 The Golden Age of Rock
& Roll: An Interview with Rock Legend, Ian
Hunter
By Gail Worley
I was maybe 12
years old the first time I heard Mott the
Hooples "All The Young Dudes." I
was pretty shy and a really unpopular kid, but I
felt instantly, euphorically inspired -- changed,
even -- by this exotic rock song about
intoxicated, cross-dressing would-be suicide
cases that managed to name check T Rex, the
Beatles and The Stones. And when Motts lead
singer, the cockney-accented, golden-tressed Ian
Hunter, sang the line "You, with the
glasses, I want you. I want you at the
front," towards the songs end, I was convinced
Hunter was telling this geeky little girl with
the glasses to come up to the front of the crowd
and rock out. Basically, "All the
Young Dudes" made me feel like less of a
freak. It was really a revelation and probably my
single strongest rock and roll epiphany to this
day. "All The Young Dudes" (which, as
most rock fans know, was written for Mott by
David Bowie) is still my favorite song, but
Ive never really told anyone that "How
my life was saved by rock and roll" story
before. I owe a lot to Ian Hunter.
Mott the Hoople
went on to have other hits with "All the Way
From Memphis," "Drivin
Sister" and "Roll Away the Stone,"
but unfortunately, the magic didnt last
forever. Ian Hunter left Mott in 1974, and began
a solo career that hit some serious peaks and
valleys of commercial success, but still turned
out some incredible, heart-felt classic songs
like "Who Do You Love," "When the
Daylight Comes," "Bastard,"
"You Nearly Did Me In" and a love song
to rock and roll thats probably his best
known hit, the anthem "Cleveland
Rocks." A dedicated music fan himself, who
never saw divisions between different styles of
music, Ian Hunter fully embraced the first wave
of british punk rock when it broke in the late
70s and even produced the second Generation
X album Valley of The Dolls. It
doesnt get much cooler than that.
On a stormy
afternoon in late July, I got the chance to meet
Ian Hunter, who is either 54 or 61, depending on
who you ask, and pick his brain about some of the
finer moments of a career that spans three
decades. Columbia records had just released Once
Bitten Twice Shy, an excellent two disc
retrospective of music from Hunters
prolific solo career, and he had driven into
Manhattan from his home in Connecticut to do some
interviews -- despite the rain, despite (as I
later learned) having just endured painful gum
surgery. Ian Hunter is rock and roll to the bone.
Although our time together was limited, Ian spoke
openly and candidly with me about his memories of
Mott the Hoople, the various ups and downs of his
solo projects, and his enduring relationship with
friend and collaborator, guitarist Mick Ronson,
who passed away from cancer in 1993 and is
eulogized in Hunters song, "Michael
Picaso."
*********
Yesterday I
was talking to a friend of mine who is really
young, 20 years old, and I told him I was going
to be interviewing you. So he says "Yeah, I
know who he is. What are some of his songs?"
So I say You know, "All the Young
Dudes," "Cleveland Rocks" and he
goes "Oh yeah, the Drew Carey show theme
song!" Do you hear that a lot now?
Yeah, that can
happen. I remember it happened with "One
Bitten Twice Shy" -- [People would ask]
Why are you doing that? I did
it cause I wrote it. Oh!
(Laughs) Because everyone thought it was a Great
White song. But its understandable. I
dont get about much and its been a
long time, it kind of gets confusing after
awhile. And those 20 year olds werent even
alive when I wrote that song.
Why
didnt they use your original version of the
song for the show?
I think it was
because -- it had nothing to do with me -- they
wanted an inordinate amount of money for my
version, or something like that. [Considering]
theyd have to pay for it anyway, and there
was that on top, they got the Presidents of the
United States to do it. I thought it came out
really good. Its a great video.
Ive
always wanted to ask you, do you think they built
the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland
because of that song?
Nooo (laughs)!
No, I dont think so. But, I mean,
anythings possible.
Well maybe
you should ask someone.
Yeah, I should.
(Laughs hard)
Because,
think about it, if anyone ever asks "Why did
they build the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in
Cleveland?" The obvious answer is
"Because Cleveland Rocks!"
Thats why
I wrote it, in a way. When I first came over,
with Mott, youd do these clubs and nobody
would turn up. When we were still with Island
(Records), nobodyd be turning up. Then
youd get to Cleveland and it would always
be packed. Cleveland and Memphis were the first
two towns that picked up on us, long before LA or
New York. I just thought, Well, wait a
minute, if this towns such a joke how come
theyre picking up on Bowie and us and
people like that? Nobody else is picking up on
it.
