12,280 as...as we were happening. 298 00:19:12,280 --> 00:19:15,720 You know? He scored himself in that. 299 00:19:17,240 --> 00:19:19,600 Putting him in a rock and roll band was really interesting 300 00:19:19,600 --> 00:19:23,320 because you had the concepts of free jazz drummers, 301 00:19:23,320 --> 00:19:25,680 but in the Rolling Stones. 302 00:19:37,520 --> 00:19:42,680 Charlie's ability to improvise, be flexible and keep perfect time 303 00:19:42,680 --> 00:19:46,120 is crucial to a band well known for living on the edge 304 00:19:46,120 --> 00:19:49,000 and being loose enough to make mistakes. 305 00:19:52,000 --> 00:19:56,000 In The Village Voice, which was where I saw the ad that led 306 00:19:56,000 --> 00:20:00,720 to my hooking up with Bruce and the E Street Band in 1974, 307 00:20:00,720 --> 00:20:05,920 they had a great section of music want ads, and invariably, 308 00:20:05,920 --> 00:20:07,960 you would come across an ad, 309 00:20:07,960 --> 00:20:11,320 "Wanted - Charlie Watts-type drummer." 310 00:20:12,720 --> 00:20:16,120 So Charlie Watts, through no initiative of his own, 311 00:20:16,120 --> 00:20:18,240 had become a genre. 312 00:20:18,240 --> 00:20:22,240 People like Charlie Watts are very hard to put in a pocket. 313 00:20:22,240 --> 00:20:26,720 They don't make pockets for people like Charlie. 314 00:20:26,720 --> 00:20:30,880 He's a totally unique guy. 315 00:20:30,880 --> 00:20:33,840 There are only a few drummers throughout history that I would say 316 00:20:33,840 --> 00:20:37,040 were artists in their own right. 317 00:20:37,040 --> 00:20:39,160 And he was definitely one of them. 318 00:20:41,680 --> 00:20:44,600 You know that iconic beat that he has? 319 00:20:44,600 --> 00:20:47,280 MUSIC: Tumbling Dice by The Rolling Stones 320 00:20:50,040 --> 00:20:53,720 That tus-tus-tus-tus. 321 00:20:53,720 --> 00:20:56,920 Everybody knows that Charlie Watts beat. 322 00:20:56,920 --> 00:20:59,560 Women think I'm tasty 323 00:20:59,560 --> 00:21:01,880 But they're always tryin' to waste me 324 00:21:01,880 --> 00:21:06,680 Make me burn the candle right down 325 00:21:06,680 --> 00:21:09,000 Dirty, yeah 326 00:21:09,000 --> 00:21:11,640 Dirty, yeah... 327 00:21:11,640 --> 00:21:16,120 He had a playing style, a feel that was all his own. 328 00:21:16,120 --> 00:21:21,000 All you women is low down gamblers... 329 00:21:21,000 --> 00:21:25,640 The sound is an open sound where the drums resonate. 330 00:21:25,640 --> 00:21:30,760 It's a note, it's not a thud and whack. 331 00:21:30,760 --> 00:21:35,440 Fever in the funk house now, now, now... 332 00:21:35,440 --> 00:21:37,840 You know, that's a jazz way of thinking. 333 00:21:37,840 --> 00:21:39,600 Drummers have their own sound. 334 00:21:39,600 --> 00:21:43,600 Charlie Watts had a snare sound which sang throughout the music 335 00:21:43,600 --> 00:21:46,640 of The Rolling Stones. 336 00:21:46,640 --> 00:21:48,480 I'm dancin'... 337 00:21:48,480 --> 00:21:51,200 What made him so unique was that he could rock so hard 338 00:21:51,200 --> 00:21:52,840 while being so loose. 339 00:21:52,840 --> 00:21:57,520 He had a very relaxed style for a very high energy type of music. 340 00:22:27,800 --> 00:22:30,400 In recording him, I discovered very early... 341 00:22:31,960 --> 00:22:34,720 ..Charlie would never play his high hat and his snare drum 342 00:22:34,720 --> 00:22:36,320 at the same time. 343 00:22:38,000 --> 00:22:40,960 In not playing the high hat at the same time as his snare... 344 00:22:42,400 --> 00:22:45,520 ..it gives the snare a huge, big, open sound. 345 00:22:55,800 --> 00:22:57,960 I'd never heard of that before. 346 00:22:57,960 --> 00:23:00,240 But if you go back and listen to it, it's great. 347 00:23:00,240 --> 00:23:02,280 But it also did something else too. 348 00:23:04,280 --> 00:23:06,720 That extra physical motion, 349 00:23:06,720 --> 00:23:08,440 that takes time. 350 00:23:08,440 --> 00:23:09,800 HE LAUGHS 351 00:23:09,800 --> 00:23:12,640 And it helped lay back the groove. 352 00:23:14,520 --> 00:23:17,920 That was an important part of that laid-back Rolling Stones sound. 353 00:23:17,920 --> 00:23:22,200 They could be relaxed and play at slower tempos, 354 00:23:22,200 --> 00:23:27,760 and yet it felt like the thing was charging forward. 355 00:23:30,600 --> 00:23:33,600 CROWD CHANTS: Charlie, Charlie...! 356 00:23:36,360 --> 00:23:40,120 Charlie's playing style reflects his character. 357 00:23:40,120 --> 00:23:43,320 It's all about The Rolling Stones, not him. 358 00:23:44,920 --> 00:23:48,640 That's what I do. I play the drums for Keith and Mick. 359 00:23:48,640 --> 00:23:51,000 I don't play 'em for me. 360 00:23:51,000 --> 00:23:55,280 But this masks the deep respect he has for his craft, 361 00:23:55,280 --> 00:24:00,320 standing on the shoulders of giants on his way to the top. 362 00:24:00,320 --> 00:24:02,360 He had so many different drum kits. 363 00:24:02,360 --> 00:24:04,840 He had Gene Krupa's kit, you know. 364 00:24:04,840 --> 00:24:07,040 Art Blakey's kit, you know? 365 00:24:07,040 --> 00:24:10,800 All the famous drummers through the years that influenced him. 366 00:24:10,800 --> 00:24:13,200 CREAKING 367 00:24:13,200 --> 00:24:17,320 And all these amazing artefacts are kept here... 368 00:24:17,320 --> 00:24:19,240 ..at a secret location... 369 00:24:19,240 --> 00:24:20,400 Wow! 370 00:24:21,960 --> 00:24:24,840 ..a treasure trove, years in the making... 371 00:24:24,840 --> 00:24:26,600 So much stuff. 372 00:24:26,600 --> 00:24:30,960 ..every shelf crammed with musical history. 