It's
the Cream, it's the Crock!
An interview with Tim Rogers of
You Am I
By
Gail Worley
Few bands on the world-touring
circuit have worked harder and longer to become an
overnight sensation than Australia's "Beat Combo
Extraordinaire," You Am I.
Together since 1989, with three number one albums to
their credit and a collection of ARIA (Australian
Grammy) Awards, You Am I routinely sell out arenas in
their home country. In the States, they seem content
to pack clubs the size of New York City's Mercury
Lounge. As far as singer/guitarist, Tim Rogers, is
concerned, it's all good. "I think we're used to
people not knowing how long we've been around,"
says the 29 year old Rogers. "We're aware of the
disparity between what people know [in Australia] and
what they may know elsewhere. It's no great concern
to us."
Reflecting influences as
diverse as the Who, early Pink Floyd and XTC, You Am
I create a timeless, guitar rock sound without
concern for adherence to temporal musical fads. With
Russell Hopkins on drums and Andy Kent on Bass, You
Am I have built a zealous global fan base. Their
enthusiastic live shows, ignited by Rogers on stage
swaggering and mischievously spontaneous banter,
incite fanatical loyalty. "The insults are
pretty much just to fill in time while you're tuning
your guitar or catching your breath," says
Rogers. "I think it just came from when the band
started. The first three or four years, we were used
to being called "Faggots" and
"Ponces" because we were playing
predominantly with harder bands. So, we developed
this kind of really pathetic [defense]. Our immediate
reaction to anything would be, "Well, keep your
eye on your girlfriend 'cause she's coming home with
us!"
You Am I's fourth record,
entitled simply #4 Record, originally slated
for release this past Spring, was delayed when the
band made an amicable departure from their
relationship with Warner Bros. "We got the
feeling that people in the upper echelons of the
company weren't as enthusiastic about the band as
[our publicist]. We saw a lot of delays with [#4
Record] coming out and a lot of conjecture."
The band had intended to
seek
representation by a smaller label and were surprised
to be offered a home with RCA. "We thought, okay
let's give it one more try," says Rogers. RCA
released #4 Record (which features such guest
musicians as the Memphis Horns and Tom Petty's
keyboardist, Benmont Tench) this fall.
Tim Rogers spoke to me from his
hotel room in Chicago close to the end of the band's
Fall U.S Tour. "It's very cold ," he began,
"and it's making a mess of my newly coiffured
haircut as well." Rogers is really impossible
not to like.
*******
There's no doubt that the
band has a fanatical following, and you do seem to
tour a lot.
We've been really lucky, for
example, with the Semisonic shows. We were surprised,
first of all, that we were allowed to play them and
it was a nice couple of shows to get on. As far as
certain people being really into the band and the
general public not knowing [about us], I guess that
happens a lot. Maybe one day when the right song
comes along or the right video, then we'll come off
all fresh-faced. In a way, you don't know if you
really want that to happen...but it would be lovely.
It can be like a double
edged sword.
We'd happily sell out at this
point. The thing is, we do have a love of garagey,
punk music. Then there's obviously a softer side to
the band, which doesn't make it that easy. I don't
know how we could bend our sound so that people would
think we had sold out anyway. We have a lot of very
sugary pop music, but then very throw away garagey
stomp as well. We're pretty much sluts as far as
throwing rock and roll around.
It seems that you're just
really allowing yourselves to be influenced by bands
you love rather than wondering how you can capitalize
on what everyone else is doing now.
Part of the reason we keep
doing that is 'cause we travel a lot. We're not in
America all the time or anywhere in particular for
very long. We're always away from home, so we don't
have the time to really sit down and find out what is
happening in current, popular tastes. Even though
it's very obvious what is [popular], say like Korn --
there are obvious things that you can't hide from.
But being on the move, and playing shows to not many
people, you've pretty much got to keep your attention
on just satisfying yourself and the other guys in the
band. That keeps you wanting to do the music that
you're enjoying, because you don't have the tastes
"of your public" to think of, because there
is no public. (Laughs).
One of my favorite songs of
yours is "Please Don't Ask Me to Smile"
from Hourly, Daily. Is that song about being a kid
and being picked on for having braces on your teeth?
Well, there are bits of it
(that are personal) [but] I never actually had
braces. The bit about opening the door for the girl
and having her say "Don't be so fucking
polite," those kinds of things are real. I
suffer from not really having a great attention span,
so I'll have an intention for a song [and it will
turn out differently]. That one, that title just came
from when people come up to you and go 'Hey Tim, just
smile! C'mon!' You know, that kind of vacuous
statement. Even though I find it very easy to smile,
I'm genuinely quite ready to smile at any given
opportunity, I just hate being asked to. Then it
started getting into other things, like the girl
cussing at me when really all I wanted to do was be
polite or whatever. But the braces thing, that comes
from somewhere else.
