He reminds me a lot of George Harrison, when he started getting dissatisfied with the Beatles. George had this to say about Brian: "When I met him I liked him quite a lot. He was a good fellow, you know. I got to know him very well, I think, and I felt very close to him; you know how it is with some people, you feel for them, feel near to them. He was born on February 28, 1943 and I was born on February 25, 1943, and he was with Mick and Keith and I was with John and Paul in the groups, so there was a sort of understanding between the two of us. The positions were similar, and I often seemed to meet him in his times of trouble. There was nothing the matter with him that a little extra love wouldn't have cured. I don't think he had enough love or understanding. He was very nice and sincere and sensitive, and we must remember him like that because that's what he was."
It is interesting that George said that of Brian, but Brian was the man who started and named the band, whereas George was simply a member of The Beatles. George was a wonderfully gifted musician, but those similarities he points out do have their limits and must be viewed with sober judgement
@@loucavania If George had got to know him better he would have changed his mind about Jones. Psychopaths are always charming at first meeting. The poison of their personality only comes out with familiarity. No one who knew Brian well liked him at all.
Bless George Harrison and his beautiful kind sentiments. He bonded with Brian, whom during those dark times needed a friend. I hope their singing together in rock and roll heaven.🎶❤️🎶
@@nanny287 George was a very kind and pleasant soul. As a malignant narcissist and psychopath Brian could, at first, seem to be polite and pleasant especially with people who could be of some benefit to him. If they had gotten to know each other better after the poison in Brian's rancorous personality came out with familiarity, even George would have turned against him. No one who knew Brian well ever had a nice thing to say about Brian. He was a truly awful person who seemed to enjoy aggressively putting people he knew down and making them feel bad. There was nothing nice about Brian. at all. BTW Brian couldn't sing.
@@williardbillmore5713 Wow. I had no idea he had narcissistic personality disorder. That is serious, and your right, even the kindest of souls like George would have walked away from that situation. May I ask your source, or rather, where you learned this? Thank you for sharing.
I read that Jim Morrison studied Jones and imitated him out of a great respect for his artistic attitude. They both were beings of gentle but electrifying grace
@@williardbillmore5713 read "no one gets out of here alive" oh and Morrison's poem that was published in LA times called "ode to LA while thinking of Brian jones, deceased" It clearly states all that and even from Jim's own pen. It's not romantic It's facts WillArd
@@williardbillmore5713 many people saw Morrison in the early years of the band affecting similar mannerisms. Such as being very quiet and talking softly. Morrison saw that inspite of Brian not being a good songwriter he was a scene maker. He knew how to bring people together. Morrison was studying people and testing it out for himself. Cause if brain wasn't a great musician as you even say then wtf was he doing there and how was he so popular? As an ARTIST.
@@mythywmyth Brian was a heartthrob for teenie bopping girls. He was the window dressing and the garnish for the band...Keith and Jagger were, and remain, the meat and potatoes and the heart and soul of the Stones. Jones lucked out. All he wanted to do was to be in a blues only band at some local clubs in London, because he had learned to play some slide guitar and harmonica. He figured that was an obtainable goal. If he could sing, things may have turned out differently for him...But as it was he found himself among two hard working and brilliant song writing geniuses who elevated his sorry ass to fame, fortune and the attention his ego craved. He knew he liked it, but at the same time he knew he had very little to do with it. He was along for the ride until his unabated self indulgences made him completely useless. I wouldn't consider Jim and Brian as being in the same league as far as tallent goes. As I have already said the biggest things they had in common were drugs, booze and self destruction. Maybe Jim had an affinity for Jones because he knew he was doomed to the same fate.
What a wonderful voice Brian had, I could listen to it for hours. There's an interview with his father on RU-vid and he could have made audio story books with his voice, its obviously a family thing! Unfortunately Brian didn't have the brashness to be a rockstar, he was a musician since childhood with the character to match. That said it's well documented about his 'move on' attitude to his ex girlfriends and many children. I read an account by a childhood babysitter who said that as a young boy Brian insisted on showing her a photo of his first sister who died at aged 2, he wanted to make sure the babysitter knew about this sister. He didn't like that there were no photos of her and no talking about her and he insisted that people acknowledged her existence. In a lot of ways he was a sensitive soul.
