Youre
often associated with musical mayhem with the high-wire artists youve
been working with. Is this a conscious direction? hear Barry in streaming mp3
Probably.
Looking back on my career, it's funny to see that Ive mainly worked
with women. Marianne Faithfull, Grace Jones, Bette Midler -- you know
-- all these Divas. I dont know why. After I worked with Marianne,
the record companies thought, "Well, he could work with anyone whos
difficult." And, so, I finished working with Bette Midler and then
Grace Jones. The only male artist Ive really worked with was John
Martyn, who is the biggest Diva of all.
Youre
also overlooking Joe Cocker, another mild mannered person. hear Barry in streaming mp3
Right.
Joe was a joy to work with. The reason he was a joy to work with
he let the musicians do what they wanted to do. As for the musical
arrangements, he would come in, listen, give us the key, and
Joe would sing over it. Hes a beautiful singer -- a little
like Marianne and Grace Jones. At times, he was very extreme
in either being straight or completely blasted. It was just a
matter of finding him right in the middle when he could do it.
And when he did it, he was wonderful.
You speak
about working with women a lot, but you work with a particular subsection
of women who are extremely intense. You have co-written with a lot of
those people. Do you think that madness and intensity leads to a more
exciting result? hear Barry in streaming mp3
It
can sometimes. The best things Ive written with someone like Marianne
Faithfull never got down on tape. It was all in the moment. We would just
play, and it turned out to be wonderful. No one would have it together
enough to say, "Lets record this." Id love to catch
Marianne when shes really on a roll.
I
was speaking to Chris Blackwell [founder of Island Records] about
Noel Coward. He knew Noel and says hes incredibly funny around
a dinner table. Very smart, very witty, and just an amazing storyteller,
but, as soon as he put it down on paper, he didnt find it
that funny. I mean: its like
nice and bitchy and everything, but its not as funny as he really
was in person. Moreover, I dont think Marianne has done anything
worth calling her masterpiece. Whether she will or not -- I really
dont
know. Capturing the moment and getting something down on tape is very
difficult.
You
achieved it a few times. What are the fine moments you remember?
With Marianne?
With anybody.
In addition, how was it possible to catch those fine moments? hear Barry in streaming mp3
With Marianne,
probably one of the best things we ever put down was Why D'Ya Do It?
a lyric by Heathcote Williams. She came in and read it, and it was so outrageous.
The band just sat around listening to these "Why do you suck my
dick?" Why do you...? At that point, we had a guitarist in the
band that was a Jimi Hendrix fan, and he started playing All Along the
Watchtower. I changed it a bit by adding a reggae-feel around it. Marianne
just started narrating this thing, and it was amazing. I knew that it was
working as soon as she started talking over that rhythm, and then it came
to the chorus--Whyd you do it, she said. Whyd you do what you
did? Whyd you do it? It was perfect. That was the closest shes
got, in my eyes anyway to writing something truly amazing.
That song
is in many ways the polar opposite of Broken English which is a
classic. Broken English is much more objective, much more presented
and considered. How did that arise? hear Barry in streaming mp3
Marianne
was reading a lot about the Baader-Meinhof Gang, and she wrote these
lyrics about them. Then Steve Winwood came into the session, and
started playing a bassline, soon after we joined in over it. Although
Im credited
with writing, (I still changed the chords and everything else), I think
its the bass line that made that particular song. I actually cant
listen to Broken English now. To me it sounds as though maybe
the producer (Mark Miller Mundy) said, "Okay, we need something
kind of disco on the album." In the song, you hear a certain sound,
whereas, now I could hear something really nice there instead of straight
disco beat. Mariannes voice sounds so strange on it compared to
her voice now. Now, she sounds a bit like a blown speaker. Before, she
sounded like a very high-pitched blown speaker. She had this amazing vibrato
when she started singing. She sounded almost angelic and now it has gone
into this.... How can I put it? Shes a bit like that alcoholic writer,
Dorothy Parker. Shes a bit like that alcoholic writer, Dorothy
Parker. She's a bit like a Dorothy Parker from hell. In fact, that should
be the title of her next album -- Dorothy Parker from Hell -- High Hits.
