Nick Simper Interview by David Lee |
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from Ian Scott Entertainment, Music America Magazine, Fair Haven, Michigan, U.S.A., 1998 |
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DAVID LEE: Let's start off with what you have going
on today with QUATERMASS II. The disc is very impressive and I have enjoyed
listening to it very much.
NICK SIMPER: Well, I am glad that you like it.
DL: I do, very much. It is something that you liked
obviously.
NS: Yeah! I mean, we enjoyed making it and we made
it under, kinda, old fashioned conditions which made it even more enjoyable. We
did it like we used to do back in the `60's with the big, old, fat tape machine
going and everything, more or less, live to get that kind of feel to it.
Obviously, there were quite a few overdubs but opposed to the modern way of
putting things together track by track. We enjoyed doing it.
DL: So there were no computers involved?
NS: Well, he has got a computer there but we did it
all basically. I like to record that way anyway, otherwise it becomes a bit
clinical, this modern way of recording. I used to like it in the old days when
you only had about four tracks or eight tracks because you knew if anybody made
a mistake! (laughs) Everybody had to start all over again. We didn't go quite
that far. Everybody made a few mistakes that got repaired afterwards but it is
nice to record in the basic style. When you start getting involved with
thirty-six tracks, where does it all end?
DL: I can just imagine how it was back then, though
after having worked in a modern studio I would almost think that it was easier
to record back in the days of two tracks with the band on one and the singer on
the other.
NS: Yeah, yeah I have recorded like that. I mean,
I've been out there since 1964 and we recorded like that. There was a terrific
kind of urgency to it and an immediacy where you knew that if anybody blew a
note you had to go back to the beginning! (laughs) Sometimes if you got other
musicians in there, I mean, when we were young sometimes you were augmented
maybe by some string players or something like that and they were usually, what
we thought, were "old guys" then. (laughs) You would be kinda drumming
your fingers if he couldn't get it right. Quite a few embarrassing times but,
yeah I remember recording that way. The biggest frustration, really when you are
short of tracks is having to share a track. In the four track and eight track
days, not so much in the eight track days but, the bass player always had to
share a track with the drummer and then you would say to the producer "I
can't hear the bass." And he would say "Well you can't come up any
louder otherwise the drums would have to come up with it." There were
problems like that but I think that the reason that a lot of those records in
the fifties and sixties are so good is because of the conditions that they were
made under. You don't get records today that have that feel to it no matter how
good they are or how well produced. There is something about those old records
that, I don't know, a little bit of magic maybe.
DL: Right. I would say a lot of magic.
NS: Yeah, yeah.
DL: I saw someone mix a live record recently and
there were sixty-four tracks to play with and as they kept doing overdubs I
began to wonder how much of the record would actually be live when everything
was done.
NS: Oh yeah. I did a live album with a guy called
SCREAMING LORD SUTCH, have you ever heard of him?
DL: Absolutely!
NS: I did a live album with him and he overdubbed so
much stuff that it just wasn't a live album anymore.
DL: Was that the record where no one knew that
there was going to be a live recording and...
NS: That's right, that's right. It was actually a
gig and when we got there all the tapes and all the machinery was there and we
didn't know until we got there. Oh, that was a long time ago! (laughs)
DL: Is he even around anymore?
NS: Oh yeah. I saw him about six weeks ago. He can
still perform and do his act. His a bit of an institution in England. He has
been around forever. He is the longest running politician that we have got, you
know? The longest running party leader and still trying to win votes in the
elections and things like that.
DL: Does he have much success?
NS: No, no he doesn't have any success! (laughs)
But he kinda livens up the political thing. Whenever there is an election or if
an MP dies or something like that they have to have what they call a bi-election
to find someone to take his place and Such would always go and stand. You have
to put up money for a deposit and he always loses it because if you don't get
elected you lose your deposit money. There is quite a lot of that on the British
scene now. You get the general sort of run of looney parties and they have no
credibility but they get mentioned in the count and they are always on the
television. They come up with all sorts of names and hey it gives it a bit of
fun, a bit of colour.
