Episode 1468 - Bernie Taupin

Episode 1468 • Released September 7, 2023 • Speakers detected

Episode 1468 artwork
00:00:00Marc:all right let's do this how are you what the fuckers what the fuck buddies what the fuck nicks what the fuck tuckians there you go what the fuck tuckians that's i guess that's the kentucky what the fuckers some guy tweeted at me
00:00:27Marc:I still look at it occasionally.
00:00:29Marc:I hadn't said that in five years, so this is a big day.
00:00:32Marc:What the fuck, Tuckians?
00:00:34Marc:Bernie Taupin.
00:00:36Marc:Bernie fucking Taupin.
00:00:39Marc:Right?
00:00:40Marc:He's the guy who wrote almost all the Elton John songs.
00:00:45Marc:He's the songwriting partner of Elton John.
00:00:48Marc:He's been writing lyrics, almost all the lyrics, the majority of Elton John's lyrics, going back to the 60s.
00:00:57Marc:That's crazy.
00:00:59Marc:That's almost like interviewing a Beatle.
00:01:01Marc:So many hits.
00:01:03Marc:So many hits.
00:01:05Marc:He's got a new memoir coming out.
00:01:07Marc:It's called Scattershot, Life, Music, Elton, and Me.
00:01:11Marc:And it's pretty great.
00:01:12Marc:I popped around in it.
00:01:14Marc:I didn't read it all the way through.
00:01:15Marc:A lot of times I don't because I don't want to lead them.
00:01:18Marc:But it's kind of the title, and he'll tell you himself, is this sort of like he was... It's not a timeline arc, but he writes about Harry Nilsson, about John Lennon, about Elton, of course.
00:01:31Marc:But he writes about the scene.
00:01:32Marc:He writes about meeting Graham Greene.
00:01:34Marc:I mean, it's just sort of...
00:01:35Marc:And he writes the fuck out of it.
00:01:37Marc:He writes a beautifully written thing, this thing.
00:01:42Marc:And it's just a lot of life.
00:01:44Marc:He was a cowboy.
00:01:46Marc:Serious.
00:01:47Marc:I didn't know that.
00:01:48Marc:Maybe I should have.
00:01:50Marc:I imagine there's some deep cut rabbit hole Elton John fans who are like, how'd you not know that?
00:01:58Marc:That Bernie Taupin was a competitive cowboy.
00:02:02Marc:How did I not know that?
00:02:05Marc:Red Dirt Cowboy, Captain Fantastic, and The.
00:02:10Marc:Yup, there you have it.
00:02:13Marc:But it was great.
00:02:14Marc:It was a fun conversation.
00:02:16Marc:So listen, I'm doing five shows at Helium in St.
00:02:20Marc:Louis next week, September 14th through 16th.
00:02:23Marc:Then I'll be at Wise Guys in Las Vegas on September 22nd and 23rd for four shows.
00:02:29Marc:bellingham washington i'll be at the mount baker theater for one show on saturday october 14th as part of the bellingham exit festival and all my october shows in portland oregon at helium are sold out there's a denver show coming up that just went on sale yeah denver november 17th and 18th at the comedy works south which i've never been to i'm a comedy works downtown guy
00:02:53Marc:But it was someone's big idea to get me out to the suburbs.
00:02:55Marc:Not mine.
00:02:56Marc:We'll see how it goes.
00:02:58Marc:I usually do well in Denver.
00:03:00Marc:But that should be up.
00:03:02Marc:That should be up for you Denver people.
00:03:04Marc:More dates forthcoming.
00:03:06Marc:The November 11th date.
00:03:11Marc:In Albuquerque.
00:03:13Marc:That should be going up on sale soon.
00:03:16Marc:Be at the chemo.
00:03:17Marc:But I don't think it's up there yet.
00:03:18Marc:But we'll see.
00:03:20Marc:Not many people go to Albuquerque.
00:03:22Marc:For some reason, it's not a great market for some reason.
00:03:24Marc:But I grew up there.
00:03:25Marc:And I've been looking at that chemo theater since I was a kid.
00:03:29Marc:The front of the place is kind of beautiful.
00:03:32Marc:It's like an old kind of New Mexico style deco structure.
00:03:37Marc:And I've always... I remember years ago...
00:03:41Marc:There was a comedy competition in New Mexico.
00:03:44Marc:I don't know if it was regional.
00:03:45Marc:I don't know if Colorado was involved.
00:03:47Marc:But I remember the winner got to perform at the chemo.
00:03:51Marc:And I was not him.
00:03:53Marc:But anyway, I will be playing there.
00:03:55Marc:And it'll be a homecoming.
00:03:57Marc:And it'll be something.
00:03:58Marc:Yes.
00:04:00Marc:So I think I told you guys about...
00:04:04Marc:Yeah, I definitely told you that.
00:04:05Marc:I've been watching these Don Rickles clips, and they've been going around.
00:04:09Marc:I talked to Bill Hader about it, and he's been texting me Rickles stuff and Jonathan Winter stuff.
00:04:17Marc:It was just sort of in the ether.
00:04:20Marc:It's always there on YouTube, but there was a while there I was finding great comfort in watching Rickles seethe in Dangerfield, but it turns out
00:04:31Marc:and I'm just finding out about this, that the Don Rickles channel on YouTube has been releasing never-before-seen specials.
00:04:39Marc:And today, they just released Don Rickles Live in Toronto.
00:04:43Marc:Now, look, you can have your opinion about Don Rickles and whatever you want, but if you like Don Rickles, you can go check it out for free on YouTube at the Don Rickles channel.
00:04:54Marc:For me, I always see a way to love that guy.
00:04:59Marc:So...
00:05:01Marc:Fridge guy update.
00:05:03Marc:The Ukrainian fridge guy, Alex is what they call him.
00:05:09Marc:As some of you who have been following, you know, he came with his son and it was quite a breakdown.
00:05:14Marc:The freezer door hinge broke off, sending ball bearings all over the place.
00:05:22Marc:I didn't have the proper valve downstairs.
00:05:23Marc:I was wrong about it.
00:05:25Marc:And this has been going on for months, for months with this guy to the point where if he says he's going to come by and fix something, I just take it with a grain of salt.
00:05:37Marc:So as some of you know, at last the last visit, because the hinge broke, my freezer drawer door has been propped shut with one of the freezer freezer shelves from the inside.
00:05:49Marc:And that's been going on for a week or so, even though he got the hinge last week.
00:05:52Marc:So it all began again.
00:05:54Marc:When are you coming to like like one of the last texts I sent?
00:05:58Marc:Look, I get it, man.
00:05:59Marc:I'll get a new fridge.
00:06:01Marc:Fuck it.
00:06:02Marc:Just come fix the hinge.
00:06:03Marc:So I don't have this, this, you know, this propped up door.
00:06:06Marc:I can't use the freezer.
00:06:08Marc:Just, you know, just let's just forget about it.
00:06:10Marc:Let's call it a day.
00:06:11Marc:Let's admit defeat and move on.
00:06:15Marc:And he's like, no, I'll come tomorrow.
00:06:17Marc:And then that day, I didn't know it was a holiday.
00:06:19Marc:I'll come tomorrow.
00:06:21Marc:And I'm like, all right.
00:06:23Marc:When?
00:06:23Marc:He's like 12 and 3.
00:06:25Marc:That was yesterday.
00:06:25Marc:So I'm figuring like, well, that's not going to happen.
00:06:29Marc:So I went out to lunch.
00:06:31Marc:And right when I got out to lunch at 12.04, he's calling me.
00:06:35Marc:He's like, I'm in front of your house.
00:06:38Marc:And I'm like, oh, fuck.
00:06:39Marc:Make the food to go.
00:06:42Marc:Let's go.
00:06:42Marc:We've got to go back.
00:06:45Marc:Ran back to the house.
00:06:48Marc:And he was there with his son again.
00:06:50Marc:So I expected fireworks.
00:06:53Marc:I expected, you know, just insanity.
00:06:54Marc:He's like, no, today is it.
00:06:56Marc:We fix it today.
00:06:57Marc:And they pulled the freezer out.
00:06:59Marc:They're chipping ice off.
00:07:01Marc:They replaced the hinge.
00:07:03Marc:And then he's, you know, he says to me, he says, you
00:07:08Marc:Okay, so he's holding up a thing that's got two tubes on it with some other valve-y or thing that goes into something else.
00:07:15Marc:He's like, I can't, you know, put this in because somebody, I don't know if manufacturer or installation, I don't know, they twist-tied it in the back, so I can't get at it.
00:07:32Marc:And I'm like, what do you want to do?
00:07:34Marc:Can you just move the fridge out?
00:07:36Marc:He's like, ah, let me think about it.
00:07:39Marc:I'm like, okay, don't yell at me.
00:07:41Marc:I'm like, so he thinks about it.
00:07:44Marc:He's like, I come back.
00:07:45Marc:I'm like, of course.
00:07:46Marc:I mean, why break up this thing we got going?
00:07:49Marc:There's no reason to break it up.
00:07:52Marc:Let's just keep doing this for as long as you want.
00:07:55Marc:I'm on board.
00:07:56Marc:But then somebody put it in my head.
00:07:58Marc:That there's a racket that some people run with where they come to fix the fish and then they slowly keep breaking it until you keep getting more and more parts.
00:08:06Marc:But this is not the case.
00:08:09Marc:This guy is a veteran fridge madman repair guy.
00:08:15Marc:You know, this is his, you know, Leviathan, man.
00:08:18Marc:This my fridge is his fucking Moby Dick.
00:08:21Marc:And he's going to fix it.
00:08:24Marc:Because this has been going on for months, I'm telling you.
00:08:27Marc:And yesterday I said, do you want money?
00:08:30Marc:He's like, no.
00:08:31Marc:No money.
00:08:32Marc:Until we fix.
00:08:34Marc:Then I'm like, how much is it going to cost then?
00:08:35Marc:As much as a new refrigerator?
00:08:36Marc:He goes, nope.
00:08:38Marc:Maybe 70%.
00:08:39Marc:And I was like, holy shit.
00:08:41Marc:Well, that's like this kind of fridge.
00:08:43Marc:It's like $10,000.
00:08:44Marc:But I think he was kidding.
00:08:44Marc:Because I pressed him on.
00:08:46Marc:And I said, tell me the truth.
00:08:47Marc:How much is this all going to cost eventually?
00:08:49Marc:He's like...
00:08:49Marc:Well, maybe 400.
00:08:50Marc:And I'm like, fine.
00:08:52Marc:All right.
00:08:53Marc:Well, we're in.
00:08:54Marc:And I look forward to seeing you again on your schedule, of course.
00:08:57Marc:So I'll just text you for a while until I get aggravated.
00:09:01Marc:And then I'll tell you I'm going to buy a new fridge.
00:09:04Marc:And then you'll come within three to four days after that.
00:09:09Marc:So, okay.
00:09:11Marc:Day before yesterday.
00:09:14Marc:I talked to Naomi Wolf.
00:09:16Marc:Whoa, I just fucked it up.
00:09:19Marc:I just did her biggest nightmare.
00:09:21Marc:I just set up her entire new book.
00:09:25Marc:I talked to Naomi Klein.
00:09:27Marc:And the basis for this whole book that really turns out to be about late-stage capitalism, encroaching fascism, the nature of the...
00:09:39Marc:the tribalized narrative of the second reality, what she calls the mirror world of the right-wing infrastructure, media infrastructure.
00:09:49Marc:But it covers a lot of stuff, man.
00:09:52Marc:But the basis of it is her being confused with Naomi Wolf.
00:09:55Marc:That's what struck the chord eventually and got her into the entire portal of this amazing book she wrote, which I read thoroughly and studied and underlined.
00:10:08Marc:I've been wanting to meet Naomi Klein
00:10:11Marc:For my entire life, it seems like I never met her at Air America.
00:10:14Marc:I think she was there once or twice and I just wasn't around.
00:10:17Marc:I've just been impressed and blown away by her brain and and just her output is spectacular as a liberal guy.
00:10:32Marc:She's full leftist.
00:10:35Marc:And, you know, I read that book and I feel a little guilty and a little like I'm not doing my part.
00:10:39Marc:But nonetheless, we got to really kind of have a talk jam here for about an hour.
00:10:45Marc:And it was just a highlight of my life.
00:10:47Marc:So that's going to happen.
00:10:49Marc:You'll hear that on Monday.
