Friday, August 23, 2013

Slide guitarist Roy Rogers talks ‘Twisted Tales’ final album with Ray Manzarek



By Ray Shasho


Eight years ago, slide guitar virtuoso Roy Rogers began an amazing musical collaboration and momentous friendship with The Doors legendary keyboardist Ray Manzarek. After Manzarek’s untimely death in May of 2013, Rogers felt awkward at first about releasing Twisted Tales their final studio album together.  Rogers stated … “I just decided to release it, music is made to be heard, there’s no agenda, it’s good music, fun music, and a great testament to our collaboration.”


Twisted Tales was released on June 18th 2013 and dedicated to the memory of Ray Manzarek. The unlikely musical duo of Manzarek and Rogers substantiated the concept “opposites attract,” and in this case… beget innovative, eclectic, and obscure musical magic. Although Rogers is perceived for slide guitar and delta blues, Twisted Tales is a completely new adventure.

The lyrical content is primarily penned by songwriter/poets Jim Carroll and Michael McClure. Some of the tracks on the album are reminiscent to a concept album. There are minor hints of Zappa, Burdon, and The Doors intermingled with diverse melody. Noteworthy tracks include … “Just like Sherlock Holmes” and “Eagle in a Whirlpool” highlighting the slide virtuosity of Roy Rogers and keyboard mastery of Ray Manazarek ... “Street of Crocodiles” An obscure, fun and interesting ditty!  My favorite track… “Black Wine/Spank Me with a Rose” …An incredible mix of musical artistry and … “Numbers” The final track on the album may conceivably be Manzarek’s swan song while echoing the music of The Doors.

I gave Twisted Tales the final studio release by Ray Manzarek and Roy Rogers (4) STARS.

Roy Rogers and Ray Manzarek also released … Ballads Before the Rain (2008) and Translucent Blues (2011).

ROY ROGERS: In 1976, Rogers and David Burgin formed an acoustic duo. They recorded the album Rogers and Burgin: A Foot in the Door and performed on the One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest movie soundtrack.  
In 1980, Rogers formed his own band Roy Rogers & The Delta Rhythm Kings. The band quickly became universally recognized.
Upon returning from Europe, Rogers was asked to join John Lee Hooker’s Coast to Coast Blues Band. Rogers toured and performed with the legendary blues performer for four years, establishing a strong personal and professional relationship with Hooker. Roy Rogers went on to produce four historic recordings for John Lee Hooker … The Healer, Mr. Lucky, Boom Boom and Chill Out. Some of the tracks included co-producing credits with Ry Cooder and Van Morrison.

In 1985, Rogers released his critically-acclaimed solo debut album entitled Chops not Chaps and was nominated for the W.C. Handy Award. Rogers continued a string of successful releases with the album Slidewinder (1988) which featured guest performances by John Lee Hooker and Allen Toussaint and Blues on the Range (1989).
Roy Rogers incredible talents were also featured on the soundtrack for the film The Hot Spot (1990) which he recorded with Miles Davis, John Lee Hooker and Taj Mahal.

In 1991, Rogers collaborated with harmonica virtuoso and vocalist Norton Buffalo to record the highly acclaimed R&B album. The duo followed with Travellin’ Tracks in 1992.

Subsequent studio albums by Roy Rogers … Side of Hand (1993), Slide Zone (1994), Rhythm and Groove (1996), Pleasure & Pain (1998), Everybody’s Angel (1999), Slideways (2002), Roots of Our Nature with Norton Buffalo (2002), Split Decision (2009).

Over the years, Roy Rogers has collaborated with some of the greatest musicians in the world including … Carlos Santana, Bonnie Raitt, Linda Ronstadt, Steve Miller, Sammy Hagar and most recently Ray Manzarek.

Roy Rogers scored eight Grammy nominations as a performer and producer.

Rogers remains one of the elite slide guitar players in the world.

I had the unique pleasure of chatting with Roy Rogers recently about the release of Twisted Tales, his most recent and final collaboration with The Doors legendary keyboardist Ray Manzarek. 
Here’s my interview with legendary slide guitarist, singer, songwriter and producer …ROY ROGERS.
Ray Shasho: How are you doing Roy?
Roy Rogers: “I’m doing alright, a little bit of hot weather here out west but it’s cooling down. It’s been kind of hot here! I’m here in Northern California; I live up near a big lake between California and Nevada by Lake Tahoe. So I’m up in the Tahoe National Forest. I’m a bay area guy, grew up in the bay area and raised our family out in the San Francisco Bay area. But we moved up here about five years ago and I love living in the mountains man.”

“You’re in the Tampa Bay area, when I think about Tampa, I think of Skipper’s Smokehouse. I used to play there a lot.”
Ray Shasho: You’re sort of in-between gigs right now?
Roy Rogers: “I’m actually doing some local gigs and then I head back over to Scandinavia again in October. I don’t tour as much as I used to, it’s more of a young man’s game anyway. If there’s a festival, I’ll fly out and maybe work at some smaller venues like Ray and I did. We’d go out and he didn’t want to hit it for long periods of time like a lot of people. As long as you can have that pivot date like a festival, book around that and fly back home, and don’t stay out on the road for a long period of time.”
Ray Shasho: I think there are a lot of countries that continue to support the blues.
Roy Rogers: “It’s true. Our culture, our music especially is so strong and that’s our biggest export in a lot of ways, what that means and where it comes from and people really get that … the whole thing of where jazz comes from and all the multifaceted things of that and the blues and rock and roll and into pop music. It’s so strong and a worldwide phenomenon. It’s really amazing when you think of it in those terms.”
Ray Shasho: Without the birth of the blues, there may have never been jazz, rock, pop or even country music?
Roy Rogers: “I always point out to people, Jimmie Rogers the so-called father of country music, when you listen to Jimmie Rogers stuff of the 20’s, you can totally get where he got that from and listening to the field hollers and plantation folks. You know as well as I do, the delineation of music was to sell it. Music was always cross-pollinated and people were either ignorant and didn’t know how that cross- pollination worked, the musicians certainly felt that way. It didn’t matter if you were Elvin Chamblin or Charlie Christian you could still play and appreciate the riffs.”
Ray Shasho: Twisted Tales, your latest and final album with Doors legend Ray Manzarek is a riveting piece of music that features an eclectic mix and some very obscure tracks. I heard a lot of musical styles in the album including …Frank Zappa, Eric Burdon and The Doors.
Roy Rogers:  “It’s very eclectic. Interesting analogies there, it’s probably all that in there somewhere. We had a lot of fun. Obviously I wrote some of the songs but especially the songs that Ray had, he was sitting on these lyrics of some friends of his which was sort of an extension of the first record Translucent Blues but much more eclectic musically as you were saying. We just knew it was going to take it that way because the lyrics almost demanded it. It gave it a skew that made it interesting to arrange it. That was the great thing about collaboration because we both wanted to make different records. Every time you make a record you can extend ideas that you have from previous stuff.  But it’s a new record and a brand new day … what side of the bed did you get out of today? We both felt that way and were both into pushing the envelope and that was part of the reason why we got along so well. Because we really became very good friends over the past seven or eight years and it was about that.”