Or possibly
Lotte Lenya.
Lotte
Lenya, yeah, also. She was very much influenced by her. The thing
is with Marianne -- she is such an amazing performer. At one point,
we went out on the road, and it was acoustic guitar and her. It was
a little like a poetry reading, you know. I would play a very minimalist
kind of guitar part behind her, and sometimes I would just stop,
and she would just continue the song so, when I came in, it would
sound like an orchestra swell even though it was an acoustic set.
We really played with the dynamics, and she could really pull it
off. It didnt happen during every gig,
but when it did, it was a magical experience to pull everything out and
just bring it in very slowly. Thats the kind of power Marianne has
on stage. You know, when shes on stage, you cannot not watch her.
Shes a great performer overall.
Seems
like youre back to playing more electric now. hear Barry in streaming mp3
Yeah.
I always liked electric guitar. I never really considered myself
an acoustic guitar player, anyway. I was a strummer and played like
a bastard. I certainly wasnt a Richard Thompson or anything,
but Ive always considered
myself a rhythm guitarist. Im not a great soloist because I like
to be right in there with the bass and the drums.
And
with the song.
Yeah,
and the song as well. The fact that I write songs makes me quite
good at backing-up singers because Ive actually worked with people who dont play--like
Marianne. The last album that we did together was in a studio called Teatro,
owned by Daniel Lanois. They had an interesting way of recording, and
I really enjoyed it. Marianne and I would come in with an acoustic guitar
and she would just sing along. (Not to mention, I played a beautiful Gibson
acoustic guitar that Bob Dylan played.) Wed just run through a song
like that, and wed get a strong take from Marianne. Shes always
like that. Its the first, second or maybe even the third take.
Three takes and she'd have it.
When
Marianne and I listen back to the song, I close my eyes and just
think of Marianne, playing that song on guitar, and singing. It sounded
like one whole person doing the song -- like Bob Dylan or whoever.
Then what we did, which I found interesting, was to bring in the
drummer. Brian Blade, a wonderful drummer, would then play with me.
There was no click track. I wasnt
playing to a click track but he would swell with me, as well. He would
kind of go up and then come down. As my timing slowed, he would follow
me. It was a wonderful way of recording becau se
it definitely had a great feel. Almost as if the band was backing the
singer and really backing the singer. It wasnt like the band
was this entity running through this song and the singer was on top of
it. Mariannes voice and my guitar served as the foundation for
the whole piece.
That
causes to question the way a typical Rock n Roll lineup records. When you
hear a recording, its the singer thats leading. In practice,
the way the style is recorded, the singer is often trailing along behind
during the sessions. hear Barry in streaming mp3
Thats
right. Steve Cropper was talking about when he was writing with Otis Redding.
Theyd get Otis Redding in the studio singing with him. He said the
band would always speed up. Its such a natural thing to do when
you have somebody like Otis Redding, and youre backing a singer
whos screaming at the end--its all part of the excitement.
Its so natural to speed up and why not? Its great. Click tracks
are fine for a certain kind of music, but I think Rock n Roll is
not really about strict timing. Its definitely about a little havoc
in there --things going off and not being right. I kind of miss that
in a lot of music these days.
What would
you do to correct it? hear Barry in streaming mp3
Kill
many people. Theres nothing I can do to correct it. This is
where its
going. Its all very strange. Theres too much music out there,
too much of everything at the moment. I remember the times in England
when Orson Welles' Citizen Kane would come on TV, and it would
be a real event. It would be like, "Wow, Citizen Kanes on!"
Now its on cable TV twice a month on Bravo or AMC and it has ceased
to be an event. Its the same with todays music. Its
all just so accessible, like having too many sweets.
Youre
speaking as if you think
that music should be a social participation, an event
rather than something you listen to on your headphones. hear Barry in streaming mp3
Yeah, I do.
I remember seeing Van Morrison at The Rainbow [now-defunct venue in North
London]. It was one of those concerts where Van Morrison was ON.
