September 8th, 2006
From: http://www.melodicrock.com/interviews/sammyhagar.html
Sammy Hagar: The Evergreen Rocker Lives Life Up.
Sammy Hagar talks passionately about his new album Livin' It Up, touring,
his lifestyle and bar, everything Van Halen, plus more on Journey, Planet
US, Montrose, Michael Anthony and then some more Van Halen. Enjoy!
Sammy Hagar is one of a handful of artists that heavily influenced my
desire to start this website. My desire was to speak to like minded people
about music that inspired me and through Sammy's work with Van Halen and
as a solo artist; some of these tunes are among my most treasured.
For whatever reason, it has taken me nearly 10 years to connect with Sammy
for an interview. But I got my interview! With personal thanks to Tom
Consolo at Azoff Management and Sammy's publicist and indeed Sammy
himself, my long awaited interview is below.
Sammy was in top form, passionte as always and was happy enough to shoot
overtime to continue chatting with me. This is definitely one of my
favourite interviews while running this site and I hope it is the first of
more to come.
While I didn't quite have time to run through 10 years worth of questions,
I think we did manage to cover a lot of ground during a 20 minute
interview that eventually blew out to nearly 45 minutes.
Over to Sammy....
[Sammy's publicist connects me through to Sammy...]
Andrew, Sammy here.
Hey Sammy, how are you doing?
I'm doing pretty good.
What can I do for you Andrew?
Well, it's a great honor to speak to you finally Sammy. I have been
running the site 10 years nearly and you are 1 of only 3 interviews that I
have never been able to do yet. Until today in this case.
Well, here we go!
I'm rapt to get you on the phone finally...how ya doing?
I'm pretty beat I gotta tell you. I must admit. I just finished a tour and
it was the most grueling tour and the most rewarding tour I have ever done
in my life.
I had Michael Anthony and The Other Half out there with me...so I did two
shows per night basically. I played an hour twenty with my band, about an
hour ten or twenty with Mikey and sometimes we'd screw around and do an
encore.
I started out with two hours and fifty eight minutes, then the next show I
went down to 2.52 and then to 2.48 and it stayed right around between 2.35
and 2.45. And it wore me the fuck out...hahaha...If I may be straight out
honest!
Haha. I actually have one of the set lists in front of me and it's
amazing.
Yeah, we did so many different sets too. I don't know...which list do you
have?
New Jersey, Homdel I'm looking at.
Pretty close to what we did...hahaha. But every time we'd get bored with a
song we'd change 3 or 4 songs a night and towards the end we started
getting a little more radical with it.
Cause. Like I said...the Wabo's -- we have a set list -- but we don't go
by it. Haha. So everyone says 'well, they don't have a set list'. No no,
we have a set list -- we just don't use the fucking thing. We use it as a
reference.
Well, that's rock n roll isn't it?
Well, it keeps me alive out there. You know, if I had to do the same show
every night, um...jumping around. That was the hard thing about the Van
Halen tour. We were not able as a band to ad-lib and change it up too much
because in order to play a Van Halen thing you have to rehearse for a
month per song. So we had to do the same show every night, you know. I'm
telling you, after 40 shows I wanted to commit suicide and we did 80! I
was just going man...I started looking at it as an exercise. Ok, I'm going
to go out and get a 2 hour aerobic workout.
I'll come back to that, because there's a couple of questions regarding
that...
I'm sure.
Haha... "I'm sure" haha...do you go through any interview without those
questions?
Haha.
It's hard at my age for as long as I have been doing this to go out and
just do a show. Like most people would say the opposite. Like anyone who
has been doing this as long as I have most of the time would say 'it's
much easier to put a show together and you just go do it.'
But then it's like a job...well I don't like to work to start with. I hate
work. So 'a job' is a bad word. I like to play music and have fun -- every
night. I like to throw a party and in order to do that you have to go with
how you feel and how it feels between you and the audience.
You can't do a sterile show otherwise...I hate it...I wouldn't do it. I'd
rather go mop the same floor every night; you know...it would be the same
thing to me.
I gotta have fun and throw a party so my way around that is by changing it
up every night and it works.
And your shows seem to becoming more of a party each and every year.
Yeah they do. It's the reason...it gives m a reason to do it. Otherwise I
would be saying this isn't fun anymore.