DL: That, and if you can get it to coincide with
the release of a record or a movie it is great publicity!
NS: Oh yeah. It keeps his career alive because Such
based his whole thing on having the best musicians with him and doing a kind of
a live spectacular act. In this country there are not many places to play and
the circuit has kind of disappeared whereas coming up in the sixties or even in
the seventies, there were so many venues where people could play and learn there
trade. There were always bands needed because there were so many places and they
were cheep to get in. The promoters never used to charge much and they were
always packed out. This is before kids became really blasé and got blitzed with
videos and computers and stuff. Everyone would turn out to see a live show whether
it was good, bad or indifferent. All those places, there would be sort of
medium sized halls form 500 people to 5000 people, have all disappeared. They
have all become kinda snooker clubs and bingo halls and there is not a circuit
anymore so, you are either at the top of the tree playing Wembley Stadium or
something like that or you are right on the bottom playing bars and pubs. This
is the difficulty QUATERMASS have had, trying to find some decent venues where
you can earn some money. There is an audience out there for us but there are so
few places to play now, it is not easy. I am sure it is the same to some extent
in the States, isn't it?
DL: Yes, it is unfortunately.
NS: Yeah. A lot of the places, they figure that
there is no profit in it anymore or a lot of places won't put bands on anymore,
they will have karaoke machines. Thousands of punters will come in and all get
drunk and want to hear themselves sing and people seem to be entertained by
things like that. Or the venues will only pay enough money that duos will come
in and guys start using drum machines and stuff like that. I just hate that sort
or situation. If I can't play with a real drummer, I won't play! (laughs)
DL: Its so unlifelike and mechanical.
NS: Yeah, deadly. So, Yeah, We are quite pleased
with this album. I attitude is that if I make something it is put away and
forgotten about and I am thinking about the next one but I have played this one
quite a bit more than I have played the others. Probably because I am not too
involved in a lot of the songs. Most of them have been written by the vocalist
so, I tend to get board witless by the other ones. You tend to get so involved
with them. You hear them so much when you are creating something like that and
you are writing them from scratch. You tend to be a little bit sick of it by the
time you come to record it but when other people have got such an input into the
writing it sounds fresher for longer, if that makes any sense.
DL: It absolutely does.
NS: I have always wanted to work with Mick
Underwood as well so that makes it sort of doubly exciting for me. We have known
each other for years and kind of met at gigs and been at gigs with different
bands and it wasn't until a couple of years ago that we sort of said to each
other "Why don't we do something?" "Why don't we do an album,
just for the crack?"
DL: This version of QUATERMASS II that is on the cd
is a bit different from the one that came together in the beginning of your and
Mick's collaboration.
NS: Oh, yeah. We had a few changes of personnel you
see. Mick and I bumped into each other at a record company Christmas party a
couple of years ago and we are sitting there with these kind of old timers and
producers and people that we have known for years and they were all talking
about different people from our kind of time and our age group and what they
were doing. I looked at Mick and said "Why don't we do something?" And
he said "What should we do?" I said "Let's find some guys and do
an album." One of the guys there got quite excited about the prospect, this
record producer who didn't have anything to do with it in the end, but he got
quite excited after having a few beers too many and he said "Why don't you
call it QUATERMASS II for a working title?" Mick had this band called
QUATERMASS in the seventies so QUATERMASS II seemed like a good working title
while we thought of a good name but we never got around to thinking of a good
name and everybody kept talking about QUATERMASS II. There were a few buzzes
that got into the music press and we kinda got to live with that so, that is why
it is QUATERMASS II. The first band QUATERMASS, which was Mickey's band from the
seventies, they were a really cult band. There records used to be very hard to
find and very collectible but they have since been re-released and have sold
quite well. So, it is not an unknown name.
DL: It certainly lends some assistance to what
would otherwise have been a pretty much unknown quantity.
NS: Yes. Are familiar with the film
"QUATERMASS?"
DL: No.
NS: It was a big horror series on the television
here in the sixties and it was one of those things that nobody missed on a
Saturday night. Everybody went home to watch "QUATERMASS." There were
two of them, the other one was called "QUATERMASS and the PIT." They
were kind of like sci-fi/horror stories and that is where he got the name from.
