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- Two Heads Talking
-
- David Byrne in conversation with Timothy Leary
-
- [INTRO]
-
- TIMOTHY LEARY: I was fascinated when you said that when you
- were young you wanted to be an artist or a scientist. Later you said
- that both were manipulated by greater powers. What do you mean by
- that?
-
- DAVID BYRNE: At a certain point I went through a period of being
- disillusioned. When I was younger in school I had this indoctrinated
- idea of science being this noble calling_ all just wonderful ideas and
- great inventions. And the same with art. They both seemed to be in
- the realm of creation and incredible ideas and exploration. And later
- on you find out that they're being manipulated by whatever-all kinds
- of politics-whether it's art politics or government or economic politics
- or whatever_
-
- TL: I agree. I'm pretty cynical after 71 years of living and 5 years in
- prison. But I've been shocked to really confront the articulate
- engineer/philosophers like Prof. Marvin Minsky of MIT who
- arrogantly flaunt their lust for control and power. Their admitted goal
- is to reduce human beings to robots. Because machines are efficient.
- Is that what you were getting at_ that you were running into that
- disillusionment?
-
- DB: In a way. And also that the kinds of investigations and
- experimentation wasn't free- flowing. It was directed in some ways
- and it was subtly nudged in ways that people hoped would produce
- desired results.
-
- TL: Absolutely, no question of that. Behind it is the Newtonian notion
- that there is an objective fact, whereas quantum mechanics, quantum
- physics: it's all movie; it's cast is changing, it's re-forming, it comes in
- clusters, it's not linear. And you don't study anything_ you set up a
- situation and you record it_
-
- DB: And you follow the pattern. People now are accepting that, but
- as you said the language and the ingrained ways of thought and
- dealing with things are based on quantification of everything and
- everything being mechanistic.
-
- TL: The nice thing about art though is this: In the evolution of human
- culture that it's the artists that push the envelope and innovate and
- create the future.
-
- DB: The artists are always the ones to show a precursor of what's to
- come. They always know what's going on ahead of time_ every big
- movement it seems.
-
- TL: Most scientists today are grimly Newtonian. These MIT engineers
- don't practice Einsteinian or relativistic or quantum psychology. They
- are the most manipulative group of people in the world.
-
- TL: So the higher power you thought about back then-when, like me,
- you were idealistic-was that these scientists were pursuing truth at all
- costs. Like Galileo they'd face the inquisition and go down; like Bruno
- they'd burn at the stake. Bullshit. I went through that. They are
- agents of the Military Industrial Complex that runs and ruins
- America.
-
- DB: But I suppose like artists there are a few like that few and far
- between. It's the exceptional ones that push into something else where
- they don't know where they're going.
-
- TL: And it's so tied to getting grants and institutional power.
- Government and University politics_
-
- DB: That sounds true for a lot of artists too, unless they're someone
- who works just on paintings or something they create themselves. If
- they want to do something larger that requires more people or more
- money, they're tied to grants and institutions and they have to go
- through all that rigmarole.
-
- TL: So what are you doing these days?
-
- DB: I've finished this record. It incorporates more of the stuff I did
- with Talking Heads and everything I've done since then, and I think
- I've pulled all that together in a kind of organic way and put it in one
- record.
-
- TL: It's a tremendous record. For those readers who haven't heard it
- yet, it includes everything that is bouncy and cool and fresh about the
- Talking Heads. And then there's the Latin beat. And the voice
- changes you go through. You also manifest a sure command and
- magisterial control. Much confidence. Elegant and funny.
-
- DB: You can get a lot across with a little taste of humor.
-
- MONDO 2000: With this turn in your music which really impresses
- me is the diversity of all your previous works, from early Talking
- Heads to late Talking Heads to The Last Emperor soundtrack to this
- Brazilian stuff_it's hard to read what's coming up next with you. How
- do you decide what mood you're in every time you put an album out?
-
- DB: I guess it's intuitive_what seems to be there_what's in the air and
- available. There doesn't seem to be any plan.
-
- TL: I mention you in every lecture I give, because you represent the
- 21st century concept of international global coming together through
- electronics. How did you get into that?
-
- DB: You mean working with different cultures?