373 00:24:30,960 --> 00:24:32,960 He's been saying this for years, actually - 374 00:24:32,960 --> 00:24:35,880 "You must come and see my drum collection." 375 00:24:35,880 --> 00:24:37,000 What have we got here? 376 00:24:38,320 --> 00:24:40,880 Wow! Tony Williams! 377 00:24:40,880 --> 00:24:43,920 And he had this idea of opening a museum. 378 00:24:45,080 --> 00:24:47,200 He said to me, "You must come and see it." 379 00:24:47,200 --> 00:24:50,240 And he wanted me to go with Steve. 380 00:24:50,240 --> 00:24:52,480 Wow! Look at that Premier kit! 381 00:24:53,840 --> 00:24:58,200 Kenny Clarke's kit that he gave to Max Roach. 382 00:24:58,200 --> 00:25:00,280 There must be 100 kit here. Yeah, yeah. 383 00:25:02,320 --> 00:25:03,560 Joe Morello. 384 00:25:03,560 --> 00:25:04,960 Wow! 385 00:25:04,960 --> 00:25:08,280 Yeah, that's the one he used with Dave Brubeck. Yeah, yeah, yeah. 386 00:25:08,280 --> 00:25:09,960 Original cases and everything. 387 00:25:13,160 --> 00:25:14,760 Charlie Parker. 388 00:25:14,760 --> 00:25:17,040 Yeah, it's his horn case. Don't believe that! 389 00:25:17,040 --> 00:25:18,520 That's incredible! 390 00:25:20,840 --> 00:25:22,000 What have we got here? 391 00:25:23,480 --> 00:25:27,720 DJ Fontana's 1953 Copper Mist Gretsch, 392 00:25:27,720 --> 00:25:32,600 purchased by Elvis for DJ in Houston. No way! 393 00:25:32,600 --> 00:25:33,840 Wow! 394 00:25:33,840 --> 00:25:36,560 "Elvis put this in the back of the Cadillac 395 00:25:36,560 --> 00:25:39,840 "and we drove to the gig, set it up and played." 396 00:25:39,840 --> 00:25:41,080 Ha! 397 00:25:42,440 --> 00:25:45,680 The whole history of drumming's here. It is! 398 00:25:45,680 --> 00:25:48,320 Jazz and rock and roll. Yeah. 399 00:25:49,800 --> 00:25:53,040 Charlie adores what he calls "his stuff". 400 00:25:53,040 --> 00:25:55,680 It's an indulgence paid for by his success 401 00:25:55,680 --> 00:25:57,760 with the Rolling Stones. 402 00:25:57,760 --> 00:26:02,800 And it keeps him sane amidst the madness of rock and roll. 403 00:26:02,800 --> 00:26:05,880 He remains the accidental rock star, 404 00:26:05,880 --> 00:26:08,920 famously reticent about being a Stone. 405 00:26:08,920 --> 00:26:11,200 CHEERING 406 00:26:11,200 --> 00:26:14,640 Because of what I do, I can't play the drums at home. 407 00:26:15,800 --> 00:26:19,320 And to play the drums, I have to go on the road. 408 00:26:19,320 --> 00:26:21,000 And to go on the road, I have to leave home. 409 00:26:21,000 --> 00:26:23,320 And it's like a terribly vicious circle. 410 00:26:23,320 --> 00:26:24,920 It's always been my life. 411 00:26:29,680 --> 00:26:32,320 For a band that has spent an enormous amount of time 412 00:26:32,320 --> 00:26:35,200 on the road during their 60 years together, 413 00:26:35,200 --> 00:26:37,760 it's a nomadic existence - 414 00:26:37,760 --> 00:26:45,320 planes, trains, tour buses, hotels and an awful lot of nothing to do. 415 00:26:45,320 --> 00:26:47,840 You must have done a great deal of hanging about in 25 years 416 00:26:47,840 --> 00:26:49,520 of the Rolling Stones? Hmm. 417 00:26:49,520 --> 00:26:52,080 Work five years and 20 years hanging around! 418 00:26:52,080 --> 00:26:53,520 LAUGHTER 419 00:26:54,920 --> 00:26:57,680 The bit where the door shuts and you're on your own 420 00:26:57,680 --> 00:26:59,640 in that bloody room... 421 00:27:00,960 --> 00:27:03,320 ..that drives you crazy! 422 00:27:05,560 --> 00:27:08,320 But then, you know, that's just me, you know. 423 00:27:08,320 --> 00:27:11,120 I should really be downstairs bopping around, 424 00:27:11,120 --> 00:27:12,880 but I'm not like that, you know? 425 00:27:12,880 --> 00:27:14,880 So it's very odd. 426 00:27:14,880 --> 00:27:17,160 There's this sort of real split thing going on. 427 00:27:17,160 --> 00:27:19,280 It's all right once the sun comes up for me. 428 00:27:44,680 --> 00:27:48,160 Charlie is anything but a rock and roll cliche - 429 00:27:48,160 --> 00:27:50,520 no TVs thrown from windows, 430 00:27:50,520 --> 00:27:52,960 no hanging out with groupies, 431 00:27:52,960 --> 00:27:55,480 no dismantling his hotel room, 432 00:27:55,480 --> 00:27:59,720 just his own unique way to while away the hours. 433 00:27:59,720 --> 00:28:03,280 He drew every bed that he slept in, every meal that he ate, 434 00:28:03,280 --> 00:28:04,680 every hotel room. 435 00:28:06,440 --> 00:28:12,800 It started in '60-something and it was something to do. 436 00:28:12,800 --> 00:28:14,080 It's a diary. 437 00:28:15,200 --> 00:28:16,680 And now I can't miss one 438 00:28:16,680 --> 00:28:19,640 because it's like ruining a day in the life of, 439 00:28:19,640 --> 00:28:22,320 so I just draw every bed that I sleep in when I tour 440 00:28:22,320 --> 00:28:24,000 with the Rolling Stones. 441 00:28:25,960 --> 00:28:29,960 I had the pleasure of him showing me one of his tour books once. 442 00:28:29,960 --> 00:28:33,120 They're very simple line drawings and... 443 00:28:35,080 --> 00:28:38,200 You know, he'd have, like, "Put your coat here", 444 00:28:38,200 --> 00:28:40,840 a little sign like that, or... 445 00:28:40,840 --> 00:28:47,920 Mixed with all kinds of details from the room. 446 00:28:47,920 --> 00:28:51,160 And I always said to him, "Charlie, you should release this. 447 00:28:51,160 --> 00:28:52,760 "You know, people want to see them." 448 00:28:52,760 --> 00:28:56,040 "Nobody wants to see this." I said, "They do, Charlie. 449 00:28:56,040 --> 00:29:00,280 "You know, it's a real eye into your world," and he was like, 450 00:29:00,280 --> 00:29:02,400 "Who wants to be in my world?!" you know? 451 00:29:02,400 --> 00:29:06,680 He totally underestimated his power as a person. 