Keith Richards
Keith Richards and a schoolmate, Mick Jagger, fell in together in the early 1960s and formed the rock band The Rolling Stones with Brian Jones. Losing and adding a few other band members along the way, The Rolling Stones made a name for themselves with up-tempo cover tunes that hit the charts in 1963 and 1964, such as their version of Buddy Holly's "Not Fade Away." Richards and Jagger started writing their own songs in 1965 and the hits began to pile up, fueled by Richards' bluesy, chunky guitar riffs. The Stones went on to a legendary career, recording and performing for the next four decades. Richards did his best to live up to the band's bad-boy image: hard partying and indestructibility became his hallmarks. (His increasingly lined and weatherbeaten face made him a kind of anti-Dick Clark, prematurely aged and always looking to be at death's door.) The Rolling Stones' hits included "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction," "Jumpin' Jack Flash," "Honky-Tonk Woman," " "Miss You" and "Start Me Up." In 1988 Richards released his first solo album, and since then he has worked both with the Stones and on other solo projects.
Extra credit: Richards was injured in Fiji in 2006 when he reportedly fell out of a tree while on vacation. He underwent brain surgery in Aukland, New Zealand, but returned to touring with the Stones later that summer.
Blog posts mentioning Keith Richards:
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