00:10:51Marc:Naomi Klein.
00:10:53Marc:Her new book is called Doppelganger, a trip into the mirror world.
00:10:58Marc:I don't know if you've read No Logo or Shock Doctrine or any of our other stuff, but massive thinker.
00:11:07Marc:Just great.
00:11:09Marc:I was so happy it went well.
00:11:11Marc:Now, on another note, I don't know if I'm losing my mind or this is natural.
00:11:18Marc:So, okay, here's what happens.
00:11:23Marc:Badlands, the Terrence Malick film, starring Martin Sheen and Sissy Spacek.
00:11:30Marc:This is the big Terrence Malick movie.
00:11:32Marc:I think it's probably the first one that really established him as sort of an auteur and a genius, if you wanted to throw that word around.
00:11:41Marc:This is sort of his early masterpiece about these two.
00:11:45Marc:He turns out to be a killer.
00:11:47Marc:I think it's based on that guy.
00:11:49Marc:I think his name's Starkweather.
00:11:51Marc:And she's this teenage girl who he kind of kills her dad and drags her along for the ride.
00:11:58Marc:It's a great movie.
00:12:01Marc:It's a challenging movie emotionally, but it's, I think, one of the great anti-hero movies of the 70s because despite the psychopathy of
00:12:13Marc:of of martin sheen's character and the nature of their relationship you still kind of like the guy it's fucked up but anyway so i tell kit let's go you know i've seen it but it's been a while and i said it's about a killer it's a guy who kills people for no reason out on the road out on the great plains and sissy's basic martin sheen warren oates and
00:12:38Marc:She goes, look, as long as they don't kill animals, I'm fine.
00:12:40Marc:I'm like, they don't kill animals.
00:12:42Marc:It's just people.
00:12:43Marc:And she's like, okay, I can handle that.
00:12:46Marc:I just don't want to see any animals being killed.
00:12:49Marc:And literally within the first 10 to 15 minutes of the film, Warren Oates shoots a dog for no reason.
00:12:57Marc:And Kit, loudly, because she's Chicago, she goes, I can't believe you.
00:13:03Marc:I can't believe you.
00:13:05Marc:I mean, what the fuck?
00:13:07Marc:And I'm like, I didn't remember.
00:13:09Marc:She's like, I'm concerned that we're going to have to leave the theater.
00:13:13Marc:She's like loudly yelling at me because they killed the dog.
00:13:18Marc:And I'm like, it didn't even look that real.
00:13:20Marc:It didn't even look that real.
00:13:22Marc:You know it's not real.
00:13:23Marc:She's like, I know.
00:13:25Marc:And there was a dead cow in it earlier because he worked.
00:13:27Marc:So I could tell she's mad sitting next to me.
00:13:33Marc:And I'm like, oh, my God.
00:13:34Marc:I fucked this up.
00:13:36Marc:She was mad.
00:13:37Marc:And then we sat there for a while.
00:13:38Marc:And eventually I could feel her soften up a bit.
00:13:42Marc:And then I realized after about another 20 minutes, I leaned in and said, I don't remember this movie at all.
00:13:51Marc:And she laughed.
00:13:53Marc:And then about 10 more minutes went by and I said, I don't think I've ever seen this movie.
00:14:02Marc:I don't know.
00:14:03Marc:I kind of remember the beginning.
00:14:05Marc:I guess it's possible I watched a bit of it.
00:14:09Marc:You know, but it was just, I watched Collateral the other night, the Michael Mann movie.
00:14:12Marc:And I'm pretty sure I saw that when it came out.
00:14:15Marc:I don't know when it came out.
00:14:16Marc:It's the one with Jamie Foxx and Tom Cruise, where Jamie Foxx plays the cab driver that's been forced into the situation of driving around this assassin by Tom Cruise.
00:14:27Marc:But I don't remember the ending at all.
00:14:30Marc:But I feel like I saw the movie.
00:14:32Marc:Same with Dog Day Afternoon.
00:14:33Marc:Like, did I see that movie?
00:14:36Marc:Or am I losing my mind?
00:14:38Marc:Is this a natural thing that some movies stick in your brain and some don't?
00:14:43Marc:Did I see Collateral?
00:14:45Marc:Did I not watch all of Badlands?
00:14:48Marc:Should I be concerned?
00:14:51Marc:I don't know.
00:14:52Marc:I certainly remember them now.
00:14:55Marc:Collateral is a pretty good later Michael Mann movie.
00:15:00Marc:The conceit of it is kind of crazy, but pretty good movie.
00:15:05Marc:All right.
00:15:06Marc:So, Bernie Taupin...
00:15:09Marc:This is the guy.
00:15:11Guest:Daniel is leaving tonight on a plane.
00:15:16Guest:Saturday night's all right for fighting.
00:15:18Guest:Get a little action in here.
00:15:20Guest:Goodbye, Yellow Brick Road.
00:15:24Guest:Get back, honky cat.
00:15:26Guest:Did I already do that one?
00:15:37Guest:Love lies bleeding in my, and you live your life like a candle in the wind.
00:15:46Marc:That's all Bernie, man, and Elton, but Bernie wrote the songs.
00:15:50Marc:You want me to do more?
00:15:52Marc:Maybe later.
00:15:53Marc:So the memoir is called Scattershot, Life, Music, Elton, and Me.
00:15:58Marc:It comes out next Tuesday, September 12th.
00:16:01Marc:You can pre-order it now.
00:16:03Marc:And this is me and Bernie Taupin.
00:16:06Marc:Talkin' Toppin'.
00:16:10Marc:I was texting with my producer this morning.
00:16:20Marc:I'm like, so is Bernie a sir?
00:16:22Marc:Is he a sir?
00:16:24Guest:I'm not a sir.
00:16:25Guest:I'm actually a CBE.
00:16:27Guest:Yeah.
00:16:28Guest:That was just last year.
00:16:30Guest:Yeah.
00:16:31Guest:What's the difference?
00:16:32Marc:Is Elton a sir?
00:16:33Guest:Yeah, Elton's a sir.
00:16:36Guest:Now let me make sure I get this right.
00:16:38Guest:It's MBE is the lowest one.
00:16:43Guest:OBE, CBE, sir, knighthood.
00:16:47Guest:Knighthood.
00:16:47Guest:Yeah.
00:16:48Guest:What the hell do you got to do to get that?
00:16:51Guest:She got me.
00:16:51Guest:I don't know why they gave it to me.
00:16:53Guest:I mean, I don't even live there.
00:16:54Guest:I haven't lived there for most of my life.
00:16:57Guest:Well, I mean, but a CBE, but a knighthood, that's two more up.
00:17:00Guest:No, no, one more up.
00:17:02Guest:One more up.
00:17:02Guest:Yeah, no, sir is the same as a knighthood.
00:17:05Guest:A knighthood is a sir.
00:17:07Guest:Right.
00:17:07Guest:But like, so why does Kingsley get that and not you?
00:17:11Guest:You know what?
00:17:12Guest:I don't really give a shit.
00:17:14Guest:No, of course.
00:17:15Guest:But, you know, it's funny.
00:17:17Guest:I never cared about stuff like that.
00:17:20Guest:In actuality, it's kind of nice.
00:17:23Guest:It's kind of a nice recognition, you know.
00:17:26Guest:And I didn't have to do the whole rigmarole of doing anything in England.
00:17:32Marc:There was no ceremony?
00:17:33Guest:Well, there was, but we did it in L.A., which was much more fun for me because it's like doing it at home.
00:17:38Guest:Right, of course.
00:17:40Guest:So it worked out great because all my friends came, and it was just a really nice afternoon.
00:17:46Guest:Did they send somebody out to the palace?
00:17:48Guest:No, it was done by the British consulate.
00:17:52Guest:Oh, okay.
00:17:52Guest:Yeah, it actually ended up being kind of fun, you know, and the medals.
00:17:56Guest:Yeah, sure.
00:17:56Guest:Kind of groovy.
00:17:57Guest:And you got it in a little case?
00:17:59Guest:Yeah, it's in a little case.
00:18:00Marc:Yeah, I mean, that means something.
00:18:01Marc:I know it's like, it's very odd to me that Mick got one and Keith didn't.
00:18:06Marc:And that's got to be, not that Keith would give a shit, but I bet so.
00:18:09Guest:Yeah, well, Keith wouldn't have accepted it anyway, you know.
00:18:14Guest:Yeah.
00:18:14Guest:It was apparently upset that Mick accepted it, which I don't see why, you know.
00:18:19Guest:I don't know.
00:18:20Guest:It's, again, it's all just periphery kind of nonsense.
00:18:25Marc:But it's sort of interesting, though, how in those relationships that have gone on for decades between guys like, you know, you and Elton have yours, but Mick and Keith have theirs.
00:18:35Marc:Right.
00:18:35Marc:But there's still this kind of like, you know, you suck up.
00:18:39Marc:Why would you?
00:18:40Marc:You know what I mean?
00:18:41Guest:Yeah.
00:18:41Guest:Yeah, well, they've just made up of different molecules, you know.
00:18:46Guest:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:18:48Guest:It's kind of astounding.
00:18:49Guest:It's something that you would expect.
00:18:50Guest:Yeah, absolutely.
00:18:52Guest:You know, Mick subscribes to all that.
00:18:54Guest:He likes that.
00:18:55Guest:He likes playing the sort of country gentleman.
00:18:57Guest:Yeah, yeah.
00:19:01Marc:A few years ago, I talked to Alice Cooper, and for some reason, you know, he told me that you guys were really good friends.
00:19:07Marc:And in that moment, I couldn't put it together.
00:19:10Marc:You know, how that would happen, you know, because I just saw... Why is that?
00:19:13Marc:Because at the time, like, you know, Alice, I always associated with a certain type of music, but when you really break down his music, the ballads are really the greatest songs.
00:19:23Guest:Yeah, but I don't think it's about the music with Alice.
00:19:26Guest:It's the man.
00:19:27Guest:Yeah.
00:19:27Guest:You know, and...
00:19:29Guest:I think everybody to this point today knows that Alice is just an all-around good guy who plays golf, is a good Christian boy.
00:19:41Guest:As he always puts it himself, he's playing a character.
00:19:46Guest:Sure.
00:19:48Guest:And he and I are like two peas in a pod.
00:19:51Guest:We get on like a house on fire.
00:19:53Guest:We always have.
00:19:54Guest:We were almost like dorm mates.
00:19:57Marc:Really?
00:19:57Marc:Oh, yeah.
00:19:57Guest:When was that?
00:19:58Guest:Well, I mean, late 70s.
00:20:01Guest:Okay.
00:20:02Marc:After the, what, he had put out like two records or one?
00:20:04Guest:Oh, no, no.
00:20:05Guest:Well, we actually first met, I met him with Elton probably in 1970, 71.
00:20:14Guest:Oh, yeah.
00:20:15Guest:When he was still part of the band.
00:20:17Guest:Right.
00:20:18Guest:So, and we ended up doing an FM radio show together, like a morning show somewhere in the Midwest.
00:20:26Guest:Right.
00:20:26Guest:And we were both on it together.
00:20:28Guest:And obviously back then, you know, our perception of him was completely different.
00:20:34Guest:And we did think, oh man, this guy's going to be a complete weirdo.
00:20:39Guest:And he was there with, I think, was it Neil was the drummer?
00:20:43Guest:of uh alice's band yeah i think i think that was his name neil big tall guy yeah and like about six five you know so that was kind of a bit daunting but um and he was drinking then too oh yeah yeah no i mean and that was early on so uh yeah he was there beer can in hand yeah and um
00:21:03Guest:But we just got on then, but we didn't really hook up until much later in L.A., and we just frequented the same places.
00:21:13Guest:Which places were those?
00:21:14Guest:All the normal sort of places.
00:21:17Marc:70s?
00:21:18Guest:Yeah, 70s, you know, like the Rainbow, the Roxy, the Whiskey, and what have you.
00:21:24Guest:And, yeah, we just kind of gravitated into the same orbit and really got on.
00:21:30Guest:And we would just hang out at each other's house like every day all summer, you know, just drink beer and watch TV.
00:21:38Guest:And, yeah, it was and play, you know, play pool.
00:21:40Guest:Yeah.
00:21:41Guest:And we just hung out.
00:21:42Guest:We'd go out at night, you know, and that was the days of the Hollywood vampires.
00:21:47Guest:Sure.
00:21:47Guest:You know.
