Tom Waits, arch-deacon that he is of drinkers and New York City buskers, is a hard man to catch. He almost never tours, and when he does, tickets tend to disappear pretty quickly. So if you're sad that you couldn't catch Waits on his latest cross-country theater-wrecking tour, it's a little understandable. Well, here's something that should cheer you up: NPR is offering an excerpt of the last show of his Glitter and Doom tour on their All Songs Considered podcast.
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Tom Waits, arch-deacon that he is of drinkers and New York City buskers, is a hard man to catch. He almost never tours, and when he does, tickets tend to disappear pretty quickly. So if you're sad that you couldn't catch Waits on his latest cross-country theater-wrecking tour, it's a little understandable. Well, here's something that should cheer you up: NPR is offering an excerpt of the last show of his Glitter and Doom tour on their All Songs Considered podcast.
When Esquire refers to you as the "Sexiest Woman Alive," don't you think you could get someone to write you an original song or two?
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When gravelly crooner Tom Waits stopped in El Paso on his Glitter and Doom Tour, he didn't expect to be greeted by the fuzz. "I paid all those tickets," he joked. "She was dead when I got there."
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There are a few things in life people just can't get enough of, and two of those things are, for sure, without a doubt, most definitely Glitter and Doom. Tom Waits knows this, and because he's a man of the people, he's extended his Glitter and Doom tour so that Europeans can get them some of his mystery-man magic. Found in:
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Earlier this morning, Tom Waits unveiled his upcoming Glitter and Doom Tour across the South, from Phoenix to Atlanta. Cities like El Paso, Tulsa, Jacksonville and Mobile might seem like random pit-stops for his traveling carnival, but he begs to differ. “Frankly, there’s absolutely nothing that’s random about it,” the world’s fourth best living songwriter said in the greatest YouTube sketch since those adorable sky-diving puppies. “Think about it, from the beginning of time, we’ve all looked to the night sky for guidance and meaning. I mean, how did the magi find the Christ child in the manger?”
Watch the incredible press conference below, with dates and cities after the video:
Dates:
June
17 - Phoenix, Ariz. @ Orpheum
18 - Phoenix, Ariz. @ Orpheum
20 - El Paso, Texas @ Plaza Theatre
22 - Houston, Texas @ Jones Hall
23 - Dallas, Texas @ Palladium
25 - Tulsa, Okla. @ Brady Theatre
26 - St. Louis, Mo. @ Fox Theatre
28 - Columbus, Ohio @ Ohio Theatre
29 - Knoxville, Tenn. @ Civic Theatre
July
1 - Jacksonville, Fla. @ Moran Theatre
2 - Mobile, Ala. @ Saenger Theatre
3 - Birmingham, Ala. @ Alabama Theatre
5 - Atlanta, Ga. @ Fox Theatre
Related links:
News: Tom Waits announces summer tour plans
Review: Tom Waits - Orphans
TomWaits.com
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UPDATE: Dates and cities have been announced! Click here.
*****
Tom Waits, he of the gravel voice and source material for an upcoming Scarlett Johansson cover album, is preparing for a tour this summer, his camp confirmed this week.
But don’t rush out to your local ticket office just yet. Waits and his management team are still piecing the tour schedule together, so no dates or cities have been announced. Organizers could only confirm that the tour would hit both the U.S. and Europe.
Waits’ fans certainly have reason to be excited, as his tours have been few and far between lately. His last outing was an eight-date U.S. tour two years ago in support of his three-disc album Orphans.
While you’re impatiently waiting for the specifics, check out Waits rocking the megaphone in a video for “Chocolate Jesus.”
Related links:
TomWaits.com
Tom Waits on MySpace
Paste: Tom Waits: All Stripped Down
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Joe’s Pub in New York is known for gathering industry types for debuts of major label artists. Tuesday's event was only different in that the crowd consisted of a handful of shaggily clad journalists and the artist on stage had an unusually familiar face. Scarlett Johansson was there, answering questions after the house speakers played through Anywhere I Lay My Head, her album of Tom Waits covers which is set for release on May 20.
Paste happened to be in NYC, and caught the last three tracks of the album as well as the question and answer session. The record was nothing like we imagined. Instead of the lounge-y approach favored by fellow young thespians like Minnie Driver, it’s a feast of indie production with TV on the Radio’s David Sitek going all David Fridmann, layering keys, guitars that sound like keys (What kind of synthesizer is that? “It’s Nick Zimmer [of Yeah, Yeah, Yeahs] on guitar playing really fast through something weird,” Sitek says.) and a collected assortment of sounds found outside a studio in Lafeyette, La. The stated goal was “a cough medicine/Tinkerbell kind of vibe.”
Johansson, whose initial aspiration was musical theater (“It didn’t work out because my voice was too deep for Cosette in Les Miserables.”), says the project began as an attempt to cover standards, including a Tom Waits duet with Bette Midler. Over time, one Waits song led to another, and she decided to just go with all Waits. “His melodies are so beautiful, his voice is so distinct and I had my own way of doing Tom Waits songs,” she says.
The results, as far as we could tell, are true to Waits’ spirit of weirdness without sounding anything like him.
“My ultimate goal,” says Sitek, “was to not get chased down by Tom Waits and get my ass beaten in a bar.”
