Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Ian Anderson: A conversation with the Scottish Gent we attest as Jethro Tull



By Ray Shasho
Throughout the progressive rock ages, Ian Anderson had been notably recognized as Jethro Tull. Even the occasional aficionado may refer to the charismatic, swashbuckling, one –legged flautist as simply “Tull.” Ian Anderson not only gave the world awe-inspiring lyric and melody, but also an everlasting and irrepressible personification. So it’s no wonder that Ian Anderson and Jethro Tull are synonymous.

Since it’s origination in 1968, the band has had numerous personnel changes, but Anderson’s ingenuity and fastidious songwriting has preserved the Jethro Tull trademark for almost a half a century. Deep-rooted lead guitarist Martin Barre should also receive accolade for infusing the heaviest of hard rock riffs.
The Jethro Tull band name was derived from an eighteenth century English agriculturalist who invented the seed drill, but Ian Anderson transformed the assigned appellative into a progressive rock protagonist. Even today, Anderson’s proficiency and style remain unchallenged.  His onstage persona mesmerized us, as we all wondered how cool it would be to be “Tull.”
Ian Anderson embarks on a worldwide tour beginning April 14th in the United Kingdom. Anderson will be performing the 1972 concept album, “Thick as a Brick” in its entirety as well as  the new release, “Thick as a Brick 2” -Whatever Happened to Gerald Bostock? .... forty years later. 
“TAAB2” the sequel was officially released on April 2nd and available at Amazon.com.  Florida dates are confirmed for the upcoming tour. September 18th at The Fillmore in Miami Beach, September 19th at the Kravis Center for the Performing Arts in West Palm Beach, September 21st at the Amphitheatre in St Augustine, and September 22nd at the Bob Carr Performing Arts Centre in Orlando.

I had the rare opportunity to speak with Ian Anderson recently about some uncommon topics. I wanted the interview to be different than the usual laundry list of Jethro Tull inquisitions. Mr. Anderson was quick-witted, fascinating, and profound. I quickly became mesmerized by other aspects of his life including entrepreneurship.
Here’s my chat with legendary multi-instrumentalist/singer/songwriter/prog-rock pioneer/Jethro Tull founder/ feline advocate/ entrepreneur/ IAN ANDERSON.
Ray Shasho: Ian, thank for being on the call today … are you calling from Scotland?
Ian Anderson: “I’m actually calling from the South West of England.”
Ray Shasho: You conducted a Self- interview which appeared on You Tube video recently about the upcoming release of “Thick as a Brick 2.” It was so good; I’m a bit worried you won’t need us journalist anymore.
Ian Anderson: “The way things are these days, we use every opportunity we can to tell a story and keep the fans amused, and keep myself amused as we get old and jaded.”
Ray Shasho: Just about every piece of information regarding Ian Anderson and Jethro Tull has been collected and available on your website, it’s getting to be very challenging to ask you anything that hasn’t already been answered on the site.    
Ian Anderson: “I’m so glad to hear you say that because that’s exactly why I do it, to try and make your job easier. You can just cut and paste and have a fun time with that without spending too much money on transatlantic phone calls.”
Ray Shasho: I spoke with Greg Lake several weeks ago; we talked about the Salisbury Cathedral charity show you did together. Greg said it was a funny experience, standing in a Cathedral playing rock and roll. He also mentioned there were dead bodies in the Cathedral while you played?
Ian Anderson: “I didn’t think we were that bad. (All laughing) Well that’s what Cathedrals usually have in them. They have crypts and all sorts of ancestors and people lie within, so we hope they remembered to take their sleeping pills.”
Ray Shasho: I’m guessing the acoustics were pretty good?
Ian Anderson: “Extremely long reverberation times and you have to be very careful how you gently amplify and redistribute the sound otherwise it will become a cacophony and will certainly awake the dead.”
Ray Shasho: I’m trying very hard to not be one of those reporters who will ask the same questions of you, and I’m usually known for asking unconventional questions to solicit new material. You have an incredibly informative page on your website called, “Your new kitten: Advice for new parents.” Why the fascination with cats?
Ian Anderson: “When I was a young boy I preferred cats to dogs. From the age of seven or eight onwards I just felt more comfortable with cats. And I felt more comfortable with girls, I didn’t really like hanging out with guys. When I was about ten or eleven, I was friendlier with the girls in my school than with the guys. And later on in my school years I really didn’t enjoy the company of men and the beer drinking experiences of teenagers… so I wasn’t a manly schoolboy. I preferred arts and more gentle pursuits than sports, so I was more of an academic really and kind of cats fit the bill. Cats fit that kind of personality better than dogs. I’m a bit of a girlie guy who liked growing up with cats.”
Ray Shasho: I sent you an email several years ago regarding the Big Cat Rescue in Tampa, Florida and recently found out that you’re already kind of connected with them.
Ian Anderson: “Well that’s right; I’ve been there and have done a couple of things for them in terms of press and promo or what have you, and we know who each other are.”
Ray Shasho: Do you have any of the larger cats on your farm?
Ian Anderson: “No, I think the proper place for those animals are in there natural habit and not in zoos or private collections of wild animals, I don’t really like that kind of thing very much. That’s like taking me out of my environment and putting me in jail for the rest of my life.”
Ray Shasho: I know your were a successful salmon farmer for many years, do you continue to be in that line of work?
Ian Anderson: “No, I was a salmon farmer for about twenty years and there were a lot of issues like environmental concerns and the principals of taking animals into intensive farming. Perhaps in the case of salmon you have this absurd reality of taking more and more out of the oceans to manufacture the feed for salmon. It takes roughly speaking … maybe ten kilos of capelin, sand eels and herring and various wild fish and shell fish species to produce one kilo of fresh farmed salmon. So it’s a very inefficient way of converting fish protein further down the food chain into fish protein higher up the food chain where we think we want to eat it. I think salmon farming has its place in the world … a few hundred thousand tons of salmon production in the world is probably a good thing, but to the level at which it’s gone now where it’s such a mass produced commodity in many parts of the world.”

