MB:
Doing a good show is just as much if not more a frame of mind as being in
good voice or playing well. When you wrote all those songs you were in
a certain mood. You weren't thinking about performing or being on the
road. You want to get back in that frame of mind to truly communicate.
TS:
It's best at free concerts and
festival situations. I really wish there were more opportunities like
that. It's those flashes that come along and bring you back to the
origins. You just pick up your guitar and go someplace and sing, just
do a guest set, just dropping in someplace, just singing to sing. Now
there aren't even that many clubs. The clubs are all closing.
Now it's just the big festival situation.
MB:
We had a perfect example at a
concert in Memphis.
TS:
The concert wasn't good. The
number of people who were there and the choice of hall and the sound; things
just didn't really come together that well. And we finished the
concert and we were kind of let down. Not too far from there in the
park they were having - I guess it was the tail end of the Memphis Blues
Festival. So we just went down there and asked if we could do a guest
show, and we got off. And we had just sung at a concert and nothing
happened, we didn't get off at all. We just walked down the street,
and there were 2,000 receptive people who were really anxious to hear us
sing, and we were really anxious to have some people to sing to, and it
became a totally different thing from the concert we had just done.
Like two different situations.
MB:
Audiences vary. For as many
times as they love you when you're really bad, they'll hate you when you're
really good. What we consider a good concert is totally different from
what the audience considers a good concert. A lot of times we
personally don't get off, we personally don't think we did a good show, and
we may have gotten a standing ovation and three encores.
TS:
And the reverse is true, too.
A lot of times you'll really get off, and the audience is just ... I guess
the ideal is a concert where everyone gets off. And that happens too.
MB:
We had a great time playing in
England. Just like anyplace else, some of the shows were really groovy
and some of the places weren't so groovy. There's one place we did
called the Implosion at the Roundhouse, where everybody has long hair,
freaked out, and everybody's really getting off. It's more a festival
type scene.
TS:
The audiences aren't different in
their reactions. It's just in the actions they go through to react.
MB:
I did get the impression that a
lot of the audiences over there, especially the really young kids, are just
really flashed on what was going on several years ago. Rock concerts:
people are really into that. People would come up with autograph
books. They're really into a star trip.
We never really thought about the audiences reacting differently at all
until the very first time we found ourselves on stage singing our songs and
rapping to the audience the way we usually rap to people in the States, and
it suddenly dawned on us that most of the things we were rapping about they
weren't even aware of. Because they're another country. You
never had to think about it before, because you were always communicating
with Americans.
TS:
Our music is influenced a great
deal by environment. Every album we've had so far has been a
reflection of what's going on in our lives, what we're surrounded with.
We very seldom take topics and write about them; we just write what's
happening to us at the time. And at that point we'd only been in the
United States and Canada, and that's what we've written about.
MB:
Yeah, America really isn't the
center of the universe. After a while you get the feeling that Europe
isn't on the other side of the ocean, it's only on television.
The main change in audiences in the States is that they're getting
really violent. Music used to be fun, it used to be a very festive
occasion. But it's getting very violent. It's actually getting
scary going on stage some places. Because even with audiences where
you know you have fans, there are just these violent scenes going down.
Right in the middle of the show you'll hear a commotion at the other end of
the hall and see tear gas rising. Outside people are banging down
doors and cops are pinning people against walls. We just did a concert
in Cleveland a few weeks ago, just before the 4th of July. People were
throwing cherry bombs and firecrackers from the balcony right down into the
audience. People were getting hurt. Our sound man was almost
blinded. A cherry bomb fell right in front of his face. It
doesn't have anything to do with the music or a festive occasion.
That's the great change I'm seeing.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
MB:
We didn't meet in L.A. but we got
together in L.A. By that time the Beatles really started doing it and
folk rock was happening, a lot of the coffeehouses were folding, a lot of
folk singers headed for both coasts, particularly the west coast. We'd
been on the road a long time and weren't particularly interested in just
being on the road. And California seemed like the likely place to stay
in one place for a while.
TS:
And we stayed in one place for two
years. Till we were dying to get back on the road again.
MB:
It almost finished us. We
were writing songs for A&M Publishing Co. We ended up recording our
first album and left California, started our own publishing company, started
a production company based in Kansas City with some friends, called Good
Karma Productions, and basically we were just so tired of the whole business
scene and the west coast business scene in particular, that we just got
together with a bunch of friends with mutual ideas and different talents and
decided you just didn't have to sign your life away to all these different
people to get things done. We could do it ourselves, with our friends.
TS:
The songs generally don't just
come all at one time. Maybe the thing that ties it all together will.