-
- TL: You produce Brazilian and World Beat albums. You win an
- Oscar for a Chinese soundtrack. You compose a symphony , The
- Forest.
-
- DB: It seems that post-WW2 with television and movies and records
- being disseminated all over the globe, you have instant access to
- anything anywhere almost. But you have it out of context,
- free-floating. And , people in other parts of the world_India, South
- America, Russia_they have access to whatever we're doing. And they
- can take what they need and leave the rest. They can play around with
- it, they can misinterpret it or re- interpret it. And we're free to do the
- same thing. It seems to be a part of the age we live in, that that's a
- unique thing about this period, that there is that kind of
- communication, even though it's not always direct communication
- with people in different places_it can lead to direct communication if
- you follow through.
-
- TL: The young Japanese particularly. Read those Tokyo youth
- magazines! They pick up on everything. Rolling Stone is like a little
- village publication compared to these Japanese mags.
-
- DB: They're very Catholic in that sense.
-
- M2: If you look at the most popular teen music magazines, 90% of it
- is all international_from America, Germany, England, it's amazing
- how well they can sense what's going on in the world.
-
- TL: What is your image in the Global New Breed culture? How are
- you seen in Brazil?
-
- DB: I think I'm seen mainly as a musician who some people have
- heard of_not a lot, but some_but who they discover has an
- appreciation and a love of what the Brazilians are doing. And
- sometimes it's kind of confusing for them, because some of the things
- I like are not always the things that the critics like. For instance, some
- of the records I put out on this little label_like a fojo(sp?) record,
- music from the Northeast, and even some of the Samba stuff, is
- considered by the middle and upper class and intelligentsia to be lower
- class music. It would be like listening to Country and Western or rap
- or something like that here. And they find it a surprise that this quote
- sophisticated guy from New York might like this lower class music
- instead of their fine art music. But sometimes it works in a strange
- way; it makes them look again at their own culture and appreciate it
- where they'd ignored it before. I guess in a way that the Beatles and
- the Rolling Stones and Eric Clapton and all those people made a lot
- of young Americans look at Muddy Waters and Howling Wolf and
- those people. It makes them look in their own backyard and see what
- they've got there. I'm not doing that intentionally, but it has that
- effect.
-
- TL: The Europeans did that for jazz too.
-
- DB: Right. A lot of jazz musicians can make a living, can gig and play
- in Europe where they can't find a place to play here.
-
- TL: The sixties with rock æn' roll was very hard on jazz musicians,
- and I spent quite a bit of time in voluntary and involuntary exile in
- Europe, and it was filled with jazz musicians who were able to gig and
- to be admired there more than here. What music do you listen to?
- Who are your favorite musicians now?
-
- DB: I remember the last Public Enemy record I heard was just
- amazing_ just this dense collage with a lot of real thinking and
- philosophy there. And I listened to the last Neil Young record; I have
- some records from Japanese groups, and Brazilian stuff and Cuban
- stuff_all the stuff we've been putting out on the little label.
-
- TL: Tell us about this label: Luaka Bop.
-
- DB: I put together a compilation of songs by important Brazilian
- artists a couple of years ago, and after I started with that I thought,
- This could be an ongoing thing. And I thought, Well I may as well
- have an umbrella that it goes under so that people might start to see
- the label and identify it and make them check out what it is. It was
- kind of a practical thing in that way. And then we're slowly getting
- into a greater range of things. In the future we're going to release a
- record_ soundtracks for Indian movies, and an Okinawan pop group,
- and a duo from England that sings in English_ that will be one of our
- few releases where the lyrics are actually in English.
-
- TL: How many records have you produced on this label?
-
- DB: Six or seven. Not that many. I'm actively involved in their
- coordination, but as of yet I haven't really been involved in the
- recording of the music. For the most part it's been presenting things
- that are already done that are languishing somewhere.
-
- TL: Marshall Macluhan would be very happy with that
- too-globalization. So what about your symphony, The Forest?
-
- DB: It was originally done for a Robert Wilson piece, and the hope
- had been-it didn't come to pass-that we would take the same story and
- he would interpret it for stage in his own way, and I would do it as a
- film. We would use the same music that I had done_and the hope was
- that we present them in the same city at the same time. So you could
- see two vastly different interpretations of re-interpreted ancient
- legend. It was updated in this case to the industrial revolution in
- Europe. The story was partly the Gilgamesh legend. I found that it is
- the oldest story we know.