452 00:29:19,920 --> 00:29:23,440 You know, there were times when Charlie was OCD. 453 00:29:23,440 --> 00:29:26,120 Timing the walk? And that's normal strolling... 454 00:29:30,760 --> 00:29:33,440 He would avoid the cracks in the sidewalk, 455 00:29:33,440 --> 00:29:38,520 he would have to walk down or up a flight of stairs a certain way, 456 00:29:38,520 --> 00:29:41,440 or else he would have to go back down and start it all over. 457 00:29:41,440 --> 00:29:43,560 You know, that was there, 458 00:29:43,560 --> 00:29:45,680 you know, that was part of who he was. 459 00:29:47,720 --> 00:29:49,760 Because I don't actually like touring, you see. 460 00:29:49,760 --> 00:29:52,160 I mean, I don't like living out of suitcases. 461 00:29:53,720 --> 00:29:56,080 One word - particular. 462 00:29:57,560 --> 00:30:01,200 He's famous for... Everything had to be organised in a certain way 463 00:30:01,200 --> 00:30:03,040 cos I would often quiz him. 464 00:30:03,040 --> 00:30:05,280 "So how do you do socks, then, Charlie? 465 00:30:05,280 --> 00:30:06,720 "Do you just roll them into a ball?" 466 00:30:06,720 --> 00:30:08,640 "No! You don't want to roll them into a ball. 467 00:30:08,640 --> 00:30:10,120 "I'll show you if you want." 468 00:30:10,120 --> 00:30:13,040 And there in his room are these beautiful travelling cases, 469 00:30:13,040 --> 00:30:15,520 and there in the top drawer would be the socks. 470 00:30:15,520 --> 00:30:17,680 "Well, you fold them in half, but you always put 471 00:30:17,680 --> 00:30:19,360 "a bit of tissue paper in between. 472 00:30:19,360 --> 00:30:22,040 "You see, that way, they keep their shape." 473 00:30:22,040 --> 00:30:27,600 Clothes had a layer of tissue paper between each shirt, 474 00:30:27,600 --> 00:30:31,600 each sock, each underpant, each jacket. 475 00:30:31,600 --> 00:30:38,440 Pristine would be the word, not one thing out of place. 476 00:30:39,600 --> 00:30:41,560 I hate people touching my things. 477 00:30:41,560 --> 00:30:43,560 HE CHUCKLES Do you? 478 00:30:43,560 --> 00:30:46,120 I hate maids coming in my room in hotels. 479 00:30:46,120 --> 00:30:49,000 I live in hotels a lot of my life. 480 00:30:49,000 --> 00:30:51,080 But I always put "Do not disturb", 481 00:30:51,080 --> 00:30:52,920 and sometimes I'm in there for two weeks, 482 00:30:52,920 --> 00:30:55,920 and I never have them in there. I hate them in there. 483 00:30:55,920 --> 00:30:58,040 What is it you hate? 484 00:30:58,040 --> 00:30:59,840 Touching things I have. 485 00:31:02,760 --> 00:31:05,880 If I went in his room to see him, if he turned his back, 486 00:31:05,880 --> 00:31:09,720 I'd move a book slightly and sit back down, and he'd turn round 487 00:31:09,720 --> 00:31:12,680 and he'd move the book exactly back where it was, 488 00:31:12,680 --> 00:31:17,200 and he'd be picking things up off the floor all the time. 489 00:31:17,200 --> 00:31:20,360 Sometimes he'd even done it when he'd been introduced on stage. 490 00:31:20,360 --> 00:31:24,880 You know, he's going... "Ladies and gentlemen, Charlie Watts!" 491 00:31:24,880 --> 00:31:27,320 And he'd go forward a little bit and stop and pick up 492 00:31:27,320 --> 00:31:33,400 a little bit of dirt, you know, or whatever it may be. 493 00:31:33,400 --> 00:31:35,040 JAZZ MUSIC PLAYS 494 00:31:36,680 --> 00:31:41,520 On tour, Charlie likes to control his environment as much as possible. 495 00:31:41,520 --> 00:31:44,400 His dressing room is called the Cotton Club, 496 00:31:44,400 --> 00:31:47,160 where he can be found listening to Duke Ellington 497 00:31:47,160 --> 00:31:49,240 before going on stage. 498 00:31:49,240 --> 00:31:51,160 "Cotton Club" was written on the door. 499 00:31:51,160 --> 00:31:55,360 You know, if you ever wanted a quiet moment, that was the place to go. 500 00:31:55,360 --> 00:31:57,480 And you would always be welcomed in. 501 00:31:57,480 --> 00:31:59,960 There would be something nice to eat and drink. 502 00:32:04,360 --> 00:32:08,280 A sea of tranquillity with just a few home comforts. 503 00:32:13,320 --> 00:32:14,400 Oh, what's this? 504 00:32:15,440 --> 00:32:17,200 Take a look at it. Open it up. 505 00:32:18,640 --> 00:32:21,280 Charlie's touring tea set. 506 00:32:24,040 --> 00:32:26,160 CHUCKLING A cup and a saucer! 507 00:32:30,960 --> 00:32:32,440 Fantastic. 508 00:32:34,800 --> 00:32:36,600 It looks pretty old, doesn't it? 509 00:32:36,600 --> 00:32:38,560 It looks Victorian. Yeah, yeah. 510 00:32:39,800 --> 00:32:42,560 This one's still got tea in it! Yeah! 511 00:32:43,680 --> 00:32:46,240 It's definitely him, isn't it? Yeah, absolutely. 512 00:32:47,560 --> 00:32:50,320 An Englishman on tour. Oh, man. 513 00:32:50,320 --> 00:32:52,520 Put it back before we break it. Yeah. 514 00:32:52,520 --> 00:32:54,480 Charlie wouldn't like that! 515 00:32:54,480 --> 00:32:56,480 Yeah. Wonderful. 516 00:33:00,080 --> 00:33:03,160 How would you describe the tour that you've had so far? 517 00:33:03,160 --> 00:33:05,440 Bloody hard work. LAUGHTER 518 00:33:07,240 --> 00:33:09,960 He secretly enjoyed touring. 519 00:33:11,000 --> 00:33:16,080 He used to say, "I don't want to do it," but I think he thrived on it. 520 00:33:19,040 --> 00:33:22,320 He got better-looking, healthier, 521 00:33:22,320 --> 00:33:24,960 and you could see him thrive as he played. 522 00:33:26,720 --> 00:33:28,960 I'm the one that leaves. 523 00:33:28,960 --> 00:33:31,520 At the end of every tour... I hate suitcases. 