“Usually farming Atlantic salmon because they’re faster growing and better oil content and just a much nicer fish altogether than the pacific species but as you probably know they farm down in the pacific too ... in Chile and elsewhere, west coast of the U.S. and Canada. That’s something we wouldn’t allow to happen in our part of the world, that is farming of nonindigenous species and an insecure context like cages and Open Ocean is something that we don’t think should be allowed to happen. But again, commercial enterprise being what it is people have decided that they’re going to do that anyway and have managed to persuade the governmental authorities to let them do it. But I’m very much opposed to that so I decided I really didn’t want to be involved with farming salmon anymore. The negatives outweighed the positives for me and I decided to gently remove myself from that world.”

“When I first started it was all shiny and new and there were only a few tens of thousands of tons of salmon being produced when I started and most of it in Norway. When we began it was a pretty low key effort usually involving people from local communities and the west coast of Scotland who otherwise found it difficult to find work, so for the first ten-fifteen years or so it felt like the right thing to do. But I became less enamored of it primarily because of environmental and conservation reasons.”     
Ray Shasho: Ian, I was a commercial banker in another life, and was the guy lending money for start-up enterprises. So I’m extremely impressed by the way you began an entirely new business venture, turned it into a success, and operated and maintained it for twenty years.   
Ian Anderson: “I’m all in favor of banks that play their part in community endeavors, private individuals looking for loans, people who want to start up a little business, and that’s what banks are for. Once we get into investment banking there is no ring fence between the investment arms of banks and the service sector of banking… I don’t like the idea of fat-cat bankers looking for their big-big bonuses, spinning the roulette wheel and using as their stake the money loaned to them used by private individuals whose life savings are wrapped up into what’s proved to be an extremely risky and unpleasant side of that industry. So that’s one of the things I’m singing about on the new album … is my end. Obviously I share this with a majority of the people. We feel cheated by virtue of the fact that people used our money to cover themselves in glory and huge bonuses. In the case of Fred Goodwin of the Royal Bank of Scotland, a knighthood, which he so surely deserved to have stripped from him as indeed it was a couple of weeks ago.”

“But it was the Royal Bank of Scotland who was the villains and the rest of the international banks are not blameless in any of this. They essentially operate in the same way and got themselves caught up in the prime mortgage business which was one of the things that toppled the house of cards primarily due to the arrogance and naivety of a couple of Icelander banks.”
Ray Shasho: I was actually one of those banking soldiers on the front lines that got axed in 2008 when turmoil hit the financial markets. I was loyal and a top producer but apparently that meant nothing to them.  
Ian Anderson: “I don’t think anybody objects in our capitalist western society about the idea of somebody getting paid for results. But disparity between those getting really quite obscene levels of bonus and those who are the foot soldiers of industry seem to have gotten completely out of balance and it doesn’t seem right that there should be a ratio of twenty … fifty… or one hundred to one between high paid people and the average low paid person. It just seems too big of a differential. You can understand if people got five or ten times as much money if they produce results, but things have just gotten out of control and that’s part of the degree to which our moral values have continued to change with capitalism becoming so incredibly powerful. But like everything else, there’s good capitalism and there’s bad capitalism. And you’ve got some of the good guys who later on realize they’ve been so very-very fortunate to have done what they’ve done so the Warren Buffets and the Bill Gates get to a point in their lives where they realize true values are what you can do for other people than rather do for yourself.”
Ray Shasho: Then there are the monopolies … where does capitalism fit in that equation?
Ian Anderson: “Nowhere is that more obvious than the record industry, where we have the purchase accepted of EMI by Universal and now down to three major record companies. They have essentially doubled between the small record companies and the tiny independents that are left. Most of them would have the goal of selling out at some point to honor one of the three majors and getting their retirement fund. In the live concert sector you have Live Nation and AEG which compose far and away the greater part of the total live concert industry around the world. And that can’t be right either, it’s just become too much of a megalithic concern where the vast majority of concert tours everywhere in the world are being carried out essentially by two multi-national and huge companies that essentially bought out all the other individual promoters, and did so obviously with borrowed money and are struggling to stay solvent.”

