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I first met John Doe after an X show in Denver, where
I discovered that we share a taste for Jameson Irish whiskey
as well as coffee ("It's the blood of the gods,"
he says).
The co-frontman and bassist from L.A.'s (and possibly
America's) best punk rock band has recently put out
a new solo album on Yep Roc records and is touring in
support of it, this time playing at the Lion's Lair,
a suitably punk yet intimate venue for his latest musical
venture, a record with equal parts punk, blues, and
country and the scars of a lifetime as a musician.
John took the time to chat with Kaffeine Buzz about
careers in music, what it takes to write a blues song,
fate, and which bands he thinks are better than X.
Kaffeine Buzz: You're playing at the Lion's
Lair this time around, right?
John Doe: In addition to the fancy-schmancy Lucinda
Williams show. We're playing at the Botanic Gardens.
That's the daytime, where you wear the gloves and hat,
and then at night, literally, the gloves come off and
you go down to the Lion's Lair and duke it out.
KB: You're touring with Lucinda Williams?
JD: I'm playing about ten shows with her.
KB: I loved your new record. How did you end
up on Yep Roc records with this album, after Kill Rock
Stars and the others previously?
JD: I've been through several. Kill Rock Stars was
good, and Yep Roc is the best I've been with so far.
KB: It seems that a lot of musicians I really
like are ending up there.
JD: How did I end up on Yep Roc...well, they were the
ones that got it, and were willing to pony up a little
money, and everyone I'd talked to said yes to Yep Roc.
And I have to say, this is the point at which most of
the other record companies I've worked for in the past
have recouped their money, and that's the point at which
they go, "OK, cool," and start walking away
from it. And now, with this Lucinda tour, Rolling Stone
did a CD review, some radio airplay, they're releasing
another single, and it's like now, Yep Roc is saying,
"Well, all right, let's get going! We've sold about
6000+ records, let's fuckin' get it on!" Whereas
most companies in the past--one sort of folded as I
was releasing the record, SpinART which was I think
a little too college-radio oriented--would start walking
away. I just am thrilled.
This is also the point at which, nine months into the
relationship, most of the time you're going "I
fucking hate these guys!" [laughs] Or not saying
I hate these guys, but just saying, "Ah, Jesus,
I wish they would pay a little more attention to their
business."
KB: You worked with a lot of different musicians
on this album, and I wanted to know more about how that
came about. From Kristen Hersh to Neko Case and Dave
Alvin...
JD: Grant Lee Phillips, Cindy Lee Berryhill, my daughter...I
paid them a lot of money, and gave them some blow, and
they were happy to play along. I didn't give my daughter
blow. I gave her crack. Wanted to get her started on
the hard stuff--No!
The best thing about it is that I can ask people and
they usually say yes, if they have it in their schedule.
I'm lucky enough to have played with most of these people
and consider them my friends. Wow. That's what happens
when you don't die. You can do a lot of stuff if you're
not dead!
KB: That kind of leads me to another question
I had for you: that song "Ready" on your album
is about the--I call it sometimes the "Cult of
the Dead Musician," like with Sid Vicious and Kurt
Cobain. It doesn't seem--I certainly don't know what
was going on behind the scenes, but it doesn't seem
like you've ever bought into that.
JD: Well, I've had some very dark moments, certainly.
I buy into it as far as missing people and loving people
maybe a little more when they're gone, but I think the
way that I feel about it now is that if that's where
you want to go, then that's all right too.
Because getting old, it has its advantages because
you worry about stuff less, and you worry about more
important things, I think, but there's no magic. And
then you have the ugly, more difficult task of trying
to maintain a career, right when you've thought, "OK,
this is what I do." Say around 40 or so. Then it
becomes clear that things you have no influence over,
or people, may be saying, "Um, as a matter of fact
I'm not so sure that this is going to be your career
anymore! We may be tired of you, and we may have had
enough of your shit. So you know that career you thought
you had, well, I'm not sure if you're going to keep
it! What are you going to do about that?"