It was around 1973, and he sang like an angel. The band was incredibly
tight, and it was a great concert. Then I saw it on The Old Grey Whistle
Test [slightly stiff British progressive pop music program on BBC
TV] and it was a different concert. That was not the concert that I went
to. It didnt come over well on TV, and I dont think much Rock
n Roll music does. I saw a great video recently, Fat Boy Slim with
Christopher Walken. Its not a great piece of music. Its Christopher
Walken dancing, a beautiful melding of the music and the video. Its
really a wonderful piece, but thats unusual to get a good video
that goes with the music.
You seem to
be approaching a nice curmudgeonly elder statesman.
I am aware that
Im sounding off about these 'youngsters'. They dont know. Remember
the time wed go on the stage with no guitar tuner. Yeah, play out
of tune all fucking night.
You
are "Establishment" now like
it or not, because you have a large respected body of work with
people who are well established, well known and well loved. But
what do you think is different now? If somebody was in a position
now that you were, say, twenty-five years ago, how do you cope
with this wash of music everywhere? hear Barry in streaming mp3
Its
probably harder now. When I was getting into the business, The
Beatles were all of a sudden writing songs. In addition, people
were signing bands -- but you need to write your own material,
and it was dreadful because many people couldnt write. When
people talk about going back to the sixties, theyre talking
about a time when there was some awful stuff. Nevertheless, I
come from a musical family. My father was a pianist, my mother
played the piano, my sisters sang, and my brothers played. Writing
music for me was easy so I got involved with bands in the Manchester
area. When I was fifteen, I was in London, and there were record
companies dying to sign me. It was easy back then. These days,
its not that easy
because people arent looking for writers anymore.
But
you imply that writers are absolutely essential. hear Barry in streaming mp3
Yes,
especially for the kind of music that I like. I love instrumental
and classical music, but I also like a really good song. Recently,
I was listening to an artist named Jake Zachary. You know, lyrically;
hes like the Yorkshire
Jacques Brel. Theres a song called The Blacksmith and the Toffee
Maker, and its about a blacksmith and a toffee maker, and the
blacksmith is this real kind of burly, sweaty blacksmith, and this toffee
maker is this little skinny lady and not very pretty. In addition, theres
a line at the end of it, and I just think its so beautiful. He
says, This is as much a romance of some of the others that you get / Not
so much a song and a dance as your Romeo and Juliet. I love it. Its
beautiful, you know. I really miss humor in music. Id love to do
an album with Jake Zachary. We should get him, Mike. You know, get him
over here.....
You mentioned
earlier about the tricks in songwriting. Does songwriting get easier as
you get older? hear Barry in streaming mp3
No,
I dont
think it gets easier. In fact, I think it gets harder, but what happens
is you learn more tricks. Its easier to write a song, but not easier
to write a good song. I could write ten songs today -- ten mediocre songs.
For me theres nothing to writing a song. Writing a good song is
difficult and also if youre editing your own songs. Now Im
in a stage where I dont know whats good and whats bad.
Ive just come out of a period of having writers block, and
writers block can be a few things. Personally, I feel its
a lack of confidence because, when youre confident and youre
writing, youll put something down, and you will go with it. If you
dont have that confidence in everything youre putting down,
you start to question it. Things arent jumping out at you. For me,
thats when I know its not working. Its an awful predicament
to be in because at that time Id go to other people and say, "what
do you think of this?" For example, if I turn around to my lady,
Carolyn, shell go, "Thats wonderful! Thats amazing!"
I dont trust that. Ill end up giving it to someone else, another
friend of mine, and theyll go, "Eh, its not the best
youve done." I will go along with that.
Arguably,
a song isnt complete until its expressed fully through
a collection of musicians. hear Barry in streaming mp3
It
doesnt
always require musicians. I got my publishing deal with Chris Blackwell
(admittedly he knew what Id written before) through a piano and
a voice, or an acoustic guitar and a voice, and it was my voice, and I
dont have a great voice. Sometimes, in a certain kind of songwriting,
if a song stands up with an acoustic guitar or a piano, then you probably
have a good song, as I say in these uncertain times of songwriting. Thats
what I do because its easy
to get a fairly mediocre song written down. With a little bit of arrangement,
we put a horn section in here, put tambourines through here and a nice
piano in here. Its all about making something that will
sound presentable. However, as far as having a certain depth, its
not necessarily a great song.