I think that song is a nice
little capsule about insecurities.
It's funny, I've been writing
songs like that and I will continue to do so, cause
you can only write about what affects you. I'm maybe
a little paranoid about being perceived as using that
insecure thing as an angle, because now [that] my
back's straightened out, my skin's cleared up a bit,
I really don't have a lot to be insecure about apart
from my accent. [My lyrics come] mainly just from
watching other people, like from when
I've got a lot of time to look out the window. I've
got younger sisters, seeing them grow up and their
friends, it tends to really effect me. Watching
adolescents grow up, these small little things happen
to your body that just make you feel so awful, so a
lot of it's not from personal experience. I feel
compelled to write chords that fit along with that
kind of feeling. I'm not really purging my pain in
most of the songs at all. I'm just there with a pen
and too much time on my hands.It's kind of nice to
write a little vignette or a song and not really know
where it comes from. I like the mystery of that.
How would you say that your
song writing has changed between Hourly
Daily and #4 Record?
Just the circumstances were
different. Before Hourly, Daily, I was at home
for a month, the first month I'd been at home in a
long while. I got to writing, just feeling very
domestic and noticing what was going on around me in
the suburbs. So a lot of the songs tended to be about
little askew opinions about what was going on in
suburban life, really. With #4, we were on the
road a substantial part of that year. Anytime we
weren't on the road, at home, I was kind of jumping
around anyway, in line with that situation. So, [the
song writing] was inspired, for lack of a better
word, by being in a traveling, substantially
unpopular rock band.
The thing I've noticed is
that the new record seems to rock a bit more than the
previous.
Yeah, I'm aware of that, I can
see the two objectively. That may be [from] wanting
to show off the band a little more. The comment has
oft been made that when people go see the band, it is
a lot more energetic than any of our records have
ever shown. Maybe I feel compelled to write songs
because I want to hear [what the band can do]. I
don't sit down and write "Rumble" for my
own sake, I do it so I can hear what Russ and Andy do
to it. So it's for my own greed as well, wanting to
hear them play all over "Junk" or something
like that. "Junk" started off sounding a
bit more morose and shuffly, like a country/blues
kind of song. But when you've got Russ and Andy in a
band to play with you, you want to show them off.
[The Crowd] want to hear it and I want to hear it as
well.
What's the story behind this
"Convicts" project? Is it your thing or is
it the whole band?
The Convicts is the band. We've
always felt that doing our own music is great, we
enjoy that, the sentimental songs mixed up with the
more throw away ones. But we just wanted to form a
band called the Convicts and make it complete garage,
stomp music, so there was no subtlety to it and we
could just set up in the corner and bash through 20
odes to convict life. You know, about scurvy... The
album title's going to be "It was but for a Loaf
of Bread I was sent."
Isn't that the story of Les
Miserables?
It was the same kind of thing.
I think we became a bit more idiosyncratically
Australian over the past couple of years because
we've been forced, in a way, to change out accents to
be understood and there's a vague amount of
condescension that comes with being from that
country. The Convicts was a way of celebrating our
colonistic (laughs) background and exacerbating our
pride for it, or whatever. It's always on the back
burner you know. Whenever we're feeling a bit tired
of playing in You Am I, [we go] "Let's just get
the Convicts together!"
Have you actually played out
as the Convicts or does this just go on in your head?
No no, it's definitely one of
those things that needs to be talked about. It's our
fake band, but it will definitely happen.
That will be fun.
Yeah, it is definitely
something to look forward to, for us as well.
You know what I think
everyone looks forward to as part of your stage shows
is your hilarious commentary. You say some pretty
outrageous things. One show you did recently, from
the stage you said something like "Tonight the
part of Tim Rogers will be played by Liza
Minelli."
It's probably just stuff that
we talk about on the bus during the day. It's not
like I plan "Oh, tonight I'm going to say
this." Like, that [comment] came from how Jeff
McDonald from Redd Kross was referred to once as
"Liza" - someone called him Liza Minelli,
because of a certain affectation in his persona. It
will just come out that night. It's just the juvenile
humor of the band.
It's one of the best parts
of your live shows. Everyone wants to know,
"What will Tim say?"
It's funny...We were in England
just recently and I was taping a show and I put [the
tape recorder] near the sound board. Over the top of
the music, our mixer, Phil, I heard him say in the
middle of a song, "Oh, shut up Rogers!" So
I stopped talking at all for a couple of shows, just
thinking maybe I'd overstepped it, people are here to
see a band, not to hear some guy ramble.
What was it like touring
with Oasis?
That was maybe nine months ago,
through Japan and Hong Kong and Australia. We pretty
much did it just to get to Japan -- we'd never been
to Japan before -- and, obviously, to be under this
certain, tabloid, visceral thrill in being close to
any band that huge. Then we got to meet and play with
them and they were absolutely charming, amazing
people. We really just fell in love with them.