“We started literally as a duet playing more of an extension of his solo thing and telling stories about The Doors and that sort of a thing. That was fun and we established our relationship doing that. But we both knew eventually that the band was going to push it in a way it needed to be pushed. The new album was fun to make. Even when I was producing John Lee Hooker stuff long ago and you had people in the studio, I firmly believe that it’s not that you can’t make good records with a lot of angst and what are we doing in the studio, but I could never make a record and take a year to make a record. You make a statement and go in unprepared and you let it flow and that translates to the record. I like records like that.”
Ray Shasho: I chatted with Billy Cobham recently and he said the Spectrum album was recorded amazingly fast. I think you’re right; many of the classic albums and tracks were recorded quickly and without a lot of preparation. 
Roy Rogers: “Yea, look at Miles Davis Kind of Blue. Very seldom, even in the Hooker days … we didn’t always get it on the first take, but if we tried it two or three times and didn’t get it, we would put it to rest and tried it on another day. This thing about having to be perfect or trying to go for perfection … I don’t buy that at all. You just want to make a statement and have fun with it. That’s what I like about this record a lot, obviously very eclectic material but it covers a lot of ground and there’s a lot of depth in there that people can either find or not find.”
Ray Shasho: I really enjoyed the album. It sort of reminded me of a concept album at times. The music camaraderie between you and Ray became even more apparent on the track “Black Wine/Spank Me with a Rose.”
Roy Rogers: “Black Wine” was a first take for Ray’s vocals. We were doing “Black Wine” and obviously it’s a long tune, we even edited it, I think it’s six and half minutes or something. Ray was doing the vocal live as we were playing it, not going in and doing the vocal again. So he was doing his thing and playing and that’s the vocal we used. He was so ecstatic because it’s unusual to do the vocal live as you’re cutting the track; it’s not always done and getting it right. He was ecstatic after that and that’s when he did that thing at the end of the record. He was so happy that he went into this ad-lib thing. That’s why it’s such a glorious train wreck. I said Ray; we have to end the record with that. It was a perfect way to end the record and became a very precious moment in light of his demise.”
Ray Shasho: The album was a pleasant surprise. Fans of Roy Rogers may have thought the album would spotlight a majority of blues tracks.   
Roy Rogers: I don’t really consider myself a real traditional blues artist and never have. I’ve always wanted to stretch it. Even though I have covered my fair share of Robert Johnson stuff, I always feel that certainly in the blues, I respected enough where you have to make it your own and have to work with it. I don’t care if it’s in a Captain Beefheart kind of way or the traditional blues. The whole thing about the collaboration with Ray is … he was a Southside of Chicago kid and I didn’t know that when I first met him. He said I remember when music shifted from “How Much is That Doggie in The Window” to “Hoochie Coochie Man” (All laughing). I said, well that was about ten years before I was around, because Ray was eleven years older than I was. But I don’t really consider myself real traditional although I’m obviously known for that slide guitar kind of thing.”
Ray Shasho: When was the last time you saw your musical partner Ray Manzarek? 
Roy Rogers:  “The last time I saw Ray, we were discussing the artwork for the album. He was leaving for Germany to go to this place to kind of detox and he had gotten a bad diagnosis but was certainly going to take it one day at a time. Then he’d come back and who knows maybe play a few shows, well he never made it back obviously. It’s just ironic because it was very important for the both of us to get the record out. So I’m just happy to get it out, I sort of held it for a bit and was vacillating between how should I do this, it was awkward. So I just decided to release it, music is made to be heard. There’s no agenda, its good music, its fun music and a great testament to our collaboration.”
Ray Shasho: When did you and Ray Manzarek first meet?
Roy Rogers: “We met about eight years ago here in the bay area. He used to do solo shows. Sometimes he did shows with Michael McClure, they would do the poetry and then he would backup Michael. Ray would sometimes do solo shows and he would do mainly Q&A’s and answer questions about The Doors and Jim Morrison. Then he’d go into… this is how I played the intro to “Light My Fire” and that sort of thing. It was kind of a one on one with Ray. The guy that was booking him as a solo artist was the same agent that booked my band. He said you know Ray is doing a solo show why don’t you go sit in with him. So I called him up and Ray heard of me, so I took my little amp and sat in with him and it was just one of those situations man … instant simpatico.”
Ray Shasho: Did you ever think one day that you’d be collaborating with The Doors legendary keyboardist?
Roy Rogers: “I used to always kid Ray …I was a blues aficionado from ‘day one’ so I wasn’t a big fan of The Doors.  All I wanted to do was to see Muddy Waters and Howlin’ Wolf. So I used to laugh and say, Ray, it’s so ironic because I wasn’t a big fan of you guys, obviously I knew you guys and he’d say … “Well to hell with you Rogers!” (All laughing)  He’d say …“Okay we’re going to play “Love Me Two Times,” are you sure you want to play this one Rogers?” (Laughing)”

“Our friendship really started from a duet and we travelled actually a lot. We did a couple of tours in the Midwest and one back east, and this was as a duet and before the band. We also cut a fairly obscure record as a duet called Ballads Before the Rain … no vocals, no blues, and completely instrumental, mainly acoustic guitar and piano. That was really the gelling of the friendship.”
Ray Shasho: What were your future plans with Ray?
Roy Rogers: “He’d always do the stuff with Robby Krieger and continued to do so and toured with him, so this was a parallel universe if you will. We were definitely planning on promoting the record and our next meeting was going to be … Now what songs are going to translate live? Some songs translate better than others when performed live. So that was going to be our next meeting. So we were greatly looking forward to touring it, but he had a pretty good run of it didn’t he.”
Ray Shasho: Did Ray know he was sick or was it unexpected?
Roy Rogers:  “Totally unexpected. We did a last tour in Hawaii in February, four dates on four different islands and he had a great time. He did say he was getting a little tired but that’s all. I said Ray we’re all tired after the tour and he said, “Yea, well I think I’m gonna go to the doctor when I get home.” So one day he goes to the doctor and within two or three weeks he got a diagnosis that nobody wants to hear. He wasn’t sick for a long period of time because he was really diagnosed in the first part of March and was gone by the middle of May.”

“He was a very deep cat. I called him a renaissance man. He wrote books, he was obviously in a film, interested in a lot of different music. We didn’t always talk about music; we had very similar political leanings and both liked to read a lot of good books and he was a very well-read. He was just a very interesting guy. At the memorial they had for him, that echoed to just about everyone who got up and spoke. They said the same thing, from the earliest days to the present; he was that same kind of guy. He was the steadying influence type of guy.”
Ray Shasho: When you worked with John Lee Hooker it was much like how Johnny Winter helped Muddy Waters?
Roy Rogers: “When I had Johnny in the studio with “Hook,” there was the analogy for both of us. Of course all those great records he produced for Muddy. It was very similar. Johnny was very close in friendship with Muddy from what I’ve read and the same for me and Hooker. We had a very close friendship. I had toured with John and was in a lot of situations with him on the road as well as in the studio. When you can make music like that with geniuses in their own right, guys like Muddy and guys like “Hook” they can dig as deep as you can go when they feel like it. Not many people can even think about doing that. To see those guys dig down on stage, if they feel like it, and they’re in the mood, it’s a done deal and they own it. It’s just a great thing to behold and how that can move people so dramatically.”