“Like everybody else we’re force to do business with Live Nation at least some of the time because they have control over many venues and cities and have the monopoly to work there. We have to grit our teeth and work with those guys too, there’s nothing wrong with the individuals that work for those companies, mostly nice people that we’ve worked with for many years, but they sold their souls to the devil … of corporate enormity, but it’s up to us to change the things we don’t like.”
Ray Shasho: When I interviewed Eric Burdon he said to call it a “music industry” is a stretch.
Ian Anderson: “Eric Burdon is a venerable old gent who’s been around for many years and when I was a lad fresh out of school, Eric Burdon was one of the guys that got me infused about trying to play music and trying to become a professional musician. All those years down the line, I think Eric Burdon has been one of those who is lucky enough to still have his job, get’s out there plays a good concert and plays a bunch of songs that he feels a rightfully degree of ownership about. That’s a good position to be in if you’ve been around as long as Eric Burdon, and made it your life, career, and the thing you love. It’s great that he can do it, but economically it’s not that easy for Eric Burdon, he’s not quite big enough around the world in terms of commanding quite enough to give himself a comfortable level of profitable percentage doing concerts. He’s probably quite close to the point where he’ll be doing okay and not great financially. He’s kind of in the low to middle range economically …it’s not easy but he’ll do okay as long as he’s careful.”
Ray Shasho: I’ve always blamed commercial radio stations for the debacle of the music industry … laziness to seek out and play new music, repetitive mindless commercials taking over the airwaves and the absence of the music radio jock. After chatting with Greg Lake … he blamed the invention of the Sony Walkman for self isolation, and not sharing the music experience with your friends anymore. What do you think changed the music industry?
Ian Anderson: “That for me was the beginning of the beginning because I’m not a social type of guy. I don’t like to sit around and listen to music with other people. The original Sony Walkman … which I think still have, was quite well made, interesting, a small practical cassette machine that allowed you to plug into it and listen to music in that convenient isolation. That privacy was great to have if you were traveling around the world and maybe had the opportunity to close your eyes and listen to some music. So to me it was a great step forward. I’m eternally grateful for the Sony Walkman and all of its successes to the introduction of the MP3 players. I think I’ve owned all the models of IPods so far. And these days between my iPod, iPhone and my personal laptop computer, I’m someone who is very-very grateful for all the ways to listen to music and completely switch off from people around me and listen to the music in detail, which is very hard to do if you’re in a room with other people.”

“We do hear perhaps too many accolades generally aimed at people like Steve Jobs. We have to remember that there are other classic things in life that we undervalue and take them for granted. If you think of the classic lines of the modern jet aircraft, it’s really been there since early World War II. I mean the first passenger jets that flew… they don’t look so different. The Boeing 737… its generations apart from a few engine changes but essentially remains the same thing that it was around forty years ago since that airplane first flew commercially.”
Ray Shasho: I know we need to wrap this up … You’re touring the “Thick as a Brick 2” tour as Ian Anderson. Will there be a future tour billed as Jethro Tull?
Ian Anderson: “The band is essentially the same, maybe one different member of the band; it’s just essentially the way I choose to describe what I do in different context. I like to work with musicians who I feel are the right people. Sometimes one or two people will change as I’m doing a certain Ian Anderson concert. If I’m doing an acoustic tour with just a stripped down show than obviously I would choose musicians who would fit that bill. If I was playing all Jethro Tull repertoire and material than I would just call it Jethro Tull, but when it’s other projects that represent my impersonal input, than I tend to use my own name rather than simply call it Jethro Tull. I think given the fact that I’m the guy that writes the music and does more of the organizational and management side of what goes on … and sometimes I think I should be forgiven for having a Roger Waters moment and claiming something is my own.”
Ray Shasho: Well, in our eyes … you are TULL!
Ian Anderson: “That’s what people have been saying for many-many long years but I always try and point out that it is “The band” or whoever that band is… the people that play the music, and we have to remember that were something like twenty eight members in Jethro Tull over the years and people who have taken part in a major tour or in recording. So it’s a big extended family … I’m the expedition leader and they trust me to take them where we go.”
Ray Shasho: Ian, thank you so much for spending time with me today, but more importantly for all the fantastic music throughout the years. We look forward to the release of “Thick as a Brick 2” (TAAB2) on April 2nd and your upcoming concert tour.
Ian Anderson: “Ray I enjoyed talking with you, we’ll see you in the states … bye-bye!”

“Thick as a Brick 2” (TAAB2) is available to purchase at amazon.com
Jethro Tull official website www.j-tull.com
Ian Anderson’s world tour begins April 14th in the United Kingdom. Anderson will be performing the 1972 concept album, “Thick as a Brick” in its entirety as well as the new release, “Thick as a Brick 2” 


Florida dates are confirmed for the upcoming tour. September 18th at The Fillmore in Miami Beach, September 19th at the Kravis Center for the Performing Arts in West Palm Beach, September 21st at the Amphitheatre in St Augustine, September 22nd at the Bob Carr Performing Arts Centre in Orlando, September 25th at Sunrise Theatre in Fort Pierce.
Just Announced! Barbara B Mann Performing Arts Hall in Ft Myers on September 24th and Ruth Eckerd Hall in Clearwater on September 23rd. Tickets go on sale April 28.

Very special thanks to Anne Leighton of Leighton Media for arranging this interview -Official website www.anneleighton.com

Contact Ray Shasho at rockraymond.shasho@gmail.com
 
 Download author/columnist Ray Shasho’s fascinating memoir ‘Check the Gs’ The True Story of an Eclectic American Family and Their Wacky Family Business Available on Kindle at Amazon.com and Nook at Barnesandnoble.com for Only .99 Cents.

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Monday, March 26, 2012

Blondie magnificent at Firefly Gala: Interview guitarist/songwriter Chris Stein














By Ray Shasho

BLONDIE was simply spectacular on Saturday night for the Second Annual Firefly Gala in Bradenton, Florida. The concert began promptly at 9:45p.m.under the stars on a beautiful tropical evening. The event raised an estimated $112,000 for The Forty Carrots Family Center, a nonprofit organization in Sarasota, Florida dedicated to strengthening families through educational programs for parents, children, and professionals in the field. The event was sponsored by The Dart Foundation.
Formed in 1974, Blondie amassed a huge Punk following at New York’s famed CBGB. The band later became known for their eclectic musical styles that included New Wave, Disco, Pop, Reggae and Rap. The band has sold over 40 million records worldwide. Blondie was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2006.

