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Ian Stewart (musician)

 

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Ian Stewart (musician)



 
 
Ian Andrew Robert Stewart (18 July 1938 – 12 December 1985) was a Scottish keyboardist
Keyboardist

A keyboardist is a musician who plays keyboard instruments. Until the early 1960s musicians who played keyboards were generally classified as either piano or organ ....
 and cofounder of The Rolling Stones
The Rolling Stones

The Rolling Stones are an English rock music band formed in 1962 in London when multi-instrumentalist Brian Jones and pianist Ian Stewart were joined by vocalist Mick Jagger and guitarist Keith Richards....
. He was dismissed from the line-up in May 1963 but he remained as road manager and piano player.

in Pittenweem
Pittenweem

Pittenweem is a small and secluded fishing village tucked in the corner of Fife on the east coast of Scotland. The name derives from Pictish and Scottish Gaelic....
, East Neuk of Fife, Scotland, and raised in Sutton, Surrey, Stewart (often called Stu) started playing piano when he was six. He took up banjo and played with amateur groups on both instruments.






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Ian Andrew Robert Stewart (18 July 1938 – 12 December 1985) was a Scottish keyboardist
Keyboardist

A keyboardist is a musician who plays keyboard instruments. Until the early 1960s musicians who played keyboards were generally classified as either piano or organ ....
 and cofounder of The Rolling Stones
The Rolling Stones

The Rolling Stones are an English rock music band formed in 1962 in London when multi-instrumentalist Brian Jones and pianist Ian Stewart were joined by vocalist Mick Jagger and guitarist Keith Richards....
. He was dismissed from the line-up in May 1963 but he remained as road manager and piano player.

Role in the Rolling Stones

Born in Pittenweem
Pittenweem

Pittenweem is a small and secluded fishing village tucked in the corner of Fife on the east coast of Scotland. The name derives from Pictish and Scottish Gaelic....
, East Neuk of Fife, Scotland, and raised in Sutton, Surrey, Stewart (often called Stu) started playing piano when he was six. He took up banjo and played with amateur groups on both instruments. Stewart, who loved rhythm & blues, boogie-woogie
Boogie-woogie

Boogie-woogie has the following meanings:* Boogie-woogie , a piano-based music style* Boogie-woogie , a swing dance or a dance that imitates the Rock-n-Roll dance of the 1950s...
, blues
Blues

Blues is a music genre based on the use of the blues chord progressions and the blue notes. Though several blues musical form s exist, the 12-bar blues chord progressions are the most frequently encountered....
 and big-band jazz
Big band

A big band is a type of musical ensemble associated with playing jazz music and which became popular during the swing from the early 1930s until the late 1940s....
, was first to respond to Brian Jones
Brian Jones

Lewis Brian Hopkin Jones was an England guitarist and founding member of the England rock group The Rolling Stones. Jones was known for his use of multiple instruments, fashionable Mod image, Recreational drug use excesses and his 27 Club....
's advertisement in Jazz News of 2 May 1962 seeking musicians to form a rhythm & blues group. Mick Jagger
Mick Jagger

Sir Michael Philip "Mick" Jagger is an England rock musician best known as the lead vocalist of the The Rolling Stones. As well as a songwriter, he is an actor, and record producer and film producer....
 and Keith Richards
Keith Richards

Keith Richards is an England guitarist, songwriter, singer, record producer and a founding member of The Rolling Stones. As a guitarist, Richards is mostly known for his innovative rhythm guitar playing....
 joined in June, and the group, with Dick Taylor
Dick Taylor

Richard Clifford 'Dick' Taylor was an early bass guitar player for The Rolling Stones. He left to become an art student at Sidcup Art College and while there formed The Pretty Things in September 1963....
 on bass and Tony Chapman
Tony Chapman

Tony Chapman was a United Kingdom drummer, especially active during the 1960s. He played with an early line-up of The Rolling Stones before they settled on their permanent band members....
 on drums, played their first gig under the name The Rollin' Stones at the Marquee Club
Marquee Club

The Marquee is a legendary music club first located at 165 Oxford Street, London, England when it opened in 1958 with a range of jazz and skiffle acts....
 on 12 July 1962. By January 1963, Bill Wyman
Bill Wyman

Bill Wyman is the former bass guitarist for the England rock and roll band The Rolling Stones from 1962 until 1992. Since 1997, he has recorded and toured with his own band, Bill Wyman's Rhythm Kings....
 and Charlie Watts
Charlie Watts

Charles Robert "Charlie" Watts is the drummer of The Rolling Stones. He is also a jazz bandleader and commercial artist. Watts is sometimes referred to as "The Wembley Whammer" when introduced by Mick Jagger during a concert....
 had joined, replacing a series of bassists and drummers.

