Tell Me :  Talk
Talk about your favorite band. 

Previous page Next page First page IORR home

For information about how to use this forum please check out forum help and policies.

Goto Page: 12Next
Current Page: 1 of 2
GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: MRambler ()
Date: October 6, 2011 21:10

GQ

By Dylan Jones

Guitar god, heavyweight hedonist... literary lion. After 50 years in the Stones, Keith Richards this year sealed his status as rock's greatest survivor with his memoirs, Life. And what a life. Candid, clear-eyed and as addictive as its author's personality, it's arguably the greatest-ever rock'n'roll read. Here, Keef riffs with Dylan Jones on rolling back the years and an unexpected GQ award.

Keith Richards has a face that conjures up many things. When he walks into his manager Jane Rose's downtown Manhattan offices, it strikes me that he looks like a slightly ruined country house, with a leathery and runnelled face. As I shake his hand I'm thinking that this is probably what WH Auden would have looked like if he had worn leather trousers, or a cape. In different dress, Keith could also pass for an Afghan tribal leader, something that would probably please him.

We are meeting today, in early June, to talk about Keith Richards winning this year's GQ Writer Of The Year award for Life, the autobiography he crafted with the help of his friend James Fox. Life is probably the best rock'n'roll memoir ever written, easily as good as Bob Dylan's Chronicles: Volume 1, but six times longer. It is the result of painstaking research (140 people are thanked in the book, many of whom Fox interviewed in order to fill in the hulking great gaps in Keith's memory), an eye and an ear for detail, and the 67-year-old's engaging way with an anecdote. Oh, and it is also one of the greatest rock'n'roll stories ever told, ever lived. Which is probably why the book has been so monumentally successful.

It's all here: sex, violence, drugs, myth-making, the character traits of some of the world's most famous people, and, of course, the truth about the ancient art of weaving. While it is written chronologically, it pinballs all over the place just when you least expect it, painting a believable, vividly colourful picture. There are some especially evocative passages about London after WWII, passages that go a long way to establishing why Keith ended up as "Keef".

The thing that struck me most when I first read it - and indeed, reviewed it at the time - was the refreshing way in which Keith discussed his monstrous drug-taking: not in a self-congratulatory way, but in extremely matter-of-fact terms. There are fascinating descriptions of what it's like to exist on heroin, extraordinary passages outlining his motivations for being under the influence, and wonderful accounts of Keef using drugs as though they were gears.

Keith and I chatted for two hours, in a suite of offices full of Stones paraphernalia: a doll based on his character in Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World's End; a poster advertising the Martin Scorsese documentary Shine A Light; piles of tour T-shirts; acres of gold discs; a signed poster advertising their infamous 1972 tour; imprints of Life; a Diamond Award presented to Jane Rose in recognition of Hot Rocks 1964-1971's 12 million American sales; and a huge painting of the world's greatest rock'n'roll guitarist, memoirist and raconteur. As we talked, I was overwhelmed by a very odd sensation, one I rarely experience: this, I thought to myself, is a privilege.

Dylan Jones: Keith, we share an agent, the man you've rechristened Ed "F***ing" Victor. Did you do a beauty parade of agents for the book?
Keith Richards: No. Ed was the person I wanted. Obviously, I drew up a shortlist, but it was always Ed F***ing Victor! And then he went to work on it, which was amazing. I wasn't involved in the business end of it, but Ed did everything and more that was asked of him. And I have to tip my hat constantly to James Fox for the way it was put together. They're my stories, but the way he crafted them, I couldn't have written it that way myself.

Up until Life, Bob Dylan's Chronicles had set a new bar for rock autobiographies...
That was the other thing I couldn't go through, trying to outdo somebody else's. Everybody's got a different way of telling a story - and has different stories to tell. But Chronicles was fantastic. That was the benchmark. When we started, I told James a few school stories and said this is what I remember. But within a week, James had found the guy I was talking about, and got the confirmation that this story would hold up. After that, I started to get more confidence in my memory. I mean, it's been pretty fried.

Why did you decide to do the book?
The Stones had just finished the last tour, having been away for three years, and I knew there was going to be an inevitable gap where we would all be sitting around thinking about what's going to happen next. And the idea came up just at that moment, and it seemed the perfect thing to keep me occupied. It just seemed the right point in the story so far. And then other things fell into place and I knew that I had a couple of years to do it, basically.

What did you want to achieve with the book?
I just wanted to tell it from my point of view, and the incredible escapades we got involved in. It would be enough for most people's lifetimes if just one of those things happened to them. But I wasn't expecting the incredible reception that it's got. It's got me into a semiliterate area - people thought I was just a moron. I've actually got to like critics in the last year! It's like, "Wow, thanks pal, let me buy you a drink!" I thought they were going to drag me through the mud, as I'm used to that, but in actual fact it sort of elevated my opinion of myself. I don't want get big-headed here, as I always play myself down, but I've been pleased. To me, my biggest fear is getting a big head, and that is when I get the hammer. Because it's very easy in this game to believe you're something special. Just look at Brian Jones - he died from it.

You've been fairly transparent about the partnership between you and James, and that's earned you a lot of credit.
I couldn't have told the story without him. In some uncanny way he captured the strength and breadth of the story. I've been friends with James for years, so he was used to my rhythm of speech. It helps that he's also a very good blues guitar player. So when I'd run out of ideas or taped the stories, we'd sit down and play some blues. But it's weird to drag through your whole life, because in the process you're actually living the damn thing twice. As we went on I was shocked by thinking, "How did one guy go through all this?" And then I realised it was me! It put my past into a more coherent perspective. Before doing the book I'd look upon my life as incredible, disconnected episodes, and in the process of doing the book I managed to make sense of it. When I finished I felt more exhausted than after three years touring with the Stones. I felt a weight had been lifted off my shoulders.

What did you learn about yourself writing the book?
That I'm a much meaner bastard than I thought. But at the same time, I realised how much friendship had meant to me, and how much my friendship had meant to other people, which I hadn't thought about before. This is the rock'n'roll life, and you had to invent it as you went along. There was no textbook to say how you operate this machinery. You didn't know you were always walking on the edge of disasters, and there's nobody to turn to and say, "How did you feel?" because no one had been there before. It was very exciting. Still is, in a way. There are loads of things people wish I'd done, and some things I wish I'd done! You become a cartoon character, and I can play that to the hilt, and I know that people have come up with a great story and they go, "He didn't do it, but if he'd thought about it and he'd been there, he would have done it."

You were the rock'n'roll blueprint.
I hope so, and it's very nice of you to say so.

You're also very self-deprecating in the book...
I've slowly grown into that. When you're supported by millions all over the world, you can either go nuts, or try to feed off the goodwill. I always felt that it was my job to give back to them as much as possible. I want to make better records, better shows. So it's about reciprocation - there are millions of fans, and if you get that feedback, especially from an early age, it's indescribable. It's the same with the Beatles, John Lennon in particular. It's something you have to handle all the time. I've never taken it for granted. I just happened to be at the right place at the right time.

You spend a long time describing London after WWII.
Even though my memory of the war is pretty much nonexistent, as I was only 18 months old, I still had a sense of sirens and collective fears. But as you're growing up in the Fifties, you're thinking this has got to change, it's too tight, the atmosphere, it's too restricted. The others running the joint want us to go back to the Thirties and we can't. And I guess as I was reaching the age of 15, 16, you've got the energy and you're bursting to escape. Plus, I fell in love with blues music, and that was where you found roots and a form of expression we didn't have in England. But as I was growing up, my mother was listening to a lot of Billie Holiday and Ella Fitzgerald... You hear things on the BBC, and then you start to bump into other guys who are into it, too; you realise it isn't just you sitting in a council flat. There are other guys out there listening to music, and somebody's got a new record from America and you're immediately at their house. You bring a bottle of beer - that was your entrance fee - and you sit around and listen to records, which is nuts but it's beautiful. It was very innocent.

Were there parts you really didn't look forward to writing?
I really didn't want to go through and remember the death of my son. You spend a lot of time trying to bury that kind of s***, not bringing it up again. That was the hard one for me, to relive that. You don't forget s*** like that.

In the book you describe using drugs as gears. What gear are you in these days?
I'm pretty much in neutral.

How many stories couldn't you include?
There were a lot for legal reasons. Especially concerning families who didn't even know that one of their relations was a drug dealer. A lot of my friends were very well brought-up boys, and I wouldn't want to upset the family just to name somebody. Everybody was experimenting and everybody was a pirate, especially in those days. In the club subculture, actually in every sort of culture, there are some very interesting people down there, but it's a great leveller where you find out who's one of our people or who's full of s***; who would stick by your side in a tough situation, and who would rat you out. It's not the most pleasant world to be in, but I do think it's kind of necessary to keep one foot in the gutter.

Why?
Because I never trusted the pavement.