For it to be fun you gotta make it fun and I make it fun...for the people
and for myself. I honestly have a blast out there. I go out -- I get fired
up before the show. My band and I, we all do a couple of shots of tequila
before the show...Mikey does a lot more than that...but...hahaha....we try
and keep it to one bottle per show. And we go out and just honestly start
having fun...goofing off, changing it up. I love to keep the band on their
toes. They love it when I change it -- it keeps them on their toes.
The way my drummer says it -- by the third song, if I haven't changed the
song yet, it gets harder and harder to get off the hook. As soon as I
change the song up and throw him a curve, he gets off the hook and the
show goes...and we all have our little quirky things that make the show
work for us.
For me it's half the amount of tities I see by the first...if I haven't
seen a nice pair of tits by the first four songs, I go 'this ain't
working, I gotta kick it up a bit.'
You can't go out and beg for that stuff, it just has to happen naturally,
so you have to create a good enough party for that to happen.
It sounds like you are! I hope you can bring it down under sometime
soon.
Well, we just finished the tour and I'm whipped. So we are not going to do
anything for a little while, but I want to so bad.
I got good news -- the tequila -- the only country I am launching it in
outside of the USA and Mexico is in Australia by the end of the year.
Fantastic.
A company called Infusions Solutions -- they have infusions.com.au. They
are going to distribute my tequila. I can't make much more than we make as
the demand is too heavy for America. It's like, hand made...I can't make a
million cases. We are only sending about 6000 cases over for the whole of
Australia. I assume that'll be gone in the first day...hahaha.
Haha....you know we like to drink down here.
Yes we do!
You had a great time here in 96 or so...I flew over to see that show.
Awesome.
Well, I gotta tell you. The band has changed. We are the same band, but we
have changed so much since then that it's not even -- those were great
shows -- but I had just left Van Halen and I was really more keyed in and
focused on the artist side of things. 'I want to be an artist; I don't
want to be a heavy metal artist'.
I wanted to shed the Van Halen thing and I was kinda of like a person who
was trying to rebel against his parents at the time.
Now, where we have come...all that has gone and the band has developed
into who and what we are.
The reason I bring up the tequila thing -- it gives me a double reason to
come over. The distributor is going to want me to come over and promote
the tequila and I'm going to want to come over and promote what I do. It
all works the same.
It goes hand in hand doesn't it? Even more so with the new album
lyrically. Let me ask this question -- is Sammy Hagar now a lifestyle?
Completely! With this band or without this band I would be the same now. I
really have found the type of life that keeps me energized and happy and
puts a smile on my face and keeps me from being pissed off. It's pretty
much beach all day and dance all night.
I like the whole Cabo lifestyle. I like the weather, the beaches, the
sand, I love my house I have there and I love my bar. Haha...I may as well
have wrote that song...haha...I really do love my bar.
Having that down the street is just one of the greatest things in the
world. Sitting around the house at night -- 9 o'clock, 10 o'clock -- you
are sitting there thinking 'fuck, I don't feel like going to bed...I can't
have any more sex...I have watched all the TV I want to. I'm going down to
my bar!'
And you go down there and jump on stage and play, throw down some tacos,
do a couple of shots of tequila. To me it doesn't get any better than that
and it is an awesome luxury.
It doesn't sound much better!
If you find it, please let me know! I'm open minded, I haven't closed my
mind, it's just that this pretty much gets me off at this time in my life.
That's awesome. You have a fantastic fanbase who are largely
supportive. But not everyone is going to come along for the ride. Do you
find that some people just don't get it?
Oh yeah...especially with this record. Ever since I have kinda been doing
this lifestyle thing -- bringing the beach on tour basically. I have
always said that not everyone is going to get it. And I'm ok with that. As
long as I don't lose my fans and even some of those fans don't like this
record because of the country element -- I've got two or three country
songs on there.
But it's ok. But what they have to realize is that I am not a one record
artist. I am not a one haircut artist. I am none of that stuff. I am
always going to change and I'm going to bring it to you. I'm going to
bring you something that I think is cool and something that really
interests and thrills me and that is the type of artist I am.
If you expect me to come out in the same clothes I wore the last time --
it ain't going to happen. Other than my little goatee and my hair a little
bit longer -- I'm kinda liking my hair long...getting a hair cut is like a
pain in the ass. Getting hair down your back on a hot day...oh, get outta
here!