Stewart had a job at Imperial Chemical Industries
Imperial Chemical Industries

Imperial Chemical Industries is a United Kingdom Chemistry subsidiary of a Netherlands Conglomerate and one of the largest chemical producers in the world....
. None of the other band members had a telephone; Stewart said, "[My] desk at ICI was the headquarters of the Stones organisation. My number was advertised in Jazz News and I handled the Stones' bookings at work." He also bought a van to transport the group and their equipment to their gigs.

In early May 1963, the band's manager, Andrew Loog Oldham
Andrew Loog Oldham

Andrew Loog Oldham is an England rock and roll record producer, impresario and author. He was manager of The Rolling Stones in the 1960s, taking a Flaming style inspired by Phil Spector....
, said Stewart should no longer be onstage, that six members were too many for a popular group and that Stewart didn't fit the image. He said Stewart could stay as road manager and play piano on recordings. Stewart accepted this demotion. Richards said: "[Stu] might have realised that in the way it was going to have to be marketed, he would be out of sync, but that he could still be a vital part. I'd probably have said, 'Well, fuck you', but he said 'OK, I'll just drive you around.' That takes a big heart, but Stu had one of the largest hearts around."

Stewart loaded gear into his van, drove the group to gigs, replaced guitar strings and set up Watts' drums the way he himself would play them. "I never ever swore at him," Watts says, with rueful amazement. He also played piano and occasionally organ on most of the band's albums in the first decades, as well as providing criticism. Shortly after Stewart's death Mick Jagger said: "Stu was the one guy we tried to please. We wanted his approval when we were writing or rehearsing a song. We'd want him to like it."

Stewart contributed piano, organ, marimbas and/or percussion to all Rolling Stones albums released between 1964 and 1983, except for Beggars Banquet
Beggars Banquet

Beggars Banquet is an LP released in 1968 by The Rolling Stones. It marked a return to the band's R&B roots, generally viewed as more primal than the conspicuous Psychedelic rock of Their Satanic Majesties Request....
. Stewart was not the only keyboard player who worked extensively with the band: Jack Nitzsche
Jack Nitzsche

Bernard Alfred "Jack" Nitzsche was an arranger, producer, songwriter and Academy Award-winning film score composer....
, Nicky Hopkins
Nicky Hopkins

Nicky Hopkins He recorded and performed on some of the most important British and American popular music recordings of the 1960s and 1970s, and is widely regarded as one of the most important session musicians in rock and roll history....
, Billy Preston
Billy Preston

William Everett "Billy" Preston was an United States soul musician from Houston, Texas, raised mostly in Los Angeles, California. In addition to his successful, Grammy-winning career as a solo artist, Preston collaborated with some of the greatest names in the music industry, including the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, Nat King Cole, Little...
 and Ian McLagan
Ian McLagan

Ian McLagan is an England Keyboard instrument instrumentalist, best known as a member of Small Faces, and Faces .An in-demand player, he has led his own Bump Band since 1977....
 all supplemented his work. In 1975 Stewart joined the band on stage again, playing piano on numbers of his choosing throughout tours in 1975-76, 1978 and 1981-82. Stewart favoured blues and country rockers, and remained dedicated to boogie-woogie and early rhythm & blues. He refused to play in minor keys, saying: "When I'm on stage with the Stones and a minor chord comes along, I lift me hands in protest."

Stewart remained aloof from the band's lifestyle. "I think he looked upon it as a load of silliness," said guitarist Mick Taylor
Mick Taylor

Michael "Mick" Kevin Taylor and another performance from the Old Grey Whistle Test seem to be the only material available from this brief collaboration....
. "I also think it was because he saw what had happened to Brian. I could tell from the expression on his face when things started to get a bit crazy during the making of Exile on Main Street. I think he found it very hard. We all did." Stewart played golf and as road manager showed preference for hotels with courses. Richards recalls: "We'd be playing in some town where there's all these chicks, and they want to get laid and we want to lay them. But Stu would have booked us into some hotel about ten miles out of town. You'd wake up in the morning and there's the links
Links (golf)

A links golf course, sometimes referred to as a seaside links, is the oldest style of golf course, and was first developed in Scotland. The word comes from the Scots language and refers to an area of coastal sand dunes, and sometimes to open parkland....
. We’re bored to death looking for some action and Stu's playing Gleneagles
Gleneagles, Scotland

Gleneagles is a glen which connects with Glen Devon to form a pass through the Ochil Hills of Perth and Kinross in Scotland. The name's origin has nothing to do with eagles, and is a corruption of eaglais or ecclesia meaning church and refers to the chapel and well of Saint Mungo, which was restored as a memorial of the Haldane family which...
."

