Musician Mick Jagger implied he does not consider his children’s inheritance when he makes financial decisions.
Jagger, 80, gave an interview with the Wall Street Journal detailing the business behind his band the Rolling Stones, suggesting that it will go on even posthumously. When a reporter asked Jagger if he would sell his catalog of music released after 1971, he said he wouldn’t.
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“The children don’t need $500 million to live well. Come on,” Jagger told the outlet. The frontman suggested his current assets could be given to charity instead. “You maybe do some good in the world.”
Jagger has eight children in total, varying in age between 52 and six. His youngest son was born with his girlfriend ballerina Melanie Hamrick. The singer-songwriter has been married twice in life. Currently, he has no plans to write an autobiography to detail his life and family but has plans for at least one other album in the future.
“You can have a posthumous business now, can’t you?” Jagger asked. “You can have a posthumous tour.”
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Last year, the band broke an 18-year period of writer’s block that failed to produce a complete album. Jagger claimed it wasn’t for lack of trying, as the band made many attempts in-studio only to come up empty.
It is their first album since their late drummer, Charlie Watts, died in 2021.