But like I say, we met at this party and we said "Who are we going to
get?" And "Who is a really heavy guitarist?" Mick said Bernie,
the guy who was with him in GILLAN. So, Bernie Torme came along for a blow and
we had a go at it. We had a go at it with Peter Taylor as well. It really took
off and we thought "This is great." Then when it came down to brass
tacks and actually doing some recording, Bernie was so far away from the rest of
us. We all lived in London and he lived out near the Coast and it was sort of
difficult to get to his place. We used to go over there and rehearse and put
stuff down in his studio but his wife also had a photography business that took
her all around the world and he used to go with her. It actual got really
difficult to get together because there were so many commitments so in the end
Bernie said that he had to go off to America for a couple of months and we said
we were just going to have to do something else. So, there was this guy called
Gary Davis that had been around for quite a while, locally, and had knocked
everybody sideways and we got him in for a blow and he fit in just perfect. We
liked the way he played and he is a nice guy. Unfortunately, it didn't work out
in the studio with Peter Taylor. We wrote some stuff and put down some back
tracks but every time it came to putting the vocals on it just didn't happen. No
disrespect to the guy. Perhaps we weren't putting down what he wanted to hear or
what he got off on but whatever happened the chemistry just wasn't right. It was
O.K. having a knock about blow but when it actually came down to actually
creating something to put on vinyl, or cd I should say, it just didn't work. We
said to Gary Davis "Do you know anybody that is any good?" and he said
"Well, there is this guy Bart Foley that I have seen a few times..."
And he knocked us out! He is a good songwriter and it saved us a lot of trouble
sitting down and racking our brains about songs because everybody has lots of
things to do. Everybody has got lots of priorities and things that take up a lot
of time and we knew that it was going to be an uphill struggle to actually get
enough stuff together to record the album. Bart came along with sort of a fist
full of songs and we thought that they were pretty damn good! Plus Bernie Torme
is a good writer and we had a whole catalogue from Bernie that we could have
used and we picked one of his. Then there is a guy called Johnny Gustafson, who
was in the original QUATERMASS. He was the original vocalist and bass player in
the seventies and he sent us quite a few songs. We did one of his and found that
we had quite a lot of material so, that is how we did it!
DL: The record that I have is actually the third
printing, right?
NS: Yeah, it has been out in Japan on Pony Canyon
and has sold reasonably well. It's come out here on RPM. I mean, I haven't got
the sales figures yet but it seems to be doing well. We don't expect to set the
world on fire! (laughs)
DL: So it is not enough to retire on yet?
NS; Not quite yet! As I say it is very hard in this
country because there are very few venues to actually do your stuff in. It is
like a vicious circle. You need to be on top to tour and show your stuff off but
we have done some nice gigs and it is surprising how many young guys have
pitched up to see us. I am talking like teenagers. Mick and myself have been
around for a few years and they seem to know everything that we have done. I was
quite surprised because I was expecting people to say "What is an old guy
like you still doing treading the boards?" They have come out and been
quite complimentary and we have had quite a lot of the older people come up and
say "Christ, we are glad to see you out there because we are getting sick
of the young metal bands!" They say that they can't play like the old guys!
Hey, we weren't always old! Once we were the young guys and we couldn't play any
better than these guys can! (laughs) It is quite flattering when people show up
and compliment you on what you do so, we are pretty grateful for that. It is
nice that people do remember you.
DL: Has it given you enough encouragement that
there will be another QUATERMASS II record?
NS: Oh yeah! That is definitely in the cards. We
have to kick some material around and we are just generally taking it as it
comes. There is no hard and fast game plan because everybody is doing other
things. Bart has done his own album and Gary works with other people and
everybody gets the odd session and gig with different people. There is not so
much for bass and drums now because not many people seems to use them for
recording. There is a lot of computer stuff with the modern bands but Bart is
demand particularly he has got pretty good pitch. He can just go into a session
and hear a song and in five minutes he is singing the harmonies and background
vocals perfect and guys like that are gold dust. They are always in demand. And
any guy who can play guitar like Gary Davis is always in demand.