Maybe because
theres nothing else to do there.
Well, usually
thats the case, I mean Rock & Roll
thrives much better in Flint, Michigan than it
does in Hyanisport. This town (New York
City)s ok but its departmentalized,
you know. I mean, I played a gig a couple of
weeks back at the Bowery Ballroom, and [the old
Mott fans] come out of the closets. We had a good
time. It was like a gathering of the clan.
I was at that
show and it blew my mind away completely. Ok,
thinking about how British punk rock, in a lot of
ways, was a nail in the coffin of progressive
rock -- yet the punks were obviously directly
influenced by bands like Mott the Hoople -- what
was that like, to bear witness to that
transition?
It was more the
press than anything else [who made a big deal out
of it]. The bands themselves, I never had a
problem with any of that lot. I mean, they were
great. The press decided that the punks
hated us, but I was going down to the Roxy and
places like that and nobody was bothering me.
[Those bands] reminded me of the punk bands in
the 50s to be honest with you, because punk
was just C, F and G -- three chords. Now, it was
A, D and E, but it was he same thing: people who
couldnt play properly learning how to play,
but now they had the marketing behind them. But
really, amongst the bands, people were just the
same as they always were. The Clashs Mick
Jones was in our fan club.
When Mott The
Hoople were recording The Hoople, Mick Ralphs
left and was replaced by Luther Grovsnor. Do you
think the band would have survived longer if Mick
Ronson had replaced Ralphs?
(Pause) No, I
think it would have died a lot quicker actually,
because Luther was great, morale-wise, in the
band. They loved Luther. They didnt get on
with Mick. I got on with Mick but they
didnt. (Pauses again) Maybe it would have
gone on for the same length [of time]. Ronson was
great on albums, maybe it would have lasted.
There was just too much baggage and it would have
been alright if we hadnt been as tired as
we were. But musically, the door shut on me. I
knew I couldnt write anymore in that
particular existence.
How was it,
leaving Mott the Hoople to do your own thing as
they carried on without you?
I wanted them to
carry on without me, because they wanted me to
keep the name and I wouldnt. I said,
I cant do that. If I take the
name theyll be left with nothing, because
[without me] its basically a rhythm
section. Theyre going to need that name to
get them kick-started. So, it was decided that
they would have the name Mott, and carry
on. That was fine by me.
It
didnt exactly turn out the way it did when
Peter Gabriel left Genesis.
Yeah, I think
the mistake they made was they probably thought I
was so much trouble that theyd get somebody
they could maybe control and they would write
more material. By this time everybody knew where
the publishing was at (laughs) -- when we
started, nobody did. But they didnt bring
in anybody who was a writer because they wanted
to write themselves and its kind of easier
said than done. Theres no point in writing
songs if they dont sell.
Was the song
"Boy" from your debut album an accurate
account of your state of mind during the last
days of Mott?
[Yes, but] I
didnt think it was about me when I wrote
it, you know. I thought it was about somebody
else. Its only recently I thought Oh,
there might be a bit of you in there
(laughs). I thought I was writing about somebody
else. But it did make sense eventually, it was
just stream of consciousness, done really quick.
Have you ever
heard from "Irene Wilde"?
No...she knows
though, she knows about [the song], somebody told
me. She married a bloke who used to...I used to
go with these girls in Shrewsbury, and I always
went with the best looking girls in the town. I
dont know why, it wasnt like I
was anything to look at or anything, but somehow
I went with Miss Shrewsbury, and she was gorgeous.
But there was always this guy, Brian Poole,
hanging about, and every time I went with these
girls -- if I left town or something like that --
he would immediately step in. I remember he had
this crimson velvet jacket and I always envied
that jacket. And he wound up with Irene Wilde, he
married her, and they had twins. But that last
time I saw her, she didnt look at all like
the girl I remembered.
A friend of
mine is writing a retrospective on the Hanoi
Rocks album Two Steps from the Move, and he asked
me if I could get your recollections of working
with that band and producer Bob Ezrin?
Yeah, Ezrin just
rang me up and said Could you come down?
