

Birth name : Lewis Brian Hopkin Jones
Born : 28 February 1942 Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England
Died : 3 July 1969 (aged 27) Hartfield, Sussex, England
Cause of death : Drowning
Genres : Rock blues folk psychedelic
Occupation : Musician, songwriter, producer, composer
Instruments : Guitar, keyboards, harmonica, sitar, marimba
Personal Life - Brian Jones
Early Jones was born in the Park Nursing Home in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, on 28 February 1942. An attack of croup at the age of four left him with asthma, which lasted for the rest of his life.[5] His middle-class parents, Lewis Blount Jones and Louisa Beatrice Jones (née Simmonds) were of Welsh descent. Brian had two sisters: Pamela, who was born on 3 October 1943 and who died on 14 October 1945 of leukaemia; and Barbara, born on 22 August 1946
Both Jones's parents were interested in music: his mother Louisa was a piano teacher, and in addition to his job as an aeronautical engineer, Lewis Jones played piano and organ and led the choir at the local church.
In 1957 Jones first heard Cannonball Adderley's music, which inspired his interest in jazz. Jones persuaded his parents to buy him a saxophone, and two years later his parents gave him his first acoustic guitar as a 17th birthday present.
Jones attended local schools, including Dean Close School, from September 1949 to July 1953 and Cheltenham Grammar School for Boys

Brian Jones and The Rolling Stones History
Brian Jones had begun a career in truancy to practice the sax. By the time Jones had reached sixteen, the future Stone had fathered two illegitimate children and skipped town to Scandinavia, where he began to pick up guitar. Jones eventually drifted to London where he spent some time with Alexis Korner’s Blues, Inc., then made the move to start up his own band. While working at the Ealing Blues Club with a loose version of Blues, Inc. and drummer Charlie Watts, Jones began jamming with Jagger and Richards on the side. Jagger would front the new band.Jones, Jagger and Richards, along with drummer Tony Chapman, cut a demo tape that was rejected by EMI. Chapman left the band shortly after to attend Art College. By this time Blues, Inc. had changed their name to the Rolling Stones, after a Muddy Waters song. The Rolling Stones’ first show occurred on July 12, 1962 at the Marquee. In January of 1963, after a series of personnel changes, Bill Wyman and Charlie Watts rounded out the Stones’ line-up.In June of 1963, the Stones released their first single, a Chuck Berry tune, “Come On.” The group performed on the British TV show “Thank Your Lucky Stars,” where the producer told Oldham to get rid of “that vile-looking singer with the tire-tread lips.” The single reached #21 on the British charts.After proving themselves with a series of chart topping hits, Jagger and Richards began writing their own songs using the pseudonym “Nanker Phelge.” “Tell Me (You’re Coming Back)” became the band’s first U.S. Top Forty hit. January of 1965 was the year the Stones broke another # 1 in the U.K. with “The Last Time” and broke the top ten in the U.S. with the same tune. The band’s next single, “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction,” held the # 1 spot for four weeks and went on to become probably their most famous.

The Stones released their first album of all-original material in 1966 with “Aftermath.” The impact of the release was dulled, due in part, to the simultaneous release of the Beatles’ “Revolver” and Bob Dylan’s “Blonde on Blonde” – a good year for rock and roll. The following year, the Stones were back in the limelight when the group performed “Let’s Spend The Night Together” on the “Ed Sullivan Show.” Amid threats of censorship, Jagger mumbled the title lines of the song. Some claim Jagger sang “Let’s Spend Some Time Together.”
With the release of the Beatles’ “Sgt. Pepper,” it seemed every band began to gauge themselves against the landmark recording – including the Stones. In December of ’67, the Stones released “Their Satanic Majesties Request” – panned as an “ambitious mess.” The following year the Stones went back to their roots with the release of “Jumping Jack Flash.” The song landed them a # 3 hit. “Beggar’s Banquet” was hailed as the band’s finest achievement.
On June 9, 1969, Brian Jones announced he was leaving the group saying: “I no longer see eye to eye with the others over the discs we are cutting.” Within a week, Jones was replaced by Mick Taylor (ex-John Mayall guitarist). Plans Jones had made to start his own band were cut short when on July 3, 1969, he was found dead in his swimming pool. After the death, at a concert in London’s Hyde Park, Jagger read an excerpt from a poem by Shelley and released thousands of butterflies over the park.

Death at around midnight on the night of 2–3 July 1969, Jones was discovered motionless at the bottom of his swimming pool at Cotchford Farm. His Swedish girlfriend, Anna Wohlin, was convinced Jones was alive when he was taken out of the pool insisting he still had a pulse. However, by the time the doctors arrived it was too late and he was pronounced dead. The coroner's report stated "death by misadventure" and noted his liver and heart were heavily enlarged by drug and alcohol abuse. Jones's death at 27 was the first of the 1960s rock movement; Jimi Hendrix , Janis Joplin , and Jim Morrison found their own drug-related deaths at the same age within two years (Morrison died two years to the day after Jones).