DL: How did you bring Don Airey into the whole
QUATERMASS mix?
NS: We just fancied a keyboard on it. You listen to
the back tacks and you think "Well, I don't know, we could use something on
this." And Don is just one of the best keyboard players around. I didn't
know him personally but Mick knew him and he seemed to be the guy that everyone
was using and he is obviously just one of those experienced session men that can
just slide in with anybody. He heard our stuff and he genuinely seemed to like
what we were doing. He was quite complimentary about the material and he liked
the bass parts and everything else. We said "Well, do you want to do
it?" And he said "Sure!" I think that he had just come back the
day before from South America or something like that with THE ELECTRIC LIGHT
ORCHESTRA. He just played what was necessary and what was wanted. It was
perfect. You know, guys like that, you don't have to tell them. Even if you have
never played with a guy like that before, once you start working with him it is
like you have played with him all of your life. There is a certain core of
people that have that effect on you.
DL: He does a great job on the record.
NS: Yeah, he is great. He is not over the top and
he is not too understated. He just does a perfect job and he just knows exactly
what to do.
DL: O.K. we'll move from QUATERMASS II back in time
a bit to DEEP PURPLE.
NS: Ugh!
DL: I know it was only eighteen months...
NS: I have done a lot of things since DEEP PURPLE.
DL: But when people think Nick Simper or Nicky...
NS: Yeah, I was Nicky in those days. (laughs)
DL: DEEP PURPLE is what people think of. Is that a
weight around your neck or something that you are still very proud of?
NS: Sure I am proud of what I did but,..I don't
know, it is funny because everybody asks about it and it would be a lie if I
said that I didn't get a bit bored talking about that so much because I have
done things since then that I figure, I mean, no disrespect to those guys but I
have played with musicians just as good and I dare say, even better. People
always tend to think of the things that are a bit more of a commercial success.
The thing that annoys me about DEEP PURPLE is that no one ever seems to give the
first line-up the credit that it deserves. We were the guys that were the
pioneers. We blazed the trail for them all. I know that they have had about six
or seven line-ups since I was with them but a lot of people don't realize that we
spent about six months touring the States and people in Europe and England
thought that we were American! Everywhere that we used to turn up on the
continent, in France or Denmark or something like that, they were expecting an
American group. And people talk about "Hush" all the time but we had
five singles on the charts for the Tetragramatton label. All of them charted
and, I think, that two or three of those were top 10. Nobody ever talks about
that, I mean, we were featured on the international page of Cashbox. I think
that we got hits in nearly every part of the world, apart from England, with
"Hush" and "Kentucky Woman" but nobody ever mentions that.
They think that we were sort of a little pop band that had one record and that
was it. We had three gold albums and those albums are still selling now. They
are still coming out. They just re-released them in a box set and there is yet
another box set coming out in the new year and I mean, this stuff that we
recorded still turns over zillions of records. Yeah, I am proud of it. The first
album was recorded in 18 hours. Can you imagine that? You wouldn't even put down
a drum track of a single in 18 hours today! We did the whole album in 18 hours.
We had a bit more time to do the second two but we worked on very tight
schedules. My main complaint about DEEP PURPLE is that when we did get some
success, which was very, very, quickly after we started, we were just worked to
death by the management and the record company. We were just the products and
they were going to milk us as much as they could until we died. That wouldn't
happen today. Bands today wouldn't let that happen. No artist would let that
happen, what happened to us. In that six months we were jammed in the studio and
we had to come up with a couple of albums and a couple of singles. We had to
just get in there and deliver because the record company, I mean, people wanted
product. We had more product out in a year than most bands had out in ten years.
You can't really deliver world class stuff under those circumstances. I am quite
amazed when I listen to the old stuff we did that it still stands up so well.
There was a hell of a lot of pressure on all the time and people say "Well,
you recorded other peoples songs and you didn't write much of your own
stuff." We never had time! If we weren't on the road we were in the studio.