Blondie hadn’t performed together for months, but based on crowd reaction at the packed mobile- amphitheater, you’d think you were reliving one of those incredible CBGB shows all over again. The band played a magnificent performance to a rapturous Bradenton gathering at the Concession.  
Debbie Harry continues to be totally hip, enticing the audience throughout the evening with coolness, glamour and vivaciousness.  Her voluptuous voice is stronger than ever and punkish struts even more apparent. An audience of donors and sponsors quickly became an audience of Debbie Harry and Blondie music fanatics. 

Blondie played all the crowd pleasers on Saturday evening including “Union City Blues,” “Dreaming,” “Maria,” “Hanging On The Telephone,” “The Tide Is High” (their cover of the 1967 Paragons tune) and “Call Me” (the band’s biggest selling single from the movie American Gigolo). An explosive one-two punch materialized when Blondie performed the most dynamic and favored tune of the night, “Rapture” including a deviation of the Beastie Boys (You Gotta) Fight For Your Right (To Party!) and followed by the stalker inspired, “One Way Or Another” from their album Parallel Lines. Blondie also showcased new music from their critically-acclaimed release Panic Of Girls including, “Mother,” and “What I heard.” Blondie’s encore for the evening was the #1 Hit, “Heart Of Glass” a tune inspired by the German electronic group Kraftwerk.
Original bandmates, guitar virtuoso Chris Stein, and accomplished drummer Clem Burke, were both on stage playing with vengeance on Saturday night. Tommy Kessler traded guitar licks with Chris Stein and was also spotlighted featuring an array of incredible rifts. Bassist Leigh Foxx and keyboardist Matt Katz-Bohen complete an amazing group of talented musicians. 

At 8p.m Saturday evening I was escorted onto guitarist Chris Stein’s tour bus for a quick interview.

Fun fact about Chris …. He’s a huge wrestling fan from way back and has met everyone from Andre the Giant to Vince McMahon.  

Here’s my chat with legendary songwriter/guitarist/photographer/ cofounder of Blondie CHRIS STEIN.
Ray Shasho: Thanks for meeting with me today Chris, looking forward to a great show. I know you’re probably asked this a lot but who were some of your influences growing up?
Chris Stein: “Hendrix was a big influence and I was a big Stones freak. And more of a Motown fan prior to the British stuff. And I wasn’t a big Elvis freak when I was a kid. I liked Dylan; I remember seeing Dylan on Steve Allen when I was a kid and that was a big moment, but never made an impression on me until later.”
“But speaking of Elvis… when we went to Graceland it was awesome and not what you might expect… it’s kind of retro at worst. Some of it is a little weird but overall not as bad as one is led to believe. It’s kind of cool in a way.”
Ray Shasho: You met Debbie Harry when you were in the Stilettos?
Chris Stein: “Yea, we’re going to have our fortieth anniversary next year.”
Ray Shasho: Congrats! Chris you’re an excellent photographer, although sad, I liked your pictures featuring the last days of CBGB.
Chris Stein: “Yea, I’m going to start putting stuff out when I get back, putting things together for the Morrison Hotel people. Maybe in April I’ll get something on their website. The digital world is so seductive… I should do more film.”
Ray Shasho: Are you collaborating musically with anyone these days?
Chris Stein: “Just the guys in the band. I listen to a lot of music … a lot of strange stuff.”
Ray Shasho: What kind of music are you listening to these days?
Chris Stein: “A lot of Latin music … ‘Systema Solar’ they’re a great Colombian band. I like Overground Raggaeton. Modern Latin styles too. I was doing the research on old style Colombian music and it sounded a lot like Captain Beefheart or something …very funky.”
Ray Shasho: When you wrote “Heart of Glass” were you specifically aiming for the explosive Disco market?
Chris Stein: “No … it was supposed to be Kraftwerk but it just fit into the mold.”
Ray Shasho: So the band is headed to the Hard Rock in Hollywood, Florida after tonight’s show?
Chris Stein:  “Just for the weekend. We haven’t played together for five or six months, but we sound okay, we remembered all the music.”
Ray Shasho: What was the origin of "Rapture"? I read somewhere that the melody was devised from a Turkish tune?
Chris Stein: “No-no. We loved Chic and the music that was going on at the time. We heard the first Rap thing in 1977 and it was very exciting ...so that was it you know.”
Ray Shasho: You guys are actually classified as pioneers for the genre of Rap music.
Chris Stein: “Yea, a couple of guys from Wu-Tang Clan told us that it (“Rapture”) was the first Rap song they ever heard … which is kind of mind-boggling. Frankie Crocker broke it on WBLS nationwide. 
Ray Shasho: Anything you’d like to promote Chris?
Chris Stein: “China Mieville’s new book, he’s our buddy; this is his new book called ‘Railsea’ coming out in May. It’s a Steampunk Sci-Fi Fantasy thing. He’s a great writer.”
Ray Shasho: What’s the story about?
Chris Stein: “The world is all dirt (he doesn’t mention any oceans) and covered with these rails, and the trains go everywhere in this complex system of rails and if you step on the ground where the rails are the animals come and eat you immediately. So then there are these islands where the people live on. I’ve been waiting for him to do a Moby-Dick reference and this book has Moby-Dick references in it.”
Ray Shasho: You grew up on Brooklyn?
Chris Stein: “I went to the same high school as Woody Allen, I grew up in Flatbush. There was this local gangster called Junior Sirico and his brother Carmine Sirico. He was like ten years older than me and use to hang out at the local pool hall …. Anyway, he’s ‘Paulie Walnuts’ of The Sopranos. I never knew it but I just found out that it was him.”
Ray Shasho: Where’s Debbie Harry originally from?
Chris Stein: “Florida and New Jersey. Her parents came from Florida but she’s adopted so we don’t know for sure.”
Ray Shasho: Do you like a lot of the Pop/Dance music that’s around today?
Chris Stein: “Don’t you like “Pumped Up Kicks” and all that stuff … it’s a great song! I like that and “Moves Like Jagger” …. they’re really good songs. But I like the fact that everything is dance music. We love Beirut; they’re one of our favorite bands too.”
Ray Shasho: I’m looking forward to tonight’s concert.
Chris Stein: “Well, we really haven’t played for months …so if anybody screws up… (All laughing)”
Ray Shasho: Are you planning another full-scale tour soon?
Chris Stein: “We do great on Europe and UK tours. We’re playing to 30,000 people in the UK and then come back here and play to a thousand drunks in a casino.”
Ray Shasho: Congrats on the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. There was a bit of a spat during the ceremony wasn’t there?
Chris Stein: “Frankie started pissing and moaning that he wasn’t going to play and he decided it was the right moment in front of 200 million people. People were saying … how much did you pay him for doing that? We thought the Sex Pistols were going to be the big thing. So he just started bitching on TV, he would have had to call somebody if he really wanted to play. I hadn’t talked with him in twenty years. We had already rehearsed.” 
Ray Shasho: Who were some of the bands you followed when you were part of the Punk and New Wave scene?
Chris Stein: “The Ramones, Richard Hell. Television when Richard Hell was still with them was really an amazing thing, it was exciting. The Ramones influenced so many people … the T-Shirts are there everywhere you go. For me the first two Stones albums are completely punk. I just heard “Satisfaction” the other day and I thought … that song sounds so punk.”
Ray Shasho: Chris thanks for chatting with me today, I’m looking forward to a great show.
Chris Stein: “Thanks Ray.”