-
- TL: Cosmology and immortality.
-
- DB: And it was written in the first cities that were ever built. And,
- oddly enough, it deals with the same questions that came up today and
- that came up in the industrial revolution when cities were expanding
- at a phenomenal rate, and industry_it deals with what it means to be
- in the city, in the country, what it means to be civilized versus
- natural_not in an overt way, but in a story kind of way it brings up
- those kinds of things. So it seemed to have a resonance that seemed
- really current, but it's old as you can get.
-
- TL: And yet you got the industrial stuff there and that's very modern_
-
- DB: Yeah, it seemed you could throw it all into the same pot and it all
- fit.
-
- TL: The older I get, the more I see everything in stages: I have to start
- with the tribe and then the feudal and then the Gilgamesh and then
- the industrial_but that's what impressed me about the sounds of
- yours. There's always the body African beat there.
-
- DB: It's part of our culture now, it's not something foreign now. It's
- something we have been inundated with. The Africans that have been
- forcibly brought here have in a way colonized us with their music,
- with their sensibility and rhythm. They've colonized their oppressors.
-
- TL: Michael Ventura explains how the Voodoo tradition came from
- Africa says the same thing. And I wrote an article about the Southern
- vegetables and us going into the Southern cultures and grabbing the
- sugar and coffee and bananas_the industrial people go down there and
- build factories, and they get counter-colonized by the music and the
- food and the psychoactive vegetables. That happened with the British
- in India_
-
- DB: In a subtle way it changes people's ways of thinking; it changes
- the possibilities of what they could think about, what they could feel.
- And they're not always initially aware of what's happening to them.
-
- TL: What happened to the plan of the two performances?
-
- DB: Wilson had the money in place to do the theatre project, so that
- happened, but the film when I did a budget of it ended up being too
- expensive. But we got the music done and that was fun.
-
- TL: And where was it performed?
-
- DB: In Berlin, New York once, and Munich, maybe a week.
-
- TL: Where did you do the New York one?
-
- DB: At BAM, at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in æ88 or æ89. But
- the music was not performed live. It was done on tape. There was
- more music than what I released. So I went back and re-edited it and
- squashed it down and made it so it would stand on its own rather than
- being background. I need a little bit of distance from it to be able to
- do that.
-
- TL: I spent some time today watching your video, Ileayie_
-
- DB: It's about an Afro-Brazilian religion called Candomble. Ileayie
- in Uruba, an African language, roughly translates as the house of life
- or the realm that we live in.
-
- M2: The Biosphere I_
-
- DB: Yeah, the dimension that we live in rather than the other possible
- existing dimensions. It was done in Bajia(sp?) in the city of Salvador,
- on the coast of Northeastern Brazil. It's mainly about an African
- religion that's been existing there since slavery times and has mutated
- and evolved over the years to the extent that now it could be called an
- Afro- Brazilian religion that contains a lot of African elements. The
- ceremonies, the rituals consist of a lot of drumming, people
- occasionally go into trance, offerings are made, occasional sacrifices
- are made, altars are made_it's an ecstatic religion, it feels good, it's for
- the most part joyous.
-
- TL: I've never seen so many dignified, happy human beings in any
- place at any time. For over 90 minutes the screen is filled with these
- stately, queenly, older black women_
-
- DB: Yeah, it's very joyous and regal in a way. When the drums kick
- in and the dancing kicks in it's like a really hot rock or R&B show.
- When the music hits that level where everybody tunes into it, it's the
- same kind of feeling.
-
- TL: That's what religion should be. That's the essence we want
- religion to be. And it's not all joyous. At times there's a sternness, and
- at times a sphynx-like trance to it.
-
- DB: It deals with acknowledging and paying homage to the natural
- forces. And some of those are deadly and some are joyous and some
- are dangerous and some are life-giving. That's the flux of nature, and
- to me the religion acknowledges both the ups and downs of it.
