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“So they set it up, and I played bass on it, and they said, ‘We’ll save that for the next album.’” In the interview with Louder , Wyman also reflected on building his first bass, a proto ...
The story of how Wyman came to play the bass even happens to be an example of his cool personality. Three years prior to the Stones' formation, in 1962, Wyman was part of a newly formed quintet ...
Bassist Bill Wyman, who reunited with The Rolling Stones for their 26th studio album ‘Hackney Diamonds’, has revealed that after the passing of drummer Charlie Watts, he believed the band ...
Bill Wyman said he was surprised when the Rolling Stones continued after the departure and death of drummer Charlie Watts. And the former bassist – who left in 1993 – suggested they only kept ...
Bill Wyman said he only played on the Rolling Stones’ “Live By the Sword” because it featured late bandmate Charlie Watts’ drumming in December 2024.
After two albums with the ‘mercurial’ jazz icon, he joined Sting's all-star band for the Dream Of The Blue Turtles album in 1985, subsequently playing with Herbie Hancock, Madonna, Eric ...
Throughout his 30-year tenure with the Rolling Stones, Bill Wyman teamed up with drummer Charlie Watts to form one of rock's most solid rhythm sections, driving such Stones classics as (I Can't ...
Bill Wyman was known as the "Quiet One" in the Rolling Stones, seen here in 1964 (Image: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images) He added: “I don’t play live anymore, too old.
Bill Wyman reunited with the Rolling Stones on their Hackney Diamonds album, but didn't like the track he played on Jackson Maxwell Sun, December 8, 2024 at 2:19 PM UTC ...
It was hard for me to put a bass in because there wasn’t a lot of room.” Intriguingly, Wyman added that he actually contributed to a second song that has yet to see the light of day.