So far, then, the forthcoming album is an unmitigated success. Reportedly, David Bowie sings on two tracks, "Falling Down" and "Fannin' Street." According to Sitek, the music icon joined the project because "he lost in Scrabulous to me. Just kidding. I relish in these moments when I'm constantly reminded I'm an amateur. His parts were so far out."
Despite the fact that no live plans are currently in the works for the project, Johansson says that a future festival appearance is not out of the realm of possibility.
Tracklisting for Anywhere I Lay My Head:
"Fawn"
"Town With No Cheer"
"Falling Down"
"Anywhere I Lay My Head"
"Fannin' Street"
"Song for Jo"
"Green Grass"
"I Wish I Was in New Orleans"
"I Don't Want To Grow Up"
"No One Knows I'm Gone"
"Who Are You?"
Related links:
Scarlett Johansson on IMDB
YouTube: Tom Waits and Iggy Pop in Coffee and Cigarettes
David Sitek on Flickr
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When Tom Waits emerges from his demented world of one-eyed midgets and skin-diseased chihuahuas to play live, people stand up and take notice. Even if it is just three songs...
As Brooklyn Vegan reports, Waits is playing a Los Angeles benefit show for the Bet Tzedek Legal Services-House of Justice on Jan. 22. The event will honor Waits' "longtime friend and ally," attorney Kevin Marks.
"He has pulled my goyim tuchas out of many a fire," said Waits, dropping some Yiddish for good measure.
Bet Tzedek ("House of Justice" in Hebrew) provides legal services for the poor, elderly and infirm in the Los Angeles area. Waits will only perform a few songs at the organization's benefit gala (and tickets are $400 a pop), but in traditional Waitsian fashion, the man hinted at a possible forthcoming tour.
"Somehow we return like the salmon to perform in important towns like Nimrod, Minnesota; Square Butt, Montana; Peculiar, Missouri; or Diagonal, Iowa," Waits said. "We just may be coming to a theatre near you."
Hey, I know some people in Peculiar. Good folks there, yessir. Stay tuned to see whether Waits makes good on his cryptic non-promise.
Elsewhere in the wide world of Waits, the Orphans compilation is up for a Grammy. Oh what an acceptance speech that could be. Do the right thing, NARAS.
Related links:
Tom Waits at Anti- Records
Watch Tyler James cover Tom Waits exclusively for Paste
YouTube: Tom Waits - "Going Out West" on Arsenio Hall
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The recently Grammy-nominated "folk" artist Tom Waits has been covered by countless artists. Bruce Springsteen, Rod Stewart, The Eagles, Linda Thompson, Robert Plant and Alison Krauss, Mugison, the list goes on and on. That being said, none of those jerks covered Waits exclusively for PasteMagazine.com. This is why Tyler James gets the big, gold star of the day.
Back in late September, we asked you, dear readers, what song you'd like to hear James cover live at Paste HQ. The response was overwhelming, but James chose Waits' "Shiver Me Timbers." You can view the video here.
This is just one of the latest, exciting developments in our ever-expanding blogs section. Keep an eye on it, as there is plenty more to come.
Related links:
TylerJames.com
Tyler James on MySpace
Tom Waits on MySpace
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There was a time, before 24-hour cable news, when happenings traveled by song. People Take Warning! Murder Ballads & Disaster Songs 1913-1938, out tomorrow (Sept. 25) via Tompkin’s Square Records, allows those of us in the PDA era a glimpse into the wireless-less past. The box set features 70 tracks (including 30 never before released) that chronicle the events of the day: from the famous sinking of the Titanic to the now-forgotten murder of the Lawson family.
The set features songs by Charlie Patton, Ernest Stoneman, Furry Lewis, Charlie Poole and Uncle Dave Macon, among others. Produced by Grammy winning team of Christopher King and Henry Sapoznik, the collection also boasts an introduction written by Tom Waits. In fact, maybe Waits can explain all this better with an excerpt from said introduction:
"In the late 1920's and early 1930's, the Depression gripped the Nation. It was a time when songs were tools for living. A whole community would turn out to mourn the loss of a member and to sow their songs like seeds. This collection is a wild garden grown from those seeds."
Related links:
PeopleTakeWarning.com
TompkinsSquare.com
TomWaits.com
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There you are, sitting on your couch, trying to find the remote inside a giant tub of buttered popcorn, hoping that someone will magically bring you another beer from the fridge. But then—a revelation! Inspiration invades your brain with an unprecedented force, and you bound up from your sedate lifestyle to grab a pen and paper. Ten minutes later, you have composed a song of unspeakable brilliance. A true work of genius.
But what then? How do you show the world that you have just made history? You could sit back down on the couch and hope for a record executive’s phone call, or you could be proactive and win $25,000. The latter approach is not a dream; it merely requires talent and a submission to the 2007 International Songwriting Competition.
The winner of the ISC gets $25,000, but with a total prize budget of $150,000, the competition clearly rewards amply for more than just first place. And perhaps more enticing than the money is the roster of amazing artists whose ears may be exposed to the fruits of your creative labors. Tom Waits, Jerry Lee Lewis, Robert Smith, and “Weird Al” Yankovic are just four of the major talents that will help judge the contest. An equally impressive group of producers and music industry executives only makes this contest more impressive. Songwriters can submit as many songs as they want in each category, or they may enter the same song in multiple categories.
