
Goo
Goo Dolls:
Prepare to Get Dizzy
An Interview With Robby Takac
By
Gail Worley
"I'm on the 34th
floor, looking out my window," says Robby Takac,
speaking from a hotel in midtown Manhattan.
"Trust me, there's nothing like this in
Buffalo." The bassist for the Goo Goo
Dolls
(his band mates are singer/guitarist John Rzeznik and
drummer, Mike Malinin) is enjoying the success of the
group's second number one hit in their eleven year
career: the love ballad, "Iris," from the
soundtrack to the film City of Angels. Yesterday, the band spent
hours in the MTV studios and tonight they will
perform "Iris" - complete with string
section - on The Late Show with David Letterman.
In every sense, they are a long way from Buffalo.
At a time when few
bands survive long enough to accumulate a catalog of
recorded material, the Goo Goo Dolls endurance (not
to mention their melodic, edgy power-punk music) is
often compared to that of the late great,
Replacements or even REM, who released half a dozen
critically acclaimed albums before achieving
mainstream success with the ironically entitled Out
of Time in 1993. The comparison is something the band
is used to hearing. "Our managers are always
telling me that," Takac says, incredulous.
"To me, it just seems weird. It's hard to see
yourself that way, like when you're doing your own
laundry," he laughs.
The Goo Goo Dolls
sixth album, Dizzy Up the Girl, will be
released on September 29th, the day before Takac's
34th birthday. Takac and Rzeznik have been in Los
Angeles mixing the record since January. "We
brought some friends in to play on this record,"
he tells me. "We'd never done that before."
The litany of guest musicians includes Tommy Keane, Benmont Tench from Tom Petty
and the Heartbreakers and Tim Pearce from Rick
Springfield's band - who played the Mandolin on
"Iris." "It's interesting to do it
that way and get other people's perspectives on your
stuff," he continues. "It was very
free-form and really came together in a very unique
way that we never really had before." Dizzy
Up the Girl is certainly one of the more highly
anticipated releases of late 1998.
****
How did the Goo Goo
Dolls get involved with the soundtrack to City of
Angels that produced this great hit
song,"Iris"?
Our management
company, Third Rail, has a film company as well -
they were doing the city of Angels movie. Johnny was
out in Los Angeles for awhile and went to a
screening. They screen films prior to there being a
score, so that everyone involved can see what's going
on, so they can write to the film. John went home
after he saw this screening and wrote a song. The
story [of the movie] itself is pretty interesting,
and that's the perspective John wrote from. Then he
called up the sound track coordinator, went down to
his office and played it for him. They decided right
away that they were going to [use it in the film],
before even hearing our version, just by him going in
and playing acoustically. So we all flew out and in a
matter of a week, we were in the studio recording it.
When we actually
turned it into the film, they thought that the
version we did - that's the version that you're
hearing on the radio right now - was a little bit too
grandiose. So they replaced it [for the film] with
John doing "Iris" by himself - an acoustic
version. Obviously, we aren't the marquis act on that
record. It's tough to go up against Alanis and U2.
It's a great record.
And
"Iris" gave you a number one hit.
At one point it was
number one in five formats. Right now (late July)
it's number three. It's kind of rare, I think to get
five formats going, it's a lot of ground to cross. We
never really saw ourselves as gross-genre until
"Name" got big. Our first record came out
in 1987 and all of our records have had that element
to them, even when we were sort of hardcore band. But
we've always been a bit more melodic than everyone
else. We grew up listening to Husker Du...drippy
English new wave and stuff like that. I think that's
what lead us down a bit more melodic of a path. If
you listen to the first record and then you listen to
the sixth record, it doesn't make sense, it doesn't
seem like the same band. At the time I was pretty
much singing all the songs, John wasn't even singing.
He started singing after the second record. But if
you listen from record to record, it makes perfect
sense where we are now, in comparison to where we
started. We went in and really made an effort to play
well and to have our growth be nurtured as opposed to
fighting it, like a lot of bands do.
Yeah but look at it
this way, You're in New York. Yesterday you did MTV
all day and tonight you're on Letterman. How does
that feel to you?
Well, it's been such a
slow build, I think we've managed to keep our heads.
