|
WSWS
: Arts Review
: Interviews
Theres something magical about music
Singer-songwriter Marshall Crenshaw speaks with the World
Socialist Web Site
By Richard Phillips
6 August 2004
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Marshall Crenshaw is one of the few singer-songwriters to have
maintained his artistic integrity and sanity after more than two
and a half decades in the fickle world of the American rock recording
industry. Crenshaws music is characterised by beguiling
tunes and simple but evocative lyrics. Whether love songs or poignant
homages to an innocent past, Crenshaws work is drawn from
the classics of American popular musicrockabilly, rock and
roll, country, gospel and rhythm and blues.
Born and raised in the Detroit
area, Crenshaw took up the guitar at an early age and was involved
in a variety of local bands before securing a part in the touring
Broadway musical Beatlemania in the late 1970s, in which
he played the role of John Lennon. When the show began to wind
up after 12 months he started making demonstration tapes of his
own compositions and developed a following for his band in the
New York rock club scene.
His first single, the Buddy Holly-influenced Somethings
Gonna Happen, led to a self-titled LP in 1982 and a steady
output of albums since. These include: Field Day (1983),
Downtown (1985), Mary Jean & 9 others (1987),
Good Evening (1989), Lifes Too Short (1991),
Live...My Truck Is My Home (1994), Miracle of Science
(1996) The 9-Volt Years (1998), #447 (1999), Ive
Suffered For My Art... Now Its Your Turn (2001), and
his most recent album, Whats in the Bag? (2003).
During this time Crenshaw also appeared in Francis Ford Coppolas
film Peggy Sue Got Married and played Buddy Holly in La
Bamba, the movie about rock and roller Ritchie Valens. He
has written on pop music history, jointly authored a cinema reference
book entitled Hollywood Rock & Roll, composed songs
for film and television, and collaborated in the production of
the new remastered version of Marvin Gayes beautiful 1971
Whats Going On album.
Perhaps the best introduction to Crenshaws 1982-96 recordings
is This Is Easy: The Best of Marshall Crenshaw. Some of
the songs on the album are Someday Someway, Cynical
Girl, Mary Anne, Our Town, Whenever
Youre On My Mind, What Do You Dream Of?
and Starless Summer Night. A diverse range of musicians
have recorded Crenshaws songs, including Bette Midler, Robert
Gordon, Kelly Willis, Marti Jones, the Gin Blossoms and the Bellamy
Brothers.
He recently concluded a brief two-city tour of Australia. In
Sydney he performed at The Basement and later spoke with Richard
Phillips about his musical background and other influences on
his work.
Richard Phillips: Could you give me a rough outline
of your main artistic influences?
Marshall Crenshaw: Im originally from the Detroit
area, Im 50 years old and have been driven to try and make
music for most of my life. I was interested in music and musical
instruments as a young child and now have a five-year-old son
who is exactly the same.
My fathers family was from the SouthTennessee and
Missouri. There were a lot of transplanted hillbillies in the
Detroit area and a lot of transplanted Southern culture and Southern
social tensions.
RP: Your father worked in the auto industry?
MC: No, he worked for the city that we lived in for
a while. He was like an assistant city manager but kind of drifted
around a bit in his working life and finally ended up in a hospital
as a white-collar guy. My mother was a junior high school teacher.
Her father was French Canadian and her mother German and she lived
in the Detroit area all her life.
I grew up during the 1950s and 60s and was drawn to what was
on the radio at the time. There was a lot of local materialr&b,
country music and gospel. We werent religious at all but
I have always loved gospel music. During the sixties garage bands
began to become popular in my town and instrumental rock was big.
I started playing guitar when I was 10 years old, in 1963, just
before the Beatles came on the scene, and the first music I tried
to learn was The Ventures and Duane Eddy and that kind of stuff.
RP: You mentioned Southern musical influences. What
were they?
MC: The songs that grabbed me when I was a kid were
Black Slacks by the Sparkletones and Suzie Darlin,
and I loved material by Buddy Holly and of course the Everly Brothers.
All that rockabilly pop stuff with electric guitars nailed me
to the wall so to speak. I dont know why it affected me
so much but it really did.
But back in those days it wasnt just rock and roll on
the radio, there was a wide range of material, including post-war
big band music and in the late 60s FM rock stations began to appear.
The FM rock station in Detroit was kind of geared to stoned people
and college students and so there would be lots of jazz and blues,
and theyd even play Stravinsky once in a while. I have a
wide-range of tastes partly because of the music I heard on the
radio at that time.
RP: Is this station still operating?
MC: No, American radio is far different now. Today there
are about six or seven conglomerates that own all the radio stations.
The music they play is totally regimented and structured, and
its getting worse, so I dont even listen to commercial
radio anymore. I wont subject myself to even five minutes
of it.
RP: What part of Detroit are you from?
MC: We lived about three miles outside the city limits,
in a town called Berkley.
RP: What was the Detroit music
scene like? Standing in the Shadows of Motown, the movie,
shows a really vibrant place.
MC: Allan Slutsky contacted me when he was putting together
his book on James Jamerson [Motown bass player] and I sang with
the Funk Brothers in the Apollo Theatre when the film premiered
in New York so I know this movie backwards and forwards.
