Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Interview with Charlie Hunter (jambase.com)



Photo by Greg Aiello

See original publishing on jambase.com here.

Charlie Hunter can do it all. Creating an instrument that translates all his musical desires, Hunter simultaneously plays bass lines, rhythm guitar and lead with incredible ease; making him one of the most exceptional jazz players currently on the circuit.

Recently departing from the group he co-founded, Garage A Trois, Hunter went right back to work on a new album and tour to be introduced and carried out in the New Year.

Hunter is celebrating the release of the new album Gentlemen, I Neglected To Inform You You Will Not Be Getting Paid, with a residency at Rose Live Music in Brooklyn now. The album was released on January 12, 2010 through Hunter's own Spire Artist Media and digitally through reapandsow.

On this record, Hunter is accompanied by a new set of artistically endowed musicians to compliment his always radiant and unique guitar work. Joining Hunter is a new horn section composed of trombonists' Curtis Fowlkes, Alan Ferber and trumpeter Eric Biondo. Grounding the rhythm section is a familiar "jam scene" friend, the improvisational drummer Eric Kalb, who's toured with Deep Banana Blackout, Sharon Jones and The Dap Kings and many more. Biondo and Fowlkes will be joining Hunter for the Rose Live Music residency.

JamBase spoke with Charlie Hunter about the new album, his upcoming tour, the talented musicians that currently surround him and the explanation behind his departure from Garage A Trois.


JamBase: You have a new album, Gentlemen, I Neglected To Inform You You Will Not Be Getting Paid. What inspiration did you draw from musically for this new record? Is it a collection of random songs or does the entire album carry a familiar theme?

Charlie Hunter: Well, I wanted to make a record with a brass type sound. Some of the songs were already written previous to creating the record, but then I wrote others with the brass theme in mind. And on this record I added a new brass section.

JamBase: What approach do you take when entering the studio to lay down a new record? Do you cut it live or is it dubbed, re-recorded and more of a procedure?

Charlie Hunter: There was no dubbing on this album at all. It's cut entirely live. This album was recorded to two-inch analog tape, mono, with no overdubs at all. It was just mixed on the fly. Everything was live.

Throughout the month of January you've scheduled a residency at Rose Live Music in Brooklyn. Why did you opt to do the residency at this particular venue?

I live in New Jersey so it's not terribly far from me. I really like playing at Rose Live Brooklyn as well. It's a smaller more portable kind of scene, you know? But I guess just like anywhere else there are people that will be interested in the music, and you go set up and play and just hope that they come to the gig.

How is this album unlike your previous releases? What makes Gentlemen, I Neglected To Inform You You Will Not Be Getting Paid unique?

They're all unique. All have their own individual kind of thing. I try to never make the same record twice. I mean, if I had to name a common thread running through all of my albums it would be that my "instrument" is always used on them. However, I don't always play it the same way. It's always a little different depending on the vibe, so this is definitely a different record than anything I've done previously. Also it's in mono; first record I've done in mono, as well as two trombones and a trumpet. I've never had that configuration before.

Fans associate "Charlie Hunter" with your live and in-studio utilization of custom seven and eight string guitars. How did you come to ascertain this technique, making yourself an innovator as well as a player in the field?

It just formed from a natural-type progression. I created the concept by being involved with drums, guitar and bass all at once. If you put those instruments together, then you create this thing I use. From there you just try to evolve that concept and make it better and more effective.

Which guitars were used on this album?

I just used one on this album. It was a custom-made seven string created by Jeff Traugott.

Besides adding Curtis, Alan and Eric to the group, you also invited Deep Banana Blackout drummer Eric Kalb. How did this relationship materialize?

I first saw him in Chinatown. He was working as a busboy in a Chinese restaurant. I just thought, wow this guy is so good and nobody gives him the time, place or gig. He has a volatile temper, a history that shows so, and I guess he had a few problems with prior bandleaders. I just figured I'd have to give the guy a gig and see if it worked out. It was kind of rocky at first, but he understood that that kind of behavior would not be tolerated. Now he's really risen to the challenge and he sounds great.

Why are you so adamant about doing things grass-root style as opposed to having a big media machine behind you? For someone who has been on a label before, what are the advantages and perks you find by doing it on your own?