Other than a few little quirky things like that, I am pretty much...I am
really a changeling...I'm always looking for something new to turn my fans
on to. And not all of them always get it.
Like some fans say 'I like it when you turned me onto tequila, but I'm not
buying the country trip'. Fine...I'll find something else for you.
But I'll guarantee you -- I will keep find something things to throw at
you. I'm not going to be pigeon holed. I want to keep my fans happy but
even the ones that might be pissed off about this record because maybe it
isn't heavy enough for them, they're going, 'well, we'll wait...we'll go
see Sammy live', cause they have to have that!
I've made it an addiction for my fans -- they have to have that...a little
taste of it. They'll fly down to Cabo if it's the only place they can get
it.
Sure. Is this album a bridge to where you are going?
I'm not sure. I'm not sure where I'm going with my music. I really don't.
I tend to keep getting more and more rootsy I think and my roots are
blues, country, soul and rock. Rock is forth believe it or not. I did not
start out playing rock; I started out playing blues and R&B.
When I was going back -- my first musical experience with my father was
listening to Hank Williams. And then Elvis Presley came along and my big
sisters went with that, so that's really country/rockabilly/blues. So
those are my roots and they are really starting to come out even deeper on
this record.
You know, something could happen in my life -- like I could go see a band
-- a wild example could be some extreme far-out free jazz form band and
that would blow my mind and completely set me on a new track.
I'm open like that...I'm one of those people that loves music and loves
style and all that stuff. So anything could happen, but right now I'm just
kickin' around the beach...haha.
Yeah, well...you have just got this record out. So we shouldn't
pressure you about the next one yet!
Oh no no...you can do what ever you like. Haha...I'll just go take a walk
on the beach and forget about it all.
Fantastic.
No this record I think is my best song-for-song songwriting I think. Some
of my most honest.
I was going to say something along the same lines. It is a very
passionate record isn't it?
It really is. I built the studio... When I went on tour with Van Halen I
rebuilt my studio -- I had it at my house and I took it out and put it in
a warehouse and really built a studio inside a studio. It is like an air
studio -- it is completely suspended and my band, while I was gone for
that year with Van Halen, The Wabos - they went in that studio every day
with producer Bob Daspit, the engineer and just worked on sound.
Vic went through all my old amps and my old guitars and his collection and
he just tried everything. And when I came back those guys just had that
place sounding so freeking good I was so motivated to just go in there and
just be myself and just let it all go and nuts -- not even think about who
I was supposed to be and I really go wound up in it man, I really got
wound up in it.
I love this record!!!
It really sounds like you do and I must say that I haven't heard vocals
from you so strong and clear since I don't know when.
Yeah, and it wasn't laborious whatsoever....I walked in and I'd just sing
these lyrics as they were so close to what I was really feeling and doing
with my life and...even the silliest song on this record - The Way We
Live.
Sure!
It is strictly written about my fans sleeping out on the sidewalk at Cabo
Wabo and they asked me to write a song about it -- so I did.
But, no one else is going to get that just like you said and if anyone is
going to dog me about this they are going to say 'now what's he singing
about? Sleeping on the sidewalk... Is he homeless or something?'
It's so personal and so inside, but most of the songs are like that, so
they were so easy to sing with complete passion and conviction.
Song style aside, that comes through loud and clear and it does sound
like you like and breathe the record. Personally I'm digging it and I
can't put it on and not be happy.
Yeah, that's what it's for. If you wake up in a bad mood -- put this
record on, it will change that. If you wake up unmotivated saying 'I
really want to work out but can't get motivated' -- put this CD on and
crank it, you'll be in the gym in 5 minutes.
You'll be headphones walking up the mountain or on your bike fucking
blasting down the road.
It really has that all in there because it's pure outdoor, night life fun.
You're either going dance and put a smile on your face or start making
plans -- 'You know what, I'm gonna call up so and so and see if they want
to go to the beach today.'
It is the manual to a good time and to a lifestyle. And I'm in love with
the record.
Sammy, I have 10 years worth of questions here so I don't know how many
I'm going to get to ask you!
No, go ahead.
<coughs> Sorry, I'm coughing like crazy here.