Motown was huge in the sixties, Detroit had a real positive
self-image and the city was the energy centre for the whole community.
It gave everybody that cared about popular music and their community
a sense of pride. Then I saw it all vanish, which was very sad.
It began to happen when I was getting old enough to start to think
about the future and finding a place in the world.
I still think about Detroit a lot and I dont want to
say anything bad about it because its part of me. But the
city just seemed to be imploding and so by the time I was about
22 or 23 I just wanted to get out. Ive heard its slowly
starting to pick itself back up and I hope thats true. There
are some interesting things musically starting to come from the
city so it seems to have found its musical voice again.
RP: How did all this impact on you?
MC: It was a heavy burden and I had a really sad outlook
on things for quite a while. Ive been on the east coast
for almost 30 years and know people from Newark, New Jersey, where
there have been big job losses, and they have similar kind of
haunted memories.
RP: A number of your songs seem to be references to
Detroit. Where Home Used To Be comes to mind.
MC: I dont go round saying this but yes they are.
Where Home Used To Be was inspired by a great web
site called The
Fabulous Ruins of Detroit. An artist called Lowell Boileau
puts it together and you should take a look at it.
Although it was written in the wake of September 11, when I
was in a sad and introspective frame of mind, I was looking at
the site and discovered that the hospital where my father worked
had been demolished. Everybody needs and desires a sense of place
and so the song is about what it feels like to revisit where you
came from and find that it has been tragically changed.
RP: Could you comment on music scene in the 1980s and
90s?
MC: To generalize Id have to say that Im
not crazy about music from the 80s. At the beginning it seemed
it was going to be a good decade but then drum machines and other
things came along which screwed things up.
The music I love best is where you hear people in some sort
of a musical discourse. That element, and a sense of immediacy,
is absent in a lot of the material produced in the last 20 years.
The record producers I worked with during that time insisted
on musicians doing all their parts separately. If you made an
album youd spend the first three days recording the drums,
then the bass player would do his thing, and finally Id
come in and do the guitar parts and vocals.
Somebody along the way got the idea that recording rock and
roll music was supposed to be like brain surgerynit-picky,
anal-retentive and all that stuff. Of course I still do recordings
where I play everythingIm enough of a narcissist to
enjoy thatbut the material I love must have some spontaneity
to it. I want to hear people with real personas and blood in their
veins.
RP: What sustained you emotionally and artistically
during these times?
MC: Im pretty busy and play about 50 gigs a year.
What keeps me motivated is that I have two young kidsa five-year-old
son and a seven-year-old daughter. We had our kids late in life
so Im determined to get out in the world and hustle up as
much work as I can. I have to admit that there was a period in
the late 80s and early 90s where I was apathetic and kind of gloomy
and could lay around on my ass for a long time. Im glad
to say that I dont want to do that anymore.
RP: And artistically?
MC: I still have the same enthusiasm for music that
Ive always had. There are a lot of good artists out there
and there is always great old stuff to discover. Theres
something magical about musicits one of gods
gifts to humanityand I constantly draw energy from it. Although
Im not the wild consumer of music that I used to be, I try
to keep my ears open and keep learningI dont want
to become a fossil.
RP: What was your response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks?
MC: I was shocked and dominated by a sense of unadulterated
sadness. We were living in Brooklyn at that time and very close
to the killing fields. There was death and horror in the airyou
could see it, feel it and smell itand because Id been
recently flying quite a bit I thought a lot about the people on
the planes and their fear. It raised a lot of issues for me.
RP: At the concert last night you made an oblique reference
to the Bush administration and called him a liar. Could you elaborate?
MC: I was mortified when Bush got into the White House
in 2000. It floored me the way he came in. Then when 9/11 happened
and Bush decided to use the attack as a propaganda device, I thought
it was the coldest thing Id ever seen in my life. Ill
never get over the fact that theyve played on peoples
emotions to sell the war in Iraq. This is a crime as far as Im
concerned. When you think about those desperate people leaping
off the World Trade Center and splattering on the sidewalk and
realize how the Bush administration used this. Its too much.
Ive been eager for the next election, and have been ever
since the last one, and Im praying that Bush gets run out
onto the street. He is the most unworthy and unqualified person
to ever serve as president of the United States. Theres
no doubt in my mind about that.
RP: But theres no real difference between the
Republicans and the Democratsthey both speak for big business
and the rich.
MC: Obviously Kerrys not going to be perfect and
youre never going to get unanimity of opinion in a country
like the US. I guess the first thing they want to do restore is
some sense of honor to the presidency and thats not such
a bad goal.
RP: What do you think about the fact that the Democrats
have said theyll not be withdrawing troops from Iraq?
MC: I was hoping thered be an antiwar candidate
on the ticket and was disappointed when Kerry picked Edwards.
I dont know why, I guess hes got to get elected. The
other problem is a lot of Americans are not politically engaged,
for the most part. They are allowed to go through life thinking
that its irrelevant, which is very foolish.
There are also a lot of people who dig Bush. I dont understand
this, his quote unquote charisma never worked on me. The whole
thing is such a messa real horror showbut all political
eras must come to an end and Im just hoping that this one
will end sooner rather than later.
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |