Sunday, 20 February 2011

Life by Keith Richards


For me and legions of Rolling Stones fans, Keith Richards is not only the heart and soul of the world's greatest rock 'n' roll band, he's also the very avatar of rebellion: the desperado, the buccaneer, the poète maudit, the soul survivor and main offender,the torn and frayed outlaw, and the coolest fucking dude on the planet


Halfway through his electrifying new memoir, Life, Keith Richards writes about fame: the nearly complete loss of privacy and the weirdness of being mythologised by fans as a folk-hero renegade. "I can't untie the threads of how much I played up to the part that was written for me," he says. "I mean the skull ring and the broken tooth and the kohl. Is it half and half? I think in a way your persona, your image, as it used to be known, is like a ball and chain. People think I'm still a goddamn junkie. It's 30 years since I gave up the dope! Image is like a long shadow. Even when the sun goes down, you can see it."

By turns earnest and wicked, sweet and sarcastic and unsparing, Richards, now 66, writes with uncommon candour and immediacy. He gives us a time-capsule feel for the madness that was life on the road with the Stones in the years before and after Altamont; harrowing accounts of his many close shaves and narrow escapes (from the police, prison time, drug hell); and a heap of sharp-edged snapshots of friends and colleagues – most notably, his longtime musical partner and sometime bête noire, Mick Jagger. But Life – written with the veteran journalist James Fox – is way more than a revealing showbiz memoir. It is also a high-velocity portrait of the era when rock 'n' roll came of age, a raw report from deep inside the counterculture maelstrom of how that music swept like a tsunami over Britain and the US.

No comments:

Post a Comment