@@williardbillmore5713 I've never heard him sing. If he was that bothered he could have gone to a voice coach to work on his 'pitch' Anyway, Andrew Oldham pushed him to side of stage and removed his microphone I think so it wasn't an issue!
@@lozr3792 There wan't any shortage of capable singers in the Stones. Keith had a good ear and a pretty strong voice and he understood harmony and where the lead vocalist needed some back up to make the overall performance stronger...Wyman had a good falsetto and filled the need when a second harmony was called for. Jones was far too involved with getting high, mugging for the cameras and perfecting his hairstyle to be bothered with learning how to sing.
@@williardbillmore5713 unfortunately yes from 1966 onwards. He wasn't on the songwriting credits. Although he was highly respected amongst other musicians where would he go after The Stones? Escaping with booze and pills made his mindset even worse. He wasn't the type to just sit back and enjoy the ride. Cue the photo shoots alongside Pallenberg etc etc. Another factor is The Stones (and The Who) didn't mix socially unlike thr Beatles, it wasn't the same camaraderie. Except Jagger, Richards and partners). BJ wasn't bolshy enough to be a rock and roller .
@@williardbillmore5713 Brian sings backing vocals on Come On, I Wanna Ne Your Man, It’s All Over Now and on the 1st album as well as the first 2 U.K. E.Ps
Brian was one of the individuals who first brought the Rolling Stones together as a group. On a lot of the early Stones recordings, the riff you hear is actually being played by Brian. Keith & Brian were also good then at "weaving" their separate guitar parts together to create one sound. At one point, Keith became the "Human Riff Machine".
"In 1966, I witnessed, on numerous occasions, the remarkable spell Brian would cast while working in the recording studio. Mick and Keith would bring songs in, Brian would listen and effectively take charge, and everyone was in awe of him. He was a real perfectionist. While recording the recorder part in Ruby Tuesday he explained to me that he had to do it over again as he had been a quarter tone off tune."--Prince Stash Klossowski de Rola (artist and friend of the Stones) in Brian Jones: Butterfly in the Park.
It's mind blowing to think that his band continued to last so long...and 50 years after his tragic death, there I was as a 1991-born, seeing The Rolling Stones live in Seattle, in 2019!
I just read in Wikipedia that he should have received a song writing credit for Under My Thumb. Keith had three chords. Brian turned it into a hit. Yet another song he was cheated out of a song writing credit. Take Brian off of Aftermath and you take the Stones off of the charts and out of the picture. Without Brian they would never have kept up with the Beatles, Who and Kinks.
For me, the Brian's era was the best period of the RStones. The most interessant.... But, according to the other Stones, Brian turned out a very dificult person... so, it seams that if he stayed in the group, eventualy the Stones will splitted at the same time as the Beatles. I think we must also give the credits for the ones who carried the band, who keeped the union, who really was ready to labour.
@@trabongo The Stones would have never split up. They just fired him and moved on. Barely! Keith’s own drug problems almost cost the Stones but fortunately Keith overcame his addiction eventually. The Brian era is my favorite too. The Taylor era right behind it. The Wood era not even close.
@@ovalvox7888 For me .... Brian Jones, was a great artist and musician, and of corse the man was a legend. Taylor was the best guitarrist of the Stones (It's Only Rock n Roll, LP, what a record....). Ron Wood.... a good fellow but when he camed to the group, the Stones had no more great things to tell the world...
No one should be kicked out of the band that they created... he should have been allowed to keep the name ...and the others , as much as I like them should have had to create a new name for themselves .
@@gardensofthegods Take the name home to his drug den? Please. Mick and Keith were the engine of the Stones, starting very early. Brian wanted things to stay as they always were, and that's not reality. By 1965, here, he's talking about films. His mind was wandering already. He no longer had the others' commitment to the band.
El problema fue que Brian Jones se junto con dos macarras como Keith y Mick...El tenia clase y era el único que sabia de música....Su elección fue la correcta para la banda, pero no para el.... I vote to induct Brian Jones into the Rock and Roll wall of fame!