We never had time to do anything. Apart from that, it was great. We played a lot
of 25,000 seat stadiums and places. We supported a lot of big acts and without
trying to sound big headed, we blew them away! I mean, we worked with CREAM and
CREDENCE CLEARWATER REVIVAL, IT'S A BEAUTIFUL DAY and SANTANA. I am not saying
that we are any better than those bands but we certainly nicked the audience
from them and a lot of people didn't like that! (laughs) They didn't like this
new, upstart, unknown band coming out of nowhere. The one thing that we did have
going for us was that we had got a bit of a track record on the British rock and
roll circuit so, we were not unknown in the business. The whole idea when it was
all put together, according to the publishers that we had, they said that we
were the first real supergroup. Not because we had really famous names but
because we could play and we knew how to deliver. Yeah, I am pretty pleased with
what we put down at the time. There are a lot of detractors that say that the
follow up line-up sounded much better but don't realize that the Mark II line-up
would spend more time on a single than we would spend on a couple of albums. So,
it was bound to sound better.
DL: Personally, I do like the subsequent line-ups and, as you say, there have been many but I do think that it is telling of the
quality of the original groups material that each show that DEEP PURPLE has
played for the last five or six years begins with "Hush".
NS: Yeah, they were all a bit different. I am
amazed that hey are still going really, I am surprised that they haven't done
other things. But, there you go, they are making a buck and it keeps the Mark I
stuff alive because it is still turning over a lot of copies. Somebody out there
is buying it. We have been doing that with QUATERMASS as well. The whole style
of that, it is just quite a unique number. I am quite pleased with that one.
There is a group, a young group, over here that have covered it and got it on
the charts recently. KULA SHAKER or something like that.
DL: Yes. Almost a note for note knock off of your
version of the song.
NS: Yeah, yeah, they obviously copied it from ours
so it is a compliment really, isn't it?
DL: Rod Evens seems to have fallen off the face of
the earth, do you have any idea of what happened to him?
NS: No idea at all. Somebody told me, not long ago,
that he was dead and then somebody told me that he wasn't dead. I have got no
idea where he is. The last I heard he was living in LA and he had got married
and settled down. He was with CAPTAIN BEYOND and after that I don't know what he
did. He has just disappeared completely.
DL: I think his last reported sighting was when
someone hired him to front a band that they called DEEP PURPLE back in 1980.
NS: Yeah, that's right.
DL: That was something that you were never involved
with though, right?
NS: He contacted me about it but I didn't want to
know about it. No, I was not involved with that in any way at all. I think that
they got the lawyers onto him and he got into a lot of trouble over that. I
never knew all about it until a couple of years after it all happened. Somebody
told me that he went out with a bunch of look-a-likes or something silly like
that and he, apparently, sold out a stadium somewhere next to the Mexican border
or something like that. Apparently, he sold that out and when the lights went up
everybody realized that it was a bunch of look a likes and the only one that had
been involved with DEEP PURPLE was him and there was a riot there. They had to
run for it! No, I never had anything to do with that. It was printed in a book
once that I was part of it and I have been meaning to sue those guys for it ever
since.
DL: After your stint with DEEP PURPLE you moved
onto other things, WARHORSE comes to mind first.
NS: Yeah, WARHORSE was my baby.
DL: That is a group that you have resurrected from
time to time isn't it?
NS: No, I have never resurrected it. The stuff has
been re-released in different forms and different packages and then recently I
found a load of unreleased material. We had a problem with one label that ripped
us off for the money but we have kept the stuff alive. We got together recently
just to see how it sounded because we hadn't actually played together since the
band folded in 1974 and we had a get together for fun really. It sounded so good
and we thought "Why don't we do some more stuff?" We have kicked some
stuff around and we brought a mobile unit down to the rehearsal room but we had
a lot of problems with it and most of the stuff that we put down wasn't recorded
well enough to use. It was unfortunate because it wasted a lot of time. All
those guys have a lot of commitments as well and it is a case of we will do some
more when we can next get together. It is still open and, as I say, the stuff
has recently been re-released with bonus tracks. That should be coming out on
the American and Canadian market in the new year as well on Angel Air as well.