If you've made it off the sofa, click here for instructions on how to enter the ISC.
Related links:
SongwritingCompetition.com
ISC entry form
List of ISC judges
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Articles“So his holiness goes to bed at 7:30? That’s not the holiness I used to know, you know what I’m sayin’? He had a whole ‘nother look goin.’”
So quips Tom Waits before launching into “Diamond in Your Mind,” recorded live at New York City’s Avery Fisher Hall with Kronos Quartet and Greg Cohen. The Waits original, initially recorded by Solomon Burke, will be released on June 26 as a digital single from Healing the Divide: A Concert for Peace and Reconciliation, a benefit show for the Tibetan Health Initiative. Hence, Waits’ gentle mocking of his Holiness the Dalai Lama. Oh, that guy!
“Working with the Kronos Quartet was like firing a .38 Special with a clam shell holster: beauty meets brains,” Waits stated. The track’s worth it if only for the moment he encourages a couple thousand people to “sing it with me, here,” creating a proper choir-like background for his haunting hymn.
Get thee to an iTunery.
Related links:
Healing the Divide
Anti-Records: Tom Waits
KronosQuartet.org
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ArticlesRecorded at a September 21, 2003 benefit concert held at the Lincoln Center's Avery Fisher Hall in New York City, the Dalai Lama, Tom Waits, Kronos Quartet, Philip Glass, Anoushka Shankar and more will be featured on Healing the Divide: A Concert for Peace and Reconciliation. Out July 10 on Anti-, the album will highlight the Dalai Lama's 20-day tour of the U.S., which culminated in the concert.
Proceeds from the sales of the CD will benefit Healing the Divide (a non-profit organization Richard Gere formed in 2001 in order to aid humanitarian crisis) and its Tibetan Health Initiative, which provides health insurance to Buddhist monks and nuns. Translation: When you buy a copy of this CD, you provide one year of health insurance for an impoverished monk or nun in a refugee settlement.
Providing the usual comedic levity, the ever-quotable Waits took a moment to get "serious" in a recent statement. The legendary artist, who contributes four songs to the release, including the previously-unreleased "Diamond in Your Mind," noted why this cause is so personally important to him. "I'm no fool," he said. "It's a spiritual insurance policy. Hell, at my age, the next group I put together, everyone may be playing a harp. All kidding aside, I owed His Holiness a favor. He did all my papers in school."
Track listing for Healing the Divide:
1. His Holiness the Dalai Lama (His Holiness the Dalai Lama)
2. Invocation (The Gyoto Tantric Choir)
3. Nivedan (Anoushka Shankar)
4. Peace Chants (Nawang Khechong and R. Carlos Nakai)
5. The Gambia (Phillip Glass and Foday Musa Suso)
6. Way Down in the Hole (Tom Waits and Kronos Quartet w/ Greg Cohen)
7. God's Away on Business ((Tom Waits and Kronos Quartet w/ Greg Cohen)
8. Lost in the Harbor (Tom Waits and Kronos Quartet w/ Greg Cohen)
9. Diamond in Your Mind (Tom Waits and Kronos Quartet w/ Greg Cohen)
Related links:
Healing the Divide
Anti- Records
Tom Waits on Wikipedia
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ArticlesTom Waits has finally settled his lawsuit against General Motors after their German ad agency McCann Erickson allegedly hired a soundalike to imitate his gravelly voice for a series of car commercials aired throughout Scandinavia in 2005.
The Grammy Award-winning singer-songwriter is reportedly donating the proceeds from his settlement to charity. Said Waits, “I’m glad to be out of the car sales business once and for all.”
Related links:
Tom Waits on Anti-
Tom Waits' homepage
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When Johnny Cash released his three-CD box set in 2000, he grouped his favorite songs not by chronology but around the three main themes of his career: “Love,” “God” and “Murder.”
Tom Waits has done something similar on his new time-scrambled box set, Orphans, giving each CD a different subtitle: “Brawlers,” “Bawlers” and “Bastards.” Unlike Cash, however, Waits organizes his songs not by the themes in the lyrics but by the differences in sound. His subtitles represent his three main musical approaches: rocking, crooning and weirdness. Waits may be best known for his words, but in organizing these 56 selections (54 listed tracks and two bonus cuts) by sonic style, he forces us to consider the importance of his music.
Many folks assume Waits’ recordings succeed because the terrific songwriting overcomes the liability of his voice—a voice that sounds like there’s a cement mixer lodged in his throat. In fact, as Waits declares in his liner notes, his peculiar voice is his main instrument and best asset, and he has developed three ways of making the most of it. He can reinforce the pugnacious, grating qualities of his voice by shouting over a primal, thumping rhythm. Those are his bluesy, rocking songs, the “Brawlers.” Or he can counterbalance those same qualities by trying to croon in his unlikely, gravelly fashion over a strong melody and relaxed rhythm. Those are his ballads, waltzes and laments, the “Bawlers.” Or he can pull his voice out of pop-music conventions and use it as a poet, actor or monologist might over atmospheric music. Stranded between song and theater, those numbers are the “Bastards.”