As far as putting out my own records, it just came to a point where it made the most sense to put out my own records. It didn't make any sense to do it with a label. Like why would you want to sink a bunch of money into a guy like me that's going to sell only five thousand records? I can make my own records and sell two thousand and make enough money to pay for the next record. So clearly, it makes more sense for me to be doing it on my own.

What propelled your decision to leave Garage A Trois and embark on another solo record?

Well, we were actually hanging out with Garage A Trois the other night in Seattle. I love those guys; I think they're great players. But the issue is with their audience. They're sort of really bossy and demanding and always too high or too drunk, constantly bossing you around. They tell you what they want to hear by screaming and yelling at you onstage. If you don't play as loud as you can all the time and close your eyes, so you don't see them dancing, then you just can't get through the gig. And I just couldn't do that anymore.

Was there a particular incident that occurred that made you feel this way or has it been building for quite some time?

Both. I had a thing happen where somebody was dancing; he was so off-time and the audience was bossing us around, telling us to play the FUNK or do this, rock out, man, blah, blah, blah. I guess I had some type of a seizure, and the guy was dancing so out of rhythm that it took me weeks to finally feel whole again. It was a serious, scary episode for me, and I felt like I really had to do my own thing and get out of there; regroup so to speak. I still LOVE those guys. I just really couldn't handle that kind of scene anymore.

In the digital age we're currently in, what's your stance on the rise of singles and the slow diminution of the concept of a record? It seems people are beginning to lose the overall concept of a record, in that it is a collection of work meant to be listened to all together.

It really doesn't matter to me because I never sell singles anyway. People usually just want my music for the whole record. I don't have any "hits." So people will just buy the whole record because that's the strength of it. It's not like popular music where you're selling one thing; you're kind of selling a concept. Generally, if you're selling a strong record they're going to want the whole record anyway.

You've collaborated with a lot of artists, producing more than 16 albums already in your career. Who else would you like to work with in the near future?

I've been pretty lucky throughout my career. I've been able to work with a lot of amazing musicians. I pretty much have been working with the people that I want to work with. But if something cool came up then I would definitely be interested in it.

What besides the residency and the album should fans expect from you in 2010?

I'm just going to be doing more of the same thing, pretty much getting into a car and driving around. Like usual, going from place to place, playing music and that's pretty much the story.



Interview with RJD2 (Jambands.com)




See original interview at Jambase/Relix here.

Ramble John Krohn, or more famously RJD2, enters the New Year fully equipped, triggering the release of a new studio album and a full fledged five leg international tour starting January 2010. On January 19th, his fourth studio album The Colossus will hit, brewing up a much anticipated and fan-feigning return to RJ’s signature collaborative and instrumental hip-hop methodology.

The album will be the first one released on his newly established label, RJ’s Electrical Connections, and includes guests Phonte Coleman, Kenna, Aaron Livingston, Columbus MC’s The Catalyst, Illogic and many more. As RJ explains, his previous album, The Third Hand, was a mission to do as much as he could do on his own, without any outside influences. The Colossus takes a complete opposite approach, trying to incorporate and include as many outside influences as possible, which RJ gleefully boasts he succeeded in doing.

Jambands sat down with RJD2 to discuss the release of The Colossus, his largest tour to date, his debut behind the drum kit, touring with a backing band and much more.

The album revisits the instrumental/vocal hip-hop collaborative format fans experienced in your breakthrough studio album, Deadringer. Did you intentionally return to a technique or feeling you held when producing Deadringer?

I don’t really see it as going back to one particular thing as much as going back to a number of broad things. I don’t personally see it as a return to the style and working of Deadringer for the whole album per se. There were songs in which I essentially used a sample only methodology to produce them and there were many other songs in which I didn’t. So there are some hints of the former album and then there are differences.

Why did you decide to go back to featured vocals on tracks (as well as singing yourself) other than predominately instrumentals and samples as you demonstrated on The Third Hand?

As far as instrumental dominance, when I look at Deadringer and Since We Last Spoke, both of those records were attempts to have as much of a vocal presence as possible. So while I think that it’s accurate to say that I’ve by-in-large spent a lot of time doing sample-based music, I don’t personally feel like instrumental music is necessarily me completely. It’s a big part of what I’ve done, but at the same time I think that if I were to go song by song down those records, at least 50-60% of the tracks will have varied vocal elements. The vocals may not be loud, but whether they are sampled or live they’re still present. It was a very cognitive thing making this record and that was kind of my mission. I mean there was a very conscious effort involved throughout it. I remember in the late ‘90s when I first started getting serious about this, creating my own music or whatever, I remember that my angle on “instrumental hip-hop” was that I wanted to make short & lively vocal-oriented pop songs. The goal was to get as close to that as possible by using the same techniques or approaches that by and large people didn’t think “instrumental hip-hop” normally used. I just remember that being a conscious goal that I wanted to achieve.

