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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:01,289 --> 00:00:05,289 crowd cheering] 2 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000 Downloaded from YTS.MX 3 00:00:07,840 --> 00:00:10,105 Please welcome The Dream Syndicate. 4 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Official YIFY movies site: YTS.MX 5 00:00:13,079 --> 00:00:17,079 [rock music] 6 00:00:21,160 --> 00:00:24,318 People are going to see Journey and Ozzy Osbourne 7 00:00:24,360 --> 00:00:25,758 in the school I was in. 8 00:00:25,800 --> 00:00:27,118 And they're like; what are you listening to? 9 00:00:27,160 --> 00:00:29,358 I'm like, Dream Syndicate. 10 00:00:29,400 --> 00:00:31,558 They’re like, I don't know what that is. 11 00:00:31,600 --> 00:00:33,880 And I was like, thank God, you know. 12 00:00:45,160 --> 00:00:50,326 It was this crazy mix of melody and noise and poetry 13 00:00:50,366 --> 00:00:51,000 [rock music] 14 00:00:51,040 --> 00:00:52,440 and just reckless abandon. 15 00:01:01,120 --> 00:01:06,078 The combination was such that no one was doing it in that way. 16 00:01:06,120 --> 00:01:08,038 They kind of created their own soundscape 17 00:01:08,080 --> 00:01:10,598 and they created their own time and place. 18 00:01:10,640 --> 00:01:14,518 Ultimately, The Dream Syndicate were always cool, because they were outside 19 00:01:14,560 --> 00:01:16,400 the other shit that was happening. 20 00:01:38,680 --> 00:01:40,598 It's just complete chaos. 21 00:01:40,640 --> 00:01:45,318 Steve's going to that place where guitars kill people, and I just loved that. 22 00:01:45,360 --> 00:01:48,560 Like, he could be so ferocious. 23 00:01:54,280 --> 00:01:55,158 It was fantastic. 24 00:01:55,200 --> 00:02:00,278 It was like dark, moody, psychedelic, jammy, 25 00:02:00,320 --> 00:02:01,880 lots of feedback. 26 00:02:09,320 --> 00:02:14,478 We were all so tired of this nervous, hyper formulated music that was going on. 27 00:02:14,520 --> 00:02:18,440 We just wanted to get lost in sound and repetition. 28 00:02:22,480 --> 00:02:23,838 I got that vibe, 29 00:02:23,880 --> 00:02:27,598 that kind of Velvet Underground meets Bob Dylan kind of vibe. 30 00:02:27,640 --> 00:02:29,932 I was right there with that band right off the 31 00:02:29,953 --> 00:02:32,118 bat, and it all happened within six months. 32 00:02:32,160 --> 00:02:33,558 The Dream Syndicate paid no dues. 33 00:02:33,600 --> 00:02:34,958 It happened so fast. 34 00:02:35,000 --> 00:02:38,800 They were just poised to go, you know, straight to the moon. 35 00:02:43,080 --> 00:02:45,198 I can't believe how good this music is. 36 00:02:45,240 --> 00:02:46,998 I loved it so much. I thought people are going 37 00:02:47,040 --> 00:02:48,638 to just freak out when they hear this. 38 00:02:48,680 --> 00:02:51,558 And they did. I mean, the club asked us back right away 39 00:02:51,600 --> 00:02:52,758 as soon as the show was over. 40 00:02:52,800 --> 00:02:56,358 From the time Dennis came to the rehearsal, to the time we made the record, to time 41 00:02:56,400 --> 00:03:00,160 we were on stage playing our first show at a groovy club to 300 people. 42 00:03:00,360 --> 00:03:04,440 All this happened in three, three and a half weeks. It was insane. 43 00:03:08,560 --> 00:03:11,558 It was tight. It was the toughest ticket in town that night. 44 00:03:11,600 --> 00:03:13,838 We played the show and people are lined around the block. 45 00:03:13,880 --> 00:03:16,038 It was kind of like the first taste I had, 46 00:03:16,080 --> 00:03:17,600 that something really big was happening. 47 00:03:19,444 --> 00:03:23,444 [rock music] 48 00:03:23,880 --> 00:03:27,158 It was the combination of everything and then having Steve 49 00:03:27,200 --> 00:03:30,558 at the center of the storm that made it 50 00:03:30,600 --> 00:03:33,600 such a fantastic experience. 51 00:03:35,120 --> 00:03:39,478 We had gone in a short amount of time from feeling like outsiders 52 00:03:39,520 --> 00:03:44,640 who had no chance of having anything happen to being everyone's darling. 53 00:04:03,000 --> 00:04:04,558 I was born in 1960 54 00:04:04,600 --> 00:04:06,289 in Santa Monica, California, and grew up in L.A.. 55 00:04:06,329 --> 00:04:08,720 [soft music] 56 00:04:08,760 --> 00:04:10,998 I'm a native Los Angelino. 57 00:04:11,040 --> 00:04:12,558 My father and mother of my first couple of years, 58 00:04:12,600 --> 00:04:15,718 they got divorced when I was two, and I was raised by my mother 59 00:04:15,760 --> 00:04:17,398 from a lot of my youth. 60 00:04:17,440 --> 00:04:20,398 I've always had a love of music. I don't know what it was. 61 00:04:20,440 --> 00:04:23,398 Maybe it's because it was the sixties and it was a lot going on there. 62 00:04:23,440 --> 00:04:27,038 And, you know, I kind of discovered music, some combination 63 00:04:27,080 --> 00:04:31,120 of my cousin bringing over Elvis records and The Beatles. 64 00:04:32,720 --> 00:04:36,958 I had an older sister, Lindy, the younger of my two sisters, 65 00:04:37,000 --> 00:04:40,198 and she liked going to concerts. 66 00:04:40,240 --> 00:04:44,758 And she knew I liked music, so she would take me to shows with her all the time. 67 00:04:44,800 --> 00:04:46,518 And we saw so many great shows. 68 00:04:46,560 --> 00:04:50,520 We saw The Who and Led Zeppelin twice and Queen. 69 00:04:52,400 --> 00:04:54,998 And my mother very kindly when I was, 70 00:04:55,040 --> 00:04:58,038 I guess eight, got me my first guitar and I started taking lessons right away. 71 00:04:58,080 --> 00:05:01,158 Played in a lot of bands from the time I was nine till I was thirteen. 72 00:05:01,200 --> 00:05:03,118 Different friends, different kinds of music. 73 00:05:03,160 --> 00:05:05,351 My first favorite bands were Creedence and The Who. 74 00:05:05,391 --> 00:05:08,920 [rock music] 75 00:05:08,960 --> 00:05:11,278 I would say those probably if I had to say the two bands 76 00:05:11,320 --> 00:05:14,558 when I was that young, that really did it for me. Those were the two. 77 00:05:14,600 --> 00:05:15,880 Bands I still listen to now. 78 00:05:17,280 --> 00:05:22,798 I remember being maybe ten years old and walking around my neighborhood in L.A.. 79 00:05:22,840 --> 00:05:24,518 A couple of blocks from where I lived, 80 00:05:24,560 --> 00:05:27,598 there was this house where a band was playing in the garage. 81 00:05:27,640 --> 00:05:31,440 And to me these guys were the biggest band ever. 82 00:05:32,520 --> 00:05:36,518 These guys are playing music together with other musicians in their garage. 83 00:05:36,560 --> 00:05:37,958 Wow! Anything beyond that? 84 00:05:38,000 --> 00:05:41,838 The idea that I would play in a band or would make records or go on tour 85 00:05:41,880 --> 00:05:44,320 or play in real clubs. Unfathomable. 86 00:05:45,440 --> 00:05:50,080 The mid-seventies were so much all about gigantic 87 00:05:51,160 --> 00:05:54,438 bloated arena bands. That's why punk rock happened. 88 00:05:54,480 --> 00:05:56,438 For a while I started playing a little less guitar, 89 00:05:56,480 --> 00:05:58,478 doing other things. I started writing sports. 90 00:05:58,520 --> 00:06:01,358 And if anything, I think my dream at that time was to be a sportswriter. 91 00:06:01,400 --> 00:06:05,238 I thought it was a creative thing for me, and I probably got some of the same 92 00:06:05,280 --> 00:06:06,398 pleasures from that. 93 00:06:06,440 --> 00:06:09,840 I got to travel around and see what grown ups did. 94 00:06:12,640 --> 00:06:14,838 But when I went to UC Davis 95 00:06:14,880 --> 00:06:17,840 when I was 17 with the idea of being a sportswriter, 96 00:06:18,920 --> 00:06:21,040 the timing was perfect 97 00:06:21,600 --> 00:06:25,278 to get back into music, because it was 1977. 98 00:06:25,320 --> 00:06:28,478 It was the magic year when everything changed in music. 99 00:06:28,520 --> 00:06:31,600 And, you know, I would say punk rock saved my life. 100 00:06:32,360 --> 00:06:35,358 Discovering this music when I was working at the radio station 101 00:06:35,400 --> 00:06:39,840 in Davis, KDVS. Having access to all this music and learning about it 102 00:06:40,640 --> 00:06:43,000 minute by minute was the greatest thing. 103 00:06:43,680 --> 00:06:46,438 And I was on this radio station with 104 00:06:46,480 --> 00:06:48,678 Tom Gracyk. Tom Gracyk was our guru. 105 00:06:48,720 --> 00:06:49,438 I had been getting all the 106 00:06:49,480 --> 00:06:52,840 good punk records like Richard Hell and Talking Heads and The Saints. 107 00:06:53,200 --> 00:06:54,518 And he was reviewing stuff like 108 00:06:54,560 --> 00:06:56,118 Peter Gabriel and Todd Rundgren. 109 00:06:56,160 --> 00:06:58,118 He was still kind of mainstream. 110 00:06:58,160 --> 00:07:02,998 And I was two years older, a year and a half older than him. So I kind of 111 00:07:03,040 --> 00:07:06,200 pushed him, forced him a little into music that he didn't know about. 112 00:07:10,000 --> 00:07:12,718 I was the music director, he became the program director. 113 00:07:12,760 --> 00:07:14,718 And by then he knew people like Kendra Smith, 114 00:07:14,760 --> 00:07:18,118 who was working in the Public Affairs Department at the radio station. 115 00:07:18,160 --> 00:07:23,838 And Russ Tolman, who had been program director there also at KDVS. 116 00:07:23,880 --> 00:07:28,278 In Davis, there were only fifty people who cared about this stuff. 117 00:07:28,320 --> 00:07:30,958 Fifty people who wanted to know about this music. 118 00:07:31,000 --> 00:07:35,120 And we all knew each other and we all fed each other's excitement. 119 00:07:37,480 --> 00:07:39,398 I saw this Bruce Springsteen show 120 00:07:39,440 --> 00:07:42,520 in Los Angeles on the Darkness on the Edge of Town tour. 121 00:07:42,800 --> 00:07:44,998 And it was just one of those revelation moments. 122 00:07:45,040 --> 00:07:48,598 He was playing San Diego the next night, and I had to see it again. 123 00:07:48,640 --> 00:07:51,758 And I knew Kendra was on school break like I was. 124 00:07:51,800 --> 00:07:54,158 And it was one of those classic things that happens all the time. 125 00:07:54,200 --> 00:07:56,758 We walked out of there saying, let's form a band. 126 00:07:56,800 --> 00:08:00,038 She said, “I've done a little singing, like in choir and, you know”. 127 00:08:00,080 --> 00:08:02,278 Alright, you're the singer. 128 00:08:02,320 --> 00:08:04,118 I'm not the singer. Holy cow. 129 00:08:04,160 --> 00:08:05,678 I've never sung in my life. 130 00:08:05,720 --> 00:08:09,958 And I knew Russ Tolman played guitar, because we had played together. 131 00:08:10,000 --> 00:08:11,998 So there we are, Kendra, me and Russ. 132 00:08:12,040 --> 00:08:14,118 I'd really never been in a band before. 133 00:08:14,160 --> 00:08:16,212 It’s like you had to be a virtuoso player 134 00:08:16,233 --> 00:08:18,558 to actually be in a band back in those days. 135 00:08:18,600 --> 00:08:22,958 And so, you know, the new wave and punk rock came along and kind of freed 136 00:08:23,000 --> 00:08:25,758 everyone from that. So Steve was very keen on starting the band. 137 00:08:25,800 --> 00:08:28,118 I guess he had gone to Kendra and said the same thing. 138 00:08:28,160 --> 00:08:29,600 Kendra Smith. 139 00:08:30,920 --> 00:08:32,920 So we started this band called Suspects. 140 00:08:53,000 --> 00:08:54,758 Kendra was the girl, 141 00:08:54,800 --> 00:08:56,478 she also worked at college radio station. 142 00:08:56,520 --> 00:08:57,093 She started off in the news department and she was that cute girl 143 00:08:57,133 --> 00:08:59,560 [rock music] 144 00:08:59,600 --> 00:09:01,278 in the news department. 145 00:09:01,320 --> 00:09:03,440 I think everyone had a crush on her. 146 00:09:04,280 --> 00:09:06,998 We put an ad in the paper and we got two guys. 147 00:09:07,040 --> 00:09:13,918 We got a bass player named Steve Suchil and we also got Gavin Blair, a drummer. 148 00:09:13,960 --> 00:09:16,078 With Suspects we actually started getting a lot of gigs. 149 00:09:16,120 --> 00:09:19,038 We were playing quite a bit, just because we were willing 150 00:09:19,080 --> 00:09:20,398 to take any gig we were offered. 151 00:09:20,440 --> 00:09:25,078 We were like a classic two guitar and bubbly female lead singer band. 152 00:09:25,120 --> 00:09:29,640 Actually, we were Davis's first new wave band as what we were known as. 153 00:09:29,920 --> 00:09:32,038 I must have written a hundred songs for Suspects. 154 00:09:32,080 --> 00:09:33,118 None. 155 00:09:33,160 --> 00:09:35,320 None of which I ever played after that. 156 00:09:35,680 --> 00:09:38,478 None have ever surfaced in any other band. 157 00:09:38,520 --> 00:09:41,478 But I was writing like crazy. And that's how I was learning to write songs. 158 00:09:41,520 --> 00:09:42,918 We made a single. 159 00:09:42,960 --> 00:09:46,478 It was called Talking Loud and Walking Proud on the A-side 160 00:09:46,520 --> 00:09:48,600 and on the B-side was Up To You. 161 00:09:54,520 --> 00:09:56,958 At one point, Steve claimed he was just going to buy them all up 162 00:09:57,000 --> 00:09:59,958 to destroy them, because he was slightly embarrassed about it. 163 00:10:00,000 --> 00:10:01,478 But it wasn't a bad record at all. 164 00:10:01,520 --> 00:10:02,558 I think Steve ended up with 165 00:10:02,600 --> 00:10:05,518 most of them in his closet, but we did sell a few. 166 00:10:05,560 --> 00:10:07,718 As a record you could hold in your hands and say, I did this. 167 00:10:07,760 --> 00:10:08,660 And it was a great feeling. 168 00:10:15,854 --> 00:10:19,400 [rock music] 169 00:10:19,440 --> 00:10:21,238 We played around for a little while longer 170 00:10:21,280 --> 00:10:23,320 and then we broke up. 171 00:10:25,080 --> 00:10:27,920 As all young bands do. 172 00:10:37,200 --> 00:10:37,998 I went back to L.A., 173 00:10:38,040 --> 00:10:42,280 I was 20 years old and more obsessed with music than anything else in my life. 174 00:10:42,480 --> 00:10:47,558 I was getting my education by day at UCLA, but my real education was working 175 00:10:47,600 --> 00:10:52,878 in this record store and talking to people about music and going to shows every 176 00:10:52,920 --> 00:10:53,920 night, if I could. 177 00:10:59,320 --> 00:11:00,678 I started playing in bands again. 178 00:11:00,720 --> 00:11:03,278 The bands I was playing with are okay, they didn't excite me that much. 179 00:11:03,320 --> 00:11:06,438 I couldn't find anybody making music that I was hearing in my head. 180 00:11:06,480 --> 00:11:08,998 And I figured, you know, I still love music, 181 00:11:09,040 --> 00:11:10,441 but I don't want to be a musician anymore. 182 00:11:12,840 --> 00:11:14,678 I remember I had one thing on my mind 183 00:11:14,720 --> 00:11:21,038 and that was I wanted to make a record that I could be proud of. 184 00:11:21,080 --> 00:11:22,998 So I got a little home recording system, 185 00:11:23,040 --> 00:11:26,158 I saved up and got a little four track reel to reel recorder 186 00:11:26,200 --> 00:11:29,760 and recorded just kind of jam that I had built around four chords. 187 00:11:30,280 --> 00:11:32,038 That became That's What You Always Say. 188 00:11:32,080 --> 00:11:34,918 And I played everything myself, and I just made up words. 189 00:11:34,960 --> 00:11:37,438 If you ever hear the version that I put out then, it just gibberish. 190 00:11:37,480 --> 00:11:39,440 Just, you know, uh uh uh uh. 191 00:11:46,120 --> 00:11:48,278 The chorus was, “but that's what you always say”. 192 00:11:48,320 --> 00:11:50,118 And the rest was just nonsense. 193 00:11:50,160 --> 00:11:53,718 And I called the band 15 Minutes, because that was my 15 minutes, 194 00:11:53,760 --> 00:11:57,438 my joke that this be the one record 195 00:11:57,480 --> 00:11:59,878 I make that is, you know, that is cool 196 00:11:59,920 --> 00:12:01,040 and now I'm going to quit. 197 00:12:02,920 --> 00:12:04,478 Around that time when I made that single, 198 00:12:04,520 --> 00:12:07,758 I met these two sisters, Kristi and Kelly Callan. 199 00:12:07,800 --> 00:12:10,638 They would shop at the record store where I worked and they said, 200 00:12:10,680 --> 00:12:12,158 “Hey, you know, I know you play guitar. 201 00:12:12,200 --> 00:12:14,678 Do you want to get together and jam sometime?” Yeah, sure. 202 00:12:14,720 --> 00:12:17,518 So we've got together and played. And I liked what they were doing. 