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Mick Jagger's LifeAnd Career As Told By His 80 Coolest Moments

Mick Jaggers LifeAnd Career As Told By His 80 Coolest Moments
Happy 80th birthday to a man of wealth and taste

Mick Jagger’s Life And Career As Told By His 80 Wildest Moments – Rolling Stone

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MICK IS SEX!

Happy 80th birthday to a man of wealth and taste

Mick Jagger
PHOTOGRAPHS USED IN ILLUSTRATION BY KMazur/WireImage; Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images; Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS/Corbis/Getty Images; GAB Archive/Redferns; ADOBE STOCK

When asked to describe Mick Jagger, Keith Richards has famously replied, “He’s a nice bunch of guys.” On this birthday, let’s celebrate all of them. There have been so many Mick Jaggers over the years, with their different highs and lows. Here’s a salute to the 80 Coolest Mick Jagger moments: a mere 80 of the countless moments when Mick reminded us all why he’s the ultimate rock star. He’s always been the most visible of rock stars — but also the most mysterious, the most slippery, the one you’ll never figure out no matter how hard you try. This is Mick at his most seductive. Mick at his most decadent. Mick at his most comical. But it’s all Mick defining the outer limits of rock & roll cool. Let it bleed, now and forever.

  • Mick meets Keith on a train platform in Dartford
    Rolling Stones singer Mick Jagger and guitarist Keith Richards opening fan mail during the early days of the band, circa 1963. (Photo by Keystone Features/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Keystone Features/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

    Two 18-year-old English schoolboys — former childhood classmates — notice each other on the platform, all because Mick is carrying a couple of blues records. Keith’s on his way to art college, Mick’s off to the London School of Economics. But they start chatting when Keith sees the Muddy Waters and Chuck Berry albums under Mick’s arm. The beginning of music’s most bizarrely long-lived dysfunctional brotherhood.

  • Mick lays a divorcee in New York City
    NEW YORK - 1969:  Lead singer Mick Jagger of the Rolling Stones performs on the stage at Madison Square Garden on November 28, 1969 in New York City, New York.  (Photo by Walter Iooss Jr./Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Walter Iooss Jr./Getty Images

    Mick peacocks across Top 40 radio with the sleepwalk sex swagger of “Honky Tonk Women,” where the poor boy sounds exhausted by his busy bed-hopping schedule. He leers over the guitars and cowbell, as if if he’s slipping into a post-coital coma, chewing up the punchline: “She blew my nose and then she blew my mind.” It hits Number One for four weeks — the Stones’ biggest U.S. single.

  • Mick out-Pythons Monty Python in the Rutles documentary
    Mick Jagger sits in a crowd of photographers with Monty Python comedian Eric Idle at a press reception to launch the Rolling Stones' album 'Some Girls', New York, 1977. (Photo by Michael Putland/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Michael Putland/Getty Images

    Monty Python’s Eric Idle and Neil Innes devised the fabbest and funniest of Beatles spoofs: The Rutles. In their TV mock-rockumentary All You Need Is Cash, they chronicle the Pre-Fab Four — “a music legend that will last a lunchtime.” But Mick steals the show as himself, totally deadpan, as he discusses the Rutles’ breakup, warning, “Cherchez la femme.” Mick gets the final word in the movie. Interviewer: “Do you think they’ll ever get back together?” Jagger: “I ‘ope not.”

  • Mick to New York: Drop Dead
    British rock and roll group the Rolling Stones sign autographs at a release party at the Trax nightclub for the band's 'Love You Live' album, September 23, 1977. Pictured from left are singer Mick Jagger, and guitarists Ronnie Wood and Keith Richards.   (Photo by Robin Platzer/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Robin Platzer/Getty Images

    Welcome to New York — it’s been waiting for you. Or as Mick would phrase it, “Go ahead, bite the Big Apple! Don’t mind the maggots!” “Shattered” is one of the nastiest, funniest NYC travelogues ever, with Mick bitching about urban decay and moral depravity, from the pimps on Seventh Avenue to the rats on the West Side to the bedbugs uptown. And he wouldn’t be anywhere else. “Shattered” comes at the all-time peak of America’s 1970s obsession with hating New York, in the aftermath of the Summer of Sam, upping the punk-rock ante on CBGB in a riot of “shedooby” chants and guitar sludge. Suggested slogan for the NYC Tourism Bureau: “Pride and joy and greed and sex, that’s what makes our town the best!”

