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Sunday, 15 April 2012

Info Post

Interview:

Tom, it’s really an honor to talk with you regarding your music. I think it would be the best for all the readers if we start at the beginning.  You were born in Bottineau, North Dakota, but you grew up in Minnesota. What can you say about your childhood? What did inspire you back then?

I was born in Bottineau, N.Dakota about 10 miles from Canada, near the Turtle Mountains. We lived in Pine Island, Minnesota and Northfield Minn where Jesse James robbed the bank. My grandparents lived near Hibbing. It is a true story that I was in a talent contest with Bob Dylan. I remember nothing of it - just news clippings my parents kept ("Another contestant was Bobby Zimmerman...")  We both lost to a 7 year old baton twirler in a red-sequined costume. Why I didn't think of the costume first, I'll never know.

I learned ukulele and then guitar and played show tunes and country and western songs that were on the radio. Liked the Everly Brothers and Elvis. Did Elvis's "Hound Dog" and "Love Me Tender," and the Everly's "Singing the Blues." Mostly what I remember about Minnesota was that it was cold a lot. 20 degrees below often each winter. They didn't have the concept of "wind-chill" then so it was probably million below.

Around 1965 Pearls Before Swine were formed in Melbourne, Florida. I know that you formed band with your high school friends. Please share the story how did you got together and what else can you remember from that very early period?

We were all kids graduated from high school. I had written a couple of songs so we made a tape for ourselves of those and some folk songs in late 1966. Had a record made from it and sent it to ESP because they had recorded the Fugs and we thought they might like us. ESP letters had a green hand print on them so we put a red footprint on ours.


You were very inspired by The Fugs, what else? Perhaps any other influences besides music?

Listened to the Fugs, Jefferson Airplane, Velvet Underground, as well as the Bee Gees and Peter, Paul & Mary. Learned guitar from Joan Baez recordings. Influenced by all the poetry studied in High school.

How did you get signed by ESP records from New York?

We sent our custom cut record to ESP with a letter saying, "hey, sign us up."  So they did. They flew us to NYC and we recorded the album (One Nation Underground) in 4 days at Impact Sound, where the Fugs and the Holy Modal Rounders recorded - so did Spanky and our gang ("Sundays will never be the same").

So the result of signing up was a release of One Nation Underground in 1967. What are some of the strongest memories from recording and producing this LP?
 

We did the album in 4 days (and nights). Went out for hamburgers and rice pudding - never knowing if it was 9 am or 9 pm until we got outside. smoked a lot of cigarettes. Richard Alderson was the genius/producer.  Wouldn't have been anywhere as good without him. Wavy Gravy came by, passing out LSD.

What can you tell me about the concept behind it and about really interesting cover artwork?

I saw the Bosch picture on a book cover (the hunger and other stories by Charles Beaumont).

I will write down the songs from the debut and I would really appreciate if you could comment each one a bit.

A1          Another Time                

I had a car accident where I was thrown out of an Austin Healy Sprite. No real injuries but on the police radio on the way to the hospital heard of others who drowned or burned that same afternoon. I immediately told myself:  "the universe doesn't care at all." and that went into my first real song, "another time".

A2          Playmate                         

"Playmate" is an old kids' song from the 30's - little girls playing with their dolls. I thought if we made it a rock song it would sound risque, which it did. The dylanesque singing helped.

A3          Ballad to an Amber Lady             

Words by Roger Crissinger - he later joined a band called "One" which recorded on the Airplane's Grunt label. Music by me.

A4          (Oh Dear) Miss Morse               

Wanted a song with Morse code in it.  Looked up "love" but only f*** worked out rhythmically dit dit dah dit/dit dit dah/dah dit dah dit/dah dit dah"  Obviously god's will. DJs got in trouble because only boy scouts knew morse code and the scoutmasters complained.

A5          Drop Out!                        

Tune in, turn on drop out was the Leary anthem, so this was a song about dropping out.

B1           Morning Song                

Written alone in a room after reading Jerzy Kozinski'e "the painted bird" another time and morning song were used  by Fassbinder in his 1969 movie, "rio das mortes.".

B2           Regions of May                             

Just trying a love song.

B3           Uncle John          

Anti-vietnam, UNCLE Sam/President JOHNson   the Vietnam war, to me, was murdered children, year after year and I was angry.

B4           I Shall Not Care        

I wrote this on the plane to NYC--a Sara Teasdale poem, part of the libretto of an Italian operas and an epitaph on many Roman tombs in the last years of the empire (I was not/I was/I am not/ I do not care) it all fit together.

B5           The Surrealist Waltz

Words by Roger Crissinger, music by Lane Lederer, an incredible musician, especially on english horn.


7. Soon you released another album called Balaklava, which is very antiwar oriented. Let’s hear the story of Balaklava LP.