“I just took my kids to see The Rolling Stones and they’ve never seen them before. Of course I’d been a fan of The Stones for a long time and saw them when they first came out. My kids loved them. Here are these guys in their late 60’s and early 70’s, and whether you like them or not, they still know how to rock. They had a bare bones show and not all the bells and whistles that they had before. It was a juggernaut man and it still amazes me, and the audience can rise and fervor, almost like a revival meeting (All laughing).”
Ray Shasho: I’ve been patiently waiting to ask you this question, have you ever met the Cowboy Roy Rogers?     
Roy Rogers: “Are you kidding me … three times! Here’s my favorite Roy Rogers story. I was nominated for a Grammy the same year as Roy Rogers the Cowboy. He was nominated with Clint Black in a different category for a song he did. I was nominated for a song I did with Norton Buffalo who I did some records with, for a song I wrote called “Song for Jessica” when my daughter was born. So you got two Roy Rogers. They still held the Grammys in New York at Radio City Music Hall at that time. Roy and I were staying at the same hotel and they completely screwed up the phone calls. So we both go there and his son Dusty was with him and I get to meet him. I’ve got this great picture hanging on the wall with me smiling with this sh*t eating grin on my face and Roy has his arm around me. Its Roy and Roy both wearing our medallion things when you’re nominated, everybody’s a winner type of thing. Neither one of us won the Grammy. So I had a great conversation with Roy.”

“The best part of the story, honest to God truth … My wife and I are going to leave, I’ve got a car coming to pick me up and take us to JFK. I’m out in front of the hotel and the driver comes and looks at me and says, “Roy Rogers, I’m a big fan of slide guitar, it’s a pleasure to give you a ride to the airport.” So we’re half way passed the East River on the way to JFK and the dispatcher comes on and says … “Who the hell do you have in the car?” The driver says, “I’ve got Roy Rogers.” The dispatcher says, “No, you don’t!” The conversation between the driver and dispatcher then went like this … “Wait a minute, is he a musician?”… “Yea”… “Was he nominated for a Grammy?”… “Yea”… “Does he have a hat on?”… “Yea” … “Well, is he the cowboy?” … “No man, he’s the blues musician.”… “Dammit, you’ve got the wrong guy!”
 So, I got Roy Rogers limo to the airport. I got the wrong car, isn’t that great? He probably never forgave me for that. He was supposed to pick up the other Roy Rogers. I will probably laugh about that till my dying day (All laughing).”
Ray Shasho: That’s a great story Roy! How were you treated in grade school with a name like Roy Rogers?
Roy Rogers: “Are you kidding me, I wore my cowboy boots about one day and then I never wore them again (All laughing).”
Ray Shasho: Roy, here’s a question that I ask everyone that I interview, If you had a “Field of Dreams” wish, like the movie, to play or collaborate with anyone from the past or present …who would that be?
Roy Rogers: “Man, there’s too many to go there, but it would certainly have to be doing something with either Robert Johnson or up to either a Captain Beefheart or Keith Richards. Captain Beefheart was a fascinating character; he influenced a lot of people and not for everybody, but that’s okay. I think that’s the thing for me. You said collaboration, sure we’d all like to sell as much music as we can, but you don’t have to try and make music for everybody, you just want to make good music. Miles said it best; there are two kinds of music, good and bad. Robert Johnson would have been so interesting, not just only because he’s a ‘Blues God’ of sorts, but the guy could have gone electric. It would have been very interesting to see where he would have gone. That’s how I think of that. His capabilities would have taken him to a lot of different realms if he was out of his traditional one. So that would have been interesting for sure. Keith Richards I’ve always liked.”

“If I had better chops it would probably be somebody like Ben Webster because I dig that kind of stuff completely, it moves me.”
Ray Shasho: Roy, what are your future plans?
Roy Rogers: “I’m starting to woodshed now for my next project. Although there are a lot of different directions that I could go frankly and I haven’t decided which one. I could make a solo record and if I have the material do maybe the singer/songwriter thing. I love collaborating and would like to do possibly a big band record with slide guitar, which has never been done. My secret desire would be to make another Wall of Sound record. I’m not talking about a Phil Spector type of Wall of Sound but a new approach to that.”

“It’s going to depend on the material for me frankly. That was the thing about Twisted Tales … Ray already had some great lyrics and I already had some stuff, it was really a back and forth thing about arranging and writing the tunes and those were in place. We had a lot of those lyrics from Michael McClure and Jim Carroll, so that helped things.”

“I could also do classic covers. That would really cover much more of a range of material, not just blues, but maybe even do some standards that I think would translate for slide guitar.”
Ray Shasho: Roy, thank you for being on the call today and more importantly for all the great music you’ve given us and continue to bring. Come to Florida soon!
Roy Rogers:Good talking with you man, I wish you success with your project and it’s always great to talk shop. Look for me to come to a festival there, no plans, but maybe sometime next year.”

Purchase Twisted Tales the latest album by Roy Rogers and Ray Manzarek at amazon.com
Roy Rogers official website www.roy-rogers.com
Ray Manzarek official website www.raymanzarek.us
Roy Rogers on Facebook
Roy Rogers on Myspace

Very special thanks to Billy James of Glass Onyon PR

Contact classic rock music journalist Ray Shasho at rockraymond.shasho@gmail.com

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Sunday, August 18, 2013

‘Melanie’ Safka Exclusive: “My Mother Drove Me To Woodstock” (Part 2)

                        

By Ray Shasho

Part 2 of 2:

Melanie Safka (Melanie) was once hailed as the female Bob Dylan. Her awe-inspiring lyrical connotations were accompanied by her majestic voice and an acoustic guitar. She was a lone entity onstage but radiated a powerful force that became the voice and spirit to one of the most important generations the world will ever know.
Here’s ‘PART 2’ of my interview with singer, songwriter, musician, Woodstock and 70’s legend … MELANIE.

Ray Shasho: Melanie, what happened to your mom, was she in the audience at Woodstock?
Melanie: “(Laughing) This is so sad, I don’t remember getting back from Woodstock. I guess we rendezvoused and she picked me up somewhere. I never got to ask her how I did.
Ray Shasho: I heard that you’re also a pioneer for concert etiquette … holding up a candle or cigarette lighter over your head at rock concerts began at a Melanie show? 
Melanie: Most people don’t know that it was me.” Now you’ve got an application on your Smartphone that displays a candle (Laughing). The first time people ever lit candles was at a Melanie concert. Because those people would show me that they were there. This was even before the song “Candles in the Rain” and before it was on a record. So people would come with lighters, matches, and candles, and that was the signal that we were there at Woodstock. The place lit-up like fireflies. Then I would usually sing one of the songs I did in that set. When the record came out it became concert behavioral and what you do at a concert. Fire Marshalls actually tried to prevent me from singing “Candles in the Rain.” I tried to tell people not to light candles but it never worked. After Woodstock, I became a festival queen. I did everything … Isle of Wight, Glastonbury etc. In the state of New Jersey, the night before I was supposed to appear at an outdoor venue, usually owned by a bank, the Governor closed me down because they said I constituted a festival and festivals were illegal in New Jersey. So I wasn’t allowed to perform there.”
Ray Shasho: So “Candles in the Rain” was definitely written about your Woodstock experience?
Melanie:Yes, I left the field with that “Candles in the Rain” anthem part in my head. I was a phenomenon; I didn’t last as long as The Rolling Stone, and again I didn’t play the music industry game, but I did have three records in the top ten at the same time. At one point, there wasn’t a person who didn’t know who I was. But I never wanted to take it to the next level. I may have also been on the list. I was not the angry protestor type, I wasn’t right or left, I had a humanist point of view that neither side would be real happy with. It was not pinning one side against another type of philosophy. Pro peace as oppose to anti-war and I don’t think that was a very popular posture and I got away with obscurity.”
Ray Shasho: I have always been a firm believer that musicians and actors should not come out and rant and rave for political parties. I think it ruins their demeanor as an artist and becomes hypocritical to what their writing and singing about.
Melanie: ‘I’m in total agreement. My job is to not tell people about what I think. I’m not running for office so you don’t need to know what I think, you just need to hear my music.”
Ray Shasho: Your music career took off after Woodstock?
Melanie: Woodstock was a catalyst for my career. From that moment on I was delivered to panel talk shows on the significance of Woodstock and I wasn’t well equipped to speak. I was very shy and wasn’t savvy in interviews and how to get out of a hairy situation. No experience just being thrown on these shows. Dick Cavett hated me. He must have gone to the hate Melanie school. He was just so ungracious. I was never loved by intellectuals, I’m entirely too cute.”
Ray Shasho: Melanie, I’m in the process of writing my second book entitled ‘When Heroes Become Voices’ which will feature ‘101 candid interviews with the greatest music legends of our time’ and you’ll be in it by the way. But the introduction will be talking about the state of the music industry and how it has especially affected the music legends. It’s like one day, somebody decided to pull the plug on our heroes in the mainstream …and I’m not talking about playing oldies.
Melanie: “This is what I remember happening when the 80’s occurred and clubs were opening based on a particular drug. The radio wall came down and it was unbelievable. I said in an interview that it was like a decisive battle and we lost. But nobody knows where and when it happened. But it did. A wall came down. That saying don’t trust anybody over thirty became a fact. Then it was don’t sign anybody over thirty and it became a doctrine between all the major record labels. It had nothing to do with the value of a young mind; it had more to do with an old person and philosophical attitudes and swaying people. They didn’t want anybody up there that could sway anybody’s opinion. Youth culture had done politically what they wanted to do and the manipulation began. Music is so powerful and so healing and that is what it was meant for.”