Because theyre having problems with the
lyrics and the singer (Michael Monroe) wont
do it with anybody else but you. So I went
down there and I met them and Michael was really
nice, I found him to be just a really nice
ordinary kind of guy, you know. So I went out and
wrote the lyrics and brought them back the
following day. It seemed very easy to do and they
liked them and that was the end of that. I still
talk to Michael. Hes back in Helsinki.
You admit
that Braincapers is your least favorite Mott
record, although it has its fans. Has time
tempered your feelings towards that album at all?
Yeah, because I
think its the nearest to what [Mott the
Hoople] were. I didnt understand that for
the longest time, for some reason. But its
about the nearest to what we were live, and
thats why I like it [now]. But its
annoying on a lot of levels. I mean, you can hear
the high hat all the way through it.
When All
American Alien Boy was released, you said
youd never make another rock album again.
Then you made Overnight Angels, a very rock album
but the one you say you most regret. Why is that?
Well, I regret
All American Alien Boy as well (laughs). That
effectively ended my career right there. I think,
having written [so many rock songs], you get
bored. Plus [I was influenced by] the people I
was hanging out with then, Jaco (Pastorius) and
Bobby Colomby, and the jazz people I was hanging
out with. They went off to work again on their
thing after that record and I sort of gravitated
back to [my roots]. I thought, Ive got to
do something here, because Alien Boy sold
nothing...
I didnt
realize it did so poorly, I love that album.
That was Mick
(Ronson)s favorite record, and he
wasnt on it. But it was the biggest
disaster of my life. I think at the time, nobody
was ready for it. They just thought Id be
coming out with another one [like the previous
one]. The label just put it out, they didnt
bother to tell anybody that it was slightly
different to what Id done before. No
effort was made to consider that this record
might have to be marketed differently. So it just
came out and nobody bought it. It wasnt a
rock & roll record.
Do you think
Youre Never Alone With a Schizophrenic
helped to undo the damage done by Alien Boy?
Yes. When I did Overnight
Angels I thought I could just walk into Rock
& Roll and take over again, but I obviously
couldnt. So Schizophrenic was a good
record because I took my chances and I really
worked hard on that. I was poncing about a bit
when I did Overnight Angels but I
dont blame anybody but myself. You know,
youve got to take care of business and I
left an awful lot to (producer) Roy Thomas
Baker...I wrote most of the songs in the wrong
key. You know, I was just...dumb.
How did you
hook up with Roy Thomas Baker? Was it because you
knew Queen?
I was in the
Beverly Wilshire and he was in the next suite. He
said Ill do your next record if you
like, so I said Alright. There
was no thought [involved]. I never thought of him
as a producer [suitable for my style of music]
because he was doing people like The Cars and
Queen, a lot colder sort of thing than me. But I
thought well, hes a big guy and Im in
mess after All American Alien Boy, maybe
he knows how to [give me hit] singles and all the
rest of it. I wasnt in a good frame of mind
and I wasnt taking care of business at all.
On Schizophrenic I really got down to it.
I thought Id better get serious here or I
can kiss it goodbye.
How did you
get The E Street Band to back you on Youre
Never Alone with a Schizophrenic considering
Bruce Springsteen was just hitting critical mass
around that time?
I was in
England. I started [recording] Schizophrenic
in England with people like Glenn Matlock, that
crowd of Rich Kids, and it wasnt working.
Steve Popovich was running my management then --
hes out of Cleveland -- and he knew Gary
Tallent (bass player in the E Street Band) and
one thing lead to another. Then all of a sudden
he rung me up and said If you want to come
back and do it here, you can do it at the Power
Station with the E Streeters. So I came
back and I rehearsed with them and the rehearsals
were great, so we just went in and did it. It
didnt cost very much, Schizophrenic,
we did it really quick.
And there
were a lot of hits off that record.
I did alright
with that one, yeah.
YUI Orta was
probably one of the first albums with a title
that was a play on words, like van Halens
OU812. Whose clever idea was that?
Mick kept on
saying that to Carola, the girl he was with at
the time. And we had no title for that record
whatsoever, so I just said Well, well
call it that then. But no one could
figure it out. I realized then that wed
done the wrong thing, but it was too late. I
wouldnt have minded but Id never
heard (of the expression) either. He just kept on
doing it with this girl he was with, Why
You I Orta. I said whats that? He
said its the Three Stooges. Some albums
just dont have titles, and it becomes a
major problem at the last minute. I guess
thats why that got stuck on there.
