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Old 07-29-2008, 02:04 PM
michelej1 michelej1 is offline
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Default Dave Walker Interview: May 2008

[Well, Gail, in light of your recent pronouncement, I thought it might be a good time to post this] From DMME.net, an interview by Dmitry M. Epstein classic rock:

http://dmme.net/interviews/dwalker.html

Dave Walker's a real blues man. The veteran of many a prominent British band most famous for his stint with SAVOY BROWN, twists and turns of Walker's walk of life saw him fronting such an unlikely - for Dave - ensemble as BLACK SABBATH. But that's a mere footnote in his story, while the latest major event in it is "Walking Underwater", the singer's best album of all. In the bleak beginning, though, nothing predicted this deep dip in the blues.

- Dave, what was the music landscape in a place you were growing up at?

Music was very much controlled by the British Broadcasting Corporation, BBC, in those days, so what we heard was mostly dance music - for example, Glen Miller, Dorsey Brothers, etcetera, and English imitators. There was also a small amount of ethnic music coming out of Scotland, Wales and Ireland that I was far more interested in, and attracted to.

- How, in your, a Brummie's, opinion, Birmingham gave birth - at around the same time - to such different bands as, say, BLACK SABBATH and ELO?

There have always been very different ways of approaching what we collectively call "rock and roll" music. In industrial areas like Birmingham and the West Midlands of England, I think that because the environment was so real and essential that this was reflected in the personality of the bands. Let's not forget that the area also spawned Spencer Davis, Steve Winwood, TRAFFIC, SLADE, THE MOODY BLUES, half of LED ZEPPELIN and yours truly.

- With your strict upbringing, what was your first rock 'n' roll experience?

My first exposure to rock 'n' roll was on a documentary program on BBC TV and it would be around 1957. The presenter of the program was indicating a brand new kind of music from the USA and the troubling, twitching of the "singer". The music was rock 'n' roll, the song was "Heartbreak Hotel", and the singer was Elvis Presley. My grandmother turned off the TV halfway through the song and said it was heathen music, but that was it - I had seen and heard enough to change my life.

- Who were your influences as a singer and guitarist?

I was influenced very early on by black American singers, who I think in those days had more air-time in England than in the US, but gladly for us for obvious reasons. So I would have to say Paul Robeson, Hoagy Carmichael - a white guy, - Odetta and Sister Rosseta Tharpe. The women I always thought brought a greater depth of feeling to singing as I think they still do. Guitar players - I would say Lonnie Mack's. Listen to "The Wham Of That Memphis Man" on Fraternity Records - 'nough said.

- By the way, how often did you play guitar in various bands you've been in?

I only have ever played rhythm guitar as I cannot play a lick of lead. I played rhythm guitar full time in THE REDCAPS, but I do intend to play rhythm guitar a lot more in the new band. I have a good knowledge of chords and have a percussive style of playing, which I perfected through the years playing coffee houses and small theatres.

- Your first band, THE REDCAPS played with THE BEATLES. What have you learnt from those shows?


What I learned from our contact with THE BEATLES was that you never went on after them, as even early on they were certainly a phenomenon. But apart from that and more importantly, it was obvious that they had complete faith in themselves and a unity that most of their contemporaries lacked.

- What determined your drift from rock 'n' roll and rhythm-and-blues to the original genre, the blues?

I don't think I drifted from rock 'n' roll and rhythm-and-blues as much as it seems now like a natural progression. For years I felt that because of my colour, race, etcetera, I hadn't earned the right to sing the blues. But I have realised after almost a lifetime that hardship, disappointment, and broken hearts touch all of us once in a while. Voila le bleus.

- Did Jeff Lynne leave big shoes for you to fill in THE IDLE RACE?

At the time, I don't remember Jeff's leaving as being treated as a disaster for the band. Jeff did, however, leave a rich recording legacy. Personally I thought that THE IDLE RACE was far more unique with Jeff, than without him.

- What memories do you have of the late Don Arden?

I felt secure being represented by Don - better the Devil you know than the one you don't!