I was very sad that Joey Ramone died, I was very sad
that Jeffrey Lee Pierce died, I was very sad that Elliott
Smith died. They were all friends, different levels
of friendship, and it just makes you feel bad, but I
think they were destined, and I think they were "ready,"
as the song says.
KB: I was reading my liner notes to the X Beyond
and Back collection, and there was a quote from someone
saying that if X had come along at the right time you
could've been as big as Nirvana.
JD: I think it was George W. Bush that said that. No,
wait, I think it was Donald Rumsfeld. [laughs] I don't
know. We were pretty good lookin', back in the day,
you know? I think we were just too weird.
KB: Nirvana was fairly weird, too.
JD: Kurt Cobain had this voice, though, that as soon
as anybody heard it they just gravitated towards it,
it was like "I want to help that guy, he sounds
like he's in trouble." I don't know if we had that.
It's funny. I was talking to somebody about punk rock
and they were saying West Coast punk rock was always
sort of ignored. And I think that West Coast punk rock
was always a little too weird and a little too hard
to get national or mainstream recognition. Because when
you think about what did, it was an Elvis Costello ballad,
or the Pretenders' "Brass In Pocket," Blondie
doing disco, "Heart of Glass"--which are all
great songs. But they're all very sort of mainstream
anyway. Maybe "White Girl" was mainstream,
but it came out in '81, people weren't ready for it.
We got lots of critical acclaim, we got some commercial
success with that "Burning House of Love"
song, but then that was sort of a metal production.
I don't think punk rock, except for current mainstream
punk rock like Green Day and stuff--though I put them
in a different category, I think they're far and away
better than the rest of the sort of shitty punk rock
stuff.
KB: Their new album is really good.
JD: Their new album is really great--it's a huge undertaking,
really ambitious, has these elements of like, prog rock,
but it never stops--it's never weak, and it's never
self-conscious. It just gets up and goes.
KB: You say that X didn't have that kind of
acclaim, but one of my friends and I keep having these
discussions where we try to come up with an American
band that we think is better than X, and we can't. So
you'll be happy to know that at least there are two
people out there...
JD: Do you want me to weigh in against my own band?
KB: No, I want you to agree with me!
JD: I think there are dozens. I think that Nirvana
was a better band than X. I think that...um...
KB: It's hard. Most of them, you go to say
it and then they're British.
JD: That's true. Do individuals count? Because then
you've got Chuck Berry and all the original rock'n'roll
stars. I would say Otis Redding and the original Otis
Redding band with Steve Cropper and that horn section
and "Duck" Dunn and all those people were
better. And even if you listen to it--the thing that
amazes me about Otis Redding, is they were so adventurous.
They were so ambitious, and they would do weird shit.
They were like the Beatles in their own R&B way.
Very linear, strange arrangements. But I'm flattered
that you think so.
KB: I suppose if you sat down and scientifically
studied it...
JD: Well, it depends on what the criteria are. I mean,
the Flaming Lips are just as good as us at putting on
a show, and even more experimental, but never lose touch
with making a great song. I think Talking Heads you
could say that about as well.
KB: Your new record--it doesn't sound like
an X record, but I think it highlights the links between
what you guys were listening to, the classic rock'n'roll
elements that a lot of other punk bands didn't have
so much of.
JD: Probably blues music. I think for the first time
[with this record] I got to whatever basic level you
have to get to to write a blues song. It just kind of
hit me and I realized, "Oh, that's what it is."
Also, I think there's enough songs like "Ready"
and "Hwy 5," actually, I'd hoped that X would
record but then we never got around to it, so I did.
I actually wrote "Ready" for X to record,
but you know, people were busy and we couldn't do it.
Which sounds really lame, but that's the way it happens.
KB: And "Hwy 5" was written with
Exene, right?
JD: Yeah, several years ago. Maybe four or five years
ago. She was doing a bunch of stuff, and I'm such a
fan of Neko's--that Blacklisted record is really
one of my favorites, ever. And so the subject matter
and the sound that I thought it had made me think of
her, so I asked her to do it.
KB: What is it that you think keeps you and
Exene able to keep working together so well, for so
long?