Other work

Stewart contributed to Led Zeppelin's
Led Zeppelin

Led Zeppelin were an English rock music band formed in 1968 by Jimmy Page , Robert Plant , John Paul Jones and John Bonham . With their heavy, guitar-driven sound, Led Zeppelin are regarded as one of the first heavy metal music bands....
 "Rock and Roll
Rock and Roll (Led Zeppelin song)

"Rock and Roll" is a song by England rock and roll band Led Zeppelin, which was first released as the second track from Led Zeppelin IV in 1971....
" from Led Zeppelin IV
Led Zeppelin IV

The untitled fourth album by English Rock band Led Zeppelin was released on 8 November 1971. It has no official title printed anywhere on the album, and is generally referred to as Led Zeppelin IV after the band's previous three numbered albums....
 and "Boogie With Stu
Boogie with Stu

"Boogie with Stu" is a song by England rock music band Led Zeppelin from their 1975 album Physical Graffiti. It was a jam recorded in 1971 at Headley Grange, where the band had done most of the recording for their Led Zeppelin IV....
" from Physical Graffiti
Physical Graffiti

Physical Graffiti is the sixth album by the England Rock music band Led Zeppelin. It is a double album which was released on 24 February, 1975....
, two numbers in traditional rock & roll vein, both featuring his boogie-woogie
Boogie-woogie (music)

Boogie woogie is a style of piano-based blues that became very popular in the late 1930s and early 1940s, but originated much earlier, and was extended from piano, to three pianos at once, guitar, big band, and country music, and even Gospel music....
 style. Another was Howlin' Wolf
Howlin' Wolf

Chester Arthur Burnett , better known as Howlin' Wolf, was an influential blues singer, guitarist and harmonica player.With a booming voice and looming physical presence, Burnett is commonly ranked among the leading performers in electric blues; musician and critic Cub Koda declared, "no one could match [Howlin' Wolf] for the singular...
's 1971 London Sessions album, featuring Eric Clapton
Eric Clapton

Eric Patrick Clapton Order of the British Empire is an English blues-rock guitarist, singer, songwriter and composer. He is "probably most famous for his mastery of the Stratocaster guitar." Clapton has been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of the Yardbirds, of Cream , and as a solo performer, being the only person to...
, Ringo Starr
Ringo Starr

Richard Starkey Order of the British Empire , better known by his stage name Ringo Starr, is an England musician, singer-songwriter and actor, best known as the drummer for The Beatles....
, Klaus Voorman, Steve Winwood
Steve Winwood

Stephen Lawrence "Steve" Winwood is an England singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist. In addition to his solo career, he was a member of the bands the Spencer Davis Group, Traffic , Blind Faith, and Go ....
, and Bill Wyman and Charlie Watts. He also played piano and organ on the 1982 Bad To The Bone
Bad to the Bone

"Bad to the Bone" is a song by George Thorogood and the Destroyers released in 1982 on the album of the same name. While it was not a major hit on initial release, its memorable video made recurrent appearances on the nascent MTV, which was created only a year before and just taking off....
 album of George Thorogood and the Destroyers.

Stewart also played with the back-to-roots band Rocket 88
Rocket 88 (band)

Rocket 88 is the name of a United Kingdom-based boogie-woogie band formed c. 1980 by Ian Stewart , Charlie Watts, Alexis Korner and Dick Morrissey....
, a late-70s/early-80s venture which included Watts, Alexis Korner
Alexis Korner

Alexis Korner , born Alexis Andrew Nicholas Koerner, was a pioneering blues musician and broadcaster who has sometimes been referred to as "the Founding Father of British Blues"....
, Cream
Cream (band)

Cream were a 1960s United Kingdom blues-rock Musical ensemble consisting of bassist/lead vocalist Jack Bruce, guitarist/vocalist Eric Clapton, and drummer Ginger Baker....
 frontman Jack Bruce
Jack Bruce

John Symon Asher "Jack" Bruce is a Scotland musician, musical composer and singer. He is best-known as an electric bass guitarist, harmonica player and piano, and was most famous as a vocalist and the bass guitarist for the 1960s rock band Cream ....
 on stand-up acoustic bass, Bob Hall
Bob Hall (boogie-woogie pianist)