We did have a deal with Capitol in the beginning when we first started the band
but Capitol, I think, they sort of over stretched themselves with the acts that
they signed and they decided to get rid of a lot of acts that they had signed
and we were amongst them. That was a great outfit. They were my favourite and we
toured hard for four years, working every night all around the continent. The
band was really big in Europe and it was really record deal problems that set
in. You know what it is like when somebody signs to a label and then the head of
A+R leaves the label a week after you have signed and the new guy isn't really
interested in what the last guy signed. We did two albums and were actually on
the verge of doing a new deal when the band split. That was basically because
the drummer and singer had been working with Rick Wakeman and he offered them a
tour and they decided to break the band up to go on the tour. That was the end
of it and a move that they have regretted ever since! (laughs)
DL: That was in `74?
NS: Yeah, that was in 1974.
DL: So that was when Rick Wakeman was embarking on
his solo career from YES.
NS: Yeah, Rick was the original keyboard player
with WARHORSE. I sort of discovered Rick. Nobody had heard of him yet.
DL: I didn't know that!
NS: Oh, yes. He didn't record with us but he was in
the original line-up, in fact, he approached me and wanted to work with me. We
started to work together and there was a lot of friction with Rick which would
take a lot more time to tell you! (laughs) But we ended up parting company. Rick
is his own man and he has done well but when there is five of you together you
have to pull together and compromise a bit and he wasn't the right type of guy
for that so, it didn't happen but good luck to him.
DL: What came after WARHORSE?
NS: When WARHORSE folded I had another band called
FANDANGO, actually, I first had a band called NICK SIMPER's DYNAMITE which was
quite good and we did well in far flung territories like Italy. We had troubles
with management and troubles with record companies and the usual stories that
you have heard a million times over and it ended up collapsing but it did
resurrect itself as FANDANGO. I was pleased with FANDANGO but the punk situation
was coming in then and not to many people were interested in signing a metal or
rock type group. Everybody wanted the punk groups because they were young and
they were new and everybody was queuing up to sign them. We signed to a German
label and, in the end, and English label. Germans, you know, they love rock
music. We went over and recorded two albums in Germany and the original
recordings should fetch a ridiculous amount of money now the same as the
WARHORSE ones do. The FANDANGO stuff has been repackaged as well and that has
sold steadily. That has come out as a double cd and hopefully that will also
come out on Angel Air sometime in the future when the original contract expires.
I like to think of all this material as my pension, you know? (Laughs)
DL: It makes me wonder, you have been kicking
around for a while and I would think that you would be getting some residuals
from all of the projects that you have done.
NS: Yeah, you get bits and pieces. It keeps you
going and keeps the wolves from the door! (laughs)
DL: I know that you spent a bit of time writing for
other artist or have I got that wrong?
NS: Yeah, well that was a bit of a difficult
situation. The guy who writes with me, Peter Parks, we wrote a song that was
covered in America by a band called MARIAH. We didn't even know that it had been
covered. They got a hold of the song and they ended up changing the name and the
title and we wouldn't have been any the wiser if a friend of ours hadn't been on
tour with Eric Clapton. He happened to be on tour and he phoned us up and said
"That song of yours is in the American top 100 but they have changed the
name and it hasn't got your name on the record as the writer!" So, we spent
money on lawyers and it was all a big loss but we got the song back in the end
but we got ripped off for the money. We have had a couple of near misses with
some stuff that we wrote for Kenny Rodgers but that didn't come off so
primarily, we are writing for ourselves. It is not so easy to write for other
artists because there are so many good songwriters out there and so many of them
are better than me too! So, it is not an easy game to make a living at. (laughs)
DL: Is it better than being an accountant?
NS: (Laughs) Oh, sure! All we want is the
accountants wages! They are the guys who seem to make the bucks. (laughs) It
wouldn't do for me because I am not too good with figures. I will just stick to
playing the bass.
DL: I think that you have to follow what you love
to do and it is obvious that you love music. Some people do get tired of it and
enter the business end of it all, has that ever been an option for you?
