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    The Rolling Stones - Jumpin’ Jack Flash Personality Type, MBTI

    What is the personality type of The Rolling Stones - Jumpin’ Jack Flash? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for The Rolling Stones - Jumpin’ Jack Flash from 1960s Music and what is the personality traits.

    The Rolling Stones - Jumpin’ Jack Flash
    ESFP

    ESFP (7w6)

    The Rolling Stones - Jumpin’ Jack Flash personality type is ESFP, the Entertainer personality type. I’m very, very comfortable with that.

    JG: Yeah, that’s the personality that I have. I’m just naturally a loud, crazy, bold personality. It’s who I am. It’s the way I was raised. It’s just who I am.

    PC: So you were born in Jamaica?

    JG: That’s right.

    PC: How old were you?

    JG: I was born in 1960.

    PC: What was Jamaica like growing up?

    JG: It was very vibrant. It was hot. We had rice and peas. We had fish. We had chicken and goat and stuff like that, but it was the basics. Lots of sugar cane. But it was a very vibrant country. There were many different cultures there; lots of different people, lots of different religions, but it was all very close-knit. Everybody was very close-knit. They knew everybody. Everybody was like family.

    “Jumpin’ Jack Flash” is a song by English rock band the Rolling Stones, released as a non-album single in 1968. Called "supernatural Delta blues by way of Swinging London" by Rolling Stone magazine, the song was perceived by some as the band's return to their blues roots after the baroque pop and psychedelia heard on their preceding albums Aftermath (1966), Between the Buttons (1967) and especially Their Satanic Majesties Request (1967).

    One of the group's most popular and recognisable songs, it has featured in films and been covered by numerous performers, notably Thelma Houston, Aretha Franklin, Tina Turner, Peter Frampton, Johnny Winter and Leon Russell. To date, it is the band's most-performed song: they have played it over 1,100 times in concert.

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