Special thanks to Minta Getzen, the Forty Carrots Family Center, and the Dart Foundation.

Blondie official website www.blondie.net

Forty Carrots official website www.fortycarrots.org


www.dangerousminds.net/comments/chris_steins_photographs_of_the_last_days_of_cbgb/

COMING UP NEXT an interview with the legendary IAN ANDERSON of Jethro Tull 

Contact author/columnist Ray Shasho at rockraymond.shasho@gmail.com

Download Ray Shasho’s new book ‘Check the Gs’ on Kindle or Nook E-Book format at amazon.com or barnesandnoble.com for ONLY .99 CENTS!

 
Ray Shasho is a product of the second half of the 20th century, made in the USA from parts around the world, and within him is every trend in music, television, politics and culture contributing to his philosophical and comically analytical reflections collected in his fine book of memories. ~~Pacific Book Review


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Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Interview: Tommy Roe tried to get Beatles signed: Both rejected by ABC Records











By Ray Shasho

When recollecting those perpetual hit makers of the ‘60s, singer/songwriter Tommy Roe’s accomplishments are among the elite of the music industry. Tommy Roe wrote and recorded (6) Top 10 hits between 1962 -1969, more than any other solo American artist, including (11) Top 40 hits, (4) certified gold singles, and (2) #1 Hits.
Tommy Roe is a member of the Hit Parade Hall of Fame, The Georgia Music Hall of Fame, and The Rockabilly Hall of Fame. Roe will also be inducted into the Iowa Rock ‘n’ Roll Music Association (IRMAA) Hall of Fame on September 2nd 2012.
Rock and Roll pioneer Tommy Roe became an overnight Top 40 radio sensation with his 1962 #1 Hit “Sheila,” a tune in which Roe pays homage to Buddy Holly. Tommy Roe scored again the following year with his Top 10 hit, “Everybody” reaching #3 in the U.S.

In 1963, Tommy Roe and Chris Montez (“Let’s Dance,” “Call Me,” “The More I See You”) toured with an up and coming rock and roll band called The Beatles.  Roe initially tried to get The Beatles a recording contract but was told by a record executive to stick to writing music and leave the record business to him. When The Beatles popularity materialized, Tommy Roe was asked to perform at their first American concert at the Washington Coliseum in D.C. Because of an overseas wave of music to hit the U.S. called the British Invasion, Roe was forced to conceive a new sound.
In 1966, Tommy Roe’s #8 Top 40 bubblegum hit, “Sweet Pea” swept the nation, followed by a British Invasion influence release, “Hooray for Hazel” which reached #6 on Billboard’s Top 100.
 In 1969, Tommy Roe struck gold twice with the prevailing, “Dizzy” reaching #1 and the Freddy Weller (Paul Revere & the Raiders) co-written tune, “Jam Up and Jelly Tight” peaking at #8 on the Billboard charts.

Tommy Roe’s willingness to accept and create new musical ideas sustained enormous commercial success during the most competitive period in American popular music.

Tommy Roe will be releasing his long and anticipated CD soon called, ‘Devils Soul Pile.’ Roe admits,“It’s titled after a song I have written and included in the lineup, the song is a departure from my normal and expected style, and one that tells the story of dysfunctional families, and the effect it has on our youth and our neighborhoods. Lyrically, this song is a bit serious, and was inspired by the everyday news of violence in our neighborhoods and cities. But a song that ends in hope.”