No worries at all, I'm much the same...its 7 in the morning here. Too
early!
Oh, Lord...I'm sorry, I feel bad for you.
No no no...I'll do it at any time. Happy to have you on the phone!
Ok, well shoot man, you can ask me anything you like.
Ok, so jumping to Van Halen then. Do you get tired of being asked about
the band in I guess every interview, being that everything is kinda on
hold?
No I don't get tired of it. The truth of the matter is, Van Halen -- one
of the greatest rock n roll bands in history --
Absolutely.
No question about it. My era...Dave era....all of it together it
fucking....you can't get much more rock n roll history than that.
It's a shame that it is not functional anymore. The last tour was
really....I spearheaded that; I really wanted that to happen. I said this
has to happen.
I heard Eddie had been sick with cancer and I said, you know...if this guy
dies and we never do this, it's gonna be a shame for everybody. For the
fans, for the band, just for rock n roll and history.
So I pushed for it to happen and it really wasn't a good time.
I wish I would have waited or tried to do it sooner. I don't know which
would have been worse or which would have been better.
But if it had of gone great, then Van Halen could have been together again
and I could have had my band on the side.
But as it turned out, my band is my band now and Van Halen is my side
project.
And unless something really changes, it's going to stay that way.
Yep.
And not because that's exactly what I want, it's just not user friendly.
It's not any fun to be around Eddie, he's not a fun guy to be around. He's
just really angry and I don't know why.
Cause, it's like 'Hey dude, what's your problem? You've got everything
anyone could want...', but he wants more. He doesn't want to share the
spotlight...he doesn't want to share the creativity anymore. He doesn't
want to be a band; he wants to be a solo artist. And he used to say that
about me and here I am a fucking solo artist!
But I keep saying he is the one that wants to be a solo artist. He wishes
that he and his brother could just go out by themselves and not have to
deal with other people so that he can just do what ever he wants.
Well, that's where I get confused. Why doesn't he do that then...why
don't both of the brothers just get out there and do that?
Well...first of all -- in the band Van Halen, Eddie always did whatever he
wanted, I did what I wanted, Alex did what he wanted and Mikey did what he
wanted.
But then Eddie started saying, no no, I want Alex to do what I want him to
do.
You know, on that Gary Cherone trip, he played drums on a few songs.
C'mon! Fucking do a solo album! Not this when you have a drummer like Alex
Van Halen.
And he sang lead on a song. My God! Am I gonna let this guy sing? That'd
be like me saying 'Eddie, I'm going to play lead guitar on that song
instead of you.'
It's not going to be as good, you know, but he just wants to do everything
and tell everyone what to do and he's fucking crazy. So it's not very easy
to say 'oh, that's a good idea'.
If it was a good idea that'd be easy, but if it's just some harebrained
cockamamie thing that he doesn't even remember what he said 5 minute
later...I'm not going to sit in the studio all night trying to do Eddie's
solo trip with my voice.
It was tough.
Those last three songs we recorded -- I could have recorded three albums
in that amount of time.
Yeah, I was going to say that while they are ok songs....they sounded
labored. They didn't flow or have that spontaneous Van Halen vibe.
Man, it was hoarse brother. I went in and Eddie had spent 3 weeks on a
guitar part and I'd come in and do my vocal in 2 hours. And it would be
done.
Now, you can make fun of me all you want and say 'Yeah, you should have
spent more time on your vocals...they could have been better -- fuck you!'
Hahaha.
It was as good as it could be though. Especially under those
circumstances, I just tried not to be around the guy.
He was miserable.
Thank God for the producer, he really made things bearable. He kept it
together.
That tour would never have happened if it wasn't for Glen Ballard. He got
me in and out before Eddie and me would get in a fight. And then the tour
-- same thing.
Two airplanes and all that. If someone could really see what went on
behind the scenes, not what happened on stage....and sometimes that wasn't
so hot either.
But you would go -- 'Oh, I understand why Sammy doesn't want to do it.'
Plus, if they want to do it -- if Ed wants to do it or Alex wants to do
it. If Ed wants to do it, all he has to do is call us up and say 'Hey, I'm
sorry about what happened before, let's try this again.'
I'd give it a try, but it would have to be a little bit different.
There were a lot of reports of Eddie drinking heavily on tour.
