Ronnie Wood
Rock, Classic Rock, Blues Rock, Guitarist (Electric/Acoustic), Bass Guitarist, Backup Vocalist
Infusing The Rolling Stones with an effortless cool and a vibrant artistic spirit, Ronnie Wood's mastery on guitar and multi–instrumental prowess have contributed to the band's evolving sound over decades. Recognized for his eclectic style and a flair for blending rock with elements of blues and country, Wood's dynamic stage presence and creative energy have reinvigorated the group's legacy time and again. His journey encompasses numerous collaborations outside the Stones, reflecting a deep pass...
Carol Kaye
Pop, Rock, Soul, Traditional Jazz (Swing, Dixieland, Bebop), Guitarist (Electric/Acoustic), Banjo Player, Bass Guitarist
Born in 1935 to professional musicians who struggled through the Great Depression, Kaye learned early that music was a sparkle in a life otherwise defined by poverty. When her father sold her mother’s piano to fund a 1942 move to California, the family found themselves in a housing project in Wilmington. Kaye was a child of the laboring class, scrubbing floors and cleaning apartments to help her mother put food on the table. It was a ten-dollar steel guitar that eventually offered an exit ramp f...
Chuck Berry
Blues Rock, Rock, Blues (Delta, Chicago, Texas, British Blues), Electric Blues, Guitarist (Electric/Acoustic), Lead Vocalist / Singer, Pianist, Songwriter / Lyricist
Some insist that the crown of rock and roll belongs to a swivel-hipped truck driver from Tupelo, yet the only piece of the genre currently hurtling through interstellar space was written by a middle-class beautician from St. Louis who spent his seventeenth year in a reformatory. This is the central dissonance of Chuck Berry: a man who established the foundation of modern rebellion while being more interested in the smooth vocal clarity of his idol, Nat King Cole, than the rough edges of the blue...