Interviewed by Jim Ladd
Jim Ladd:Welcome to the
SFX radio network press conference with Roger Waters. We're here to
discuss the continuation of Roger's 'In the Flesh Tour 2000', the
upcoming release of 'Is There Anybody Out There: The Wall Live' from
Pink Floyd, and Roger's new solo record. Joining us now from Paris,
France, please welcome Roger Waters:
Roger Waters: Hello Roger! (laughs) Hi Jim.
Jim Ladd: How you doing, man?
Roger Waters: I'm doing well.
Jim Ladd: You begin
touring again on June 2nd in Tampa, Florida, and you're gonna do 23
cities in all. Tickets are already on sale in most cities. I just
wanted to know first off, were you surprised at the overwhelming
reception you received on the first leg of this tour?
Roger Waters: Yeah, I was
surprised. It was extremely gratifying, and it made us a very happy
little band of campers, I don't mind telling you.
Jim Ladd: Would you like to expand on that?
Roger Waters: You know,
there's something pleasurable about playing music and people singing
and listening to it, and telling you that they like it. It's a happy
situation, and I like it. What more can I say?
Jim Ladd: You have spoken
about the magic that happens when you really connect with an audience.
Does that happen every night - that magic connection - or is that kind
of a rare thing? And describe the feeling for me...
Roger Waters:
It happened every night on the first leg of the tour just about. There
were a couple of nights when I got involved in some of the old stuff -
strangely enough, in the smallest venues. We did the Rosemont Theatre
in Chicago and that was one of the less good gigs. Notwithstanding the
fact that there were only 3000, well, 3 and a half thousand people
there, there were two or three who wanted to whistle to the old
joining-in business through the whole show which I find rather
distracting. When you're trying to sing a song, and someone is
whistling loudly through it, it's offputting. By and large, we had
wonderful responses from the audiences and the magic was definitely
there. I got a lot of kind of shivers down the spine.
Jim Ladd: Glad to hear
that. We might just put out there in the ether that if you're gonna go
to one of these concerts and you really want to be connected with roger
- shut up during the quiet songs and go nuts at the end of the tune. Is
that fair to say?
Roger Waters: That would be marvellous.
Jim Ladd: Speaking of the
shows, first off, you were surprised, I think, at the fact that you
actually had to cancel some of the smaller halls and rebook in some of
the bigger places because the response was so great. Is that correct?
Roger Waters: Yeah. I
mean, clearly we didn't have to, but in fact the very small halls
didn't work very well with this show. The Rosemont Theatre in Chicago
was too small for this show and there were a couple of others. The
place we did in Quebec was a bit too small. It felt like cramming a
medium size show into a very small venue and it didn't work. So it
seems to work best in places that are from sort of six to seven
thousand people up to some of the sheds - some of the indoor-outdoor
venues - for twenty thousand people. I think any bigger than that and
it would start become alienating again.
Jim Ladd: Well, this
brings us to the point that you are really unequalled when it comes to
staging a show. Now, every band of course uses some form of lights and
special effects to one degree or another, but your show always has a
storyline that...you use these things to enhance the show rather than
merely having a lot of sound and fury which signifies nothing. Will
this tour...does it have a theme, a thematic thread to it from the
beginning to the end of the show?
Roger Waters: Not really.
The narrative, such as it is, is really the narrative of my career.
It's something of a greatest hits. There's work from my days with Pink
Floyd as well as stuff I've done since I left. And we'll be doing at
least one new song during this tour. So really the way it hangs
together is that the way the songs connect with one another dictates
the running order. There is no real narrative. Though, because it's
written by one guy, there's some kind of philosophical or musical
thread running through it.
Jim Ladd: Will the second
leg of this tour differ from the first? And by that I mean, did you do
something, and after all of these shows, you thought 'Well geez, when I
go back out again, I want to try this or that', or is it going to be
fairly much the same setlist?
Roger Waters: No, well the
setlist has changed. I have made a few changes to it. I've dropped some
tunes and put other tunes in instead and I've continued to work on the
show. I've been working for the last couple of days with Jonathan Park
on new visual stuff and changing visual stuff. I'm dropping some of the
stuff I did for The Wall and adding some other things.
Jim Ladd: Okay. You did -
which I was happy to hear - some personal meet and greets with the
audience after some of your shows. I wanted to ask you how you liked
that experience. Will you be doing more of these?
Roger Waters: What, you mean just outside the gig?
Jim Ladd: Yeah, I understood you took time to shake hands, talk to people, sign autographs, whatever - spend time with some fans.