203 00:12:17,560 --> 00:12:18,518 They played these songs 204 00:12:18,560 --> 00:12:22,798 that had a million chords and would speed up and slow down randomly. 205 00:12:22,840 --> 00:12:25,318 And all I could think when I heard these girls play was, 206 00:12:25,360 --> 00:12:26,840 they remind me of The Shaggs. 207 00:12:33,120 --> 00:12:34,598 These girls are the new Shaggs. 208 00:12:34,640 --> 00:12:36,598 I got to play with them. I was so excited about it. 209 00:12:36,640 --> 00:12:41,240 But we needed the bass player, so we advertised in this Recycler newspaper 210 00:12:42,240 --> 00:12:44,520 for a bass player to come play with us. 211 00:12:44,880 --> 00:12:48,918 And this tall, skinny guy 212 00:12:48,960 --> 00:12:52,360 with a pageboy haircut shows up, that’s Karl Precoda. 213 00:12:52,840 --> 00:12:55,838 He came in and played with us, and after it was over, I walked him out 214 00:12:55,880 --> 00:12:59,478 back to his car and I said, “So you know what you think?” 215 00:12:59,520 --> 00:13:02,400 He said, “They're terrible, but I like you!” 216 00:13:03,080 --> 00:13:04,038 I like what you're doing. 217 00:13:04,080 --> 00:13:05,640 Okay, so we start playing together. 218 00:13:12,560 --> 00:13:14,398 He quickly changed from bass to guitar 219 00:13:14,440 --> 00:13:16,280 and we would just sit around and jam in the basement. 220 00:13:17,120 --> 00:13:19,318 Everything just came alive. 221 00:13:19,360 --> 00:13:21,358 And the two of us playing guitars and playing, 222 00:13:21,400 --> 00:13:25,478 you know, an E chord for twenty minutes in my father's basement. 223 00:13:25,520 --> 00:13:27,918 For some reason, this is what I've been looking for. 224 00:13:27,960 --> 00:13:30,118 At that point, I was so excited about it. 225 00:13:30,160 --> 00:13:31,478 I got in touch with Kendra. 226 00:13:31,520 --> 00:13:35,158 Kendra, after Suspects broke up, started playing bass. 227 00:13:35,200 --> 00:13:37,358 Bear in mind, she had never played bass before. 228 00:13:37,400 --> 00:13:39,998 She has picked up the bass and started playing one note, 229 00:13:40,040 --> 00:13:42,478 dum dum dum dum dum dum dum. And that was all she wanted to do. 230 00:13:42,520 --> 00:13:45,438 I'm sitting in the basement with Karl going, dah dah dah dah dah dah. 231 00:13:45,480 --> 00:13:47,080 Playing one chord over and over again. 232 00:13:47,400 --> 00:13:50,638 And that really was such a refreshing thing to all of us. 233 00:13:50,680 --> 00:13:53,278 I think we were all so tired of this 234 00:13:53,320 --> 00:13:55,918 nervous, hyper formulated music that was going on. 235 00:13:55,960 --> 00:13:57,078 We just wanted to play. 236 00:13:57,120 --> 00:14:01,278 We just wanted to get lost in sound and repetition. 237 00:14:01,320 --> 00:14:04,838 You know, the obvious role model for that kind of music was the Velvet Underground. 238 00:14:04,880 --> 00:14:07,798 And I would hear something like Sister Ray, 239 00:14:07,840 --> 00:14:10,800 seventeen minutes of two chords and say, this is the greatest thing ever. 240 00:14:18,960 --> 00:14:22,918 At a certain point, we started thinking we might be getting kind of good enough. 241 00:14:22,960 --> 00:14:25,638 We could play a show someday. Who knows? 242 00:14:25,680 --> 00:14:27,160 This is kind of, we like it. 243 00:14:27,440 --> 00:14:29,290 Kendra said: “I'm kind of friends with Dennis Duck from Human Hands”. 244 00:14:29,330 --> 00:14:33,330 [rock music] 245 00:14:34,360 --> 00:14:36,438 One of our big fans, 246 00:14:36,480 --> 00:14:39,798 someone who used to come see us all the time, 247 00:14:39,840 --> 00:14:43,198 I remember seeing her backstage at the Whisky several times, was Kendra. 248 00:14:43,240 --> 00:14:45,558 Dennis was a rock star. I saw Dennis play the Whisky A Go Go. 249 00:14:45,600 --> 00:14:47,638 But, Kendra seemed to think he would come play with us. 250 00:14:47,680 --> 00:14:48,878 I said: “Sure, give it a chance”. 251 00:14:48,920 --> 00:14:53,918 My phone rang in Pasadena on an incredibly stormy, 252 00:14:53,960 --> 00:14:57,680 rainy night, just pouring rain, lightning. 253 00:14:58,560 --> 00:15:03,158 I get this call and this guy says: “Dennis, this is Steve Wynn. 254 00:15:03,200 --> 00:15:04,558 I'm a friend of Kendra's. 255 00:15:04,600 --> 00:15:07,358 And she told me that you play drums. 256 00:15:07,400 --> 00:15:09,680 And I was wondering if you want to come rehearse with us.” 257 00:15:10,520 --> 00:15:14,958 And I just thought: oh, no, no, I really I just don't want to do this. 258 00:15:15,000 --> 00:15:18,678 And I'm sure I said no about a hundred times, and he just persisted. 259 00:15:18,720 --> 00:15:22,078 He wouldn't take no for an answer and convinced me to pack up 260 00:15:22,120 --> 00:15:23,958 all my drums in the car. 261 00:15:24,000 --> 00:15:27,878 Dennis decided to drive across L.A. 262 00:15:27,920 --> 00:15:31,358 from Pasadena to Westwood, where I lived, 263 00:15:31,400 --> 00:15:33,558 an hour and a half in the rain 264 00:15:33,600 --> 00:15:35,038 to play with us in the basement. 265 00:15:35,080 --> 00:15:38,038 Drove out there very reluctantly, 266 00:15:38,080 --> 00:15:42,718 set up my drums in their pool house, which was the rehearsal space, 267 00:15:42,760 --> 00:15:45,878 and played through a bunch of songs. 268 00:15:45,920 --> 00:15:50,278 I think we played Suzie Q by Creedence for about a half hour. 269 00:15:50,320 --> 00:15:52,078 Maybe played That’s What You Always Say. 270 00:15:52,120 --> 00:15:54,680 And maybe just jammed on an E chord for another hour. 271 00:15:58,960 --> 00:16:02,878 He brought a boombox with him and recorded the whole rehearsal. 272 00:16:02,920 --> 00:16:07,318 And Dennis, as I learned later on, doesn't always express 273 00:16:07,360 --> 00:16:08,478 what's going on inside his head. 274 00:16:08,520 --> 00:16:09,616 He took off and didn't say anything. Just: “Oh, okay, you know, good luck.” 275 00:16:09,656 --> 00:16:13,656 [rock music] 276 00:16:14,120 --> 00:16:17,718 Three days later, just out of good manners, I called him on the phone 277 00:16:17,760 --> 00:16:20,718 and said: “Just want to say thanks again for coming out and playing with us. 278 00:16:20,760 --> 00:16:23,400 We enjoyed playing with you. Hey, did you listen to your tape?” 279 00:16:24,120 --> 00:16:26,918 He said: “That's all I've listened to for the last four days.” 280 00:16:26,960 --> 00:16:28,238 This is the greatest thing. 281 00:16:28,280 --> 00:16:31,118 I can't believe how good this music is. 282 00:16:31,160 --> 00:16:33,638 I was utterly shocked. 283 00:16:33,680 --> 00:16:35,238 That is the greatest thing I've ever heard. 284 00:16:35,280 --> 00:16:36,838 I want to play with you guys. 285 00:16:36,880 --> 00:16:37,480 Wow! 286 00:16:38,920 --> 00:16:40,278 You got to be kidding, I couldn't believe it. 287 00:16:40,320 --> 00:16:41,598 I thought I was joking with me. 288 00:16:41,640 --> 00:16:44,480 Dennis was a damn near God. 289 00:16:45,320 --> 00:16:48,478 We were just like: “Oh, you know, that could never happen. 290 00:16:48,520 --> 00:16:51,358 We're just not good enough for him!” 291 00:16:51,400 --> 00:16:54,358 It was so different than anything else that was happening at the time. 292 00:16:54,400 --> 00:17:00,638 Because I was so into krautrock. I was into Can, Amon Düül, Kraftwerk, Neu. 293 00:17:00,680 --> 00:17:04,398 Just all these great for European and German bands. 294 00:17:04,440 --> 00:17:08,518 And I liked the simplicity of those kind of trance beats. 295 00:17:08,560 --> 00:17:12,998 And I kind of felt like I was playing that kind of beat behind 296 00:17:13,040 --> 00:17:16,078 the more sort of Creedence, Stones-ish guitars 297 00:17:16,120 --> 00:17:18,160 that Steve and Karl were playing. 298 00:17:21,440 --> 00:17:23,478 I could see in Steve right away 299 00:17:23,520 --> 00:17:28,634 that he had a certain special quality as a songwriter. 300 00:17:28,674 --> 00:17:32,674 [rock music] 301 00:17:34,880 --> 00:17:38,398 That time in the next three weeks, things happened very quickly. 302 00:17:38,440 --> 00:17:40,918 We started playing more often and we started writing songs. 303 00:17:40,960 --> 00:17:44,720 Decided maybe we should try to play a show. 304 00:17:45,520 --> 00:17:48,478 Decided the best way to get a show 305 00:17:48,520 --> 00:17:50,200 would be to record our songs. 306 00:17:51,080 --> 00:17:53,318 Found a studio that Dennis knew. 307 00:17:53,360 --> 00:17:55,678 I had a friend in, actually, 308 00:17:55,720 --> 00:18:00,638 in Sierra Madre. This guy Tom, that had a little home recording studio. 309 00:18:00,680 --> 00:18:05,118 He actually had his living room set up as a recording studio. 310 00:18:05,160 --> 00:18:10,238 And then the nursery for where his baby was, was like the control room. 311 00:18:10,280 --> 00:18:12,038 So it was pretty primitive. 312 00:18:12,080 --> 00:18:16,438 Dennis also said, I know a guy 313 00:18:16,480 --> 00:18:19,478 who could engineer it. Paul Cutler. Do you know him? 314 00:18:19,520 --> 00:18:22,958 Paul Cutler? My God. Paul Cutler played guitar in 45 Grave. 315 00:18:23,000 --> 00:18:23,920 I love 45 Grave. 316 00:18:31,920 --> 00:18:34,158 I think Steve's total 317 00:18:34,200 --> 00:18:37,120 bill for all of it was 200 dollars. 318 00:18:37,960 --> 00:18:41,438 I think it was 100 dollars for the studio and 100 dollars for me. 319 00:18:41,480 --> 00:18:44,958 We set up in this guy's living room 320 00:18:45,000 --> 00:18:47,798 and recorded When You Smile, 321 00:18:47,840 --> 00:18:48,998 Sure thing, 322 00:18:49,040 --> 00:18:50,078 That's What You Always Say 323 00:18:50,120 --> 00:18:51,360 and Some Kinda Itch. 324 00:19:06,240 --> 00:19:08,118 In the same first four weeks 325 00:19:08,160 --> 00:19:12,438 got a gig at a great club, 326 00:19:12,480 --> 00:19:15,958 a club called Club Lingerie, which was the coolest club in L.A. at the time. 327 00:19:16,000 --> 00:19:18,678 But we got that gig, because Dennis had played there and knew the booker. 328 00:19:18,720 --> 00:19:23,438 Human Hands in Los Angeles were very popular. 329 00:19:23,480 --> 00:19:24,798 They had put out a few records. 330 00:19:24,840 --> 00:19:29,038 They had a, you know, strong but small cult following. 331 00:19:29,080 --> 00:19:31,358 And so the first three or four shows, 332 00:19:31,400 --> 00:19:33,318 everyone said: “Hey, let's go see The Dreams Syndicate. 333 00:19:33,360 --> 00:19:34,958 That's Dennis Duck’s new band.” 334 00:19:35,000 --> 00:19:38,358 All this happened in three, three and a half weeks. 335 00:19:38,400 --> 00:19:39,998 From the time Dennis came to the rehearsal, 336 00:19:40,040 --> 00:19:42,078 to the time we were on stage playing our first show 337 00:19:42,120 --> 00:19:45,560 at a groovy club to 300 people, all was that fast. 338 00:19:45,760 --> 00:19:48,918 We opened with When You Smile and it just, 339 00:19:48,960 --> 00:19:51,760 you know, the feedback was going and it just sounded amazing. 340 00:20:07,080 --> 00:20:08,118 I loved it so much. 341 00:20:08,160 --> 00:20:10,478 I thought people are going to just freak out when they hear this. 342 00:20:10,520 --> 00:20:11,198 And they did. 343 00:20:11,240 --> 00:20:14,718 I mean, the club asked us back right away as soon as the show was over. 344 00:20:14,760 --> 00:20:17,998 We listened to the tape from that one day session. 345 00:20:18,040 --> 00:20:20,998 And said, this is too good for a demo tape. We should put this out. 346 00:20:21,040 --> 00:20:24,838 He put that out on his own label and it did great. 347 00:20:24,880 --> 00:20:26,438 I was a fan right then and there. 348 00:20:26,480 --> 00:20:29,518 First track on one was Sure Thing. 349 00:20:29,560 --> 00:20:33,158 And I went: “Yes, this is a sure thing!” 350 00:20:33,200 --> 00:20:36,398 It was propulsive. 351 00:20:36,440 --> 00:20:39,040 The guitar work was 352 00:20:40,800 --> 00:20:45,480 minimalist, but with a real drive and intensity to it. 353 00:20:59,880 --> 00:21:02,038 We all had paid our dues, whatever dues we have to pay. 354 00:21:02,080 --> 00:21:04,318 I paid mine with Suspects and other bands. 355 00:21:04,360 --> 00:21:05,478 We all played in other bands. 356 00:21:05,520 --> 00:21:10,278 We'd all played crappy shows for five people or less. 357 00:21:10,320 --> 00:21:12,278 But Dream Syndicate paid no dues. 358 00:21:12,320 --> 00:21:13,718 It happened so fast. 359 00:21:13,760 --> 00:21:17,638 I knew it was great... but I think it took me a long time 360 00:21:17,680 --> 00:21:22,438 to realize how unusual it was for that to happen so easily, 361 00:21:22,480 --> 00:21:29,598 which, to me, maybe means that it was ready and meant to be, but... 362 00:21:29,640 --> 00:21:33,718 just that we achieved 363 00:21:33,760 --> 00:21:38,518 so many different things so quickly in one band sonically. 364 00:21:38,560 --> 00:21:41,238 And then, nobody else was really doing that. 365 00:21:41,280 --> 00:21:46,878 The guitar was a bit of a, you know, 366 00:21:46,920 --> 00:21:49,878 embattled instrument at that point. 367 00:21:49,920 --> 00:21:55,838 And the underground was definitely 368 00:21:55,880 --> 00:21:58,638 reviving the use of the guitar. 369 00:21:58,680 --> 00:22:00,118 Los Angeles is very funny. 370 00:22:00,160 --> 00:22:03,838 There are bands that can kind of come out of nowhere and within a gig 371 00:22:03,880 --> 00:22:06,878 or two become like the next big thing. 372 00:22:06,920 --> 00:22:08,798 And that's what happened with The Dream Syndicate. 373 00:22:08,840 --> 00:22:11,438 They were like, you know, they were stars. 374 00:22:11,480 --> 00:22:15,318 They were, you know, or at least they were the putty out of which, 375 00:22:15,360 --> 00:22:17,840 you know, the star making machine can make stars. 376 00:22:26,080 --> 00:22:28,838 And I drank a lot in the early days of The Dream Syndicate. 377 00:22:28,880 --> 00:22:30,092 And I say this not like it's some kind of boast, like, weren't we wild? 378 00:22:30,132 --> 00:22:31,720 [rock music] 379 00:22:31,760 --> 00:22:34,798 But it was the way I overcame my shyness, 380 00:22:34,840 --> 00:22:37,398 my fear of being a frontman and a lead singer 381 00:22:37,440 --> 00:22:42,798 and also a way to, as Jim Morrison said in L.A. years earlier 382 00:22:42,840 --> 00:22:45,158 break on through to the other side, which was so important to me. 383 00:22:45,200 --> 00:22:49,400 I want people to walk away from a show and say, I can't believe what I just saw. 384 00:22:50,120 --> 00:22:51,358 I don't know if I like it. 385 00:22:51,400 --> 00:22:53,558 I don't necessarily know if I love it or hate it. 386 00:22:53,600 --> 00:22:55,600 But I've never seen anybody do that before on stage. 387 00:23:01,901 --> 00:23:04,600 [rock music] 388 00:23:04,640 --> 00:23:08,318 Steve, you know, his hair was like all sticking up and he kind of 389 00:23:08,360 --> 00:23:12,518 like prowled around the stage and was very provocative to the audience. 390 00:23:12,560 --> 00:23:16,798 There was no pandering or making it easy for people to like them. 391 00:23:16,840 --> 00:23:17,878 You know what I mean? 392 00:23:17,920 --> 00:23:20,800 And I like that. That was really influential. 393 00:23:26,440 --> 00:23:30,318 Karl was definitely a rock star to me. 394 00:23:30,360 --> 00:23:35,438 He was like this lanky guy on on stage with this guitar, 395 00:23:35,480 --> 00:23:41,198 you know, just digging into his guitar and going nuts and getting the feedback. 396 00:23:41,240 --> 00:23:43,638 Karl and Steve would just go off. They were insane. 397 00:23:43,680 --> 00:23:46,758 They would do the ten minute jams or run around the stage. 398 00:23:46,800 --> 00:23:49,638 Karl would jump up off his amplifiers. 399 00:23:49,680 --> 00:23:51,558 He was really out there. 400 00:23:51,600 --> 00:23:56,238 He was so flamboyant one with the feedback and all the moves. 401 00:23:56,280 --> 00:23:58,958 You know, the guitar hero moves. 402 00:23:59,000 --> 00:24:00,118 He was always out of tune. 403 00:24:00,160 --> 00:24:03,560 But like Albert King, he would play it back into tune. 404 00:24:07,800 --> 00:24:10,998 The first EP came out in April of 1982, 405 00:24:11,040 --> 00:24:13,918 and by that time we were playing a lot of shows. 