by Amy Harris
07.27.2012
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Interview at 09:10 AM |
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The Doobie Brothers have been entertaining audiences across the world for more than 40 years. In 2010 the band released World Gone Crazy, their first album in a decade. They continue to be an inspiration with their recordings and their rigorous tour schedule.
CityBeat caught up with guitarist and vocalist Tom
Johnston by phone this week. Johnston discussed the changes the band has
seen through 40 years of Rock n Roll and what guides the creative
process of the band. They will be performing at Riverbend at the PNC
Pavilion this Sunday alongside Chicago.
CityBeat: You guys have been touring on the road for over 30 years. Do you ever get tired of just being on the road?
Tom Johnston: You get tired of travelling. You
don’t ever get tired of playing. The playing part is what makes you come
out here in the first place. I think Keith put it the best, Keith
Knudsen, “You get paid for all the time it takes to get to the town and
then you play for nothing.”
CB: You have seen music change over the
years in recordings from albums to 8-Tracks to tapes to CDs to MP3s and
iPods. Do you think it sounds better or worse today, the classic analog
vs. digital question?
TJ: If you have hearing like mine, it really
doesn’t make any difference. There is basically the school of thought
that digital recordings aren’t as warm as analog. I can’t really tell
you the difference when I am listening to it. Maybe if I did a mix there
would maybe be a difference in analog that I could tell the difference.
They have really come a long way with digital recording. They have ways
of mixing digital recordings now so it sounds more like analog. Some
people still buy albums if you can get them. People are still putting
albums out. In fact, this last album we put out, World Gone Crazy,
there was over 14,000 actual albums put out with the CDs, and by that I
mean actual vinyl records for the people that want to hear it in
analog.
CB: How many guitars do you have and what is your favorite to play?
TJ: Oh boy. I’ve got a lot of guitars. Basically,
everything I use on the road is PRS and that is what I play live. I use
two basic guitars live that I trade off and I have a Martin acoustic
that I play as well live. It is pretty much all about Paul Reed Smith
right now. At home I have a Stratocaster and I have some older guitars I
have had for a long time, an old Les Paul, an old 335, a couple Strats
and a Telecaster. But live and when I am out on the road, it is strictly
Paul Reed Smith.
CB: When you began and wrote the early
hits and songs for the band like “Rockin’ Down the Highway”, what were
your early inspirations?
TJ: My inspirations at the time of writing a song
like that had pretty much been put in place from playing since I was 12
on the guitar and picking up singing when I was 15. Most of my early
stuff came from Blues and R&B and Rock & Roll by the guy I
consider the King of Rock & Roll, that was Little Richard and people
like Jerry Lee Lewis. Later on, that changed, I
got into Hendrix and Cream and quite a few other people I am not going
to be able to think of right now. David Mason albums, old Fleetwood Mac
albums, you know from the ’70s, just a lot of stuff going on then. As
far as players, Albert, Freddie and B.B. King were huge in my guitar
playing. I call them the Three Kings, that’s basically how a lot of
people refer to them. There are a lot of singers that influenced me.
James Brown was definitely one of them.
CB: Have you had a single issue or incident that has ever changed the way you approach music?
TJ: If I ever did, I am not really sure when it
was. I know the first time I ever watched, one of the few times I
actually got to watch, James Brown live was 1962 in Fresno and that was
pretty much a life altering event, musically. I
had never seen anything like that. It just blew me out of the water. I
couldn’t believe someone could work that hard that consistently and put
on just an incredible show. That was a big event in my life.
CB: Over the years, you have had some health ailments with your voice and other things. How do you stay healthy on the road now?
TJ: I take care of myself. Back in the old days it
was the Rock & Roll lifestyle, that wasn’t really healthy. But the
biggest sideline I ever had was stomach ulcers which I developed in high
school but it fully bloomed when I was out on the road in 1975 when I
actually had to leave the tour. That is really the only health issue I
ever had, but it was a bad one.
CB: Do you consider yourself or does the
band consider themselves spiritual in any way and did it ever play a
factor in your music or writing?
TJ: To be honest with you, no — at least not in the
secular way of any specific religion. It’s not that we are not a
religious band, it is just everybody has their beliefs about the world
and mankind and how we got here I suppose but it is certainly nothing we
would talk about.
CB: After all these years, I assumed you guys would talk about everything.
TJ: We talk about a lot of stuff but that isn’t one
that pops up. Actually it popped up this morning. I was just giving my
views on Buddhism and thinking it was a little more realistic since it
is based on mankind’s shallow man as opposed to strictly about a
specific deity and things having to be done a certain way. But those are
just opinions and I don’t really follow it that closely; I don’t think
anybody in the band does, to be honest with you.
CB: Do you guys take on different leadership roles within the band?