Roe’s new release will be followed by ‘An Evening with Tommy Roe’ concert tour launching on April 7th in Riverside, Iowa. A Florida appearance is scheduled at The Villages in Lake Sumter Landing. Roe says, “I will also do a Q&A session in the middle of the show while the stage is being set for my acoustic set with band leader and lead guitarist Rick Levy.”

I had the rare and wonderful opportunity to chat with Tommy Roe about his illustrious music career, including his personal experiences with The Beatles, Elvis and Frank Sinatra.

Here’s my interview with singer/songwriter/musician/rock and roll pioneer Tommy Roe.
Ray Shasho: Thank you for being on the call today Tommy. How are things in Los Angeles?
Tommy Roe: “It’s funny, I came here in 1965 to do a show with Dick Clark called ‘Where the Action is’ and was supposed to stay for six months but I’m still here. (All laughing)”
Ray Shasho: I heard through the grapevine that you’re working on a new CD.
Tommy Roe: “I’m not sure exactly when I’ll get it out, maybe by spring, it’s just a long process today. For one thing the record business just sucks! (All laughing) Trying to get a record deal or trying to get somebody really interested in your project.  I mean, I’ve been out of the business for awhile and fighting that whole battle as well …it’s not easy. But if I’m not successful with a label by May, I’m going to put it out myself and see if I can get an independent distributor. And I can always sell it at my concerts …so we’ll see what happens. I’ve got some new songs and that’s why I’m so excited.  I’ve started writing again and recorded the songs and I’m just trying to package it and put it together, so that’s kind of where we stand with it.”
Ray Shasho: We’re all anxiously awaiting some great new material by Tommy Roe. You are a true rock and roll pioneer.
Tommy Roe: “Well thank you. I didn’t record for a long time and songwriting is funny. I’m not the kind of songwriter where I can sit down every day and write a song, it has to come to me from somewhere. So it’s out there in space somewhere and it sort of reaches me. When that happens I turn one after another and they seem to come out real easy. When I went to Nashville to work with the songwriters there, they were so disciplined and go to the office everyday and write. I couldn’t do that, it’s not the way I do it. I just like to let it happen, and when it happens I have to make it work.”
Ray Shasho: I’ve heard the good and the bad about record companies in the 60’s. After chatting with Tommy James, he told me that even though he was literally cheated out of million in royalties, if it weren’t for Record Exec. Morris Levy, he would have never been a star.
Tommy Roe: “That’s true, it’s like the guy that got me started Bill Lowery from Atlanta. We had these kinds of moguls around that sort of controlled different parts of the country. Levy up there and Bill Lowery in the south and these guys really helped a lot of young entertainers get started and without them we could have never done it. Back in those days the way radio was structured you had to have somebody fighting for you. We didn’t make the money that the guys make today but I think we had a lot of fun. I know I did, it was very spontaneous and I hope the kids today have as much fun as I did.”
Ray Shasho: I was intrigued by the artistic photos that you shot internationally and displayed on your website.
TommyRoe: “Yea, I got into taking pictures, my wife is from Franceand we go there at least once a year. Last year we went twice, she speaks five languages so we travel to all these different places. I kind of follow her around with my camera. (Laughing) But it’s just something I enjoy. It’s funny when I started in the music business; I was in high school and actually had an art scholarship to the Atlanta Art Institute. I was going to enter the Institute when “Sheila” became a hit. So I had to go with the music instead of the art. So it worked out for the best.”
Ray Shasho: You also worked for General Electric?
Tommy Roe: “I got married very young and had a little baby. I was married actually in my last year of high school so I had to get a job. I worked for General Electric; my cousin helped me get a job there, didn’t know what the hell I was doing … just putting wires together. I think what they did was to make machinery to generate electricity at a dam, but I didn’t have a clue what I was doing. I was just thankful to have a job.”
Ray Shasho: Your first big hit, “Sheila” was one of those rock and roll originals. I’ve always felt if you had continued in that musical direction, you would have been a hell of a rocker.
Tommy Roe: “I kind of got sidetracked… “Sheila” and then “Everybody” was even more of a rockabilly southern song and it went to number three on the charts. But when I came out here to California, I got with this producer who wanted to change my style. What was happening at that time is you had the British Invasion. All the British acts were making it huge over here and really pushed a lot of the American acts off the charts. And this guy figured the only way that I could compete and to stay on the charts was to come up with something totally different. The British acts loved doing rockabilly, that’s what the British acts based their styles off, so he suggested that we get into the softer rock stuff and I think it really helped me survive the ‘60s. The British were just taking over the charts and then I came up with “Sweet Pea.” That was my first soft rock thing. It was a big hit so we just stuck with that style throughout the ‘60s.”
Ray Shasho: I always wondered if it was your decision to change styles musically or the record labels. 
Tommy Roe: “Yea, it was the producer and the label together trying to figure out a way to keep me on the charts. But I really loved the rockabilly style, that’s what I do in my show. When I started singing as a kid in high school I use to do John Lee Hooker. The reason I did it was because our band was getting booked at fraternity parties at Georgia Tech and University of Georgia and that’s all they wanted to hear was blues stuff. So that’s what I really started to sing as a kid… all that blues stuff.”
Ray Shasho: When you wrote “Sheila” were you thinking about Buddy Holly at the time?