406 00:24:13,960 --> 00:24:16,718 Our fourth and fifth show was opening for Wall of Voodoo, 407 00:24:16,760 --> 00:24:19,198 you know, they became very popular at the time. 408 00:24:19,240 --> 00:24:22,878 We actually open for the Psychedelic Furs in San Francisco and L.A. 409 00:24:22,920 --> 00:24:26,758 Not too long after that, we had interest from Slash records. 410 00:24:26,800 --> 00:24:28,878 Slash was the hippest label in L.A. at the time, 411 00:24:28,920 --> 00:24:30,998 you just couldn't get groovier than that. 412 00:24:31,040 --> 00:24:33,718 X were on that label and The Blasters were on that label. 413 00:24:33,760 --> 00:24:37,198 Sure, we were getting a lot of attention. Sure, Slash was a big label. 414 00:24:37,240 --> 00:24:39,158 Doesn't mean that they gave us any kind of a budget to work with. 415 00:24:39,200 --> 00:24:41,638 So we had very 416 00:24:41,680 --> 00:24:45,278 minimal time to make the record. Which was a good thing. 417 00:24:45,320 --> 00:24:46,478 I love seeing them live. 418 00:24:46,520 --> 00:24:51,398 I mean, I really, that's one of the reasons I wanted to get them 419 00:24:51,440 --> 00:24:54,238 as live as possible in the studio. 420 00:24:54,280 --> 00:24:57,358 You know, aside from budget constraints. 421 00:24:57,400 --> 00:24:59,518 We were told, you're going to record 422 00:24:59,560 --> 00:25:02,718 at the studio called Quad Tech, on these three nights back to back 423 00:25:02,760 --> 00:25:03,678 from midnight to eight. 424 00:25:03,720 --> 00:25:06,558 We set up, record all night long. 425 00:25:06,600 --> 00:25:08,358 Starting at midnight. 426 00:25:08,400 --> 00:25:09,078 Boom. 427 00:25:09,120 --> 00:25:13,558 Recording. Ending eight in the morning. Finishing. Going to work. 428 00:25:13,600 --> 00:25:18,598 I was still working, so I went off and just drove to work from the studio. 429 00:25:18,640 --> 00:25:20,998 And the next night going in and doing overdubs, 430 00:25:21,040 --> 00:25:23,198 which wasn't much. And the third night mixing it. 431 00:25:23,240 --> 00:25:24,198 And it was done. 432 00:25:24,240 --> 00:25:28,398 I remember going back the last day with the mixes into the record store, 433 00:25:28,440 --> 00:25:31,278 into Rhino Records, and playing it over the speakers 434 00:25:31,320 --> 00:25:34,400 in the record store and smiling, because we had done it. 435 00:26:01,322 --> 00:26:05,322 [rock music] 436 00:26:37,720 --> 00:26:39,278 When Days of Wine and Roses came out, 437 00:26:39,320 --> 00:26:41,198 I think it created a ripple. 438 00:26:41,240 --> 00:26:44,318 You know, people paid attention to it. 439 00:26:44,360 --> 00:26:48,998 Days of Wine and Roses was the one that really 440 00:26:49,040 --> 00:26:50,678 blew me out of the water. 441 00:26:50,720 --> 00:26:56,078 You know, longer songs, you know, that kind of flow of conscious lyrics. 442 00:26:56,120 --> 00:27:00,598 And the desperation. You know. 443 00:27:00,640 --> 00:27:01,998 I was right on that record. 444 00:27:02,040 --> 00:27:06,558 I just thought it was one of the most exciting and 445 00:27:06,600 --> 00:27:13,918 compelling and also emotionally 446 00:27:13,960 --> 00:27:17,678 forceful records I had heard in a really long time. 447 00:27:17,720 --> 00:27:22,958 It was noise, but it actually had spirit and spirituality. 448 00:27:23,000 --> 00:27:24,118 I didn't get it. 449 00:27:24,160 --> 00:27:27,718 I honestly didn't think, you know, I didn't get it. 450 00:27:27,760 --> 00:27:32,838 But as you know, as time went on, I kind of got it. 451 00:27:32,880 --> 00:27:35,198 And Days of Wine and Roses is an amazing record. 452 00:27:35,240 --> 00:27:38,680 It’s one of my favorites from the time period. 453 00:27:50,840 --> 00:27:53,038 I guess it came out in October and in January we went on tour 454 00:27:53,080 --> 00:27:54,318 for the first time. 455 00:27:54,360 --> 00:27:57,198 We went out, hit the road. And played all across the country. 456 00:27:57,240 --> 00:28:01,078 Got in the van and drove everywhere. We drove all the way across the 457 00:28:01,120 --> 00:28:03,838 the Midwest, the East Coast, the South, all around. 458 00:28:03,880 --> 00:28:05,038 We came to New York. 459 00:28:05,080 --> 00:28:07,838 And as I would often do when I was in L.A., I would get The Village Voice. 460 00:28:07,880 --> 00:28:11,678 I opened it up and in the center of the newspaper, 461 00:28:11,720 --> 00:28:15,518 The Village Voice, in the listings for the shows 462 00:28:15,560 --> 00:28:20,798 was a two page centerfold of a picture of The Dream Syndicate. 463 00:28:20,840 --> 00:28:22,838 We played the show and people are lined around the block. 464 00:28:22,880 --> 00:28:25,758 It was the toughest ticket in town that night. 465 00:28:25,800 --> 00:28:29,798 And I remember having the executives from Geffen Records and 466 00:28:29,840 --> 00:28:31,318 all the other labels flew in. 467 00:28:31,360 --> 00:28:34,318 One of the greatest shows that I’ve ever seen. 468 00:28:34,360 --> 00:28:38,638 And I actually did record it on my portable cassette player. 469 00:28:38,680 --> 00:28:39,878 It was that good. 470 00:28:39,920 --> 00:28:45,478 I was willing to risk being thrown out to have a souvenir of this show for myself. 471 00:28:45,520 --> 00:28:47,718 It was kind of like the first taste I had, 472 00:28:47,760 --> 00:28:49,360 that something really big was happening. 473 00:29:01,840 --> 00:29:03,558 About a week after we came home, 474 00:29:03,600 --> 00:29:05,560 Kendra called me up and said: “I need to talk to you.” 475 00:29:05,960 --> 00:29:08,158 We got together and she said: “I'm going to quit the band. 476 00:29:08,200 --> 00:29:09,640 I don't want to be in a band anymore.” 477 00:29:11,240 --> 00:29:13,918 I was stunned. I couldn't believe it. 478 00:29:13,960 --> 00:29:17,240 Kendra was my friend, my, you know, my oldest friend in the band. 479 00:29:17,720 --> 00:29:21,998 Despite my complaint about touring, I think most of that was just 480 00:29:22,040 --> 00:29:26,318 no privacy and no breaks. 481 00:29:26,360 --> 00:29:31,278 I really just need to be alone a lot more time than was had for me. 482 00:29:31,320 --> 00:29:34,358 You pack all your equipment and five or six people into a van. 483 00:29:34,400 --> 00:29:39,438 You crowd into motel rooms all across the country. 484 00:29:39,480 --> 00:29:41,358 You know, you're uncomfortable. 485 00:29:41,400 --> 00:29:44,678 I think that we started evolving as a band to somewhere else. 486 00:29:44,720 --> 00:29:47,798 We're kind of getting started going to a 487 00:29:47,840 --> 00:29:52,638 slowly, going to more of a rock kind of sound. 488 00:29:52,680 --> 00:29:59,120 We slowly started playing less of the Velvets and more Neil Young. 489 00:30:15,472 --> 00:30:19,472 [band playing] 490 00:30:28,120 --> 00:30:29,798 We played our last show with her in L.A., 491 00:30:29,840 --> 00:30:33,078 but things were not going to stop. Things were still moving along. 492 00:30:33,120 --> 00:30:36,638 So I never considered breaking up the band. I knew we had to move along. 493 00:30:36,680 --> 00:30:39,558 And very quickly after she quit the band, 494 00:30:39,600 --> 00:30:41,520 we got asked to open a tour for U2. 495 00:30:44,600 --> 00:30:47,758 Dave played in a band called the Textones, who I had seen a few times. 496 00:30:47,800 --> 00:30:50,478 He was also in a band called The Droogs, which is kind of a garage rock thing. 497 00:30:50,520 --> 00:30:53,638 Dave was nice. He learned the songs. 498 00:30:53,680 --> 00:30:56,958 You're in the band. No question. There was no other audition. 499 00:30:57,000 --> 00:30:59,078 I got together with Kendra. 500 00:30:59,120 --> 00:31:02,158 And Kendra showed me her lines 501 00:31:02,200 --> 00:31:03,920 that she was using on the songs. 502 00:31:04,440 --> 00:31:06,998 And I liked them so much. 503 00:31:07,040 --> 00:31:09,080 I just continued playing her lines. 504 00:31:09,720 --> 00:31:12,958 And it wasn't out of lack of other things to play. 505 00:31:13,000 --> 00:31:15,880 It was just that they were that good and that solid. 506 00:31:17,960 --> 00:31:20,158 This was the beginning of the change of The Dream Syndicate 507 00:31:20,200 --> 00:31:21,238 to a different kind of band. 508 00:31:21,280 --> 00:31:25,038 And Dave, gave a little more of a of a rock sound. 509 00:31:25,080 --> 00:31:27,358 More testosterone than estrogen. 510 00:31:27,400 --> 00:31:29,120 It became a tougher band. 511 00:31:41,960 --> 00:31:45,558 That first show when they opened for U2 was just insane. 512 00:31:45,600 --> 00:31:46,998 It didn't seem like they really 513 00:31:47,040 --> 00:31:48,478 were, like, feeling like there was 514 00:31:48,520 --> 00:31:50,558 a bunch of pressure opening for U2 or something. 515 00:31:50,600 --> 00:31:51,558 They were just kind of crazy. 516 00:31:51,600 --> 00:31:54,798 And I remember Karl Precoda like tearing strings off his guitar 517 00:31:54,840 --> 00:31:57,118 and wrapping him around the guitar as he was still playing and stuff. 518 00:31:57,160 --> 00:32:01,318 And it was just a lot of noise, actually, but it was really, really good. 519 00:32:01,360 --> 00:32:03,118 We were opening for them every night. 520 00:32:03,160 --> 00:32:05,678 All across America. We played the Palladium in New York 521 00:32:05,720 --> 00:32:08,598 and we played similar sized venues across the country. 522 00:32:08,640 --> 00:32:12,038 And it really put The Dream Syndicate at a higher level 523 00:32:12,080 --> 00:32:15,118 in terms of their live profile and their national awareness. 524 00:32:15,160 --> 00:32:19,678 Bono would come in occasionally backstage and sit down and talk to us. 525 00:32:19,720 --> 00:32:23,638 And I remember a couple of times, I think he even gave us a little like 526 00:32:23,680 --> 00:32:26,838 giving us a few pointers about how to do things on stage. 527 00:32:26,880 --> 00:32:30,438 He goes: “You know your guitar player, he represents United States. 528 00:32:30,480 --> 00:32:34,958 He should paint his guitar red, white and blue, like a flag.” 529 00:32:35,000 --> 00:32:37,478 And I looked at him and said: “Buck Owens does that.” 530 00:32:37,520 --> 00:32:39,480 He looked at me: “Who?” 531 00:32:40,640 --> 00:32:44,120 I’m like, if you don’t know who Buck Owens is, pal. 532 00:32:47,200 --> 00:32:50,238 We are experiencing the adrenaline of success. 533 00:32:50,280 --> 00:32:53,198 We’re experiencing traveling the country for the first time. 534 00:32:53,240 --> 00:32:57,358 Driving through Mississippi and Wyoming and Idaho and places 535 00:32:57,400 --> 00:32:59,478 we've never seen before and what people are like. 536 00:32:59,520 --> 00:33:01,187 And all these things we're feeding into the music. 537 00:33:15,327 --> 00:33:17,520 [rock music] 538 00:33:17,560 --> 00:33:20,518 1983, we had worked it up to the point 539 00:33:20,560 --> 00:33:23,838 where they basically became the hottest independent band in L.A.. 540 00:33:23,880 --> 00:33:26,958 We outgrew an independent label at that point. 541 00:33:27,000 --> 00:33:29,598 There were a lot of people interested 542 00:33:29,640 --> 00:33:32,718 on that last tour coming out to shows, people from labels. 543 00:33:32,760 --> 00:33:37,518 Three in particular EMI, Geffen and A&M all wanted to sign the band. 544 00:33:37,560 --> 00:33:40,198 At one point, it looked certain that we were going to sign 545 00:33:40,240 --> 00:33:44,078 to Geffen Records, but then the A&M people were very convincing. 546 00:33:44,120 --> 00:33:45,398 They loved the music. 547 00:33:45,440 --> 00:33:47,678 And we just saw so much enthusiasm 548 00:33:47,720 --> 00:33:51,160 coming from them that we ended up making our deal with them 549 00:33:52,280 --> 00:33:54,518 So that was the label we chose to go on. 550 00:33:54,560 --> 00:33:57,360 And they started the process to make Medicine Show. 551 00:33:59,800 --> 00:34:01,518 We had to choose a producer. 552 00:34:01,560 --> 00:34:04,398 And for some reason, we just fixed on Sandy, on Sandy Pearlman. 553 00:34:04,440 --> 00:34:06,078 We knew him from The Clash. 554 00:34:06,120 --> 00:34:09,878 I guess that's the one album, the second Clash album, Give ‘Em Enough Rope. 555 00:34:09,920 --> 00:34:12,358 And I guess Blue Öyster Cult too, you know. 556 00:34:12,400 --> 00:34:14,158 He managed to appeal 557 00:34:14,200 --> 00:34:16,280 to something Karl wanted and something I wanted. 558 00:34:17,240 --> 00:34:19,558 I wanted something that was kind of like, you know, just 559 00:34:19,600 --> 00:34:21,278 little punk rock and strong, aggressive. 560 00:34:21,320 --> 00:34:24,320 So I had the side, that he did The Dictators and The Clash. 561 00:34:24,800 --> 00:34:27,558 Karl wanted this thing more rock and roll and little mainstream. 562 00:34:27,600 --> 00:34:29,758 He got Blue Öyster Cult. So it worked for both of us. 563 00:34:29,800 --> 00:34:32,918 I saw them at UCLA and actually I loved them. 564 00:34:32,960 --> 00:34:34,198 But it was with Kendra. 565 00:34:34,240 --> 00:34:39,358 It is amazing what a difference it made, substituting 566 00:34:39,400 --> 00:34:41,360 Provost for Smith. 567 00:34:43,320 --> 00:34:46,638 And it was kind of 568 00:34:46,680 --> 00:34:50,718 amazing and dismaying, actually, because I was kind of intrigued 569 00:34:50,760 --> 00:34:54,360 with the idea of making an intimate dreamy record. 570 00:34:56,160 --> 00:35:00,318 We went to San Francisco, I think September of 83. 571 00:35:00,360 --> 00:35:05,078 We got put up in some condos that Sandy had access to. 572 00:35:05,120 --> 00:35:09,878 The Automatt was a very, very plush recording studio. 573 00:35:09,920 --> 00:35:12,278 While we were in there, there were other bands. 574 00:35:12,320 --> 00:35:15,638 I think we had Jefferson Starship 575 00:35:15,680 --> 00:35:19,038 on one side of us and Yoko Ono on the other. 576 00:35:19,080 --> 00:35:22,038 We played the songs. Spent two weeks doing basic tracks. 577 00:35:22,080 --> 00:35:24,318 Okay, two weeks instead of one day. 578 00:35:24,360 --> 00:35:26,640 But still not that excessive for the times. 579 00:35:29,000 --> 00:35:32,678 We would do many, many, many takes of a song. 580 00:35:32,720 --> 00:35:37,118 His way of working was to do all these takes 581 00:35:37,160 --> 00:35:40,798 and then go back and edit parts of them together. 582 00:35:40,840 --> 00:35:44,718 Try that, now try it again, now try it again. 583 00:35:44,760 --> 00:35:45,798 Over and over and over. 584 00:35:45,840 --> 00:35:49,318 I like to do a lot of takes, because 585 00:35:49,360 --> 00:35:52,558 pretty early in my career, 586 00:35:52,600 --> 00:35:54,758 my career of evil. 587 00:35:54,800 --> 00:35:55,800 Quote. 588 00:35:58,840 --> 00:36:01,278 I discovered that accidents were really good. 589 00:36:01,320 --> 00:36:04,200 We finished the session and Dennis went home. 590 00:36:04,640 --> 00:36:07,600 Dave did two weeks of bass overdubs. 591 00:36:08,240 --> 00:36:10,958 Now, that's incredible. Two weeks of bass overdubs. 592 00:36:11,000 --> 00:36:13,078 I can't think of how, how is that done? 593 00:36:13,120 --> 00:36:16,758 Dennis and I would go back home to Los Angeles 594 00:36:16,800 --> 00:36:18,358 and then we'd get called back 595 00:36:18,400 --> 00:36:21,440 and it would be Sandy wanting us to repair one note. 596 00:36:21,720 --> 00:36:24,280 Then Karl did his guitar parts and took six weeks. 597 00:36:29,080 --> 00:36:31,958 We had a ton of fun recording guitar parts. 598 00:36:32,000 --> 00:36:35,318 You know, he was happy to try any experiment. 599 00:36:35,360 --> 00:36:36,358 We had good sound. 600 00:36:36,400 --> 00:36:39,438 Six weeks of Karl by himself in the studio, doing guitar parts. 601 00:36:39,480 --> 00:36:42,598 And it was a kind of thing where you just didn't know. We didn't know better. 602 00:36:42,640 --> 00:36:45,335 Records in the eighties took two to three months. That’s what they took. 603 00:36:45,375 --> 00:36:48,600 [rock music] 604 00:36:48,640 --> 00:36:50,558 After two weeks of basic tracks, 605 00:36:50,600 --> 00:36:53,238 two weeks of bass overdubs, six weeks of guitar overdubs. 606 00:36:53,280 --> 00:36:54,238 Here's the hard part. 607 00:36:54,280 --> 00:36:55,718 Six weeks of vocals. 608 00:36:55,760 --> 00:36:57,958 Six weeks of me singing eight songs. 609 00:36:58,000 --> 00:37:01,480 I really wanted to do well. 610 00:37:02,520 --> 00:37:04,078 I wanted to, you know, 611 00:37:04,120 --> 00:37:08,440 I started by doing what I thought was right as a singer. 