JD: Exene and I have worked together--I hope that while
we're touring on this Knitters record that we'll work
together more. I think they're just about finished with
an Original Sinners record, so maybe she's
done writing for that and she'll allow me to look into
her private notebook and extract a few songs.
KB: I just think that it's one of those things
that's almost like fate, that your voices and everything
just so perfectly works together.
JD: I wouldn't disagree. I think the fact that Exene
moved to LA at the time she did, which was about a month
or less before I did, and that music was, from '73 to
'75, kind of shitty, and all the punk rock people came
to LA, and we met Billy Zoom, a lot of that is fate.
I think as far as singing together, we learned how to
sing together. And if you grow up and learn something
with somebody, kind of how I felt singing with my daughter,
it was a natural thing. She just sang along and it blended
better than it would with another person.
Also, I love singing with other people and think that
it sounds better when there's somebody else. A vocalist
like Bob Dylan or even a great singer like Neko or someone
like that, they sound so good all by themselves, but
I think I sound better with somebody else. That's why
I keep asking people to sing with me,
KB: The documentary X: the Unheard Music was
recently released on DVD. I actually tried to order
it, but they sent me the wrong video, so I did not get
to see it and come up with interesting questions about
it for you. So instead, could you just tell me a little
about it?
JD: It's actually, I think, quite good. It was a guy
who just was a fan and was a filmmaker, had gone to
film school, and wanted to do a documentary and he followed
us every three, four to six months for about four years.
So the film sort of developed as time went on. It has
some concert stuff, and it goes into the world of creating
music, writing songs, goes into Billy's history, DJ's
history, the history of the band and Exene and her relationship
with her sister, which was really important to our development.
And it was a pain in the ass to get it away from all
these different people who owned it at different times
and put it on DVD. But like all things, since there
really are only two corporations in the entire world
that own everything, it gets easier. "Oh, you mean
I own all these companies anyway? Well then we'll just
put it out." Which is kind of what happened with
Rhino and the rereleases. It was Warner/Elektra/Rhino,
"Oh, we own all this shit anyway! We don't need
permission from anybody! We'll just release it!"
[laughs]
KB: I saw on the Yep Roc website that you'd
played at a show with Pearl Jam recently, and then Eddie
Vedder came and played at your show.
JD: Yeah, X played with Pearl Jam in '99, or 2000,
and we played four shows and it was great. It was the
first big band that ever asked X to play arena stuff.
The Chili Peppers never asked us, Jane's Addiction never
asked us, even though they'd both opened for X, so we
were thrilled. Eddie Vedder is a wonderful person. He's
a truly righteous human being. He talks the talk and
walks the walk. We started talking about playing an
X song during the "No Voter Left Behind" tour,
before the election 2004, and we played "The New
World" in Seattle, and then I played a show after
that, and they kept playing that song.
So when we did this little convention for independent
record stores, we did it again. They were doing an in-store
appearance with full rock band amplification. And then
Eddie came to this in-store that I did and sang another
couple of X songs. Not to mention I got to meet Nancy
Wilson of Heart and she played on a song too.
KB: Do you have any acting projects going on
right now?
JD: A couple of independent films, but I don't know
what's going to happen to them. You do them and hope
they get finished and hope they get released. Nothing
big in the works. But I did meet Cameron Crowe, who's
married to Nancy Wilson, so maybe he'll take pity on
me and put me in one of his movies. And X has a live
DVD out too.
KB: That's actually what I got sent, rather
than the documentary.
JD: Well, the documentary is better. The DVD is good,
and it does give a sense of what it's like, it's just
a concert.
KB: And you mentioned a new Knitters record...
JD: Yeah, it's coming out on Rounder in July. And we'll
be in Denver, I would imagine, the beginning of September.
Catch up with John Doe at the Lion's Lair, at the Botanic
Gardens or Boulder Theatre with Lucinda Williams, and
keep your eyes open for X and the Knitters' projects.
And if you haven't yet, for goodness' sake, go buy Forever
Hasn't Happened Yet.
www.xtheband.com/doe.html
www.yeproc.com
-Sarah Jaffe, June 24, 2005
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