Creo que chicos como los the small faces hubieran quedado bien con el me parecían buenas personas en general,Steve Marriott etc pero no se si se hubiera adaptado a el. los otros eran tan fríos junto con jones claro que no se inmutaban por nada ya lo pensé y la verdad no lo veo con ellos.tal vez con otros grupos alguien mas
Indeed, and the producer's cut of this interview does have Brian's answer to the surreal question: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-uZh6cJxDNQA.html
I love watching the part in the beginning where he talks close to the camera with his beautiful voice. I wish I was as handsome as him and have as beautiful a voice as him, even his knowledge and attitude. He could be a total druggie with double eye bags and still look handsome af
Yep..definitely a Pisces. Water signs (including myself) tend to hold everything in until we self destruct. We do however have it under control when we are older. I wish he would end up having that chance. Rest in Peace.
Their at the end when in interviewer asked Brian if the movie would be surreal (or something like that , the video is a little muffled) . Brian gave him a look that if looks could kill the interviewer would have been blown to hell and back . How embarrassing and insulting he was towards Brian . Terrible !
brian jones no jones no stones the light still flickers for his talent listen to all his tracks while he was in the band and remember him as a one off performer if he had lived he would have had a super group ?
Why? Are you a supremely talented, creative musician , or just a loser feeling sorry for himself and wanting others to feel sorry too. " look at me, I'm just like Brian Jones.."
He always sounded like a highly educated young man, very articulated, very clever. I think he just got bored of being a Stone. Sadly, drugs killed many clever young people in the Sixties.
He seems very introspective and unsure. A dreamer. They don’t make good rockers. Brian May have founded The Rolling Stones, but Mick and Keith made them.
The interview asked "What is surrealism?" The end of the interview was cut off. Brian says, "I regard surrealism as a sort of...I see it as an abstract realism if you like." You can hear it in the Producer's cut of the documentary.
Bill wasn't a member and didn't even know them for the first seven months the band was together yet he loves to talk about those early days as though he was there and recorded every detail. Most of what he says is pure fiction. Dick Taylor was the Rolling Stones bass player until almost 1963. Keep that in mind when Bill Wyman starts talking about Brian founding the band, auditioning and choosing the members, leading and naming the band. None of it is true. In fact Brian asked Keith if he and Ian could join Keith's band, the Blue Boys and Keith agreed. The Blue boys had been founded by Mick Keith and Dick Taylor seven months before Brian asked to join ...That band changed their name to the Rolling Stones . The name Rollin Stones had been discussed by them all, but they could not come to a consensus agreement. When pressed on the phone by a reporter for a name when they were about to debut at the Marquee Club in Soho. Jones blurted out the name without consulting the rest of the boys. Thereafter they were stuck with it once it went to press, like it or not. Bill would not join the band for another five months after the renaming. Bill was playing bass for the Cliftones at the other end of London. Jones did run an advert in the Jazz News to try to start a rhythm and Blues band . But the only person he "auditioned and chose" was pianist Ian Stewart. Upon failure to start a band Brian went to Keith and asked if they could join his band, because he liked the way they sang and played the blues.. That is another myth created by Wyman. He claims that Brian directed the band to play the Blues. They were already a blues band, hence the name; Little Boy Blue and The Blue Boys. Jones was not even a founding member of the band that BECAME the Rolling Stones... “The band is really an amalgamation of two bands. The one being an R&B band I formed about a year ago, and the other being a group run by Mick and Keith in S.E. London. I was introduced to Keith and we decided to pool our resources, so with Stu from my band, and Mick from Keith’s we became the nucleus of the ‘Stones.’” ---Brian Jones 1963 in a certified and authenticated hand written letter to the leader of their fan club who asked Brian how the band got together. That letter was auctioned off after being authenticated by Bonhams Auction House where it was sold to the highest bidder for thousands of pounds. Brian was lying. He did not have a band when he went to Keith ...It was only he and Ian.
To describe surrealism is a personal occurrence apart from obvious of being a 20th century avant-garde movement. Don't think the world was really at that time for BJ interpretation of the latter.
Btw, the end of the interview was cut off. Brian says, "I regard surrealism as a sort of...I see it as an abstract realism if you like." You can hear it in the Producer's cut of the documentary. ;)
George was a very kind and pleasant soul. As a malignant narcissist and psychopath Brian could, at first, seem to be polite and pleasant especially with people who could be of some benefit to him. If they had gotten to know each other better after the poison in Brian's rancorous personality came out with familiarity, even George would have turned against him. No one who knew Brian well ever had a nice thing to say about Brian. He was a truly awful person who seemed to enjoy aggressively putting people he knew down and making them feel bad. There was nothing nice about Brian. at all. BTW Brian couldn't sing.