524 00:33:31,520 --> 00:33:35,840 I leave the band, but they won't let you! 525 00:33:38,840 --> 00:33:41,400 Man, you know, we were a little family back there 526 00:33:41,400 --> 00:33:43,320 in our dressing room, you know? 527 00:33:43,320 --> 00:33:45,360 CHUCKLING 528 00:33:47,680 --> 00:33:50,840 Charlie thought I could cut hair because he's seen me do my own. 529 00:33:52,480 --> 00:33:56,600 That was about the only time, though, that he let me cut his hair! 530 00:34:00,840 --> 00:34:05,440 I love playing the drums and I love playing with the Rolling Stones. 531 00:34:05,440 --> 00:34:09,360 I mean, my wife always says I like them more than her, 532 00:34:09,360 --> 00:34:10,720 which isn't true. 533 00:34:12,080 --> 00:34:15,400 Have you thought about taking your wife around with you? 534 00:34:15,400 --> 00:34:19,080 She comes on the tours occasionally, but she doesn't like them. 535 00:34:19,080 --> 00:34:22,520 I don't blame her. I mean, what is it, really? 536 00:34:22,520 --> 00:34:26,840 You know, apart from this show. And it's all me. It's what I do. 537 00:34:29,200 --> 00:34:31,280 There was no place for a wife 538 00:34:31,280 --> 00:34:33,280 on the tours. You know, there was nothing to do. 539 00:34:33,280 --> 00:34:38,800 And I sat in these dingy hotel rooms and I sketched and I read 540 00:34:38,800 --> 00:34:41,040 and wished I was somewhere else! 541 00:34:42,200 --> 00:34:44,920 I just wanted to be with Charlie so badly. 542 00:34:47,360 --> 00:34:53,440 I was complaining to Charlie's mother once about his absences. 543 00:34:53,440 --> 00:34:55,840 It was just before we got married. She said... 544 00:34:55,840 --> 00:34:59,600 "Oh," she said, "don't worry about it. It will be over within a year." 545 00:35:01,800 --> 00:35:05,920 Charlie and Shirley are married for 57 years. 546 00:35:05,920 --> 00:35:09,160 Devoted to one another, he misses her on tour, 547 00:35:09,160 --> 00:35:12,320 craving the peace and solitude of home. 548 00:35:16,680 --> 00:35:19,360 The first Stone to leave London, 549 00:35:19,360 --> 00:35:23,600 he's part of the '60s rock star exodus to large country mansions - 550 00:35:23,600 --> 00:35:25,960 symbols of wealth and fame. 551 00:35:27,320 --> 00:35:30,480 But with Charlie, it's about more than status. 552 00:35:30,480 --> 00:35:31,960 It's a refuge. 553 00:35:33,520 --> 00:35:37,160 It gave him a peaceful place to live, you know? 554 00:35:38,840 --> 00:35:40,960 I did go to his place in Devon. 555 00:35:40,960 --> 00:35:43,000 DOGS BARK 556 00:35:43,000 --> 00:35:44,640 I think they had 15 dogs. 557 00:35:44,640 --> 00:35:46,840 Come on! 558 00:35:46,840 --> 00:35:48,800 He took me around to show me the horses. 559 00:36:31,280 --> 00:36:33,160 Oh, it was total respect for design. 560 00:36:33,160 --> 00:36:36,080 He wasn't trying to be a silly eccentric, 561 00:36:36,080 --> 00:36:37,920 buying cars for the sake of it. 562 00:36:37,920 --> 00:36:41,520 No, he loved every line on that Lagonda. 563 00:36:41,520 --> 00:36:45,360 Sitting in it, to him, was like being in a painting, you know? 564 00:36:45,360 --> 00:36:48,200 And, thank you very much, 565 00:36:48,200 --> 00:36:53,480 I'll wear a suit to match the colours of my car, 566 00:36:53,480 --> 00:36:57,000 and he'd just sit in and be the part. 567 00:37:00,200 --> 00:37:03,400 Charlie is well known for his sartorial elegance, 568 00:37:03,400 --> 00:37:06,080 a very modern English country gentleman... 569 00:37:07,720 --> 00:37:10,760 ..far from the wild drummer archetype. 570 00:37:10,760 --> 00:37:14,160 And his fiercely independent spirit stands out, 571 00:37:14,160 --> 00:37:19,560 even in a band that redefines freedom of expression. 572 00:37:19,560 --> 00:37:23,720 I think the look of rock and roll is a bit shabby, 573 00:37:23,720 --> 00:37:25,440 but that's me, you know? 574 00:37:27,800 --> 00:37:33,200 He wasn't necessarily dressing the part of the rock star, 575 00:37:33,200 --> 00:37:38,400 but more of the jazzer who was playing in a rock band. 576 00:37:40,240 --> 00:37:43,400 Now, this is another area where drummers doffed their caps 577 00:37:43,400 --> 00:37:47,680 for old Charlie, that he could go out there in a very expensive suit 578 00:37:47,680 --> 00:37:51,800 and play drums, whereas I got to go out in shorts and a T-shirt. 579 00:37:51,800 --> 00:37:53,360 He was just immaculate. 580 00:37:54,720 --> 00:37:57,200 And I don't think he sweated. 581 00:37:57,200 --> 00:37:59,880 Oh, yeah... Charlie... 582 00:37:59,880 --> 00:38:02,520 Bespoke suits, bespoke shirts, 583 00:38:02,520 --> 00:38:04,000 bespoke shoes. 584 00:38:10,960 --> 00:38:12,360 I've got a campaign. 585 00:38:15,560 --> 00:38:19,760 I'm saving the bespoke tailoring industry. 586 00:38:19,760 --> 00:38:21,560 Single-handedly! 587 00:38:24,800 --> 00:38:29,560 Charlie has a lifetime devotion to bespoke suits, most of which come 588 00:38:29,560 --> 00:38:33,360 from his tailor of choice - Huntsman in Savile Row. 589 00:38:34,480 --> 00:38:39,120 A client for over 50 years, one of their favourites, 590 00:38:39,120 --> 00:38:44,080 he even has a fabric his tailors nicknamed the Watts Stripe. 591 00:38:47,760 --> 00:38:50,240 I never knew him as Charlie. 592 00:38:50,240 --> 00:38:52,000 I always called him Mr Watts. 593 00:38:54,760 --> 00:38:58,200 I'm just waiting on a friend... 594 00:39:00,120 --> 00:39:04,320 Every customer has their own paper pattern, and most customers 595 00:39:04,320 --> 00:39:08,880 have a suit pattern, maybe an overcoat pattern or something. 596 00:39:10,680 --> 00:39:13,240 Testament to Charles's eclectic wardrobe, 597 00:39:13,240 --> 00:39:16,160 there's a big bundle of patterns on Charlie's hook. 598 00:39:19,040 --> 00:39:21,240 ARCHIVE: A gentleman's tailor is a professional, 599 00:39:21,240 --> 00:39:23,680 like a doctor or a solicitor. 