- How did you meet Kim Simmonds? Did you leave Birmingham after THE IDLE RACE had broken up?
I met Kim Simmonds after I had jammed one night up in Birmingham, with John Bonham, a couple of guys from FAIRPORT CONVENTION, and Stan Webb from CHICKEN SHACK. Stan was managed at the time by Harry Simmonds who also managed SAVOY BROWN. I was recommended by Stan, and passed the audition! THE IDLE RACE actually coursed on after I left. But yes, I moved to London when I joined SAVOY BROWN.

- How come "Denim Demon" and "The Derelict" were the only songs of yours that, respectively, SAVOY and FLEETWOOD MAC recorded? Were there more that you offered to them?

Until fairly recently, my writing has always been pretty sporadic anyway. You also must remember that the bulk of the writing was handled by Kim and Paul Raymond with SAVOY BROWN, and by Christine McVie and Bob Welch with FLEETWOOD MAC. So submitting material was almost a dead issue. "Denim Demon" and "Derelict" were really only used because we needed a bit more materials for the respective albums they appeared on. Both songs you could conceive and write in about ten minutes. No fancy harmonies, stories but no real "message". I've always found stories much more interesting, especially when based on fact.

- How did the autobiographic "Denim Demon" come about?

It was just a song about my first American tour impressions.

- What was so alluring in the MAC that you decided to leave SAVOY BROWN?

FLEETWOOD MAC paid!!!

- With FLEETWOOD MAC in turmoil at the time you joined, how justified do you think were accusation of you pulling the band in the SAVOY BROWN direction?

With my input into the band being so minimal, I don't see how I could be said to have been pulling anyone anywhere. Although in my opinion it may have been a good idea at the time. FLEETWOOD MAC were always a good blues rock band. Why they quit playing it, I'll never understand.

- How would you describe your contribution to the MAC?

Minimal.

- Why did HUNGRY FIGHTER, the band you had with Danny Kirwan, was so short-lived?

HUNGRY FIGHTER had great players but no musical identity. You have to remember that this is 1973-1974, and musically things were turning to crap. The oil crisis, no development money from the record companies anymore. Danny Kirwan, bless him, had already started his downward spiral, and it was so painful and sad to watch that I think it permeated the band's optimism and vision. Alas.

There was some accident before the HUNGRY FIGHTER's only gig. What happened?

The road crew who were helping HUNGRY FIGHTER were working the night before our gig at London University with another band. On the way home from that gig, they were involved in a serious road accident in which our roadie, John Knowles, was badly injured, and the equipment we were to use was, by and large, destroyed. We did not play, as the headline band would not loan us any of their gear.

- The band's drummer was Mac Poole. Did you hear his work in Nick Simper's WARHORSE?

No, I did not hear any of Mac's work with Nick Simper. Mac Poole is a great drummer!

- What made you move to America in the late Seventies?

In view of the above situation and given the fact that I was married to an American woman, to move to America seemed like the next step. Actually, I moved to America in October of 1974.

- Why didn’t you try to start there a new band - of your own - rather than join the established teams?

Actually, the band that evolved out of my meeting the late John Cippolina of QUICKSILVER MESSENGER SERVICE was in essence a new band. The band was called MISTRESS, a horrible name but a great group, and it developed new material which lyrically I contributed to.

- With your and Cippolina's pedigree, why didn't MISTRESS succeed - with ro without both of you?

Actually, John Cippolina never was a member of MISTRESS. As to MISTRESS' lack of success, those were the beginnings of the cocaine days!

- Originally that band was called RAVEN, and you made some demos. Is there any chance for these tapes to be released?

MISTRESS and RAVEN were two separate entities, although they did share Gregg Douglas as a guitarist. There is a CD of the RAVEN band out there. I think I sing on two of the tracks.

- The short stint with BLACK SABBATH seems the strangest move of your career. Why did you agree to the offer - out of Brummie solidarity? I mean you're not a metal singer, although SAVOY BROWN's "Time Does Tell" isn't so far from what the SABS were doing...

