"There's a basic rule which runs through all kinds of music, kind of an unwritten rule. I don't know what it is. But I've got it"
About this Quote
Ron Wood’s genius here is the swagger of a man admitting he can’t explain his own advantage. He gestures at “a basic rule” that supposedly underwrites “all kinds of music” - a big, almost mystical claim - then immediately punctures it: “I don’t know what it is.” That swerve is the point. In rock culture, especially in the Rolling Stones orbit, articulate theory is often treated as suspicious; feel is the credential. Wood doesn’t deny craft, he just refuses to translate it into classroom language. The line performs a kind of anti-expertise expertise.
The subtext is apprenticeship without academia: years of listening, stealing, jamming, failing publicly, and learning what moves a room. When he says “But I’ve got it,” he’s talking about an internal compass - pocket, timing, taste, the instinct for when to lay back and when to slash across the beat. It’s also a statement about belonging. In bands that run on chemistry and ego management, “having it” is a social passport as much as a musical one.
Context matters: Wood comes from a tradition where the “unwritten rule” is policed by audiences and bandmates, not textbooks. Blues, R&B, rock, funk - these styles carry codes (respect the groove, serve the song, don’t overplay) that are learned by immersion. His quote lands because it captures a truth musicians recognize and non-musicians envy: the most decisive knowledge often arrives as embodied certainty, not a definition you can cleanly hand to someone else.
The subtext is apprenticeship without academia: years of listening, stealing, jamming, failing publicly, and learning what moves a room. When he says “But I’ve got it,” he’s talking about an internal compass - pocket, timing, taste, the instinct for when to lay back and when to slash across the beat. It’s also a statement about belonging. In bands that run on chemistry and ego management, “having it” is a social passport as much as a musical one.
Context matters: Wood comes from a tradition where the “unwritten rule” is policed by audiences and bandmates, not textbooks. Blues, R&B, rock, funk - these styles carry codes (respect the groove, serve the song, don’t overplay) that are learned by immersion. His quote lands because it captures a truth musicians recognize and non-musicians envy: the most decisive knowledge often arrives as embodied certainty, not a definition you can cleanly hand to someone else.
Quote Details
| Topic | Music |
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