Bill Wyman: Ex-Rolling Stones bassist diagnosed with cancer

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Bill Wyman
Image caption,

Bill Wyman played bass on all of the Rolling Stones' most successful albums

Former Rolling Stones bassist Bill Wyman has been diagnosed with prostate cancer.

A spokesman for the musician said: "He is undergoing treatment and is expected to make a full recovery as it was caught in the early stages."

Born William Perks in Lewisham, London, the star was a member of the Stones from 1962 until 1993.

Since then, he has recorded and toured with his own band, Bill Wyman's Rhythm Kings.

The 79-year-old was pictured last weekend at the wedding of Rupert Murdoch and Jerry Hall.

In a statement, his family "asked for their privacy during this time."

Image source, Reuters
Image caption,

Wyman (second left) attended the wedding of Rupert Murdoch and Jerry Hall with his wife, Suzanne Accosta (left), Bob Geldof (right) and his wife Jeanne Marine (second right)

Wyman joined the Stones in 1962, replacing bassist Dick Taylor, who went on to play with Pretty Things.

According to legend, he was favoured by the Stones because he owned his own amplifier.

At 25, he was the oldest member of the group by several years, but struck up a rapport with the rest of the group, in particular drummer Charlie Watts. Between them, they would provide the solid, rhythmical backing that underpinned Mick Jagger and Keith Richards' theatrical performances.

His subtle-but-intricate bass lines powered songs like Paint It, Black, 19th Nervous Breakdown and Gimme Shelter.

The musician also claims credit for writing the classic guitar riff on Jumpin' Jack Flash.

In his autobiography, Stone Alone, Wyman wrote: "I was just messing about at the piano and started doing this riff, da-daw, da-da-daw, da-da-daw, then Brian played a bit of guitar and Charlie was doing a rhythm. Mick and Keith came in and said, 'Hey, that sounded really good, what is it?'"

However, he never got to play bass on the track, with Keith Richards laying down the guitar parts while Wyman played organ.

Unkindly branded "the boring one" during the band's heyday, Wyman inadvertently became the band's unofficial archivist, keeping extensive scrapbooks filled with photos, lyrics and memorabilia that documented the band's meteoric rise to fame.

Image source, Evening Standard
Image caption,

The Rolling Stone in 1964: (L-R) Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts, Brian Jones and Bill Wyman

"Playing with the Stones there was always such a lot of pressure," he told the Telegraph in 2008. "The next album or single always had to be the best, or at least sell more.

"When we got together to play it was a great moment. Working with Charlie [Watts] was fantastic, and we're still really close. But when I toured with the Stones it would take a month to practise all these songs we'd been playing for 30 years."

The musician also courted controversy in the 1980s, when he married 18-year-old model Mandy Smith.

Wyman, who was 52 at the time, reportedly began dating Smith when she was 14. In recent years, as the Jimmy Savile scandal unfolded, he approached police to ask whether they wanted to question him about their relationship.

"I went to the police and I went to the public prosecutor and said, 'Do you want to talk to me? Do you want to meet up with me, or anything like that?' and I got a message back, 'No,'" he said. "I was totally open about it."

Wyman last played with the Stones at the band's 50th anniversary shows at the O2 Arena in 2012.

However, he said he would not be interested in rejoining the group on a permanent basis because he has "better things to do".

"I left the Stones because their music really annoyed me, so why should I go listen to their music?" he told the German newspaper Bild in 1998.

"When you're a Rolling Stone, you do nothing but Stones music. My life is more exciting since I'm not one."

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