TJ: Yeah, to a point. It is basically when we are
recording. When we are playing, it kind of happens naturally. Recording
it is pretty much whoever writes the tune will be leading if you will,
but other people come up with ideas for the tune so it is pretty much
always a group effort.
CB: Are there any current Rock bands or new Rock bands on the scene right now you would like to collaborate with or work with?
TJ: I think John Mayer is an incredible guitar
player. I really enjoy his work. Another one is Bruno Mars — I think he
is extremely prolific as a song writer and pretty amazing. There is a
band called Mannish Boy, which is a Blues
group. I really like those guys. They are new. Most people aren’t going
to know them. They aren’t Pop or anything like that. They are simply a
Blues band but they are really, really good. There are more, I just
can’t think of them right now. There are more people I think are really
good out there that would be fun to get in the studio with. It would be
fun to work with Christina Aguilera or Cee Lo Green. It would be fun to work
with anyone from Maroon 5. We recently worked with Luke Bryan for that
TV show on CMT called Crossroads and we had a ball doing that.
CB: I love Luke Bryan and his music. He has kind of blown up recently.
TJ: He is a good guy. He is a really good guy. We had a lot of fun doing that show. Everybody was just having a lot of fun.
CB: Do you have any creative outlets or hobbies outside of playing music?
TJ: It’s outside of the band in a sense but I write
music for a hobby. I love writing. I do it all the time. I have a
little studio at home. A lot of the stuff I write would never be used by
this band. I am starting to branch out and write with other people now
too, which is something I haven’t done as much. I have always kind of
just written my own songs. I have started taking the steps to go out and
write with some other writers who are very prolific and very much
involved with the Pop scene or the Country scene or whatever else. I
just really started doing that before we came out on this tour. When we
finish this tour this year, I will go back to doing that some more. It
was fun. It was a new place to go. It is exciting to get in and work
with someone else because they help you find a lot of stuff you don’t
know you have and I think you do the same for that person. You come up
with songs that you would never come up with if you were just sitting
there by yourself.
CB: Do you use social media outlets like Facebook and Twitter to stay connected to your fans?
TJ: There is Facebook and Twitter and all that
stuff on our website. I don’t do any of that stuff. For whatever reason
it hasn’t called me. I don’t have any need to be in touch with people or
stay in the limelight or find out what is going on. I am kind of a
private guy and I would like to keep it that way rather than blast it
all over the universe. I don’t belong to Facebook. I know tons of people
who do it and that’s great. From a business point of view, it is a
really smart way to go. From a website point of view, it is a really
good tool for getting your music out there, events out there, where you
are going to be, maybe even staying in touch with other musicians,
things like that but mostly I do that on the phone. Twitter, I have
never even used Twitter. I know people do it all the time but I have
never gotten involved with it.
CB: I still use a telephone because I prefer to talk to people.
TJ: It is alive and well in the younger generation. That’s how they communicate.
CB: My last question is do you have any fond Cincinnati memories over the years?
TJ: Yeah, playing at Riverfront Stadium, playing at
where we are going to be playing this Sunday which is right on the
river, Riverbend. We have
played there lots of times. I was just talking to a gentleman a little
bit ago about playing in Blue Ash the last time and a tornado came
through and shut the show down and we never got a chance to go out and
finish it. We have been playing Cincinnati since we started so we are
talking 40 years of playing Cincinnati.
CB: We look forward to seeing you on Sunday.
TJ: Thank you very much. We are looking forward to
being there and it will be a gas as always. This show with Chicago has
pretty much been sold out everywhere we have gone. The crowds have been
great and it is a good combination. The two bands, we get together at
the end and do an encore of everybody in both bands playing at the same
time and it is pretty powerful.
May 11 • Ballroom at Taft Theatre
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Long before Jack and Meg White made it fashionable, Scott
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and addressing him, “Attention all planets of the Solar Federation, we
have assumed control.” The countdown is on.
May 12 • Stanley's Pub
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The seeds of Chicago quartet Strange Arrangement were planted in 1996, when the members were still in high school. By the end of high school, the band was solidified, but the members headed to Iowa to study at the School for Music Vocation. By 2000, the band members had gone their separate ways to find jobs in music. It appeared Strange Arrangement was finished. But in 2005, all four members ended up in the same city once again — Chicago.
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Sometimes you have to leave Ohio — and
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there are between the Buckeye State and the larger world of
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[cool filmmaker]
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James Flynn’s film directorial debut, Eastern College, tells the story of a small group of recent college gradu ates who are about to go their separate ways. Shot on location at Flynn’s alma mater, Miami University, Eastern College manages to avoid the clichs of many college set coming-of-age come dies, putting a personal spin on a well-worn genre.