Brummie solidarity is exactly what it was. Actually Tony Iommi for whom I have great regard was helpful in my joining SAVOY BROWN in 1971.

- How?

Tony and BLACK SABBATH were represented at the time by Chrysalis Agency, I believe, and SAVOY BROWN worked out of that office also. Basically, Tony had a word with Harry Simmonds, Kim's manager, on my behalf.

- Did SABBATH use any of your vocal melodies on "Never Say Die"?

I have no idea, having never heard the album.

- Did Geezer Butler, the main SABBATH lyricist, back out when you came in to let you be the wordsmith?

I didn't know Geezer was supposed to be the main lyricist. I was the only one writing lyrics, as I recall.

- In what terms did the SABS inform you that your services weren't needed anymore?

I showed up for rehearsal. As I walked in, the band announced that they were going to the local pub for a meeting and that I was to wait until they got back. When they did, Bill Ward spoke for the band and said, and I quote, "We're still here, and you're not". That was it.

- Were you disillusioned so much in the business that you left music for most of the Eighties?

Actually, after I had been in the US for a year my marriage broke down, and then after MISTRESS and my failure with BLACK SABBATH. I returned to the US from Great Britain and basically became a shiftless hippie for a few years, working on ranches and doing a lot of manual jobs - construction, kitchen work, etcetera. In fact, I don't think you can call yourself a "blues" singer if you haven't had a few dish washing jobs! In 1981 I put together THE DAVID WALKER BAND which in its short two-year life included Jim Pugh who has played keyboards with Robert Cray and Etta James now for several years, and Steff Burns who plays with Alice Cooper. Unfortunately, drugs did have a great influence with a couple of us and along with what I will call bad advice, we narrowly missed a major label deal, and we went our separate ways. The band was really excellent, and I think that was what really made me a non-participant musically. Plus the new stuff that was selling in those days was, in my opinion, absolute ****!

- Why did THE DAVID WALKER BAND's only album never see the light of day?

Drugs...

- There was a rumor you lived with a tribe of Native Americans for some time - true of false?

I didn't live with a tribe. I lived in Gallup, New Mexico for eleven years. Gallup is a big Indian town. I worked for a guy in Gallup. The work took me out onto the Navajo Reservation a lot and I also had a Pueblo girl friend for three years. She left me for a cop!

- Was it difficult to get back to SAVOY BROWN in 1987, fifteen years after you left the band?

No, in terms of material, as we were doing a lot of our well-known stuff from the late Sixties, early Seventies. Physically it was difficult as I recall for about the first six months or so.

- Why did you re-join in the first place - given Kim Simmond's not treating you as equal during your first stint with SAVOY?

Someone had told me about a live SAVOY BROWN album. A recording of the band from Central Park in 1972. Anyway, I found the album on Relix Records and liked it. I had been working as an odd-job man, and I decided to contact Kim Simmonds, which I did, he invited me to rejoin the band. The odd-job man was getting old, so I went back.

- What kind of band DONOVAN'S BRAIN are and were you a real part of this band?

They were what I would call "diletante psychadelic" a "noodling" band. No, I was never a member of the band. And I feel that a lot was made out of the fact that I had overdubbed a couple of vocal harmony tracks for them. That was all.

- "Walking Underwater" is a great collection of vintage, though recently recorded, blues. Do you still find anything new in this music after all these years?

You always find something new in the music, but in this instance I think, through my friends at Iron Horse Entertainment and their encouragement, I have found something new in myself.

- Where does the desperation of the album's title track come from?

Strange! The nom de plume I use is "Desperate Davey"! It's autobiographical about me and women I loved and lost.

- "Walking Underwater" seems to be the first record of yours with you co-writing most of the material. Why is it only now that you feel confident as songwriter?

I don't know if I do feel confident as a songwriter. I just received a lot of encouragement from people on this project, without which I don't know if I could have done it.
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Old 07-30-2008, 12:20 AM
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aleuzzi aleuzzi is offline
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Gosh, Walker's had some pretty hard nocks. This interview reads like a catalogue of personal disasters which, paradoxically, have left the man room to re-invent himself. I'm thrilled he has a new album and has co-written a lot of the material.
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Old 07-30-2008, 05:34 AM
Gailh Gailh is offline
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- How would you describe your contribution to the MAC?