Even in 65 you could see that thousand yard stare in Brian's eyes, indicating that the lights are on but nobody's home. Jones was already a waste of space.
Brian had his issues. The one thing he didn’t have. Was loyalty that should have been awarded to him. Brian was such a creative musician. Where even Jagger & Richards couldn’t come to turns with. Mainly because of egos. Brian Jones will always remind me where the Stones came from. Brian was the first Stone...
Loyalty what? He spent a fortune he died on debts. Yes he was a very talented musician BUT he couldn't write a song and he couldn't sing and after brian the show went on and still going on till now.
fabio meloni, his later years you say. Not his absolute talent. You come across as the biographer for Jagger or Richards. You’re a complete sell out! Your comment is built on shifting sands...look that up
@fabio meloni, dude you have no idea what was in my message. Go for any negative and be sublimed by any Jagger/Richards rhetoric. If it wasn’t for Jones, the Stones wouldn’t exist. No different with Fleetwood Mac. Without Pete Green, they wouldn’t have existed...
I listened to this interview whilst sitting on a bench opposite Brian's grave. A very quaint and beautiful cemetery. I hear in his voice a feeling of deep melancholy, not easy to describe. He was a very bright, intellectual, interesting, and enigmatic man who seemed to fade away as the 60's progressed. Nonetheless, his flame still burns brightly in this new technological age. RIP Mr. Jones.
That was great to read my friend it must have felt strange being feet away from brians grave listening to his voice you seem a very deep spirited chap I loved reading your post x stay true my friend xj
Isn't he just gorgeous ❤ the voice, his hair, mannerisms and his charming charisma, but not to mention his exquisite talent, Brian was such a beautiful, talented and exquisite man, he's just lovely ❤ RIP Beautiful Brian, hope your teaching the people in Heaven to play an instrument
@@williardbillmore5713 lies and more lies. It happend with anita only. And that girl was a cruel bitch too who also beat Brian. Gimme another girl’s testimony that he was violent except anita.
it’s weird to think he was so smart and intelligent but, at the same time, portrayed as bitter and abusive. I guess we can’t confirm either now that he’s passed. But just guessed. I still say that I can’t see him living past thirty no matter what. I doubt he would have stayed in the band or settled with a wife and kids. I really think, if not when he did, he would pass before the time we live in now.
He's got the classic Pisces 'I know what it's all about but I can't explain it....so why bother?' and it leads to bitterness and separation and an easy spiral into drugs to escape shitty reality which we know isn't what it seems.
Mä ymmärrän häntä olen myös "Kalat". Vesielemettinä ja kaloina olemme kaikkein herkimpiä, - ja ajattelemme että kyllä itse aina pärjäämme. Toisia enempi suojelemme, -ja Brianilla oli varmaan vaikea henkisesti, kun hän menetti otteensa elämästä, koko ajan tiedostaen hänen rakkaita ihmisiä, joiden elämäänsä hän kuuluisi pitäen huolta. Luulen että viimeiseen asti hän mielessään yritti, että huomenna...mutt hän mennyt jo yli rajan mistä on vaikea päästä. Ehkä hänen ujoutensa oli osa syynä, miksi hän turvautui päihteisiin. Siihen aikaan kun ei terapioista tiedetty mitään. - Hän alkoi voida pahoin henkisesti kahden itsepäisen jäärän kanssa kun huomasi että he polkevat ja lyttäävät tylysti. Wymam ja Watts taas olivat niin nynnyjä etteivät uskaltaneet mennä väliin, vaikka huomasivat, -ja pitihän heidän oma paikastaan pitää kiinni.
Back in the day there were a lot of people who thought he was murdered and still do . If you listen to the audio book about him here on RU-vid... plus the way he was constantly hounded by the police it does make you wonder ... the story of how he was singled out and tormented is disturbing... everyone should know about it .
@@titto2602 there’s a number of books about the Stones, as well as about Brian. Please research for one or maybe two that’s to your liking. Brian lived in the edge and he paid a huge price…May he Rest In Peace 💜
It wasn’t just luck; Keith had the necessary mental and physical toughness. If anyone was built to survive the rock n’ roll lifestyle it was him. Alas, Brian and many others fell by the wayside.