The first time we did TV was with Superstar
Carwash - three records ago now - and that was
Conan O'Brien. We've done Letterman three times,
we've done Leno three times. MTV...I can't even count
the number of times we've been [on] there. It's
amazing you know, when MTV decides that they're going
to latch onto you, it's like a roller coaster ride,
man. They put you in just the oddest situations all
the time. We did the Olympics through them, we played
in Aspen through them and down in Panama City Florida
in the middle of a monsoon.
Would you guys
move to Manhattan?
We lived here for a
year actually. Johnny and I moved here right after
the Boy Named Goo tour, which lasted 23
months. A long, long time. We stayed here for nine or
ten months and wrote 90% of this new record here,
which is called Dizzy Up The Girl.
Tell me about
that, is the recording complete?
Yeah, it's all
recorded. Right now we're mixing at this place called
Ocean Way in Los Angeles with Jack Joseph Puig. He's
pretty hot at this particular point. He did all the
Jellyfish records, produced and mixed them, so we
thought he was coming from an interesting angle. I
like to think that we're trying to break a little bit
of new ground every time we do something. We've been
leery of going with the first guy, the logical
choice. Jack was eclectic enough to where we thought
he'd do a really cool job with this.
This record was really
neat because we actually had enough money to go in
and do it right. We looked at every single song as
its own beast...it was really important for us to
find the right vibe on every song. Simultaneously, as
[the recording] is going on, "Iris" is
going through the roof right? - so we'd record for
three days and then have to go do something... Go
play on a TV show or do this or that and come back.
So it's been sort of a process, time wise. A lot of
the time we'd pretty much finish the song in a day,
as far as the making of the bed of the song. Each
song's really got a character of its own; different
amplifier, different drum sets, different procedures
of recording, which added to the uniqueness of the
songwriting itself. This record has some of the
heaviest stuff and, at the same time, some of the
sweetest stuff we've ever done.
Do you think you'll
put out a more rock single or will you stick with the
ballad thing?
Well, we generally
don't release ballads first. That was a big mistake
that was made by (laughs) the meeting of the minds on
the Superstar Carwash record, prior to A
Boy Named Goo, with a song we had written with
Paul Westerberg called "We Are The Normal."
It was the ballad from that record and I think they
were going with the star-power, sort of thinking that
Paul's involvement may have moved it along. I think
that it would have been a smarter to have gone with
some rock tracks first, not expecting them to cross
over. That's sort of a weird predicament. We're
expected now to cross formats. So you really have to
fight to get the rock single out first.
It's kind of
twisted, isn't it?
The good thing is it's
not a prison for us, because it's coincidentally one
of the things we do. I don't think John ever said to
himself "I'm going to go write 'Name' now and
I'm going to get on five formats."
The five format
formula...
Exactly. It's just
something he did and it worked.
What does the title
of the record mean?
John has a friend
who's some sort of a workaholic, if you will. She
works all day and night, a music industry person. I
think he felt she was getting a little tense and he
said to himself in his head one day, or at least so
he tells me, that he needed to take her out and
"dizzy her up a bit" so she could forget
about work. That's what it's all about: going out and
letting go for a little while.
It's a very
provocative title.
Yeah sure. I mean, the
double entendres never hurt, right? It was actually
the name of a song at one point, that was changed
along the way. But it just sounded so unique and the
imagery is really nice. When we first started kicking
it around some of the feminist types had a bit of a
problem with it.
I think it rules.
Once it's put into
perspective and you're not looking at it so
defensively, it's sort of fun.
Yes, it is fun.
Tell me about this "A Day in the Garden"
Woodstock anniversary concert coming up (August 16).
That will actually be
the first big show we do. We have a new rhythm
guitarist now, a side guitarist, Nathan December. He
played on the last REM tour, Adventures in Hi-fi
or whatever. The Brain Explosion Tour. He's been
playing on and off with us for years and he's joining
us now, so we're a little bit more free, playing
live. It should be really interesting to see. I guess
that show's going to be pretty big. It sold 12,000
tickets the first day.
It's got a good
lineup, you, Marcy Playground, Dishwalla...