Roger Waters: Yeah, I
don't mind doing that. Clearly it's a numbers thing. If there's like
forty or fifty people then you can say hello to them all and sign
something. And they can say thank you and you can say thank you, and
everybody goes away happy. If there's a lot more than that than it
could be a problem. But on the last tour, yeah, if I ever see people
standing around with something to be signed, I'm very happy to, if I've
got the time, which I usually have, to sign it for them. I'm a bit
concerned about, though...there seems to be some kind of a business in
selling on signed articles and memorabilia. You start seeing the same
faces in city after city, and suddenly the same people have got all
your albums from the start and it's quite clear that they're actually
in the business and these things are going to go to trade fairs, or fan
conventions, or something and they're selling on these autographed
items. When I see those faces, I refuse to sign that stuff. If
somebody's got a treasured album, and they bring it in, and they want
me to sign it, I couldn't be happier than to personalize that. But I'm
not really interested in really helping people run businesses.
Jim Ladd: Good for you.
Let's get back to the songlist for a minute. I asked you this the last
time I saw you and you had a great story about it. When you look back
on your career, with so many songs to choose from, how did you ever
decide on the setlist?
Roger Waters: I went back
to the beginning, and I listened to all the songs, all of them, and I
wrote a list of everything I wanted to do and it was about five hours
long. So then I started hacking at it and I whittled it down to a
couple of hours. You know, playing the songs night after night on the
last tour, it became clear which ones worked really well, and which
ones weren't so good. So, I'm doing 'Set the Controls' now which we
didn't do on the last thing. I'm going to do 'Bravery' from Amused to
Death. I thought the stuff from Amused to Death worked great apart from
'What God Wants', which was always hard work every night. It seemed
like hard work to me the theatre of the piece was difficult to get
across so I'm probably dropping that, I don't know.
Jim Ladd: I'm sorry to hear that. I was so hoping that you would do 'What God Wants'. That's too bad.
Roger Waters: Well, I
watched the video again the other night and I was watching and
thinking: 'This could work if we put that guitar part in here so the
whole thing doesn't grind to a halt when the vocals starts, and if we
edited it a bit, shortened it...and if I brought the voices which are
on the tape, you know, the shouting responses, the 'What God Wants, God
Gets'...then it could work.' It's maybe a question of dynamics. So I'm
still not completely clear what I'm going to do.
Jim Ladd: Can you very quickly run down the people in the band. And I especially want to make mention of that little midget from Wales?
Roger Waters: Right. How quickly do you want me to do this?
Jim Ladd: Well, just tell us who's in the band.
Roger Waters:Er...(laughs)
Jim Ladd: I don't have a stopwatch on you Roger. I just meant I didn't need a life history.
Roger Waters: I just
wondered whether you wanted (gives a couple of names out quickly) - you
know like that - or whether you wanted more when you said 'very
quickly' but I get the picture. The drummer is called Graham Broad.
There are three guitar players. Snowy White, who I have a long history
with. He was one of the extra guitar players in Pink Floyd for a long
time, so he in fact did the original Wall shows. Doyle Bramhall II. I'm
sure lots of people in LA will know him, though he's actually from
Texas. Andy Fairweather-Low, the ubiquitous Welshman, one of the great
guitar players, is in the band as always. And then there's two keyboard
players, Jon Carin and Andy Wallace. And two other vocalists, Katie
Kissoon and PP Arnold, who were on the first leg of the tour last year.
And in fact I am adding a third woman: Doyle's wife is going to join
us. So there will be three background vocals rather than two. I felt
that that needed thickening up a bit.
Jim Ladd: Let's talk about
the new live version of 'The Wall' which will be in stores on April
18th. The title will be 'Is There Anybody Out There: The Wall Live',
and this was recorded at Earl's Court in London. Why did you choose
that particular performance?
Roger Waters: Those were the only performances that were recorded.
Jim Ladd: No way!
Roger Waters: Actually,
that's not true. The performances in 1980 were recorded but very badly.
These are the only ones that were recorded with any kind of real
separation on 48 tracks. So, it's just those five nights is all that
exists, really.
Jim Ladd: Oh geez. So LA, New York and the one in Germany, that didn't happen.
Roger Waters: No.
Jim Ladd: How long had it been since you heard these shows? Twenty years?
Roger Waters: Yeah.
Jim Ladd: Did you do any overdubbing or re-recording for the live CD?
Roger Waters: Nope, nothing.
Jim Ladd: Oh really? So it's as it happened. That's how we're hearing it?
Roger Waters: Yep. Scary, eh?
Jim Ladd: Well, I think it's a wonderful piece of history, you know.
Roger Waters: You know,
strangely enough, the performances sound really good. I mean, it's
quite clear listening to it that it is live, but we haven't fiddled
with anything. I think we all agreed that that would not be a good idea.