[The title for] Schizophrenic
was on a toilet wall: "Youre never
alone with a schizophrenic." Mick found it
on a toilet wall and he told me. I said
Ive got to have it and he
wouldnt give it me, because he was going to
do an album himself. In the end he got Just
Another Night. I had to trade him Just
Another Night to get that title. I thought
What a great title!
The song
China, which was sung by Mick Ronson, never made
it onto a proper release. Why was that?
He never liked
it. The thing with Mick is, everybody used to say
Why doesnt he sing more? You
couldnt get him to do it. When he did that,
"China," Mick Jones said to me,
Well, were one song short, how about
using that song? It just developed right
there and then. Then Mick Jones says
Youre singing the rest of the album,
let Mick sing this. I thought he sung it
beautifully, because its like a sea chantey
sort of thing, and he sung it plaintive. But Mick
hated it, absolutely hated it. He hated his own
voice, for some reason.
I think he
had a lovely voice. His vocals on the first two
verses of "When the Daylight Comes" are
stunning. Its the most beautiful song.
Do you want to
hear a story about that? I was outside talking to
Springsteen, outside of the Power Station. I was
talking to Bruce (laughs) and [Mick] came out and
he goes You gotta do this vocal! And
I said (sternly) Not now. (laughs)
You do it. So he did, and thats
how that came about. I was right in the middle of
a conversation I didnt want to end, so I
said You go and do it, so he did. I
came back in and I thought Oh, that sounds
really good. It sounded a bit like
me, so I took over the third verse, right from
when I went back in.
Trying to get
him to [sing] was a nightmare, especially live.
He wouldnt listen to himself in monitors,
hes gotta listen to the amp. That was his
problem with his solo career, because he had to
leave the amp to sing. Hed just get totally
perplexed by the whole thing, you know.
Was that some
kind of technical thing or was he shy?
No, it was
purely technical. He always had to hang where it
sounded right to him, and thats a whole
other problem if youve got a mic to get to.
I mean, he was supposed to do harmonies and it
was 50/50 if he was going to make it or not
(laughs). If he happened to be in the area and
everything was alright, yeah.
Do you ever
wish youd been able to produce an
instrumental record of his, because his playing
was so lyrical.
Well, I think
where he belonged, but he just never got the
shot, was [writing music for] movies. If
hed have gotten the shot Michael Kamen got,
hed have been off and running.
I have no
idea who Michael Kamen is.
Well, he writes
a lot of these big scenic film jobs. Kamen was
around at the time, he was one of the kids
hustling around. But he got huge and famous.
Thats where Mick belonged, but Mick
didnt have the wherewithal to get into that
area. Because its more than just playing,
its how you handle yourself and who you
meet and going to meetings, and he couldnt
do that. The thing he did with Tina Turner is the
most hilarious thing youve ever seen in
your life. Mick was a little bit loony, you know,
in certain ways (laughs). Daft is not the word,
he was an incredibly funny bloke.
Do you have a
favorite Mick Ronson Kodak Moment?
(Long pause)
Singing nursery rhymes to the kids at barbecues,
stuff like that. I miss him more for that than
anything else, because our kids grew up together
and the wives grew up together, everybody grew up
together. Even when we werent working
together we would be hanging out. Theres
nothing you can say about that except
theres my life before him dying and my life
after. Its as simple as that: two different
lives.
I
couldnt believe how long its been
since he passed. Seven years. It seems like just
couple of years.
Yeah, I know,
times goes quickly. But cancer was in his family,
his dad died of it and there was a lot of it in
his family. Then he got it and there we were for
two years -- it was a nightmare. He did great, I
mean, he was still up and about right up until
about two days before it actually happened. He
was on morphine and he was fine, he didnt
hurt or anything.
How did you
get him away from Bowie anyway, after the Ziggy
Stardust & The Spiders from Mars tour?
Bowie retired
and Mick sat home. I was looking for a guitar
player and a couple of people -- Mick Rock was
one of them -- said Why dont you go
see Mick, hes sitting around not doing
anything. That was how the whole thing
started with Mott. Bowie did ring him up in the
80s and wanted to go out and do -- he must
have been hard up --he wanted to do Spiders
again, but Mick wouldnt do it. Why
wont you do it? We already did
it.
I bet Bowie
could make a lot of money doing that now if he
could pull it off.
I dont
think he needs it (laughs).
********
Ian Hunter
will release an album of all new material in
March of 2001.
Email Gail Worley
--Thanks to
Tommy Rocker for helping me with my questions.
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