The National Midnight Star #571

Errors-To: rush-request@syrinx.umd.edu Reply-To: rush@syrinx.umd.edu Sender: rush@syrinx.umd.edu Precedence: bulk From: rush@syrinx.umd.edu To: rush_mailing_list Subject: 11/29/92 - The National Midnight Star #571 ** Special Edition **
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It was a couple of weeks after Neil's Rockline interview when he announced that Geddy did the rap section on Roll the Bones. Although I only got half of the interview, I thought it was interesting enough to post here. Enjoy! Ron ============================================================= ONE ON ONE: A CONVERSATION WITH NEIL PEART OF RUSH [...Back now to One on One with Neil Peart of RUSH] As I mentioned earlier, Neil is one of the most respected drummers in rock. In fact, years ago the late great Jazz drummer Buddy Rich cited Neil as his favourite player in rock -n- roll. And Rich is not alone in that assessment. So back to our conversation with Neil Peart, and the subject is drumming. SW: Well what about the physical side of things? Playing the drums for two hours and change every night at this point in your career, as opposed to 15 years ago. NP: Yeah! Ironically its gotten easier. I used to suffer a lot, particularly in the opening act days, because we'd only play 40 minutes a night and I would hardly have time to get warmed up. There would be no sound check. I used to have a lot of trouble of cramps in my wrists, and things like that. Now I've gotten into endurance sports and built up my stamina to the level where it doesn't kill me any more. I can go out and play for two hours and, yes it's - one thing about drumming is that your working at your absolute physical limit and also at your absolute mental limit. There aren't many things that demand so much of you on both levels at once. But at the same time i've had a lot of time to work on it, basically, and at this point - its difficult, I don't underestimate the difficulty of it at all - but I don't feel I've passed that turning point yet where I've had to say to myself that I could have done that 5 years ago, or I'm going to have to pace myself a little slower this year. This particular set of music we're playing is a little over two hours and it's so jammed packed, I mean, Geddy gets to say a sentence every four or five songs and the rest of its is just non-stop music. And the guys get a break in the middle while I do my drum solo, but for me, you know, that's just pushing it to another level for six or seven minutes, and then the show starts again. So it is a vigorous onslaught. SW: Do you enjoy it though? NP: When it goes well I enjoy it. SW: Do you come off stage exhilarated? NP: If I play well. That's something you can never count on and something that inwardly I judge very strictly, so there are nights when I walk off feeling very proud and other nights when I would just rather hide under the bus. Drag me to the next city. That is another pitfall of the road, that you judge your life totally by the last performance. In some ways that's good because you get another chance the next show to walk up there and say tonight I'm going to fix all that. And they are such small things - things an audience would never notice, things often times the other guys in the band would never notice. They're purely inward things, and sometimes just how difficult it is to concentrate or how easily it comes, or just biological or phycological things that no one can figure out. It's an inward thing, and its a danger that if you get depressed if you've had a bad show its not a realistic take on judging your whole life, but it is the right way to walk up on stage is as if your life depended on it and to know that if for some reason you were killed that night - that if this was your last show - you would know that you had given it everything you had. I feel those are the proper values to take with you, but there's a price to be paid for those as well. SW: You mentioned before extracurricular physical endurance pursuits that have helped keep you stamina up. What do you do? NP: The funny thing about that is as a kid I was zero athletic ability at all; a total lack of coordination. And then through getting so obsessed by drumming in my teenage years I built up a level of stamina that I was able to build into other things. So I got into things like cross-country skiing and found it came easily to me because I was used to exerting myself over long periods, and breath control and all those things came very easily. And swimming was the same. I can swim effortlessly for miles just from the same thing that drumming has - you have that centering and breathing control, and balancing yourself, and cycling the same thing. You have that rhythmic thing that you set your pace and just go. So those are the kind of things that were actually made possible for me by drumming. But the fact that I do them on days off or when I'm off the road or whatever, feeds back into the drumming by keeping my stamina high. And it's more important for mental health on the road, if I go out on my bicycle on the afternoon of a show and get in touch with the real world. Or on a day off cycle between to cities and see part of America I haven't seen before. These things keep me much more in touch with the real world, than the usual bubble of touring which can so alienate, and mess people up demonstrability. SW: Who were you influences as a drummer, when you were starting? NP: The list is so long, but my first spark probably came from the Gene Krupa story - the movie, and seeing that. From rock - early rock didn't strike me at all because early rock, especially for a drummer was pretty simplistic and actually pretty