How much studio time was spent on The Colossus compared to your previous studio releases?

The record came together sometime around January or February of 2009. I started working on it pretty much when I completed and released The Third Hand. So around some time in 2007, but the bulk of the work happened from around fall 2008 through the winter of 2009. It’s hard for me to remember the exact date, but part of the way I work is that I develop ideas and little sketches of music. Sometimes those things develop really quickly and some of the songs come through right away. And other times they just sit. If it’s not coming out or it’s not working, I never force it. So I just let it sit. And a lot of times those things end up in the dust bin or the garbage and they never get revisited. But sometimes I will go back and revisit them and what needs to happen for it to progress is having a fresh perspective where the piece of music should go.

As you said before, you invited guests to join you on some tracks of The Colossus. Can you talk a bit about the process of scheduling and the impact that may have had on the music?

As far as the collaboration portion, all the instrumentation parts that I didn’t play were tracked in the studio, and that was labor intensive having to get everyone scheduled, getting charts or writing charts. So that was a bit labor intensive. But the other songs, the vocal songs, the only one that was recorded in studio was “Crumbs Off the Table” where I had been working with Aaron Livingston a little bit. The other thing that made it easy was that all the collaborative songs were still songs that I wrote all the vocal parts, melodies and lyrics, so I was recording songs that were technically already finished and demoed. So it was a lot quicker because of that. In the typical producer/vocalist collaboration, the vocalist is writing and that makes it take a lot longer. But when I worked with Phonte Coleman, he had the song (“The Shining Path”) done in a week (laughs). You know, it was just like, here are the lyrics, here’s the demo, here’s the instrumental and it’s done.

What was it like to work behind the drum kit on Colossus? What other instruments did you play on the album?

I guess, to me, I see the main discipline being drums, bass, keyboard and guitar. Everything else I really just sort of built extensions from those instruments. An example is the difference between a harpsichord and piano, besides specifics, are a similar technique as long as they are keyboard based. So I use the harpsichord as an extension of the keyboard. Synthesizer, acoustic and electric guitars, bass and drums were the basics.

Is there a particular philosophy behind the making of your music? Does each album have a theme or certain influence that propels it?

The more deep I get into the record mission, the more that is the case with the overall philosophy. My first record was a compilation of songs. Reason being, the only means I had to complete a song at that time was a sampler. Thus everything I made for that record was sample-based music. For the second record I had bought a couple of keyboards and sort of got into tracking live stuff a little bit. There was also a couple of songs that I sang on that record. Not everything was sample-based per se, but the only driving philosophy behind it was for me to just keep expanding and provide new and interesting songs. By the time The Third Hand came around, that was the first record that had a theme, whereas the point of it for me was to see how far I could get just by myself without drawing on anyone else. And now The Colossus has a completely opposite theme than The Third Hand. The intent was to collaborate as much as possible, with as many outside influences and players and resources on the record as possible. Additionally on this album, there is also an overview of the different approaches I’ve taken to making music and also specific references to my first 3 albums that are “hidden”; I don’t think they’re hidden, I think they’re pretty obvious but with that said they’re hidden in the music if you will.

This is the first album you released on your newly established label, RJ’s Electrical Connections. What led you to release this album on your own?

I guess the main motive being that I didn’t need anyone else’s money to complete this album [laughs]. I know that it’s common to actually complete the record before it even gets signed. I know how that whole thing works. And that was the thing with The Third Hand, that record was done before I decided to put it out. I know that’s a common experience but I started having more and more of an issue with that process. It just didn’t make sense to me to drop back into a label this time around. I had this record and was mulling over whether I should try and make it work with another label. But then on a totally unrelated matter, I went through this process of reacquiring the ownership of my masters from Def Jux so then I suddenly needed a place to distribute them. So there was another argument why I should be doing this and essentially starting a label. I look back on the fundamentals of the music industry and I think I’ve gained enough of an understanding of what gets done to release a record that I basically felt confident in on my own. I didn’t think it was going to be easy but I was confident that I was going to be able to have a handle on the decisions that needed to be made.