Robert 'Bob' Hall , is a leading English people Boogie-woogie pianist. A long-time collaborator of Alexis Korner, he also performed regularly with Slide guitar bluesman Dave Kelly and his sister, Jo Ann Kelly....
 sharing piano with Stewart, and a horn and brass section including Colin Smith, John Picard
John Picard (musician)

John Francis Picard, born Tottenham, London, 17 May 1934 is a British jazz trombonist.After serving in the RAF, during which he played at weekends with Cy Laurie, he spent a further four months with Laurie before joining Humphrey Lyttleton, from 1954 until 1960....
, Dick Morrissey
Dick Morrissey

Richard Edwin "Dick" Morrissey was a United Kingdom jazz musician and composer. He played tenor sax, soprano sax and flute....
 and Don Weller
Don Weller (musician)

This article is about the British jazz musician Don Weller; for the American illustrator and painter, see Don Weller.Don Weller , is a British jazz musician, tenor saxophonist and composer....
.

Death and posthumous recognition

Stewart contributed to The Rolling Stones' 1983 Undercover
Undercover (album)

Undercover is an album by The Rolling Stones and was released in 1983. After their preceding studio album, Tattoo You, which was mostly patched together from a selection of outtakes, Undercover was their first release of all newly-recorded material in the 1980s....
, and was present during the 1985 recording for Dirty Work
Dirty Work (album)

Dirty Work is The Rolling Stones' 18th studio album . It was released on 24 March 1986 on the Rolling Stones Records by Sony Music. Produced by Steve Lillywhite, the album was recorded during a period when relations between Mick Jagger and Keith Richards soured considerably, and is often regarded as a low point for the band....
 (released in 1986). In early December 1985, Stewart began having respiratory problems. On 12 December he went to a clinic to have the problem examined; he suffered a heart attack
Myocardial infarction

Myocardial infarction , commonly known as a heart attack, occurs when the Blood flow to part of the heart is interrupted. This is most commonly due to occlusion of a coronary artery following the rupture of a Vulnerable plaque, which is an unstable collection of lipids and white blood cells in the wall of an artery....
 and died in the waiting room.

The Stones played a tribute gig with Rocket 88
Rocket 88 (band)

Rocket 88 is the name of a United Kingdom-based boogie-woogie band formed c. 1980 by Ian Stewart , Charlie Watts, Alexis Korner and Dick Morrissey....
 in February 1986 at London's 100 Club
100 Club

Not to be confused with 100 Club, the name of several civic clubs in the United States which support families of public servants killed or injured in the line of duty....
, and included a 30-second clip of Stewart playing the blues standard, Key to the Highway
Key to the Highway

"Key to the Highway" is an Eight bar blues song by Charles 'Chas' Segar and Big Bill Broonzy.It is considered one of Broonzy's greatest songs and has become a recognised List of blues standards#K....
 at the end of Dirty Work. When the Stones were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum is a museum located on the shores of Lake Erie in downtown Cleveland Cleveland, Ohio, United States, dedicated to recording the history of some of the best-known and most influential artists, producers, and other people who have in some major way influenced the music industry, particularly in the are...
 in 1989, they requested Stewart's name be included.

Basis for fictional detective Rebus

According to a Sunday Herald
Sunday Herald

The Sunday Herald is a Scotland Sunday newspaper launched on 7 February 1999. From the start it has combined a liberal stance with support for Scottish devolution....
  in March 2006, Stewart was the basis for a fictional detective:

Rankin says the lyrics to a song by Aidan Moffat
Aidan Moffat

Aidan John Moffat is a Scotland vocalist and musician, best known for his work with Malcolm Middleton in Arab Strap ....
 & The Best-Of's about Ian Stewart. "The Sixth Stone" is the first release by the new band of Aidan Moffat, formerly of Arab Strap
Arab Strap (band)

Arab Strap were an indie rock band from Scotland that consisted of core members Aidan Moffat and Malcolm Middleton. The band were signed to independent record label Chemikal Underground, and eventually split in 2006....
. It is included on Chemikal Underground
Chemikal Underground

Chemikal Underground is an independent record label set up in 1994 in music by Glasgow, Scotland rock band The Delgados. It was set up to release their first single, "Monica Webster" / "Brand New Car" and went on to break many new Scottish bands in the nineties....
's Ballads Of The Book
Ballads of the Book

Ballads of the Book is a compilation album, released on Chemikal Underground on 5 March 2007. The project was curated by Roddy Woomble, and features collaborations between Scotland musicians and Scottish writers....
 compilation, which has Scottish authors and poets writing lyrics for contemporary Scottish bands.