Tommy Roe: “I was a huge fan of his and that was my way of respecting Buddy Holly. When I first recorded “Sheila” I recorded it while I was in high school and wrote it when I was about 14 years old. I recorded it early in high school with my local band. We didn’t have the drums and when I hooked up with Felton Jarvis, he loved the song but wanted to put something more exciting into it, so he thought about putting those drums in there. My first version of “Sheila” was almost a hit, it was a hit locally in the southeast but never spread nationally and that’s why Felton knew the song. He knew it would become a hit if he rerecorded it and added the drums in there. I was a huge fan of Holly so it was fine with me.”
Ray Shasho: Besides Buddy Holly who were some of your early influences growing up?
Tommy Roe: “Chuck Berry of course, Carl Perkins… anybody that wrote songs. When I was a kid I wanted to be a songwriter, I was very shy so I never dreamed about being a performer. “Sheila” was originally a poem I wrote about a girl that I went to school with and her name was “Frieda.” It use to be “Sweet Little Frieda.” It was a poem and at the time my dad taught me three chords on the guitar and I thought… boy if I could just put some music to my poems maybe I could become a songwriter. So that’s what started it for me, it just happened that my dad played an instrument and I use to love to write silly poems to my girlfriends. So I turned “Frieda” into a song and ran around singing “Sweet Little Frieda” for a long time. When I finally got the chance to record it the producer suggested changing the name to “Sheila.”
Ray Shasho: You toured with the Beatles before they got big in America.
Tommy Roe: “I did. After Sheila was a hit in 1962, I had an opportunity to go to England and tour over there in 1963. I had worked some dates over here in the states with Chris Montez; in fact we did the Sam Cooke tour together and did several other tours together in the U.S. So we knew each other and they put us together on this tour in England to co-headline. When we got over there we saw the program and it had a featured act on our show called The Beatles, and they were on the bottom of the lineup. Nobody knew who the Beatles were they were just starting out, and I think they only did one other tour before our tour. The Helen Shapiro tour and then they did our tour. On our tour is when they really broke out, it was like Elvis all over again. I even suggested to Brian Epstein that I’d take a package back with me to the states and get them a record deal, which I did; they gave me a promo kit to take back to the states. All they talked about was America; they wanted to know if I met Buddy Holly, have you ever been to New York? Have you been to the Statue of Liberty? …so many questions, they just wanted to know everything about America.”
“So I came back to the states after the tour and I talked to Felton from over in England and I said, “You know I’m working with this band and they’re going to be huge, we should see if we can get them a record deal in the states.” So I brought my promo pack with me and took the Queen Elizabeth ship back to New York City and Felton met me at the dock when I got home. He said, “Come on grab a cab, we’ve got a meeting set up with Sam Clark at ABC Records and he’s waiting for you to hear the band that you found.” So we went right up to Sam’s office and I went in and they said, “Hey kid… it’s good to have you home, we heard you had a great tour and we understand that you found an act that you want us to hear. I said, “Yea, it’s an act that was on our tour called The Beatles. They all kind of laughed. I pulled out their first album with pictures of them wearing the bangs, and the office got real quiet …they stopped talking and looked at the front cover and then said, “What the hell is that?” Felton pointed out, “Wait, you got to hear them.” So they took the album and put it on the turntable, dropped the needle, played a few bars from the first cut and then picked up the needle and said, “I tell you what kid …let us be the talent scout, that’s got to be the worst piece of crap that I’ve ever heard in my life, we’ll find the talent, you just go back to your nice room at The Waldorf Hotel with the nice TV and write us some more hit songs.”I was devastated and felt about an inch high. They completely blew us off!”
“About six months later … The Beatles became how we know them as … The Beatles. Every time I would see those executives at my label from that point on …they would run for the door, they could not face me.”
Ray Shasho: In 1964, you were on the bill with The Beatles when they played their first American concert in Washington D.C. at the Coliseum.
Tommy Roe:  “Of course I had done the tour in England with The Beatles in 1963, so we had a relationship. Brian Epstein was going to manage me at one time so they were talking back and forth with my music publisher and talking to Brian about managing me and said, we’re coming to the states and would like Tommy to open the show for us at a show in Washington D.C. so that’s how that all happened.”
“They did the Ed Sullivan Show and then took the train down to the Washington Coliseum show and I drove up from Atlanta with the band that I used to record “Everybody,” the song was just out as a new record. “Everybody” was inspired by my tour in England with The Beatles. I wrote that on the ship coming back from England to New York.”
“I only did two songs at the Coliseum show with The Beatles … I did “Sheila” and “Everybody.” Then The Chiffons came on and did two songs. But you know what’s funny; it was just supposed to be The Chiffons and myself, and after The Ed Sullivan show everybody called and wanted to get on that show. The Righteous Brothers were there and several other acts came and were also on the show. They got no publicity, they just wanted to come and be close to The Beatles. Murray the K came down from New York and wanted me to introduce them to The Beatles, I told him look …they’ve got security nobody can get near them, you can probably get to them easier that I can.”
Ray Shasho: I had a friend that was actually at that concert, he said that he couldn’t hear any of the music because the girls were screaming so loud.
Tommy Roe: “Al Gore was there too. There was an article in The Washington Post recently where they interviewed Paul, myself, and Al Gore for the anniversary of that show. They’re trying to save that building so they interviewed all of us together for that article.”
Ray Shasho: I was there as a kid, I think to watch the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus, and the Coliseum was in a really crappy neighborhood.