“But I really do believe that we are poised for the next great event. If it doesn’t happen we’re headed for supreme dark ages. But I can sense that something big and wonderful is going to happen and I want to be there.”
Ray Shasho: Melanie, are your children musicians?
Melanie: “My son is a musician and he’s amazing. There’s a track on Ever Since You Never Heard of Me which is the instrumental we wrote and did that one when he was 16. We put that on the album because it was so pretty and it kind of blended with the other songs. But he’s been writing with me and he plays his guitar. My two daughters also sing. One sings out in Phoenix, Arizona and she may be moving to Hawaii. The other one is a songwriter in Nashville.”
Ray Shasho: What was the origin behind “What Have They Done To My Song Ma”?
Melanie: “It was quite literal. I walked into the recording studio and my husband was consumed by the hits. We were so different, like day and night. It was probably why we were married for forty years. He’d hear a song and wanted to go make it a hit. I walked into the studio and was overwhelmed. I don’t read music and didn’t know how to talk in music terms to musicians, to communicate what I wanted. Peter could communicate with them and go at it his way. I don’t know what song it was but I knew it was being taken in a direction that I wasn’t thrilled about, and it was look what they’ve done to my song. It was literal, and again it could be an analogy to anything.”

“The New Seekers did it very much like my version, so I wasn’t thrilled about that. It wasn’t as exciting as when Ray Charles did it. He remade it as his own song. I thought, hey, I’m a writer! I never really thought of myself as a writer, just a singer. They didn’t have that term singer/songwriter .They used to call me the female Bob Dylan because he wrote songs and sang them. Most people didn’t know that I wrote the songs that I sang.”
Ray Shasho: You sang the French verse on the song perfectly. I always wondered if you spoke French fluently.
Melanie: “I had spent time in France. It sounded to me when I wrote the song that it had to have a French word, it sounded chanteuse. I speak menu French but that’s about it. I did take French in high school. We worked with these translators and tried to get a meaning that was at least similar.”
Ray Shasho: Melanie, what was your experience with Rolling Stone magazine?
Melanie:Rolling Stone waged war against Buddah Records and unfortunately I was on Buddah Records. They absolutely massacred me! They said on the review of “Candles in the Rain,” the chorus was really good but when my voice came in it was kind of like a pencil scratch. But they always waged war with me. They never mentioned that I wrote the song or sung it with an all black gospel choir with one white girl, which was a pretty phenomenal thing for that particular moment in time.”
Ray Shasho: I don’t give bad reviews. If I receive a CD in the mail that I don’t like, I simply won’t talk about it. Why should I humiliate someone’s craft publically? So all my music reviews have been very favorable.
Melanie: Well you would be fired from Rolling Stone because there was a girl that wrote for Rolling Stone that made too many good reviews and she got fired.”
Ray Shasho: Do you own all the rights to your music?
Melanie: “I don’t own my songs and the rights to my songs; I don’t own my performances, I don’t own my performance royalties and have been sold down the river. I receive not one penny from any song. I didn’t know my writers share was sold. Peter did everything. He was a wild and crazy eastern European gambling type person. I think he gambled my writers royalties, writers share and apparently at the moment stuck a piece of paper under my nose and I never read the piece of paper and I signed it. That was the end of that. I didn’t know I was signing away my writers share.”
Ray Shasho: Unfortunately I’ve heard a lot of similar horror stories.
Melanie: “This was a very odd story because we were married. I called ASCAP seeking their help and advice and they were very uncooperative. But I keep writing songs and it will be a matter of moments when somebody puts one in a movie or a commercial and then I’ll be able to survive.”
Ray Shasho: Melanie, thank you so much for being on the call today, you are such a delight to chat with. And thank you for all the beautiful music that you’ve given us and continue to bring. We’ll see you on November 22nd at the Carrollwood Cultural Center in Tampa, Florida.
Melanie: “Thank you Ray we’ll see you in November!”

Melanie will be performing on November 22nd at 8:00 p.m. at the Carrollwood Cultural Center (Main Theatre) in Tampa, Florida. For tickets visit here or call 813-269-1310.

JUST ADDED ... Melanie will also be performing on Saturday November 23rd at the Fogartyville Community Media and Arts Center in Sarasota, Florida. For tickets visit here or call 941-894-6469.

Melanie Safka official website at www.melaniesafka.com
Melanie Safka on Facebook
Melanie Safka on Twitter
Melanie Safka on Myspace
Purchase Melanie’s latest release Ever Since You Never Heard of Me at amazon.com

Very special thanks to Beau Schekeryk and Kim Reilly of SeaSide Music Management
Coming up NEXT… Recent interviews with Roy Rogers , Corky Laing (Mountain)
 and Cherie Currie (The Runaways)
Contact classic rock music journalist Ray Shasho at rockraymond.shasho@gmail.com


Purchase Ray’s very special memoir called ‘Check the Gs’ -The True Story of an Eclectic American Family and Their Wacky Family Business … You’ll LIVE IT! Also available for download on NOOK or KINDLE edition for JUST .99 CENTS at amazon.com or barnesandnoble.com - Please support Ray so he can continue to bring you quality classic rock music reporting.
“Check the Gs is just a really cool story ... and it’s real. I’d like to see the kid on the front cover telling his story in a motion picture, TV sitcom or animated series. The characters in the story definitely jump out of the book and come to life. Very funny and scary moments throughout the story and I just love the way Ray timeline’s historical events during his lifetime. Ray’s love of rock music was evident throughout the book and it generates extra enthusiasm when I read his on-line classic rock music column on examiner.com. It’s a wonderful read for everyone!” stillerb47@gmail.com


© Copyright rayshasho.com. All Rights Reserved


Monday, August 12, 2013

‘Melanie’ Safka Exclusive: “My Mother Drove Me To Woodstock” (Part 1)


By Ray Shasho

Part (1) of a (2) part interview:

Melanie Safka (Melanie) was once hailed as the female Bob Dylan. Her awe-inspiring lyrical connotations were accompanied by her majestic voice and an acoustic guitar. She was a lone entity onstage but radiated a powerful force that became the voice and spirit to one of the most important generations the world will ever know.