00:21:47Guest:Yeah.
00:21:48Guest:Members would come and go, and then they eventually went completely.
00:21:53Guest:Oh, people.
00:21:53Guest:You know, on and off, like Keith Moon.
00:21:56Guest:Yeah.
00:21:57Guest:Ringo.
00:21:58Guest:Yeah.
00:21:58Guest:John Lennon on occasion.
00:22:00Guest:Yeah.
00:22:02Guest:Mickey Dolenz.
00:22:03Guest:Yeah.
00:22:04Guest:Who else?
00:22:05Guest:Oh, Harry Nilsson.
00:22:06Guest:Ah, Harry.
00:22:06Guest:You know, just all the usual crew.
00:22:09Guest:Yeah.
00:22:10Guest:As I say...
00:22:11Guest:Many of them went on to different pastures, and I mean that.
00:22:16Guest:Sure.
00:22:17Guest:Eternal pastures.
00:22:18Guest:Yeah.
00:22:20Guest:But, yeah, I think— But you and Alice remain?
00:22:23Guest:I think Alice and I remain great friends.
00:22:27Guest:I just saw him a few months ago at his birthday party.
00:22:31Guest:He's out on the road.
00:22:33Guest:But he's always out on the road.
00:22:36Guest:And he's like Elton.
00:22:37Guest:He doesn't have a phone.
00:22:38Guest:Oh, really?
00:22:39Guest:So if I need to get a hold of him, I just text his wife.
00:22:43Guest:And she'll give him the phone, and we'll get back on it with each other.
00:22:48Guest:But, yeah, we've remained great friends.
00:22:50Guest:Do you golf?
00:22:51Guest:No, good Lord, no.
00:22:53Guest:He tried to get me into it once, and the only bit I liked was driving the car.
00:22:57Guest:Sure.
00:22:58Guest:That was fun, and getting out in the open air.
00:23:00Guest:But...
00:23:01Guest:No, golf is not my thing.
00:23:03Guest:I mean, you know, I'm a complete sports nut.
00:23:09Guest:Yeah.
00:23:10Guest:Soccer?
00:23:10Guest:No, no.
00:23:12Guest:Sorry, I'm making assumptions.
00:23:13Guest:Football and baseball.
00:23:14Guest:Yeah, yeah.
00:23:14Guest:You have to understand, you know, I've lived here since 1970, you know.
00:23:19Guest:Is it 1970?
00:23:19Guest:Yeah, well, I basically stayed here from the moment I got here because everything I wanted to achieve in life was in the U.S.
00:23:29Guest:So everything I did before that was a kind of push to get here ultimately.
00:23:35Marc:Well, it's interesting because, like, you know, in the book you write very eloquently –
00:23:39Marc:Like this is like a real book, you know, you didn't have someone come in and listen to you tell stories.
00:23:44Marc:Right.
00:23:45Marc:You wrote the hell out of this.
00:23:46Marc:Well, I appreciate that.
00:23:48Marc:And it reads in the prose.
00:23:49Marc:It's beautiful.
00:23:50Marc:But, you know, even with whatever contention you have with the English countryside, you write about it sort of half resentful and half beautiful.
00:24:00Guest:Right.
00:24:00Guest:Well, I don't—I have no—there was no contention when I was growing up in the British countryside.
00:24:06Guest:Other than you felt like your father pulled you into this farm life.
00:24:11Guest:Well, no, and I didn't mind that.
00:24:13Guest:I didn't resent it at all.
00:24:14Guest:In fact, I loved growing up in the English countryside when I was a small child.
00:24:20Guest:It's just that my interests—
00:24:22Guest:ultimately gravitated towards U.S.
00:24:26Guest:history, U.S.
00:24:27Guest:music.
00:24:28Marc:I think it's interesting because in the book, it's weird that I don't think you mention your brother in the entire chapter.
00:24:35Guest:No, I don't.
00:24:38Guest:I've got two brothers.
00:24:39Guest:Because I thought, like, oh, this guy's an only child.
00:24:41Guest:He's out there playing soldier.
00:24:44Guest:Well, you have to remember also my brother and I were scholastically miles apart.
00:24:51Guest:He went to what they call grammar school.
00:24:53Guest:I went to secondary school.
00:24:54Guest:He had his own set of friends.
00:24:56Guest:He was totally into soccer and cricket and all of those things.
00:25:00Guest:Right.
00:25:00Guest:I was completely a solitary individual.
00:25:03Guest:In fact, even in the house that I was born, which was literally, literally in the middle of nowhere.
00:25:12Guest:I mean, there was no other kids around.
00:25:14Guest:It was just me and my brother.
00:25:16Guest:Even then, we didn't play together.
00:25:18Guest:He'd be kicking a soccer ball around on the lawn.
00:25:21Guest:What's the age difference?
00:25:22Guest:Just two years.
00:25:23Guest:But I've got a younger brother who's 10 years younger than me.
00:25:27Guest:So he wasn't born in the same area or the same place.
00:25:31Guest:He was born later on.
00:25:32Guest:And he's, you know, a U.S.
00:25:35Guest:lives here.
00:25:36Guest:He's lived here for...
00:25:37Guest:probably half his life also no he's are we close uh yeah oh absolutely i just we just got back from his daughter's wedding but he lives in houston and so he's texas boy my daughter just started a and m so so she's there yeah so she's an aggie now but she's on the rodeo team there too the rodeo team yeah yeah she's a big time barrel racer really yeah
00:26:00Guest:Really good.
00:26:01Guest:Very competent.
00:26:03Guest:Definitely out-cowboyed me.
00:26:05Guest:I mean, you know, I cowboyed for 10 years.
00:26:08Guest:You did?
00:26:08Guest:Yeah.
00:26:09Guest:Hey, didn't you read my book?
00:26:10Guest:Not the whole book.
00:26:11Marc:What do you want from me, Bernie?
00:26:14Guest:You haven't got to that part.
00:26:15Marc:If I read the whole book, then I'll just lead you and say like, well, in the book.
00:26:19Marc:So it's better that the stories come up organically.
00:26:22Marc:What was the cowboy period?
00:26:24Guest:Well, that was – that started in the – well, it was something that I always wanted to gravitate towards.
00:26:31Guest:Oh, yeah.
00:26:32Guest:From when you were a kid.
00:26:33Guest:Yeah, from when I was a kid.
00:26:34Guest:But, you know, I'd lived in L.A.
00:26:37Guest:for – since 1970, I was in the L.A.
00:26:41Guest:area all the way through to the early 90s.
00:26:45Guest:And by that time, I just said, okay, you know, you've got to go out there and live your dream.
00:26:51Guest:Yeah.
00:26:51Guest:And so I did.
00:26:53Guest:So I bought a 30-acre horse ranch up in the San Ynez Valley.
00:26:56Guest:And you still have it?
00:26:57Guest:No.
00:26:59Guest:Because I don't cowboy anymore because I blew my shoulder out.
00:27:03Marc:But when you say cowboy, what are you doing?
00:27:06Guest:Well, I was raising horses and I was going out as a non-pro cutter.
00:27:10Guest:Do you know what cutting is?
00:27:12Guest:No.
00:27:12Guest:Oh, okay.
00:27:13Guest:Well, it's an event where you work with cattle, cutting cattle out and keeping them out of the herd.
00:27:20Guest:I'm sure you've seen it.
00:27:22Guest:It's pretty complex, you know, so anybody who's interested in finding out about it, just go online and look it up.
00:27:29Guest:It's like...
00:27:30Marc:equestrian ballet it's amazing what these horses do and you loved it i loved it i mean it's the biggest outside of sex it's the number one rush you could probably have it's just so interesting to me because like i don't know you and obviously everybody in the world grew up with elton john's music and i always knew when i was a kid that you know you were the guy that wrote them and there's on a couple records there's a picture of you
00:27:53Guest:Well, on all the first albums, I think from the first album all the way up to probably Blue Moves and a couple albums after that, my picture was on the album sleeves.
00:28:06Guest:And it was always like, who's that guy?
00:28:08Guest:I was kind of part of the band.
00:28:10Guest:I was part of the gang.
00:28:12Guest:You had a pretty good haircut.
00:28:14Guest:Yeah, haircuts was never my thing.
00:28:16Guest:I never liked my haircuts.
00:28:17Guest:It was kind of a long one and then short on top.
00:28:20Guest:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:28:21Guest:It kind of varied, but in the panthenon of looks, my hair was not my number one attribute, I don't think.
00:28:30Marc:Right, but it was of its time.
00:28:31Marc:Like that band in the 70s.
00:28:33Guest:That's probably why I shaved it all off now.
00:28:35Guest:You got rid of it?
00:28:35Guest:Yeah, I got it all, you know.
00:28:36Marc:Don't even worry about it.
00:28:38Marc:But I guess the point that I was getting to was that, you know, you were able to live this, you know, unique, like, you know, in the book, no one necessarily knows you other than the guy that wrote all these amazing songs.
00:28:52Marc:But, you know, but the cowboy information, I have to assume that's going to be pretty new information for a lot of people.
00:28:57Guest:I don't think so.
00:28:57Guest:I think our hardcore fan base knows me, you know, because my sort of pseudonym is the Brown Dirt Cowboy from Captain Fantastic.
00:29:06Guest:You know, so that kind of opened the floodgates and that gave me that character because that's how my character of those two sort of cartoon characters, Elton was the bright, flashy Captain Marvel character.
00:29:21Guest:And I was the sort of
00:29:22Guest:earthy, you know, cowboy character.
00:29:26Marc:So this had been, like, in your mind since you were a kid, but then, like, with Tumbleweed Connection, is that, like, that cover, was that sort of a reflection of that?
00:29:33Guest:Well, it was definitely, I was driving the bus on that one.
00:29:36Guest:You know, the thing is, it's kind of interesting if you look back on that, because the album before that, which was what we call the Black Album, the Elton John album, which was...
00:29:47Guest:a pretty sort of classically driven album you know songs like 60 years on yeah and a lot of those king must die they were very as i say had a classical bent to them and then we did a complete 360 on you know on the next album and did this full-on americana album that was
00:30:07Guest:Very much influenced by the band.
00:30:10Guest:That was your choice?
00:30:11Guest:Well, once I heard the band, I realized that I could write those kind of songs up to that point.
00:30:18Guest:I loved that kind of music, but I didn't think it was commercially viable.
00:30:25Marc:So storytelling, basically?
00:30:27Marc:Yeah.
00:30:27Guest:That's because that's what I always wanted to do.
00:30:30Guest:I'm very uncomfortable with the term songwriter for myself.
00:30:35Guest:I'm uncomfortable slightly.
00:30:37Guest:Well, I hate the word poet.
00:30:39Guest:Anyone who refers to me as a poet, it's like an anthem.
00:30:42Guest:You never refer to yourself as a poet?
00:30:43Guest:That's an anthem to me.
00:30:45Guest:No.
00:30:46Guest:I'm not a poet.
00:30:47Guest:I'm a lyricist.
00:30:48Guest:But in your youth?
00:30:49Guest:No.
00:30:50Guest:I mean, I dabbled in poetry, but that was poetry.
00:30:53Guest:It wasn't song lyrics.
00:30:55Marc:So the band, now, did you have an opportunity to spend time with those guys?
00:30:59Guest:Oh, yeah.
00:31:00Guest:Yeah, they were friends of mine.
00:31:01Guest:In fact, again, sorry to say, in the book.
00:31:04Guest:Don't be sorry to say it.
00:31:05Guest:Later on in the book, you'll read how Rick Danko and I became very, very close friends.
00:31:10Guest:He was so sweet, that guy.
00:31:11Guest:He was so great.
00:31:12Guest:He was the most kinetic person, though, I've ever met in my life.
00:31:15Guest:He could not sit still.
00:31:17Guest:Oh, really?
00:31:18Guest:Now, I mean, a lot of that had to do with drugs, obviously, and it affected all of us.
00:31:22Guest:But for him, I mean, it never...
00:31:27Guest:It was a hindrance to him.
00:31:29Guest:Yeah.
00:31:30Guest:But he was the most kinetic personality imaginable.
00:31:34Guest:But he was also incredibly talented.
00:31:37Guest:Unbelievable.
00:31:38Guest:I mean, he could pick up anything and play it.
00:31:41Guest:And his voice.
00:31:42Guest:Yeah.
00:31:43Guest:Well, that was the magic of the band, too.