He was pretty out of it the whole tour. There were nights when I didn't
even know what song he was playing. Nobody else did either. We just stayed
on the same song while he stumbled around the neck of the guitar.
And he is the most brilliant guitar player in rock history. Certainly one
of them...right up there with Jimmy [Page], I don't care what anyone says.
I think Eddie is as innovative as Jimmy or anyone else and together we
wrote some of the greatest songs in rock history and with Dave they wrote
some of the greatest songs in rock history.
So it's all been done. I don't want to go out there and bury the goose. I
would sooner leave it alone and say let this thing go down as one of the
greatest thing.
I don't wan to keep going out there and butchering it.
But I wish we had of hit Australia.
Same here!
We obviously didn't leave the country...haha.
Probably a good thing, right?
Yeah! It's a long flight to deal with someone on an aircraft.
It sucks!
We had our own airplanes... Ed and Al had a plane and me and Mike had a
plane, because the times we tried to fly together it would almost be a
smack the windows out of the plane kinda vibe.
They couldn't put us on a commercial airliner all together...not for 8, 10
or 12 hours!
That's the worst thing about living down here.
It's a ways!
Jumping to the 5150 album -- the 20th Anniversary of the album being
released this year.
Oh that's right.
What an amazing record!
Yeah, that's a great record. That was Van Halen! I think For Unlawful
Carnal Knowledge is the best record, that's my personal favourite. But
5150 was the most high energy rock n roll record that we made with me in
the band. It was just magic.
We made that album in 4 weeks! It was done, thank you, goodbye, thank you
-- written, record and mixed. That's a good example of what the band could
be when everyone is just letting each other just do their thing and
everyone comes to the table with their thing and you just get in a room
and pow!! It's just instant...those were the good days.
And you went from 4 weeks on that record to nearly a year on Carnal
Knowledge.
Yeah. That was kind of intentional. That was our agreement with Andy
Johns, the producer...that we wanted to make the definitive Van Halen
record and we were getting along pretty good then.
But I'll straight up say it -- the only problem with that record was that
we were a little bit lazy - we had so much success and we were having such
a good time.
Fucking Eddie and I were out buying new cars everyday and racing them down
Pacific Coast Highway, you know, having a good time and not wanting to go
into the studio and work as much.
So the reason that record took so long was mainly because of that, but it
was a great record in the end.
I love it. I kinda move between that and 5150 as my favourites,
depending on the day of the week. Amazing records.
Is there ay chance of your records with Van Halen getting the remaster
treatment like they did with the Dave era albums?
I would think so. I would think that it is not as necessary though as the
Dave records were as they were from a different era.
They were records...vinyl and all that and they were mastered on vinyl, so
they had already been mastered for CD, but I don't think the technology
was up to par.
Yeah.
To where we started -- 5150 could probably use it, but Balance man...shit,
that was hot...about as good a technology as you could get. That record
sounds phenomenal.
So I don't think that it is as necessary and that's probably why they
haven't done that.
But that stuff doesn't mean anything to me...I'm kinda a vintage guy. I
like things to be what they are and what they were and just leave them
alone and move on.
To keep fucking around with that old stuff and trying to re-sell it to the
fans, that takes a little bit of a cheap shot.
But that's what broke the band up in the first place -- the first Greatest
Hits record. It wasn't all that did it, but it was the icing on the cake.
To me I'm not into going in and recording two new songs...and that last
venture with the Best of Both Worlds package -- I was all for trying to do
a whole record, but three months later I'm going 'Man, we haven't even
finished three songs dude...you want to tour, let's go tour. You want to
make a record, go call someone else.'
I wasn't going to spend all that time in there.
I can understand that. And now Eddie's off doing his adult movie
soundtrack work now.
I think that is just his way of, like I said...trying to be a solo artist
and trying to do it undercover.
But he needs to get out and do it. I'm all for him doing anything. I think
he should go out and tour -- find a little band and go out and play...just
jam and be crazy and save Van Halen for Van Halen. Van Halen - that's
gotta be four of us...or rather me or Dave, I don't give a shit. It's just
gotta be four people getting along and playing music together and making
the music together. Not about the way Eddie is trying to do it now.
It will never work -- he should just go out and be a solo artist. Go jam,
go play, go make a record...shit I'm all for it. That's what I'm going to
do. That's the way I do it -- 'ok, that ain't working, I'll go put my band
together again you know.'