When I asked Melanie how she developed her unique and sensational singing style she said …
“I went out to imitate Billie Holiday and Edith Piaf and got it wrong.”
Melanie was born in Queens, New York to a Russian-Ukrainian Father and an Italian Mother. Her musical career began in Greenwich Village and eventfully landed her first recording contract with Columbia Records. She released several singles on the label but retained greater success after signing with Buddah Records.

 Her debut album Born to Be (1968) was acclaimed for her independent music styles. It became clear that there was an exciting new singer on the block. In 1969, the single “Bobo’s Party” a track from her debut album reached #1 in France. Her second studio release Affectionately Melanie (1969) spawned the single “Beautiful People,” the song became a Top 10 hit in the Netherlands.

 Melanie’s songs began gaining momentum but she was still, for the most part, considered an unknown to the U.S. music scene until August 15th 1969. Melanie was invited to perform at the Woodstock Music and Art Fair held on a dairy farm in Brethel, New York. Her mother drove her to the event. She had been clueless to the size and significance of the concert until she witnessed Sly Stone walking around and Janis Joplin sipping Southern Comfort while being interviewed by reporters. After arriving at the hotel she was separated from her mother and rushed onto a helicopter. While descending towards the stage area, she was in total disbelief over the mass of people attending the three-day event. Melanie shared a tent with folk musician and composer Tim Hardin while she awaited her turn to perform at the most famous concert event in music history.
 
Several hours later, she was called upon to perform after Ravi Shankar’s set. Melanie was terrified … a lone woman performer with a guitar in front of a half a million people. Without a setlist to guide her, she opened with “Close to It All” followed by “Momma Momma,” “Beautiful People,” “Animal Crackers,” “Mr. Tambourine Man,” “Tuning My Guitar,” and concluded with “Birthday of the Sun,” a song she chose simply because it was raining.
Before and during her performance, concert organizers had distributed candles throughout the crowd. The lit candles during her performance while it rained inspired her profound composition, “(Lay Down) Candles in The Rain” (1970 #6 Billboard Hot 100 singles chart). She also inspired the etiquette of raising candles and cigarette lighters at concerts while portraying an audience of fireflies.
 
After Woodstock, Melanie became the concert festival queen, performing at such outdoor events as The Isle of Wight, Strawberry fields Festival and Glastonbury Festival. She was also asked to perform on numerous Television programs including Dick Cavett, Ed Sullivan and Johnny Carson.

“(Lay Dow) Candles in The Rain” was followed by “Peace Will Come (According to Plan)” (#32 Hit),” and her Rolling Stones cover, “Ruby Tuesday” (#52 Hit).

Melanie and husband/ producer Peter Schekeryk formed their own record label called Neighborhood Records in 1971.
Also in 1971, Melanie landed her biggest commercial hit entitled, “Brand New Key” (#1 Billboard Hot 100 singles chart). A song inspired after a stop at a McDonalds fast food restaurant.

Melanie also released “What Have They Done to My Song Ma’” which was also covered by The New Seekers and Ray Charles. The New Seekers also covered “Beautiful People” and “Nickel Song” composed by Melanie.

Melanie set a record for the first female performer to land three simultaneous Top 40 hits … “Brand New Key,” “Ring the Living Bell” and “Nickel Song.”

Melanie was awarded Billboard’s #1 Top Female Vocalist for 1972. She also became a UNISEF Ambassador that same year.

In 1973, Melanie spawned the hit “Bitter Bad” (#36 Billboard Hot 100 singles hit).

In 1989, she won an Emmy Award for writing the lyrics to “The First Time I Loved Forever” the theme song for the TV series 'Beauty and The Beast.'

Melanie’s songs have been covered by countless musicians over the years.

Her latest album is entitled … Ever Since You Never Heard of Me (2010)

She has sold more than 80- million records to date.

Melanie will be performing on November 22nd at 8:00 p.m. at the Carrollwood Cultural Center (Main Theatre) in Tampa, Florida. For tickets visit here or call 813-269-1310.

I had the incredible opportunity to interview Melanie Safka in a (Two-Part) exclusive interview.
Here’s ‘PART 1’ of my interview with singer, songwriter, musician, Woodstock and 70’s legend … MELANIE.
Ray Shasho: Hi Melanie thank you for being on the call today.
Melanie:Hi Ray, it’s my pleasure.”
Ray Shasho: I noticed your cell phone number had a Pinellas County area code, but you live in Nashville?
Melanie: “That was my husband’s phone; he passed away a few years ago. We had a second home in Florida which doesn’t exist right now but I kept that phone number. We lived in Safety Harbor. It was like this little cove that no one knew about. Then they started building more houses so we moved out and travelled across the bridge and decided to live in this beautiful old house in downtown Clearwater. Then we decided to move from there to Nashville.”

“Probably the longest I’ve lived anywhere was on the west coast of Florida. It was really nice and I liked it a lot. The west coast of Florida seemed like an authentic place, but now it’s been developed liked everywhere else and not as wonderful as it once was.”
Ray Shasho: Your most recent album is entitled … Ever Since You Never Heard of Me (2010) and feature’s a track called, "I Tried to Die Young."Talk about that song?
Melanie: “I love irony and playing with words and “I Tried to Die Young” … yes, I was a very self -destructive person in my youth. Not in the ways of 60’s youth culture, I wasn’t a druggie and didn’t abuse myself in those ways. I did crazy things that could’ve been risky and I didn’t play the music business game very well. My husband would always cringe when I said certain things. He was the one that got me out there; I never would have done this. I would have been a potter in North Carolina. I was an introvert and hated being recognized or being seen, he pushed me out there. I love making the music and knew what it was that I had to do but all that in- between stuff wasn’t my thing.”
Ray Shasho: I’ve witnessed your musical influence and style in so many women artists over the years … Stevie Nicks is one good example.
Melanie: “Stevie Nicks, Cyndi Lauper …Joanna Newsom.” She set a whole other trend for that super breathy thing that engineers can’t get microphones far enough down somebody’s throat. I feel like I need to apologize for it … it just took over.”
Ray Shasho: Melanie, you’ve always had such a beautiful voice, incredibly attractive, and thousands of guys fell in love with you.
Melanie: “I was so shy and always felt ugly and never ever felt like I was pretty. I look at my photos now and say, what was I thinking? I felt fat, ugly and my nose wasn’t right and didn’t see anything that would attract anybody. I was married and my husband always told me that I was gorgeous but I thought that was just him.”
Ray Shasho: I must have been extremely naïve growing up because I never got the sexual innuendo implied by the press about your classic number one hit “Brand New Key.”
Melanie: “I never thought of it … it just came right from the top of my head. But I do often write beyond my intellect. I think art is not about how clever you can be. It has become valuable in the world of art … especially when you’re promoting. If you can articulate about what you’ve done, a lot of people can read that into what you’ve done and it makes what you’ve done that more valuable. I’ve never been a great articulator; I just do the music part.”