Orphans is a peculiar kind of career overview, because not one of these tracks has ever appeared on an official Tom Waits album in the U.S. Twenty-four are from various soundtracks, tribute albums, overseas EPs and multiple-artist compilations, and 32 have never been released anywhere before—some because they’re newly recorded; some because they were written for other singers, and others because they were put aside for a rainy day. Waits wrote or co-wrote just 34 of the songs; the balance includes a Frank Sinatra number, a 1656 British ballad, a 1959 swamp-pop hit, songs by Skip Spence and Daniel Johnston, two songs apiece from Leadbelly and The Ramones, plus the Seven Dwarves’ marching song. And yet the box set manages to summarize his career, because every sonic approach he has ever used is represented here.
You won’t find “Innocent When You Dream”—one of Waits’ greatest songs—on Orphans, but you will find “Shiny Things,” which boasts a similar ramshackle grandeur. This is a “Bawler,” the sound of an exhausted man who hasn’t had a home-cooked meal or a good night’s sleep in a year, who nonetheless tries to bend his ravaged, sandpaper throat to romantic crooning. Over nothing but a piano and a banjo—almost in tune with one another—he sings of crows that fill their nests with shiny dimes and silver twine. Sitting in his own nest of racetrack tickets and glittering bourbon bottles, he recalls the less-than-shiny things he left behind, and his voice fills up with unbearable regret.
You won’t find “16 Shells from a Thirty-Ought Six,” Waits’ memorable description of the outlaw/hobo life, but you will find “Buzz Fledderjohn,” his description of a kid watching the neighbor’s yard, enticed by the guns, dogs, snakes and women there. In both these “Brawler” songs, the allure of life at the margins is bolstered by bluesy slide guitar, the anti-American Idol sound of Waits’ baritone, and percussion that sounds as if it were played on used auto parts in an attempt to duplicate the rhythms of an engine that hasn’t been tuned in seven years.
“Buzz Fledderjohn” is one of four songs on Orphans previously cut by bluesman John Hammond Jr. (on two of his own records) that had never been released by Waits himself before this year. One of those songs, “Fannin Street,” is a stunning lament of regret and warning that takes its title from a Leadbelly song. Waits also sings an actual Leadbelly song, “Ain’t Goin’ Down to the Well,” as if it were a twitchy garage-rock number and The Ramones’ “Danny Says” as if it were a prison folk ballad.
His voice is so compelling he doesn’t even need a song structure to create a successful performance. He can recite a Charles Bukowski poem (“Nirvana”) or one of his own (“Pontiac”) with minimal music and make it work. He can read descriptions of strange insect behavior or riff on bizarre dog toys and hold our attention. He can even deliver two different versions of a song he adapted from a passage in Jack Kerouac’s On the Road and make you glad to hear both. He calls these songs “Bastards,” songs so distant from any conceivable radio format that none will claim parentage.
It would be a mistake to dismiss this box set as a bunch of leftovers of interest only to Waits fanatics. There is some filler, it’s true, but there are also more than a dozen songs that rank with his best work. As always, there is a push-and-pull between Waits’ romanticism and his skepticism, between his hope that people’s better instincts will prevail and all the evidence to the contrary. He counteracts this romanticism with the clanging, howling sound of his “Brawlers,” and he counteracts the skepticism with the wistful, yearning sound of his “Bawlers.”
The highlight of Johnny Cash’s first (and best-by-far) Rick Rubin album, American Recordings, was Waits’ “Down There by the Train,” but only now has Waits released his own piano-and-vocal demo. As good as Cash’s raspy version was, there’s something incomparable about the desperation of Waits’ version. Grace and forgiveness, he implies, don’t make regular stops and certainly don’t wait around for you to show up. But like a train that never stops moving, kindness has to slow down where the track makes a sharp turn, and that’s where you can jump onboard if you get a good running start and grab the ladder on the first try.
“I’ve hurt the ones who loved me,” he sings, torn between a growl of suspicion and a mumble of desire, “and I’m still raising Cain. I’ve taken the low road and if you’ve done the same, meet me down there by the train.”
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ArticlesThe legendary Tom Waits will take the stage – and the hot seat – as both a performer and a guest of The Late Show with David Letterman on Monday, November 27 and The Daily Show with Jon Stewart on Tuesday, November 28.
Waits just released the 56-track Orphans , which includes 30 new recordings as well as two dozen collaborative songs with artists in film, literature and music.
To view the video for "Lie to Me," the first track on Orphans, click here.
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For better or worse, jazz vocalist Madeleine Peyroux won’t ever outgrow the Billie Holiday comparisons, despite her crooning claim, “I’m not looking backward for something that’s gone” (“Once in a While”). But looking backward is precisely where Peyroux camps, from her lounge-jazz sound to her choice of covers: Joni Mitchell (“River,” a duet with k.d. lang), Leonard Cohen (“Blue Alert” and the title track) and Serge Gainsbourg (“La Javanaise”). Only a tender take on Tom Waits’ “(Looking For) The Heart of a Saturday Night” gives Peyroux the glimmer of modernity Perfect World so desperately craves.
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Why do modern psychedelic artists insist on either whispering or singing in their airiest, whiniest falsettos? From The Flaming Lips to Mercury Rev to Sparklehorse’s Mark Linkous, the effect is deadly. Linkous’ fourth full-length—recorded at home with a variety of guests (the Lips’ Steven Drozd and Dave Fridmann, Danger Mouse, Tom Waits on piano from an It’s a Wonderful Life leftover)—is another paradoxically claustrophobic affair that shoots for the ethereal stars while hushing itself into the broom closet. The playful “Some Sweet Day” and charging “Ghost in the Sky” scream for a singer to take command. You’re left with ornate but unremarkable headphone listening.