00:31:46Guest:They had three incredible voices in Richard Manuel, Rick, and Levon.
00:31:51Guest:Yeah, no doubt.
00:31:53Guest:And then they had a great songwriter in Robbie.
00:31:56Guest:Yeah.
00:31:56Guest:They were probably my favorite band of all time.
00:32:00Guest:It's interesting because they changed a lot of guys.
00:32:02Guest:I mean, Clapton never recovered from the band.
00:32:04Guest:No.
00:32:05Guest:Well, both him and George Harrison wanted to join the band.
00:32:08Guest:Yeah.
00:32:09Guest:And so, yeah, they had an incredible effect on everybody.
00:32:13Guest:But I can't emphasize enough.
00:32:16Guest:how they gave me the courage to write the kind of stories and songs that I really wanted to write about.
00:32:25Guest:And it happened just like that, you know.
00:32:27Guest:So after that classically leaning Elton John album, suddenly we had this
00:32:33Guest:you know, sepia-soaked Americana album.
00:32:37Guest:And people, what's great is people accepted that at the time.
00:32:41Guest:And we followed that on with Mad Men, which was kind of a combination of both.
00:32:46Guest:And my first real vision of America, because...
00:32:51Guest:Tumbleweed was written, all written before we even came to the States.
00:32:55Guest:So it was your sort of fantasy perception.
00:32:58Guest:It was my fantasy perception of everything from the American West to the Civil War to characters that inhabited.
00:33:06Guest:And then Madman was what I perceived of America when I actually got there and drove out to America.
00:33:14Guest:you know middle america and the american west and saw all the places that i'd only dreamt about and heard about in song and fiction and movies and i wanted to see the real thing you know when i grew up roy rogers and gene autry and the long ranger didn't cut it for me right you know yeah i wanted to see the the stuff that really affected me was the stuff i heard about in songs you know the people like johnny orton
00:33:42Guest:Sure.
00:33:42Guest:Marty Robbins was singing about and then later Peckinpah and, you know, earlier maybe John Ford a little bit.
00:33:49Guest:I couldn't stand John Wayne, but I liked The Vistas, you know.
00:33:53Guest:Sure, The Searchers is a big one, huh?
00:33:56Guest:I'm not a Searchers fan.
00:33:57Guest:You're not?
00:33:58Guest:No, I never understood why anybody thought it was a good movie.
00:34:01Guest:It's incredible.
00:34:02Guest:Got an incredibly hokey sense to it, too.
00:34:06Marc:Yeah, but there's that turn in that movie where, you know, John Wayne was willing to kill the girl.
00:34:13Guest:Yeah.
00:34:14Guest:That's pretty heavy.
00:34:15Guest:You know, some of the peripheral characters were really, really boneheaded.
00:34:20Marc:Yeah, I agree.
00:34:21Marc:But I also agree with you about The Wild Bunch.
00:34:23Guest:Yeah.
00:34:24Guest:OK, well, that's number one for me.
00:34:26Guest:But I was much more affected by things like High Noon.
00:34:32Guest:Yeah.
00:34:33Guest:Red River, I thought, was pretty good.
00:34:35Guest:Yeah.
00:34:36Guest:And then the early Peckinpah things like Ride the High Country was a great movie.
00:34:41Marc:That's an unbelievable movie.
00:34:42Guest:Yeah.
00:34:42Guest:And people don't give that.
00:34:44Guest:I mean, to me, that's much better than The Searchers.
00:34:47Marc:Well, that's because he was a studio guy then, so he had to work within the confines.
00:34:51Marc:Right, right.
00:34:52Marc:And I like the Ballad of Cable Hogue.
00:34:55Marc:Oh, yeah, yeah.
00:34:55Guest:I mean, it's more laconic and a little more laid back.
00:34:59Guest:But, yeah, Peckinpah was a master at that.
00:35:01Guest:He really...
00:35:02Guest:He really knew what the West was like.
00:35:05Guest:And I mean, even Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid, even though, you know, it's the characters are a little off kilter, you know, Chris was, you know, fantastic, but sure didn't look like Billy the Kid.
00:35:18Marc:Did you see that movie Old Henry?
00:35:21Guest:Oh, yeah.
00:35:21Marc:I loved it.
00:35:22Guest:Oh, my God.
00:35:22Guest:Loved that movie.
00:35:23Marc:How great is that fucking movie?
00:35:24Marc:That movie was fabulous.
00:35:26Marc:Because, like, you know, when Tim's just on that porch with that slight angle, you don't know it until the end.
00:35:31Marc:Right.
00:35:31Marc:All the way through it.
00:35:32Marc:I loved that movie.
00:35:34Guest:Hardly anybody, I'm sure, saw it.
00:35:36Guest:I talk about it all the time.
00:35:36Guest:Oh, good for you.
00:35:37Guest:I talk about it with Tim.
00:35:38Guest:I always push it.
00:35:40Guest:Two thumbs up for me, too.
00:35:41Marc:Oh, good, good.
00:35:42Marc:So that's interesting.
00:35:43Marc:So Madman was really your interpretation, your first reflection on the country.
00:35:47Guest:Yeah.
00:35:47Guest:Yeah, exactly.
00:35:48Guest:I mean, I sort of wrote it as a travelogue, you know, my first look at the vistas and characters that inhabited the heartland.
00:36:00Marc:Now, let me ask you a question going back to the band in terms of its influence on, you know, three primary British artists that we just talked about.
00:36:07Marc:I mean...
00:36:08Marc:What was it?
00:36:09Marc:Was it it was because it seemed like an honest representation of America?
00:36:14Marc:Because like all those guys were kind of deep in blues and, you know, Everly Brothers or whatever.
00:36:18Marc:But what was it about the band that resonated so deeply?
00:36:22Marc:Well, I guess you can't speak for Clapton, but I mean, for yourself.
00:36:26Guest:Well, I think it—I mean, I think I'm speaking for probably all of those people that fell into the web of the band.
00:36:33Guest:It was completely different.
00:36:36Guest:I mean, it was earth-shatteringly groundbreaking.
00:36:41Guest:You know, I mean, up to that point—
00:36:44Guest:My humble opinion, they invented Americana.
00:36:47Guest:Yeah.
00:36:47Guest:You know, they had the balls to sing about stuff that seemed completely timeless.
00:36:54Guest:Yeah.
00:36:55Guest:And from another era.
00:36:56Guest:Yeah.
00:36:56Guest:And incorporated all of those things.
00:36:59Guest:I mean, from the moment that Big Pink started with those toms and tears of rage, you know.
00:37:05Marc:With that origin.
00:37:06Marc:Yeah.
00:37:06Guest:And you kind of go...
00:37:07Guest:Where is this coming from?
00:37:10Guest:It's just like it came out of the ether.
00:37:13Guest:It wasn't rock and roll.
00:37:17Guest:It wasn't country.
00:37:19Guest:It wasn't blues.
00:37:20Guest:It was just this—it seemed brand new, but it seemed so old at the same time.
00:37:25Marc:But all those were represented.
00:37:26Guest:They were all represented.
00:37:28Guest:But it wasn't—
00:37:30Guest:It seemed old, but it seemed brand new.
00:37:32Guest:It seemed so fresh.
00:37:34Guest:And they weren't afraid.
00:37:35Guest:It wasn't loud either.
00:37:37Guest:It was so subtle, you know.
00:37:40Guest:And I can't emphasize enough the effect it had on me.
00:37:46Guest:And it really, really was...
00:37:48Guest:the blue touch paper after sort of hearing Marty Robbins sing El Paso years before, you know, it was a continuation of my education into what could be achieved lyrically and musically.
00:38:05Marc:Yeah.
00:38:05Marc:Well, I think it's interesting that, and I've, and I noticed about the blues as well, that when you were a kid,
00:38:12Marc:and you were listening to what was available to you that represented America or watching it, that there really wasn't stuff available.
00:38:21Marc:That you had to meet a guy who was an American to turn you on to the Lewin brothers.
00:38:29Guest:Yeah, and Lefty Frizzell and Kitty Wells and people like that.
00:38:35Guest:But the thing is that that guy was sort of my...
00:38:42Guest:my contact to that kind of music but a lot of us had those kind of people that's why the people in liverpool yeah you know heard so much of that music because the military you know the merchant seaman coming back from abroad coming back from the states liverpool was a hub you know a seafaring hub right so so much music came through that that port yeah and it's like
00:39:07Guest:You think about when Mick met Keith on a platform at Dartford, and one of them had a Robert Johnson album under his arm.
00:39:17Guest:The Robert Johnson.
00:39:18Guest:You know that he didn't get that Robert Johnson album at a record store.
00:39:23Guest:Yeah.
00:39:23Guest:You weren't going to find that there.
00:39:25Guest:There was another way he found that.
00:39:27Guest:Yeah.
00:39:27Guest:And so that's all of my contemporaries and some of the few beforehand.
00:39:34Guest:You know, they found their way to that kind of music by the same kismet that I just happened to be at the house next door to an American serviceman who was helping out with the British Air Force.
00:39:50Guest:And had bought these records with him.
00:39:52Guest:And when I heard that, you know, coming out the window, it was like manna from heaven.
00:39:56Guest:You know, it was like, you know, what the hell is that?
00:39:59Guest:That's not what I'm hearing on the radio.
00:40:00Guest:That's not Jim Reeves.
00:40:02Guest:That's not Slim Whitman or Roger Miller.
00:40:04Guest:Right.
00:40:04Guest:That's the real deal.
00:40:06Marc:Yeah.
00:40:06Marc:Yeah.
00:40:07Marc:And so it must be it just kind of must have just blown your mind.
00:40:10Marc:I'm getting like a little hairs on my neck just talking about it.
00:40:14Marc:But somehow or another, you and Elton were able to transcend form in a lot of ways.
00:40:21Marc:And it's a rare thing.
00:40:22Marc:You created your own sound as well.
00:40:24Guest:Well, I think because when I met Elton... What year was that?
00:40:29Guest:1967.
00:40:31Marc:Because, like, they re-released that record.
00:40:33Guest:What was it, the Regimental Sergeant Zippo?
00:40:35Guest:Oh, well, that was the first record that we ever made that never got released.
00:40:39Marc:Right, exactly.
00:40:39Guest:So it wasn't actually re-released.
00:40:41Guest:So it's just new.
00:40:42Guest:Because it was never released in the first place.
00:40:44Guest:It was just shelved.
00:40:45Marc:But it's interesting because, like, on that record...
00:40:49Marc:Like once Empty Sky comes out and stuff, it seemed like you guys were on your way to something totally unique.
00:40:55Marc:And that record more reflects the sounds that were happening.
00:40:58Guest:Well, I think if you're talking about Empty Sky, you're talking about what was really prevalent at the time.
00:41:05Guest:Everything was – it was in the –
00:41:08Guest:sort of ashes of psychedelia.
00:41:12Guest:People were drawing inspiration from science fantasy and science fiction, whether it was King Crimson or Progal Harum, you know, or Pink Floyd.
00:41:22Guest:Everybody was mining the same material, you know.
00:41:26Guest:And so I was trying, you know, at the time, I was trying to emulate that too because I was reading a lot of the same...
00:41:35Guest:the same material you felt like you had to i i yeah i did i felt i needed i mean i liked that stuff but i it it was almost like i was grasping for straws because everybody was probably doing it better yeah and i i wanted to gravitate onto that um
00:41:55Guest:that that's sort of a more american-based music americana country but i would i guess you could call me in the closet at the time because i didn't think it would be acceptable which again goes to the band you know when the band i heard that and i started hearing some of the things like johnny cash at fulsome prison oh my god and you know you hear all this music and you go you know what
00:42:20Guest:This can, you know, this can be made palatable and commercial.
00:42:25Guest:And then, you know, people started realizing the same thing and were jumping onto the same boat, too.
00:42:31Marc:But it's interesting because with Elton, and we'll go back to when you met him, like, you know, he's not that guy, is he?
00:42:39Marc:Well, Elton is a sponge.
00:42:41Guest:And let me go back to what I say about when—67.
00:42:44Guest:When we met, one of the things, obviously, that we bonded on, beside the fact that we wanted to be songwriters, we didn't really know how to go about it.
00:42:54Marc:So you both sent in to a—what was it?
00:42:55Guest:Yeah, we answered the ad in the new musical, Express, for Liberty Records.
00:43:00Marc:And did you know anything about— I didn't even know how to write a song.
