Mick Taylor leaned over to Mick Jagger at an Eric Clapton birthday celebration and announced his departure from the Rolling Stones. On December 12, 1974, Jagger, Taylor, and the other guests were gathered to watch a fireworks show. A distraught Jagger questioned Ronnie Wood, who was standing close, “Do you think he was serious?”
Taylor was deadly serious and this was a decision that had been a long time in the making. In the 2012 documentary Crossfire Hurricane, Taylor said he was addicted to heroin and left to try and protect himself and his family from the maelstrom of being a member of the Rolling Stones.
Taylor was dead serious about this; he had been considering it for a while. In 2012, Taylor disclosed that she was addicted to heroin in the documentary Crossfire Hurricane. In an attempt to protect his family and himself from the turmoil of being in the band, he departed the Rolling Stones.
In a 1995 Rolling Stone interview, Jagger expressed his belief that tension between Taylor and Keith Richards played a role as well, saying, “I think he found it difficult to get on with Keith.”
Regardless of the cause, the fact remained that the Stones were losing a player with unpredictable talent. Taylor was a virtuoso who took the Stones to new heights with his incredibly expressive and fluid playing, even with all of their combined talents. A monument to his unmatched and extraordinary brilliance, the band was changed not just when he arrived but also when he left.
Entering a band with the stature of the Stones was a shock for Taylor, who joined in 1969 after Brian Jones passed away. In front of a crowd of 250,000 people, he made his live debut at the Stones’ free concert in Hyde Park on July 5, 1969, at the age of just 20, making him much younger than the other members of the band.
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