-
- TL: Also you said that the aim of these ceremonies is to bring the
- orixas_deities who serve as intermediaries between mortals and
- humans and the supreme force of nature. Tell us about that.
-
- DB: When the vibe is right somebody gets possessed by one of the
- gods. There's a pantheon of gods like in ancient Greece or Rome. The
- god is said to be there in the room, in the body_so you can have a
- conversation with him, you can dance with him_so god isn't up there
- unreachable, untouchable_it's something that can come right down
- into the room with you and you can dance with it or ask questions
- directly to the god.
-
- TL: The great thing about the Greek gods is that they had human
- qualities_
-
- DB: These as well_they can be sexy, jealous, vain, loving, whatever_all
- the attributes of people.
-
- TL: William Gibson has written about Voodoo. And he has many of
- his Voodoo people talking about the human being as a horse, and that
- the god comes down and rides the human being_
-
- DB: That's the Haitian metaphor_the horse_it's the same idea.
-
- TL: The healer, the warrior, the mother bubbling_one after another
- these archetypes of characters or natural forces_basic human
- situations, roles_
-
- DB: The nurturing mother or the warrior man or woman, the sexy
- coquette_
-
- TL: The wind seductive female warrior_ that's Yarzan_to tell you
- readers about the tape, David and the editors have every now and
- then English sub-titles so you know what god or goddess is being
- evoked. You must have had many shoots.
-
- DB: Yeah, we cheated and shot a lot of stuff and put it together to
- make one ceremony that presented as much as possible.
-
- TL: You couldn't have all those gods in the same room! The Shango
- justice woman with the axe would be going after the_it's obvious you
- put it together that way.
-
- DB: Yeah, it was a film device to show a little bit of everything.
-
- TL: It worked very well. Then you would have small screen, partial
- screen clips.
-
- DB: That was a way of showing simultaneous things from another
- time. Like if you saw an offering being made, we could show in a little
- corner of the screen what went into the basket. Or if you saw one thing
- happening there we could cut to something that was kind of the
- equivalent in a box, and you could see them simultaneously and
- maybe kind of intuitively pick up some of the connections without
- someone coming on the screen and telling you. You can just pick it up
- in the same way you do with music. You lose some things, you don't
- get everything, but you get the feel of it. That was the intention
- anyway.
-
- TL: There was one powerful moment that confused me. That's when
- a man dressed as a Catholic priest came and was almost violent in
- saying something about false prophets.
-
- DB: The African religion is periodically being persecuted by the
- Catholic Church, by the Protestant Church, by the government. They
- go through waves of being recognized and persecuted and going
- underground and coming back up again and being recognized and
- pushed down again_
-
- TL: That's happened to all of us; I know the cycle well.
-
- DB: So that was a scene from a fictional film there dramatizing the
- persecution by orthodox religion.
-
- TL: You wrote it in_
-
- DB: It was something I found in a Brazilian film. It was an example
- of recent persecution, so I thought, Let's throw this in_
-
- TL: That's a very powerful moment because I felt that you didn't
- orchestrate that_it was authentic, as your friend here would say.
- [points to a book] Would you comment on this book?
-
- DB: The guy who organized this was an artist named Joseph Kasuitt
- who's most well- known for art that looks like your shirt.
-
- TL: The shirt I'm wearing, is Anarchic Adjustments. The front reads:
- "Ecstasy." And on one arm it's got Egos In, Egos Out.
-
- DB: Joseph Kasuitt would have a definition of a word and just frame
- that. He invited me to be part of this exhibition in Japan where the
- idea was to create art with a fax machine. I thought that sounded like
- fun. I did something sort of the equivalent of the seven deadly sins. It
- didn't exist; I collaged it, sandwiched it in the fax machine, and it
- came out the other end. And then they took the fax and blew it up
- giant-size, the size of a painting. What happened when it was
- transmitted, rather than receiving it on paper they received it on
- acetate. So the acetate then became a photo negative. They have fax
- machines that can receive on other materials, and then they can blow
- it up to whatever size they like.
-
- TL: Yours is upside down (off the record) and you've got all these
- collaged bodies with arms and legs and tits, and I couldn't figure it out
- until I turned it rightside up.
-
- M2: So were you sent two different faxes and they just merged them
- together?