Jim Ladd: Now that begs the question when you say 'we all agreed', what do you mean by that?
Roger Waters: Well, I
don't know what I mean. I didn't hear that anybody had said: 'Let's
re-record all the vocals' or 'I want to do the drums again please!' So
I just assume we were all agreed. I didn't actually sit in a room and
say, 'Now, are we all agreed?'
Jim Ladd: OK. Do you have fond memories of those performances? Was it a good time in your career?
Roger Waters: Absolutely.
They were fantastic, they really were. It was kind of a daft idea, and
the fact that with the help of Gerry Scarfe and Mark Fisher and
Jonathan Park, who were the main collaborators in putting the shows
together, we kind of pulled it off and they worked as well as they did.
It was just great and every night was a great pleasure.
Jim Ladd: You know, I'm
glad to hear that because when you talk to people who attended those
shows, that's a real hallmark in their lives. Those shows made such an
impression on people - not me, but you know most people. I'm glad to
hear that it made an impression on you as well.
Roger Waters: Yeah, it was cool.
Jim Ladd: You have
included two songs on this live album - we're talking about The Wall
now - that are not on the studio version, that you played that night,
and one of which is 'What Shall We Do Now?' and the other is 'The Last
Few Bricks'. Right?
Roger Waters: Wrong.
Jim Ladd: Wrong?
Roger Waters: Well, you
know, the idea that these are new songs is wrong. They aren't new
songs. What they are is...'What Shall We Do Now?' is the list of kind
of consumer, kind of... you remember in the movie the wall of consumer
items?
Jim Ladd: Yeah.
Roger Waters:...And it's
that list, and it actually figures in the lyrics on the studio album,
but the cut was not on the studio album because it screwed up the
dynamic of the record. 'Shall we buy a new guitar / shall we drive a
more powerful car / shall we work straight through the night / shall we
get into fights' and all that. So it's that. So there's nothing very
new about it. And 'The Last Few Bricks' is towards the end of the first
half. In rehearsal we discovered that physically the guys who were
building the wall didn't have time to finish it for 'Goodbye Cruel
World', so we had to fill in a few minutes of time. So we actually
played a kind of reprise of tunes from the first half. There's nothing
new about that either, it's just a medley of bits from the first half
of the show.
Jim Ladd: Okay. I'll try not to be so literal next time.
Roger Waters: Well, no,
it's an interesting point because the record company have put out that
there are two new songs on this thing and that's just not true and I
think people should know.
Jim Ladd: You're absolutely right, absolutely right. They're not new like you wrote them yesterday. They just weren't on the album.
Roger Waters: 'What Shall
We Do Now?' is in the movie. So anybody who's got the movie has had it
for the last nineteen years and the other bit is just a medley.
Jim Ladd: Whose idea was
it to celebrate the twentieth anniversary of 'The Wall' with this
release? Did you say 'Guys, let's do this', or the record company?
Roger Waters: It certainly
wasn't my idea. It was concocted between Steve O'Rourke and Dave
Gilmour and the record company, I suppose. I would think largely the
record company. And I was a bit...when I heard of the idea, it felt a
bit like scrabbling to scrape the bottom of the barrel and see if there
were any dollar bills left sticking there that could be scraped up, and
so I was rather against the idea. Then I actually talked to my son
Harry, who's 23 now, and he said, 'Well, why are you against it? A lot
of people are interested in live recordings,' and some bands that he
likes, particularly like, you know the American band Phish for
instance, he says somebody or other records every single show they do
and a lot of people listen to them. He does, for instance. There's a
big kind of market in bootleg recordings and there's a big interest in
recordings of live performances of pieces of work that people know
well. And I thought, well, why shouldn't there be. Actually, James
Guthrie, who has produced the record and done all the mixes, has done a
great job and it sounds really good. It's really interesting to hear
what happened when we did it live. And it is the original cast
recording.
Jim Ladd: It is the
original cast recording, that's true. That's true. Let's go on to
something new, OK? You have already begun work, I am told, on a new
solo project, yes?
Roger Waters: Yes.
Jim Ladd: And what will be the title and subject of this work, Mr Waters?
Roger Waters: I'm not
really sure. I've just done a month's work in compass point in Nassau
with the band, who i just told you about. Except Andy wasn't there, and
the girls weren't there, but the rest of the band were there. Andy
Wallace wasn't there - Andy Fairweather-Low was. And we've cut five
tracks, four of which I think have lyrics already and one doesn't have
any. One of them is the song 'Each Small Candle' that we performed once
on the last tour. We did it in Kansas City on the last gig and I
thought that that was what the whole record was going to be about - was
each small candle - the idea that we all have a responsibility for our
own behaviour and everything that everybody does in life impinges on
everyone else, broadly. But some other songs are appearing and they
have kind of connections with each other. It seems to be broadening out
from the initial concept. Though it may well be that the album will
still be called 'Each Small Candle', 'cause I like that title. "Each
small candle lights a corner of the dark". But it seems to be about
love.