What's with Eddie and Alex Van Halen jamming with Kenny Chesney??
That's your gig!
Well, Kenny's my good buddy and they know it. When I took Michael Anthony
out on tour I think it made them feel insecure, you know, 'we've gotta
make a statement.'
So Kenny Chesney comes to town, they call up management and said we want
to come and jam...just to show that they are not sitting at home doing
nothing I guess.
I was the strangest thing...Kenny called me after that and said, he goes
'Oh my God dude, how did you do it?' Hahaha.
Oh no!
It was just the craziest wackiest thing for them to do that! Why wouldn't
they have gone and jammed with some rock people or something? It just
didn't make any sense whatsoever, but Ed and Al don't always make sense.
Ok, so any chance we might one day see Van Halen touring with both
Sammy Hagar and David Lee Roth?
Oh no! So there you would throw another monkey wrench into the fucking
brew! I don't ever see that happening.
That was my dream -- to try and make that happen from the last Sam &
Dave...when I took Dave on tour with me -- the Sam & Dave tour.
That was my whole reason for doing that -- 'perhaps Dave and I will become
friends, we can buddy up and then we'll go hit on the brothers...and we'll
have a great time.'
The fans deserved that. But oh no...but I'll tell you ...right now, David
is more user friendly than Eddie.
Oh dear. People within the industry often have colorful descriptions
when talking about Dave.
He's wacky man...he's as wacky as a motherfucker...but at least you know
what you get. With Eddie, he has become wacky. He used to be this sweet,
great guy. He was my best friend, my next door neighbour, but he's turned
into this monster.
But Dave's always been crazy. So at least you know what you are getting
with Dave.
Dave cracks me up. He can't let the Van Halen thing go. His newest CD is a
remake of the old Van Halen songs. I don't get it...'C'mon Dave, come up
with some new shit, go freshen yourself up...'
His live set list is mainly Van Halen.
Yeah, it's 25 year old material...20 year old stuff whatever it is. C'mon
man, he needs to get over the fact he's not in Van Halen anymore. Or maybe
he should be...maybe that's the ticket.
It's just a shame that Australia -- the only Van Halen tour you got was
the Cherone tour.
I saw it and it wasn't pretty.
Yeah, Gary's a great guy, but that was so far removed from what Van Halen
is all about. It was too bad we never got over there. But it's not over...
Andrew -- it's not over until it's over.
I'm ready. I'm fucking ready. My chops are up -- I'm out there singing and
playing better than I ever have in my life and I can do it -- anything
that comes along I can do it.
And I'm open minded to doing it if it could be fun. Take the fun out of it
and you lose me. I go with the fun.
Again, I don't know when you are going to pick up that phone that keeps
ringing and end the interview, so I'll jump to some other questions
quickly!
Well, I think times ran out...these last three phone calls have been my
publicist trying to hook me up with the next interview...haha.
I'll give you one more Andrew -- take your pick!
Thanks Sammy. Thank you mate...I appreciate the extra time. I just
wanted to talk about another guitarist -- a friend of mine and a friend of
yours -- Neal Schon.
Oh, he's awesome.
I'm sorry Planet Us didn't work out as I dug the two tunes that I
heard.
Yeah, that could have been a great band, but as you well knew, I couldn't
come out and say it at the time, but the Van Halen reunion was coming up
and I couldn't have three bands!
I didn't want to take these guys down that road and then leave them high
and dry.
So I had to pull the plug on that early -- especially with a guy like Neal
who the second you tell him something, you may as well have told you!
Hahaha...yeah!
But Neal's a great player...probably one of the most underrated guitar
players around because he is as good as anyone, but he never gets the
credit for inventing anything or you know.
But Neal goes back to Santana for God's sake! And here you are with a guy
like Carlos Santana who is a legend himself -- you are not going to get
much credibility there.
And so you know, Neal since then it's just been such a commercial ride
with Journey -- but Journey is a great commercial band.
Oh absolutely.
They got big because they were so fucking good. They made such great
songs. It wasn't because they were hit makers...they created those hits
through just great musicianship and great songwriting.
Neal has never gotten his due and probably never will, but he's an awesome
guitar player.