600 00:39:23,680 --> 00:39:27,680 If a man wishes to be dressed correctly, there is only one way, 601 00:39:27,680 --> 00:39:30,360 and that is to patronise the right tailor. 602 00:39:32,400 --> 00:39:35,280 He had this elegant, relaxed posture. 603 00:39:36,880 --> 00:39:39,120 He just wanted soft, flowing garments. 604 00:39:40,280 --> 00:39:42,720 That echoed his personality in a lot of ways. 605 00:39:44,040 --> 00:39:45,720 He never wanted to stand out. 606 00:39:47,400 --> 00:39:51,040 He was quite an introvert in a lot of ways. 607 00:39:51,040 --> 00:39:54,120 He had a very good eye for detail. 608 00:39:55,240 --> 00:39:57,920 His eye for colour was great as well. 609 00:39:57,920 --> 00:39:59,760 He always put things together well. 610 00:40:02,640 --> 00:40:05,520 And sometimes he'd say, "Well, we'll make that, but we'll make it 611 00:40:05,520 --> 00:40:07,920 "like this," and we'd have a conversation. And I'd think, 612 00:40:07,920 --> 00:40:09,760 "Really?! Are you sure?" 613 00:40:09,760 --> 00:40:12,240 And then we'd do it and it would work! 614 00:40:14,640 --> 00:40:16,400 I have this disease... 615 00:40:18,600 --> 00:40:22,320 ..that I see a swatch and have to have a jacket or something. 616 00:40:25,000 --> 00:40:27,080 One of his favourite things was 617 00:40:27,080 --> 00:40:29,840 to go into the basement in what we call, 618 00:40:29,840 --> 00:40:32,240 ominously, the hanging room. 619 00:40:32,240 --> 00:40:36,000 He'd love to rummage and find old lengths of cloth 620 00:40:36,000 --> 00:40:39,600 that have been left or forgotten about, and we'd make something 621 00:40:39,600 --> 00:40:41,960 out of those, and he'd love that. 622 00:40:45,480 --> 00:40:47,720 It comes from my father. 623 00:40:47,720 --> 00:40:50,960 Did he have a tailor? Did he take you to his tailor? Yes. 624 00:40:50,960 --> 00:40:54,000 I thought in those days, it was normal practice. 625 00:40:54,000 --> 00:40:55,440 So, what did your father look like? 626 00:40:55,440 --> 00:40:57,520 What kind of suit would HE have chosen? 627 00:40:57,520 --> 00:41:00,360 Actually, very much like I wear. 628 00:41:00,360 --> 00:41:05,680 A lot of what he liked was late '40s and '50s. 629 00:41:05,680 --> 00:41:09,960 So I live in TCM world, you know, 630 00:41:09,960 --> 00:41:11,760 Turner Classic Movies. 631 00:41:14,440 --> 00:41:17,760 He used to spend a great deal of time worrying, 632 00:41:17,760 --> 00:41:20,560 fretting about where these clothes were going to go. 633 00:41:21,920 --> 00:41:23,800 I think he'd try and drop three of them home 634 00:41:23,800 --> 00:41:25,480 so that his wife didn't see too many, 635 00:41:25,480 --> 00:41:27,960 but didn't stop him ordering more! 636 00:41:29,200 --> 00:41:31,560 I've got some suits here, actually. 637 00:41:31,560 --> 00:41:34,120 It's a shame he's never going to see them. 638 00:41:34,120 --> 00:41:36,400 But he tried them and he liked them. 639 00:41:36,400 --> 00:41:38,160 LAUGHS: So that was good. 640 00:41:44,720 --> 00:41:46,880 DRUMBEAT 641 00:41:48,120 --> 00:41:50,680 Whether it's beats or buttons, 642 00:41:50,680 --> 00:41:54,160 designing a suit or laying down a drum track, 643 00:41:54,160 --> 00:41:57,320 for Charlie, it's all about feel. 644 00:41:58,640 --> 00:42:02,320 He was quite forward-thinking 645 00:42:02,320 --> 00:42:06,320 and he listened to a lot of different kinds of music. 646 00:42:06,320 --> 00:42:08,360 In the early days, when we were doing 647 00:42:08,360 --> 00:42:10,680 the Exile On Main Street record, 648 00:42:10,680 --> 00:42:13,000 everyone else was listening to Jerry Lee Lewis, still. 649 00:42:13,000 --> 00:42:16,720 We were listening to, like, dub reggae. 650 00:42:17,880 --> 00:42:22,960 He was a WAY better drummer technically 651 00:42:22,960 --> 00:42:25,760 than anyone ever suspected. 652 00:42:28,440 --> 00:42:31,800 In 1996, we were trying to make some loops, 653 00:42:31,800 --> 00:42:33,800 we were going to mess around with drum loops. 654 00:42:33,800 --> 00:42:36,640 So we sent Charlie out in a room, 655 00:42:36,640 --> 00:42:38,040 he put on headphones... 656 00:42:40,640 --> 00:42:43,520 ..and we played The Chronic - Dr Dre. 657 00:42:49,600 --> 00:42:52,240 He played those beats, never flammed once. 658 00:42:56,440 --> 00:42:58,760 He was perfectly on it. 659 00:43:00,960 --> 00:43:04,640 He could be a perfectly time-corrected drummer 660 00:43:04,640 --> 00:43:06,600 if he so chose to be. 661 00:43:08,560 --> 00:43:12,240 But he didn't, cos he knew that that would be utterly soulless. 662 00:43:14,960 --> 00:43:19,160 Consider the variety of music the Stones have covered, in the way 663 00:43:19,160 --> 00:43:21,800 Mick and Keith have written over the years, and he's covered 664 00:43:21,800 --> 00:43:25,160 every aspect of what they wanted to do in his sleep. 665 00:43:31,520 --> 00:43:35,000 The Rolling Stones have always been musical chameleons, 666 00:43:35,000 --> 00:43:37,160 with a keen ear for trends, 667 00:43:37,160 --> 00:43:40,880 changing their colours to suit the cultural landscape. 668 00:43:42,080 --> 00:43:47,520 Charlie liked all kinds of dance music, so when the dance music craze 669 00:43:47,520 --> 00:43:51,560 kind of took off in the mid-'70s, Charlie was really into that. 670 00:43:51,560 --> 00:43:53,040 It's like we talked about before, 671 00:43:53,040 --> 00:43:55,400 it's...it's all about beats. 672 00:43:55,400 --> 00:43:58,880 MUSIC: Disco Inferno by The Trammps 673 00:44:07,360 --> 00:44:10,320 It's the beats of the New York dance floor that influenced 674 00:44:10,320 --> 00:44:12,880 the Rolling Stones' next new direction. 