Has this given you a taste for doing a bit more writing?
Yeah, there is talk about that, but basically I want to get the Stones back together and give it one more bash. I think they've got it in them. But it's about timing and an awful lot of very careful diplomacy.

Mick didn't love the book, did he?
Mick was obviously a bit peeved, but that was yesterday and this is today. We're two guys divided by life.

Did you read Ronnie Wood's book?
Well, I think he tossed it off. Even Ronnie would admit that. Ronnie's got a much better story to tell than that book, that's all I can say. Charlie's book is the one I really want to read.

You haven't glamorised being on the road.
It actually wasn't a very glamorous life; it was a lot of hard slog, a lot of hard work. We were taking care of two hours on the stage and the rest of it; I wouldn't wish it on anybody.

How do you feel when you go back to Britain?
It's the only place in the world where I feel like a tourist, just because of the obvious changes. I always feel like a stranger, but I'm sure if I stayed there for a year that feeling would disappear. It's just that I'm not there a lot. But I do love the old country. Get me down to Sussex and you have to dig me out.

Six months before the book came out I bumped into David Remnick, the editor of the New Yorker, and all he could talk about was your book. He said that he was hoping you were going to explain the open G tuning. Which you did!
I'm amazed by that part of the book, and how much response I've got from the guitar players of this world. It's so difficult to put on to the page how you play an instrument, and I was amazed by the fact that I can, and I apparently made it fairly comprehensive. It's got a lot of tips in there, and that was the one difficulty for me and James - I didn't know how to put it into words. I know you have to do this and put this there, but on the page that will look dopey. But the translation worked.

And is there going to be a movie of the book?
Yeah, there are feelers out at the minute. I'm in no rush right at the moment. Also, how are they going to find me? The idea of a succession of Keith Richards coming down is horrifying. Maybe when I'm dead and gone they can make a movie of it.









Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 2011-10-06 21:16 by MRambler.

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: Cocaine Eyes ()
Date: October 6, 2011 21:36

Thanks kindly for posting this! Honest, to-the-point, "Keef". smoking smiley

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: Justin ()
Date: October 6, 2011 21:45

Keith's Checklist for Any Photoshoot:

1. Knife
2. Cigarettes

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: gwen ()
Date: October 6, 2011 21:46

Thanks a lot.

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: 71Tele ()
Date: October 6, 2011 21:49

"I'm in neutral"...At least he's candid. I, too, want to read Charlie's book.

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: Erik_Snow ()
Date: October 6, 2011 22:10

Quote
Justin
Keith's Checklist for Any Photoshoot:

1. Knife
2. Cigarettes

And during the 90s and 2000s - also; an apple was needed

It could had been a lot worse.....a plate of porridge and a big spoon, for instance

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: open-g ()
Date: October 6, 2011 22:16

Nice read, thanks for posting.

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: MRambler ()
Date: October 6, 2011 22:23

Quote
Justin
Keith's Checklist for Any Photoshoot:

1. Knife
2. Cigarettes

3. Sneakers

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: dcba ()
Date: October 6, 2011 23:07

Quote
MRambler
Quote
Justin
Keith's Checklist for Any Photoshoot:

1. Knife
2. Cigarettes

3. Sneakers

... but no guitars!

Thx for the read! thumbs up

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: Kirk ()
Date: October 7, 2011 01:41

Mick didn't love the book, did he?
Mick was obviously a bit peeved, but that was yesterday and this is today. We're two guys divided by life.


Does he mean 'Life' the book?

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: Rolling Hansie ()
Date: October 7, 2011 01:54

Great read. Thanks for posting

-------------------
Keep On Rolling smoking smiley

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: chelskeith ()
Date: October 7, 2011 02:10

Charlie's book.

Haha, Mick Taylor will rejoin the band before that happens, unless it's his sketch book of hotel rooms for charity or an instruction book on playing drums...

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: stonesrule ()
Date: October 7, 2011 05:33

Keith would shiver in his shoes if the crew wrote a book.

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: Send It To me ()
Date: October 7, 2011 05:34

What is this "one more time" crap? How about three or four more times?

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: Title5Take1 ()
Date: October 7, 2011 05:42

Thanks for posting. Interesting interview. I read they've already cast the Keith Richards movie, and Keith will be played by Nathan Lane. (Little joke there.)