  • Mick plays ‘You Can’t Always Get What You Want’ on Zoom
    you can't always get what you want zoom covid
    Image Credit: Youtube

    In the early days of the Covid pandemic, the Stones get together long-distance for a Zoom version of their most hardass hit, on a global TV special. A spotlight for the Stones to strut their stuff as the World’s Greatest Rock & Roll Band — with drummer Charlie Watts bringing the thunder for what turned out to be his last live triumph.

  • Mike Jagger becomes “Mick”
    UNITED KINGDOM - circa 1963: Mick Jagger, lead singer with English rock and roll group The Rolling Stones posed backstage circa 1963. (Photo by Mark and Colleen Hayward/Redferns)
    Image Credit: Mark and Colleen Hayward/Redferns/Getty Images

    As a student at the London School of Economics, a nice boy named Mike Jagger changes his name, to conjure up a little faux-Irish salt-of-the-earth street cred. Result: one of the all-time great rock-star names. His family keeps calling him “Mike” for the rest of their lives.

  • Mick causes an international scandal for reportedly dallying with Margaret Trudeau
    CANADA - MARCH 10:  After giving driver her autograph; Margaret Trudeau leaves New York taxi cab yesterday at photography studio. She refused to answer reporters' questions about her marriage; but when asked whether she was feeling well; she replied: I feel fantastic; I feel good; very good; about myself and my life.   (Photo by Boris Spremo/Toronto Star via Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Boris Spremo/Toronto Star/Getty Images

    Mick makes the headlines for reportedly dallying with Trudeau — whose husband at the time just happens to be the prime minister of Canada. (As is her son Justin in 2023.) The first lady skips their wedding anniversary to party with the Stones, in the same Toronto hotel where Keith just got busted for dope. Even Charlie Watts admits, “I wouldn’t want my wife associating with us.” Mick is shocked, shocked, at the sex rumors, dismissing them as “insulting to me and insulting to her.”

  • Mick outrages Middle America with a giant inflatable penis
    Guitarist Ronnie Wood and singer Mick Jagger of the Rolling Stones performing on stage in the USA during their 'Tour of the Americas' in 1975. (Photo by Michael Putland/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Michael Putland/Getty Images

    His most infamous stage prop ever, from the 1975 U.S. tour.

  • Mick faces off with John Lennon at the ‘Rock and Roll Circus’
    John Lennon, Mick Jagger. (Photo by: Universal Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Universal Archive/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

    In the star-studded chaos of the Stones’ brilliant concert film Rock and Roll Circus, Mick has a heart-to-heart sitdown with John Lennon. They reminisce about their early days together, calling each other “Michael” and “Winston,” but the tension is electric. “He said a lot of sort of tarty things about the Beatles,” John tells Rolling Stone in 1970, “which I am hurt by, because you know, I can knock the Beatles, but don’t let Mick Jagger knock them. I would like to just list what we did and what the Stones did two months after on every fuckin’ album. Every fuckin’ thing we did, Mick does exactly the same — he imitates us. And I would like one of you fuckin’ underground people to point it out.”

  • The Stones get busted for pissing on a petrol-station wall
    MANCHESTER, ENGLAND - MARCH 7th: English rock and roll group The Rolling Stones posed in a corridor at the Midland Hotel in Manchester, England on March 7th, 1965. Clockwise from top right: Brian Jones (1942-1969), Bill Wyman, Keith Richards, Mick Jagger and Charlie Watts. (Photo by Jeff Hochberg/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Jeff Hochberg/Getty Images

    The most mythically significant urination in the history of rock & roll bladders. Mick and the boys get pinched for relieving themselves against the wall of a petrol station, one night on the road after a gig. The owner won’t let the Stones use the facilities because — well, look at them. He testifies Bill Wyman is a “shaggy-haired monster wearing dark glasses.” Mick insists, “We piss anywhere, man.” Keith later claims the cops swoop in before the band’s even done zipping up. The punishment: a three-pound fine each, plus the kind of publicity other bands would kill for. (John Lennon spent the rest of his life jealous this didn’t happen to the Beatles in 1965.) Their luck with the law would never again be so simple.