612 00:37:08,840 --> 00:37:11,718 Then after a while, I just tried to figure out what Sandy wanted. 613 00:37:11,760 --> 00:37:13,278 You know, I don't know if Steve knew 614 00:37:13,320 --> 00:37:16,118 that I was working to make him sound as awesome 615 00:37:16,160 --> 00:37:17,518 as I could make him sound. 616 00:37:17,560 --> 00:37:20,278 I don't think it was much of a struggle. 617 00:37:20,320 --> 00:37:23,598 I don't even think the record is taking that long. 618 00:37:23,640 --> 00:37:27,358 You know, you get a big producer to come in and you're 619 00:37:27,400 --> 00:37:29,720 giving up some control or a lot of control. 620 00:37:30,640 --> 00:37:36,278 And so, as the artist, you know, your vision maybe gets diminished a little bit. 621 00:37:36,320 --> 00:37:37,798 I was so exasperated, 622 00:37:37,840 --> 00:37:39,918 that I just really went deep inside myself 623 00:37:39,960 --> 00:37:44,998 and I came with these weary, painful, otherworldly, 624 00:37:45,040 --> 00:37:48,838 dark vocals that work great. 625 00:37:48,880 --> 00:37:50,680 But it was a hard road to get there. 626 00:38:02,440 --> 00:38:04,198 Steve was not as efficient. 627 00:38:04,240 --> 00:38:09,038 I think it was a kind of consequence of 628 00:38:09,080 --> 00:38:11,558 of other things, which had little to do 629 00:38:11,600 --> 00:38:15,720 with the recording process, that just were going on at the same time. 630 00:38:16,240 --> 00:38:19,160 You know, it would be fun to work with Steve now. 631 00:38:19,680 --> 00:38:21,638 It wasn't that much fun to work with Steve then. 632 00:38:21,680 --> 00:38:25,040 I think I'm a pretty nice guy, pretty approachable 633 00:38:25,520 --> 00:38:26,438 in general, you know. 634 00:38:26,480 --> 00:38:27,880 Everybody has their bad moments. 635 00:38:28,080 --> 00:38:30,398 But for those six months, I became a bad guy. 636 00:38:30,440 --> 00:38:35,198 Not a not a cruel guy, not a malicious guy, but just a dark, 637 00:38:35,240 --> 00:38:39,078 self-obsessed, hard drinking guy going to bad places. 638 00:38:39,120 --> 00:38:43,158 And I made decisions involving friends and weren't always that great. 639 00:38:43,200 --> 00:38:46,960 And I think a lot of that had to do with taking that long to make a record. 640 00:38:47,280 --> 00:38:48,958 All of your confidence goes away. 641 00:38:49,000 --> 00:38:51,080 You know, whatever happened was 642 00:38:52,880 --> 00:38:58,080 infinitely less pleasant than any other record I had made, you know? 643 00:38:59,680 --> 00:39:07,040 Even recording The Clash was more fun. 644 00:39:07,640 --> 00:39:08,678 Which is saying a lot. 645 00:39:08,720 --> 00:39:10,878 We were in there when we were recording. 646 00:39:10,920 --> 00:39:15,720 There was a lot of drinking going on and we were there involved. 647 00:39:16,520 --> 00:39:20,158 And I think it was frustrating for Steve and the guys that it was taking so long. 648 00:39:20,200 --> 00:39:22,238 It made me crazy. 649 00:39:22,280 --> 00:39:24,440 It was five months of just feeling 650 00:39:25,320 --> 00:39:29,078 disconnected, hopeless, not knowing how things were going down. 651 00:39:29,120 --> 00:39:32,318 I was drinking a lot, and also, 652 00:39:32,360 --> 00:39:33,798 sadly, that was beginning 653 00:39:33,840 --> 00:39:37,478 of the end of the friendship with me and Karl, because Karl 654 00:39:37,520 --> 00:39:38,878 was kind of enjoying that. 655 00:39:38,920 --> 00:39:42,918 He enjoyed, it felt like what rock bands do. 656 00:39:42,960 --> 00:39:45,278 You go in, you make a record that takes forever, because that's 657 00:39:45,320 --> 00:39:48,158 that proves you're successful. 658 00:39:48,200 --> 00:39:50,998 This is what Led Zeppelin might have done. 659 00:39:51,040 --> 00:39:54,238 I think he was very excited by that and he was annoyed 660 00:39:54,280 --> 00:39:55,838 that I would try to put an end to that. 661 00:39:55,880 --> 00:39:59,080 So I think we had our first bits of really big tension making that record. 662 00:40:05,800 --> 00:40:06,836 Karl wanted to be in a bigger band. 663 00:40:06,876 --> 00:40:07,480 [rock music] 664 00:40:07,520 --> 00:40:09,158 In other words, he wanted to be in a band 665 00:40:09,200 --> 00:40:11,918 that sold records and played bigger places. 666 00:40:11,960 --> 00:40:16,918 And so I think he's really pushing his sort of seventies rock sound. 667 00:40:16,960 --> 00:40:17,678 By the end of the day 668 00:40:17,720 --> 00:40:19,718 we had a record that we both liked. 669 00:40:19,760 --> 00:40:22,080 It somehow matched that thing, which we both wanted. 670 00:40:22,400 --> 00:40:27,558 He had made a very wide scope 671 00:40:27,600 --> 00:40:31,360 record that was a great reflection of his talents. 672 00:40:32,240 --> 00:40:35,678 And I had made a record that was dark and unsettling 673 00:40:35,720 --> 00:40:39,678 and would divide people into two camps who either liked or didn't like it. 674 00:40:39,720 --> 00:40:41,118 Everybody was happy. 675 00:40:41,160 --> 00:40:44,880 But unfortunately, we at that point were kind of finished as friends. 676 00:41:04,960 --> 00:41:08,438 It just took me a little while to get to realize, 677 00:41:08,480 --> 00:41:13,958 wow, this is a different sounding band than the one I that I knew. 678 00:41:14,000 --> 00:41:19,000 I was just shaken by the power of the Medicine Show album. 679 00:41:19,400 --> 00:41:21,478 I was, like, trembling. 680 00:41:21,520 --> 00:41:24,158 I'm like, Jesus Christ, this is some pretty heavy stuff. 681 00:41:24,200 --> 00:41:27,878 I honestly, despite the fact that I was beaten to a pulp 682 00:41:27,920 --> 00:41:29,318 from the making of that record, 683 00:41:29,360 --> 00:41:33,318 I came out of that feeling like this is going to blow people's minds. 684 00:41:33,360 --> 00:41:34,718 We knew we had changed. 685 00:41:34,760 --> 00:41:38,278 We knew we'd gone through a lot of changes in one year, 686 00:41:38,320 --> 00:41:39,558 but we'd forgotten then, 687 00:41:39,600 --> 00:41:42,240 what I hadn't realized as a music fan is that 688 00:41:43,240 --> 00:41:45,278 for other people who loved Days of Wine and Roses 689 00:41:45,320 --> 00:41:46,918 they hadn't gone through those changes with us. 690 00:41:46,960 --> 00:41:49,598 I think it works in retrospect. 691 00:41:49,640 --> 00:41:52,078 I think at the time a lot of people were disappointed, 692 00:41:52,120 --> 00:41:54,520 cause it didn't sound like The Days of Wine and Roses. 693 00:41:54,920 --> 00:41:57,158 But they didn't need to make that record again. 694 00:41:57,200 --> 00:41:58,318 They'd already done it. 695 00:41:58,360 --> 00:41:59,480 Word got around, you know. 696 00:41:59,800 --> 00:42:00,598 Oh, The Dream Syndicate 697 00:42:00,640 --> 00:42:03,678 spend 250.000 dollars making Medicine Show. 698 00:42:03,720 --> 00:42:07,960 It was amazing that it took so long and cost them so much to make. 699 00:42:08,480 --> 00:42:10,958 And although it was a different sound, 700 00:42:11,000 --> 00:42:14,558 in some ways it was a stronger record than Days of Wine and Roses. 701 00:42:14,600 --> 00:42:15,758 Medicine Show 702 00:42:15,800 --> 00:42:18,000 it had this reputation as 703 00:42:19,400 --> 00:42:23,838 sort of a bloated attempt at, 704 00:42:23,880 --> 00:42:27,118 you know, some kind of big rock and roll statement, 705 00:42:27,160 --> 00:42:31,118 you know, almost like Rumours by Fleetwood Mac, which has this 706 00:42:31,160 --> 00:42:33,518 reputation of, oh, my God, they spent like millions 707 00:42:33,560 --> 00:42:36,358 and millions of dollars and did tons of drugs. 708 00:42:36,400 --> 00:42:40,118 But Rumours is a fantastic record that holds up really well. 709 00:42:40,160 --> 00:42:43,158 And what Steve was trying 710 00:42:43,200 --> 00:42:47,360 to do on Medicine Show, again, it was incredibly ambitious. 711 00:42:56,737 --> 00:43:00,737 [rock music] 712 00:43:09,200 --> 00:43:12,158 The funny thing about Dave Provost and The Dream Syndicate is 713 00:43:12,200 --> 00:43:14,478 he wasn't really a member of the band that long. 714 00:43:14,520 --> 00:43:15,958 After we made the record, 715 00:43:16,000 --> 00:43:17,998 we got offered the tour with R.E.M. 716 00:43:18,040 --> 00:43:19,638 and we were ready to go on there, 717 00:43:19,680 --> 00:43:21,798 and there was some tension there. 718 00:43:21,840 --> 00:43:25,038 When we were in rehearsals, Steve looked around and goes: 719 00:43:25,080 --> 00:43:28,040 “Dave, I think you're going to have to do the backup vocals.” 720 00:43:28,400 --> 00:43:31,798 And at that point, I just panicked, like I'd never panicked before. 721 00:43:31,840 --> 00:43:36,078 I think he was having some romantic issues and a girlfriend who kind of 722 00:43:36,120 --> 00:43:38,758 was pressuring him to pressure us in certain ways. 723 00:43:38,800 --> 00:43:42,678 I had a girlfriend that was being really, really horrible and, you know, 724 00:43:42,720 --> 00:43:46,558 trying to snoop around the band's business and stuff like that. 725 00:43:46,600 --> 00:43:48,998 We were not going to budge on this and we can't really. 726 00:43:49,040 --> 00:43:50,918 And he said: “Fine, I'm going to quit.” And that was that. 727 00:43:50,960 --> 00:43:53,198 So we found ourselves without a bass player, 728 00:43:53,240 --> 00:43:56,280 much in a way we were before the U2 tour a year before that, 729 00:43:56,880 --> 00:43:59,598 without a bass player and a big tour coming up, a tour with R.E.M. 730 00:43:59,640 --> 00:44:01,038 across the country. Eight weeks. 731 00:44:01,080 --> 00:44:04,638 And Karl said: “I know this guy 732 00:44:04,680 --> 00:44:07,598 who's a friend of a friend of mine and I've met him. 733 00:44:07,640 --> 00:44:08,598 He's a nice guy. 734 00:44:08,640 --> 00:44:10,358 I think he's a really good bass player. 735 00:44:10,400 --> 00:44:11,438 Let's ask him.” 736 00:44:11,480 --> 00:44:13,080 So that was Mark Walton. 737 00:44:15,160 --> 00:44:18,718 I owned a rehearsal studio in Van Nuys, California. 738 00:44:18,760 --> 00:44:21,838 I was working. Karl came by the studio one afternoon and said: 739 00:44:21,880 --> 00:44:23,118 “Hey Mark, what are you doing?” 740 00:44:23,160 --> 00:44:28,600 I’m like, I'm working. This is my job. 741 00:44:29,000 --> 00:44:31,918 He goes: “No, not not today. 742 00:44:31,960 --> 00:44:34,278 For the next month or year or whatever?” 743 00:44:34,320 --> 00:44:36,158 I'm like, what do you mean? 744 00:44:36,200 --> 00:44:40,598 So he pulls out the EP and The Days of Wine and Roses 745 00:44:40,640 --> 00:44:43,638 and the new album they just finished, the Medicine Show, 746 00:44:43,680 --> 00:44:47,918 and said: “Could you learn all these and go on tour and a week?” 747 00:44:47,960 --> 00:44:52,038 And so I said, I think about it, you know. 748 00:44:52,080 --> 00:44:53,518 So next day I called him. 749 00:44:53,560 --> 00:44:56,918 I said: “Sure, that sounds like fun. Let’s go!” 750 00:44:56,960 --> 00:44:59,678 So he came up, showed up, play the songs great. 751 00:44:59,720 --> 00:45:00,520 Seem nice enough. 752 00:45:01,560 --> 00:45:04,598 He had kind of a, he wore a bandana around his neck, 753 00:45:04,640 --> 00:45:07,398 kind of a Hollywood rockabilly look. 754 00:45:07,440 --> 00:45:08,760 I don't know about that bandana. 755 00:45:09,120 --> 00:45:10,718 Besides a bandana I like you. 756 00:45:10,760 --> 00:45:12,238 He really came along at a good time, 757 00:45:12,280 --> 00:45:16,038 because for one thing, and this cannot be understated, 758 00:45:16,080 --> 00:45:17,760 he got along with Karl and he got along with me. 759 00:45:46,360 --> 00:45:48,958 I don't know if we had the idea to have keyboards from the start, 760 00:45:49,000 --> 00:45:49,887 but I think once we realized the sound was going to be so big and so cinematic 761 00:45:49,927 --> 00:45:53,927 [band playing] 762 00:45:54,800 --> 00:45:58,238 and so epic, we all decided keyboards would be great with this. 763 00:45:58,280 --> 00:45:59,918 Sandy suggested Tommy Zvoncheck. 764 00:45:59,960 --> 00:46:03,438 He was a great player and he really had the right sound for that record. 765 00:46:03,480 --> 00:46:07,838 Tommy Zvoncheck ended up going on tour with us, because he'd played 766 00:46:07,880 --> 00:46:09,758 so much on Medicine Show. 767 00:46:09,800 --> 00:46:14,518 He'd played so many parts on those songs that we wanted to have, 768 00:46:14,560 --> 00:46:17,240 we wanted to recreate that sound live. 769 00:46:29,880 --> 00:46:30,958 The sound of Medicine Show 770 00:46:31,000 --> 00:46:33,238 and the sound of that tour is an anomaly. 771 00:46:33,280 --> 00:46:35,840 It's a sound and a style I did for six months. 772 00:46:36,480 --> 00:46:38,198 Never before. Never since. 773 00:46:38,240 --> 00:46:41,638 But it's a really important period for what music I made. 774 00:46:41,680 --> 00:46:44,520 And I’m really proud of that. But it's such a funny, different kind of record. 775 00:46:45,040 --> 00:46:47,440 It's almost like a different person stepped into my body for six months. 776 00:47:05,240 --> 00:47:06,318 When we went on tour 777 00:47:06,360 --> 00:47:09,318 with R.E.M., you know, we had that big old tour bus. 778 00:47:09,360 --> 00:47:11,158 We were traveling in style 779 00:47:11,200 --> 00:47:15,278 and we were playing with a really great hip new band, too. 780 00:47:15,320 --> 00:47:19,798 We all got along really well and I was so happy to be there, my first big tour. 781 00:47:19,840 --> 00:47:24,278 So, you know, to me it was a very enlightening experience. 782 00:47:24,320 --> 00:47:26,838 It was a really, very exciting time. 783 00:47:26,880 --> 00:47:30,078 It was strange, because while this was all happening, 784 00:47:30,120 --> 00:47:31,958 Karl and I were pulling further apart. 785 00:47:32,000 --> 00:47:36,078 What Karl wanted, once we got successful, was to be more successful. 786 00:47:36,120 --> 00:47:37,838 And to be a rock star. 787 00:47:37,880 --> 00:47:39,158 He was a lead guitarist 788 00:47:39,200 --> 00:47:42,080 who played with, you know, an open vest and no shirt underneath. 789 00:47:42,960 --> 00:47:45,318 It's easy just to look back in one way and say: 790 00:47:45,360 --> 00:47:46,918 Well, I wasn't getting along with Karl. 791 00:47:46,960 --> 00:47:49,878 And we made a record which alienated some of our audience. 792 00:47:49,920 --> 00:47:54,718 But at the same time, we were playing to a lot of people who loved what we were doing. 793 00:47:54,760 --> 00:47:58,958 The beautiful thing was in Europe, where we had never toured 794 00:47:59,000 --> 00:48:01,280 and were Days of Wine and Roses was kind of barely known. 795 00:48:01,680 --> 00:48:04,400 We were a new band that people loved. 796 00:48:04,720 --> 00:48:08,118 It seems like right now that the audiences in Europe for the first time 797 00:48:08,160 --> 00:48:11,998 in a while, are very excited about what's happening in the U.S.A.. 798 00:48:12,040 --> 00:48:16,198 And they want to know about bands like us and Green on Red and R.E.M. 799 00:48:16,240 --> 00:48:17,960 and all these bands from the U.S.. 800 00:48:53,038 --> 00:48:57,038 [rock music] 801 00:49:08,200 --> 00:49:09,998 This was a really great period of time. 802 00:49:10,040 --> 00:49:13,918 It was only tempered by the fact that you're in a band of four people 803 00:49:13,960 --> 00:49:15,838 and two of those people aren't talking to each other. 804 00:49:15,880 --> 00:49:18,838 He's looking at me and hating everything I say or do, and I'm looking at him 805 00:49:18,880 --> 00:49:20,358 and hating everything he says or does. 806 00:49:20,400 --> 00:49:23,038 That's a thing I just don't like having when I'm making music. 807 00:49:23,080 --> 00:49:25,278 I was designated as Karl's roommate. 808 00:49:25,320 --> 00:49:28,038 I was a buffer, really, between the two of them. 809 00:49:28,080 --> 00:49:33,158 So they didn't have their emotional outbursts 810 00:49:33,200 --> 00:49:36,480 or anything else that might occur during the tour. 811 00:49:37,400 --> 00:49:40,598 We then went to Japan. And something on that tour 812 00:49:40,640 --> 00:49:42,278 and I can't even say what it was, 813 00:49:42,320 --> 00:49:45,038 but it felt like he and I just really at that point 814 00:49:45,080 --> 00:49:46,718 got more disconnected than ever. 815 00:49:46,760 --> 00:49:49,760 I remember some of the later shows, it seemed like it was, 816 00:49:51,680 --> 00:49:55,318 things weren't as friendly as they used to be. 817 00:49:55,360 --> 00:49:57,880 Definitely had that sense. 