00:43:03Guest:I didn't know what writing a song meant.
00:43:05Guest:So the Brill Building was out of your—
00:43:07Marc:Yeah, no, no, no.
00:43:08Guest:I wasn't in that caliber.
00:43:10Guest:But you knew about it?
00:43:11Guest:I was grasping at straws.
00:43:13Guest:I wanted to learn how to do it, but I was incapable of it.
00:43:18Guest:I mean, I barely understood.
00:43:20Guest:I was only a few years out of realizing that...
00:43:26Guest:The person that sang a song on a record didn't just make it up.
00:43:30Guest:Right.
00:43:30Guest:You know, I thought when I was a little kid, I thought I didn't look underneath and see those names and parentheses underneath.
00:43:38Guest:I just thought whoever was singing the song simply it was theirs and they made it up.
00:43:42Guest:I thought that, too.
00:43:42Marc:It took until like less than 10 years ago.
00:43:45Marc:I was talking to Nick Lowe.
00:43:46Marc:And, you know, I believed like he was writing from some sort of first-person point of view when he wrote The Beast and Me.
00:43:52Marc:But it was kind of a monumental thing for me to realize that, no, songwriters make things up.
00:43:56Marc:Yeah.
00:43:57Guest:Well, that's the beauty of it for me.
00:44:00Guest:That is the thing that I have always aspired to do is to invent.
00:44:05Guest:to tell stories, to lend from life, but also lend from fiction.
00:44:10Guest:Create your own fiction.
00:44:12Guest:Mix it all up together.
00:44:14Guest:That's what's fun.
00:44:15Guest:That's why I want—you know, I think of myself as a cinematographer.
00:44:20Guest:I'm continually poaching from life, you know?
00:44:23Marc:So tell me about—so in 67, you meet Elton.
00:44:25Guest:Yeah, so—
00:44:26Guest:We bonded on music, all kinds of music.
00:44:29Guest:The thing is about us is that we have always been appreciative of every genre possible, which is why I think our canon in general has included all kinds of music.
00:44:44Guest:You know, influences from, you know, I'm a complete jazzer.
00:44:48Guest:It's all I really listen to.
00:44:49Guest:Who are you guys?
00:44:50Guest:Oh, pfft.
00:44:51Guest:Everybody.
00:44:52Guest:Ellington, Coltrane.
00:44:55Marc:It's Charlie Parker's birthday today.
00:44:57Guest:Yeah, and it's not lost on me that the year I started was the year that John Coltrane died.
00:45:03Guest:So, you know, 67 I started and he left us.
00:45:07Marc:Yeah, yeah.
00:45:07Guest:Did you see a lot of those guys?
00:45:09Guest:I didn't see enough.
00:45:11Guest:I saw quite a few at Shelley's Manhole the first couple of years I was in L.A.
00:45:16Guest:I used to go there all the time.
00:45:18Marc:That's interesting.
00:45:18Marc:So that's really your thing, and it takes a certain mind to lock into that.
00:45:23Marc:But it wasn't back then.
00:45:24Guest:I mean, I came to jazz a little later.
00:45:26Guest:When I first started with Elton, like Elton didn't listen to country music, and I didn't listen to a lot of soul and R&B, which he was totally into.
00:45:35Guest:Right.
00:45:35Guest:So we blended all that.
00:45:37Guest:He'd say, have you heard this?
00:45:38Guest:And I'd say, have you heard that?
00:45:40Guest:And we would buy records, and we didn't have much money, but he had a little bit more than me because he was getting more money because he sang on the demos.
00:45:49Guest:But back then, we were just jobbing songwriters trying to make a living.
00:45:53Guest:And so we had very little money.
00:45:54Guest:So what we had...
00:45:56Guest:what we didn't give to his mom, you know, as a throw in for some rent.
00:46:01Guest:Yeah.
00:46:01Guest:Um, you know, we'd spend on records and, uh, what we do would, we'd go to this place called music land in Soho and barrack street.
00:46:10Guest:And, uh, we'd spend all our time in there and they, what they would do is they would get the American imports in every week of albums, uh,
00:46:20Guest:that weren't going to come out in England for another probably month or two.
00:46:24Guest:So we were gravitated to that.
00:46:26Guest:So we'd get all this stuff like Electric Ladyland or the first Leonard Cohen album months before it came out in the UK.
00:46:35Marc:It seemed to me that in the late 60s in London, it was crazy with music.
00:46:41Marc:In terms of everyone trying, like Fleetwood Mac was around, Peter Green was around.
00:46:45Marc:Right.
00:46:45Marc:And were you there when Hendrix came over?
00:46:47Guest:No, I was on the sort of cusp of he went out as I came in, kind of literally.
00:46:55Guest:But yeah, I mean, it was a veritable minefield of music.
00:47:01Guest:And obviously, so much of the blues.
00:47:04Guest:Yeah.
00:47:05Guest:You know, later on in the book, you know, my whole friendship with Willie Dixon, which was, you know, one of the biggest, you know.
00:47:15Guest:Great.
00:47:15Guest:Well, he was a songwriter.
00:47:16Marc:Friendships of my.
00:47:17Marc:Oh, really?
00:47:17Marc:Greatest friendships of my life.
00:47:18Guest:When did you meet him?
00:47:21Guest:In the 80s.
00:47:23Guest:So he was old.
00:47:24Guest:Yeah, I...
00:47:26Guest:spent a great deal of time with him and his family in the last few years of his life.
00:47:32Guest:In fact, I was responsible for getting him inducted in the Songwriters Hall of Fame because I was absolutely incensed when I found out that he wasn't in there.
00:47:43Guest:He wrote all the good songs.
00:47:44Guest:Hello.
00:47:45Guest:And you think about some of the people they put in there, somebody who wrote a couple of songs in the 80s.
00:47:51Guest:I was absolutely just went through the roof.
00:47:55Guest:And what was your relationship with him?
00:47:56Guest:We were just friends.
00:47:58Guest:I mean, at my 40th birthday party, somebody said to me, what would you like to have at your birthday party?
00:48:07Guest:And I said, Willie Dixon, just as a joke.
00:48:10Guest:And they got in touch with his people, and he turned up, and we just hit it off, and I hit it off with his family.
00:48:16Guest:And we just got on like a house on fire.
00:48:19Marc:I saw him in the house.
00:48:19Guest:I loved him dear.
00:48:22Guest:Yeah, I saw him perform.
00:48:24Guest:And in fact, I put together a benefit after he died for the Blues Foundation.
00:48:29Guest:But anyway, how we started that is that so much of the music that he wrote, as I said in...
00:48:39Guest:when I inducted him into the Hall of Fame, I said, the bands in the 60s in England, blues bands in the 60s, wouldn't basically have had a set list without Willie Dixon.
00:48:52Guest:Yeah, of course.
00:48:53Guest:And because of all the blues tours that came to the UK and Europe,
00:48:58Guest:they brought all that music and were respected far more in the UK than they were at home.
00:49:04Guest:You know, they were treated like kings when they were treated like shit here.
00:49:08Marc:Yeah, it took you guys to introduce us to the blues.
00:49:10Guest:Exactly, exactly.
00:49:12Guest:And so what we did is we took it back to the States.
00:49:16Guest:And so it rebounded back here.
00:49:20Guest:But yeah, I mean, if it wasn't for those guys, I mean, there would be no blues bands in England.
00:49:26Marc:Yeah.
00:49:26Marc:And also it wouldn't have taken the jump that it did.
00:49:29Marc:Like I'm a Peter Green freak.
00:49:31Marc:Right.
00:49:31Marc:And like the way he played guitar to me.
00:49:33Marc:Yeah, he was a magnificent guitar player.
00:49:35Marc:It was unbelievable and heavy and sad.
00:49:37Guest:It's like Mick Taylor, you know.
00:49:38Guest:Yeah, Mick Taylor too.
00:49:39Guest:Mick Taylor is one of the greatest guitarists come out of England.
00:49:43Guest:Do you know him?
00:49:44Guest:No, I don't.
00:49:45Guest:I've never met him.
00:49:46Marc:I just assume everyone knows each other.
00:49:48Guest:I know most people, but there are significant characters that for some reason I never really ran into.
00:49:58Marc:So in 67, when you and Elton start doing this stuff and you're putting together, you know, I guess the songs that ended up on the regimental Sergeant Zippo.
00:50:06Marc:Sergeant Zippo, yeah.
00:50:08Marc:How much were the Beatles hanging over you?
00:50:11Guest:Well, the interesting connection with us and the Beatles, I mean, I think the Beatles affected everybody, even if it was subliminally.
00:50:20Guest:I don't know.
00:50:21Guest:But the interesting connection with us and the Beatles was we were signed to Dick James Publishing.
00:50:27Guest:Dick James published the Beatles.
00:50:29Guest:Yeah.
00:50:29Guest:So the Beatles would come to Dick James' studio to cut demos sometimes, especially Paul McCartney would do a lot of stuff there.
00:50:36Guest:Yeah.
00:50:36Guest:And so there was that connection.
00:50:41Guest:But, I mean, the Beatles affected everybody.
00:50:44Guest:In fact, there's a good story about when Elton, before Elton was making records, you know, he used to play on other people's records over at EMI.
00:50:53Guest:Yeah.
00:50:54Guest:And we'd go over to EMI and our first encounter with a Beatle of any sort.
00:51:00Guest:Yeah.
00:51:00Guest:Elton was doing a novelty record with an English band called the Baron Knights, who used to do these send-ups of the Bee Gees and all these contemporary bands.
00:51:14Guest:And Paul McCartney just walked into the studio one day because he was working in the next studio doing the White Album.
00:51:22Guest:Oh, God, yeah.
00:51:23Guest:Yeah.
00:51:23Guest:And we're all looking at each other, you know, it's Paul McCartney, you know, okay.
00:51:30Guest:That cool, that cool.
00:51:32Guest:And the thing is, this band, the Baron Knights, had supported the Beatles, so they knew him.
00:51:37Guest:And they're all going, hey, what you doing, Paul?
00:51:39Guest:You know, and Paul goes, oh, I just wrote this song, want to hear it?
00:51:42Guest:And he sat down and played Hey Jude.
00:51:45Guest:Come on.
00:51:45Guest:And so Elton and I was like, okay, well, we're not going to forget that one, are we?
00:51:55Marc:I was like, you know, not unlike the band.
00:51:57Marc:Like when I watched the Peter Jackson documentary footage, I think that they had that thing that the band had, which was this alchemy that you can't even explain how these guys just magically pull stuff out of the air sometimes.
00:52:10Guest:Right, and I think people try to overthink it, too.
00:52:13Guest:You know, people will just indulge themselves to points of insanity.
00:52:18Guest:Well, just trying to figure every single millisecond of the Beatles' existence.
00:52:24Guest:You know, it's...
00:52:26Guest:Okay, you know what?
00:52:28Guest:They wrote some of the best pop music of all time, if not the best pop music of all time.
00:52:33Guest:Enjoy it as it is.
00:52:34Guest:Don't try to figure, you know, go into the studio and take the tracks down and see what such and such was doing.
00:52:42Marc:Yeah, it was so natural, though.
00:52:43Marc:Did you watch that stuff?
00:52:44Marc:Yeah, I did.
00:52:45Guest:I thought it was a little long.
00:52:46Guest:Oh, long.
00:52:47Marc:But didn't you find there was a humanity to it?
00:52:50Marc:I mean, they were around when you were coming up.
00:52:52Marc:But for me, I'm like, oh, my God.
00:52:55Marc:You really got a sense of their personalities.
00:52:57Marc:Yeah, no doubt.
00:52:58Guest:I mean, it was wonderful.
00:52:59Guest:As I said, I could have done with a little less.
00:53:02Guest:There were portions where it –
00:53:06Guest:seeped a little into boredom, I thought.
00:53:08Guest:But then you'd get something like McCartney playing Get Back on the Bass, riffing it and writing it basically in front of John on the bass, playing chords on the bass.
00:53:22Guest:So things like that were...
00:53:24Guest:phenomenal and yeah it was wonderful but as i say you know i i'm not one of those i'm not a beetle surgeon who wants to sure understand every millisecond of their careers so when you and elton started working together i mean was it initially back and forth collective like were you you know were you coming up with verses alternating or well the most of the first writing that we did was at his mom's uh apartment in uh
00:53:54Guest:in the north of uh northwood hills yeah in in a suburb of london yeah and you know we had a bedroom at the back and uh there was a piano in the front room so it was it was kind of like our little brill building you know i'd be writing stuff in the bedroom yeah and i'd take it
00:54:13Guest:to the living room and say, here, I just wrote that.