  • ‘Empty Heart’
    Mick Jagger (lead singer of 'The Rolling Stones') in July 1964.;    (Photo by Monitor Picture Library/Avalon/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Monitor Picture Library/Avalon/Getty Images

    A fantastic deep cut from the early days — the hungry young Stones at their meanest, out to conquer the world with this raw, primitive electric screamer of a song. Mick yowls about how it feels to have an empty heart, and why that’s a good thing.

  • Mick fights a paparazzo at the Providence, Rhode Island, airport baggage claim
    Singer Mick Jagger performing with the Rolling Stones, 1975. (Photo By Michael Putland/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Michael Putland/Getty Images

    Mick gets hauled off to the clink, along with Keith, after a scuffle with a pushy photographer at baggage claim. He poses for one of the surliest mug shots ever. But Boston Mayor Kevin White gets them sprung in time for that night’s concert, fearing a riot. The Stones get rushed from jail to the stage in limos with a police escort, finally playing after midnight. They sign off at 2 a.m. with “Street Fighting Man.”

  • Angie Bowie tells Joan Rivers that she caught Mick and David Bowie in bed
    NEW YORK CITY - NOVEMBER 28:  David Bowie and Mick Jagger sighted on November 28, 1985 at the China Club in New York City. (Photo by Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection/Getty Images

    Angie appears on Joan’s TV talk show to claim she caught her husband David (who sang a brilliant version of “Let’s Spend the Night Together”) getting ziggy with Mick. Both gentlemen refuse to comment. But let’s just say that if it isn’t true — if Mick and Bowie went all those years without any dancing in the sheets — well, we’re not mad, just disappointed.

  • ‘Sweet Thing’
    UNITED STATES - FEBRUARY 08:  Mick Jagger at Webster Hall  (Photo by Richard Corkery/NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Richard Corkery/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images

    The most underrated moment of his solo career. Mick’s solo records can be divisive, to say the least — but this funked-out strut is unimpeachable, from his sadly neglected solo joint Wandering Spirit. Mick really knows his way around the word “sensual.”

  • Mick hits Number One with ‘Angie’
    Rock singer Mick Jagger of the Rolling Stones poses for a portrait in the grounds of his Vienna hotel in September 1973.  (Photo by Eddie Sanderson/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Eddie Sanderson/Getty Images

    Exactly the kind of song you’d sing if you wanted to sound heartbroken about a woman, but you had no idea what it was like to give a shit. He sounds like he keeps saying her name because he’s having trouble remembering it. (“Angie, Aaa-haaan-jaaay—it is Angie, right?”) Keith started writing this song while recovering from heroin detox, for the album Goats Head Soup, but Mick turns it into his own kind of melodrama.

  • Mick proves how easy it is to write faux-‘Exile’ songs with ‘Plundered My Soul’
    AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS - JULY 31:  Mick Jagger of Rolling Stones performs live at Arena on July 31, 2006 in Amsterdam, Netherlands.  (Photo by Greetsia Tent/WireImage)
    Image Credit: Greetsia Tent/WireImage

    For the 50th Anniversary edition of Exile on Main Street, Mick refurbishes some outtakes into finished songs, whipping up new lyrics. All he needs to do is go into his old Exile character, and out comes the brilliance of “Plundered My Soul.” It kinda raises the question of why he doesn’t do this more often? Jagger pulls the same trick for the Some Girls reissue, adding a whole new coat of NYC grime to “Do You Think I Really Care?”

  • Mick becomes a great-grandfather
    English singer Mick Jagger and his wife US choreographer Melanie Hamrick attend the 2023 American Ballet Theatre's summer season opening night performance of
    Image Credit: Kena Betancur/AFP/Getty Images

    In 2014, Mick’s granddaughter Assisi Jackson gave birth to a baby girl, and Mick, at 70, made great-grandfatherdom cool.