818 00:50:40,560 --> 00:50:44,718 I came back from that tour. And I think can't do this anymore. 819 00:50:44,760 --> 00:50:46,358 I'm just not happy. 820 00:50:46,400 --> 00:50:48,758 I'm not getting joy out of this. 821 00:50:48,800 --> 00:50:52,358 And I'm feeling a tension and feeling a disconnect from 822 00:50:52,400 --> 00:50:54,078 somebody who once was my friend. 823 00:50:54,120 --> 00:50:56,838 So I got on the phone and I called 824 00:50:56,880 --> 00:51:00,118 each member of the band individually and said: “That's it, we're breaking up!” 825 00:51:00,160 --> 00:51:06,318 When Steve called me and told me the band was breaking up, I was shocked. 826 00:51:06,360 --> 00:51:08,678 I was like, why would you do that? 827 00:51:08,720 --> 00:51:09,718 When you get older, you might say: 828 00:51:09,760 --> 00:51:12,358 “Hey, why don’t we get together for a cup of coffee and talk about this?” 829 00:51:12,400 --> 00:51:14,078 or “What's the thing bothering you?” 830 00:51:14,120 --> 00:51:17,600 Or let's, you know, a more mature way of handling it. 831 00:51:18,200 --> 00:51:20,358 One person might say, “I'm through!” 832 00:51:20,400 --> 00:51:22,038 The person might say: “Fine, me too!” 833 00:51:22,080 --> 00:51:23,718 And that's that. And that's what happened to us. 834 00:51:23,760 --> 00:51:27,600 So we went from the tour to being broken up in about two weeks. 835 00:51:40,200 --> 00:51:41,958 Right after that Japanese tour. 836 00:51:42,000 --> 00:51:45,878 When we came back and the band was broken up, I had something to transition into, 837 00:51:45,920 --> 00:51:48,112 which was the Danny & Dusty project with Dan Stuart. 838 00:51:48,152 --> 00:51:48,960 [rock music] 839 00:51:49,000 --> 00:51:53,678 And we'd recorded a couple of tracks together for a compilation 840 00:51:53,720 --> 00:51:57,078 around the beginning of ‘84. And we decided to make a whole record. 841 00:51:57,120 --> 00:52:00,318 So we went into the studio and made The Lost Weekend 842 00:52:00,360 --> 00:52:03,678 in a weekend, exactly as the title suggests, a very quick record. 843 00:52:03,720 --> 00:52:05,438 And the engineer on the record was Paul. 844 00:52:05,480 --> 00:52:07,158 That was a fun record. It was easy. 845 00:52:07,200 --> 00:52:10,998 It's got a great spirit and it's got a great sense of humor. 846 00:52:11,040 --> 00:52:14,520 That record is called The Lost Weekend for a reason. 847 00:52:15,360 --> 00:52:17,758 Nobody really remembers what happened there. 848 00:52:17,800 --> 00:52:19,998 It was just a great mix of songs. 849 00:52:20,040 --> 00:52:21,680 We played a few shows in L.A.. 850 00:52:48,640 --> 00:52:50,918 Because of having such a good time 851 00:52:50,960 --> 00:52:54,118 on the Danny & Dusty record, because I had a good time with Paul, 852 00:52:54,160 --> 00:52:57,640 because I had really good memories of playing with Dennis and Mark as well. 853 00:52:58,320 --> 00:53:02,240 I kind of decided. Well, let's get together and play some music. 854 00:53:02,480 --> 00:53:08,078 After auditioning Nels Cline and Eddie Muñoz and a few other people. 855 00:53:08,120 --> 00:53:09,838 You know, four people altogether. 856 00:53:09,880 --> 00:53:12,678 And Paul just seemed like the best person. 857 00:53:12,720 --> 00:53:16,078 As soon as we heard Paul playing with the band, we all just 858 00:53:16,120 --> 00:53:18,198 agreed that he was the guy. 859 00:53:18,240 --> 00:53:20,358 Hello there, my name is Paul B. Cutler. 860 00:53:20,400 --> 00:53:23,360 I play in a rock band called The Dream Syndicate. 861 00:53:24,480 --> 00:53:27,318 It is again that type of thing when at the time, it felt like a long time 862 00:53:27,360 --> 00:53:29,598 between the two things. It was only three months. 863 00:53:29,640 --> 00:53:31,678 But there was enough time to clear out the bad air. 864 00:53:31,720 --> 00:53:34,878 And from the time we started playing with Paul, I suddenly felt excited about being 865 00:53:34,920 --> 00:53:36,040 The Dream Syndicate again. 866 00:53:57,520 --> 00:54:02,318 It was a really perfect band for me to be able to join. 867 00:54:02,360 --> 00:54:04,880 It really was a good situation. 868 00:54:06,000 --> 00:54:08,760 It helped me expand 869 00:54:09,720 --> 00:54:11,918 my guitar playing a little bit more. 870 00:54:11,960 --> 00:54:13,878 Paul, there wasn't anything you couldn't do. 871 00:54:13,920 --> 00:54:16,480 If he wanted to play twenty notes in a second, he could do that. 872 00:54:16,920 --> 00:54:19,158 If he wants some feedback for twenty seconds, he could do that. 873 00:54:19,200 --> 00:54:21,798 Whatever he wanted to do, he was unafraid to do it. 874 00:54:21,840 --> 00:54:22,807 And that was exciting for me. 875 00:54:32,640 --> 00:54:34,318 If they wanted Karl Precoda clone, 876 00:54:34,360 --> 00:54:35,758 they could have found one. 877 00:54:35,800 --> 00:54:37,558 I mean, I tried to honor, 878 00:54:37,600 --> 00:54:38,941 like, Tell Me When It’s Over, 879 00:54:38,981 --> 00:54:40,000 [rock music] 880 00:54:40,040 --> 00:54:41,518 there's sort of a signature part: 881 00:54:41,560 --> 00:54:45,998 dah dah dah, nah nah nah nah, nah nah nah nahnah. 882 00:54:46,040 --> 00:54:46,998 Right. 883 00:54:47,040 --> 00:54:48,758 I tried to honor stuff like that. 884 00:54:48,800 --> 00:54:50,118 Other than that, 885 00:54:50,160 --> 00:54:54,958 I didn't sit around trying to learn Karl Precoda parts. 886 00:54:55,000 --> 00:54:57,878 It was very much The Dream Syndicate. 887 00:54:57,920 --> 00:55:00,798 But it was 888 00:55:00,840 --> 00:55:01,758 The Dream Syndicate 889 00:55:01,800 --> 00:55:05,078 the way The Stones were one way 890 00:55:05,120 --> 00:55:09,878 with Brian Jones and another way with Mick Taylor. 891 00:55:09,920 --> 00:55:15,678 You know, the guitar voice helped to transform 892 00:55:15,720 --> 00:55:18,358 what was already there into something new. 893 00:55:18,400 --> 00:55:21,958 Live The Dream Syndicate with Paul B. Cutler 894 00:55:22,000 --> 00:55:26,238 was totally different than Karl, but equally, sometimes even more exciting. 895 00:55:26,280 --> 00:55:32,838 It's Paul's postrock and jazzisms and punk rock sound with Steve's, 896 00:55:32,880 --> 00:55:35,798 that really made me feel great about that band. 897 00:55:35,840 --> 00:55:39,678 I really felt like that contrast was really beautiful. 898 00:55:39,720 --> 00:55:43,718 I was always kind of knocked out about how he could get these crazy sounds. 899 00:55:43,760 --> 00:55:47,798 I saw Paul Cutler doing all those guitar things with tools and stuff 900 00:55:47,840 --> 00:55:50,240 before Eddie van Halen was doing those things. 901 00:55:58,720 --> 00:56:00,118 Paul incorporated everything. 902 00:56:00,160 --> 00:56:01,638 I don't know where he was coming from. 903 00:56:01,680 --> 00:56:03,878 I mean, I know he's a big music listener, but to be honest, 904 00:56:03,920 --> 00:56:05,398 I don't know what one thing 905 00:56:05,440 --> 00:56:06,798 inspired him more than anything else. 906 00:56:06,840 --> 00:56:08,198 But it fit well with us. 907 00:56:08,240 --> 00:56:09,880 It really became the new sound of the band. 908 00:56:13,520 --> 00:56:17,678 I think we went on tour in 1985 without a new record. 909 00:56:17,720 --> 00:56:20,998 We toured the States, came back home and said: “Let's do a record together.” 910 00:56:21,040 --> 00:56:23,598 So I wrote the songs for Out of the Grey. 911 00:56:23,640 --> 00:56:25,960 Nothing old there. It was all new stuff. 912 00:56:26,400 --> 00:56:28,678 And we started doing demos at A&M. 913 00:56:28,720 --> 00:56:30,518 And we're excited by that. It felt really good. 914 00:56:30,560 --> 00:56:34,158 I think we did four or five songs for them 915 00:56:34,200 --> 00:56:37,318 and they just weren't that happy with them. 916 00:56:37,360 --> 00:56:39,520 Oh my God, okay, we'll do it again. 917 00:56:39,880 --> 00:56:40,838 Nah, something else. 918 00:56:40,880 --> 00:56:42,358 Oh my God, what do you want? You know. 919 00:56:42,400 --> 00:56:44,678 They wanted to hear a single 920 00:56:44,720 --> 00:56:48,158 or they wanted to hear something that was going to be more accessible. 921 00:56:48,200 --> 00:56:50,440 I think. We want to do this, because we like it. 922 00:56:51,120 --> 00:56:53,438 And if we could somehow do something 923 00:56:53,480 --> 00:56:56,958 to make you happy, maybe we try, but we don't even know what you want. 924 00:56:57,000 --> 00:56:58,918 The guy is like: “Oh, these are pretty good demos. 925 00:56:58,960 --> 00:57:01,078 When you're going to make the record?” 926 00:57:01,120 --> 00:57:05,000 And Steve said something like: “This is the record.” 927 00:57:09,440 --> 00:57:10,419 I know a couple of people who worked at the label 928 00:57:10,459 --> 00:57:12,360 [rock music] 929 00:57:12,400 --> 00:57:16,598 had left the label between Medicine Show and the follow-up album. 930 00:57:16,640 --> 00:57:19,038 And when you start to lose people, 931 00:57:19,080 --> 00:57:22,960 sometimes the base of support within the label can erode. 932 00:57:23,320 --> 00:57:24,798 After the third round of demos, 933 00:57:24,840 --> 00:57:27,038 I met with the guy who signed us to the label. 934 00:57:27,080 --> 00:57:28,238 Very nice guy. 935 00:57:28,280 --> 00:57:31,518 I sat down and said: “Look, we love touring. 936 00:57:31,560 --> 00:57:34,358 We want to get out there and play. That's our livelihood. 937 00:57:34,400 --> 00:57:36,158 We have a lot of fans. 938 00:57:36,200 --> 00:57:40,398 We could be a band for you that can make records cheaply, a lot cheaper 939 00:57:40,440 --> 00:57:44,838 than Medicine Show was. We can make inexpensive records and tour 940 00:57:44,880 --> 00:57:48,838 a lot and sell 50.000 copies and everybody makes money.” 941 00:57:48,880 --> 00:57:52,998 And he said: “We're not in the business of selling 50.000 records.” 942 00:57:53,040 --> 00:57:56,838 We were, you know, like 400.000 dollars in debt to these people. 943 00:57:56,880 --> 00:57:59,360 He said: “If you want to go, we'll let you go.” 944 00:58:00,240 --> 00:58:01,520 I said: “We want to go.” 945 00:58:02,400 --> 00:58:05,918 And not only did A&M let us go, 946 00:58:05,960 --> 00:58:09,320 not only was a giant debt of Medicine Show 947 00:58:10,280 --> 00:58:12,998 a lot of money, a quarter of a million dollars. 948 00:58:13,040 --> 00:58:16,840 Not only was a giant debt of all the money we lost on the R.E.M. tour, 949 00:58:17,880 --> 00:58:19,480 another hundrerd thousand dollars. 950 00:58:19,960 --> 00:58:21,798 Not only was that all gone, 951 00:58:21,840 --> 00:58:23,478 wiped like it never happened. 952 00:58:23,520 --> 00:58:25,880 But they gave us money to go away. 953 00:58:26,800 --> 00:58:27,758 It was in the contract. 954 00:58:27,800 --> 00:58:31,998 We had some of those kind of clauses in our deal that allowed them to leave 955 00:58:32,040 --> 00:58:35,958 and that we got a payment on the back end and things like that, that you never 956 00:58:36,000 --> 00:58:39,958 would have gotten if you were only being pursued by one label. 957 00:58:40,000 --> 00:58:42,038 And the money they gave us to leave the label 958 00:58:42,080 --> 00:58:44,598 was the money we spent making Out of the Grey ourselves. 959 00:58:44,640 --> 00:58:46,758 And we recorded the whole record on our own. 960 00:58:46,800 --> 00:58:47,718 Paul produced it. 961 00:58:47,760 --> 00:58:49,278 And we had a finished record and sold 962 00:58:49,320 --> 00:58:53,078 the finished record to a new label called Big Time who just started up 963 00:58:53,120 --> 00:58:54,440 and were thrilled to have it. 964 00:59:01,560 --> 00:59:05,038 I think that I tried to 965 00:59:05,080 --> 00:59:09,880 force it a little too much into a popper direction. 966 00:59:10,560 --> 00:59:13,078 Not that it's pop music on any level. 967 00:59:13,120 --> 00:59:15,520 I think he did a great job recording. 968 00:59:16,400 --> 00:59:18,918 It's just the mixing that got everybody screwed up. 969 00:59:18,960 --> 00:59:24,198 It's all this bad eighties, you know, technology that everybody was using. 970 00:59:24,240 --> 00:59:25,718 We're not the only ones. 971 00:59:25,760 --> 00:59:27,198 We just happened to be caught in it. 972 00:59:27,240 --> 00:59:28,998 Out of the Grey was problematic, 973 00:59:29,040 --> 00:59:32,078 because apparently it was not mastered correctly. 974 00:59:32,120 --> 00:59:34,200 And so the original 975 00:59:35,800 --> 00:59:41,438 sound of it was, you know, didn't cut through the way Medicine Show did. 976 00:59:41,480 --> 00:59:45,038 I always have to watch what I say about Out of the Grey, 977 00:59:45,080 --> 00:59:46,958 because there’s a side of me that feels like 978 00:59:47,000 --> 00:59:48,880 it's my least favorite record I've ever made. 979 00:59:49,320 --> 00:59:50,840 And when I say that, 980 00:59:52,200 --> 00:59:53,958 it's a hard thing to say, 981 00:59:54,000 --> 00:59:57,240 because first of all, a lot of fans really like it. 982 00:59:57,800 --> 00:59:58,918 A lot of fans love it. 983 00:59:58,960 --> 01:00:00,558 I meet people, it’s their favorite one. 984 01:00:00,600 --> 01:00:05,198 And it feels hard to say, well you're wrong, because you know 985 01:00:05,240 --> 01:00:07,320 ultimately it doesn't belong to me anymore at that point. 986 01:00:28,920 --> 01:00:31,598 They're not that many songs there I’m not fond of. 987 01:00:31,640 --> 01:00:33,838 There's some songs that I actually dislike, you know. 988 01:00:33,880 --> 01:00:36,360 Dancing Blind is on that, I hate that song. 989 01:00:36,800 --> 01:00:38,640 So, of all my records I've made. 990 01:00:39,080 --> 01:00:41,638 That one has the most songs where I just feel like 991 01:00:41,680 --> 01:00:43,200 I just wasn't doing that good a job. 992 01:00:48,840 --> 01:00:53,318 The song Boston, which is sort of, you know, a big, long, epic song. 993 01:00:53,360 --> 01:00:56,198 And I really got into it because that's a song about 994 01:00:56,240 --> 01:00:59,718 Van Morrison living in Boston in the late sixties. 995 01:00:59,760 --> 01:01:03,480 And so Steve and I bonded over those lyrics of nothing else. 996 01:01:20,520 --> 01:01:22,518 Even that record 997 01:01:22,560 --> 01:01:25,318 was a great album and I’m still on board. 998 01:01:25,360 --> 01:01:30,118 Out of the Grey has a much more kind of hopeful kind of streak in it, 999 01:01:30,160 --> 01:01:35,880 but it also has incredibly dark themes in it and some really dark songs. 1000 01:01:47,720 --> 01:01:50,158 Every day I get another sympathy card. 1001 01:01:50,200 --> 01:01:52,998 If you think about that, it's brilliant. 1002 01:01:53,040 --> 01:01:58,158 I mean, think of how dark and literary that line is. 1003 01:01:58,200 --> 01:02:01,918 So, Steve’s songs from that period, again even though these aren't 1004 01:02:01,960 --> 01:02:06,678 the albums that I think define him for a lot of people. 1005 01:02:06,720 --> 01:02:10,600 You know, for me, they are some of his strongest work. 1006 01:02:33,768 --> 01:02:37,768 [rock music] 1007 01:02:40,920 --> 01:02:44,320 In the States, in the U.S., and this is a funny story. 1008 01:02:45,360 --> 01:02:48,198 It was seen as a comeback record and a comeback tour, because the U.S. 1009 01:02:48,240 --> 01:02:51,760 was a little unsure about Medicine Show in some ways. Critics anyway. 1010 01:02:52,680 --> 01:02:53,640 We went to Europe 1011 01:02:54,800 --> 01:02:56,958 and critics didn't like Out of the Grey so much. 1012 01:02:57,000 --> 01:02:59,158 If I'm not mistaken, the reviews weren't as good. 1013 01:02:59,200 --> 01:03:01,798 So it was that kind of, there’s a weird kind of seesaw effect. 1014 01:03:01,840 --> 01:03:05,080 But our second European tour was better than ever. 1015 01:03:10,640 --> 01:03:14,080 More cities, more countries, more places, bigger audiences. 1016 01:03:14,360 --> 01:03:17,598 Europe was great. We were more popular there. 1017 01:03:17,640 --> 01:03:19,998 So we'd go over there and just have all this fun, 1018 01:03:20,040 --> 01:03:23,280 and then we'd be driving thousands of miles around America. 