“Of course I can see it symbolically with the key, but I just thought of roller skating. I was fasting with a twenty seven day fast on water. I broke the fast and went back to my life living in New Jersey and we were going to a flea market around six in the morning. On the way back …and I had just broken the fast, from the flea market, we passed a McDonalds and the aroma hit me, and I had been a vegetarian before the fast. So we pulled into the McDonalds and I got the whole works … the burger, the shake and the fries … and no sooner after I finished that last bite of my burger …that song was in my head. The aroma brought back memories of roller skating and learning to ride a bike and the vision of my dad holding the back fender of the tire. And me saying to my dad …“You’re holding, you’re holding, you’re holding, right? Then I’d look back and he wasn’t holding and I’d fall. So that whole thing came back to me and came out in this song. So it was not a deliberate or intentional sexual innuendo.”
Ray Shasho: Did you think the song would become as popular as it did after you wrote it?
Melanie: “No. I did it as a little ditty. It was my husband the producer who was always looking for the hits. I was mortified when I saw what he was doing; he was going to make this record a hit. At first I became reactionary to that song because it was all anyone wanted to know about. They didn’t remember Melanie with the all black choir singing “Candles in the Wind,” they didn’t remember “Beautiful People” or anything else. It was all about “Brand New Key.” People kept saying …when are you going to come up with another one of those? I guess next time I go on another twenty seven day fast. I have eaten at McDonalds with hopes it would turn on but it never did. That unique combination just never happened again.”
Ray Shasho: I told Tom Rush in an interview I did with him and it also applies to you …there is nothing like watching a lone musician up onstage with a guitar, a song, and a story.
Melanie: “Oh God yea. Over the years every major label wanted to superimpose my voice on what they thought was the next commercial hit. Clive Davis said put down your guitar down and be the 80’s woman …and I didn’t take that job (All laughing). Melissa Manchester did, I always wondered about that, it was the strangest transformation. She was a singer and songwriter … earthy, sat down at the piano, sang and wrote songs, and all of a sudden she got this Clive Davis hit and it was like a Las Vegas type act. So I made some very expensive decisions in my life. It’s hard enough to get up night after night and do what you love, but to get up and do something that you didn’t love would be absolutely horrendous.”
Ray Shasho: Who were some of your early musical influences growing up?
Melanie: “Billie Holiday, Peggy Lee … Brenda Lee was a big influence in my teens and I loved her voice. I sang a couple of Brenda Lee songs that were real pop hits and then I discovered Edith Piaf. I loved Joan Baez but couldn’t have that pure little voice that she had, it was so beautiful, I tried but it just didn’t come out that way. I went out to imitate Billie Holiday and Edith Piaf and got it wrong …I guess that’s where my style came from.”
Ray Shasho: Melanie, what is your perception of performing at Woodstock?
Melanie: “It was many things … it was the experience that I shared with 500,000 people, or seemed like at least that many. I was pretty much an unknown person; I had one record “Beautiful People” that was being played on WNEW FM at most, it hadn’t hit college radio stations or underground stations in America. I had been played a bit by pirate stations in the Netherlands and John Peel in England. Other than that, most people didn’t know who Melanie was. I hadn’t been on television yet and never performed for more than 500 people before.”

“I was in England and had been asked to do a film score and been working in the studio right next door to where The Rolling Stones were. I had the London Symphony Orchestra in the studio with me and my husband was the producer and I was deciding whether I should go back and do this Woodstock thing. I had pictured …three days of peace, love, and music was going to be more like a picnic with kids, families, arts and crafts, and going shopping … I had no clue!”

“My mother drove me to Woodstock. We went to the wrong place and then finally found the hotel and I was all by myself with my mom. So we got to the hotel and there’s Sly Stone walking by. Then surrounded by media was Janet Joplin drinking Southern Comfort and all of a sudden, now I know this was something really big. That traffic wasn’t just an accident ahead it was something really-really big and I was going to have to sing in front of it.”

“We were told that we needed to go in a helicopter. I had never been in a helicopter before so I asked why can’t we just drive like everyone else. So we get into the helicopter and they stop my mother … they asked who is she and I said it’s my mother. They said no mothers, just the performers and mangers. I didn’t even have the smarts to say oh yea she’s my manager (All laughing). I said bye mom and we were separated.”

“So I went off in the helicopter and then began descending onto a field. I looked out the window and asked the pilot what is that? He said it was the people. Then he pointed to the stage and it looked like a football field. I thought … I’m going to die, get me out of here!”

“Once we landed I was led to a little tent. There was an upper echelon tent and then the miscellaneous people. I was put in a tiny tent with Tim Hardin who was way more known than I was. Richie Havens was onstage singing and I knew he was terrified because I think he was in his twentieth minute of “Freedom.” I started thinking …oh my God, how can I possibly do this? I wouldn’t be able to get up in front of all those people and not a possibility. They kept coming in between acts and saying …you’re next… you’re next! I developed this deep bronchial nervous cough and it just sounded like the demons were coming out of me. Joan Baez who was in the upper echelon tent heard me coughing and sent me tea. I thought Joan Baez … oh my God! She was my idol. Her sending me the tea was my Woodstock moment.”

“Hours and hours later … it started to rain and the other side was just beginning to light up with candles that Hog Farm was passing out. Right before I went on the announcer made kind of an inspirational message about the lighting of the candles and keeping the light alive. I really thought when it started to rain everybody was going to pack up and go home. I thought it was going to be my reprieve and I was going to be saved. Every ounce of me was praying that I didn’t have to do this. I thought … if there is a God, prove it, I have to get out of here! (All laughing) I was one girl with a guitar and an unknown one at that, and I’m going to be thrown on the stage! Right after Ravi Shankar and the announcement, I was called.”

"Woodstock was a life changing experience. I really sensed a connectedness with the people. I felt a positive wave and human power throwing into me and can never forget that. The people who will ever experience that … and I think Richie was one and really felt that too. There were so few that didn’t come away from Woodstock with a very cynical attitude. I didn’t have that. It wasn’t a career move for me, I was just one person and didn’t have a point of reference and didn’t have a manager out there saying you got to do this or that. I was just me and I went out onstage and didn’t even know what I was going to do. I had no recollection of what I did out there. I did one song that I had never sung in front of people in my whole life … it was called “Birthday of the Sun.” I never sing it anymore; I sung it at Woodstock because it was raining and I just wrote it. (Laughing) I didn’t have it out on a record; I wasn’t promoting anything and didn’t have any other agenda except that I had to get through to these people, whatever it is, it was my defining moment. I didn’t know if they were going to stone me or throw tomatoes. Or this might be it, my last moment on this earth. And I came away from that with this glow of warm, beautiful, human energy and I was probably the only straight person at Woodstock.”

“I had an out of body experience when I walked out on that stage. I left my body. I didn’t hear a thing; I wasn’t there and was hovering above my body and at some moment felt one with myself again. It was the extraordinary circumstance that I was put in."

Melanie will be performing on November 22nd at 8:00 p.m. at the Carrollwood Cultural Center (Main Theatre) in Tampa, Florida. For tickets visit here or call 813-269-1310.