Third Eye
Blind...Dishwalla opened up for us for four or three
months last tour...a long time. We did a big club
tour with them. They're really cool guys.
Didn't you guys
open for Bush last year?
Those were four of the
most humiliating months of my life. It was just very
weird. I felt like I was sandwiched between this sort
of comic bookish spectacle.
Why is that?
We write and play rock
songs - that's pretty much our deal, there's no smoke
and mirrors, no craziness or anything like that. No
fanfare...
No Stonehenge...
No teenage girl
cameraderie. Like, No Doubt, they're really cool
people - they were cool with us and we were cool with
them, but it was just that the crowd seemed sort of
bizarre to us. We weren't used to sitting in a hockey
arena full of 14 and 15 year olds. Our crowd is a
little bit more diverse, and a lot of people who dug
us didn't want to pay at the $35 to sit through No
Doubt, who no one knew who they were at the time, and
certainly not Bush. Man, what happened with them? So
fast, meteoric, up and down.
Who knows...maybe
they'll come back.
Yeah, you know what
else is weird? Remember we were talking about the
five format thing? The expectations of that? Isn't it
weird with a band like that, their first record sells
6 million copies and their next record sells a
million and a half, and they're talking about what a
miserable failure it is. Like, wait a minute.
And so many bands
don't even get to sell a couple hundred thousand
records.
Reprise never did that
to Neil Young. Neil Young releases a record that
sells nine copies and people go, "Let's see what
Neil's going to do next!"
It's very rare that
anything new really moves me anymore. I wonder if a
record is really good or if it's just better than the
last ten pieces of crap I listened to.
I'm not going to name
any bands, but I'm sure that you could put a list
together just as easily as I could, of bands that are
basically one song bands.
One hit wonders.
And a label will sign
them, and as long as they have that hit, they don't
care what's on the rest of the record (laughs).
And have you
noticed that there's lot of almost
"novelty" rock that's coming out? Like that
Harvey Danger song...
That was sort of my
point.
And that
"Closing Time" by Semisonic, who blow.
Keep going, I think
you've got my list.
Cute little songs,
but that's it, and they're on a major label, they
have one hit song and they're gone. Certainly you've
had the better situation of making consistently good
records that people over 12 will buy. It's not like
the Goo Goo Dolls are wondering "Gee, how do we
top that song about hanging out in the liquor
store?"
I feel like a prick,
because you always want to be able to support your
peers and what they do...
But crap is crap.
Good point (Laughs).
And the labels are nurturing this whole thing.
They're not looking for the next REM, I don't think.
It's too much of a quick fix now and everybody's so
afraid this whole modern rock/alternative thing is
just going to disappear. It's already morphing itself
into Top 40. The problem is that anything worth a
shit that's independent is getting scooped up, so
[bands] don't really have much of a chance to develop
and grow.
Let's wander onto
another path now before our heads explode. I heard
you and John on the radio just this morning doing a
Fender guitar ad.
(Laughing).
"We like
Fender Guitars, they rock, we're getting some for
free just for doing this ad." Did you get free
guitars for that ad?
We've had a
relationship with them for the past couple years,
yeah. They're really cool with us...anything we'd
like to try. John gets these guitars put together
that are a bit unorthodox, that he plays with a lot
of different tunings. I'm sort of the same way, I
play Fender Basses. Basically, the ads were cut from
interviews. They'd send a guy into the studio when we
were recording, set up a mike for an hour and they
just talk to us.
They do make you
sound pretty cool.
Have you heard the
Richie Sambora one?
I think so.
It's the most
embarrassing thing I ever heard in my life. He goes
(imitates Richie Sambora's voice) "Hey, let's
face it, Guitars get you chicks. And nothing gets you
chicks like a Fender Stratocaster!"
Are you kidding me?
Like "I'm married to Heather Locklear, and
you're not!"
(Laughs). Right.
Actually that's
pretty funny.
Yes, it is. But I
would assume it's true. I think that's why 90% of
young, teenage males play the guitar. Chicks dig it.
(laughs)
For more Goo
Goo Dolls Info, check out The World of Goo
Gail's
Monthly column, The
Worley Gig regularly turns in both Pandemonium
Online and The NY Hangover.
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