You just announced an extensive 2010 tour that will take place from January to April of this year. Is this the largest tour you’ve ever scheduled on a consecutive show basis? Is there any strategy or meaning behind the venues or locations you chose to perform?

This is definitely the longest. Essentially it is two weeks on and two weeks off, so I don’t do all of the dates all at once. I am able to go home in between each leg which is nice. I don’t do well when I’m away too long. That’s my threshold for being away from home, about two weeks and after that I’m ready to go back. That’s the way I’ve been formatting my tours for a couple years now. In 2007, the tour for The Third Hand was three legs of two weeks and this one is four legs of two weeks and then I go off to Europe for a fifth leg. This is definitely the biggest tour and as far as the decisions of why I chose these destinations, I just wanted to cover as many bases as possible. We also paid attention to the routing of the tour considering the weather. We did the down south stuff first because it will be in the middle of the winter and should be comfortable down there at that time.

To what extent will your live show move beyond songs from The Colossus and showcase your entire catalog?

I am certainly going to showcase the whole catalog for sure. It was a learning experience when I went on tour for The Third Hand. I have a band for this tour. When I first went out with a band, we did songs from The Third Hand album and over the years I’ve realized that people want to hear their favorite songs and there’s absolutely nothing wrong with that. So even though I’m now doing songs from Deadringer live with a band and a different format, it’s still fun doing a hybrid thing substituting the sampler with an actual drummer. A lot of these songs are also a lot easier to execute. I sometimes feel like I’m shooting fish in barrel when I revisit songs from previous albums. We can do it easily, but at the same time people don’t go to a show for the sake of virtuosity either. The artists are not there for themselves, the artist is there for the sake of the fans. So you basically want to play songs that people are going to want to here.

Will any artists featured on the album be accompanying you throughout the tour?

Hopefully the cities I visit where they live or are at the time, they will come and do their respective songs. On the whole, it’s a four piece band including myself, a drummer and two multi instrumentalists who will be playing bass, keys or guitars. I can’t really afford to take the guests on the road just to do one song, you know, I had to be realistic. But hopefully they can come out in their home towns.

What’s your take on the mainstream fame that has blown your way, being featured on Mad Men, CSI and many other media programs? I remember while I was attending University of Colorado in 2004, my friends and I viewed you, Aesop Rock, C-Rayz Walz and other Def Jux artists as part of the “underground hip-hop” scene. Now being featured in these bigger projects, it seems you sort of went outside the proverbial indie box and now are more mainstream…

Remember, I want to point out here, that you admittedly said in this that this is something you and your friends in Colorado said [laughs]…

Yes of course…

So I think that’s an important distinction that you are making. It draws into a perspective that there are these kinds of terms that we have to make up for ourselves. You’re right, saying that my records have a higher visibility now as opposed to in 2002 or 2003. With that said, none of those things that you mentioned happened because some bigwig lawyer or bigwig agent or an A&R record guy took me in and made me do it. The Mad Men guy came to me and same with Wells Fargo and CSI. All of the stuff that you mentioned came from either me or the label that put the record out at the time, saying, “Listen are you interested in this or these songs?” So, in that sense I don’t feel like there is any difference in terms of the scale or scope, but that’s not the right way to put it. I guess I’m saying I work with the same resources I did when I began and that’s how I feel about it. I don’t feel like I have any bigger guns behind me now then say, I did in 2002. That’s really just an artifact of staying around and sticking it out and making records on a consistent basis and as weird as it seems, places like Hollywood and TV Land pay attention to little shit [laughs]. It’s true.

What other projects do you have in the works for the New Year? Any collaborations or productions on your or anyone else’s albums?

All of the above! I spent a lot of time recording in the last 2 ½ years. I basically work every day on the label stuff or producing new music, so I’ve got a lot. I currently have at least one record under my belt that I want to release under another name. I’m almost done with a collaborative record with one of the guys who is on the new album. I’m really excited about that. But it’s a different kind of thing, it’s more of a traditional collaborative process where I’m doing the instrumentation and production and he’s doing the vocals and lyrics. And after that I’d like to jump back in to the mix. The next thing I’d like to tackle is to produce another record. I’ve tried to release instrumental versions of the vocal stuff like I did for The Third Hand and have a plan similar for The Colossus where all the instrumental songs get exchanged for new songs. So half of the album would be instrumental versions of the vocals songs from The Colossus and half of it would be brand new songs. So, all of these things are things that I will be working towards releasing on the New Year.



