Ian
Gillan Interview with Jon Kirkman, March 2006
Hard
to believe it but Ian Gillan has been treading the boards professionally
for over forty years. In tribute not only to his longevity in
the business - an amazing feat in itself - but also as a mark
of celebration, Ian Gillan has recorded the album Gillan’s Inn.
Writer and Rock DJ Jon Kirkman spoke to Ian Gillan while he took
a break in between dates on the current Deep Purple Rapture of
the Deep tour and has very kindly allowed us to reprint the full
interview here.
Jon
Kirkman: Gillan’s Inn is a good way to celebrate your 40th
anniversary in the business doing an album, getting your pals
in to help you.
Ian Gillan:
It didn’t start off that way actually. About eighteen months ago
my manager phoned me up and said that I have been singing now
for about four hundred years and it is about time that I did an
anniversary record. So with that in mind, over the next few days
I thought he meant a compilation album of tracks which was the
idea I think to start with. I burned a few CDs from my media files
and listened to them in the car for a few days and realised it
wasn’t going to work. The sounds were so different from different
eras. I know they can all be re-mastered to give it some kind
of cohesion but there was also the problem of Episode Six and
The Javelins from the early days and I didn’t have anything suitable
to put on a compilation that would mix in.
So we started thinking about re-makes, I spoke to my producer
and he suggested phoning some people and getting some guests on
it. Within twenty minutes I had a reply from Joe Elliot who said,
"Count me in mate", and then Joe Satriani and Jon Lord
and all the guys in Purple, Tony Iommi and it was just great.
We worked on that basis and chose some material. I found an old
Episode Six song on an old BBC tape that would be a great basis.
It was a Bob Dylan song but at least it was a gesture to the time
and the arrangement. It was great fun.
I
told them to imagine that they were coming to the pub, I had a
set list and you get up and play two or three songs each and I
mix and mingle all the players. We just had a hoot. We are not
trying to improve these original versions; we’re just using them
as a vehicle to have a good time. We’re paying them respect and
we will see what happens. There was a very particular technique
in doing this because obviously these people are scattered all
over the world and I couldn’t get them all in the studio at the
same time in the same place. We recorded in three different locations
in the UK, Buffalo, New York, Toronto, Austin, Texas, San Francisco,
Los Angeles etc. We kicked off doing the bed tracks, live vocals,
and live musicians. I had done this once before and it works really
well. When Ian Paice came along in England to do his three or
four songs or whatever we just put the cans on him and he would
hear everything as if it was live. We just removed the original
drummer so he is playing to a live track and therefore plays live.
We managed to keep that feeling throughout the whole record. That
was the trickiest part about the whole of the recording but it
worked very well.
JK: It’s got a very relaxed feel to it as well which I
am presuming is the way you wanted it to go. You didn’t want it
to be too formal I guess.
IG:
I didn’t want to have any songs
with complicated arrangements so we left out all of those big
production numbers. I wanted it to be like a jam basically. When
people come up and jam they are relaxed. There has to be the right
sense of urgency though. A lot of these are rock songs so there
has to be power and dynamics and texture but at the same time
when people are feeling relaxed they tend to be very confident
and deliver their best. Satriani was amazing; he had never heard
the track before. He set his gear up in the studio and said, "Shall
we go out for a bite to eat after this? I know a nice little place
round the corner. What would you like me to do?" So I played
him Unchain your Brain and he just nailed it solo second take.
I said, "There’s a bit more on the intro Joe if you wouldn’t
mind, would you like to hear it?" "No," he said,
"Just roll it and give me a nod when you want me to come
in." This is what we do on stage and the hairs on my arms
come up even now! I think it was three choruses back to back building
to a climax. Unbelievable, he nailed it first take without having
heard it before.
JK: Looking at the material, you mentioned Unchain your
Brain, and listening to these songs I can remember the originals.
My one criticism, and it is a minute one, is that the production
on some of those Gillan albums are very of their time and that
is proved by listening to the versions here. I think the songs
are incredible particularly something like Men of War which is
a great song. I love the fact that you have done these songs and
they kick ass.
IG:
Well I made a decision early on that this is not going to work,
it may have worked with the Gillan stuff as the focal point. But
it wouldn’t have worked with quite a few of the others. In actual
fact it wasn’t until later that I realised while talking to my
manager what a nightmare it would have been putting together the
compilation because we would have had to license these tracks
from all the different record labels that we have been with over
the years and it would have been a nightmare. So there’s another
bonus. The songs are what they are. You can never improve on the
originals. I told all the guys that as they came along, "Look,
let’s start with Smoke right, everyone knows what that’s like.
I want every guitar player that comes to the session to take one
part in Smoke. We ended up with four on the DVD that you can interact
with. There is another one with Steve Morris which is available
on a special CD rom. That is what we did; we just had fun and
showed respect. None of them are ever going to have the impact
that the originals had.
