San Francisco Chronicle

Drummer kept beat for the Rolling Stones for 58 years.

- By Gavin Edwards Gavin Edwards is a New York Times writer.

Charlie Watts, whose strong but unflashy drumming powered the Rolling Stones for over 50 years, died on Tuesday in London. He was 80.

His death, in a hospital, was announced by his publicist, Bernard Doherty. No other details were immediatel­y provided.

The Rolling Stones announced earlier this month that Watts would not be a part of the band’s forthcomin­g “No Filter” tour of the United States after he had undergone an unspecifie­d emergency medical procedure, which the band’s representa­tives said had been successful.

Reserved, dignified and dapper, Watts was never as flamboyant, either onstage or off, as most of his rock-star peers, let alone the Stones’ lead singer, Mick Jagger; he was content to be one of the finest rock drummers of his generation, playing with a jazz-inflected swing that made the band’s titanic success possible. As Stones guitarist Keith Richards said in his 2010 autobiogra­phy, “Life,” “Charlie Watts has always been the bed that I lie on musically.” While some rock drummers chased after volume and bombast, Watts defined his playing with subtlety, swing and a solid groove.

“As much as Mick’s voice and Keith’s guitar, Charlie Watts’ snare sound is the Rolling Stones,” Bruce Springstee­n wrote in an introducti­on to the 1991 edition of drummer Max Weinberg’s book “The Big Beat.” “When Mick sings, ‘It’s only rock ’n’ roll but I like it,’ Charlie’s in back showing you why!”

Charles Robert Watts was born in London on June 2, 1941. His mother, the former Lillian Charlotte Eaves, was a homemaker; his father, Charles Richard Watts, was in the Royal Air Force and, after World War II, became a truck driver for British Railways.

Charlie’s first instrument was a banjo, but, baffled by the fingerings required to play it, he removed the neck and converted its body into a snare drum. He discovered jazz when he was 12 and soon became a fan of Miles Davis, Duke Ellington and Charles Mingus.

By 1960, Watts had graduated from the Harrow School of Art and found work as a graphic artist for a London advertisin­g agency. He wrote and illustrate­d “Ode to a Highflying Bird,” a children’s book about jazz saxophonis­t Charlie Parker (although it was not published until 1965). In the evenings, he played drums with a variety of groups.

Most of them were jazz combos, but he was also invited to join Alexis Korner’s raucous rhythmand-blues collective, Blues Incorporat­ed. Watts declined the invitation because he was leaving England to work as a graphic designer in Scandinavi­a, but he joined the group when he returned a few months later.

The newly formed Rolling Stones (then called the Rollin’ Stones) knew they needed a good drummer but could not afford Watts, who was already drawing a regular salary from his various gigs. “We starved ourselves to pay for him!” Richards wrote. “Literally. We went shopliftin­g to get Charlie Watts.”

In early 1963, when they could finally guarantee 5 pounds a week, Watts joined the band, completing the canonical lineup of Richards, Jagger, guitarist Brian Jones, bassist Bill Wyman and pianist Ian Stewart. He moved in with his bandmates and immersed himself in Chicago blues records.

In the wake of the Beatles’ success, the Rolling Stones quickly climbed from being an electric-blues specialty act to one of the biggest bands in the British Invasion of the 1960s. While Richards’ guitar riff defined the band’s most famous single, the 1965 chart-topper “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfacti­on,” Watts’ drum pattern was just as essential. He was relentless on “Paint It Black” (No. 1 in 1966), supple on “Ruby Tuesday” (No. 1 in 1967) and the master of a funky groove on “Honky Tonk Women” (No. 1 in 1969).

Watts was ambivalent about the fame that he achieved as a member of the group that has often been called “the world’s greatest rock ’n’ roll band.” As he said in the 2003 book “According to the Rolling Stones”: “I loved playing with Keith and the band — I still do — but I wasn’t interested in being a pop idol sitting there with girls screaming. It’s not the world I come from. It’s not what I wanted to be, and I still think it’s silly.”

As the Stones rolled through the years, Watts drew on his graphic-arts background to contribute to the design of the band’s stage sets, merchandis­e and album covers — he even contribute­d a comic strip to the back cover of their 1967 album “Between the Buttons.” While the Stones cultivated bad-boy images and indulged a collective appetite for debauchery, Watts mostly eschewed the sex and drugs. He clandestin­ely married Shirley Ann Shepherd, an art-school student and sculptor, in 1964.

On tour, he would go back to his hotel room alone; every night, he sketched his lodgings. “I’ve drawn every bed I’ve slept in on tour since 1967,” he told Rolling Stone magazine in 1996. “It’s a fantastic nonbook.”

Similarly, while other members of the Stones battled for control of the band, Watts largely stayed out of the internal politics. As he told the Weekend Australian in 2014, “I’m usually mumbling in the background.”

Jones, who considered himself the leader, was fired from the Stones in 1969 (and found dead in his swimming pool soon after). Jagger and Richards spent decades at loggerhead­s, sometimes making albums without being in the studio at the same time. Watts was happy to work with either, or both.

Watts and his wife had a daughter, Seraphina, in 1968 and, after spending some time in France as tax exiles, relocated to a farm in southweste­rn England. There they bred prizewinni­ng Arabian horses, gradually expanding their stud farm to over 250 horses on 700 acres. Informatio­n on his survivors was not immediatel­y available. Doherty, the publicist, said Watts had “passed away peacefully” in the hospital “surrounded by his family.”

The Rolling Stones made 30 studio albums, nine of them topping the American charts and 10 topping the British charts. The band was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1989 — a ceremony Watts skipped.

Eventually the Stones settled into a cycle of releasing an album every four years, followed by an extremely lucrative world tour. (They grossed over a half-billion dollars between 2005 and 2007 on their “Bigger Bang” tour.)

Watts’ true love remained jazz, and he would fill the time between those tours with jazz groups of various sizes — the Charlie Watts Quintet, the Charlie Watts Tentet, the Charlie Watts Orchestra.

He was not slowed down by old age, or by a bout with throat cancer in 2004. In 2016, drummer Lars Ulrich of Metallica told Billboard that since he wanted to keep playing into his 70s, he looked to Watts as his role model. “The only road map is Charlie Watts,” he said.

Through it all, Watts kept on keeping time on a simple four-piece drum kit, anchoring the spectacle of the Rolling Stones.

“I’ve always wanted to be a drummer,” he told Rolling Stone in 1996, adding that during arena rock shows, he imagined a more intimate setting. “I’ve always had this illusion of being in the Blue Note or Birdland with Charlie Parker in front of me. It didn’t sound like that, but that was the illusion I had.”

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 ?? Taylor Hill / Getty Images 2019 ?? Charlie Watts plays drums during a Rolling Stones show at New Jersey’s MetLife Stadium. Watts would perform with jazz groups between Stones tours.
Taylor Hill / Getty Images 2019 Charlie Watts plays drums during a Rolling Stones show at New Jersey’s MetLife Stadium. Watts would perform with jazz groups between Stones tours.

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