00:54:15Guest:What do you think of this?
00:54:16Guest:And he'd go, oh, wait a second.
00:54:18Guest:Listen, I just wrote this to that last thing that you wrote.
00:54:21Guest:And he'd play me that.
00:54:23Guest:And I'd go, that's cool.
00:54:24Guest:We'll go down to Dick James Studio tomorrow and lay these down.
00:54:28Guest:We'll do demos of them.
00:54:29Guest:And that's how we wrote all of those very, very early songs.
00:54:33Marc:Were they demos to record for Elton or for anybody?
00:54:37Guest:Well, Elton wasn't Elton at that point.
00:54:40Guest:So there was no Elton.
00:54:41Guest:There was no thought of him actually being a performing artist.
00:54:46Guest:Right, right.
00:54:46Guest:That came a few months later.
00:54:48Guest:So these were mainly a cross between songs that we were being somewhat forced to write for middle of the road artists who, in those days, you know...
00:55:01Guest:depended on songwriters, people that were currently popular, people like Lulu and Silla Black, Cliff Richard, Engelbert Humperdinck, Tom Jones.
00:55:12Guest:Did they record any of your songs?
00:55:13Guest:None of them.
00:55:14Guest:No, because they were terrible.
00:55:15Guest:They weren't good.
00:55:17Guest:Because we weren't good at writing that kind of songs.
00:55:21Guest:And then ultimately, an A&R guy came to work at Dick James, who was sort of, I think, brought in
00:55:27Guest:to modernize the establishment a little.
00:55:31Guest:And he kind of looked at our stuff and said, quit writing this crap.
00:55:34Guest:You know, this is good what you've been writing on the side here.
00:55:38Guest:And he pinpointed a song we'd written called Skyline Pigeon.
00:55:42Guest:which was basically one of the first songs we wrote that we went, I think we're on to something here.
00:55:47Guest:This is actually quite a good song.
00:55:49Guest:And that literally got covered three times, I think, in the first couple of months.
00:55:56Guest:And we ultimately recorded it on the first official release, which was Empty Sky.
00:56:03Guest:And so this guy really kind of started pushing us in the...
00:56:08Guest:Right direction.
00:56:09Guest:And a guy called Steve Brown, who actually ended up producing the Empty Sky album.
00:56:15Marc:So when you like, what is the because jumping around the book, you seem to not have a necessarily have a discipline around around the songwriting.
00:56:25Marc:It just comes to you.
00:56:27Guest:I sometimes wonder, I'm completely undisciplined in certain areas and very disciplined in other areas.
00:56:36Guest:But the areas that I'm disciplined in are more banal.
00:56:43Guest:You know, it's like I keep a tidy house.
00:56:46Guest:I keep my clothes straight.
00:56:49Guest:I'm slightly undisciplined in my work ethic because I'm all over the place.
00:56:54Guest:And I've got so much I want to do and say that I don't know sometime when to do it and when not to do it.
00:57:02Guest:And should I do this today or should I do this today?
00:57:05Guest:Should I go in my studio and work on my art?
00:57:07Guest:As far as writing songs, I only ever write songs nowadays and in the last couple of decades when we're going to make a record.
00:57:20Guest:Elton will call me and say, I feel like making a record in maybe a couple of months.
00:57:26Guest:I want to start thinking about some ideas.
00:57:28Guest:That's when I'll start writing.
00:57:30Guest:I'm not the...
00:57:34Guest:The textbook songwriter who gets up, goes into the office, and that's a kind of Diane Warren thing, which is great.
00:57:43Guest:That's a professional songwriter.
00:57:45Guest:I don't think of myself in those terms.
00:57:47Guest:I've never thought of myself in those terms.
00:57:50Guest:As I say, there's a whole bit at the beginning of the book where I question what a songwriter really is.
00:57:55Guest:And I don't think of myself as that.
00:57:58Guest:And I don't even think of myself.
00:57:59Guest:I suppose I am a lyricist.
00:58:01Guest:But again, somebody asked me what I do.
00:58:03Guest:I say I'm a storyteller.
00:58:05Marc:Well, it's interesting in the book about like, you know, because you're very well-readed.
00:58:10Marc:I believe so.
00:58:11Marc:Yeah.
00:58:12Marc:And that, you know, there was this sort of this interesting encounter with Graham Greene.
00:58:18Marc:Right, right.
00:58:19Marc:Who, you know, was arguably one of the greatest novelists ever.
00:58:23Marc:In my estimation, probably the greatest, but I'm sold.
00:58:27Marc:Yeah, and it was just, even with the backstory of owning that copy of Mabokos of Alita and stuff, that, you know, the actual meeting, you had to sort of frame it in a way that was, well, okay, that's what I got.
00:58:43Guest:Well, it was, again, kismet and, you know, a beautiful accident.
00:58:50Guest:Yeah.
00:58:50Guest:You know, it's just because I'd agreed to meet somebody at the Savoy.
00:58:55Guest:Yeah.
00:58:55Guest:And it just happened, you know, I thought—
00:58:59Guest:okay got to go to the savoy bar it's a bar that i've never been to and it's legendary yeah and boom there he is man you know and it's like it's my my dream you know next to hearing the band album that was another one of the great you know great moments of my life you know because and especially the fact that he was not dismissive of me you know yeah he took he
00:59:22Guest:I wouldn't say he took a shine, but I think he saw that there was a true glimmer of interest there and knowledge.
00:59:31Marc:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:59:32Marc:It's a great moment when you meet a hero and they're not dismissive or assholes.
00:59:36Guest:And I don't think, I can honestly say that's probably the greatest accidental meeting I've ever had in my life.
00:59:44Marc:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:59:45Marc:It's a good one.
00:59:45Marc:So it's not unlike you to just have a phrase come to your head, set it aside, and build it out later?
00:59:53Guest:Oh, yeah.
00:59:54Guest:No, absolutely.
00:59:55Guest:And especially in the early days when I was really doing a lot of traveling, my pockets and my travel bag were littered with stuff I'd scrawled on menus, napkins.
01:00:12Guest:Yeah, yeah.
01:00:12Guest:Vomit bags from planes.
01:00:15Guest:Anything I could get, a hotel stationery.
01:00:18Guest:I mean, I used to have a whole box of it.
01:00:21Guest:And then when it got to be time to sort of work on an album or work on songs for an album,
01:00:28Guest:I'd get all these pieces out and they'd have sort of first lines.
01:00:33Guest:They'd have song titles on them.
01:00:35Guest:I always liked finding interesting song titles.
01:00:40Guest:Because when I used to flip through albums in a record store, the things used to appeal to me would be albums that had interesting song titles.
01:00:50Guest:Yeah, sure.
01:00:51Guest:Something that was kind of mundane, maybe pushed aside.
01:00:54Guest:But that was definitely one of the components that I worked with.
01:01:00Guest:But a lot of the song titles were taken from lines in the songs.
01:01:05Guest:Well, yeah.
01:01:06Guest:I mean, the title of a song is usually used in the chorus anyway.
01:01:10Marc:But you had to pick which one was going to happen.
01:01:12Guest:Yeah, yeah.
01:01:13Guest:So, but...
01:01:15Guest:I would, I would, I didn't, I mean, I certainly didn't do the Bowie trick of just writing stuff out, throwing it in the air and then putting it together like a jigsaw puzzle, you know, which is what he did, you know, that wasn't my, the way I like to work, you know.
01:01:33Guest:But, yeah, I mean, I just collected and ultimately pieced things together.
01:01:41Marc:I just saw it.
01:01:41Marc:It was so funny because there was a which song I just watched.
01:01:45Marc:I just hosted a screening of Dog Day Afternoon.
01:01:47Guest:Oh, yeah.
01:01:47Guest:And Amarina.
01:01:48Marc:Yeah, is the opening thing.
01:01:49Marc:And that was Lumet was like, well, that's the song we want.
01:01:52Guest:Yeah, it's funny.
01:01:53Guest:I mean, everybody says that it doesn't really fit, you know, the movie.
01:02:01Guest:But now you can't watch the movie without hearing it and you understand it totally.
01:02:06Guest:You know, there is something about seeing those New York streets in the 70s.
01:02:11Guest:But this is a song that is basically a country song about the country, not about urban chaos.
01:02:18Guest:Right.
01:02:19Guest:But for some reason, it fits.
01:02:21Guest:And I think that's happened a lot of times with people's songs.
01:02:25Guest:I guess that's the fun of putting music in movies.
01:02:31Guest:I think if I'd done anything else in my life, I would have liked to have done that as a job.
01:02:37Guest:That would have been fun.
01:02:38Marc:It feels like some of the songs, even some of the albums, unfold like movies.
01:02:42Marc:I mean, I don't know how you think about it, but it seems like
01:02:46Marc:For some reason, Goodbye Yellow Brick Road plays as a movie.
01:02:49Guest:Oh, absolutely.
01:02:50Guest:Yeah, I mean, it's definitely the most cinematic of our albums because they are, for the most part, story-driven.
01:02:59Guest:I mean, if you think about it, I think there's only like one...
01:03:05Guest:what you would call romantic ballad, love song, if you want, on the album.
01:03:10Guest:Everything else is pure filth and about, you know, huge human flotsam and unsavory characters and weird robotic bands.
01:03:21Guest:And, you know, yeah, it's kind of like a comic book, a graphic novel, if you will.
01:03:25Marc:For me, though, that moment where I guess it's...
01:03:28Marc:Jostin comes in after a funeral for a friend, you know, and then goes into Love, Lies, Bleeding.
01:03:35Marc:Right.
01:03:36Marc:It's like that's like one of the greatest moments in music.
01:03:38Guest:Well, I'd like to think so.
01:03:40Guest:Yeah.
01:03:40Guest:I mean, it's certainly a good it kicks off the album really well.
01:03:44Guest:But and again, it's like if you want to it's like Madman Across the Water is, as I said earlier, is like an American travelogue.
01:03:53Marc:Yeah.
01:03:54Guest:You know, it's a primer for the American West.
01:03:56Marc:And so then when you get into—but then there's a couple records before Goodbye Yellow Brick Rose where you deal with these characters.
01:04:02Guest:Yeah, well, I think Don't Shoot Me and Honky Chateau.
01:04:09Guest:Yeah, they kind of played middle ground, I think.
01:04:11Guest:There was a bit of everything on them.
01:04:13Marc:But were you always gunning for hits?
01:04:15Marc:Was that part of— Not me.
01:04:17Guest:I had no idea about hits.
01:04:19Marc:Never.
01:04:19Guest:I think—
01:04:20Guest:And I'll tell you what, we never set out to write hits.
01:04:24Guest:We set out to write albums.
01:04:26Guest:But when I was a kid, I remember Hockey Cat was a big hit.
01:04:30Guest:Well, I know that the one thing I do know is that Honky Chateau was our first number one album in the States.
01:04:39Guest:And then Honky Chateau, I believe, had, I think Rocket Man was on there.
01:04:45Guest:Yeah.
01:04:45Guest:But, you know, Elton is the guy who knows every, every fact about charts, you know, where they, he knows every place he's played, you know, what the capacity is.
01:05:01Guest:when he played it, and he knows the same about our music and how it fared on the Billboard charts.
01:05:08Guest:I mean, he's a Billboard devotee.
01:05:12Guest:He just still follows it.
01:05:14Guest:He follows the records, the artists on it.
01:05:18Marc:Crocodile Rock was a big hit.
01:05:19Marc:That one was everywhere.
01:05:21Guest:Yeah, but that was later on.
01:05:22Marc:Don't Shoot Me.
01:05:23Guest:Yeah, that was a big hit.
01:05:25Guest:And Daniel.
01:05:26Guest:Daniel was a big hit, too.
01:05:28Guest:Where did that song come from?
01:05:30Guest:Daniel was based on a story in Time magazine that I read on a plane about the Tet Offensive and guys coming back from Vietnam.
01:05:41Guest:And it's funny how the ones that came back to, if you want, the urban jungle and the...
01:05:51Guest:urban cities were sort of ripped on by the people that called them baby killers, which was unfortunate, but the guys that went home to the Midwest were treated like heroes.