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ArticlesMany of the the Tom Waits tickets that have been purchased via resale sites such as eBay and StubHub.com will not be accepted at Waits’ upcoming shows.
Because all eight dates of his tour immediately sold out, tickets have been available for sale through resale sites and ticket brokers. Many tickets sold from these entities are assumed to be fraudulent, and some tickets may also be counterfeit.
All premium tickets for Waits’ shows, as well as all tickets for the Atlanta, Detroit and Louisville shows must be obtained at the venue on the evening of the show. Only the original buyer will be allowed to pick up the ticket and must show a valid photo ID as well as the credit card information used to buy the ticket.
There will be no exceptions, as the severe anti-scalping procedures were detailed before the official ticket sale dates. The venues, management, label, promoter and Waits are striving to catch scalpers and get the face value tickets to the fans. However, they will not be responsible for fixing problems with counterfeit tickets or fraudulent sale of tickets.
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ArticlesTom Waits is set to perform a string of live dates during the month of August. The legendary, secluded artist will tour eight cities throughout the South and Midwest, kicking off the tour in Atlanta on the first of the month.
Waits, whose last live performance was in 2004, has chosen to travel to the cities he hasn’t performed in since the '70s.
"We need to go to Tennessee to pick up some fireworks, and someone owes me money in Kentucky," says Waits about why he’s chosen this particular time and route to tour.
Judging by sales from his past dates (seats sold out in minutes), fans best snatch up tickets as soon as possible. On-sale dates will be posted in local ads of regional papers.
Tour dates
8/01 Tabernacle, Atlanta, Ga.
8/02 Thomas Wolfe Auditorium, Asheville, N.C.
8/04 Orpheum Theatre, Memphis, Tenn.
8/05 Ryman Auditorium, Nashville, Tenn.
8/07 Palace Theatre, Louisville, Ky.
8/09 Auditorium Theatre, Chicago, Ill.
8/11 Opera House, Detroit, Mich.
8/13 Akron Civic, Akron, Ohio
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Quirky. Experimental. Hip. Poetic. Cinematic. Thoughtful. Thought-provoking. It’s one thing to deliver one or more of these qualities; it’s quite another to consistently deliver them all for 31 years. On Real Gone, Waits brings the wood once again. Percussively driven, along the lines of Bone Machine, Real Gone delivers another batch of vibrant songs and performances that make for yet another essential album.
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Tom Waits should be giddy at the moment. Last night—in his first performance in five years, at Vancouver’s intimate 2,400-seat Orpheum Theatre—he strolled onstage in his regulation baggy black suit and skewed pork-pie hat, all spider-limbed and spectral, and then tore through most of the primal-blues jackhammers from his new album, Real Gone. He employed a pedal-activated, digital-delay device to recreate the vast vocal percussions that drive the disc—woofing nonsensical syllables like “Acka, poom-poom” or “Boom chicky-tatta” and replaying them as looped backbeats. Waits was more than animated—his lithe frame twitched and shuddered to the jarring rhythms.
And he was generous, as well. Alongside stark new numbers like “Metropolitan Glide,” “Top of the Hill” and the guttural “Hoist That Rag” (all co-written/-produced with his wife, Kathleen Brennan), he tossed in crowd-pleasing classics like “Tabletop Joe,” “Heart Attack and Vine” and “House Where Nobody Lives,” a signature track from his stellar ’99 Grammy winner Mule Variations (his first for hip indie label, ANTI-). The show—featuring Marc Ribot on guitar, someone called Brain on drums, Larry Taylor on bass and Waits’ son Casey on percussion—heads to Europe next, before reportedly swinging back through America in early 2005.
Waits should be overjoyed about other things, too. Like the smash-hit, sold-out London and San Francisco runs of The Black Rider, with Marianne Faithfull trilling the Brecht/Weill-ish lieder he composed for playwright Robert Wilson. Or another Wilson-commissioned soundtrack, Alice, whose “Kommienezuspadt” closed the Vancouver set. Or his umpteenth feature-film appearance, jawing over java with Iggy Pop in Jim Jarmusch’s Coffee and Cigarettes. Or even “A Little Drop of Poison,” the delectable ditty he contributed to the Shrek 2 soundtrack. After disappearing from the recording scene for most of the ’90s, this gravel-throated minstrel is experiencing a comeback, a renaissance rocketing the 55-year-old right back to the singer/songwriter vanguard—turf he first staked out back in ’73 with his decadent Asylum Records debut, Closing Time.
But today, when Waits shuffles into King Fortune Seafood, a Chinese restaurant a few blocks from the Orpheum, he’s simply smiling about last night’s triumph. He’s comfortable with it, as he is all his other lauded coups of late, seemingly happy to be back, happy to be hitting the road again and flexing those stage muscles. Sure, he’s also become the pet character actor of top-flight film directors like Jarmusch, Robert Altman and Francis Ford Coppola. And during his 30-year career, his songs have been covered by everyone from The Eagles and Rod Stewart to Johnny Cash and Bruce Springsteen (who ironically chose “Jersey Girl,” Waits’ note-perfect spoof of the Boss and his working-class-isms).