NS: I have come pretty close to that a few times
but I didn't feel right wearing a suit. (laughs) I got involved in a bit of
record production for some companies and things like that but it just didn't
suit me. I often found that some of these guys were so young that communication
was quite difficult. I think that they thought that I was too old to be doing
it! (laughs) It's gone full circle now and a lot of the younger guys are getting
off on what we were playing years ago. You listen to a lot of these bands and
their covers are getting on the charts and you think to yourself "Geeze, we
were doing that in 1960!" So, it is quite complimentary. I think that a lot
of them are finding out that a lot of good music came out of them days. That is
not to say that they are not doing good things now but I think that was a
special period for creativity.
DL: I know that growing up in the seventies and
eighties left me feeling like I missed something very special. There was nothing
so creatively explosive as the fifties and sixties. Everything since that time
has been some form of copy from that period.
NS: Yeah, I know what you mean. I suppose everyone
has their time. My mom and dad used to say "Yeah, the stuff that you are
doing is alright but you should have heard some of the stuff that was going down
in the forties." When you listen to that stuff you have to agree, those
guys were great musicians. There has always been good stuff about. Good music
will always come out won't it?
DL: Absolutely and good music has come out and you
have been a part of thirty years of it.
NS: Yeah, thirty four years since I first went
professional. And I still play live on weekends. There are a bunch of ex-pros
that go out and play in bars for just kicks really. You get a lot of kids that
come along and ask for tips and things or come to see the guitarist and that is
nice. People sit in and it is good. We have Richard Hudson who is with THE
STRAWBS and guys of that calibre. There is a pool of about ten musicians that we
all get together. It's called THE GOOD OLD BOYS (laughs), we named it that after
the BLUES BROTHERS movie and of course we are all old! (laughs) We just go out
and play a few things of our own but mostly covers. Everything from Garth Brooks
to heavy metal, we play our own way. Sometimes we have sax players with us and
whoever pitches up and it is always a good fun night. That is what you need at
this stage of the game. You don't want to be too serious. It is a serious
business when you are dealing with accountancy and record label and management
and you are counting every penny and signing contracts but it is a good antidote
to go out there and just have a bit of fun and to try and remember why you
originally got into it. It was to have fun regardless whether you got paid or
not! (laughs) That is the name of the game really.
DL: Is that what you see yourself doing for the
foreseeable future or can you see a day when you say to yourself "O.K. It's
time to put the bass back in the case."
NS: No! I'll never put it in the case! (laughs)
I've got a `61 Fender that is worth its weight in gold now and I still get that
one out. I get kinda frightened to take that one out of the house but I creep
out to certain venues just to stop it from drying out. I have got a couple of
Fender basses and they both play good but putting it away? I don't know. The
STONES are still rolling aren't they? I don't think you ever can really. Chuck
Berry and Little Richard and some of these old guys, Jerry Lee is still alive.
These are the guys that I grew up on and they are still doing it and they are
still valid so I don't see any reason to put it away. Most musicians seem to get
better when they get older. You learn things all the time like when you go to
see some kid that is eighteen and you see him do something and you think
"How did he do that?" (laughs) They haven't got the road and the
circuit to learn their trade on but they have certainly got other things because
the standard of musicianship in that age group compared with how we were in the
sixties, I mean, they are light years ahead of us. I see bass players that
absolutely frighten me to death! The only thing to me is that with all of these
funky bass players why don't they play guitar because they are good enough to.
It is not my scene at all, I like a bass to be felt rather than heard but you
have to admire the musicianship of some of these guys. They get younger and
younger and better and better. (laughs) There is no reason why the old guys
can't keep going. We just keep boogieing away we do our thing and nobody thinks
that they have anything to prove. We've done our bit as best as we could do it
and hopefully there is a bit more life left in us yet! I'll tell you, Mickey
Underwood plays a kit like an eighteen year old. He is just frightening! He did
a drum solo not long ago that absolutely turned the place on its side. I don't
know where he got the energy from and to see it was absolutely phenomenal. That
guy has got to be the loudest drummer in the world. I think that given the right
circumstances, the right situation, the right audience in the right venue we
could all do a bit of that. There is nothing to stop us!"