-
- DB: Yes, I put the characters on top of a photographic image and
- sandwiched them together and sent it into the machine.
-
- TL: You said in your autobiographical note here that you're gradually
- emerging from racism. Do you want to comment on that?
-
- DB: After years of telling myself I'm not a racist, I'm a liberal, I'm
- free-thinking, I started to acknowledge that I have these reactions that
- I'm not aware of, that I didn't look at before; things that have been
- bred into me, not necessarily by my parents_maybe by the society, by
- the system, by television_and that it's a real job to get rid of it. You
- can't just blissfully say, Everybody's equal, everybody's nice. The
- conditioning is so powerful that you have to work all the time_
-
- TL: It's invisible; racism is the water through which we swim.
-
- DB: And you have to tread water to stay up there; otherwise you're in
- it. You have to go against the flow to rise above it. So it's
- acknowledging that in some ways I'm trying to deal with it, but it's
- not going to happen overnight. It's not something you can announce
- to yourself and all of a sudden you're clean and pure.
-
- TL: It's continued awareness and reminding yourself. It's interesting
- that this comment of yours comes at a time when politics in this
- country is totally racist. The Republican party is now flat-out the
- white middle class party. The Willie Horton advertisements, the
- nomination of Thomas_they're all just straight out Apartheid. They
- hardly deny it anymore. They trumpet their racism. How do you
- account for that? Why is this happening in America?
-
- M2: I think Reagan had a lot to do with it.
-
- DB: He got elected by a landslide, and I wonder what buttons was he
- pushing?
-
- TL: The racism was there; he just pushed the button. The KKK
- fellow, Duke_55% of the white people in Louisiana voted for him.
- Another landslide. White people would have elected him.
-
- DB: Although he didn't get elected, at the same time it says there are
- an awful lot of people who would have elected him, and it's gonna
- make a lot of tension there. In a cynical way I kind of welcome it. It's
- going to polarize things and show things for what they really are. So
- there's not going to be this bland face_ (end of side 1)
-
- DB: There's this Herzog documentary, Herdsmen to the Sun, where
- he did a thing about an African tribe where the young men come of
- age. They compete with one another for girls and for honor, and the
- way they do it is they get themselves up in what we would call
-
- drag: eye make-up and lipstick and the whole deal, not Revlon #5 or
- anything, but their own version of that. And they pose and primp and
- it's kind of beautiful ritual and very confusing to us who have rigid
- ideas about what it means to be a man_
-
- TL: The North/South dimension has been very important in your life.
- There's this concern with East/West-America vs. Russia, and now
- America vs. Japan. But North/South is the basic genetic_
-
- DB: You mean, it's the HAVES and the HAVE-NOTS_
-
- TL: But as you say, most intelligent, thoughtful Northerners
- understand that we pay dearly in losing what the Blacks preserve.
- Your videos catch the richness of life and nature and animals and the
- flow and the contact with the gods.
-
- DB: It's something we all need to work out. I mean they'd love a VCR
- and a car with a cassette player. There's a balance somewhere.
-
- TL: Well, I see the industrial age as a stage, a very tacky, messy
- awkward stage of human evolution. We had to have the smoky
- factories, and we must mature beyond them. I was very touched by
- your comments about your symphony, The Forest. You were trying
- to acknowledge the romance and the grandeur of the factory
- civilization even though it was fucking everything up.
-
- DB: My up-bringing and my instinctual reaction says that this stuff
- sucks. This has created the mess that we're in. But you're never going
- to find your way out of the mess unless you can somehow, like the
- Samurai, identify with your enemy. And become one with your
- enemy, and understand it, or you won't be able to truly find your way
- out of the maze.
-
- TL: The Soviet Union is a great teacher about the horrors of fire
- power machine tech. You see those grizzled old miners and the
- smog_they come out of the deep, sooty, hellhole mines with their faces
- black_On the other hand, there was a grandeur to it, and you simply
- cannot cut the industrial part of our nature out because it has brought
- us to this room where we can use machines to record our
- conversation. That's something that I find interesting in Japan, which
- is the perfect machine society. There's not much pollution there; you
- never see any filth on the street.