But Waits is remarkably humble about all this. So when he sits down at a secluded corner table, he thoughtfully sips several cups of jasmine tea and contemplates-in yarn-spinning raconteur style-much larger issues. Like what his good friend Fred “Herman Munster” Gwynne told him before he passed away, back when they were acting together in Coppola’s Cotton Club. “He said that when he goes to heaven, and God says ‘What did you do while you were down there?’ he’ll go, ‘I got a little piece of film I’d like to show ya,’” chuckles Waits, whose steely, blue-eyed gaze is as hypnotic and unwavering as Rasputin’s probably was. “‘It’s just a little clip from a Bertolucci thing I did called Luna.’ Fred said, ‘That’s all I’m gonna show Him, not The Munsters stuff, just the Luna clip.’ And that was it, just a great little moment for him.” Waits immediately liked Gwynne, he recalls, because “he was a seeker—he was always on a quest.”
The same tribute could be paid to Waits. His melancholy work—initially peopled with Munster-type misanthropes—has grown increasingly numinous and metaphysical over the years. When he warns on Real Gone, “Don’t go into the barn,” he feels no need to spell out why—you can hear in his Doberman snarl that something quite tragic, possibly bloody, took place there. And he’s not interested in the incident itself—just the haunted funereal pall, the sense of threat left behind. But when Waits himself arrives at the pearly gates some day, what life moments would he show? After talking with him for over an hour, one feels that it might be his whirlwind romance with Brennan, whom he met while working on Coppola’s One From the Heart. She taught him how to rethink himself—that he didn’t need the headaches of a major label or the smarmy industry figures who went with it, that they could go it alone as a songwriting couple and find receptive outlets later, once the music was completed. That purity of vision—uncluttered by any accepted rules of rockdom—paved the path for Real Gone and its startling human-beatbox experiments. And for the new relaxation that’s swept over the Northern California-based Waits, even on the eve of his demanding new tour.
So what kind of footage would the man choose to screen? It might not be Luna, but it’s damned close. So sit back and dim the lights … 4, 3, 2, 1—roll clip.
Paste: Interesting menu here … Like that old National Lampoon fake Chinese menu, with Twice Chewed Lobster in Hissing Sauce and Sweet ’n’ Sour Land Shrimp …
Tom Waits: Nobody chews my lobster but me, I’ll tell ya. But you’ve heard about regular people who’ve been in car accidents or suffered a stroke or something, or had some kind of injury at work, like a blow to the head. And as a result of the injury, they are now gourmands. They crave only the most exotic foods. And they’re usually working-class people, so all of a sudden at the dinner table, you’ve got Fred Flintstone getting very effete, until his whole family doesn’t know who in the hell he is. They’re like, “What—did you have your brain replaced?”
P: This first question is rather odd, but bear with me. Have you ever seen the Joe Dante film Gremlins? Or met Dante at all? Because there’s actually a Nighthawks-era Tom Waits gremlin in the film, murmuring to himself in the gremlin bar. Or at least it looks that way.
TW: No! Really? I dunno—I probably have seen it somewhere, ’cause I’ve got kids. But I’ve never sat down and watched it front to back.
P: Well, that shoots down my whole theory.
TW: Backup! Do you have backup for this?
P: I’m smarter than I look. I’m curious about how your persona—or early perception of it, at least—has become intertwined with pop culture.
TW: Gee, I dunno … That’s a tough one. My own personality intertwined with pop culture … Oh, the character. Yeah. But I don’t have a lotta contact with it—I’m on the road a lot. But you mean unshaven, cigarette, eggs and whiskey, sleeping ’til three in the afternoon? I don’t know where that fits into pop culture, because I’m not really an expert on pop culture. But it’s kinda like a Cantinflas character. But it’s a ventriloquist act, ya know. There’s me, and then there’s that. And that’s not me.
P: I’m left with all these remarkable visuals of you, though. Like you working that chewing gum as the diner guy in Rumblefish, saying “Think about it—35 summers …” and trying to keep Rusty James in line.
TW: Rumblefish—I love that picture. Yeah, that was a good moment, really cool. Francis just said “Write your own dialog.” He says, “I’m not even gonna tell ya what to say—man, this is your diner, this is your apron, your spatula. I’m not gonna give you any lines. You just make it all up.” So it was fun. And that’s what I’d rather do in every picture, ’cause I can’t remember lines. … But the “35 summers” thing—it was because I was 35, I’d had 35 summers.
P: And then there’s the image of you as Renfield in Dracula, eating what appeared to be real bugs.
TW: Oh, yeah—I did eat bugs! They have a bug wrangler on every film, ya know. If there are bugs in the movie, there’s a bug wrangler. And they were mealworms. Protein, ya know. But I’ve eaten earthworms as a child.
P: But mealworms have huge pincing mandibles. They bite back.
TW: So you have to kill ’em with your jaws. You have to kill ’em first. And the wranglers don’t like it, ’cause these are their little actors. “Floyd! He’s been with me for 30 years! In the name of God, what have you done?” I didn’t even know there was such a thing as a bug wrangler on a film, but I found out.
P: When did you first start to realize that you’d formed your own stark visual identity?