Tommy Roe: “Yea, they used it for boxing matches and stuff.It was kind of a slimey kind of a place. And the acoustics in there were awful. My band was down in the orchestra pit, they cleared the stage and then they put The Beatles stuff on there. I was kind of standing at the door and watching their show and Ringo was actually picking his drums up and turning them around because it was like a theater in a round. He would get off his drum riser and reset his drums so he could play to the people that he had his back to. It was the most amazing thing I’ve ever seen in my life, and his drums were moving all over the place, the symbols were flying everywhere, I don’t know how he managed to keep them upright and not fall over. It was the most amazing thing.”
Ray Shasho: Tommy, not only are you a rock and roll pioneer, but you’re also a very important part of Beatles rock and roll history. We haven’t covered Elvis Presley yet … have you met him? 
Tommy Roe:“Oh yea, I met him several times. Felton who produced “Sheila” and “Everybody” ended up producing Elvis the last six or seven years of his life. So when they opened in Las Vegas at the Hilton, Felton invited me over to the opening show. So I met him there, Felton was always doing the sound for Elvis at those Las Vegas shows, so we’d hang out together and go to the dressing room. Elvis was a strange dude. Sometimes he would be very talkative and very alive and other times he would just sit in the corner and say nothing. Either he was moody or not moody there was no in between with him. When you first met Elvis, you think my God this guy’s handsome. And the first time you’re taken back, he had such charisma and magnetism when you walk into a room and meet him. There was two people that I’ve met that were that way …Frank Sinatra also had the same thing but in a different way. When you met Frank, his presence was overpowering and Elvis was the same way. There are very few entertainers that have that; it’s a God given gift.”
Ray Shasho: I was a huge fan of Frank Sinatra. I saw five of his concerts including front row center seats at Caesars Palace in Vegas and Resorts in Atlantic City. I’ve always wanted to meet him, what was Sinatra like?
Tommy Roe: “He was a great and fun guy. My wife was very good friends with him, as a matter of fact she had a house right next door to his in Palm Springs. Before we were married we’d go down to that house. It’s on the golf course and he’d be playing golf and met him several times there. But she knew him really well. The first time I met him was at a restaurant in Palm Springs, and I was touring and had my road manager with me, and he was 6’5 and weighed about 280 pounds, just a huge guy. So we’re in there together with my girlfriend at the time who became my wife Josette. As we walked in to the restaurant Josette said, “Oh there’s Frank” and I didn’t know who she was talking about. She took me by the hand and took me over to his table and introduced me to him. She said, Frank I want you to meet my boyfriend … this is Tommy Roe, he’s a singer too and this is his bodyguard. Frank said, “Josette, you don’t need a bodyguard, I’m your bodyguard. (All laughing) We had a fun conversation, “Jilly” was there with him, and I think it was kind of their hangout in Palm Springs. But he was a very nice guy and total charisma.”
Ray Shasho: When “Hooray for Hazel” hit the Top 40 airwaves, I really thought it was part of the British Invasion. I never imagined the tune to be a Tommy Roe song. Am I correct to think that the song mirrored the British Invasion?   
Tommy Roe: “Well we were trying to survive weren’t we? Of course I had the experience of being over in England so I knew that sound. I was familiar with that British sound so I wanted to integrate it into my recording sessions. You’re right; “Hazel” did have that. I love doing “Hazel” in the show and it’s amazing how many people remember it.”
Ray Shasho: What was the origin behind “Hooray for Hazel”?
Tommy Roe: “Well you remember the Hazel TV show?  There are so many girl names for songs… why not a Hazel … let’s do a Hazel. So that’s where a got the idea for the song.”
Ray Shasho: There seems to be a resurgence of “Sweet Pea” on You Tube. The song is getting thousands of hits, and everyone seems to love the little girl that you sing to in the video.
Tommy Roe: “I’ve heard about that, there’s a clip from ‘Where the Action is’ where I’m singing to that little girl.  I’ve even had some emails asking if it was my daughter. It wasn’t my daughter but she kind of looked like me in a way. She was a big fan in the audience and knew every word to the song. The audience was full of kids but I just so happened to sit down with her and she sang right along with me. But there has been a lot of reaction to that video.”
Ray Shasho: Tommy, you’ve got some concert dates coming up?
Tommy Roe: “We’re going to start on April 7th at the Riverside Casino in Iowa and then we go up to the Seneca Niagara Casino in New York. We’ve got some dates over in Canada in May and coming down to the Villages in Florida on June 18th. We do an hour show with an acoustic set in the middle and a Q & A with the audience which I really enjoy. It’s a lot of fun and the audience loves it.
Ray Shasho: Tommy we’re all looking forward to your new CD and upcoming concert dates. Thank you for being on the call today and most of all for all the great Tommy Roe music over the years.
Tommy Roe: “Ray, thank you for the interest in Tommy Roe. We’ll see you down in Florida.”

Watch for Tommy Roe’s CD including brand new material soon!
Check for updates and concert dates on Tommy Roe’s official website at www.tommyroe.com
The Villages official website www.thevillages.com
Special thanks to the great Billy James at Glass Onyon PR for arranging this interview
Official website http://glassonyonpublicity.wordpress.com

Contact Ray Shasho at rockraymond.shasho@gmail.com

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Book Review -Ray Shasho is a product of the second half of the 20th century, made in the USA from parts around the world, and within him is every trend in music, television, politics and culture contributing to his philosophical and comically analytical reflections collected in his fine book of memories.  I found Check the Gs to be pure entertainment, fantastic fun and a catalyst to igniting so many memories of my own life, as I too am within a few years of Ray.  So to all, I say if you have a bit of grey hair (or no hair), buy this book!  It’s a great gift for your “over-the-hill” friends, or for their kids, if they are the history buffs of younger generations trying to figure out why we are the way we are.~~Pacific Book Review

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