Saturday, January 9, 2010

Interview with the Kinks' Dave Davies (StayThirsty)

http://www.staythirstymedia.com/201001-041/html/201001-dave-davies.html

Dave Davies is a guitar legend. His unique sound and classic riffs have long pierced the eardrums of critics and music enthusiasts for nearly 50 years. Now approaching his 63rd birthday, Dave will be releasing a new DVD entitled, “Dave Davies Kronikles: Mystical Journey” with a complimentary European and American tour at selected venues.
Dave Davies has always been the quieter voice in The Kinks. With an often turbulent relationship with his brother Ray, Dave stepped back from the spotlight and had his guitar convey the wisdom and musical supremacy he holds within.

As I approached my interview with Dave, I had compiled a list of around 50 questions to ask him. For obvious reasons, the list was forcibly truncated, although it does show how much there still is to learn about the guitar slinger’s history and life within and around music.

I spoke with the great Dave Davies about his history with The Kinks, his influence in the music spectrum, the upcoming DVD/tour and the possibility of a Kinks reunion with his brother, Ray.

I now present, “A Well Respected Man…”



THIRSTY: As a child, how were you inspired musically?

DD: Band-wise or family-wise?

THIRSTY: Both would be great.

DD: Well…How did it all start? When I was quite a small boy there was always music in the house. Me and Ray were two boys in a family of eight children. We have a total of six older sisters. The girls were always into different types of music and there was always a variety of music present in the house. A range of stuff from Hank Williams, to Doris Day, to Perry Como to god you name it. We were open to all of this music that was constantly surrounding us.

THIRSTY: Interesting. At which particular time in your youth did it become clear that you were going to seriously pursue guitar?

DD: My first real interest in guitar formed when I first heard one of my brother-in-law’s, Mike, play while he was teaching Ray the regiments of the instrument. He had some old film of Big Bill Broonzy playing in some old stingy club. I’ve seen it since; you can see it on YouTube. He’s playing "Hey, Hey." I saw the clip, filmed in black and white complimented by shadows and the sound and his voice and everything. That kind of made me want to get a hold of the guitar. So I learned four or five chords real quickly. You know, I thought I knew it all [laughs].

THIRSTY: And what specific artists of that time influenced you musically?

DD: Johnny Cash was a huge influence. Certain genres like rock music which flaunted Buddy Holly’s guitar were so very inspirational. I adored the Ventures. So at first, when Ray and I began playing with one another, I was on rhythm guitar and Ray was playing lead. Then I learned some licks and we picked up Chet Atkins specific picking style. We heard all these guitar players and pickers really through our brother-in-law, Mike, whom I mentioned before. He had all these old records and film clips. There are so many people. We were listening to all this stuff and we just tried to copy it. I really got into Eddie Cochran and I liked the way he sang, and he looked cool and he’s a very accomplished guitar player as well. So he kind of had the full set; the sound, EVERYTHING. It inspired me to want to learn the rest of what this music thing was all about. There are lots and lots of influences. I’ve really only mentioned a few.

THIRSTY: That’s definitely a well-renowned list. So when The Kinks first eyed success, you were around 18-19. Did you know at that point you, Ray, Pete Quaife and Mick Avory had something serious brewing up? Or was it more of a garage band vibe; a bunch of kids messing around?

DD: Well, we knew we were onto something different because there weren’t that many musicians our age in the neighborhood of north London. All the musicians seemed a bit older, sort of in their early twenties. So the music was still influenced by the Dixieland and modern Jazz genres. In actuality, we were quite adventurous really. It was Pete and I who started to come together at first. Ray was playing guitar with a Blues band; they were called a Blues band, but it was more in the realm of an older generation of Jazz work. Me and Pete did all the clubs. Pete used to fix it with his friends to sneak me in through the back doors because I wasn’t quite old enough to access them yet.

THIRSTY: It seems like a dominating influence on your musical preference and inspirations drew from American Blues and Rock & Roll. How did American music find its way to you across the Atlantic to London?