675 00:44:12,880 --> 00:44:15,520 ARCHIVE: It's 3.00 in the morning in Manhattan, 676 00:44:15,520 --> 00:44:17,840 and still at Studio 54, 677 00:44:17,840 --> 00:44:21,160 people crowd the doors hoping to get in. 678 00:44:23,960 --> 00:44:28,760 Disco is exploding, and many of the huge hits heard in clubs 679 00:44:28,760 --> 00:44:31,600 are driven by legendary drummer Earl Young, 680 00:44:31,600 --> 00:44:34,720 pioneer of the "Four on the floor" disco beat. 681 00:44:36,360 --> 00:44:39,680 I guess he probably heard something that I did, and he said, 682 00:44:39,680 --> 00:44:43,560 "Well, look, I can play that! 683 00:44:43,560 --> 00:44:45,800 "I'm going to put that on one of OUR records." 684 00:44:47,640 --> 00:44:53,440 He got into the four on the floor and got the Philly sound there! 685 00:45:01,400 --> 00:45:05,280 I said, "Jeez, I should be on there playing that song, man!" 686 00:45:05,280 --> 00:45:09,400 Got that groove... Dun-dun, da-na-na-na... 687 00:45:09,400 --> 00:45:11,880 And yet they rocked with their dance groove, too. 688 00:45:13,600 --> 00:45:16,720 Most of the time in a rock band, it's music for dancing, 689 00:45:16,720 --> 00:45:20,520 and so, if you like dancing... 690 00:45:20,520 --> 00:45:23,480 ..which, Charlie was actually a rather good dancer. 691 00:45:23,480 --> 00:45:25,600 So it's all to do with dancing. 692 00:45:28,080 --> 00:45:31,840 Miss You introduces the Stones to a new audience and keeps them 693 00:45:31,840 --> 00:45:34,480 relevant as a new decade approaches. 694 00:45:35,720 --> 00:45:38,480 For a blues band with a jazz drummer, 695 00:45:38,480 --> 00:45:41,080 they're not a bad disco act. 696 00:45:41,080 --> 00:45:43,920 When you really understand music in general, 697 00:45:43,920 --> 00:45:47,200 whether it's improvisational like jazz or, you know, 698 00:45:47,200 --> 00:45:49,400 a three-minute rock record, it's all the same. 699 00:45:51,560 --> 00:45:56,240 You just take that sensibility and ply it to the song that's presented. 700 00:45:56,240 --> 00:45:57,840 Charlie was the master of that. 701 00:46:00,480 --> 00:46:04,880 Miss You is recorded for the album Some Girls, released in 1978... 702 00:46:06,240 --> 00:46:09,600 ..and, as ever, Charlie's drumming is the essential ingredient, 703 00:46:09,600 --> 00:46:12,240 holding it all together. 704 00:46:12,240 --> 00:46:15,080 But behind the scenes, their Mr Reliable 705 00:46:15,080 --> 00:46:17,560 is having an uncharacteristic wobble. 706 00:46:17,560 --> 00:46:19,680 MUSIC DISTORTS 707 00:46:35,120 --> 00:46:36,440 And I drank a lot. 708 00:46:36,440 --> 00:46:42,120 And then they all go together, and this is easy life to get... 709 00:46:42,120 --> 00:46:45,120 ..hooked up in, doing this, you know? 710 00:46:47,080 --> 00:46:49,440 Especially if you're lucky to be in a position I'm in. 711 00:46:49,440 --> 00:46:53,520 I mean, you can sit here and have anything fed to you, right? 712 00:46:53,520 --> 00:46:56,920 If you wanted that sort of life, it wouldn't last long, 713 00:46:56,920 --> 00:46:58,760 but you could sort of get into that. 714 00:47:01,040 --> 00:47:03,800 I took a lot of drugs late in life... 715 00:47:05,440 --> 00:47:06,920 ..and didn't do it very well, 716 00:47:06,920 --> 00:47:10,680 so I nearly lost a marriage and my life. 717 00:47:10,680 --> 00:47:14,480 MUSIC: Down In The Hole by The Rolling Stones 718 00:47:21,560 --> 00:47:27,400 In the mid-'80s, I used to go out at night, and it was ridiculous. 719 00:47:27,400 --> 00:47:30,040 It was a life of a junkie. 720 00:47:47,680 --> 00:47:51,240 But how did you manage to resist it early on for all those years? 721 00:47:51,240 --> 00:47:54,040 I don't know, it was never something I wanted to do 722 00:47:54,040 --> 00:47:56,840 and it was always around me, but I just wasn't interested. 723 00:47:56,840 --> 00:48:01,880 And then I got a kind of mid-life crisis and became this other person. 724 00:48:04,440 --> 00:48:08,720 Charlie can never really explain what brings on his midlife crisis. 725 00:48:08,720 --> 00:48:10,480 Maybe it's personal. 726 00:48:10,480 --> 00:48:13,000 Or maybe it's just the Stones themselves, 727 00:48:13,000 --> 00:48:16,120 who famously aren't getting along at the time. 728 00:48:16,120 --> 00:48:20,720 Or perhaps he's emulating his jazz heroes for whom heroin 729 00:48:20,720 --> 00:48:22,960 had been a handmaiden. 730 00:48:22,960 --> 00:48:25,200 Parker is the classic one. 731 00:48:25,200 --> 00:48:28,960 You know, to be that brilliant and that destructive - 732 00:48:28,960 --> 00:48:32,040 there's something terribly glamorous to me about being like that, 733 00:48:32,040 --> 00:48:33,680 you know? 734 00:48:33,680 --> 00:48:36,520 It's just the genius, really, of it all. 735 00:48:38,400 --> 00:48:39,800 Whatever the cause... 736 00:48:41,080 --> 00:48:44,320 ..salvation comes from the unlikeliest of places. 737 00:48:46,000 --> 00:48:49,120 I told him that... "It's just not you, Charlie!" 738 00:48:52,160 --> 00:48:57,080 And also, you know, the main thing that really worried me 739 00:48:57,080 --> 00:48:59,760 about Charlie at that point was his drinking. 740 00:48:59,760 --> 00:49:03,880 He was drinking like heavy-duty, you know, cognac and other stuff. 741 00:49:03,880 --> 00:49:07,480 And Charlie Watts started blowing up... 742 00:49:07,480 --> 00:49:11,480 So if he was dabbling with other stuff, I didn't really mind, 743 00:49:11,480 --> 00:49:14,840 it was the booze that needed to... 744 00:49:14,840 --> 00:49:17,880 Some people are just, they're perfect as they are. 745 00:49:17,880 --> 00:49:20,320 They don't need stimulants, they don't need... 746 00:49:20,320 --> 00:49:25,360 Us...unfortunate imperfections, you know, hell, we need help. 747 00:49:25,360 --> 00:49:27,000 Charlie Watts didn't need any. 748 00:49:27,000 --> 00:49:31,720 He was immaculate... An immaculate conception. 