Can’t believe Keith still hanging on! He looks sooooo old & scary... can’t even understand him talking if that’s what cha call it.... totally sounds like a mess on whatever....
I think Brian would have really fit in with the expansiveness of the Kinks, Zeppelin and Eric Burdon with War. I really believe the guy would have made more great music after the stones, if he didn't pass of course.
@@joeyhuebner10 brian jones was to much in love with the blues music, so much that in the early yrs of 1963 he used to appear on the bill with the stones as elmo lewis which was somewhat of a copycat nickname for blues legend elmore james and i have a dvd at the house called just for the record the rolling stones of the 1960s 70s 80s 90s and 2000 and beyond where anita palenberg is on there documenting how brian jones was so not a fan of the pyschodellic music that the stones faze entered into 1n 1967 that he thought it was a bunch of rubbish and that he wanted to remain true to the blues, he was not an experimental kind of guy when it came to their music, i am sure you can find those discs on google or youtube somewhere and palenberg knew brian jones to well back in the day. but we dont have to argue about it. i to am very well versed on who and what brian jones was and his likes and dislikes through others who have talked about him who were in his inner circle back in those days and what they have said about him. i do also believe that the stones were at their best with him before they threw him under the bus.
When it all comes right down to it, The Rolling Stones are Brian's band. He was pretty much the founder and coordinator in their early years. In fact, he formed the band as strictly a blues band until they shifted more toward rock and pop later on.
Yes and that's why he never should have left.. when someone creates a band and then the shit hits the fan they should be allowed to keep the band and its title... the others should have had to create their own new band with another name.... it was like they stole his baby
Had Mick and Keith kept to Brian's vision for the band no one would have ever heard of them. Including you. The pure blues craze died out in the London scene after about a year or so and it was replaced by the Brit's craving for Rock and Roll with a blues influence. Keith and Mick had an amazing Knack for writing that kind of pop hit record after pop hit record one after another almost without fail. They would have had to be insane not to take advantage of their situation... Brian loved the wealth, fame and attention being in a hit band brought to him, but he realized it was not by any of his own doing. So he turned to drugs and booze to mask his failings to his own enormous ego. Once on his self destructive, downward slide into drugs and booze addiction Jones became even more useless. Keith and Mick never looked back and Bill and Charlie went along for the ride of their life.
His voice is taking me elsewhere, no not sexually. It is so unfitting yet very fitting. His voice reminds me of an old British narrator, he has very much sadness in his voice, he seems very shy and only warming to people he trusts, goddamnit he is by far the most interesting stone.
I feel so bad for him. He seems like a really calm and smart person to be around with. I wish that he could have gotten the loyalty he deserved. Rest In Peace, I wish i could’ve saved you
@@williardbillmore5713 “He was actually quite a nice person who didn’t want people to think he was nice. He wanted to be known as an evil character, but he wasn’t really.” - Ian Stewart
@@TheaterPup Whatever his motivations for being an asshole were ... he apparently was pretty good at it. Even the gentle man, Charlie Watts had some very unkind words to say about Brian Jones' disposition and attitude towards others he worked with... I doubt you could find evidence of Charle saying anything negative about anyone else.
@@williardbillmore5713 Haters seem stuck on this one random thing Watts said, and you can't even comprehend what he was saying. Some people called George Harrison "unpleasant" for the same reason, he and Jones were brutally true to themselves and weren't afraid of upsetting people. That's not a bad quality. And you don't seem familiar with how human relationships work in general. We all have people who think badly of us. And we all have people who think well of us. If you watch that 2020 documentary, Jones had many loved ones, men and women, who wanted to set the record straight in a positive way. To dismiss them because it goes against your narrative is ridiculous. You also don't seem to understand the psychology of drug addiction and how it affects a person. You just have this strange vendetta not at all based in reason. I suggest you ask yourself why. Good luck to you.
He's a handsome man and an honest musician.He 's the one who put the ad for his future band. Once you said that, he was lucky, like two others musicians to be at the right place at the right moment. The Stones are really two. Maybe three. And the fourth came later.
classic pisces. like a 60's cobain in a way-- art and emotion: seeking to find the balance to express. I can't get over the "WHAT IS SUREALISM" bit at the end. thats why he looked that way, hes a pisces, he knows it cant be spoken about- but shown through artistic mediums. Love you brian
As a fellow suffering Pisces, I get where Brian was coming from. We really don't belong in this realm and it's difficult to explain it or frame words around it. Imagine being so selfless that you don't have ambition-something people have always told me I lacked. Not sure about Brian, but Cobain was a Virgo rising as I am-and it creates turmoil between ordered, modest Virgo and chaotic Pisces. It's not an easy placing to live under without understanding friends and family-finding someone understanding is extremely difficult.