moronic through the late fifties and early sixties. An it wasn't tell the late '60s that rock really grabbed me. Well, Keith Moon was certainly a drummer that didn't influence me, ironically, very much musically, but inspired me. I guess that's the right word. I really loved his flamboyant sense of disorder, although it turned out to be the antithesis of my approach to drumming. But it doesn't matter, it did inspire me. And then a lot of later drummers in that era: Mitch Mitchell with Jimmy Hendrix, and later there was Michael Giles with the early King Crimson band that was a big influence on me. And so on into the '70s. I'm afraid of questions like that, just 'cause the list is so long. SW: What about today? Are there drummers working today that you admire? NP: Absolutely. Any number of the well known ones. But, among young ones, the drummer for Soundgarden for instance is an example of a good '90s drummer who has a whole, the full body of drumming knowledge behind him, who is taking it into new areas. I hear both new drummers and other working drummers of the time, and they're playing great. SW: Is there anybody that you like to go and watch? NP: I don't go out for much, there's not much that's worth going out for, and for me to go out its got to be unrepeatable like a good piece of theatre. I'll go to an opera because it won't come to my house, or to a art museum. There's a drummer Omar Hakim who played with David Bowie and with Sting and Weather Report who's just a beautiful drummer to watch. I'm more of a listener than a watcher. [...Fade to Closer to the Heart] One of the most interesting subjects that we covered in our recent interview had to do with Neil's views on rock stardom. Adulation, especially on the often intense level that many devoted Rush fans express it, is something that makes Neil Peart feel.. NP: As you put it, very uncomfortable. I've tried to deal with it and articulate it, and figure out for myself why it makes me so uncomfortable. In songs like limelight I've tried to address it. I've lunched a lengthy campaign to try to deglamorize rock - n- roll and demythologise the world of a musician, and try to express it as very much a job. You really work hard at it, and for us we come in in an afternoon and put in an eight hour day, and when the work is done we get on the bus and away we go. To me is much more prosaic than it's usually portrayed to be, but the deeper question you're getting at there is the whole concept of heros. I don't think its a healthy thing on any level to have heros. A better word would be exemplars. I think people should exemplify worthy values to pursue, but the idea of a hero is something super-human, without flaws. Unattainable is the destructive part of it, I think, because if someone is trying to live up to a hero and mythologising them - idealising them that much - its too far away. It's too unattainable. Whereas if you look at someone as an example of a good musician that you would wish to live up to as an example then that's a healthy relationship. Unfortunately Western culture has been devoted, at least in this century, to the cultivation of heros, super-human, larger than life, the whole Hollywood marketing of film stars. It's a Western thing, through Europe as well. Sports stars, everybody like that. They're supposed to be perfect, they're supposed to be super-human. It's bad for them. The list of casualties through the whole world, just looking at pop music alone, and I know that a lot of those are casualties of the "circus"; the position they're being put in. And I see that's what's happening to Guns'n'Roses right now. That's the casualty that Jimmy Hendrix was, the casualty that Keith Moon was, John Bonham was, all those. Put in an unattainable human situation, and trying to play to it though. That's the one I decided early on - No! I've seen the casualties go down to that. And fortunately for us we came up gradually enough, we opened for other bands and saw how they dealt with it, and dealt with in very unhealthy ways for the most part. They might try to give people what they wanted, but in the long term it was self destructive to them. So the same thing with sports heros. People are constantly complaining because their heros are human, or their exemplars are human. That's the danger on both sides. Its a loss of expectations and a loss of respect on whoever's doing all the idolizing. And for the people in the spotlight, it's just so dangerous if you're not stable. You know, I'm stable enough to reject is all, but I've had a lot of friends who haven't been. Phil Lineup (?) from Thin Lizy was one. He was just basically a very lovely person, but he was another one put in that situation who couldn't handle it. Some people can handle it, some people can manipulate it even very well, but other people begin playing the role - It's like the line I used in Superconductor, 'The role becomes the actor'. They start playing this role and they start walking out after their shows saying 'Oh, you love me! Yes, I love me!'