749 00:49:33,800 --> 00:49:35,040 Bless his heart. 750 00:49:37,640 --> 00:49:43,200 Keith telling me this, and it stuck, and I just stopped. 751 00:49:45,040 --> 00:49:47,240 While Charlie was hooked on heroin, 752 00:49:47,240 --> 00:49:51,680 his first addiction remained the strongest - jazz. 753 00:49:51,680 --> 00:49:55,640 And it's time to make a long-held fantasy a reality. 754 00:49:58,240 --> 00:49:59,560 Let's stay leisurely now. 755 00:49:59,560 --> 00:50:02,320 Final rehearsals were under way at Ronnie Scott's club 756 00:50:02,320 --> 00:50:03,520 in London today. 757 00:50:05,560 --> 00:50:07,480 It's the Charlie Watts Big Band 758 00:50:07,480 --> 00:50:09,960 in rehearsal for their debut next week. 759 00:50:12,560 --> 00:50:16,760 Some 33 musicians have joined forces to bring back that feeling 760 00:50:16,760 --> 00:50:18,480 of the Benny Goodman era. 761 00:50:25,040 --> 00:50:27,400 He was a great supporter of Ronnie Scott's club 762 00:50:27,400 --> 00:50:30,360 and he wanted to give something back. 763 00:50:30,360 --> 00:50:33,000 The club was going through a bit of a difficult time at that point, 764 00:50:33,000 --> 00:50:35,720 financially, and was in danger of closing. 765 00:50:37,480 --> 00:50:39,520 I said that I would bring a band in. 766 00:50:39,520 --> 00:50:41,440 They could keep the proceeds. 767 00:50:42,640 --> 00:50:44,280 He gave that gig to the club. 768 00:50:45,560 --> 00:50:48,320 The musicians represent some of the biggest names in jazz and rock 769 00:50:48,320 --> 00:50:52,000 in Britain today, alongside some newer musicians. 770 00:50:53,760 --> 00:50:57,440 Once I was a sentimental thing... 771 00:50:58,720 --> 00:51:00,640 One of those up-and-coming musicians 772 00:51:00,640 --> 00:51:05,200 is David Bowie's long-time collaborator, Gail Ann Dorsey. 773 00:51:05,200 --> 00:51:07,680 Now a spring romance... 774 00:51:07,680 --> 00:51:10,320 This was Charlie Watts from The Rolling Stones, which is 775 00:51:10,320 --> 00:51:12,520 one of my favourite bands ever. 776 00:51:12,520 --> 00:51:16,280 I just remember him being just kind of the normal guy, down the pub 777 00:51:16,280 --> 00:51:20,840 kind of guy. I think he was just so happy to be playing jazz. 778 00:51:20,840 --> 00:51:26,120 All I've got to show's a splinter... 779 00:51:26,120 --> 00:51:27,880 One position filled... 780 00:51:31,520 --> 00:51:33,920 ..that only leaves the other 32. 781 00:51:35,920 --> 00:51:40,840 So I drew a list up of people, and I thought, "Who would I like?" 782 00:51:40,840 --> 00:51:43,800 Jack Bruce from Cream... 783 00:51:43,800 --> 00:51:46,800 ..Stan Tracey, the legendary jazz pianist... 784 00:51:50,240 --> 00:51:53,720 ..and the young prodigy Courtney Pine on saxophone. 785 00:51:56,680 --> 00:51:59,960 I met Charlie and he looks over to me and he said, 786 00:51:59,960 --> 00:52:02,480 "Yeah, have a good time." 787 00:52:02,480 --> 00:52:06,440 And I just remember it being an incredible experience. 788 00:52:06,440 --> 00:52:10,240 I'd never been on stage with people like that. 789 00:52:17,400 --> 00:52:21,360 It was just an outstanding conceptual idea for jazz big band, 790 00:52:21,360 --> 00:52:23,680 which I don't think had ever been done before. 791 00:52:27,000 --> 00:52:29,560 GAIL ANN DORSEY: Each night before the show, I would be sort of 792 00:52:29,560 --> 00:52:32,240 peering out, going, "Oh, my God, who is walking through the door?" 793 00:52:32,240 --> 00:52:35,920 Like, each night, there was someone else famous. It was crazy. 794 00:52:35,920 --> 00:52:40,280 Chrissie Hynde and Gil Scott-Heron, and all of the Stones came. 795 00:52:41,840 --> 00:52:43,440 David Bowie came, in fact. 796 00:52:43,440 --> 00:52:46,440 And I actually asked him, "Did you remember that was me 797 00:52:46,440 --> 00:52:49,240 "that was singing with Charlie Watts Big Band?!" 798 00:52:50,720 --> 00:52:53,560 I know Charlie's mum and MY mum came down. 799 00:52:53,560 --> 00:52:54,840 CHUCKLING 800 00:52:54,840 --> 00:52:58,320 Charlie got a limousine and came to the club, saw the first set, 801 00:52:58,320 --> 00:53:00,200 and then went home in the car again! 802 00:53:03,840 --> 00:53:07,880 I just remember him smiling a lot. LAUGHS 803 00:53:07,880 --> 00:53:10,400 I think in his head, he was like, "Yeah, I'm..." 804 00:53:10,400 --> 00:53:13,600 Yeah, fulfilling something that he really always wanted to do. 805 00:53:14,800 --> 00:53:17,080 COURTNEY PINE: Smiling, smiling, smiling. 806 00:53:17,080 --> 00:53:20,000 Cos he realised he was a part of an amazing creation, 807 00:53:20,000 --> 00:53:24,760 and it really was a turning point for me, for my career, and for that, 808 00:53:24,760 --> 00:53:27,480 I'll be ever grateful to Charlie Watts. 809 00:53:29,920 --> 00:53:34,200 The place was packed every night cos it was Charlie's big band. 810 00:53:34,200 --> 00:53:36,840 Probably did save the club from closing. 811 00:53:38,360 --> 00:53:41,680 Charlie's big band holiday reinvigorates him... 812 00:53:44,800 --> 00:53:48,320 ..so when his other band get back on the road... 813 00:53:49,800 --> 00:53:52,240 ..there's a renewed sense of purpose. 814 00:53:52,240 --> 00:53:54,160 CHEERING 815 00:53:54,160 --> 00:53:57,640 This is an era when the Stones fully embrace their billing 816 00:53:57,640 --> 00:53:59,840 as pioneers of stadium rock. 817 00:54:01,520 --> 00:54:04,840 Their tours become evermore elaborate. 