DD: We used to go to a great shop in the West End of London (SoHo) called Dobell’s. There they had all the good Blues stuff, Buddy Holly and all of those musicians. We wanted to seek out these other guys who were like Sleepy John, Lonnie Johnson and John Lee Hooker. John Lee Hooker was absolutely amazing. Me and Pete used to go there during lunch time and sort through the various records. We kind of integrated the Blues things that we liked from Muddy Waters and Howling Wolf and Sonny Boy Williamson with our own preferences. It was a blend of current popular Rock and Roll, mostly Chuck Berry.

THIRSTY: Chuck Berry was inspirational? His merchandise was available at Dobell‘s at that time?

DD: Oh, indeed, he was inspirational. He had a full set of credentials; great voice, great look, he was kind of European looking. He didn't look like the black Blues guys, he had more of a European presence with the clothes he wore and his guitar sound. I remember a friend of mine, his name was Johnny Burnett of all people, he wasn't THE Johnny Burnett, he just happened to be named Johnny Burnett. His folks had moved over to England from Canada and he brought records with him. The first time he played me “Sweet Little Sixteen” on the Gramophone the hair stood up on the back of my neck. I couldn't believe it. It was a very inspiring time for a young kid to pick up music because there was so much stuff going around at the time.

THIRSTY: Besides the music, what other products of America were appealing to you as an adolescent?

DD: One of my sisters married a Canadian soldier so she used to go back and forth to Ottawa, Canada. She would bring back all her stories about America and we would all listen to them. She would speak of refrigerators and new this and new vacuum cleaners and new gadgets. So we were kind of in awe of everything American in the late '50s. Of course, especially music; there was so much.

THIRSTY: Any respectful Kinks fan knows about the conflicting relationship between Ray and yourself throughout the years. How is your relationship currently?

DD: Well, we're kind of--excuse me between sips of tea--we kind of get along alright at the moment. We get a little bit fair in our ways as we get older. Everything has to be exactly how he wants it. I find it so infuriating after all these years that he still can't give me the space I need to do the creative things I need to do to express myself as an individual. So it's always been like that. Whatever we do, good and bad, he always wants to be in the spotlight. I haven't always wanted to be followed in the spotlight anyway, but he could have given me a little more encouragement and space generally. We were both really fortunate to have had such long and fulfilling careers in The Kinks.

THIRSTY: And now let’s discuss The Kinks third single that debuted in August of 1964…

DD: Oh yes…

THIRSTY: The infamous song, “You Really Got Me.” By far, in my opinion, THE BEST guitar riff of all time. I read that you manipulated your amp in a certain way to achieve the grungy innovative sound present throughout the entire song. Can you explain the method you used to innovate that sound?

DD: The idea came to me when I would listen to John Lee Hooker. I would think to myself, ‘How he was able to get that sound?’ It's more of an edgy sound and some of the Blues players had an edgier sound. So I had this amplifier that I bought at a radio shop and the sound was so pretty and clean. It had two knobs; hand control and volume control. I couldn't get it to do what I wanted it to do. I had the sound in my head and in my heart. This inescapable feeling in me. And this amp wasn't cutting it, so I had this blast of inspiration or whatever; this idea that maybe if I cut the speakers it would sound different. So I got a razor blade and sliced all the way around the speaker, but enough to leave it in tact to the actual frame. When I plugged it in, it had this great rockin' sound and I thought, ‘I'm a little more of an inventor for this time.’ Generations since have been copying it; that sound. When we used to use it at gigs, people used to laugh at me. This silly kid, he had this really silly sound. But when "You Really Got Me" was a hit everyone wanted to know how I got that sound.

THIRSTY: Following the summer 1965 American tour, the American Federation of Musicians banned The Kinks from touring in America for the next three or four years. How did this affect the band, missing crucial American festivals, and how did the ban come about?

DD: I think it was a management chalk up, something in the background. We were not a very professional band. Our managers were a bit green around the ears. The whole thing was so naive and I think we just ruffled a few feathers, important feathers. I don't know, I never did get to the bottom of it, but it was something with the Unions and someone pissed off someone. We didn't realize the Unions were so huge in America, they ran everything. So they brought it down on us for three years…we missed Woodstock and that stuff.

THIRSTY: Are you able to look at that situation in any sort of positive light? A sort of, “Make the best of what’s around” scenario?