1019 01:03:24,680 --> 01:03:27,000 We played successful shows, but it wasn't the same. 1020 01:03:27,560 --> 01:03:32,880 And you got to drive a long ways to get from Boston to Chicago. 1021 01:03:33,160 --> 01:03:35,840 That's a long ways, man. 1022 01:03:36,600 --> 01:03:39,360 It's not like going from Belgium to Holland. 1023 01:03:44,680 --> 01:03:45,838 Now I don't know how this happened. 1024 01:03:45,880 --> 01:03:50,320 I don't know how with two days notice, somebody had the idea 1025 01:03:50,600 --> 01:03:53,960 to book The Dream Syndicate to headline the main stage at Roskilde. 1026 01:03:54,360 --> 01:03:55,198 But they did. 1027 01:03:55,240 --> 01:03:57,598 We were on tour, I think we were in Italy. 1028 01:03:57,640 --> 01:04:00,520 And, you know, we got a call from our 1029 01:04:01,840 --> 01:04:04,800 our manager or agent, I think it was, that 1030 01:04:06,200 --> 01:04:09,158 The Cult had canceled and they were like 1031 01:04:09,200 --> 01:04:14,558 a headlining slot on Roskilde. And would we like to fill in for them? 1032 01:04:14,600 --> 01:04:19,798 So we landed in Copenhagen, drove an hour to Roskilde, got there, showed up. 1033 01:04:19,840 --> 01:04:22,920 I mean, we went right to our backstage room, 1034 01:04:24,280 --> 01:04:26,400 had a beer and it was time to play. 1035 01:04:26,880 --> 01:04:27,638 That was it. 1036 01:04:27,680 --> 01:04:30,520 Walked on stage in front of 50.000 people. 1037 01:04:31,840 --> 01:04:34,480 And a guy came out, introduced us and said, 1038 01:04:35,400 --> 01:04:38,758 “Now I know a lot of you expect to see The Cult. They were going to play. 1039 01:04:38,800 --> 01:04:39,878 They couldn't play. 1040 01:04:39,920 --> 01:04:41,438 But we have something special for you.” 1041 01:04:41,480 --> 01:04:45,718 Directly from Los Angeles, California. 1042 01:04:45,760 --> 01:04:48,598 The Dream Syndicate. 1043 01:04:48,640 --> 01:04:51,598 I think they saw us kind of being heroic, because we showed up. 1044 01:04:51,640 --> 01:04:55,438 And on no notice whatsoever came to entertain people. 1045 01:04:55,480 --> 01:04:57,680 Everything was right. And we played a great set. 1046 01:05:01,848 --> 01:05:05,848 [crowd cheering] 1047 01:05:13,920 --> 01:05:17,360 So we started playing and people started throwing coins at us. 1048 01:05:18,920 --> 01:05:21,518 And we're kind of like, weird. And me and Mark 1049 01:05:21,560 --> 01:05:25,480 actually started picking them up, just putting them in our pockets. 1050 01:05:27,680 --> 01:05:30,398 We just thought: well, it's money we might as well take it 1051 01:05:30,440 --> 01:05:31,640 and go have lunch. 1052 01:05:45,240 --> 01:05:46,558 Steve played right before us, 1053 01:05:46,600 --> 01:05:47,164 and that's when I saw the band for the first time. 1054 01:05:47,204 --> 01:05:50,560 [rock music] 1055 01:05:50,600 --> 01:05:53,040 And then and I remember it really well, because 1056 01:05:54,200 --> 01:05:58,878 we were up next after them and it started raining during our set. 1057 01:05:58,920 --> 01:06:00,838 It was wonderful disaster. 1058 01:06:00,880 --> 01:06:04,518 To this day that's why I think I have a really good career in Scandinavia. 1059 01:06:04,560 --> 01:06:08,718 It made such an impression on fans from Denmark and Norway and Sweden 1060 01:06:08,760 --> 01:06:10,720 the lasts with us for a long time. 1061 01:06:15,640 --> 01:06:17,838 From the time after Out of the Grey came out, 1062 01:06:17,880 --> 01:06:20,440 and after that tour finished. Probably late ‘86. 1063 01:06:21,120 --> 01:06:22,278 I started writing a lot. 1064 01:06:22,320 --> 01:06:24,598 And we started playing this kind of acoustic trio shows, 1065 01:06:24,640 --> 01:06:27,758 and I started writing songs for those shows. 1066 01:06:27,800 --> 01:06:31,518 Here tonight with Chris Cacavas from Green on Red 1067 01:06:31,560 --> 01:06:36,520 and Robert Lloyd from the Romans and the infamous criticalist. 1068 01:06:45,200 --> 01:06:49,478 This combination was just a blast. 1069 01:06:49,520 --> 01:06:54,118 And it was the beginning of the era, that went on until this day, 1070 01:06:54,160 --> 01:06:56,998 of me collaborating with Steve Wynn. 1071 01:06:57,040 --> 01:07:00,798 Thought about doing a solo record, but decided instead it was 1072 01:07:00,840 --> 01:07:02,640 a good time to make a record with the Dream Syndicate. 1073 01:07:08,960 --> 01:07:10,758 If I complain about Out of the Grey. 1074 01:07:10,800 --> 01:07:13,878 One thing about it is also I didn't think we had found our sound yet. 1075 01:07:13,920 --> 01:07:15,958 When we made Ghost Stories, we had our sound. 1076 01:07:16,000 --> 01:07:18,438 We've been on tour. We knew what we were going for. 1077 01:07:18,480 --> 01:07:20,358 I wrote songs I liked. 1078 01:07:20,400 --> 01:07:23,158 And at that point we looked for an outside producer. 1079 01:07:23,200 --> 01:07:26,598 And somebody introduced me to Elliot Mazer. 1080 01:07:26,640 --> 01:07:28,078 I can't remember who. 1081 01:07:28,120 --> 01:07:30,078 But I knew Elliot Mazer, because he had produced 1082 01:07:30,120 --> 01:07:32,998 Harvest by Neil Young and Time Fades Away by Neil Young. 1083 01:07:33,040 --> 01:07:36,878 Steve came in and said that 1084 01:07:36,920 --> 01:07:39,718 Elliot Mazer was on. 1085 01:07:39,760 --> 01:07:41,958 You know, we didn't have a discussion about it. 1086 01:07:42,000 --> 01:07:45,919 He just came and said: “Can you believe that Elliot said yes?”, kind of thing. 1087 01:07:45,961 --> 01:07:48,440 We're like, wow, that's really cool. 1088 01:07:55,360 --> 01:07:57,638 While we were kind of preparing for Ghost Stories, 1089 01:07:57,680 --> 01:08:02,918 while we were doing the pre-production, we did a show at Raji’s. 1090 01:08:02,960 --> 01:08:06,358 This Club in Hollywood that we liked a lot. And Elliot said: “Let's record it.” 1091 01:08:06,400 --> 01:08:11,038 And we recorded directly to DAT and we're going to mix it on the spot. 1092 01:08:11,080 --> 01:08:13,600 So when the show's over, you got your recording. 1093 01:08:14,000 --> 01:08:17,280 And it was just one of our best live shows. 1094 01:08:17,680 --> 01:08:19,518 And a lot of people say that's the best Dream Syndicate record. 1095 01:08:19,560 --> 01:08:21,760 And I wouldn't say that's impossible. 1096 01:08:50,320 --> 01:08:53,438 Sonically, it's an amazing 1097 01:08:53,480 --> 01:08:53,990 document to capture a band in their prime. 1098 01:08:54,030 --> 01:08:57,720 [rock music] 1099 01:08:57,760 --> 01:09:01,478 After hearing that, I'm like, why the fuck would anyone ever go in 1100 01:09:01,520 --> 01:09:05,440 a recording studio ever? 1101 01:09:09,080 --> 01:09:10,718 Elliot was real old school. 1102 01:09:10,760 --> 01:09:14,478 You know, he had that vibe, which I loved from the sixties 1103 01:09:14,520 --> 01:09:17,600 and seventies, where create a good environment. 1104 01:09:18,760 --> 01:09:20,278 Make the artists happy. 1105 01:09:20,320 --> 01:09:21,838 Get people excited. 1106 01:09:21,880 --> 01:09:23,038 Capture a moment. 1107 01:09:23,080 --> 01:09:25,800 He's kind of this peacy Bay Area guy. 1108 01:09:27,880 --> 01:09:29,958 I am a redneck from Arizona. 1109 01:09:30,000 --> 01:09:34,800 I mean, peacy just rubs me all kinds of the wrong way. 1110 01:09:35,400 --> 01:09:36,638 You know? I hate it. 1111 01:09:36,680 --> 01:09:39,478 To me, it's fascism. 1112 01:09:39,520 --> 01:09:40,838 I don't see any difference. 1113 01:09:40,880 --> 01:09:44,758 He would stand in the studio with us, not in the control booth, in the studio 1114 01:09:44,800 --> 01:09:46,038 and wave his arms around. 1115 01:09:46,080 --> 01:09:48,958 He would stand out there like he was conducting us, like he was dancing. 1116 01:09:49,000 --> 01:09:50,198 Like he was freaking out. 1117 01:09:50,240 --> 01:09:54,518 He would jump right in my face and shake his hands in the air 1118 01:09:54,560 --> 01:09:56,078 and shake his little butt. 1119 01:09:56,120 --> 01:09:59,958 He was losing his cool, so we could also. 1120 01:10:00,000 --> 01:10:04,278 I think he was more in touch with what the band was all about. 1121 01:10:04,320 --> 01:10:06,318 I like the record. 1122 01:10:06,360 --> 01:10:07,520 Once it was done, I liked it. 1123 01:10:43,000 --> 01:10:45,078 It was produced by Elliot Mazer. 1124 01:10:45,120 --> 01:10:49,918 He's the guy who basically produced, help produce Time Fades Away, 1125 01:10:49,960 --> 01:10:53,318 one of the rawest Neil Young records ever. 1126 01:10:53,360 --> 01:10:56,958 Recorded live on a completely chaotic tour. 1127 01:10:57,000 --> 01:11:00,758 And yet it's really one of the great dynamic 1128 01:11:00,800 --> 01:11:05,598 documents of Neil Young as a writer and as a performer. 1129 01:11:05,640 --> 01:11:11,598 And Elliot bringing that to this band, which helps, 1130 01:11:11,640 --> 01:11:14,198 I think, connect 1131 01:11:14,240 --> 01:11:18,398 Steve and The Dream Syndicate with an important lineage 1132 01:11:18,440 --> 01:11:19,720 in American music. 1133 01:12:19,560 --> 01:12:23,078 We went to Europe to tour for Ghost Stories immediately, 1134 01:12:23,120 --> 01:12:24,758 because we had a great following there. 1135 01:12:24,800 --> 01:12:27,398 We had a seven week tour of Europe and the shows were great. 1136 01:12:27,440 --> 01:12:29,718 We've had a lot of people that came out, 1137 01:12:29,760 --> 01:12:31,958 sold out most shows we played. 1138 01:12:32,000 --> 01:12:37,398 We finished the European tour and had two or three days off 1139 01:12:37,440 --> 01:12:40,560 and then started a seven week U.S. tour. Insane. 1140 01:12:41,000 --> 01:12:41,718 That's what we did. 1141 01:12:41,760 --> 01:12:43,680 Where are you going to be going? 1142 01:12:44,400 --> 01:12:47,078 I mean, all of us are going tomorrow to Boston, 1143 01:12:47,120 --> 01:12:51,880 going traveling around Midwest, Canada, the South, Texas, 1144 01:12:53,120 --> 01:12:55,758 all the way to California, for that week in California. 1145 01:12:55,800 --> 01:12:57,238 And at that point it will be 14 weeks. 1146 01:12:57,280 --> 01:12:58,958 We'll probably just take a little time off and 1147 01:12:59,000 --> 01:13:01,918 we're putting out a live record next year and record a new studio album. 1148 01:13:01,960 --> 01:13:02,760 Just keep moving. 1149 01:13:06,680 --> 01:13:09,558 Well, in America at that point, people have stopped caring. 1150 01:13:09,600 --> 01:13:14,558 Our United States tour after Ghost Stories was a shit show. 1151 01:13:14,600 --> 01:13:18,600 Club attendance at the shows was getting a little lighter. 1152 01:13:19,880 --> 01:13:21,718 Some of our shows got canceled. 1153 01:13:21,760 --> 01:13:25,238 We went through so many managers and booking agents. 1154 01:13:25,280 --> 01:13:28,398 So by that point, we didn't have a good focus, 1155 01:13:28,440 --> 01:13:31,558 a good team and coordination. 1156 01:13:31,600 --> 01:13:36,478 At that point we had a little of the curse of a band 1157 01:13:36,520 --> 01:13:37,718 that’s not new anymore. 1158 01:13:37,760 --> 01:13:42,720 It was absolutely heartbreaking, man. Nobody came. 1159 01:13:44,360 --> 01:13:46,918 If you're a brand new band or starting out and you play to twenty people 1160 01:13:46,960 --> 01:13:49,640 you feel like, this is great, because next time it will be thirty or forty. 1161 01:13:50,120 --> 01:13:52,798 When your band’s around for seven years and you're playing to twenty people 1162 01:13:52,840 --> 01:13:53,920 and last year it was a hundred. 1163 01:13:55,560 --> 01:13:57,240 What’s going to be next time? 1164 01:13:58,720 --> 01:14:02,078 We had to do an overnight drive after a show. We were tired. 1165 01:14:02,120 --> 01:14:05,560 We were fed up from, you know, not great shows in attendance. 1166 01:14:06,120 --> 01:14:08,678 And Paul and I got really drunk on the drive. 1167 01:14:08,720 --> 01:14:11,058 Mark and Paul started having a pillow fight 1168 01:14:11,079 --> 01:14:13,598 in the van, whacking each other with a pillow. 1169 01:14:13,640 --> 01:14:15,835 That's fun. Four in the morning, little drunk, having a pillow fight. 1170 01:14:15,875 --> 01:14:16,920 [rock music] 1171 01:14:16,960 --> 01:14:20,758 And Paul said: “That's it. Pull the van over.” 1172 01:14:20,800 --> 01:14:25,878 Paul just opens the door to the van and disappears into the midnight. 1173 01:14:25,920 --> 01:14:27,158 Oh, that's funny. 1174 01:14:27,200 --> 01:14:29,880 Paul's taken this joke one step further. 1175 01:14:30,520 --> 01:14:32,798 And then we said: “Paul?” 1176 01:14:32,840 --> 01:14:36,158 We sat there for about an hour and thinking he'd come back. 1177 01:14:36,200 --> 01:14:37,398 He didn't come back. 1178 01:14:37,440 --> 01:14:39,838 Now it’s four in the morning. Pitch black. 1179 01:14:39,880 --> 01:14:41,880 We're in Canada and there's not 1180 01:14:43,360 --> 01:14:44,678 a town in sight. 1181 01:14:44,720 --> 01:14:46,798 There's no lights. We're in the middle of nowhere. 1182 01:14:46,840 --> 01:14:49,720 So finally we thought, well, let's go out there. We got a flashlight. 1183 01:14:50,360 --> 01:14:51,838 He actually pulled stuff. 1184 01:14:51,880 --> 01:14:54,638 So there is this trail, so we could follow him for a while. 1185 01:14:54,680 --> 01:14:58,478 And it went out into a field and disappeared. And that was it. 1186 01:14:58,520 --> 01:15:02,078 So we went back to the van and started driving back and forth. 1187 01:15:02,120 --> 01:15:04,718 You know. We went for miles. We couldn't find him. 1188 01:15:04,760 --> 01:15:06,478 Finally went back the other way. 1189 01:15:06,520 --> 01:15:10,798 And there he was, hitchhiking on the side of the road, 1190 01:15:10,840 --> 01:15:13,198 going the opposite direction than we were going. 1191 01:15:13,240 --> 01:15:14,438 And we drove up to him 1192 01:15:14,480 --> 01:15:18,000 and he sees us coming and he starts running to get away from us. 1193 01:15:18,680 --> 01:15:20,478 “Paul, what are you doing?” 1194 01:15:20,520 --> 01:15:21,518 Keeps running. 1195 01:15:21,560 --> 01:15:22,838 “Get in the van.” 1196 01:15:22,880 --> 01:15:25,878 He got in the car, but he wouldn't talk to anyone. 1197 01:15:25,920 --> 01:15:28,918 The late night, the disappointment of the tour, the alcohol. 1198 01:15:28,960 --> 01:15:32,280 Something just got him so angry and pushed him over the edge. 1199 01:15:32,560 --> 01:15:36,240 America is like the heartbreak city. 1200 01:15:37,240 --> 01:15:39,278 It's huge, you know. 1201 01:15:39,320 --> 01:15:43,398 And if you have to drive around this country, you have to drive 1202 01:15:43,440 --> 01:15:47,680 a thousand miles across Texas and then you get your heart broken. 1203 01:15:48,800 --> 01:15:50,360 This is not a good thing. 1204 01:15:56,480 --> 01:15:58,793 Once that first crack happens with musicians, I'm looking for the way out. 1205 01:15:58,833 --> 01:16:00,480 [rock music] 1206 01:16:00,520 --> 01:16:03,238 And I told Dennis during a tour, I think I'm done. 1207 01:16:03,280 --> 01:16:08,158 I wouldn't say I'd thought about doing it, but when he when he said it, 1208 01:16:08,200 --> 01:16:09,398 it made sense. 1209 01:16:09,440 --> 01:16:12,358 It didn't even, like, shock me or anything. 1210 01:16:12,400 --> 01:16:15,118 If Steve wanted the band over, the band was done. 1211 01:16:15,160 --> 01:16:16,798 And it was sad. 1212 01:16:16,840 --> 01:16:18,518 I was disappointed. 1213 01:16:18,560 --> 01:16:24,718 That was a very strong period that in a way ended a little too abruptly. 1214 01:16:24,760 --> 01:16:28,118 You know, the band really wasn't finished doing the business. 1215 01:16:28,160 --> 01:16:32,958 It’s just that trying to do the business 1216 01:16:33,000 --> 01:16:35,840 had just become so frustrating. 1217 01:16:51,040 --> 01:16:55,038 The night before our last show was San Francisco, and it was a great show. 1218 01:16:55,080 --> 01:16:58,158 It was packed. We played great. The audience was great. 1219 01:16:58,200 --> 01:16:59,118 It was exciting. 1220 01:16:59,160 --> 01:17:02,078 I finished the show and tore all the strings off my guitar 1221 01:17:02,120 --> 01:17:04,080 in an excited delirium. 1222 01:17:08,840 --> 01:17:12,160 The next day we went to Santa Clara and the show had been canceled. 1223 01:17:12,440 --> 01:17:14,718 And I thought: that's perfect. 