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: October 7, 2011 13:37



......Keeeeef there's a friggin' dove there in the smoke .... How'd ya do that man??? ........peace



ROCKMAN

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: Rolling Hansie ()
Date: October 7, 2011 13:40

Quote
Rockman
a friggin' dove

Indeed. Cool

-------------------
Keep On Rolling smoking smiley

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Date: October 7, 2011 15:00

Yes to Keith dismissing Ron's book(s). I don't know if Ron has a book to write. He certainly has been around a lot, a lot of interesting people too. But does he himself has something interesting to say about it all?

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: novica ()
Date: October 7, 2011 15:12

Quote
Rockman
......Keeeeef there's a friggin' dove there in the smoke ....

great eye Rockman !
cheers smileys with beer


Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: Cafaro ()
Date: October 7, 2011 18:11

many thanks for posting.

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: mccparty ()
Date: October 7, 2011 19:07

Quote
Rockman


......Keeeeef there's a friggin' dove there in the smoke .... How'd ya do that man??? ........peace

I also see that the arthritis has not slowed down. Bummer.

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: thabo ()
Date: October 7, 2011 19:08

Keith says; "..and I knew there was going to be an inevitable gap where we would all be sitting around thinking about what's going to happen next."

That's Keith for the last 20 plus years "sitting around" for what is going to happen, instead of thinking about what "we are going to MAKE happen" and than ACT. Because things don't just happen, you have to make it happen like Jagger does. You can't just sit around letting others arrange it all swelling oneself in past glory, a fisherman is as good as his LAST catch Keith.

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: 24FPS ()
Date: October 7, 2011 21:46

Petty bastard still used the platform to take one more kick at Brian's corpse. Guys like Keith don't understand that cutting down the defenseless only drags his own image down.

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: LillithFlair ()
Date: October 7, 2011 21:55

Quote
24FPS
Petty bastard still used the platform to take one more kick at Brian's corpse. Guys like Keith don't understand that cutting down the defenseless only drags his own image down.

Seriously. Lord knows Brian had some major demons but Keith is hardly a saint by comparison. I liked Keith, faults and all, a lot more before this book to be honest. Instead of seeming honest he came across as a petty, self aggrandizing, grudge holder.

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: Rip This ()
Date: October 7, 2011 21:57

Quote
24FPS
Petty bastard still used the platform to take one more kick at Brian's corpse. Guys like Keith don't understand that cutting down the defenseless only drags his own image down.


I agree it was a little jolting....but then he comes up with this romantic, magnificent, literate, and simple sentence of "We're two guys divided by life".....and you have to stop a second or two.....gifted.

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: lettingitbleed ()
Date: October 8, 2011 00:24

Brilliant. Much thanks and praises for posting.

Nice to see that in reading "Life", even Keith sees himself coming across as a miserable Bastard.

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: proudmary ()
Date: October 8, 2011 00:48

Quote
Rip This
Quote
24FPS
Petty bastard still used the platform to take one more kick at Brian's corpse. Guys like Keith don't understand that cutting down the defenseless only drags his own image down.


I agree it was a little jolting....but then he comes up with this romantic, magnificent, literate, and simple sentence of "We're two guys divided by life".....and you have to stop a second or two.....gifted.

"We're two guys divided by life" - another shitty one-liner, prepared in advance.
By the way, diplomacy would not be needed if he had not peeked into Jagger's pants

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: Title5Take1 ()
Date: October 8, 2011 01:16

I'm fascinated Keith was interviewed by the Stones' bass player. Oh, wait, a few letters make a difference, don't they?!tongue sticking out smiley

I did roll my eyes at the question/comment: "You're also very self-deprecating in the book..." I liked the book, but Keith's recurrent "Alpha male" self-labeling was hardly modest.

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: nocomment ()
Date: October 8, 2011 08:04

Quote
Rockman


......Keeeeef there's a friggin' dove there in the smoke .... How'd ya do that man???

Advanced spiritual practice. Here's a beginner: Great interview, thanks for posting.

Also, just saying, there are some excellent tutorials online about how to photoshop cigarette smoke.

Who cares really, just so long as its a message of peace he's exhaling.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 2011-10-08 08:18 by nocomment.

Re: GQ: Keith Richards interview
Posted by: bob r ()
Date: October 8, 2011 14:09

Great pics ! The one where he's sitting at the table, he looks like Beethoven !

Goto Page: 12Next
Current Page: 1 of 2


Sorry, only registered users may post in this forum.

Online Users

Guests: 1706
Record Number of Users: 206 on June 1, 2022 23:50
Record Number of Guests: 9627 on January 2, 2024 23:10

Previous page Next page First page IORR home