@@tomservo5347 I'm a Pisces Virgo too! My moon and rising! ugh there's so much to say about being torn between the opposites. But it's really a hybrid if you find balance- we can make our fantasies come true through attention and structure. And we're much more analytical and cerebral than a lot of pisces haha. It's about using the mind as an antenna and not being defined by it. When is your birthday? I'm feb. 25 and born in '94- my name is Melody! If you want any material on astrology, I'm always down to hook another weary fish up :~)
@@tomservo5347 Also sometimes I think I don't belong, but in finding faith in the universe and trusting it- the fact we're HERE is reason to know we're supposed to be here and manifest/ help the world. The world needs more compassion and heart- humans are so daft at times and we need to be units of raising consciousness xo
This man was quite the paradox. Intelligent, very articulate and obviously well educated. Apparently, he had a very high IQ as well. Not to mention his musical ability. He also had quite a few illegitimate children with several different women. Some say he was abusive to his girlfriends. Towards the end of this interview his expression changes completely, as if someone pulled a switch. The eyes suddenly turn cold. So creepy.
His story is almost exactly like Syd Barretts. In interviews hes intelligent and articulate, but other people say he would beat his girlfriends and was insane.
Now it is called domestic violence, he got beat too you know, even Keith said do. they hurt each othrr. How can you defend her girl, just because she’s a girl ? I’m a girl too but i can see clearly who’s the victim here. It,d Brian. He was about to find his place in his own band but becaus he was too into drugd and New inexperience, she said in her Book that she decided to" kidnapp" Brian out of all the members because he was the most intelligent, open mindrd and very sexy. BUT it failled Brian didn’T need a girlfriend like anita, someone sho was poserful, took lots of drugs and had powerful personanliities,Brian was sad,,depressed man who needeed to know why was he leaving, he actuzlly needeed à mon and a nurse. And there were few girlfriend who had been ready to take care of him but never happened 💘
@@xxChiQuiTitaxx73Where in my statement was I defending the girl because she's a girl? What are you talking about? Personally, I believe Brian might have been mentally ill, either bipolar or somewhere on the bpd spectrum. I believe he was abused, and that he himself was also abusive. I admire him very much, and I believe he was very a very gifted human being. He may have wanted to be admired and loved, but maybe, he couldn't deal with all the attention and the pressure of being famous. His excessive drug use and the people around him weren't particularly helpful in that respect. Fact is, we can't really know what was going on in his life. It is a shame that he died so very young. Had he lived, we might have known more.
The Beatles loved Brian. Called him brilliant, talented. No Jones, no Stones. He was a sacrifice. And the man who murdered him is dead now too. Music industry is DARK. A Faustian bargain weighs heavy on those with a conscience.
I think this is from the period where he could first see his influence on the band he formed diminishing in the wake of the Jagger Richards growing song writing partnership.That would make me sad as Brian was clearly a powerfull, driven and origional carecter who suddenly saw his grip over the baton he claimed passing to someone else.Were the famous excesses the symptom or the cause of what followed....who knows
It's 1965 and Brian has the beginning of lines under his eyes..He was a genius with instruments but had a double edge sword and like most people of his ability were bothered by depression....The golden Stone.
Brian Jones has a way of reminding me of a Twilight Zone episode. It was so weird when he died n he was so talented and peculiarly beautiful, like a fragile thing that won't last long. The Stones had such a different sound whilest Brian was around. And now Charlie is gone. Sigh. It's like I've always known these guys and I'm sure there are plenty of us who feel that the day Keith and Mick leave us will be on par with losing a family member. August 2021..
He founded The Rolling Stones, only to get sacked by his own band. I know it was because of drugs, but... seriously, which Stone was not into it? Especially the Glimmer twins.
@@williardbillmore5713 dude stop being a loser who obsesses over Brian Jones do something useful with your life instead of wasting everyone's time with your bs 🙄