Everyone got on really great and had an excellent
time. I think the bands really complimented each
other. We'd go on and put on a very short, sharp set
of, ahem, "hits." Then they'd come through
like a volcano with live production and sound and
swagger and attitude. It was really good fun and
something I'd like to do again, actually. I didn't
appreciate it at the time, but they are fantastic
people, really funny.
A question about the song,
Cream and the Crock" which is just a song about
being on the road, right? I read that the working
title of that song was "Don Henley." Now
this has got to be a good story.
We always said that, even
though we spend a lot of time on the road, we never
wanted to write a song about a band being on the
road, because that would be something that would be a
little too Eagles-ish. So we just called that song
"Don Henley" because that was our way of
saying, look, we can't help it. It was going to stay
like that but then when Benmont was playing on the
record he said (Adopts American accent) "Ah,
Tim, why is this song called Don Henley?" I went
through the story and then he said (American accent)
"Well, I just spoke to Don the other week, and
maybe I should mention that to him." I thought
oh no, I can't believe that Don Henley is now two
degrees of separation from this record. I thought I
should change the title to avoid any litigation. It
wasn't meant in any particular way, it was just fun.
I mean, the song, "15" was called
"Fuck the Kids" for awhile.
That's provocative.
We were talking about this
Metallica thing, I read an article in Kerrang a
couple of year ago. Any song they'd do, they'd ask
themselves at the end of the song "But what
about the kids?" You know, will the kids like
it? And we were so aware that most of the songs on
the record wouldn't appeal to "the kids" so
we just called it "Fuck the Kids." We
thought the better of it later on.
I understand that Jon Auer
from The Posies worked on one of your earlier
records.
He mixed our second record,
which is called Hi-Fi Way. That was about four
or five years ago. He just remained a friend ever
since, really. Our tech guy who travels around with
us used to work with the Posies, and there's kind of
a number of connections that we have with that band.
I think when we were making our first record, Frosting
on the Beater had just come out, and we were
really big fans of that record and of that band in
general. I think the first time I met Ken was when we
were doing a tour with Soundgarden about five years
ago. We met up in Seattle and the night ended with a
few bottles of gin and us stealing typewriters or
portable record players from the local primary
school, and then replacing them. The act of stealing
is far better than the actual outcome of depriving
young children of learning aids.
I think on Jon and my first
night together he almost set his bed on-fire, because
we found out we were born on the same day and all
these other attachments came together. We only really
see each other once a year, we've never consummated
the relationship, but maybe one day (laughs). He
definitely is a very sweet man. I think he should
just get his record out and then the world will be a
better place.
Are there any of your songs
that you enjoy playing live more than others?
I like playing
"Rumble" now and "Junk," all
those rock and roll songs. We've sets at home, when
we play for a bit longer and we can stretch it out a
bit. I guess we're running about 200 shows a year at
the moment, or 150, so it becomes a bit of a blur.
Some really work for a couple of weeks, then you drop
them and bring them back later on. I love them all,
they're like my children, you can't ask me to chose
(Laughs). The new ones are probably more fun to play.
It depends from country to country as well.
What inspired you to write
the song "What I Don't Know About You"?
There was a song called "I
Think I Like What I Don't Know About You" that
my girlfriend at the time wrote, she just wrote
lyrics down and gave them to me. It meant something
quite heartfelt and personal and I said to her that I
thought it was the best thing that she'd written. I
said, do you mind if I just take the title, cause I
just love the title so much. And she was like, yeah,
no problem. Then we were in England before we made #4,
and I sat down and started playing those chords.
The lyrics probably came from being out in the sun
too long. You can catch some vague attempt at
affection to a person, with the crux of it saying
you've got a lot to find out about that person. That
expectation is the wonderful part about it, I guess.
That's one of my favorites to play live as well.
It's a great song.
Some people have noticed that
recently. I didn't think that for awhile, because we
released it in Australia as a single and so many
people were like, "Oh my god, it's just such a
wussie pop song." So we quickly buried it, even
though it was probably our favorite song for a long
while.
What's up for you after this
U.S tour ends?
We've already started on the
next You Am I record, writing songs for that. That
feels particularly good at the moment. It's nice to
keep moving and not worry about promoting the last
record. We just treat it a bit like a job - even
though it's what we love. It helps sometimes to think
of it as another night at the office because it gives
you that extra kick at 11 in the morning when you
don't want to get up. And maybe it helps rationalize
it, because it does feel like you're just on a paid
slumber party, really. To regard it with a little bit
of the attitude that it is work - we're all from
working class families, really - justifies it. But
that's pretty pathetic so I'll just stop there.
*****
Gail's
Monthly column, The
Worley Gig regularly turns in both Pandemonium
Online and The NY Hangover.
E-Mail Gail Worley
For more You Am
I info,
check out Mr.
Milk Online
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