continued from front site: Both Wheels and the Rolling Stones get more popular as they get
older.
Both Wheels and the Rolling Stones have changed with the times. For example,
they both started back in the days before the Internet, and now both have
websites.
Both Wheels and the Rolling Stones show no signs of slowing down.
Although the Rolling Stones aren't visiting Toronto this year, Halifax
today is the first of three Canadian stops on the Bigger Bang Tour. The Stones
will also perform in Regina on Oct. 6 and 8, and in Vancouver on Nov. 3.
Mick Jagger's love of cars began when he was a kid. When he was growing up
in post-war England, there was a strong American influence, with U.S.-produced
television, movies and consumer products. As a boy, Jagger once said his
ambition was to own a red Cadillac.
When the Rolling Stones toured the U.S. in June 1964, Jagger made sure that
the Stones were chauffeured by a Cadillac limousine for their first appearance
on the Ed Sullivan Show.
Back home, Jagger favoured British auto makers. One of his first cars was a
Ford Escort. But he was better at singing than driving.
In April 1966, Jagger bought a new navy blue Aston Martin DB6. He even had
a record player installed.
He soon crashed the Aston. He was uninjured; the car was a write-off.
Jagger bought a Morgan sports car in 1969, an expensive, hand-made,
limited-production, British-made two-seater that looks like something out of
the 1930s, which is when it was designed.
Car and Driver magazine reported in January 1977 that Jagger's
purchase gave a boost to the struggling firm:
"Mick Jagger bought himself a Morgan ... Jagger took to being seen
about town in a buttercup-yellow 4/4 and was frequently photographed en route
to his Old Bailey dope trial, with Marianne Faithful sitting beside him ...
the Morgan became trendy.
"The price of old Morgans soared."
Today, Mick has his own Cadillac. It's part of his collection of
automobiles stored near his estate in France.
He also has a Delahaye, which was a luxury car made in France during the
World War II era, and a Ferrari.
Richards once said, "Amazing things can happen in the back of a
Bentley...."
Keith Richards, the Stones' lead guitarist, also has a fleet of cars.
On the website http://www.keithrichards.com,
Richards was asked what kind of car he drives.
He answered: "What day? You're talking about the Bentley or the
Ferrari or the Volkswagen? My favourite cars are still the old Bentleys. I do
enjoy driving. I still have a Jag XJS, one of the originals — '76, I think."
In 1966, Richards bought a new Bentley S3 Continental four-door, which he
named "Blue Lena" in honour of the great American singer Lena Horne.
In March 1967, Richards travelled in his Bentley to Morocco, along with
another Stone, the late Brian Jones, and Jones's girlfriend, Anita Pallenberg.
Jones fell ill and had to stay in hospital in France. Pallenberg and
Richards continued on the trip, and soon Pallenberg was Keith's girlfriend.
"Richards once said, `Amazing things can happen in the back of a
Bentley and they did!'" explains Tamara Guo, who runs a Keith Richards
fan site at http://www.thekeithshrine.com.
"Richards still owns the Blue Lena, which he keeps at his Redlands
estate in the U.K."
Guo, who also edits the Stones Planet Fanzine http://www.stonesplanet.com,
refers to herself as Blue Lena on the websites.
"Being a lifelong Keith Richards fan, I wanted an obscure screen name
that only diehard Keith fans would know the meaning behind, so I adopted the
moniker Blue Lena."
The Bentley has seen some tough times. Richards once drove it into a garden
shed at Redlands.
The other early member of the Stones still touring, drummer Charlie Watts,
doesn't have a driver's licence, but that doesn't mean he can't enjoy cars.
Watts said in an interview in the 1960s, before the band hit it big:
"I don't particularly want to drive, but if I were a millionaire, I'd buy
vintage cars just to look at them because they're beautiful."
And after he became a millionaire, that's what he did. In 1983, he bought a
1937 Lagonda Rapide, just to "sit in and look at."
The Lagonda of that era was a large, fast, luxurious British-made car,
rivalling the Bentley. Only 25 of the 1937 Lagonda Rapide models were produced
— and Charlie treasures his.
So there's more to the Rolling Stones than sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll.
There's also cars.
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