  • Mick dances a sax solo for Sonny Rollins
    BERKELEY, CA - MAY 1979:  Sonny Rollins is seen waiting to take the stage during the Berkeley Jazz Festival at the Greek Theatre in May 1979 in Berkeley, California.  (Photo by Ed Perlstein/Redferns/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Ed Perlstein/Redferns/Getty Images

    For “Waiting on a Friend,” the Stones invite one of their biggest heroes to blow his horn: jazz legend Sonny Rollins. But the Saxophone Colossus gets Mick to join the improvisation. As Mick recalls, “I said, ‘Would you like me to stay out there in the studio?’ He said, ‘Yeah, you tell me where you want me to play and dance the part out.’” So Mick dances, Rollins translates the moves into sax glory, and “Waiting on a Friend” turns into the magnificent finale for Side Two of Tattoo You.

  • The ‘Dirty Work’ album cover
    rolling stones dirty work

    There’s great Eighties album covers, and there’s terrible Eighties album covers. But this is easily the all-time greatest terrible Eighties album cover, doing for pastels what Altamont did for the Hells Angels community-outreach program. One look and you can see all the hatred and bad vibes in the room. You can see Mick can’t wait to walk out and never see these bastards again. But you can also see he’s stuck with them for life.

  • Mick sniffles and sobs through ‘As Tears Go By’
    Guitarist Keith Richards (R) and vocalist Mick Jagger of rock & roll group The Rolling Stones on the set of music programme Ready Steady Go! in London, circa 1964. (Photo by TV Times via Getty Images)
    Image Credit: TV Times/Future Publishing/Getty Images

    No other rock & roll singer could have gotten away with this teary ballad, but Mick relishes the role of a forlorn aristocrat, weeping over his lost childlike innocence. (Talk about a distant memory.) He and Keith originally wrote it for Marianne Faithful, but it takes Mick’s fab arrogance to put it over the top, as he sobs, “My riches can’t buy everything.”

  • Mick kicks off another massive world tour just two freaking months after heart surgery
    MIAMI, FLORIDA - AUGUST 30: (L-R) Ronnie Wood, Mick Jagger, Charlie Watts and Keith Richards of The Rolling Stones perform onstage at Hard Rock Stadium on August 30, 2019 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Rich Fury/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Rich Fury/Getty Images

    The Stones’ triumphant 2019 tour — their last hurrah with Charlie — blasts off in Chicago, as Mick busts out his moves with a defiant “told you so” vibe. It’s almost like he feels — somewhere deep in his surgically reconstructed heart of stone — he’s got something to prove. People were worried whether this guy was in peak condition at 76? Picture yourself moving like this on the best day of your damn life.

  • Mick delivers a criminally underrated performance in ‘The Man From Elysian Fields’
    MAN FROM ELYSIAN FIELDS, Anjelica Huston, Mick Jagger, 2001
    Image Credit: Everett Collection

    Mick’s movie career has led him to some very strange places, but he’s brilliant in this Hollywood melodrama, as a high-class pimp running a posh male-escort service. In a fancy restaurant, he confesses to Angelica Huston that fame and fortune is meaningless without true love. “If you don’t use success to enrich your life, then you’re just putting failure into Gucci shoes.” She laughs in his face. Mick never expresses this sentiment ever again.

  • ‘Undercover of the Night’
    GOTHENBURG, SWEDEN - JUNE 19:  Mick Jagger, lead singer for the rock group the
    Image Credit: Tommy Wiberg/AFP/Getty Images

    The Stones hit the ground running in the Eighties, with one of their leanest, meanest, funkiest hits. Mick rails against Reagan-era U.S. imperialism, ranting, “One hundred thousand disparus/Lost in the jails of South America.” The band mix the Clash, Grandmaster Flash, Lee Perry, and Duran Duran into their own electro-throb groove. Like so many Stones classics, it’s a boogie through a combat zone. In the video, Keith plays the kidnapper who pulls a gun on Mick — he’d probably spent years waiting for that moment.