DD: I think looking back; it was good in another way because it made us turn inward and self-reliant on each other. Made us turn towards family. Everybody else was trying to get away from their family. It seemed like in my generation, the kids ran from the old people. My mom, dad and sisters were very supportive of our playing and writing. It kind of shaped us in a different way.

THIRSTY: The 1967 album, “Something Else By The Kinks,” included only one song that scored major UK chart success. This song entitled, “Death of a Clown,” was written by you. Did this moment ignite your motivation to go onward with solo work, seeing that your creative content proved to be successful on its own?

DD: I did. One of our managers suggested that I go solo. I felt quite uncomfortable with it because I was so used to being in a family; in a band which was like an extended family. Then going out and touring all over the world, with the fans, that's another part of the family. So I didn't want to be stuck out there on my own. I like the cooperation and camaraderie of being in a group. My heart was in the group really. Ray was very much into analyzing things. Trying to build up his craft, his solo. If I was in the right mood, I'd always write something. The more I thought about it, the worst it got though.

THIRSTY: In 1968, The Kinks released their sixth studio album, “The Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society.” It failed to conquer sales, however, it was greeted positively by American and European rock critics. Upon returning to America, this being one of the more recent albums, how were you received? Where did you first perform post-ban?

DD: When we came back? I think Boston was the first destination. I always remember Boston Tea Party used to be a great gig. I don’t know if you remember that, I don’t know how old you are Jarrod?

THIRSTY: Not quite old enough to have seen that gig, but I wish I was…

DD: You must be a bit of a historian. So I assume you know of the Tea Party venue?

THIRSTY: Absolutely.

DD: I remember that we played Boston a lot and New York. This was a different America though; screaming girls at gigs and most noticeably, young people were really uncertain about the future. Kids were getting killed and tortured in the war overseas. A very different America we went back to.

THIRSTY: So after the ban was lifted, and The Kinks returned to the United States, they produced a new album, “Arthur (Or the Decline and Fall of the British Empire).” This album focused on themes around “family” and “childhood.“ I read that your sister, Rosie, was a major influence for the album? Is this accurate?

DD: All of our sisters had a big influence on us growing up. We were privileged for growing up in such a loving and encouraging environment. If you wanted to try something out, you were allowed the space to do it. But I think Rosie’s influence was more on Ray. He was a bit of a difficult kid; I would ignore him most of the time. I think Ray was rather somewhat of a sad kid. I think he was difficult. Rosy was the one, she was the oldest, and she was the one who thought she could shape him differently.

THIRSTY: In November of 1970, my favorite Kinks album released; “Lola versus Powerman and the Moneygoround, Part One.” This album contains the track, “Strangers,” written by you, and is the most beautiful song I’ve ever heard…Can you speak about this track?

DD: Oh thank you, I love that song. The background is that Hank Williams had a great sense a humor. It was a bit morose. I always remember one of his songs, he sang a line [singing] “I’ll never get out of this world alive” [sings]. It was a great Hank Williams tune. Not that you should know, it’s an old great Hank Williams tune. Sorry that wasn’t that great of singing. I hope it improves before my next gig [laughs].

THIRSTY: No, it was perfect Mr. Davies. Please continue…

DD: Well that line was always stuck in my head. That’s how I came out with one of the first lines I strummed out in Strangers, "If I live too long, I’m afraid I’ll die." It was kind of inspired from that funny line in the Hank Williams song. Then I started to write about and old friend of mine at school named George Harris. We were dear friends. Actually, George and I were going to start a band, but he got too heavily into drugs and it kind of pulled us apart. The drug thing was like a three-way affair. He died of a methamphetamine overdose. They found him departed…he was young. I always felt it was going to be me and him. I didn’t think at that age that it was going to be me and Ray. So I really kind of wrote it to him; “Strangers on this road we are on, we are not two we are one“. It was like, what might of been if he hadn’t died so tragically.

THIRSTY: The Kinks have been influential to musicians and groups since their inauguration. Bands such as Van Halen, The Pretenders, the Smashing Pumpkins and many more have covered Kinks songs either live or in studio. Is this complimentary? To hear your music done by other artists?

DD: Not really. I thought it was great in the sense that imitation is the finest form of flattery. The Van Halen version was good; the guitar solo was bit a showoffy, it sounded a bit sort too accomplished. “You Really Got Me” was made by a bunch of kids quickly, because if we hadn’t of done it quickly we would have been thrown out of the studio. It’s a very different attitude when you play the two versions next to each other. I still like Van Halen’s version though.

