
Brian Jones
The Making of the Rolling Stones
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Narrated by:
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Steven Crossley
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By:
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Paul Trynka
About this listen
Brian Jones was the golden boy of the Rolling Stones - the visionary who gave the band its name and its sound. Yet he was a haunted man, and much of his brief time with the band, before his death in 1969 at the infamous age of 27, was volatile and tragic. Even now the full story of his downfall is still largely untold.
Brian Jones is a forensic, thrilling account of Jones' life, which for the first time details his pioneering achievements and messy unraveling. With more than 120 new interviews, Trynka offers countless new revelations and sets straight the tall tales that have long marred Jones' legacy. His story is a gripping battle between creativity and ambition, between self-sabotage and betrayal. It's all here: the girlfriends, the drugs, and some of the greatest music of all time.
©2014 Paul Trynka (P)2015 TantorListeners also enjoyed...
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Critic reviews
What listeners say about Brian Jones
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Anonymous User
- 02-20-23
Very detailed story
I'm a Rolling Stones fan, but to not hard core. This book went into extensive detail and name dropping. I was familiar with maybe 50% of the names.
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- Anonymous User
- 07-30-24
Interesting listen
This was a very insightful book. I love the Rolling Stones and adore Brian as much as I’ve watched and listen to, I received new information through this book. Gives a very detailed and thorough background of his life, prior to the Rolling Stones and during the Rolling Stones.
Didn’t always enjoy the voice, but that was just my preference. Overall, I’m very happy that I listened to this audiobook. I actually listen to it three times. So it gets a great review from me.
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- M_D_Roberts
- 07-17-15
Well Written and a fair perspective On The Brian Jones
I'm a fan of the 60's and 70's era Rock N Roll era. This is a well written book which gives you different perspectives based on interviews from the people and friends that surrounded Brian.
It is well read. I really like the narrator. Very well done. If you have any interest in the Stones and Brian Jones, I recommend this book.
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3 people found this helpful
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- Gunnar Benckert
- 11-09-22
Very biased
I get it, Mick & Keith are bad people and Brian was a genius. Repeated agaian, again and then again. Narrator is excellent but I did not bother to finish it.
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- Amazon Customer
- 06-20-18
Ode to the_
The Brian Jones of long ago.....before the criminals also known as the 'Rollin Stones' wrecked the Rhythm and blues scene that was just catching fire in England and abroad. The overpowering need for greed, fame, wrath, pride and of course massive amounts of criminal activities (murder included) took over the original intent of musical companionship...
Here the young, talented, handsome, musical prodigy named Brian Jones is revealed... who like the many of us, got lost down the rabbit hole.
In this audible, traces of him still exist and are brought to a new light in clarifying proper ways.
An absolute must in the collection of the dark and mysterious, shrouded in utter chaos and sadness known formally as Rolling Stones legacy.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Ray Krupton
- 07-14-16
An intellectual perspective on the founding Stone
Paul Trynka wrote a very smart, and as far as I can tell a very well researched book on one of the most fascinating and original rock stars to have ever existed. It's a largely tragic story, but compulsively readable and filled with surprising perspectives on all the members of the Rolling Stones and those that were close to them. As a fan of the band I couldn't put it down, and it only strengthened my admiration for Brian Jones and his contributions. My only complaint is that I wish it delved a bit more deeply into Brian's processes and skills as a musician. If you were wondering why Brian thought to use a sitar on "Paint it Black" or an autoharp on "You Got The Silver," you won't find much here, but you'll sure learn a lot about the personal drama surrounding the making of such songs.
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- Harry F. Myhre
- 03-15-16
best rock and roll history.
I always liked the brian jones version of the stones. after brian left, their sound changed and I lost interest.
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1 person found this helpful
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- 33480
- 03-31-16
Best Jones Bio, in my opinion
Paul Trynka did a very fine job with this book. It lacks the murky sensationalist crap that so obviously plagued previous accounts of one of Rock's earliest pioneers, Brian Jones. This was finally about Brian Jones; an insightful, open look into everything about Brian. The good, the bad and the all-too-famous ugly. The good, at long last, outweighs the bad. At the end of the day, this is a character study. If you were to pretend you knew nothing about Mr. Brian Jones - that he wasn't a Rolling Stone, just some guy - you would come away with a clear understanding of this person's contributions to the most important period in Popular Music; his very human shortcomings; the dynamics of his most important personal relationships; the monumental impact his austere upbringing had on him, culminating into the tragic end we all knew was coming. Paul Trynka's account is not glamorized. It's factual.
This was about Brian Jones' extraordinary talent, often forgotten or uncredited. It's about time. I learned some things I never knew before. That's the best kind of book in the world.
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4 people found this helpful
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- Wiz&Rib
- 05-29-15
Sympathy and due for the Devil
Well researched and proudly written, this book finally wrests the majority of the ownership of the Rolling Stones back to Brian Jones. Exciting, frustrating, sad and satisfying. The narration is well done, although he sounds a bit like a dissatisfied schoolmaster.
Still, highly recommended for any Stones fan. Essential material for the library.
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2 people found this helpful
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- M. Graham
- 11-17-15
Great story, exceptionally well narrated
What did you love best about Brian Jones?
First, this is one of the VERY few pop music biographies that is appropriately narrated. I've listened to countless audiobooks about famous musicians, and, with the exception of the wonderfully written and narrated Tune In (first volume of Mark Lewisohn's biography of the Beatles), they have been disappointing. Unfortunately, American narrators seem to be the worst: either pretentious in diction or remarkably "off" in tone and pace. They never match the spirit of the books OR the spirit of rock music.
At first I thought the narrator might grow tedious (he sounds like an old-fashioned school master in the beginning), but as the story went on, I thought he captured exactly the right archness and irony that many of the incidents and quotations call for. AND: So far (I'm almost finished with the recording), he hasn't mispronounced a single foreign (or American) proper name (something every other recording, even the Beatles' biography, is flawed by, almost to the point of hilarity).
Well written, quite balanced look at the musical roots, inspirations, and rip-offs that have marked the Stones' career.
Any additional comments?
PLEASE urge the producers of audiobooks to choose narrators who can capture the tone and spirit of the stories they read. This audiobook, and Lewisohn's audiobook, are models of how rock stories should be told.
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6 people found this helpful