Jim Ladd: About love?
Roger Waters: Yeah.
Jim Ladd: Well, I really
like the metaphor of the candle, and the fact that our individual
lights, either singularly or combined, should illuminate the dark or
the darkness.
Roger Waters: I like that
idea too, but there's another new song called 'The Flickering Flame'.
It's got a long involved lyric, but the last bit of the lyric says
something about what the thing's about as well which is: the last few
couplets go: 'When my synapses pause in their quest for applause / When
my ego lets go of my end of the bone / To focus instead on the love
that is precious to me / Then I shall be free.'
Jim Ladd: Oh man. Very nice, Roger.
Roger Waters: So that's kind of what it's about too.
Jim Ladd: Did you say 'When my ego lets go of my end of the bone'?
Roger Waters: Yeah.
Jim Ladd: That's a great line.
Roger Waters: Aye.
Jim Ladd: You know, you still got it, pal. You know what I mean - you still got it.
Roger Waters: Uh, Jim...
Jim Ladd: Damn, that's a
great line. Do you have any idea when this will be done? You know, six
months, a year, whenever it's done, it's done?
Roger Waters: No. I'm
working on it...I'm in Paris at the moment working on the opera, but
the singer I was supposed to be working with this week who is an
American tenor called Paul Groves has sadly got flu - get well soon,
Paul! - so I've found myself with a bunch of studio time and nothing
much to fill it with. So I'm actually working on these songs now
instead of working with him. Then next week I work with Ying Huang,
who's a soprano who's doing the opera. So what I'd like to do is finish
the lyrics. Maybe write a couple more songs, then go back in with the
band, learn them, work out how exactly the whole thing fits together
and then re-record everything with the band playing live together. That
is the big difference in this record, from my more recent records, is
that I'm working with a band, and we play everything together at the
same time, which is a discipline I'm really enjoying.
Jim Ladd: That is a big difference. Yeah, that is true.
Roger Waters: Yeah.
Jim Ladd: Will you be playing any of the new songs on this upcoming tour?
Roger Waters: I will be
playing definitely one new song - whether it'll be 'Each Small Candle'
or one of the others, I'm not sure. There's another song that I'm
thinking I might do live, because I think it could be great live. It's
got different sections, and one of the sections is a very uptempo,
7/8th feel thing which is really exciting and I have a lot of ideas of
how it might work with a chord and stuff. That seems to be developing a
working title of something like 'Love in Spite of Traffic' - it's kind
of what it's about. I'm not quite sure how it's going to develop. I
seem to be...I don't know...my preoccupations are changing as I get
older.
Jim Ladd: And boy, they
should be changing. I mean it would be sad if they weren't. You should
be growing as a human being and you obviously are.
Roger Waters: I am. I mean, I'm 182 pounds now, you know. Only a few years ago I was about 160.
Jim Ladd: Well, there you
go. That's exactly what I was talking about, Roger. That's exactly what
I meant. Phew. You know, by the way, and god, I hate to give you
compliments but LA - and I don't know why - but they are so looking
forward to you coming here.
Roger Waters: Well, you
know I lived in LA for six months in '79, and we did a lot of the
recording for 'The Wall' there. We finished the thing off in Producer's
Workshop on Hollywood Boulevard and recorded a lot of the sound effects
and stuff that was on the record and all that stuff with me...you know
that bit before 'Nobody Home' where there's the sounds of people in the
street and then me shouting 'Shut up!', well, we just opened the window
onto Hollywood Boulevard and stuck the microphone out. So I have a real
fondness for this city, weird as it is, and the audiences there have
always been great. They've always been very responsive and I look
forward to seeing the people I worked with all those years ago as well.
Whenever I come back through LA, I always try and get hold of Jim Haas
and John Joyce and Stan Farber and Joe Chemay, who were the singers who
did the shows with us then. We usually managed to get them onstage
singing the backgrounds in 'In The Flesh', or something like that and I
always look forward to that. There's something really cool about
meeting old friends again.
Jim Ladd: Last question. You've spoken before about how music can touch the huamn spirit. Do you view making music as a spiritual act?
Roger Waters: Yeah. Music
is an expression of the human spirit. So yeah, I very much see it as a
spiritual act. Whatever that means, you know. The organization of
simple and complex harmonic motions that we describe within our music
definitely reach parts of us that we can't really define or understand
or know and we all kind of...I think we all intuitively understand that.
Jim Ladd: Very good, Very good.
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