THIRSTY: Were you ever asked questions surrounding the songs’ authenticity? Meaning did any fans of the 1980’s who hadn’t done their homework ever ask you why you cover Van Halen’s “You Really Got Me?”

DD: [laughs] In the ‘80s, when we were playing big stadiums in America, yes some younger people would come to the show and say why are the guys playing that Van Halen song? [laughs] They didn’t connect the dots who came first. And again, yes, I think Chrissie Hynde (Pretenders) was also very influenced by The Kinks like so many people were. The Violent Femmes and I became very good friends years later.

THIRSTY: In the ‘80s you began you “officially” began your career as a solo artist. What launched this urge to do so?

DD: The thing was, I wanted to make a solo album I was happy with and not one that the record company wanted me to do. And it wasn’t really until the late 1970s that I felt like I wanted to do really it. I felt mentally, inspirationally and emotionally better equipped to write about something I felt was important. And that’s when I started to create the songs that became part of my first self-titled solo album in the early 80s. This is how I evolved as a person and a musician.

THIRSTY: The Kinks were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1990. How did it feel to finally be recognized as one of the all time best in music?

DD: It was fantastic. I tell you it was a bit funny at first after all these years of not being in "the club" and being pushed aside. It seemed rather strange that all of a sudden we were included in something. In a way, it was nice but I don’t know if I wanted to be here anyway [laughs], you know? So there were mixed feelings really, but it’s always nice to be appreciated.

THIRSTY: The Kinks broke up in 1996. What was the reason behind this breakup? Did you want out?

DD: I thought the band, as it was prior to us breaking up in ‘96, was the best sounding one we've had for years. People were involved. I smelt something was up because Ray started doing his own shows, and he would also do some ten minute acoustic solo before we went on. I was beginning to get pissed off with it. Then sometimes it would go up to twenty minutes. One night I went out into the audience and shouted out while Ray was doing his acoustic thing, "Oh look at me I’m wonderful, oh I’m such a troubled artist. Surely The Kinks deserve a better opening act than this!!” His agent wanted him to do some solo stuff and it was in fact Ray that left the band. Obviously The Kinks can’t exist without both Ray and Dave. He really wanted to do it, I wasn’t going to say he couldn’t. It helped me in a way because I got my stuff together and got a band together and began touring and recording on my own. I think I wrote some really important songs during that period. It was a really important time for me.

THIRSTY: You have a DVD release and tour approaching in early 2010, correct?

DD: I do have a DVD being released in February of 2010 in the States. It will probably coincide with the release in Europe as well. It‘s titled, “Dave Davies Kronikles: Mystical Journey.” It's a DVD that has new music in it and some old key songs like “Death of a Clown.” I’m very excited about this. We will do some key shows around New York and LA around that time in February to promote Mystical Journey.

THIRSTY: So now the final question that is on everyone’s mind; Will we ever see a Kinks reunion, or a Dave and Ray tour anytime soon?

DD: I’ve spoken to Ray various times. The sad thing is that I’d like to do something with him and The Kinks, but Ray wants to control everything. In his heart of hearts, he’d like to own everything. He believes The Kinks is his. He wants to be The Kinks and I think that’s a very selfish way to look upon it. Of course, he’s written amazing songs and we’ve been part of a collaboration, which I think was so important. However, there is something in him that won’t allow me or give me the room to express myself and my ideas. To be fair, I’m sure he would admit that he wouldn’t have a career if it hadn’t been for me. The same way I wouldn’t have if it weren’t for him. We all learned together as musicians and writers. He wants everything and it’s sad. There are some things that we have to mutually agree for this to ever work. The Kinks are not The Kinks without Dave Davies and, of course, they’re not without Ray Davies. So you need Ray and Dave to make it work. There are some very simple things that I’ve asked him to address, but he is always changing his mind. He'll agree to something and then when push comes to shove he’ll change his mind on it. It’s kind of sad that he won’t address these things and these are things that I need. With that said, I’m still sure me and Ray will work on something as The Kinks once again.

THIRSTY: I’m definitely looking forward to that. Thanks for your time Mr. Davies, and good luck with the upcoming DVD and tour.

DD: Thank you truly, Jarrod