  • Mick bows to Aretha Franklin in ‘Amazing Grace’
    CIRCA 1972: R&B singer Aretha Franklin rehearses in circa 1972. (Photo by Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

    The 2018 documentary shows Aretha recording her gospel-soul classic Amazing Grace live in a Baptist church in L.A., with a congregation full of churchgoers. But two prodigal sons appear in the back row: Mick and Charlie, in town to finish up Exile. For once, Mick doesn’t want attention — he’s just there to worship Aretha, clapping in awe at her sacred genius.

  • Mick records ‘Connection,’ his most soulful bonding with Keith
    NEW YORK - FEBRUARY 13: The Rolling Stones are photographed during a performance on
    Image Credit: CBS/Getty Images

    A deep cut cherished by Mick/Keith shippers — barely three minutes long, the Glimmer Twins’ voices weaving together like never before, full of paranoia and fear, with no hope except each other. When you hear “Connection,” you can hear why these two have put up with each other’s bullshit for so long. How do you walk away from a sound like this?

  • ‘Prodigal Son,’ his most ridiculous bonding with Keith
    Mick Jagger (left) and Keith Richards from The Rolling Stones record guitar parts for the track 'Sympathy for the Devil' at Olympic Studios in Barnes, London, June 1968. (Photo by Mark and Colleen Hayward/Redferns)
    Image Credit: Mark and Colleen Hayward/Redferns/Getty Images

    A country-blues sermon from the Rev. Robert Wilkins, transmuted into the strange love between these two blood brothers. It’s the Bible story of the rich man’s heir who goes crawling back home in shame. But Mick has no ability to feel shame, or even surprise — he never had a doubt they’d take him back. At the end, Keith lets out a hearty “heeey!,” as if he’s so caught up in the story — and in this musical mind-meld — he can’t help himself.

  • Micks bares his soul in ‘Too Tough’
    Mick Jagger on the beach at Barbados, just prior to his 40th birthday. (Photo by © Wally McNamee/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images)
    Image Credit: © Wally McNamee/CORBIS/Getty Images

    A startlingly candid song hidden on the Undercover album, where Mick dishes the dirt about how lonely it feels being a jaded roué with a heart of stone. He spots one of his old flames while he’s flipping channels, no doubt in some five-star hotel. As he sings, “I saw you on TV last night in a rerun soap/You were young and beautiful, already without hope.” He wonders why he’s doomed to live his life this way. Then he goes right on living his life this way.

  • Mick dances on the Sixties’ grave with ‘Dead Flowers’
    (NO AGENCIES IN UK, FRANCE, GERMANY, HOLLAND, SWEDEN, FINLAND, JAPAN.)    Rolling Stones 1970 Mick Jagger during Rolling Stones File Photos 1960's-1990's in London, United Kingdom.  (Photo by Chris Walter/WireImage)
    Image Credit: Chris Walter/WireImage

    A poison valentine for the Woodstock generation? A surly lament for Altamont? A hardass portrait of smiling young potheads turning into zombie-eyed junkies? A countrified obituary for the not-even-dead-yet Gram Parsons? “Dead Flowers” is all that and more.

  • Mick lays out the high price of womanizing in ‘Some Girls’
    Mick Jagger after a party at the
    Image Credit: Bertrand Rindoff Petroff/Getty Images

    Mick reveals the dirty details of playing the ladies’ man, for any fans out there who wish they could be him. He introduces the kids in the audience to exciting new concepts like child support, social diseases, alimony, court dates, legal bills — and lets them all know they can’t afford it.

  • Mick redefines the collapse of civilization in ‘Jigsaw Puzzle’
    Mick Jagger during the recording of The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus, London 1968. (Photo by Andrew Maclear/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Andrew Maclear/Getty Images

    The Stones take a huge leap forward with Beggars Banquet — the album where they finally shake off the Beatles influence and blow up the blues. “Jigsaw Puzzle” is his wildly comic ramble through modern culture, a spoiled rock & roll prince watching the castles crumbling. Mick crows, “The singer, he looks angry at being thrown to the lions!” He also notes that the guitarists look damaged, the drummer looks shattered, and the bassist looks “nervous about the girls outside,” which is probably true.