JK: You have been very lucky though haven’t you in terms
of the great musicians? If we concentrate on one little aspect
like guitarists, you have worked with some of the best. On this
album, if you listen to the song When a Blind Man Cries I just
love the way Jeff Healey plays on that.
IG: Isn’t that beautiful?
JK: It’s great.
IG:
Shuffling around with all the
bits of paper choosing the different guests and who is going to
be on what, I wanted a guitar player who was really a blues player.
We had already put Jon Lord down for that one and the producer
suggested Jeff Healey because he lives right here in Toronto.
I asked for his number and called him up. Jeff had worked with
us some years ago. I told him about project and asked him to come
along and play on a song called When a Blind Man Cried and I thought,
oh fuck, he’s blind but he didn’t see the irony in that whatsoever.
I love that song and it is all about us moaning and groaning about
life when a blind man cried he really has something to cry about.
So yes you are right. I remember having the hand held camera in
the studio because his style of playing is on his lap.
JK: Have you twigged how he does that yet?
IG:
He must be self taught. It is just incredible. I did a gig with
him on the way out to do the Rapture of the Deep album and stopped
off in Toronto, went to Healey’s and did a set with him. It was
great, it was hot. He is a great musician. He had a tumour removed
from his leg a couple of months ago, he has always struggled through
but wow what a great guy. That solo on When a Blind Man Cries
was fabulous.
JK: What are your expectations for the album; you are obviously
tied up currently in the middle of a world tour with Deep Purple
promoting the Rapture of the Deep album.
IG:
I think my expectations were very simple to start with and that
was to have a musical document that was an anniversary thing to
mark forty years of hard work. That’s not counting the semi –pro
years before that. However, when this thing developed it turned
into something entirely different because I was talking to the
record company 5.1 in Los Angeles and John Trickett who is the
CEO. He asked me if I had any ideas for the production and I said
that since the days on vinyl when I used to sit with a new record,
open it up and flick through the pages of the gate fold and look
at all the candid photographs and the anecdotes and lyrics and
pictures and all the design extensions of the artist in the studio
come out.
There
has been none of that since we have CDs. The artwork has really
gone so I want to write a book. I have got it all here and I want
to put the CD in the book or give the book away with the CD that
contains all the extra bits of information etc. He said it could
be a problem because they wouldn’t rack it in the shops and said
about selling it in bookshops but he said that he had the answer.
He said we would do it all electronically and do a dual disc.
He said that we could do everything we want on the B side of the
record. They have had a team working on this night and day since
the very beginning collecting stuff. I had the hand held camera
in the studio and we had other bits and pieces. They got me to
handwrite all the lyrics, to do introductions to the songs and
there is an awful lot on there. I have only been through about
50% of it.
JK:
There is so much on there.
IG:
Exactly. I was watching it with my daughter when I got back from
the first leg of the European tour when it arrived. We were going
through the brick by brick and some of the making of the candid
stuff inside the studio. We were both rolling on the floor laughing
at some of these things. It is a real insight into what goes on
behind the scenes. I don’t know what people think goes on in a
recording studio but basically we just have fun.
JK: I always thought most musicians do what they do because
they didn’t fancy clocking on at the factory and if it was like
you are no better off are you?
IG:
That’s true. I had a day job. I was still at school actually when
I was in my first band. They came around my house on a Saturday
morning and there would be five guys with acoustic guitars, biscuit
tins and knitting needles and we were just making a racket. I
remember the looks on our faces when we got through our first
couple of songs. It was just incredible. Thank God for the blues
because it gave us simple structures and the idea of telling a
story over a song. It was great days and I think it is that way
now. It is better than clocking on although having said that the
discipline involved in what we do that makes it seem effortless
is actually quite an insight. On the tour bus they practise for
six hours every day even on show days. We can’t be late for things;
we have to be on time and there are other responsibilities as
well. That was all the professionalism we learned in the early
days that keeps you in good stead but you’re right it’s not like
clocking on (Laughs).
JK: Well the album is great and I think people are going
to be knocked out by the DVD. The track listing is very diverse
but it does hang together very well. Well done for that.
IG:
I appreciate that very much.
JK: Choosing the material and tracking it must be an art
in itself.
IG:
It is, I mean I haven’t done this sort of thing very often. Normally
you go into the studio, you write your material and it is an encapsulation
of that period in time that goes onto the record. All the songs
are compatible because it is all the same musicians and same writing
source. I had a lot of help in this with my team.
JK: It has turned out wonderfully and it is great to speak
to you.
IG: Thank you very much.
© Jon Kirkman, www.Rockahead.net 2006
(the screenshots are taken from the Gillan's Inn DVD 'Making of..'
documentary
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