What do you think of their decision to go with Jeff Scott Soto as
vocalist, standing in for Steve Augeri.
I think it's really too bad for Steve as he is a great guy and he meant
well. But he got so hung up on trying to be Steve Perry that I think it
took him down. Jeff's a great singer...Jeff's the real deal. Jeff's
himself...he sings like Jeff Scott Soto. He doesn't sing like somebody
else and that's what they needed all along because the rest of the guys in
the band are that talented -- that good.
So I think it will turn out to be a good move, just too bad it happened so
late...and too bad for Steve, cause Steve did a great job filling in for
Steve Perry for so many years, because that's what he was doing.
Now maybe Journey can reinvent themselves.
Jeff's a friend and an amazing singer.
Completely.
Montrose Sammy?
I think like Van Halen, Montrose for me is too retro...I can't go back and
do an album. Every year I try to do something with Ronnie and Phil and
Denny...you know, we've done it for a few years in a row, and it's
great...but it's best to keep it like that.
But to say I'm going to put Montrose back together and go out and do a
major album and major tour -- I can't do that.
It was a great band...really really a great band. But I'm just so
different from that now.
You have recorded one lead vocal for his [Ronnie Montrose] new album
haven't you?
That's right -- and it's a cool song -- Colorblind. We co-wrote it just
like the old days. Thank God it wasn't like the old days though...haha
Ronnie and I put all that shit to rest and we've grown up and it's awesome
to go out on stage and play with those guys. Denny Carmassi is one of the
greatest drummers on the planet.
Wonderful drummer...
I love that guy -- one of my best friends, three of four times a week we
speak on the phone or see each other. So it's all good. But I don't see
that band getting back together and being valid in the world today other
than just being some old band just trying to do it again. I'd rather just
be this old guy that's doing it some other way.
4 old guys...there's nothing worse than 4 old guys! One's ok, but 4!!!
Haha. You are doing well Sammy.
Just quickly if I can -- Michael Anthony -- his interview with Burrn
Magazine was one of the best and most open and honest interviews I have
ever read.
I wanted to get your take on that -- gutsy of him to come out and just
tell it like it is.
I think it's about time.
Mike has always been the guy that Ed and Al kept their thumb on. And Eddie
really was not good to him on the last tour. And I fought for him and if
it wasn't for me fighting for him, they would have done the tour without
him.
I said 'I will not do the tour without Michael Anthony. It is either going
to be the four members or I'm out.'
Yes.
So I forced Mike into the band and by doing that, they were really really
not cool to Mike. And Mike is the greatest fucking guy on the
planet...he's one of the greatest bass players on the planet... one of the
greatest background vocalists on the planet and he's valuable.
And to treat him like shit I don't get it. I don't fucking get it.
So I'm so happy for Mike that he stood up and went out and said 'Look man,
I'm just going to tell it like it is and here's what's going on.' And
that's the way it is going to be from now on.
Now that could be another part of the reason why there will never be a Van
Halen re-union, cause I'm certainly not going to do it without Mike and
they may not want to talk to Mike after that.
I thought it was an amazing interview...I had so much respect for him
already, but after I read that, I was like -- wow, you rule Mike.
You know Andrew....the bottom line is that everyone can sit here and say
'Oh he's the problem, that guy's the problem', point your finger at
everybody...the bottom line really is that the Van Halen machine doesn't
work well anymore.
If it did, I would be the first guy there saying 'Hey, this is a great
band, I want to be part of this.' And I do want to be part of this, but
not when you can't. I don't know what happened to Ed, but he's a changed
dude.
If you ever do an interview with him, more power to you brother.
I'd actually love to do an interview with Ed.
I really hope you do get to interview this guy. When we did the reunion
and we did the new record, as much press as we could have got -- if you
noticed, you never saw...very little interviews... never saw us on TV,
never heard Eddie on the radio unless someone called him at 4 o'clock in
the morning and hope that he answers the phone.
Haha...sure.
Ok, that is because Al is the smart brother and the good brother and he
keeps that fucker out of the press. Because man, anyone that gets hold of
that guy is going to get an earful.
I understand. I'm up for it!
Haha....ok man, this is my other call I gotta take it.
Ok thanks Sammy for the extra time, I really enjoyed talking with you.
I appreciate it.
Ok, adios Andrew, bye.
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