1224 01:17:14,760 --> 01:17:18,398 Our last show was a cancelation, but really our last show was 1225 01:17:18,440 --> 01:17:22,560 a really good classic Dream Syndicate show. 1226 01:17:45,400 --> 01:17:50,078 The band was, in a sense, just waiting for him to come back. 1227 01:17:50,120 --> 01:17:53,478 I always hoped that I get another chance to play with him at some point. 1228 01:17:53,520 --> 01:17:57,238 After, you know, losing my house in Hurricane Katrina 1229 01:17:57,280 --> 01:17:59,640 and moving to Las Vegas. 1230 01:17:59,920 --> 01:18:03,598 Not having, you know, anyone to play with or hang out here. 1231 01:18:03,640 --> 01:18:05,760 I was depressed and upset. 1232 01:18:09,640 --> 01:18:12,998 There was a festival in Bilbao called the Walk On Project. 1233 01:18:13,040 --> 01:18:16,200 It's an organization down there, started by a friend of mine 1234 01:18:16,520 --> 01:18:20,158 to help with the research and treatment of pediatric diseases. 1235 01:18:20,200 --> 01:18:23,438 And I've done some shows and recordings for them before. 1236 01:18:23,480 --> 01:18:26,678 And they were having a festival in 2012, 1237 01:18:26,720 --> 01:18:31,118 and he asked me if I would be up for playing there with one of my bands. 1238 01:18:31,160 --> 01:18:34,478 That would mean my solo band Steve Wynn & The Miracle 3 1239 01:18:34,520 --> 01:18:35,838 or The Baseball Project. 1240 01:18:35,880 --> 01:18:37,518 And neither band could do the show. 1241 01:18:37,560 --> 01:18:39,318 And I really wanted to do the festival. 1242 01:18:39,360 --> 01:18:40,198 So I thought. 1243 01:18:40,240 --> 01:18:44,798 Oh yeah, I have another band, The Dream Syndicate. 1244 01:18:44,840 --> 01:18:48,438 And of course, we hadn't played a show in 24 years, but we’re all still friends. 1245 01:18:48,480 --> 01:18:49,518 We talked about it. 1246 01:18:49,560 --> 01:18:51,078 We all agreed it was a good idea. 1247 01:18:51,120 --> 01:18:54,158 When that call came in, I was very excited to go out and do that. 1248 01:18:54,200 --> 01:18:56,800 And the next issue was who would play guitar? 1249 01:18:57,280 --> 01:19:00,518 And it wasn't going to be Karl. 1250 01:19:00,560 --> 01:19:01,958 I was very aware of that. 1251 01:19:02,000 --> 01:19:04,718 I approached Paul Cutler, who’s still a friend. 1252 01:19:04,760 --> 01:19:07,078 At a certain point in time, 1253 01:19:07,120 --> 01:19:11,438 The Dream Syndicate was incredibly potent as a live band. 1254 01:19:11,480 --> 01:19:17,600 We would nail your ass to the ground. We were on. 1255 01:19:18,160 --> 01:19:21,200 And anything short of that, I'm not interested in it. 1256 01:19:21,560 --> 01:19:25,238 Not to mention it would take me forever to relearn those songs. 1257 01:19:25,280 --> 01:19:28,160 So the obvious thing at that point was to ask Jason Victor. 1258 01:19:29,240 --> 01:19:32,118 I moved to New York in ‘94. 1259 01:19:32,160 --> 01:19:34,478 It was important to find some favorite record stores. 1260 01:19:34,520 --> 01:19:37,238 And there was a store on St Mark's Place. 1261 01:19:37,280 --> 01:19:40,518 And when I would shop there, this young kid. 1262 01:19:40,560 --> 01:19:44,838 I mean, to me, it seemed like this kid, working there saying: 1263 01:19:44,880 --> 01:19:47,158 “You're Steve Wynn, I'm a big fan of your music.” 1264 01:19:47,200 --> 01:19:49,038 So, thank kid! 1265 01:19:49,080 --> 01:19:50,238 And it was Jason. 1266 01:19:50,280 --> 01:19:53,718 Around that time, I'd become a really big fan of Steve Wynn, 1267 01:19:53,760 --> 01:19:57,118 of his solo career, and of The Dream Syndicate. 1268 01:19:57,160 --> 01:19:58,878 One day he said: “Hey, I'm a guitarist. 1269 01:19:58,920 --> 01:20:01,838 If you ever want to get together and jam, I'd love to do it.” 1270 01:20:01,880 --> 01:20:05,558 He probably figured, Well, I'll just do it once, and maybe 1271 01:20:05,600 --> 01:20:08,758 he'll give me even better deals on my CD’s. 1272 01:20:08,800 --> 01:20:13,320 So we got together for two hours at a place down in the Lower East Side, 1273 01:20:13,880 --> 01:20:16,958 and when we got there, I of course found out: 1274 01:20:17,000 --> 01:20:21,238 oh man, this guy is a really good guitarist. 1275 01:20:21,280 --> 01:20:23,278 And he knows all my songs. 1276 01:20:23,320 --> 01:20:26,358 He came home after that. 1277 01:20:26,400 --> 01:20:31,478 He was like: “I think I may have found my next guitar player.” 1278 01:20:31,520 --> 01:20:34,478 My biggest dream at that point was to go on tour. 1279 01:20:34,520 --> 01:20:38,758 I've got a band and a guitarist right now, but it's good to know 1280 01:20:38,800 --> 01:20:40,360 the record store kid is such a good player. 1281 01:20:47,600 --> 01:20:49,878 His band was about to do a European tour 1282 01:20:49,920 --> 01:20:53,760 and they needed our merch seller and a driver of the van. 1283 01:20:54,880 --> 01:20:56,518 And I told them. 1284 01:20:56,560 --> 01:21:00,438 Well, obviously I know how to sell merch from working in the record store. 1285 01:21:00,480 --> 01:21:04,880 And a van, never drove a van before, never drove stick shift before. 1286 01:21:05,560 --> 01:21:07,238 But I lied and said I can do it. 1287 01:21:07,280 --> 01:21:08,518 Right around this time 1288 01:21:08,560 --> 01:21:10,838 Chris Brokaw contacted me and said: 1289 01:21:10,880 --> 01:21:13,238 “I'm really sorry, but I can't do the tour.” 1290 01:21:13,280 --> 01:21:15,960 I have another tour at the same time. I have to do it. 1291 01:21:16,280 --> 01:21:17,918 And then the light bulb went off. 1292 01:21:17,960 --> 01:21:21,118 I know, Jason's already planning on the tour. 1293 01:21:21,160 --> 01:21:22,880 I'll ask him to play guitar instead. 1294 01:21:42,040 --> 01:21:42,918 You know, you're nervous. 1295 01:21:42,960 --> 01:21:45,278 You're stepping into really big shoes. 1296 01:21:45,320 --> 01:21:47,076 You're stepping into history. 1297 01:21:47,116 --> 01:21:51,116 [rock music] 1298 01:21:55,240 --> 01:21:57,558 He's just incredibly versatile. 1299 01:21:57,600 --> 01:21:59,640 He's a real joy to play with. 1300 01:22:15,760 --> 01:22:19,158 He has a bit of Paul and Karl in him, 1301 01:22:19,200 --> 01:22:22,158 but he's got this other element that is strictly Jason. 1302 01:22:22,200 --> 01:22:25,318 He's, you know, paying 1303 01:22:25,360 --> 01:22:31,438 the right amount of homage to the textures and the intensity 1304 01:22:31,480 --> 01:22:34,600 of how the older songs were played back in the day. 1305 01:22:43,920 --> 01:22:47,798 We've been playing Dream Syndicate songs with the Miracle 3 for ten years now. 1306 01:22:47,840 --> 01:22:48,958 The funny thing is, 1307 01:22:49,000 --> 01:22:52,558 Jason and I both play very differently once were with Mark and Dennis. 1308 01:22:52,600 --> 01:22:57,480 It's interesting how the rhythm sections treat the songs differently, 1309 01:22:58,720 --> 01:23:03,080 and so then your own playing adapts to that. 1310 01:23:03,240 --> 01:23:05,118 So once Jason and I play with Mark and Dennis, 1311 01:23:05,160 --> 01:23:06,478 it's The Dream Syndicate. 1312 01:23:06,520 --> 01:23:07,878 It's funny how that is. 1313 01:23:07,920 --> 01:23:13,238 Right after we did the first original reunion shows in Spain, 1314 01:23:13,280 --> 01:23:15,078 people started freaking out. 1315 01:23:15,120 --> 01:23:19,478 They were saying: “You'll play again? Really? 1316 01:23:19,520 --> 01:23:21,840 How can I get you to play here?” 1317 01:23:23,560 --> 01:23:26,398 Book a show, you know. We'll show up. 1318 01:23:26,440 --> 01:23:30,038 And so we would do that occasionally here and there. 1319 01:23:30,080 --> 01:23:31,880 And then it just started snowballing. 1320 01:23:32,560 --> 01:23:33,720 And we kept doing little things 1321 01:23:34,480 --> 01:23:37,438 with the feeling that we're a nostalgia band. 1322 01:23:37,480 --> 01:23:39,398 We're happy to be a nostalgia band. 1323 01:23:39,440 --> 01:23:41,198 We're nostalgic too, for God’s sake. 1324 01:23:41,240 --> 01:23:43,118 So let's go out there and play the old songs 1325 01:23:43,160 --> 01:23:44,600 and make everyone happy and have some fun. 1326 01:23:55,600 --> 01:23:57,278 We kept playing and kept playing, 1327 01:23:57,320 --> 01:24:00,918 until we realized, okay, we can only do this so long. 1328 01:24:00,960 --> 01:24:03,078 You know, we need to evolve. 1329 01:24:03,120 --> 01:24:06,878 We need to make a record or something to justify us being a band. 1330 01:24:06,920 --> 01:24:08,718 Otherwise we're an oldie band 1331 01:24:08,760 --> 01:24:12,718 and I don't want to be an oldie band member if I can avoid it. 1332 01:24:12,760 --> 01:24:18,118 Steve was writing new material, so that allowed us to move out 1333 01:24:18,160 --> 01:24:22,758 of the stage of just playing old songs, into a newer period. 1334 01:24:22,800 --> 01:24:26,758 Well, let's see what it would be like to record a record for the fun of it. 1335 01:24:26,800 --> 01:24:29,680 Let's see how it turns out. Low pressure. 1336 01:24:36,080 --> 01:24:39,198 We booked some time in the studio in Richmond, Virginia. 1337 01:24:39,240 --> 01:24:41,364 The studio where I worked quite a bit, called Montrose Recording. 1338 01:24:41,404 --> 01:24:41,960 [rock music] 1339 01:24:42,000 --> 01:24:43,078 And I felt like, we'll go down there 1340 01:24:43,120 --> 01:24:46,320 for five days, do our thing, hang out, have some fun. 1341 01:24:48,120 --> 01:24:50,478 And I thought maybe it would be good to have, 1342 01:24:50,520 --> 01:24:53,998 if not a producer, at least somebody in the control room 1343 01:24:54,040 --> 01:24:56,598 who knows us, who has an objective opinion, 1344 01:24:56,640 --> 01:24:59,798 who isn't me being the bandleader and being the boss. 1345 01:24:59,840 --> 01:25:02,958 But somebody who can kind of be our our guide. 1346 01:25:03,000 --> 01:25:05,518 And I thought the perfect person to do that would be Chris Cacavas. 1347 01:25:05,560 --> 01:25:10,598 He wanted me to be sort of his Brian Eno to his Bowie, 1348 01:25:10,640 --> 01:25:11,438 and I liked that. 1349 01:25:11,480 --> 01:25:13,800 I'm like, okay, I can live with this role. 1350 01:25:18,160 --> 01:25:19,758 One thing we found when we went in the studio 1351 01:25:19,800 --> 01:25:21,158 to make that record, was 1352 01:25:21,200 --> 01:25:24,118 not only we can 1353 01:25:24,160 --> 01:25:28,878 justify our existence, not only can we somehow 1354 01:25:28,920 --> 01:25:31,198 approximate what it was that people loved about the band, 1355 01:25:31,240 --> 01:25:35,478 but even better, we're a new band that does new things in a new way. 1356 01:25:35,520 --> 01:25:40,440 We came together and each person was like a gear in the machine. 1357 01:25:40,760 --> 01:25:43,518 Again, but differently. 1358 01:25:43,560 --> 01:25:46,080 And it all fit together. It was great. 1359 01:26:04,709 --> 01:26:08,709 [rock music] 1360 01:26:31,400 --> 01:26:34,438 Jason knowing so much about my musical history 1361 01:26:34,480 --> 01:26:35,958 and about The Dream Syndicate. 1362 01:26:36,000 --> 01:26:40,078 He had his feelings about this is good, this is bad. 1363 01:26:40,120 --> 01:26:42,438 First and foremost, 1364 01:26:42,480 --> 01:26:44,478 I'm a fan of the band. 1365 01:26:44,520 --> 01:26:49,078 And sometimes I think that gets on the guy's nerves, 1366 01:26:49,120 --> 01:26:52,558 because I go: “This is not up to snuff” or 1367 01:26:52,600 --> 01:26:54,638 “Nah, The Dream Syndicate wouldn’t do this.” 1368 01:26:54,680 --> 01:26:58,318 Within the context of a band that is already 1369 01:26:58,360 --> 01:27:02,798 rather experimental and rather open to 1370 01:27:02,840 --> 01:27:04,918 improvised ideas. 1371 01:27:04,960 --> 01:27:09,718 Jason is a guy who took it even one step further. 1372 01:27:09,760 --> 01:27:11,278 He's like: “No, I'm not going to play that. 1373 01:27:11,320 --> 01:27:12,918 That's the obvious thing to play. 1374 01:27:12,960 --> 01:27:14,160 And I'm not going to play that.” 1375 01:27:54,880 --> 01:27:58,398 If we play How Did I Find Myself Here?, I think once a day in the studio, 1376 01:27:58,440 --> 01:28:00,078 which kind of along with the other songs. 1377 01:28:00,120 --> 01:28:04,478 We would play fast, slow, twenty minutes, seven minutes, 1378 01:28:04,520 --> 01:28:07,838 whatever, every kind of version, just to have fun with it. 1379 01:28:07,880 --> 01:28:11,518 And one of the days we were playing it and really got into the groove of it, 1380 01:28:11,560 --> 01:28:13,118 Chris was in the control room. 1381 01:28:13,160 --> 01:28:16,520 Dennis Duck was playing this sort of trip hop beat. 1382 01:28:17,720 --> 01:28:21,000 And it sounded, I heard this sort of funky vibe in there. 1383 01:28:21,760 --> 01:28:25,120 And then I thought to myself: oh, I think I might have a part for this. 1384 01:28:26,480 --> 01:28:30,318 So between takes, I asked the engineer Adrian 1385 01:28:30,360 --> 01:28:35,358 to hook up the old Wurlitzer piano that was in the control room. 1386 01:28:35,400 --> 01:28:38,038 So now I'm ready to play with the band. 1387 01:28:38,080 --> 01:28:39,118 But they can't hear me. 1388 01:28:39,160 --> 01:28:43,958 But I'm just jamming along with them and having a blast, you know, just trying 1389 01:28:44,000 --> 01:28:48,200 to find this sort of funky vibe that would fit to what they were doing. 1390 01:28:49,800 --> 01:28:53,480 So finally they come in to hear what they did. What they did. 1391 01:28:54,200 --> 01:28:57,840 And then they hear my keyboard track, which I didn't tell them about. 1392 01:28:58,440 --> 01:29:01,918 And Adrian puts it up in the mix and they're like: what the heck is that? 1393 01:29:01,960 --> 01:29:06,438 That sounds amazing! How? Where do these keyboards come from? 1394 01:29:06,480 --> 01:29:08,678 Chris, you're playing along the whole time? 1395 01:29:08,720 --> 01:29:10,278 And I said: “Surprise!” 1396 01:29:10,320 --> 01:29:13,840 I think we were all surprised by how it turned out. 1397 01:29:14,320 --> 01:29:16,518 It's what you dream about, you know? 1398 01:29:16,560 --> 01:29:20,118 It's when you're playing live, you hope it's going to sound that good. 1399 01:29:20,160 --> 01:29:23,958 The blend of the shorter songs and always one or two long songs 1400 01:29:24,000 --> 01:29:26,078 where we get freaky and where anything can happen. 1401 01:29:26,120 --> 01:29:27,638 That's who we are. 1402 01:29:27,680 --> 01:29:30,198 And the long song was always Coltrane 1403 01:29:30,240 --> 01:29:31,238 or Days of Wine and Roses. 1404 01:29:31,280 --> 01:29:33,718 Suddenly we had How did I Find Myself Here? 1405 01:29:33,760 --> 01:29:35,518 And that was maybe the best song of all of them. 1406 01:29:35,560 --> 01:29:36,520 We got to do that. 1407 01:29:50,647 --> 01:29:54,647 [rock music] 1408 01:30:03,560 --> 01:30:05,318 Eventually I was asked to become 1409 01:30:05,360 --> 01:30:09,678 the fifth member, the fifth Beatle of The Dream Syndicate. 1410 01:30:09,720 --> 01:30:13,518 When we finished, How Did I Find Myself Here?, when that record was done and mixed 1411 01:30:13,560 --> 01:30:16,038 and ready to be released, we knew we were a five piece band. 1412 01:30:16,080 --> 01:30:20,358 I think that record really sets up 1413 01:30:20,400 --> 01:30:23,318 an entirely new era 1414 01:30:23,360 --> 01:30:27,878 for him as a writer and as a collaborator with, 1415 01:30:27,920 --> 01:30:31,518 you know, musicians that he's known 1416 01:30:31,560 --> 01:30:33,518 most of his life, if not all of his life. 1417 01:30:33,560 --> 01:30:36,638 I feel like How Did I Find Myself Here? was a debut album. 1418 01:30:36,680 --> 01:30:38,518 It was a debut with a new band. 1419 01:30:38,560 --> 01:30:40,038 And we went back to make the second record. 1420 01:30:40,080 --> 01:30:41,880 Second records were always hard. 1421 01:30:46,720 --> 01:30:48,718 We were, I think, kind of figuring out 1422 01:30:48,760 --> 01:30:51,638 how to be The Dream Syndicate of old, 1423 01:30:51,680 --> 01:30:53,638 Dream Syndicate of How Did I Find Myself Here? 1424 01:30:53,680 --> 01:30:55,558 Dream Syndicate we were developing into being. 1425 01:30:55,600 --> 01:30:57,558 It was a lot of growing pains on that record. 1426 01:30:57,600 --> 01:31:00,798 And I'll be honest, it wasn't always the most fun record to make. 1427 01:31:00,840 --> 01:31:02,758 You know, you did the first record, 1428 01:31:02,800 --> 01:31:05,038 How Did I Find Myself Here? and then, 1429 01:31:05,080 --> 01:31:10,000 and people had a really favorable reaction to it. 1430 01:31:10,720 --> 01:31:14,758 And I felt like, well, what if this one just falls flat? 1431 01:31:14,800 --> 01:31:18,320 There is, I felt more pressure for some reason on that second record. 