01:06:09Guest:And so the idea of it was that it's supposed to represent the guys that went back to
01:06:16Guest:to the Midwest and couldn't handle that kind of adoration.
01:06:21Guest:And it's a fictionalized story about one of them just saying, I got to get out of here.
01:06:26Guest:And it's about his brother's farewell to him, you know, just saying.
01:06:29Guest:Yeah, yeah.
01:06:30Guest:So it was based on that.
01:06:32Guest:But you can take it many, many different ways.
01:06:34Marc:Of course.
01:06:34Guest:I think that's what... And that's the beauty of songs, you know.
01:06:37Marc:Yeah.
01:06:38Guest:How...
01:06:38Guest:However you want to interpret it, I'm totally down with.
01:06:43Guest:I'm happy with.
01:06:44Marc:Well, I think that's the magic of music in general, right?
01:06:47Guest:Yeah, well, you know, I've said this a million times.
01:06:50Guest:Songs are like abstract art.
01:06:52Guest:If you don't understand what the song is about, then come up with your own interpretation.
01:06:58Guest:Don't look to me.
01:06:59Guest:I'll probably make something up.
01:07:01Marc:Well, it's also just how it moves you, right?
01:07:02Marc:I mean, you know, because there's that repetition of things and certain songs will grow with you emotionally as you grow.
01:07:08Guest:Well, everybody gravitates to a song differently because it might pinpoint an emotional soft spot in their life, whether it's their wedding, whether it's their first child, whether they were going through an emotional upheaval, a breakup at the time, and this song was something that comforted them, which is wonderful.
01:07:30Guest:I mean, I think that's terrific.
01:07:32Guest:So that person is probably going to associate that song with
01:07:36Guest:with themself and that upheaval in their life and that's that's a wonderful fact i mean it's it's that's the way it should be yeah i don't want to be selfish with the songs yeah yeah you know take them and run with them once i've written them once they're recorded they belong to the world yeah and i find that like even if it's not tethered to an event or an experience that just the emotions of of the singing of a song
01:08:02Marc:It doesn't have to be tethered to anything.
01:08:05Marc:One that still has a lasting effect.
01:08:06Guest:Well, I like to think that our songs are timeless.
01:08:10Guest:They reoccur over the decades.
01:08:12Guest:They crop up again, you know, and they keep doing it.
01:08:16Guest:And they've done it just recently.
01:08:18Guest:What do you mean, recently?
01:08:20Guest:Well, I mean, Elton.
01:08:21Guest:With Rocketman?
01:08:22Guest:No, no.
01:08:24Guest:The Dua Lee Perelton hit, you know, which is a mashup of different songs.
01:08:29Guest:Yeah.
01:08:35Guest:you know, contemporary graphic.
01:08:38Guest:So that in itself is pretty amazing.
01:08:43Marc:It's interesting, too, because of him and the nature of the lyrics, but also there's something about Elton being so front and center, you know, as a personality and as a piano player that lends itself to a certain timelessness.
01:08:55Marc:Like he is unto himself.
01:08:57Marc:Even if the production is of a time, it's still an Elton John song.
01:09:01Right.
01:09:02Guest:Well, I'd like to think that people find something in the song that remains contemporary through the decades.
01:09:09Guest:Because they really have stood the test of time, and they still sound great.
01:09:14Guest:The production on them is fantastic, which is probably why we haven't had...
01:09:20Guest:a ton of cover versions of our songs.
01:09:24Guest:I mean, we've had plenty of cover versions, but probably not as many as you might imagine because people always say, well, the Elton John version is the ultimate, you know, I'm not going to try and top that.
01:09:35Marc:Yeah, yeah, that's the one.
01:09:36Guest:Unless you go in a completely different direction with it, you know.
01:09:40Guest:And we've had great people cover our songs, everybody from Sinatra to Ray Charles.
01:09:45Guest:In fact, the last track that Ray Charles ever cut in his life was one of our songs.
01:09:50Marc:Oh, really?
01:09:51Guest:Which one?
01:09:51Guest:Sorry seems to be the hardest word.
01:09:53Guest:Oh, wow.
01:09:54Marc:Yeah.
01:09:54Guest:And did you have contact with Ray about it?
01:09:59Guest:No, but Elton did because Elton sang on it with him.
01:10:02Guest:Oh, yeah.
01:10:02Guest:So, in fact, Elton's got outtakes of it with conversations between him and Ray talking about the song and talking about...
01:10:13Guest:other things as well.
01:10:15Guest:So that's pretty much a treasure because he died very, very soon after that.
01:10:20Marc:And, you know, in terms of...
01:10:24Marc:managing success, do you feel that for you it was easier to not be front and center?
01:10:33Guest:Well, it's applicable to my nature.
01:10:36Guest:I would never have wanted it.
01:10:38Guest:I couldn't live in a fishbowl.
01:10:40Guest:I'm such an individualist that I have to be able to walk down the street on my own.
01:10:45Guest:I mean, if you look at Elton, Elton is probably, I would say, in the top 10 most recognizable people.
01:10:51Marc:It's the opposite of that.
01:10:52Guest:Yeah, I mean, totally the most recognizable person in the world.
01:10:56Guest:I mean, some people can walk down the street and be recognized, but Elton John can't walk down the street on his own.
01:11:05Guest:I mean, he just can't.
01:11:07Guest:I could not do that.
01:11:09Guest:I mean, he has structured his life where it works well for him.
01:11:15Guest:And I've structured my life where it works well for me.
01:11:18Guest:I like to be able to do things for myself.
01:11:22Guest:I don't have a staff.
01:11:24Guest:I'm managed by my wife.
01:11:27Guest:I have a temporary assistant sometime, not all the time.
01:11:32Guest:I've got one at the moment simply because organizing stuff for the book.
01:11:38Guest:But no, I don't want somebody driving me around
01:11:42Marc:But also then, like, you know, as you went through whatever your kind of party days, you weren't, you know, the press didn't get on you and you didn't have to, you know, throw.
01:11:54Guest:Well, I don't think they got on a lot on a lot of us in those days because social media didn't exist.
01:12:00Guest:Sure.
01:12:00Guest:You know, social media, the way it exists now, you can't do anything.
01:12:04Guest:But the Stones took a hit.
01:12:06Guest:Yeah, but they were very high profile and they probably did things that were in the public eye.
01:12:15Guest:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
01:12:16Guest:What I'm talking about is out of the public eye.
01:12:21Guest:In the Caribbean.
01:12:22Guest:You could do anything you wanted to do.
01:12:24Guest:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
01:12:24Guest:Now, you can't do anything anywhere.
01:12:27Guest:You can't say anything.
01:12:28Guest:You know, it's just... It's a completely different playing field now than it used to be.
01:12:35Marc:Sounds like you had a good time in the Bahamas.
01:12:37Guest:Oh, I had a great time.
01:12:38Guest:I loved it there.
01:12:39Guest:I mean, it was kind of my second home.
01:12:41Guest:I kind of outstayed my welcome, ultimately.
01:12:46Guest:Yeah.
01:12:46Guest:Which I did in a lot of places, I guess, at a certain point in my life.
01:12:50Guest:But I certainly made the most of it while I was at it.
01:12:53Guest:Never...
01:12:54Guest:No animals or human beings were hurt in the intent of my indulgences.
01:13:02Marc:And you got to hang out with Oliver Reed.
01:13:04Guest:Yeah, yeah.
01:13:05Guest:And survived.
01:13:06Marc:Yeah.
01:13:08Marc:Was there ever a line that you got scared of not surviving?
01:13:13Guest:No.
01:13:14Marc:No, that's good.
01:13:14Guest:No, no.
01:13:17Guest:I think the scariest thing I ever did was to attempt to free base in the drug days.
01:13:24Guest:And I had the good sense to go, this isn't a rabbit hole I'm going down.
01:13:30Guest:I know where this ends.
01:13:31Guest:And I walked out of it and escaped what could have been my demise and was demise of others.
01:13:39Marc:Either you like your heart about to explode or you don't.
01:13:42Guest:Right, exactly.
01:13:43Guest:And the fact that, you know, five minutes later, you need it again.
01:13:46Marc:Yeah, it's not a pretty thing to watch.
01:13:49Guest:No, I knew right away that that was not going to work.
01:13:53Guest:Now, how are you and Elton these days?
01:13:55Guest:Good?
01:13:55Guest:Great.
01:13:56Guest:Just talked to him the other day.
01:13:57Guest:Yeah, he's okay?
01:13:58Guest:Oh, he's good.
01:13:59Guest:He actually had a fall the other day and had to spend a night.
01:14:02Guest:He's actually in the south of France right now on vacation.
01:14:06Guest:He went on vacation, as he does at this time of the year always.
01:14:10Guest:Yeah.
01:14:10Guest:but he's got an especially well-deserved vacation after, you know, the end of the tour.
01:14:16Guest:Yeah.
01:14:17Guest:Is this the last one?
01:14:19Guest:Yeah, this is it, man.
01:14:20Guest:Done.
01:14:21Guest:No more.
01:14:21Guest:He's done that before, though, hasn't he?
01:14:23Guest:No, not like this.
01:14:24Marc:Oh, really?
01:14:24Guest:No, people say that, and it's fabrication.
01:14:28Guest:I mean, you know, everybody says that at some point, but let me pose a question to you here.
01:14:36Guest:If he were to go back on the road, don't you think he would be just...
01:14:39Guest:pilloried and crucified absolutely absolutely no this is it he's done he's not going to tour anymore no more world tours if he ever did anything again it might be a residency and do a like a deep cuts kind of thing oh yeah you know which we've talked about but it would be at home on home ground does he live here too
01:15:01Guest:He's got a home here, but his main residence is in England.
01:15:05Guest:But he's got a place in the south of France and he has a place in Atlanta also.
01:15:10Marc:Now, were there times like and I know you wrote about this in the book and people have talked about it before and made insinuations where there was a sort of relationship tension.
01:15:24Marc:Between you two?
01:15:25Guest:No, I mean, he always happily says that we've never, ever had an argument.
01:15:32Guest:Even in the time that we stepped away from each other in the... I don't know when it was, the mid-'80s.
01:15:39Guest:It was basically after the Blue Moves album, so whenever that was.
01:15:43Guest:And that was just...
01:15:44Guest:I think that was a geographical separation.
01:15:47Guest:You know, it became more prevalent.
01:15:51Guest:Um, and also you have to understand at that particular point in time, we had broken every record there was to break.
01:16:00Guest:We had three albums to go into number one,
01:16:03Guest:Straight Out of the Box, which had never happened before in Billboard history.
01:16:07Guest:Three in a row went straight in at number one.
01:16:09Guest:Which ones were those?
01:16:11Guest:Captain Fantastic was the first.
01:16:15Guest:Rock of the West is next and Blue Moves next.
01:16:18Guest:Yeah, yeah.
01:16:18Guest:And then, you know, he played two days at Dodger Stadium.
01:16:23Guest:We played the biggest stadiums in the States.
01:16:26Guest:You know, we'd had number one singles in a row.
01:16:30Guest:It's like, what do you do after that?
01:16:31Guest:You know, you've got to kind of step back and go, okay, we have to reassess the whole ballgame here.
01:16:37Guest:You know, you're not going to keep striking and, you know, you're going to strike out at some point and not keep hitting home runs.
01:16:46Guest:And...
01:16:48Guest:I think it just happened by osmosis, naturally, whatever way you want to say.
01:16:55Guest:And, you know, we took a break from each other for a while, and he did an album with somebody else, and I did an album with Alice Cooper and worked with a couple of other people.
01:17:06Guest:Didn't you do a Starship song?
01:17:08Guest:Yeah, I did.
01:17:10Guest:Which one?
01:17:10Guest:We built this city, yeah.
01:17:12Guest:Worst single of all time, apparently, according to many magazines.
01:17:16Guest:which I wear as a badge of honor.
01:17:20Guest:The song has lasted way longer than some of the magazines that depicted it as it were.
01:17:25Guest:And everybody knows the song.
01:17:27Guest:Yeah, and everybody knows the song.
01:17:29Guest:It's been good to my family, so I'm not going to... I say in the book, I think that...
01:17:34Guest:You know, I asked myself the question, if I hadn't written it, would I like it?
01:17:39Guest:And I go, no, but I did.
01:17:40Guest:So I stand by it.
01:17:42Guest:Yeah, sure.
01:17:44Guest:Yeah.