A specific melody may tie the thing together. But it may be weeks or
months. There may be some words that you said two months ago that kind
of fall into it. I'm not very good at writing on topics. The
songs just kind of happen. One day you'll have another song.
Sometimes if you have half a song, then you'll sit down and work out the
rest of it. But that's about the closest we get to sitting down and
writing songs.
MB:
We never know when we're going to
write a song, much less what the song's going to be about.
TS:
People say "What's the next album
going to be like?" and there's no way we can possibly say. A song to
me is a song surely before it's finished. You have a song, and you
might write another verse to explain what you're talking about in the song
after it's there. You can take a song and play it with a rock group, a
jazz group, or on kids' toy pianos and kazoo; the arrangements might be
different, the key, even the melody might change a little, and you can still
tell what the song is.
MB:
Who knows where they come from?
It's all out there. There are only so many notes in the scale, only so
many combination of notes, only so many rhythms, only so many words, so I
don't think anything is completely original. It's all just floating
around out there. It's just a matter of grabbing pieces and sticking
pieces together. I don't know where they come from; I wish I knew.
How the songs come about; what chemical change happens in your brain or your
heart or whatever that makes you come up with a new tune.
TS:
I don't know if you'd really want
to know.
MB:
Yeah, I would, because I really
like to work. I would like to write more.
TS:
But I have a feeling that what
makes a song special is that spontaneity, like just grabbing things, like
taking the song that exists rather than trying to make one. I think
it's that ability, that folks that have that ability to grab that
spontaneous song as it passes by. You know all those people, the
songwriters who've been writing songs for years. It would nice to be
able to turn on the spontaneity.
MB:
Yeah, how do you inspire
spontaneity?
MB:
It's hard to be receptive, because
you don't want to receive most of the vibrations that are around. You
want to shut it off.
TS:
Or how do I make myself receptive?
I think receptiveness is the important thing.
MB:
There was no battle with the FCC
because we refused to react or anything. We couldn't possibly take it
seriously, their statement. It was just harassment on the FCC's part
to try to squelch creativity and freedom of speech. It's funny,
because when we were writing the song, we weren't thinking, "we're trying to
write a controversial song" or anything. It was just another song in
the long line of songs we've written and will write. And we had a lot
of single releases before that time that nothing happened with, so They, the
people, decided to make something out of this song, decided to make this
song a hit for whatever reason. So it was just another song.
We didn't ever know we had a hit. We were on vacation
down in the Florida Keys, and we came back to go on tour with Quicksilver,
to find out that he had a hit record, a banned hit record.
TS:
"What? What is this?" We got
to Chicago and all these people were coming up to us, asking us about this
controversy, about getting censored.
MB:
And all we could say was "Well I
never thought about it. I've been down in Florida."
TS:
It's really refreshing to see that
nobody paid much attention to it. I had a confrontation with an
assistant to the chairman of the FCC, and he said to my face that they
weren't banning our song or anybody's song, that the FCC's original
statement said that the radio stations should just be aware of what they're
playing, and the statement was misconstrued and taken out of context, and
that's where the problem was. So I told him that he really ought to
clarify his position. The FCC claimed that the whole thing was blown
up. So we told them they should say what they mean and make it clear.
The whole thing is, it wasn't a drug song. If we had
sat down and felt we were writing this song to admonish kids to take drugs,
I would have felt badly about it, felt that they had a position.
MB:
Tarkio is a real place. It's
a small town in Missouri. We nicknamed the highway that goes through
there Tarkio Road because it's a highway we had to drive a lot; it's a hard
road to drive. The heart of Middle America. It was just a
reflection of what we were doing then which was a lot of concerts in Iowa,
Missouri, Nebraska, Kansas. We were driving. Having to deal with
a lot of small town policemen.
TS:
We're influenced by the people we
work with in the studio. We write a song, and our piano player may
play something that I would never have conceived, that will actually change
the song, and you might like it well enough, and it influences you heavily
enough that the next time you're sitting there writing a song, you take that
approach to it, get that kind of a feel.
MB:
We've been together four years
now, and we'd both worked about three years before that, traveling,
performing, writing. And we're still doing those things.
It's just more intense now. It's not nearly as groovy as before.
We don't have very much time at all for our personal lives.
TS:
Most of our time is spent waiting.
You go to your plane, they give you a ticket, they say, go to Gate 19, and
you have to wait for the plane. You wait for a cab, wait for the
people who are supposed to take you someplace. You have to wait for
the people who are supposed to take you to the concert, but it's really not
long enough to get involved in something even to get out your guitar and
start picking.
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