TW: Gee, I dunno. But like any business, whether you’re a fisherman or you repair refrigerators or you’re an airline pilot or a lion tamer, at a certain point you realize you have to ask yourself a question—“Can I parlay this into a business? Can I make money off this?” And at a certain point you realize—yeah, I can take this somewhere. But it’s always a gamble. What I was really pursuing was my dream of it all, about being in music. I was in music, ya know. The way it appears visually, or whatever perspective from other people’s vantage point is one thing. But mine’s from the inside. I have all these heroes, and I love music and I wanna be a part of it. I’ve been inspired, and now hopefully someday I’ll get an opportunity to inspire somebody else. And that’s how it works, really. People who make songs don’t go to school to learn how to do it. You sit down next to the record player, and you write down the words and try and figure out these changes, and that’s how everybody does it. And as far as whether you think you can make it, well, there are levels of “making it.” For me, I was happy to be making another record, going on the road, putting the band together and doing it.
P: But you’ve always understood the importance of other art besides music—books, films, paintings. And you have to seek them out. As a kid back in Indiana, I learned that early—we really had to fight for culture out there.
TW: That’s why so many American presidents come from the Midwest—because it’s so flat, they have to dream. Roy Orbison? I said, “Where’d you get that voice, man? What—did you listen to opera all your life?” And he goes “Nah, man—if there was a dance a hundred miles away on Saturday, I heard the sound of the dance coming across the plains, and by the time the voice reached me, it was all watery. So when I was a kid, that’s the way I wanted to sound, like those dances sounded.” … I thought that was a fascinating little anecdote …
P: But you understand, appreciate the thrill of discovering a good book or movie. I just saw The Black Rider for the first time, with Marianne Faithfull singing your songs, and I can’t believe I’ve lived this long without discovering Robert Wilson’s work. And it had such amazing detail, like one of the actors bending his middle fingers inward for every scene. I don’t know why.
TW: You wanna know why? ’Cause Wilson choreographs every physical movement that you see onstage. He does it first. Every finger, every eyelash, every hair, every jaw—everything. And then he shows them how he wants ’em to do it, and when he wants ’em to do it, and then he winds it up like a clock. And lets it tick, tick, tick, tick. And there are marks all over the stage, for where you have to be for light. And if you’re not where you need to be for light, well … When it comes to choreography, Wilson’s just amazing. And it’s all timed to the pit, all the musicians in the pit. I mean, I’d seen Einstein on the Beach at BAM—it was like nine hours long, and you had to go out and get coffee and come back, take a nap for awhile. It was the strangest experience—more like being on a long flight to Hong Kong. You wake up and people are in different positions, the light’s different. Then you go back to sleep or read a little bit—very strange. But Wilson’s more like an inventor, a real visionary, and he’s meticulous about what he wants and doesn’t want. It’s not a democracy. That’s why what you’re seeing is a very specific vision from one man’s mind—you’re not seeing a collaboration.
P: So how do you write music for such a perfectionist?
TW: You know, you kinda sit in the dark at a long table for several different workshop periods. It’s almost like being at Cape Canaveral—that kinda feeling, ya know? And you’re watching the stage with him, plus you’re dealing with a lot of sleep deprivation, because you’re working long hours with bad coffee and no food, no windows, in a strange country, with jetlag. And I think that goes into the work, as well. You’re in a state. But everyone trusts him so much—he’s like a professor, like the best professor. For me, in all my years in school—nothing like Wilson. Like you’ll always remember a particular teacher? I’d say Wilson is my teacher. I mean, I didn’t go to college. But there’s nobody that’s affected me that much, as an artist.
P: What are some key lessons he taught you?
TW: I dunno. That’s a good question. I never really boiled it down like that. I remember once, he had a huge explosion in the theater—he’d asked somebody to get rid of a particular piece of furniture onstage, and it was still there 30 minutes later. And he said, “Get that chair offstage or I’m gonna throw it in the ulster!” He was so irate. And if he wants to do music for a particular scene, he does the music, on a microphone. He just starts making sounds—he goes “Bž-bksh, meeee-oowr! Whooo-eee, plow-plow-plow-plow, koo-tee-koo, bleerm, bleerm!” Know what I mean? You make things right now. It’s not a magical thing. You’re at the edge of the cliff and it’s time to jump. And you just have to trust that you won’t hit the rocks.
P: Did that give you the initial idea for your human beat-box sounds that ½nally materialized on Real Gone?
TW: It did, yeah.
P: Which you put to good use last night onstage. You’d bark out something like “Acka, poom-poom,” hit a digital-delay pedal on the floor, and it’d repeat as tape-looped percussion.
TW: Yeah. And the device stopped working halfway through the show. It’s called a Boomerang. I just go “Acka, poom-poom,” and it becomes something I can sing over.
P: And Real Gone feels like a continuation of the wild percussive experiments of Bone Machine, one of your most important albums.
TW: Yeah, I think so. It picks up maybe where that one left off. A lot of people think it picks up where Rain Dogs left off, but I dunno. But hopefully, you get better as you go, get more refined. I write songs a lot quicker now.
P: And you’ve also learned how to constantly reinvent yourself. Not for the audience’s sake, of course, but to keep yourself interested, amused.