. And it's so artificial, and yet - I was mentioning Guns 'n' Roses too, to go from a L.A. bar band to the biggest band in the world, in like a year, is too great. It's too great of a leap. And it's not like they changed, everything around them changes. And we've seen enough of it in our small scale to guess what it's like for people like that. The whole world does change. Suddenly everybody changes towards you. Slash was being interviewed and he kept prefacing everything he said with 'I don't want to complain, but...', because they were asking him how his life had changed. Basically what he was saying was 'I have no freedom. I have no joy. I have no privacy', but he had to preface all those objections by saying 'I don't want to complain' because he's a hero; he's not supposed to. That's what he's supposed to want. He's supposed to want to be trapped in his hotel room all day because there's a mob of kids outside. I've actually gotten into trouble by trying to demythologise it, because it does make me uncomfortable. I love my work. I chose the work I wanted to do, but it's like Paul Newman said, 'I chose to be an actor, I didn't choose to be a star'. I chose to be a musician, you know. The distinction is not allowed. I've had people write irate letters after I've made statements like that saying, 'How dare you say that what you do is just a regular job. And you just go to work for your eight hours and do the very best job you can'. Well I don't know, it seems self evident to me, but to other people it seems like a betrayal of this great golden ideal of the larger than life star. Other people have tried to fight it. Paul Newman, who I mentioned, is one example of one. For I while I had to be totally, just, reactionary about it. I guess during the turning point for us when we started getting too popular, and all the artifices foisted upon you. The line from Limelight about one must put up barricades, and that was so true. The idea for us, through all our early years of touring, of having a closed dressing room, or security guards, or having to check into hotels under another name. That was ridiculous to us. I mean, we'd go play a show, our dressing room was wide open and anyone could walk in. There was nothing like that. And so when we had to make that change, it felt very artificial. It felt like, 'well who are we to have security people', 'who are we to have pseudonyms to check in under'. You feel artificial doing that, but it's for self defense. Suddenly, everyone you encounter in the course of a day wants something from you. So that's how the world around you changes, even if initially - I don't think anybody changes through becoming popular, initially. I don't think anyone does. They don't instantly get a swelled head or anything like that - but suddenly everyone around you that you see in the course of a day looks at you in a different way. And nearly everyone will come up to you wanting something. If its just a decision, if it's someone working for you, or an acknowledgement, or a piece of your time, an autograph, or an interview, or any number of things. There's never anyone giving, its just take, take, take. For our band, we're on a limited scale, but for any band thrust into it with full force in such a short time; it's no wonder they're on the verge of death every two weeks. Neil Peart, of course, is not only Rush's drummer, he's also the band's lyricist, and as such enjoys a reputation as one of the most literate in rock. SW: How do you do come up with lyrics now? Has it always been the same since you've started writing for the band way back when, or is it a different process now? NP: I would say my methodology is the same, where in the time between records, I'm collecting impressions and collecting phrases I like, and writing down little possible titles, and that sort of thing. And then, when we do go in to do the song writing stage, I have a whole bunch of raw material so I don't have to sit there with a blank piece of paper and wait for my muses to strike me divinely. I have a lot of raw material there, and then it's simply my own discipline to sit there for three days and work on a song that doesn't seem to be going anywhere, but just keep coming back to it, and work on it, and work on it until it does get somewhere. I don't think that part of it has changed, although the craft - I think I've certainly gotten better at it - but, I think the actual series of events, and again the element of emotion that we were talking about before, doesn't change. And so often, where anger is the impetus, and even Roll the Bones - the verses to go with a sense of outrage about, you know, babies being born with aids, and kids being born into instant starvation in Ethiopia and many parts of Africa, or in Heresy too, where it was just a sense of outrage about four generations of people who had to live in this horrible environment just because of somebody's dumb idea just seemed to me like the ultimate heresy in life. SW: The collapse of communism? NP: Yeah! Yeah! But it was more, ah, thinking back over it, again those four generations of people, empathising with them and thinking that if I had been born in Bulgaria in my time, I could never had - regardless of whatever ambition I had, whatever strength of will and discipline to practice, and whatever gift or talent I had, or anything - it would have be worth nothing. I would have ended up as, you know, whatever they told me to be, basically. So, again, that kind of thing has always made me angry about that system, but here I saw examples, and during my travels in Europe last fall I saw kids from Eastern Europe for the first time free to travel around Western Europe. I was travelling over the Alps in Austria, and these four guys, young guys, in their broken down old Scoda, were trying to get up the Grustukner(?) Pass in Austria, and they couldn't go much faster than I could, 'cause their poor car was dying. So at every pull off on the road, their car would be steaming and they'd be waving and cheering, and just so happy to be free! You know, that's the underrated part of it all. There was all the big euphoria when The Wall came down and all that, but then it settled into the hard work of restructuring the whole thing. So, their moment of glory was a very brief one, as most moments of glory are, and as the creative one is too. I was describing how, when I'm working on lyrics, how on an average I'll sit there for three days going over it, and going over it, and there's no moment when I go 'Ah, there it is! It's beautiful!'