1432 01:31:54,440 --> 01:31:59,038 It was a good group effort, because everyone contributed 1433 01:31:59,080 --> 01:32:04,718 and we we hadn't really worked that way fully before. 1434 01:32:04,760 --> 01:32:07,798 So it was very satisfying artistically. 1435 01:32:07,840 --> 01:32:10,118 When we know we're going to go record a record. 1436 01:32:10,160 --> 01:32:13,318 It’s insane, the back and forths with the four of us. 1437 01:32:13,360 --> 01:32:17,358 Steve loves to send thousands of emails, you know, into it. 1438 01:32:17,400 --> 01:32:22,918 Listen to this, this record from whoever, Miles Davis. 1439 01:32:22,960 --> 01:32:25,958 And like this is kind of what I'm thinking. Check this out. 1440 01:32:26,000 --> 01:32:28,238 This is what we make should make a record of. 1441 01:32:28,280 --> 01:32:33,958 It's like a North African, you know, weird music and some really great grooves. 1442 01:32:34,000 --> 01:32:36,278 And he would send this stuff and I'm like, yeah, yeah, yeah. 1443 01:32:36,320 --> 01:32:37,558 That's a good idea. 1444 01:32:37,600 --> 01:32:43,038 You know, you get to the actual recording and sort of all those ideas fall away. 1445 01:32:43,080 --> 01:32:45,958 None of them actually is what These Times sound like, 1446 01:32:46,000 --> 01:32:49,078 but they're just ideas he was just into at the moment. 1447 01:32:49,120 --> 01:32:54,080 And so he'd like to share those types of ideas with the band members. 1448 01:33:22,240 --> 01:33:24,918 Stephen McCarthy lives in Richmond, Virginia. 1449 01:33:24,960 --> 01:33:28,798 He's a native of the city. So he lives two miles from the studio. 1450 01:33:28,840 --> 01:33:32,838 So Steve calls me up at the end of the recording 1451 01:33:32,880 --> 01:33:36,998 of These Times and says: “Hey, why don't you come by like 10:00?” 1452 01:33:37,040 --> 01:33:38,760 We're going to have dinner, we'll have a drink. 1453 01:33:39,200 --> 01:33:41,760 And we're cracking that first beer at 11, 11:30. 1454 01:33:42,440 --> 01:33:44,398 And we said: “Wait a second. What are we doing? 1455 01:33:44,440 --> 01:33:47,398 We're sitting here on a porch drinking beer. 1456 01:33:47,440 --> 01:33:48,838 There's a recording studio there.” 1457 01:33:48,880 --> 01:33:50,438 So we go out in the studio. 1458 01:33:50,480 --> 01:33:53,518 Everything's already mic’d up. The guitar amps are on. The piano. 1459 01:33:53,560 --> 01:33:54,318 Everything's going. 1460 01:33:54,360 --> 01:33:56,640 We start playing together and it feels great. 1461 01:34:01,680 --> 01:34:03,598 Not a word is said about, 1462 01:34:03,640 --> 01:34:05,478 all right, we're going to play this style. 1463 01:34:05,520 --> 01:34:07,318 We're going to play in this key. 1464 01:34:07,360 --> 01:34:08,078 Nothing. 1465 01:34:08,120 --> 01:34:09,560 Twenty minutes go by and we're kind of, 1466 01:34:10,640 --> 01:34:11,798 you know, when things are going well, 1467 01:34:11,840 --> 01:34:13,598 we're looking at each other from across the room. 1468 01:34:13,640 --> 01:34:14,918 Yeah, this is great. 1469 01:34:14,960 --> 01:34:17,718 At that point, everybody had had 1470 01:34:17,760 --> 01:34:22,000 a fair amount to drink, you know, so there's a different vibe going on. 1471 01:34:22,480 --> 01:34:26,998 I think we were just releasing, you know, energy that we'd 1472 01:34:27,040 --> 01:34:30,920 been kind of saving up during, you know, when we were just working on the songs. 1473 01:34:40,520 --> 01:34:43,918 And we played, you know, a good long time. 1474 01:34:43,960 --> 01:34:46,798 And I got up and everyone was like: where are you going? 1475 01:34:46,840 --> 01:34:49,598 I just ran into the house, grabbed a bottle of tequila, 1476 01:34:49,640 --> 01:34:51,278 a bunch of glasses, poured it out. 1477 01:34:51,320 --> 01:34:52,318 Hey, Mark’s got tequila. 1478 01:34:52,360 --> 01:34:55,838 So, strum strum, shot, boom, thanks, strum strum. 1479 01:34:55,880 --> 01:34:57,638 And he goes around and picks up the bass again. 1480 01:34:57,680 --> 01:35:00,038 So we never stopped even in those kind of seven minutes. 1481 01:35:00,080 --> 01:35:03,398 We played for about an hour and a half, 1482 01:35:03,440 --> 01:35:07,798 just continuous, and the songs morphed into other songs. 1483 01:35:07,840 --> 01:35:10,318 Somebody would play a riff, we'd follow that riff. 1484 01:35:10,360 --> 01:35:14,398 We just keep jamming and navigating, having this conversation. 1485 01:35:14,440 --> 01:35:17,758 Everyone wanted to keep it going, until we were going to drop dead. 1486 01:35:17,800 --> 01:35:20,718 It's like, this is great. This is what you dream of as a musician. 1487 01:35:20,760 --> 01:35:23,598 Seriously, it's like that kind of excitement. 1488 01:35:23,640 --> 01:35:26,438 And we end up with this ninety minute, unbroken piece of music. 1489 01:35:26,480 --> 01:35:28,000 And then we collapse. 1490 01:35:37,080 --> 01:35:39,438 The next day we come in the studio 1491 01:35:39,480 --> 01:35:42,140 and John Agnello, who’s engineered the 1492 01:35:42,161 --> 01:35:45,478 record and been my main guy for 25 years now, 1493 01:35:45,520 --> 01:35:48,318 he's already listening to the music we've done from the previous night. 1494 01:35:48,360 --> 01:35:51,718 He went: “You know what, this could be a song.” 1495 01:35:51,760 --> 01:35:54,718 And so he would cut it and say, here's a separate entity. 1496 01:35:54,760 --> 01:35:56,598 And he presented it to us. 1497 01:35:56,640 --> 01:35:59,118 ”You know, I just made separate files for each of these 1498 01:35:59,160 --> 01:36:01,838 and think they sounded like separate songs to me.” 1499 01:36:01,880 --> 01:36:05,720 We listened back and thought, wow! 1500 01:36:06,240 --> 01:36:07,838 I don't know what we can do with this. 1501 01:36:07,880 --> 01:36:09,478 And I even tried for a while 1502 01:36:09,520 --> 01:36:12,520 to put words to some of the pieces to put on These Times. 1503 01:36:13,400 --> 01:36:16,318 I'll take those 5 minutes and make a song out of it. 1504 01:36:16,360 --> 01:36:18,360 But nothing was quite as right. 1505 01:36:19,240 --> 01:36:21,598 I don't know, out of context. 1506 01:36:21,640 --> 01:36:22,960 So nothing I used. 1507 01:36:30,760 --> 01:36:33,678 I would lay down every night and before I go to bed 1508 01:36:33,720 --> 01:36:36,878 I put my headphones on and I would listen to the full jam. 1509 01:36:36,920 --> 01:36:40,360 It was something that made me at peace and I really enjoyed. 1510 01:36:40,880 --> 01:36:44,878 It wasn't until a few months later that Steve admitted he was doing 1511 01:36:44,920 --> 01:36:46,158 basically the same thing. 1512 01:36:46,200 --> 01:36:48,638 I was taking a flight, I remember, from Paris to Berlin 1513 01:36:48,680 --> 01:36:51,638 and listened to the whole thing, looking out the window of the plane. 1514 01:36:51,680 --> 01:36:54,560 Maybe a little hung over, maybe looking at the clouds passing by. 1515 01:36:54,960 --> 01:36:58,398 And all I could think was, this is really good. 1516 01:36:58,440 --> 01:37:00,478 And from that point on, I kind of made it 1517 01:37:00,520 --> 01:37:02,840 my obsession to somehow make a record out of that. 1518 01:37:09,920 --> 01:37:11,678 I went back down to Richmond 1519 01:37:11,720 --> 01:37:17,798 for five days to take this sprawling mess of a jam and try new things. 1520 01:37:17,840 --> 01:37:20,078 And I worked hand in hand with Adrian Olson, 1521 01:37:20,120 --> 01:37:23,118 who is the engineer there, runs the studio. 1522 01:37:23,160 --> 01:37:25,160 And he and I tried different things out. 1523 01:37:25,520 --> 01:37:27,038 Stephen McCarthy came down. 1524 01:37:27,080 --> 01:37:28,758 I helped Steve with some of the arrangements. 1525 01:37:28,800 --> 01:37:32,160 Maybe like, you know, where do we think the horn would go? 1526 01:37:32,640 --> 01:37:36,278 And I think I played some sitar on a couple of songs. 1527 01:37:36,320 --> 01:37:41,038 At one point I was thinking: oh, some horns might be nice on this. 1528 01:37:41,080 --> 01:37:44,278 And Adrian said: “There's a guy in town named Marcus Tenney. 1529 01:37:44,320 --> 01:37:48,120 He understands playing improvization and responding.” 1530 01:37:48,280 --> 01:37:52,078 He just set up and played this 20 minute piece 1531 01:37:52,120 --> 01:37:55,598 and just, you know, played that great stuff you hear on the record. 1532 01:37:55,640 --> 01:37:56,520 Incredible. 1533 01:38:19,880 --> 01:38:21,558 I was walking around New York City one day 1534 01:38:21,600 --> 01:38:26,318 and I kind of had an idea of how I wanted to do vocals for the song. 1535 01:38:26,360 --> 01:38:30,760 I thought, you know, if I do it kind of in a lower spoken thing. 1536 01:38:32,800 --> 01:38:37,760 So I rushed home and I got up to my home recording system. 1537 01:38:38,840 --> 01:38:42,518 And I remember having my little cheap microphone and I said, you know, 1538 01:38:42,560 --> 01:38:45,518 just so I can get the idea down, I want to get the idea of this voice, 1539 01:38:45,560 --> 01:38:47,798 I want to have on the song. I don't know what to sing, 1540 01:38:47,840 --> 01:38:50,238 but I'll look at my lyric idea I have on my phone. 1541 01:38:50,280 --> 01:38:52,358 So I got my phone here in one hand, the microphone, 1542 01:38:52,400 --> 01:38:55,078 the microphone and the harmonica in another hand. 1543 01:38:55,120 --> 01:38:57,318 And the computer song running. 1544 01:38:57,360 --> 01:39:01,878 And I say, I'm going to recite all these random lyrics and titles I have. 1545 01:39:01,920 --> 01:39:05,998 So I'm kind of like hearing The Regulator, listening and scrolling 1546 01:39:06,040 --> 01:39:07,478 the phone, you know? 1547 01:39:07,520 --> 01:39:11,120 Have you heard? Have You Heard was just a song title, you know. 1548 01:39:12,200 --> 01:39:14,798 You know, Dusting Off The Rust. All these little things 1549 01:39:14,840 --> 01:39:16,440 just to get the voice recorded. 1550 01:39:17,680 --> 01:39:18,960 . That's the vocal on the record. 1551 01:39:36,036 --> 01:39:40,036 [rock music] 1552 01:39:45,960 --> 01:39:48,318 I said: “Steve, what did you do to your voice?” 1553 01:39:48,360 --> 01:39:50,200 He said: “I just sang low.” 1554 01:39:50,560 --> 01:39:53,080 I said: “What? You didn't pitch shift it or anything?” 1555 01:39:53,480 --> 01:39:54,678 I said: “How did you do that?” 1556 01:39:54,720 --> 01:39:55,678 He's like: “I can do that.” 1557 01:39:55,720 --> 01:39:57,398 I'm like: what? 1558 01:39:57,440 --> 01:39:58,638 I was floored. 1559 01:39:58,680 --> 01:40:01,038 This was so amazing to me. 1560 01:40:01,080 --> 01:40:04,078 This was like, this is the record that 1561 01:40:04,120 --> 01:40:06,438 I think I wanted to make from the get go. 1562 01:40:06,480 --> 01:40:09,598 If you can get an artist to do something 1563 01:40:09,640 --> 01:40:13,360 and they don't know that they're doing it, that's some magic right there. 1564 01:40:30,720 --> 01:40:35,158 It's a record unlike anything else in their discography, 1565 01:40:35,200 --> 01:40:38,438 but it's based on everything they've always done. 1566 01:40:38,480 --> 01:40:40,200 Which is improvise, 1567 01:40:41,160 --> 01:40:44,198 improvise together as a unit, 1568 01:40:44,240 --> 01:40:47,758 as a bonded unit, and then being able to form songs 1569 01:40:47,800 --> 01:40:50,998 and coherent ideas 1570 01:40:51,040 --> 01:40:53,998 that can then be extended and expanded. 1571 01:40:54,040 --> 01:40:55,678 It's really a remarkable record. 1572 01:40:55,720 --> 01:40:59,718 It's definitely the kind of thing that will put you in a trance. 1573 01:40:59,760 --> 01:41:02,478 You know, turn off whatever other devices 1574 01:41:02,520 --> 01:41:05,878 you've got going at the time and just ride it, 1575 01:41:05,920 --> 01:41:09,520 because it will take you places you have not been before. 1576 01:41:47,800 --> 01:41:49,798 We hadn't seen each other, 1577 01:41:49,840 --> 01:41:53,678 let alone played music together in a year, almost a year and a half. 1578 01:41:53,720 --> 01:41:57,878 When we show up at the studio, we were raring to go. 1579 01:41:57,920 --> 01:42:00,480 We were itching to play. 1580 01:42:01,960 --> 01:42:04,158 And I think on this session we just had a good time. 1581 01:42:04,200 --> 01:42:06,358 We just played music, we had a lot of laughs, 1582 01:42:06,400 --> 01:42:08,198 we had a lot of fun eating together. 1583 01:42:08,240 --> 01:42:10,078 It felt natural to be together again. 1584 01:42:10,120 --> 01:42:11,400 It was fantastic. 1585 01:42:11,720 --> 01:42:13,158 As much as These Times 1586 01:42:13,200 --> 01:42:17,478 was one of the more difficult ones, this one was so much fun to make. 1587 01:42:17,520 --> 01:42:19,358 It felt easy, felt effortless. 1588 01:42:19,400 --> 01:42:22,478 The one song I had written for the new album is the opening song 1589 01:42:22,520 --> 01:42:23,598 Where I'll Stand. 1590 01:42:23,640 --> 01:42:25,758 I said, this is a new song. 1591 01:42:25,800 --> 01:42:27,038 Here are the chords. Let's go. 1592 01:42:27,080 --> 01:42:33,278 The version the first time we'd played together in all that time, on a new song, 1593 01:42:33,320 --> 01:42:34,478 that's the opening of the album. 1594 01:42:34,520 --> 01:42:36,840 Take one is the one we used. Just one take. 1595 01:42:37,200 --> 01:42:40,600 We kind of laughed and said: “Oh, pretty good.” 1596 01:42:57,280 --> 01:43:00,678 The first song is called Where I'll Stand. 1597 01:43:00,720 --> 01:43:05,518 And that record is exactly where he's standing. 1598 01:43:05,560 --> 01:43:10,478 And to have a band like this continue 1599 01:43:10,520 --> 01:43:14,398 to inspire me, that means a lot because I need that strength as well. 1600 01:43:14,440 --> 01:43:16,918 I don't think we ever think in terms anymore of 1601 01:43:16,960 --> 01:43:19,038 give me a three minute pop song and get the hell out of here. 1602 01:43:19,080 --> 01:43:24,638 But more like just drift off for a second, for ten seconds, for ten hours, whatever. 1603 01:43:24,680 --> 01:43:27,118 But let yourself go. 1604 01:43:27,160 --> 01:43:28,960 And this record is another way yourself go record. 1605 01:43:58,440 --> 01:44:01,323 So if you ask me, where are The Dream Syndicate going to go next? 1606 01:44:01,363 --> 01:44:02,480 [rock music] 1607 01:44:02,520 --> 01:44:05,640 I can give you an answer, but I can guarantee you I'd be wrong. 1608 01:44:06,320 --> 01:44:10,798 Because Steve and the rest of the guys, they never repeat themselves. 1609 01:44:10,840 --> 01:44:12,998 I don't think we've done everything yet we can do. 1610 01:44:13,040 --> 01:44:15,718 You know, I think we've, even with the four records we've made 1611 01:44:15,760 --> 01:44:19,078 in the last five years, which is really something anyway. 1612 01:44:19,120 --> 01:44:23,438 We have a lot left that we can do with the same people. 1613 01:44:23,480 --> 01:44:24,718 We want to keep going. 1614 01:44:24,760 --> 01:44:26,038 We want to keep pushing forward 1615 01:44:26,080 --> 01:44:29,838 and doing new things, surprising ourselves, surprising our fans. 1616 01:44:29,880 --> 01:44:35,478 I think if this band still is having as much fun together as we have, then 1617 01:44:35,520 --> 01:44:38,118 I don't see why we would stop that. 1618 01:44:38,160 --> 01:44:39,518 I don't see why we would give that up. 1619 01:44:39,560 --> 01:44:42,158 If I can play to the day I die, I will. 1620 01:44:42,200 --> 01:44:47,118 My greatest hope for Steve and The Dream Syndicate in the future is don't quit. 1621 01:44:47,160 --> 01:44:50,878 I still haven't had enough and I don't think you're done. 1622 01:44:50,920 --> 01:44:54,078 When I first started playing music 1623 01:44:54,120 --> 01:44:58,118 and making records, all I could think about was; how can I keep this going? 1624 01:44:58,160 --> 01:44:59,918 I don't want this dream to end. 1625 01:44:59,960 --> 01:45:02,478 And that's the biggest change now, is I don't worry about that anymore, 1626 01:45:02,520 --> 01:45:04,760 because the dream won't end. 1627 01:45:37,702 --> 01:45:41,702 [rock music] 133483

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