Its
so easy with the technology we have now to go and press a button
and cut instant canned energy. Do you think this is detrimental
to songwriting because the energy void is already partly filled? hear Barry in streaming mp3
Its
wonderful where the musics going. The great thing is that its
completely out of control right now and theres some great things
coming out. But, talking about the kind of music I do, Ive been
inspired by a listening to a drum track or a bassline, and thats
a non-organic thing. I really love some stuff coming out now at the moment.
Yet it's very different from the kind of music I listened to while growing
up like Cole Porter. I love to sit down and create a mood through chord
structures and with lyrics. I love the sound of lyrics and what they
have to say. That's why I hate Sting.
Want
to expand on it? Without being bitchy. It can be a case study of
what you care for in a song and what you dont care for in
a song--without getting personal about it.
I
find everything that Stings written incredibly contrived. Hes
written some nice pop songs, but, lyrically, I can just see him reading
something and picking out all the interesting lines. Whereas, I can
hear Bob Marley sing an incredibly basic song like Stir It Up, and
I know this is honesty thats coming through, and it really shines. I think in
most music I can tell whats honest and whats not.
Do you
think everybody can, ultimately? hear Barry in streaming mp3
I
really dont
know. I remember one time trying to write a song for Madonna, and it
came out incredibly contrived, yet I think I did everything right.
I had the right rhythm, the lyrics were kind of Madonna-type lyrics,
and the chord changes were Madonna. In the end, it reeked of insincerity
and, to me, whatever Madonna does, she believes in it, at least.
I think people can tell. I hope they can tell because people are
fooled a lot.
Before,
you said that knowing too much could lead to writers block. How
did you get through the writers block? hear Barry in streaming mp3
I
started writing. I mean physically writing in a book. I would write
all my ideas down. Apparently, theres a book called The
Artists Way, which Ive never read, but I was speaking
to a friend of mine whos
a novelist, and he said, "Just going through the motions of writing
really helps." Because then youre just writing anything.
I tried that, and what happened with me, is I stopped worrying about
it, and thats when it started kind of coming back. Its
not fully back at the moment, but, hopefully, it will keep growing.
As
professionals, we always have to worry about it, though.
Yeah. I think
thats why many people turn to alcohol and drugs -- because they
can help. Theres this book called Alcohol and the Writer, and
its about Poe and Hemingway, Steinbeck and all these writers
who drank a lot. Drinking was their way of getting the wheels turning.
The question at the end of it was whether they have been better writers
if they didn't drink (or would they have been writers, even)? Would they
have written had they not had them to kind of smooth things out? It's
a great temptation for me every time I have a writer's block to have a
joint or a line and think that it will kind of inspire me. But I dont
do that now. Instead, I have to fight. I have to fight through it and
what happens, because I don't do that now, I look at everything I've
written with such a clean, clinical eye. Maybe I'm being too critical,
about the songs that I'm writing.
Its
hard to find where theres a middle line. hear Barry in streaming mp3
Yeah.
And, is there a middle way? Thats what rather worries me. I know that my best
writing came from extreme of emotions -- either incredibly sad or incredibly
happy. I dont know if Ive written anything in the middle. Therefore,
having something like Prozac, for me, would be a nightmare just being in
that middle line. Im certainly not making comparisons, but the best
art, be it from Beethoven or Van Gogh, comes from a certain type of character.
They were extreme people. And particularly in Rock n Roll, extreme
is always good!
That brings
us back to the original question, and we confirm your answer that a little
craziness is necessary. hear Barry in streaming mp3
I
think it is. Speaking for myself, I know that all my life Ive really tried
so hard to be normal. I always had the feeling that if I really was me,
I would be arrested or Id be in jail or whatever. Ive always
tried to contain myself somehow. However, that craziness is definitely
there and I think most people in the business have it. People that I
think have something to say are usually quite mad.
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