Balaklava took a long time to record, we were trying different things: swamp sounds, chamber orchestra, etc.  we used the actual voices of Florence nightingale and the trumpeter from the charge of the light brigade in the Crimean war at Balaklava. Last time that war was "glorious".
 

8. Again I would ask you if you could share a few words about songs on the album

A1          Trumpeter Landfrey...               

Trumpeter Landfrey. He was on a record called Voices of History, along with Florence nightingale. He actually was the bugler at the charge of the light brigade.

A2          Translucent Carriages                 

Where this came from in my head I have no idea. The second parts (Jesus raised the dead...) came from the same place. We did many versions of this until we arrived at what is on the record.

A3          Images of April              

Richard Diderson had some recordings a friend made in a swamp. We used the frogs that ribbetted in the key of A. Richard also knew some some fine jazz musicians who contributed.

A4          There Was a Man                         

Pretty straightforward--folk song  used a wonderful 12-string sitting around the studio.

A5          I Saw the World                             

I was very happy when Utah Phillips told me how much he liked the song and quoted lines from it. His work is wonderful, workers of there world songs.

A6          Guardian Angels                           

Wrote this on a car trip to Tallahassee, Florida. We did this many ways and ended up with the string quartet and the old radio sound. No - we didn't record it in 1927.

B1           Suzanne                           

Leonard Cohen's beautiful song. I'm so glad he is getting all the recognition that he deserves. We used a giant marimba and I fell to the floor after the last notes.

B2           Lepers and Roses                         

No idea.

B3           Florence Nightingale....                             

The actual voice from 1887.

B4           Ring Thing

Tolkien of course. The bagpiper told us he found the rhythm for what he did by swaying with the trees.

Where all did you tour back then? Any favorite touring/concert moments you would like to share with me?
 
 
We did not tour until 1971, which added to the mystery of who the hell we were rumors that we had a dwarf drummer and were in our 60's added to the mystery.
 
 
The band signed for Reprise Records in 1969 and there were also some lineup changes. You released These Things Too, which is also a change in your sound…

 
We escaped from ESP and went to Reprise. Much of the recording was further work with Richard.
 
 
The Use of Ashes and City of Gold albums were recorded in Nashville with session musicians including Charlie McCoy, Kenny Buttrey, and other members of Area Code 615. Several also featured your then-wife Elisabeth on vocals. How do you remember that recordings?

 
Yes, all from the same sessions with Charlie McCoy. The sessions went fast. Run through the song for Charlie's guys, do a take, do a second take and we were very often done. They contributed ideas immensely helpful.
 
 
Next you released Beautiful Lies You Could Live In and your first solo album called Familiar Songs, which are in fact demo recordings released by the record company without his knowledge. Is that really true?

 
Yes, "Familiar Songs"  showed up one day in a record shop  in NYC. I said, "hey! that looks like me on that cover." Went on to Paramount Blue Thumb after that.


So your first actual solo album was Stardancer from 1972 and Sunforest from 1973, both released on Blue Thumb. What happened next?
 

All 9 albums from the 60's - 70's  were me and whoever was around. There was no real PBS group until my band in 1972 - 1973 for touring, which was Art Ellis on flute, etc.; Bill Rollins on bass and cello, etc. and for a while, Harry Orlove on guitar, banjo etc. A very happy time finally. After 10 years I was tired of the road, had met everyone you would want to meet (Dylan, Lennon, Allen Ginsberg...) and, with no money (ESP then crooked manager who ran off with the money). I sold popcorn at the Harvard Square Cinema in Cambridge Mass, learned to be a projectionist and began going to school - working full time. I think in that whole period I got a total of 5 hours sleep.


In late 70’s you became successful civil rights lawyer. Are you still active as a musician lately?

Became a law student in 1981, graduated from Penn Law in Philly in 1984 and worked with Alan Epstein and his firm on the victims' side of discrimination and civil rights cases. Joined the County Attorney's office in Charlotte County Florida, and retired when my wife Lynn was diagnosed with cancer. She is doing OK now, but it has to be checked every three months or so. We are hopeful about it. I have played several Terrastock festivals. Great one at U of London in 1999. A new album (1999) called "A Journal of the Plague Year" and "Constructive Melancholy" - 30 years of PBS, came out.  There is a box set of all the Reprise albums called " His Jewels Were The Stars') and a compilation of outtakes, etc., called "The Wizard Of Is." And of course there was the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993.


Thank you so much for taking your time, Tom. Would you like to send a message to It’s Psychedelic Baby readers?

 
Yes, dear Readers, think good thoughts for Lynn and feel free to email us at "pbswine.tomrapp@gmail.com".


















 Interview made by Klemen Breznikar / 2012

© Copyright http://psychedelicbaby.blogspot.com/ 2012

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