If you followed The Rolling Stones from the beginning, then you already know that Brian Jones was considered to be the driving force behind the band's early image and direction ...
But over time, he seemed to lose his focus ... and his excessive drinking and drug use put him "missing in action" for any number of key events.
It reached the point where the rest of the band had no choice but to fire him.
Less than a month later, he was dead ... having drowned in his own swimming pool.
As the band grew in stature over the mid-to-late '60's, Mick and Keith (as the group's chief songwriters) quickly became the poster boys of the band ... and have been so ever since, leaving Jones' contribution as not much more than a footnote in The Rolling Stones' history.
Far too often, he has become the forgotten stone.
But not this month anyway!
Brian Jones ... "the tragic Stone" ... has been all over the media lately.
Rolling Stone: The Life And Death Of Brian Jones is now available on DVD and, thanks to a number of deleted scenes and behind-the-scenes storytelling, you'll find that it will take you well beyond the commercially released film you'll see when it premiers tonight (Monday, May 15th) on BBC-TV Arena at 9 PM Eastern, as well as BBC Two and BBC iPlayer. (You can also find it On Demand on Amazon Prime ... and it will soon be streaming on a few other platforms as well.)
https://ugly-things.com/rolling-stone-life-and-death-of-brian-jones/
Harvey Kubernik tells us ...
In 2004, I interviewed bass player Bill Wyman of the Rolling Stones, who was also their resident diarist and collector in his 1962-1989 tenure with the band. I asked about group founder Brian Jones, now the subject of an Arena Television documentary that will be broadcast May 15th on BBC Two and BBC1PLayer.
Having already seen the film, I will warn you that it is narrated in SO heavy a British dialect that you'll wish more of it had subtitles! But if you pay attention, Brian's complete story is spelled out from start to finish.
The film also explores a letter Jones received from his estranged father ...
Meanwhile, this past week marks the 55th anniversary of the last time Brian Jones played with The Rolling Stones
For more on the guy who helped to form The Rolling Stones ... (and even gave them their name!) ... this one just may sound like something you might find worth watching! Check it out tonight on BBC Two or Amazon Prime Video. (kk)