-
- DB: No, it's cleaned up pretty quickly. You get scolded for tossing a
- can out your car window_I've seen people get scolded for not washing
- their car! It's a matter of honor or face.
-
- M2: And nothing is old there. I didn't see one car that was more than
- 4 years old or with a dent in it.
-
- DB: That's taking LA one step further.
-
- TL: OK. Cut! Change subject. When are you going to make another
- movie?
-
- DB: I'm having the ubiquitous LA meetings.
-
- M2: How about more True Stories?
-
- DB: No, John Goodman's on to other things now. I have a few ideas
- that I've been talking to people about.
-
- TL: That was a great achievement that movie. It was a very original
- eccentric film. I remember the opening scenes of the highway. Again,
- your performance is authentic. You've got a lot of fans of that movie.
-
- DB: It was fun to blend fact and fiction.
-
- TL: Have you experienced Virtual Reality?
-
- DB: No.
-
- TL: But you've heard about it. How does it strike you?
-
- DB: It strikes me as being not another reality, but maybe a kick in the
- head that will turn you around a bit, a perceptual twist that will give
- you a new way of looking at things.
-
- TL: I'm very involved in it. Basically, the average American household
- passively watches television 40 or 50 hours a week. These talk shows
- and the prime time programs are more real to more Americans than
- the day-to-day realtime flesh and blood.
-
- DB: Maybe it's myself or my friends but you sit in front of the TV and
- if you're not watching a video you've rented or something else, you're
- zapping it. And sometimes people keep their finger on the zap button,
- and it's like they're editing together a program that is comprised of
- everything that is on television at that particular moment. So there's
- an impulse to interaction. On a primitive level people want to talk
- back in a way. I guess what I was saying, without having experienced
- anything, the goggles seem like an incredible tool in the same way that
- any other way of altering your perception is a tool_jumping off a
- diving board towards something else. But I'm speaking from
- ignorance.
-
- TL: How did you get involved in The Last Emperor?
-
- DB: Bernardo, the director, came and saw Stop Making Sense. He
- saw it in a theatre in Rome and he was knocked out. He liked the film
- and the performance, but the audience got involved in the film. They
- got up and danced, they jumped up on the stage, they sang along and
- whooped and hollered. And he saw people reacting to cinema_it
- wasn't passive. So he didn't forget me. So years later he phoned up
- and asked if I wanted to do some music. And I was in the middle of
- something or another, and I said, I can spare a few weeks. So I could
- only do a little bit and Ri Wichi(sp) could only do a little bit, and the
- other stuff was source music. But it worked out great and it was fun
- to do. He's had a
-
- record of doing some pretty good soundtracks: The Last Tango
- soundtrack_
-
- TL: Bernardo is pretty clever about getting good photographers too.
- I have a funny question I want to ask you. When you consider what
- you have done. How many students from the Rhode Island School of
- Design have won an Oscar?
-
- DB: Gus Van Zandt will probably get an Oscar soon.
-
- TL: If you had been a scientist_you say you didn't want to be a
- scientist because you liked the graffiti on the walls of the art
- department. If you had been a scientist what kind of scientist would
- you have been?
-
- DB: I guess at the time what seemed like pure science: physics_where
- you could speculate and play around and be creative. That seemed like
- the absolute equal to being an artist. And it still does. If you get the
- chance, the opportunity, and the cards fall right, there's no difference.
- The kind of intellectual play and the spirit is the same.
-
- TL: Nature is that way; it's basically playful. Murray Gelman, who is
- one of America's greatest quantum physicists, used the word quark to
- describe the basic element from a funny line from James Joyce, "three
- quarks from Meister Mark" or something like that.
-
- DB: I had a math teacher in high school who included Lewis Carroll
- and Alice in Wonderland in his higher math studies. I thought, This
- guy knows what he's doing.
-
- TL: Well, the guy Dodgson who wrote it knew what he was doing.
- That metaphor of through the looking glass on the other side of the
- screen. Talk about your Uruba gods and goddesses. Talk about
- Yarzan and Shango. Alice is the Goddess of the Electronic Age.
-
- M2: Are there any more Talking Heads projects ever again?