01:17:45Guest:So and then by the same baby steps, we just got back together eventually and took up like it had never happened, you know.
01:17:55Marc:Yeah.
01:17:55Marc:Well, I mean, and you keep, you know, there's still a lot of hits after that.
01:17:59Guest:Yeah.
01:18:00Guest:They keep coming.
01:18:01Guest:Yeah.
01:18:01Guest:Yeah.
01:18:03Guest:And, you know, the thing is, because he's retired from the road doesn't mean he's retired from the studio.
01:18:09Guest:The guy's not going to sit still, believe me.
01:18:12Guest:So we've got plans, you know, to go back in the studio at some point.
01:18:16Guest:And, you know, nothing written in stone yet.
01:18:19Guest:But it's like he's still playing with some of the same guys.
01:18:24Marc:From the old days?
01:18:25Marc:Like that original band?
01:18:26Guest:Well, yeah, they toured with them.
01:18:28Guest:Oh, absolutely.
01:18:29Guest:Yeah, Davey, Nigel, they're both still in the band.
01:18:32Guest:I'm not sure what they're going to do now.
01:18:34Guest:I haven't talked to them about that.
01:18:37Guest:I plan on seeing Davey soon, so I'll see what he's up to.
01:18:42Guest:But I'm sure they'll find plenty of work.
01:18:45Guest:I mean, they're the best there is, so there shouldn't be a shortage of jobs out there.
01:18:49Marc:So is there anything that...
01:18:51Marc:Two questions, and they're just coming to me now.
01:18:54Marc:Like, you know, out of the entire catalog, which one do you go back to in your mind the most as being a great example of what you do?
01:19:07Guest:I don't know.
01:19:08Guest:I mean, there's several.
01:19:09Guest:I mean, it's...
01:19:11Guest:There's two ways of answering that.
01:19:12Guest:You know, people always say, ultimately, sometimes always say, what's the best song you've ever written?
01:19:20Guest:Yeah, that'd be hard.
01:19:20Guest:And that's hard.
01:19:21Guest:It's like, I think Duke Ellington said, the one that I'm going to do tomorrow.
01:19:26Guest:Sure, yeah.
01:19:28Guest:But as far as albums, I think it goes in stages.
01:19:31Guest:Yeah.
01:19:32Guest:Obviously, I love Tumbleweed.
01:19:34Guest:I love Mad Men.
01:19:36Guest:I recently re-listened to it simply because they did the 50th anniversary version of it and I had to listen to the pressing.
01:19:48Guest:And I thought, dang, this is really a good album.
01:19:51Guest:It really stands the test of time.
01:19:53Guest:I actually think I like it better than Tumbleweed.
01:19:56Guest:Yeah.
01:19:57Guest:I don't know why, but I have a soft spot for Tumbleweed.
01:20:02Guest:But then I love Captain Phantom.
01:20:04Guest:I mean, Yellow Brick Road, obviously, you know, is a bench point.
01:20:07Guest:And sonically, that album is just phenomenal.
01:20:10Guest:I mean, if you hear a good pressing of it.
01:20:13Guest:Gus Dudgeon is probably one of the most underrated producers of all time.
01:20:17Guest:I think, if anything, we had the best sounding albums of the 70s.
01:20:21Guest:Yeah, for sure.
01:20:22Guest:I mean, there are a few other people that make great sounding records.
01:20:25Guest:Yeah.
01:20:26Guest:But then some of the later albums, I love songs from the West Coast.
01:20:31Guest:Yeah.
01:20:31Guest:I think that's a really, really fine record.
01:20:34Guest:There's an album we made called Made in England, which is a good sounding record.
01:20:38Guest:Yeah.
01:20:38Guest:And got great songs on it.
01:20:40Guest:And then of the later ones recently, I love the album we did with Leon.
01:20:45Guest:Yeah, that's a good record.
01:20:47Marc:Yeah, it's a great record.
01:20:48Marc:And I wouldn't have known that they had this love for each other.
01:20:53Guest:Well, we toured with Leon in the early days.
01:20:55Guest:Leon was at the Troubadour in 1970.
01:20:57Guest:Right, yeah.
01:20:59Guest:And once said to me in the studio, he said, I haven't told anybody this, but when I saw Elton at the Troubadour in 1970, I turned to Denny Cordell and said, well, my career's over.
01:21:15Guest:which was a huge compliment.
01:21:17Guest:But I loved that album, and I loved an album we did called The Diving Board, which was fairly recent.
01:21:23Guest:I thought that was a very...
01:21:26Guest:adult grown-up album on our part i think it was it was a return to simplicity but it was very literary and and very grown-up i suppose the best way of putting it do you feel like you've done everything you set out to do in terms of up to this point musically no lyrically no i i you know i what's the dream
01:21:49Guest:I'd love to make one more great, great record.
01:21:53Guest:Yeah.
01:21:54Guest:Contemporary, but also inhabited by what it takes to make a great Elton John record.
01:22:02Guest:And what is the Elton John sound at the Elton John piano level?
01:22:06Guest:The Bernie Taupin storytelling, but put into a sort of contemporary.
01:22:12Guest:And when I say contemporary, I don't mean machine driven.
01:22:15Guest:Yeah.
01:22:16Guest:I mean, just that it sounds fresh and new, but it sounds like Elton John.
01:22:21Marc:Everything could bring in any of this new generation of jazz guys.
01:22:24Guest:I don't think that would work with us.
01:22:29Guest:I don't think that would be Elton's thing, you know, and he drives the bus when we're in the studio.
01:22:35Guest:I leave those decisions up to him.
01:22:39Guest:But...
01:22:40Guest:Who knows?
01:22:42Guest:It's always an adventure.
01:22:44Guest:And as long as it's an adventure, then I'm in for the exploration.
01:22:51Marc:It seems like we were talking earlier about, I just remembered something I was going to pick up on and I didn't, that you talk about song lyrics as being similar to abstract art.
01:23:00Marc:And your work is abstract, is it not?
01:23:03Guest:Well, I started in the abstract...
01:23:06Guest:Multimedia kind of stuff?
01:23:09Guest:It's more multimedia now.
01:23:11Guest:I call them wall sculptures, you know, because they're sort of built on plyboard and built on cedar blocks and they're deconstructed instruments and burnt elements and elements, found elements.
01:23:27Guest:And they're pretty interesting and they're pretty original.
01:23:31Guest:There's nobody out.
01:23:32Guest:The trouble with when I was doing abstract work was that you end up feeling like you're purloining from your heroes.
01:23:44Guest:Yeah.
01:23:44Guest:It's the same as music.
01:23:45Guest:You start out emulating your heroes.
01:23:48Guest:Sure.
01:23:48Guest:It's like filmmakers start out emulating their heroes and probably still do.
01:23:52Guest:Any artist.
01:23:53Guest:Yeah, any artist does that.
01:23:54Guest:But you've got to find your own voice in the end.
01:23:57Guest:And that's what happened with me in art.
01:23:59Guest:I felt that my stuff looked too much like Hans Hoffman or Franz Kline.
01:24:04Guest:You were just painting?
01:24:05Guest:I was painting back then.
01:24:07Guest:Now paint isn't even... Well, it is involved occasionally if I throw some onto a piece.
01:24:13Guest:But, you know, there's...
01:24:15Guest:This text work in it.
01:24:18Guest:It's pretty interesting.
01:24:19Marc:And do you do it impulsively?
01:24:21Guest:Well, I kind of got derailed by writing the book because once I realized what I was doing by...
01:24:32Guest:you know, writing these prose pieces.
01:24:34Guest:And I suddenly realized, oh, wait a second.
01:24:36Guest:I think what I'm doing is writing a book here.
01:24:39Guest:So I took it seriously and knuckled down and then got this deal through my agent in New York and got a very good deal on the book.
01:24:49Guest:And so I just put nose to grindstone and
01:24:54Guest:literally spent probably four or five hours a day for about two years working on the book.
01:25:01Guest:Wow, that sounds like the most disciplined you've been about writing.
01:25:04Marc:Yeah, there you go.
01:25:05Guest:I can't argue without one.
01:25:09Marc:But it shows.
01:25:10Marc:I mean, you know, it really shows that there's something about it that shows that you were sort of like taking it seriously.
01:25:18Marc:And, you know, I could tell you had like Graham Greene in mind in a certain way in terms of, you know, your descriptions and just how you lay it out.
01:25:26Marc:It's not like we did this and then that.
01:25:29Marc:Yeah.
01:25:30Guest:Exactly.
01:25:30Guest:Well, as I make very clear at the beginning of the book, I never intended it to be A to Z. I always wanted it to be non-linear.
01:25:39Guest:I mean, the opening of the book is pretty as it is.
01:25:43Guest:It's got about my childhood.
01:25:46Guest:It's got about meeting Elton.
01:25:48Guest:But then basically, once Elton and I get out of London and get to the States, hence the title of the book, Scattershot, it's a bit like I loaded up
01:25:58Guest:shotgun put in the shells pull the trigger and wherever the pellets fell is where my narrative you know went on to so it's geographical it's all over is that how you wrote it too um yeah yeah absolutely yeah so that's sort of in line with the way i wrote i wrote what i felt like writing when i got
01:26:22Guest:to the word processor in front of me.
01:26:25Guest:What do I want to write about today?
01:26:27Guest:You know, the story of Graham Greene would come up, you know, and I go, I'm going to write about that today.
01:26:32Marc:Because that's one of those stories.
01:26:33Marc:It's not just like a meeting thing.
01:26:35Marc:It's sort of like it had a lifelong kind of resonance.
01:26:39Guest:Yeah, definitely.
01:26:40Guest:At the end, by the...
01:26:43Guest:When I realized that I was... The funny thing is that I never really looked at my contract for the book, you know, because it says you're contracted for so many words and so many pages.
01:26:54Guest:I didn't even look at that.
01:26:55Guest:I just wrote till I was done.
01:26:57Guest:Yeah.
01:26:58Guest:And it ended up being over 800 pages.
01:27:00Guest:Oh, yeah.
01:27:01Guest:So you can understand that I needed a good editor to go, well...
01:27:06Marc:But that's a great thing.
01:27:07Marc:Yeah.
01:27:08Marc:And if you trust your editor and you got to make some.
01:27:10Guest:Yeah, it was tough to make some of the decisions.
01:27:13Guest:But I'm very, very happy where the pieces fell.
01:27:17Guest:I mean, I think we came up with a very, very condensed version of those 800 pages.
01:27:24Marc:Yeah, I think people are going to love it.
01:27:26Marc:I hope so.
01:27:27Marc:I sure do.
01:27:28Marc:And what about do you ever like I mean, it's interesting how, you know, how kind of like, you know, culturally American in a lot of ways.
01:27:36Marc:Do you miss England?
01:27:38Marc:No.
01:27:42Marc:There you go.
01:27:43Marc:Thanks for talking.
01:27:45Guest:Oh, thanks, man.
01:27:45Guest:Appreciate it.
01:27:51Marc:Right?
01:27:53Marc:What a life.
01:27:55Marc:Scattershot.
01:27:56Marc:Life Music, Elton and Me comes out next week, but you can pre-order it now wherever you get books.
01:28:00Marc:Hang out for a second, folks.
01:28:04Marc:People, don't forget to sign up for the full Marin if you want the bonus episodes we put out twice a week.
01:28:10Marc:We had an extra bonus chat with Todd Berry that we posted this week and next week, some more movie talk with Kit, this time about Mulholland Drive.
01:28:18Marc:Sign up using the link in the episode description or go to WTFPod.com and click on WTF Plus.
01:28:25Marc:Next week on the show, author and activist Naomi Klein.
01:28:28Marc:I told you she was coming.
01:28:29Marc:She's on Monday.
01:28:30Marc:And Hannah Einbinder from Hacks is on Thursday.
01:28:34Marc:All right, you guys, I'm practicing my slide.
01:28:36Marc:I listened to a little R.L.
01:28:38Marc:Burnside.
01:28:39Marc:My timing's a little loopy, but I nail some of it.
01:28:43Marc:Indulge me.
01:28:46guitar solo
01:29:07guitar solo
01:29:30guitar solo
01:29:50Guest:guitar solo
01:30:29guitar solo
01:31:19Guest:Boomer lives.
01:31:46Monkey and the Fonda.
01:31:47Cat angels everywhere.
01:31:47Boomer lives.

Episode 1468 - Bernie Taupin

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