818 00:54:04,840 --> 00:54:08,320 But at the heart of all the extravagance and innovation, 819 00:54:08,320 --> 00:54:10,360 some things never change. 820 00:54:10,360 --> 00:54:12,440 MUSIC: Start Me Up by The Rolling Stones 821 00:54:12,440 --> 00:54:14,000 Yeah! 822 00:54:14,000 --> 00:54:16,800 If you start me up 823 00:54:16,800 --> 00:54:19,480 If you start me up, I'll never stop... 824 00:54:31,200 --> 00:54:33,840 BILLY SLOAN: How do you power the greatest rock and roll band 825 00:54:33,840 --> 00:54:37,880 in the world with what looks like a starter drum kit? 826 00:54:37,880 --> 00:54:39,680 Well, I don't know. 827 00:54:39,680 --> 00:54:43,240 All that is is how you set up, how you play. 828 00:54:43,240 --> 00:54:46,520 And some people need lots of drums. 829 00:54:46,520 --> 00:54:49,480 I mean, a lot of times, they're just for show. 830 00:54:50,520 --> 00:54:55,800 It's just this old, very sort of funky little four-piece kit! 831 00:54:55,800 --> 00:54:59,080 And the snare looked like it was from, like, the '30s. 832 00:54:59,080 --> 00:55:02,600 And I guess he'd been playing that same snare for God knows how long? 833 00:55:02,600 --> 00:55:06,640 And there just was something very endearing about the humanity 834 00:55:06,640 --> 00:55:10,800 in his set-up for this massive production that was going on. 835 00:55:10,800 --> 00:55:12,840 It stuck with me. 836 00:55:12,840 --> 00:55:16,000 The mystery inspired me, I think, with Charlie, 837 00:55:16,000 --> 00:55:20,800 because he's such a laid back, well-dressed gentleman, 838 00:55:20,800 --> 00:55:22,840 always going...like that. 839 00:55:22,840 --> 00:55:26,080 Then it's like a firework explosion when he plays the drums 840 00:55:26,080 --> 00:55:27,960 with no effort, you know? 841 00:55:27,960 --> 00:55:31,520 It was the most amazing feeling to have him behind you 842 00:55:31,520 --> 00:55:33,240 in the engine room. 843 00:55:35,920 --> 00:55:39,600 Youngsters like me, we like to have a lot of things to bang on. 844 00:55:39,600 --> 00:55:43,440 With Charlie, his fundamental purpose on the planet was groove, 845 00:55:43,440 --> 00:55:45,720 and he had all the equipment he needed 846 00:55:45,720 --> 00:55:47,600 to do just that and no more. 847 00:55:48,640 --> 00:55:51,840 Most drummers, when they get into a big rock and roll band 848 00:55:51,840 --> 00:55:54,160 and they're playing stadiums, they get the kit 849 00:55:54,160 --> 00:55:57,320 the size of the stage. Charlie never changed anything at all. 850 00:55:57,320 --> 00:56:00,520 He started with four drums and I'm pretty sure 851 00:56:00,520 --> 00:56:02,440 that's how he ended up! 852 00:56:04,400 --> 00:56:06,520 It was an amazing thing... 853 00:56:07,680 --> 00:56:09,480 ..to drive the Stones like he did. 854 00:56:15,920 --> 00:56:19,440 From his very first gig with the Rolling Stones in '63... 855 00:56:20,560 --> 00:56:24,200 ..to his last-ever show 58 years later, 856 00:56:24,200 --> 00:56:28,240 Charlie is the calm, reassuring presence at the back, 857 00:56:28,240 --> 00:56:30,560 holding it all together. 858 00:56:30,560 --> 00:56:32,920 CHEERING Ole, ole, ole 859 00:56:32,920 --> 00:56:35,560 Charlie, Charlie. 860 00:56:42,160 --> 00:56:45,440 With the embodiment of rock and roll to the left of him 861 00:56:45,440 --> 00:56:48,320 and a truly global superstar to the right, 862 00:56:48,320 --> 00:56:53,640 Charlie is stuck in the middle, physically and emotionally. 863 00:56:53,640 --> 00:56:57,880 But with his grounded, no-nonsense approach to fame and rock and roll, 864 00:56:57,880 --> 00:57:02,040 he was and is still the soul of the band. 865 00:57:02,040 --> 00:57:04,840 Charlie was that silent leader, 866 00:57:04,840 --> 00:57:09,440 the elder that'll knock you in the nose if you say the wrong word. 867 00:57:09,440 --> 00:57:11,800 But on the other hand, there's nobody 868 00:57:11,800 --> 00:57:13,640 that you'd rather have by your side. 869 00:57:19,000 --> 00:57:21,280 You never saw Charlie ruffled. 870 00:57:22,320 --> 00:57:26,240 And when the two of them, when they get ruffled, 871 00:57:26,240 --> 00:57:28,880 Charlie smiles. He sits back there and looks at them, 872 00:57:28,880 --> 00:57:35,160 and says, "Oh, for God's sakes, Bernard, what are they on about?" 873 00:57:35,160 --> 00:57:36,920 He was the equaliser. 874 00:57:38,720 --> 00:57:41,720 He was a very safe haven 875 00:57:41,720 --> 00:57:44,400 in a complicated group of people. 876 00:57:46,480 --> 00:57:49,880 Charlie was the rock and they both loved him and he loved both of them, 877 00:57:49,880 --> 00:57:51,320 and he's apolitical. 878 00:57:54,880 --> 00:57:58,000 BERNARD FOWLER: Charlie speaks, they BOTH listen. 879 00:57:58,000 --> 00:58:02,480 Whether it goes to the Mick side or the Keith side, 880 00:58:02,480 --> 00:58:07,520 Charlie will decide that. Charlie will decide that. 881 00:58:07,520 --> 00:58:09,160 I miss that cat. 882 00:58:12,360 --> 00:58:17,480 He famously had a little coat hanger on a stand that you get in hotels, 883 00:58:17,480 --> 00:58:19,920 and that's where he would hang his jacket, 884 00:58:19,920 --> 00:58:25,560 and hanging over the coat stand was a sign that said "Open" or "Closed". 885 00:58:25,560 --> 00:58:29,080 And when Charlie was playing the drums, it would say "Open". 886 00:58:29,080 --> 00:58:32,720 And when he wasn't, it would say "Closed". 887 00:58:32,720 --> 00:58:35,080 And the only person who changed it was Charlie. 888 00:58:35,130 --> 00:58:39,680 Repair and Synchronization by Easy Subtitles Synchronizer 1.0.0.0 71683

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