. The moment of glory for me is that moment when I go 'Oh, good! It's going to work', and then there's a whole bunch more work still to do to make it work. The same for us when we're in the demo stage. We get the most excited about the songs the first time we can see the elements are working. You know, we can go 'Yes! This is what we're trying to do', and we here this first demo - very rough, and very unrealized - but, at the same time, we realize at that moment it will work. All it takes is another six months of work, you know. SW: How are your ideas shaped? Are the shaped just by - you described being in Europe last year and seeing people, and obviously that stayed with you, and somehow that came through in some material that you wrote. Other things: books, I know you're a big reader, movies, just the way you live your life I guess? NP: Yeah! Conversations, and I have a whole network of correspondents spread around the world that - we're too far apart to see each other regularly, but we write back and forth and discuss what's on our minds, and people in different disciplines, some are freelance writers, one of them's a computer scientist, you know - people working in different jobs. Some of them are students - so all coming from different context and with their own struggles, but still we carry on dialogues about things which are interesting us. Through this whole writing on chance, for instance, with this record, I've had plenty of arguments with friends about different aspects of it, and how to postulate a random universe without making it seem futile, like we were just ants running around. That wasn't what I was trying to get across. Through many, many all night conversations those ideas were clarified for me. I would raise the element I was thinking about, and then argue about it with a friend of mine, and maybe gain a new point of access, or perhaps a better way to express it. Sometimes a conversation goes like that, where we argue for three hours and then find out we agree, but it's the mode of expression that needed to be clearer. So those things are very important too. But books are important, newspapers are important, even television - conversations that I overhear. All those things are valid and important and come into play when I'm trying to capture the full scope of something. Just in the element of randomness - I didn't want to talk about it my life, particularly, but I wanted to take that particular example and extrapolate it into all the people I knew, all the people I didn't know. SW: So you decided that before you started writing this album? NP: No, the actual - the element emerged initially just by accident - by chance! Face Up was one of the first songs that I started working on lyrically, long before we even got together to start working. The image of the wild card came up and I just started thinking 'Hmmm, a wild card', and some card game where you're dealt a card and you can either turn it up of turn it down. So I had that phrase 'turn it up, turn it down' which I really liked. But the wild card image kept affecting me more and more, and I started thinking about all the wild cards in my own life, and all the wild cards that other people are dealt. So many areas - like Ghost of a Chance, about the possibility of enduring love, and how heavily the odds are against it in spite of how many pop songs have been written with love and forever in the same line. To me its not a realistic proposition, except in very rare occurrences, and also I wanted to make the point in the song that it's an effort of will. To fall in love is an easy thing, and is rightly considered, I think, a biological thing. But, beyond that, it takes effort. The line that I used is 'You have to make it last'. Yes, you can find someone to love, but then the second corollary to that is for you to make it last. The song Roll the Bones is full of any number of little decisions that I had to make about what I thought, and how best to express them and how to introduce the idea that yes we do have free will and yes we do have choices, and yes our choices do affect the way our fates turn out. But at the same time, there are always these wild cards that are going to come along, sometimes tragically, sometimes triumphantly. The motto comes down to 'Hope for the best, but prepare for the worst'. [...Fade to Roll the Bones] I guess the final piece in the Rush musical puzzle is just how the different elements in this trio fit together. To complete our interview session with Neil backstage in Providence, we got on to how his words are incorporated into the music of bandmates Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson to become Rush Songs. SW: Do the lyrics dictate the structure of the song? The way that you write the lyrics down, does that to any extent, dictate how the song is going to sound? NP: It does, but it's a complicated relationship. I will certainly manipulate the rhythm and the meter within the lyrics sometimes to suggest a certain context for it - a certain way that it might be sung. And sometimes I have to explain to Geddy what I'm after because on paper it looks so abstract. And then I'll say 'Well I had in mind, maybe, to set you up vocally - it would be nice to have these two lines as a pair, and then this one will let you phrase out in a freer way', and so on. So sometimes I have theoretical things in mind, but we tend often to work from the lyrics just because it's a built in structure. It's easier, you know, there's a piece of paper with different