Melanie Safka official website at www.melaniesafka.com
Melanie Safka on Facebook
Melanie Safka on Twitter
Melanie Safka on Myspace

Purchase Melanie’s latest release Ever Since You Never Heard of Me at amazon.com

Very special thanks to Beau Schekeryk and Kim Reilly of SeaSide Music Management

Contact Classic Rock Music Journalist Ray Shasho at rockraymond.shasho@gmail.com

Coming up NEXT… 'Melanie' Safka exclusive: “My mother drove me to Woodstock” (Part 2)

Purchase Ray’s very special memoir called ‘Check the Gs’ -The True Story of an Eclectic American Family and Their Wacky Family Business … You’ll LIVE IT! Also available for download on NOOK or KINDLE edition for JUST .99 CENTS at amazon.com or barnesandnoble.com - Please support Ray so he can continue to bring you quality classic rock music reporting. 
“Check the Gs is just a really cool story ... and it’s real. I’d like to see the kid on the front cover telling his story in a motion picture, TV sitcom or animated series. The characters in the story definitely jump out of the book and come to life. Very funny and scary moments throughout the story and I just love the way Ray timeline’s historical events during his lifetime. Ray’s love of rock music was evident throughout the book and it generates extra enthusiasm when I read his on-line classic rock music column on examiner.com. It’s a wonderful read for everyone!” -stillerb47@gmail.com

© Copyright rayshasho.com. All Rights Reserved
 



Sunday, August 4, 2013

Ted Nugent Interview: Our First American Rock and Roll President?


 

By Ray Shasho

Guitar slinger, singer and songwriter Ted Nugent is best known in rock and roll folklore as the ‘Motor City Madman’ and over the decades has magnanimously personified the title and reputation. Nugent has managed to circularize himself to the world in one way or another … from his rock and roll virtuosity, to his hunting craftsmanship, to his extreme patriotic views and passion. Ted says he’s even considering a presidential bid. Politically correctness is definitely not a part of Ted’s vocabulary, but maybe that’s not a bad thing, I’m pretty sure our forefathers weren’t either.

Ted Nugent will be performing at the ‘House of Blues Orlando’ with Laura Wilde on August 19th at 8:30p.m. For tickets visit here or call 407-934-2583. Nugent’s current lineup has longtime lead vocalist and rhythm guitarist Derek St. Holmes, Dokken co-founder “Wild” Mick Brown on drums, and Greg Smith on bass and vocals.

TED NUGENT has sold more than 40 –million albums and has performed at more than 6,400 concerts. His illustrious music career has spanned over five decades.

Born in Detroit, Michigan, Ted’s father was an Army staff sergeant and Nugent was raised in a stringent household. A self-taught musician, Nugent began playing the guitar at six years old. His first two bands were the ‘Royal High Boys’ and the ‘Lourds.’ After an impressive performance at the Michigan State Fair, the Lourds were asked to open for the Beau Brummels and the Supremes at Cobo Hall. Later that year while still in his teenage years, he moved to Palatine, Illinois, a residential suburb of Chicago.
Later that year Nugent fronted the group The Amboy Dukes.

The Amboy Dukes: After graduating high school, Nugent returned to Detroit where he recruited new members for The Amboy Dukes. The group signed with Mainstream Records and released their self-titled debut album The Amboy Dukes (1967). The bands second effort was entitled Journey to the Center of the Mind (1968) and scored commercially with the psychedelic title track reaching #16 on Billboard’s Hot 100 singles chart.
The Amboy Dukes core lineup became … Ted Nugent (lead guitar and vocals), John Drake (vocals), Gary Hicks (guitar, vocals), Andy Solomon (organ, piano and vocals), Greg Arama (bass) and Dave Palmer (drums). Rhythm guitarist Steve Farmer wrote the lyrics to “Journey to the Center of the Mind and is credited on many other tracks and studio recordings. Keyboardist Rick Lober and bassist Bill White were replaced after the debut album. In 1969, Rusty Day replaced John Drake on vocals.

Subsequent albums by The Amboy Dukes: Migration (1969), Marriage on the Rocks/Rock Bottom (1970), Survival of the Fittest Live (1971).
Subsequent albums by Ted Nugent and The Amboy Dukes: Call of the Wild (1973), Tooth Fang & Claw (1974).

TED NUGENT SOLO: In 1975, Ted Nugent signed a solo deal with Epic Records. Nugent had separated from the Amboy Dukes to pursue a solo career and scored immediately with the release of his debut album Ted Nugent. The album spawned the hit singles “Stranglehold” and “Hey Baby.” The lineup featured Ted Nugent on lead guitar and vocals, Derek St. Holmes on lead vocals and rhythm guitar, Rob Grange on bass and Cliff Davies on drums.

Nugent transformed himself into a master showman onstage while creating the role of a caveman- rock and roll- superhero wearing a loincloth.

Nugent’s follow-up album was Free-for-All in 1976. Singer, songwriter and musician Meat loaf contributed on several tracks.
In 1977, Ted Nugent released his most successful album to date entitled Catch Scratch Fever. The double-platinum release generated the classic tracks … “Catch Scratch Fever” (#30 U.S. Billboard Hot 100 singles Hit), “Workin’Hard, Playin’ Hard” and “Out of Control.”

Ted Nugent became a rock concert phenomenon selling out arenas and stadiums.

In 1978, Ted Nugent released Double Live Gonzo! an incredible double- album featuring live performances. The LP reached triple platinum status. The album also featured original tracks “Yank Me, Crank Me” and “Gonzo” played live. Also in 1978, Nugent released the successful Weekend Warriors. It was the first album not to feature vocalist Derek St. Holmes.

The album was followed by State of Shock (1979) reaching the U.S. Top 20 and achieving gold status. Nugent’s sixth studio album Scream Dream (1980) featured the standard “Wango Tango.”

Subsequent Ted Nugent studio albums: Nugent (1982), Penetrator (1984), Little Miss Dangerous (1986), If You Can’t Lick ‘Em … Lick ‘Em (1988).

In 1989, Ted Nugent joined the group Damn Yankees with Tommy Shaw of Styx, Jack Blades of Night Ranger and Michael Cartellone (Who would eventually join Lynyrd Skynyrd). The band released two successful studio albums … Damn Yankees (1990) and Don’t Tread (1992). Their single “High Enough” reached #3 on Billboard’s Hot 100 singles chart.

Subsequent Ted Nugent studio albums: Spirit of the Wild (1995), Craveman (2002), Love Grenade (2007).

Ted Nugent has consistently remained in the limelight one way or another. Either with his outdoorsman Television show Spirit of the Wild or VH1 reality TV program Surviving Nugent, or raising controversy and being interviewed by the networks, or simply through his incredible musical talents. Nugent has a love him or hate him persona, and either way, you’ve got to admire his fortitude.

I had the rare pleasure of chatting with Ted about his upcoming show at the House of Blues in Orlando and some very hot topics…
Here’s my interview with legendary guitar hero, singer, songwriter, pro-gun, pro-freedom and pro-America advocate … (“The Nuge”) TED NUGENT.