-
- DB: We put together one of those box set things. I guess it'll come out
- some time next year. There are 3 or 4 unfinished songs and some old
- demos that we finished up and wrote words where there were missing
- words. We're still on good terms but I think it's had its day for the
- time being.
-
- TL: Barbara and I saw an I-MAX version by Julian Temple of the
- Rolling Stones. It's really insanely powerful.
-
- DB: It's not frightening?
-
- TL: It is in a sick way_seeing Mick Jagger's face enlarged_
-
- DB: I think it would be_seeing Keith Richard's face twenty stories tall
- and being able to inspect the damage of the years. I know that's not
- the point_
-
- TL: Seeing Keith's face magnified and enlarged is beautiful. You don't
- realize this when you're sitting in the audience, but he drops this little
- smile that's millimeters, but he's communicating. And the projector is
- as big as a Volkswagon.
-
- DB: Do you see a lot of the set?
-
- M2: You see a lot of the set_the whole industrial complex_during
- Honky Tonk Woman these ten story dolls inflate and dance.
-
- TL: Have you been to the Soviet Union?
-
- DB: Very briefly, only twice. Only to Moscow and to a very small
- town on the border of Finland. And fairly recently. I hope they can
- get things sorted out because there's an incredible creative energy
- there. Music and film and poetry, and it's just been bubbling under,
- and the steam is getting ready to blow itself off the kettle.
-
- TL: That was a great discovery for me to realize that behind the
- Brezhnev iron mask there were lots of turned-on, sophisticated,
- international, cosmopolitan, intellectual, educated people. But we
- never heard about them.
-
- DB: So, alternative reality in a way.
-
- TL: Interestingly enough, it was the children of KGB agents, who
- were more ready for the open society because they have been exposed
- to the video and the West.
-
- DB: Yeah, I meet musicians and artists in places like Yugoslavia that
- were more attuned to the good stuff that was happening here than a
- lot of people in New York or LA. They'd focused themselves and
- decided what they liked and what was really happening. And it was
- amazing that some of the stuff that I like had some relevance over
- there.
-
- TL: In defense of America_I'm not an American and I'm working
- ceaselessly to dissolve, disrupt, derail, destroy the American
- government and get it decentralized_but America is the breeding
- grounds for new ideas and we're so over- stimulated, jaded in a sense.
- Imagine what it would be like living under Brezhnev in the Soviet
- Union compared to the way it was here in the 60s and 70s in the sense
- of the available options.
-
- DB: Now we're coming to terms with the fact that the new ideas are
- sometimes coming from elsewhere and that we can use them, accept
- them, they're available to us.
-
- TL: What do you think is going to happen in America?
-
- DB: To be honest I think America's going to go through a rough
- period of losing pride and ego, because I think the country's going to
- be cut down to size economically. Which might be a good thing. It
- might force people to look and see where our real strengths lie, where
- our assets are, and where our real creative forces are, rather than being
- in some imaginary area.
-
- TL: I'm very alarmed by the passionate revival of bitter, cruel,
- Christian fundamentalism in this country which is mirroring the
- fundamentalist Islamic thing. That's spreading from Morocco to
- South East Asia.
-
- DB: I assume that here as there, it's because people are confused, the
- values are undercut, everything they see makes people wonder what
- life is about.
-
- TL: Have you seen My Own Private Idaho?
-
- DB: Yeah, I liked it a lot. There was a real quick shot of a house
- falling out of the sky_this orgasm at the same time.
-
- TL: You did the score for Married To the Mob_
-
- DB: Jonathan Demme used a lot of rock æn' roll stuff in there. I just
- did a lot of
-
- conventional scoring: saxophones and strings, but it was a lot of fun
- to do.
-
- TL: Did you ever imagine you'd be doing symphonies ten years ago?
-
- DB: No, that's the fun, that you don't know what you're going to get
- into. You kind of leave it open.
-
- TL: Of course, what I heard on The Forest album is symphonic but it
- wanders off into a lot of other things too.
-
- DB: Yeah, there's a lot of other stuff thrown in there. I think it all
- hangs together but it sure isn't all regular symphonic stuff.
-
- TL: There are many moving moments of authenticity. And on that
- note, let us suspend this pleasant moment of authentic conversation.
- Thank you, David.
-