  • Mick does his funniest flouncing ever in the ‘Hang Fire’ video
    rolling stones hang fire
    Image Credit: Youtube

    The early days of music video. “Hang Fire” is a zero-budget one-take quickie — no props, no concept, just five rock stars herded into a hallway for a couple of minutes of awesomely inept lip-synching. (Woody maybe had a little too much sugar in his tea this morning.) But Mick minces like a showgirl with the rent due, especially the moment where he sneaks up to a giant picture of himself to give it a great big kiss.

  • Mick redefines drugs with ‘Something Happened to Me Yesterday’
    The Rolling Stones. Mick Jagger talks with the Press during a break in rehearsals at the Eamonn Andrews TV Show 5th February 1967 (Photo by Daily Mirror/Mirrorpix/Mirrorpix via Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Daily Mirror/Mirrorpix/Getty Images

    In the heyday of mystic-crystal revelations, Mick goes deep on an acid trip that leaves him more alienated — and more hilariously English — than ever. David Bowie basically founded his career on this song, especially the moment where Mick muses, “You’re talking in a most peculiar way.” In that moment, you can hear “Space Oddity” and all that followed.

  • Mick redefines pants in ‘Rock and Roll Circus’
    Mick Jagger from The Rolling Stones performs live on stage on the set of the Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus at Intertel TV Studio in Wembley, London on 11th December 1968. (Photo by Mark and Colleen Hayward/Redferns)
    Image Credit: Mark and Colleen Hayward/Redferns/Getty Images

    A fashion peak for Mick, which for him means it’s also a philosophical peak. He’s the ringmaster of the Stones’ lavish concert movie Rock and Roll Circus. Sadly, the film gets buried, because they get cold feet when they see how great the Who are that night. But Mick has never made a prettier peacock, rocking his purple trousers off as he sings “You Can’t Always Get What You Want.” In his skintight red shirt and leather belt, he’s the queen of the underground.

  • Mick stars in ‘Cocksucker Blues,’ the Stones film they didn’t want you to see
    Singer Mick Jagger of the Rolling Stones, London, May 1972. (Photo by Michael Putland/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Michael Putland/Getty Images

    He brings filmmaker Robert Frank along to chronicle the Stones’ 1972 American tour, named after the obscene song they recorded as a final insult to their record label. “It was my idea to make that movie,” Mick says. But when the Stones get a look at the documentary, with its sordid on-the-road sex and drugs, they decide it’s too unflattering to show people — not to mention too legally dangerous. Cocksucker Blues has been a bootleg rarity ever since.

  • Mick redefines doom in ‘Gimme Shelter’
    UNITED KINGDOM - JULY 05:  HYDE PARK  Photo of Mick JAGGER and ROLLING STONES, Mick Jagger performing live onstage at free Hyde Park Concert  (Photo by Peter Sanders/Redferns)
    Image Credit: Peter Sanders/Redferns/Getty Images

    “That’s a kind of end-of-the-world song, really. It’s apocalypse; the whole record’s like that,” Jagger tells Rolling Stone’s Jann S. Wenner. “It’s a very rough, very violent era. The Vietnam War. Violence on the screens. Pillage and burning.” But somehow, the song feels even more terrifying today.

  • Live Aid with Tina Turner
    PHILADELPHIA, PA - JULY 12: (L-R) Tina Turner and Mick Jagger rehearse their duet for the upcoming Live Aid concert at JFK Stadium on July 12, 1985 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Peter Carrette Archive/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Peter Carrette Archive/Getty Images

    Mick plays the historic global-TV charity concert with Tina Turner, doing a steamy duet on “State of Shock” and “It’s Only Rock & Roll.” Mick shows that he’s deeply touched by this momentous occasion by removing her leather skirt.

  • Mick redefines class warfare in ‘Back Street Girl’
    English singer Mick Jagger of The Rolling Stones during a performance by the band on the set of the Associated Rediffusion Television pop music television show Ready Steady Go! at Wembley Television Studios in London on 7th October 1966. The group would perform three tracks on this edition of the show, 'Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby, Standing in the Shadow?', 'Lady Jane' and 'Paint It Black'. (Photo by Ivan Keeman/Redferns)
    Image Credit: Ivan Keeman/Redferns/Getty Images

    A scathing portrait of male vanity — always Mick’s  specialty, and always his favorite target for his mean streak. A gorgeous accordion waltz about a hypocritical upper-class snob and his secret working-class mistress, as he talks down to her: “Please take the favors I grant/Curtsy and act nonchalant.”