Ted was performing in his hometown of Detroit, Michigan later that evening.
Ray Shasho: Ted, thank you for taking some time out of your busy schedule and spending it with me today.
Ted Nugent: “My pleasure Ray.”
Ray Shasho: You’ll be performing at the ‘House of Blues in Orlando’ on August 19th, what are some of the songs we can expect to hear from your setlist?
Ted Nugent: “That's always a loaded question, and only questions and guns are allowed to be loaded around me. We have so many killer songs it is always frustrating to choose a couple hours’ worth, but we do so gallantly every night anyway. Every song of mine makes a killer opener and or a killer encore. We just let ‘er rip and it always works out to everyone's total satisfaction. Afterall, what would life be like without “Gonzo,” “Just What The Dr. Ordered,” “Wango Tango,” “Turn It Up,” “Free For All,” “Stormtroopin’,” “Wang Dang Sweet Poontang,” “Live It Up,” “Queen Of The Forest,” “Fred Bear,” “Hey Baby,” “Cat Scratch Fever,” “Stranglehold,” “Great White Buffalo,” and so many more.”
Ray Shasho: One of my favorite You Tube videos is when you began incorporating “Journey to the Center of the Mind” into your setlist and also reunited with your old bandmates The Amboy Dukes. What’s the origin behind that psychedelic rock classic?
Ted Nugent:I was certainly very fortunate to be surrounded by dedicated virtuosos far ahead of their time and much better musicians than myself from the very beginning. The Amboy Dukes' superior rhythm section of Dave Palmer on drums and Greg Arama on bass guitar was a very powerful musical force to reckon with when we jammed every day and created such musical masterpieces. Though I came up with some pretty inventive guitar maneuvers and songwriting, the full credit should go to my fellow bandmates for thinking way outside the box at the time. I am pleased to know that such dedicated creativity and effort had a positive impact on music lovers and musicians alike, and am very proud to have been lucky enough to be at the right place at the right time with those guys. God knows I truly love that music.”
Ray Shasho: “Stranglehold” has been featured in numerous motion pictures … the song is spellbinding. Talk about writing and recording that classic track? What came first the music or the lyrics?
Ted Nugent: “I am a very, very fortunate and blessed guitar player to always be surrounded by musical monsters, so my life has been a nonstop jam session. I crave the musical adventure of sonic creativity and am powerfully inspired everytime I grab a guitar. “Stranglehold” is a perfect example of a spontaneous groove and guitar pattern that had a life of its own from the very 1st note. A musical stream of conscience if you will, or even if you won't. All my songs instinctively erupted from my guitar and lyrical visions followed the spirit of the music, bot image wise and rhythmical cadence wise. It remains one of life's greatest joys to this day.”
Ray Shasho: Do you have any good road stories from back in the late 60’s or 70’s?
Ted Nugent: Ray, being clean and sober my entire 65 years provides me the joy/curse of remembering everything! My happy memory cup runneth over I assure you. So many, so wonderful, so insane fun!! I am writing a book "Stranglehold" now that will be unleashed in 2015 full of these incredible experiences. Hang on tight.”
Ray Shasho: I’ve chatted with so many great Michiganian music artists like Peter Rivera, Mark Farner and Suzi Quatro to name just a few and I personally feel that the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame should have been located in Detroit. Michigan has done more for music than any other state in America. I live in the Bradenton/Sarasota area which has sort of become a safe haven for thousands of Michiganites. What happened to that once great and very important city called Detroit?
Ted Nugent: Detroit, like much of America, must admit to the economic lie that non-productivity, the curse of Americans who have given up looking for work, and the official list of jobs Americans are not willing to do is social and spiritual suicide. Until America wakes up to that, or real leaders demand policy based on that, Detroit and America will continue their self-imposed kamikaze tailspin into hell. It's so simple, it's stupid, but not as stupid as the soulless people who are responsible for it. As far as Motor City music power goes, we are still the best of the best … Kid Rock, Eminem, Jack White and more. That black, soulful spirit lives on.”
Ray Shasho: Ted, what happened to the music industry? It’s almost like someone pulled the plug on all the legendary rock artists and are prohibiting them from showcasing anything new across mainstream airwaves.
Ted Nugent:Nobody is going to invest a fortune into good orchard land, all the farming equipment necessary, the fertilizer, the seedlings, the nonstop Herculean work effort needed to grow apples, then bring them to the fruit stand for people to take home for free. Got that? Ripoff technology has murdered the creative spirit.”
Ray Shasho: Florida residents love their firearms … I’ve heard hundreds of people wait early in the morning each day at Walmart parking lots for the trucks to arrive so they can buy their ammo. Is there an ammo shortage and why?
Ted Nugent:There is a dramatic shortage of ammunition available to ‘We the People’ while the most corrupt, criminal power abusing government runs amok hoarding nearly every bullet being produced. This is just another deceptive maneuver by a phony president doing everything he can to further infringe on our sacred 2nd Amendment rights, anybody who doesn't know this is on crack from Mars.”
Ray Shasho: Are you serious about running for President? The first Rock and Roll President … I think it’s about time. What would your political agenda be like during your campaign?
Ted Nugent: “I so wreak of logic and commonsense that it is obviously very refreshing in this world of otherwise soulless politically correct denial and dishonesty. God knows America would be the greatest again if she operated like the Nugent family. No takers, no whiners, no gangsters, no dopers, no drunks, no criminals, no bloodsuckers, no excuse makers, no crybabies, no punks, no Obama supporters. My entire team are dedicated to be the absolute best that we can be and as productive as humanly possible. Wouldn't that be great if all of America were like that.”
Ray Shasho: Ted, describe the infamous meeting between you and the Secret Service.
Ted Nugent: “The professionals of the Secret Service were compelled to investigate the media and government lies about what I said and did so with total professionalism, courtesy and respect. We had a nice conversation, I told them exactly what I said and they took notes, thanked me and shook my hand. I am under constant scrutiny by crazy, corrupt, power abusing politicians and media goons for the simple fact that I expose cockroaches on a daily basis in my media interviews, speaking engagements and writings. I am doing God's work so the devil and his gang can't stand me. The heroes of the secret service confirmed what they already knew to be true, that I am a wonderful human being doing everything right and legal. They really should be investigating their boss, and they know it.”
Ray Shasho: Ted, here’s a question that I ask everyone that I interview … If you had a “Field of Dreams” wish, like the movie, to play or collaborate with anyone from the past or present, who would that be?
Ted Nugent: “Believe me, I have lived The Dream to the maxx!! I played bass guitar for Bo Diddly and Chuck Berry, have jammed with and collaborated with the greatest musicians that ever lived, and continue to do so to this very day. Look around me; that is the ultimate “Field of Dreams.””
Ray Shasho: Anything special you’d like to promote?
Ted Nugent: “Our Ted Nugent Kamp for Kids children's charity is in its 25th year, and we are involved in pretty much every military charity out there to give thanks to the incredible hero warriors of the US Military and their families. Everyone who loves and cares about the real American Dream should join us at tednugent.com TalkBack for the ultimate team and plan to take back America. Freedom is not free, and we all have a lot of work ahead of us. And I perform the ultimate soundtrack to get the job done every day. We're not having any fun at all.”
Ray Shasho: Ted thank you so much for taking time to answer these questions, but more importantly for all the incredible music that you’ve given us and continue to bring. We’ll see you at the ‘House of Blues Orlando’ on August 19th.
Ted Nugent: “Thanks Ray.”

Ted Nugent will be performing at the House of Blues Orlando with Laura Wilde on August 19th at 8:30p.m. For tickets visit http://www.houseofblues.com/venues/clubvenues/orlando/ or call 407-934-2583.

Ted Nugent official website www.tednugent.com
Ted Nugent on Facebook
Ted Nugent on Twitter
Ted Nugent on Myspace
Ted Nugent on tour

Very special thanks to Linda Peterson

Coming up NEXT … Recent interviews with Melanie and Roy Rogers

Contact classic rock music journalist Ray Shasho at rockraymond.shasho@gmail.com

Purchase Ray’s very special memoir called ‘Check the Gs’ -The True Story of an Eclectic American Family and Their Wacky Family Business … You’ll LIVE IT! Also available for download on NOOK or KINDLE edition for JUST .99 CENTS at amazon.com or barnesandnoble.com - Please support Ray so he can continue to bring you quality classic rock music reporting. 
~~Pacific Book Review says 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.

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