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We managed to grab a quick chat with the legendary John Cale
about his brand new album 'Black Acetate'. Here's what he had
to say.
"The first two songs on the album are guitar based songs. ‘For
a Ride’ is pretty much a studio event – it doesn’t
translate into live performance very well, but it’s a guitar
based song and so is ‘Outta the Bag’, but ‘Outta
the Bag’ is more of a joke. It has a goofy quality to it
about the voice that’s in falsetto. A lot of people suggested
I sing it normally and I tried, but it just lost all of its charm – it’s
just this quirky little number that works when you sing it in
falsetto. And even when you can’t do it, I figured out,
when you do it live people just enjoy if you can’t hit
the notes, so that just works for that particular track. |
‘Brotherman’ is an improvised track. I have this bad
habit of rattling off about things in the world, like politics and
stuff. So when I listen to that track what I really hear is me trying
to stay away from it, and it’s one of the funkier tracks on
the record because I worked on several different ones and this is
the one that I kept – it has a good humour to it.
When
I was writing ‘Satisfied’ I wrote it on the bass
line, and I imagined myself doing a Sting song or a Blue Nile song – it
was empty and focussed on the vocal. It really came out as a really
romantic, affectionate subject matter.
‘In a Flood’ is more of an acoustic number – it
has a slide in it and very little movement. It’s a story about
someone running away and realising when they were half way gone that
maybe they’d made a mistake and maybe things weren’t
that bad after all, so they found that they just turned the car they
were driving around and went back.
‘Hush’ is a song that has no bass in it. I was very
happy to discover that you could write Rock ‘n’ Roll
songs without a bass – funky Rock ‘n’ Roll songs.
It’s quite a sensuous number. The whole idea of working the
drum groove on this – I worked it on a background and there
was a pad on there that was kind of like a generator noise or a power
station noise that was constant throughout the song, and we ran into
trouble placing the vocal properly so I dropped the generator, but
it really works well live – this whining sound of a machine
throughout the song.
‘Gravel
Drive’ is a statement of understanding – I wanted it
to explain to my daughter that I understand how she felt when I
went off on tours, but the life of a troubadour is what her dad
was into and not to panic because I always came back. Even when
I didn’t come back, I came back. It did the job – I
think the understanding is better now than it was.
‘Perfect’ is something I wrote in a dressing room – it’s
the only song that wasn’t written in the studio. It was written
in the dressing room at the Paradiso and was a throwaway guitar riff
on an acoustic guitar, but when it got on the electic guitar it got
a life of its own. Once you got the hook it was pretty straight forward – it
wrote itself pretty much.
‘Sold
Motel’ is an older one and it’s the one track that was
done with my live band. We had chosen about 15 songs out of 48 and
we still weren’t happy with what the variety we had there
was. I remembered this song that I hadn’t really done justice
to, so we got the band in and recorded it and it expanded and got
better from recording it with a live band.
‘ Woman’ is the one track where I was messing around.
It was a problem, but it has this dual personality now with the
sort of anthemic, stadium chorus and this really push and pull of
a funky groove at the beginning of it – and it works for what
it is.
‘Wasteland’ went through plastic surgery – it
started off as one kind of song and then veered off into another.
One of the songs that we started off with had a harmonica in it -
it was tuning for some Stevie Wonder harmonica parts – and
the song was in the key of that song. The way ‘Wasteland’ is
now is in another key, but the harmonica still works in the new key.
That was freaky coincidence, but it was a great one.
‘Turn the Lights On’ came from the studio I was working
in. I had been using a Marshall stack, but the studio itself happened
to have rows of old amps – original old amps and Supros. One
day I sat down with about four or five of them and plugged in from
one to the other to the other – I was playing a Les Paul – and
they all had real interesting sounds to them. So we picked one of
them and we wrote these changes with a click and ‘Turn the
Lights On’ became the guitar monster that it should be, and
it started off with these great old amplifiers. The Supros were valve
amps, but they were made to go with Lap Steel guitars, so every one
of these amps had a Lap Steel that was paired with it, because they
made the guitars to go with the amps.
My favourite
song on the album is ‘Mailman’. It’s
about lying – if you tell someone you are a liar is it true?
Contradictions and all that are a lot of fun. It has this atmosphere
of someone who is caught in a kind of vortex of a mood and is talking
about it very knowledgably, but has no idea of what he’s talking
about in the end."
-- John returns to the UK in January 2005 for a string of Live dates.
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