  • Mick vs. the Soviet Union
    Rolling Stones singer Mick Jagger sports a preppy look.   (Photo by LGI Stock/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images)
    Image Credit: LGI Stock/Corbis/VCG/Getty Images

    Mick is such a symbol of Western decadence, he creates an international crisis without even trying. In August 1983, at the peak of Cold War paranoia, a 16-year-old Russian kid — the son of a Soviet diplomat — tries to defect to the U.S. because he wants to be like the Stones. It doesn’t work, but as he’s boarding the plane back to Moscow, his parting words to reporters: “Say hi to Mick Jagger.”

  • ‘Memo From Turner’
    British actor James Fox and British singer-songwriter Mick Jagger on the set of British crime drama film 'Performance', UK, 16th September 1968. (Photo by Larry Ellis/Daily Express/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Larry Ellis/Daily Express/Getty Images

    The climax of one of the darkest, scariest of all rock films: Performance. Mick stars as a demonic reclusive rock star named Turner, hiding out in his London mansion in a decadent menage a trois with Anita Pallenberg and Michele Breton. As he warns, “The only performance that makes it, that really makes it, that makes it all the way, is the one that achieves madness.” The tension explodes when Mick howls this blues curse, “Memo from Turner,” with blues guitar from Ry Cooder. The song ended up in an equally druggy movie years later — it’s part of Ray Liotta’s coke-sweat freakout at the end of Goodfellas.

  • Mick wears wizard hat on the cover of ‘Their Satanic Majesties Request’
    mick jagger rolling stones satanic majesties request wizard

    It was worth a try. The Stones tried to go psychedelic in this zany Sgt. Pepper’s omelette, which they quickly disavowed. But Satanic Majesties has always been one of their most underrated records, simply because it’s one of their most Mick records. He absolutely kills it in the dystopian sci-fi blues of “The Lantern,” “Citadel,” and “2000 Man,” a totally accurate prediction of our modern world’s doom-scrolling bait-clicking phone addiction.

  • Mick Jagger to John Mulaney: “Not funnnaaaaayy!”
    SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE --
    Image Credit: Dana Edelson/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal/Getty Images

    In his comedy special Kid Gorgeous, Mulaney gives a hilarious description of his week of agony when Mick hosted SNL, shooting down his ideas for jokes. “Never to your face does a British billionaire in leather pants go ‘not funnaaaaay!’” When the two write a song together for a sketch, Mulaney has to ask, “Motherfucker, is this how you write songs? Just one word at a time, with verbal abuse?”

  • Mick achieves cinema realness in the ‘Faraway Eyes’ video
    mick jagger faraway eyes rolling stones
    Image Credit: Youtube

    Yes, the Stones do a video for this absolutely insane country-gospel spoof, with Mick sitting at the piano and batting his eyes like the most wholesome preacher in Bakersfield. Everybody in the band looks like they’re dead asleep while standing up, except for that suspiciously perky Mick. Maybe, just maybe, drugs are involved.

  • Mick checks into the ‘Memory Motel’
    Singer Mick Jagger and photographer Annie Leibovitz pose at Niagara Falls during the Rolling Stones Tour of the Americas, 1975. (Photo by Christopher Simon Sykes/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Christopher Simon Sykes/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

    This bittersweet Black and Blue soul jam has to be the best song ever written about a Rolling Stone photographer. It’s allegedly inspired by the great Annie Leibovitz, a friend of the band who took so many of their most iconic portraits. Ever the soul of discretion, all Mick would explain is that “the girl in ‘Memory Motel’ is a real independent American girl.”