TW: Well, that’s really the goal, isn’t it? You have to keep yourself interested, and you have to be endlessly curious. And I may be a bit more eccentric, and I don’t really care what people think. And to a large degree, I don’t care what anybody thinks. Because I have my own kinda world I’m in. When you start worrying about intervals, that’s when you know you’re a composer. When you lay awake at night, worrying about a particular section of a song. Like last night, I was looking at the wall and the light was really low, and one eye was kinda cockeyed. And it looked like a skull with a big cloud coming out of its head, and a hand with a white glove. And I thought, “Well, that’s pretty out there for this hotel, to do something like that!” And then I looked at it again in the morning, and it was a bouquet of white roses. But it was out of focus. So that’s what I do when I’m making stuff up. I don’t see what’s there. I learned that when I was little. We had drapes, and the drapes had all these water stains on ’em. But there were also patterns, like leaves and camels and all that stuff. But there were all these really dramatic water stains, and I thought the water stains were part of the design of the fabric. And there were all these shapes, so I made my own shapes out of ’em. And I still do that. When I’m looking at any kind of pattern, I’ll find, say, noses or something.
P: There’s a really sad adage that says the older we get, the less we look up in wonder at the world—the more beauty, or the appreciation of it, gets trampled underfoot.
TW: See, that’s where we’re at—we have a deficit of wonder. I think it’s because of computers. When I ask people questions now, they get on their computer—“Gimme a few minutes and I’ll let ya know …” And I’m like, “Noooooo!” I want ’em to wonder about it, man! I don’t wanna know the answer—I just want ’em to wonder about it.
P: That’s slowed down, while the rest of technology keeps speeding up. To the point where you can’t just watch a CNN news broadcast—you have to multitask to read the endless bulletins at the bottom of the screen.
TW: First of all, I don’t have a TV, so I am so out of it. Now the only show I’ve seen in the last 15 years, I swear to God, is Pimp My Ride. And somebody sent me that on tape. And I thought, “Man, I hope this is #1, ’cause I just love it.” But I don’t have any TV. And there really is no such thing as multitasking. You can only do one thing correctly at a time. So if you’re gonna do seven things, each one of those things is getting one-seventh of your time. Even though you’re doing ’em at the same time. That’s why my phone is a camera, my watch is a rifle—it’s just insane. But they’re selling us on this stuff, and it’s affecting everything, even the election. Touch-screen voting? Forget about it—what’s more corruptible than computers?
P: Wait a minute! No TV? That means you’re missing some great new shows this season, like Lost and Desperate Housewives!
TW: I heard they’re good. But I’m afraid of incorporating all that into my diet—I’m afraid it’d just send me off. I dunno, it’d be like eating Styrofoam. You remember in the old days, when you’d send away for something from the back of a cereal box? And you had to wait for 30 days, and it was coming from Battle Creek, Michigan? Life is different now, because in the time that it took for it to arrive, a lot of wonder took place. I remember wondering about the town of Battle Creek—What’s it look like? Is it like the North Pole? Who lives in it? Is there an actual creek?
P: And finally, the postman arrives like on The Simpsons and goes “Here it is, kid—here’s your stupid spy camera!”
TW: You know what I did when I was little? You could get a signet ring with your initials on the ring—a silver one. You send in the form and they’ll send you a ring—it was unbelievable. So I wanted the ring, I sent it in, the ring comes. So I’m wearing the ring, but three weeks later, 17 cases of salve show up, in shoe-polish-shaped cans. I was required to sell 17 cases to friends, relatives, neighbors, but it was in small print. And I was like, six, and so scared to death—I thought I was gonna wind up in jail, ya know? It was my very first conflict.
P: In our neighborhood, a kid sent away from a comic book for a ‘Scary, realistic-looking seven-foot-tall Frankenstein.’ But when it arrived, it was just a 7’-long sheet of plastic with a cheesy monster printed on it. He hung it from his upstairs window anyway and pretended to like it.
TW: Nobody really wants to know … Well, do you really wanna know how magicians do their tricks? You think you wanna know, but you don’t. And when you do, you wish you didn’t. But you can’t un-know it. You can’t un-ring a bell. There are things I just don’t wanna know. And I think that’s probably true with regard to myself, as well—there are things people don’t wanna know about me. They wanna continue to wonder about me, and I think that’s fine. I promote that. So over the years, I’ve usually given untrue answers to things. Just because—well, why not? Truth. Truth is overrated, as well as intelligence is overrated. Don’t ya think?
P: I think it takes a certain degree of smarts to appreciate both the abyss and beauty, like you seem to do, album after album. To understand that the grotesque is just as important as the sublime.
TW: I think my wife probably opened me up to that. I used to tell my wife, “Baby, I’m just meat and potatoes,” and she’d say, “Oh, the hell you are!” But she’s the one who does deeply contemplate the mysteries of life and tries not to contribute to the troubles of the world. I used to think that if you talk about death, that it would come to visit you. Now I think it’s the other way around. And it is all around us, all the time. Or maybe I’m just getting older and starting to embrace that …
P: Bowie once said that the two key questions an artist is faced with once he hits 50 are: How much time do I have left? And what the hell am I supposed to be doing with it anyway?
TW: Bowie’s right, he’s right about that. What am I supposed to be doing? Those are the really big questions, and I haven’t figured ’em out. And you can’t live in show business—there’s not enough protein there, ya know? Career, family—they’re always in some ways somewhat symbiotic, and at the same time diametrically opposed. But I’m OK with those questions now. Or maybe I have a lot of answers that are looking for questions. Yeah—that’s it, in a nutshell. All my answers are just answers looking for questions.