sections of the lyrics on there, and we say 'You know, I think this would make a nice chorus and this part would make a nice bridge' and sometimes they're not what I intended, but that's great. When the other guys give input, I tend to get excited more than insulted , so that's important. Yeah, there is an influence, but sometimes we, in a contrary sense, avoid it. If there's a piece that sounds like it aught to be very violent in a musical setting or, conversely, a piece that sounds like it ought to be very gentle, sometimes just to be contrary we'll set them up in a totally opposite context just so there isn't a sense of the expected, or taking the easy way. SW: Yes. I saw a documentary recently about Elton John and Bernie Toppin (?), 'Two Rooms', and Elton John talked about Tiny Dancer, I think it was, and he said 'When Bernie gave me the lyrics, the song just, the music actually, just flowed and made sense. It was the only possible music that could go with those words with the way they were structured'. In this case, because you write the lyrics, but you don't necessarily create the music to go along with them. They are separate disciplines in this band. NP: And sometimes I'm very surprised, too, when I first hear the song or the music, or the words set to music. And usually pleasantly surprised, because for me the words don't really come alive until they've been sung. At the same time, I'm off working in one room on my word machine, and the other two are working in another room on the music, so when we get together at the end of the day if they've put a new set of lyrics to music, sometimes, it'll be a total revelation to me - the context they've found to put it in. So sometimes we don't discuss it too much, just so those surprises can come up. They all work. All the methods work. SW: Do they trust you? Does Geddy trust you, in terms of what your're going to write and then what will eventually come out of his mouth? Or does that just become a process of... NP: There's a lot of collaboration there. I mean, again, when I bring something in, as long as they're positive about it initially, and saying 'O.K., I see what you're trying to get here, but there are a couple of areas that are unclear to me', or 'perhaps it would be more effective if you were to structure it thus and so'. And I'll go back all excited, 'Yes, not only do they like it, but here's some things that'll make it better'. But from a vocalists point of view purely, we work very closely together, where sometimes I can't tell what structure of consonant and vowels will be euphonious to come out of your mouth. I can hear them sung in my head, but that doesn't mean it can be physically done that way. So, we'll work very much on that now - where if Geddy's having trouble with a line, I'll try to find another way to rephrase it - a smoother way to deliver it. Or, if I hear a certain effect of, again, certain consonants and vowels coming up that's very good, I might make more of it and, basically respond to how it's being sung. Sometimes he remarks on a line that's giving him trouble, sometimes I just hear it - I just say 'No. That doesn't work.' It's all to the positive, as I'll feel better about the completed work. Everything is a degree of improvement, so it's never anything that causes fights. SW: What about ideas? Has Geddy ever taken a song that you've given him and said 'Look, I just can't say this!'? NP: Ahh, No. No, because I would never put myself in that position, I guess. SW: You know what he'd be comfortable with? NP: Yeah! After all these years, I've learned enough about the craft to know that if I'm going to put him in the position of having to portray a character, it has to be a sympathetic character. Or, if he's going to be in a narrative position, I have to put enough emotion into that narrative to allow him, as a vocalist, emotive. So, those are bits of craft that you learn along the way that you wouldn't think of transgressing. I wouldn't imagine coming in with a song that would be just totally impossible for him to relate to. Sometimes there are difficulties in interpretation, that are great to go back and fix. And sometimes there are things I do as experiments that never get set to music. And that's O.K. too. I mentioned that we never write a song for nothing, but we would certainly do a lot of preliminary experiments for nothing, and throw them away. I mean, those guys write plenty of musical snippets that end up never being used or end up being replaced. We say this bridge is simply not good enough, and it goes out. The same with me lyrically, they'll say 'O.K. these chorus are really good, but the verses are going to have to change someway to either allow Geddy, as a singer, more scope or just musically to suite a certain framework better. All those things are refinements along the way, but for me to come in with a fully realized work and be rejected out of hand wouldn't happen. It would just be something that would be overlooked in favour of something better. SW: On Roll the Bones, which song do you think you're most happy with in terms of lyrics? Do you think it would be, maybe, 'Where's my thing'? NP: (Laughs). Good! Yeah! A good one to nail, because it's impossible for me to answer that question, always. [...fade to 'Where's my Thing?'] Song for which Rush has just received a Grammy nomination - excellent instrumental track called 'Where's my Thing?' found on the band's latest album Roll the Bones. And that'll do it for One on One: A conversation with Neil Peart of Rush. I'm Steve Warden, thanks for listening. [...fade to YYZ] ----------------------------------------------------------
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