  • Mick marries Bianca in the all-time most chaotic rock-star wedding
    12th May 1971:  British rock singer Mick Jagger, of the Rolling Stones, and his new bride, Bianca Pérez-Mora Macías, make their way through crowds on their wedding day, St. Tropez, France. Bianca wears a wide-brimmed hat with a veil, and a low-cut blazer. Mick wears a sport-coat and vest, with a floral shirt. They were married for nine years, and had a daughter named Jade.  (Photo by Daily Express/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Daily Express/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

    A tiny French village in St. Tropez gets invaded by a horde of jet-set rock & roll maniacs. Mick asks Keith to be his best man, showing a touchingly optimistic faith in human nature. Needless to say, Keith passes out and snores through the reception. Mick’s long-suffering dad tells the press, “I hope my other son doesn’t become a superstar.”

  • Mick plays Keith on ‘Saturday Night Live’
    SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE -- Episode 12 -- Pictured: (l-r) Kevin Nealon, Mike Myers as Mick Jagger, Mick Jagger as Keith Richards during 'Weekend Update' on February 6, 1993  (Photo by NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images via Getty Images)
    Image Credit: NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal/Getty Images

    Mick has brought down the house at 30 Rock so many times: belting “Shattered” in 1978, seeing Jimmy Fallon in the mirror in 2001, karaokeing “Moves Like Jagger” in 2012. But his greatest SNL hit has to be this Weekend Update appearance, with Mike Myers playing Mick and Mick all pirated up to play a zonked-out Keith. It’s a Point/Counterpoint debate on controversial rap lyrics, Ice-T, and censorship. Mick-as-Keith just mumbles incomprehensibly, behind his shades, headband, and cigarette. His best punchline: “Mick, you ignorant slut.”

  • Cops raid the studio while the Stones are recording ‘Let’s Spend the Night Together’
    Mick Jagger (lead singer of 'The Rolling Stones') in 1966.;    (Photo by Monitor Picture Library/Avalon/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Monitor Picture Library/Avalon/Getty Images

    Halfway through this tune, you hear a breakdown full of clicking sticks. Why? Because the police just barged into the studio. While the Stones hastily hid their substances, producer Andrew Loog Oldham had to distract the law. “The cops had come in — they were actually in the fuckin’ studio,” he told Rolling Stone in 1987. “And I had to dash out and go, ‘Hey — you’re exactly what we want, man! Could you please get your truncheons out? And I had ‘em standin’ there, bangin’ their truncheons together, while somebody removed the stash from the control room.” Artistic inspiration can come from anywhere.

  • Mick redefines loneliness in ‘2000 Light Years From Home’
    1967:  Mick Jagger, the lead singer of the Rolling Stones arrives at the opening night of a ballet.  (Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Fox Photos/Getty Images

    Everybody wanted to do shiny, happy drug songs in 1967, greeting the new mind-expanding dawn. But it took Mick to go all the way down, where a psychedelic trip is just another way to feel total cosmic isolation. Inner space, man.

  • Mick redefines pretty-pretty-pretty-pretty girls in ‘Beast of Burden’
    OAKLAND - JULY 26:  The Rolling Stones perform at Oakland Stadium in Oakland, California on July 26, 1978.  (Photo by Ed Perlstein/Redferns/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Ed Perlstein/Redferns/Getty Images

    A soulful guitar ballad about adult heartache. But the money moment is when Mick licks his lips and slips into his falsetto reverie about “pretty-pretty-pretty-pretty girrrrrls.” It’s like he can’t wait for the chance to transform himself into the prettiest girl of them all. (Pretty-pretty! Such a pretty!) It inspired one of the all-time best Stones covers, from the punk band Wild Flag, with the dueling guitars and falsettos of Sleater-Kinney’s Carrie Brownstein and Helium’s Mary Timony.

  • Mick grows a beard
    Mick Jagger holding guitar in a scene from the film 'Ned Kelly', 1970. (Photo by United Artists/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: United Artists/Getty Images

    Just trying out his short-lived “hip poetry professor just divorced and seeing what’s out there” look.

  • Mick shaves beard
    Portrait de Mick Jagger, leader des Rolling Stones, circa 1970, en France. (Photo by Bertrand LAFORET/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Bertrand LAFORET/Gamma-Rapho/Getty Images

    He never tries that shit again.

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