Minimal.

I'd go along with that

I read somewhere that both Bob and Christine found it difficult to write for Dave. I don't know if that's right or not (perhaps Bob could expand on it?) I think maybe he just wasn't the right person for the band. Although he did explain the meaning behind Rattle Snake Shake, at a FM concert, which as a naive 14 year old I hadn't actually grasped!

Gail

Last edited by Gailh; 07-30-2008 at 07:59 AM..
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Old 07-30-2008, 11:04 PM
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aleuzzi aleuzzi is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Gailh View Post
- How would you describe your contribution to the MAC?

Minimal.

I'd go along with that

I read somewhere that both Bob and Christine found it difficult to write for Dave. I don't know if that's right or not (perhaps Bob could expand on it?) I think maybe he just wasn't the right person for the band. Although he did explain the meaning behind Rattle Snake Shake, at a FM concert, which as a naive 14 year old I hadn't actually grasped!

Gail
You saw Dave with the Mac, live?! Awesome!
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Old 07-31-2008, 03:06 AM
Gailh Gailh is offline
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Originally Posted by aleuzzi View Post
You saw Dave with the Mac, live?! Awesome!
I most certainly did. 31 May 1973 at the Free Trade Hall in Manchester. My first ever FM concert. Actually my first ever concert (they say you always remember your first time )

I can't remember too much about the songs they played. Nightwatch definately, Rattle Snake Shake springs to mind. Some moron kept shouting for Albatross and Bob Weston asked him if he was "going to f*ck*n listen". I don't remember Christine singing lead on more than one song but I can't remember what it was. Might have been Morning Rain?

that's about it really

Gail
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Old 07-31-2008, 11:10 AM
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Wow, you were at an historical gig, Gail! I've read stories about British audiences heckling for Albatross, which had just been re-released to great fan fare. Glad Bob Welch put him in his place.

Christine didn't sing more than one song? Tragic!
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Old 07-31-2008, 11:53 AM
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Wow, you were at an historical gig, Gail! I've read stories about British audiences heckling for Albatross, which had just been re-released to great fan fare. Glad Bob Welch put him in his place.

Christine didn't sing more than one song? Tragic!

Yeah....Audience(s) members also used to sometimes heckle "where's Peter Green"...etc. too. Gail was indeed at a historical gig, since we only did one American tour with Dave as frontman ;-) Dave was a GREAT frontman, and singer, make no mistake about that...He got the crowd on their feet with his finale song "Goin' Down", which he belted to the rafters...Dave had a great "look", not contrived, but he really loved "Indian" turquoise jewlery....and with his snakeskin boots, and long black hair down his back, and that beard...he looked like an English Bob Seeger.....Fleetwood Mac's music was just too nuanced, and subtle, and Dave was "too big" a "prescence" for us....like a bull in a china shop...;-)

I'd never dis Dave's talents though.....he was awesome !

Bob Welch(missus)
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Old 07-31-2008, 12:40 PM
Gailh Gailh is offline
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Originally Posted by aleuzzi View Post
Wow, you were at an historical gig, Gail! I've read stories about British audiences heckling for Albatross, which had just been re-released to great fan fare. Glad Bob Welch put him in his place.

Christine didn't sing more than one song? Tragic!
It was Bob Weston that shut him up. Quite right too!

I think it did get a round of applause from the Mancunian audience.

Gail
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Old 07-31-2008, 11:56 PM
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It was Bob Weston that shut him up. Quite right too!

I think it did get a round of applause from the Mancunian audience.

Gail
Yikes, I misread Weston for Welch. Bad me. Though it would have been equally as cool to hear Welch say it!

eh missus?
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Old 08-01-2008, 07:28 AM
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like a bull in a china shop...;-)
That's exactly how I have always felt about Dave Walker's presence in Fleetwood Mac.

There's nothing wrong with bulls and there's nothing wrong with china but they simply don't belong together.

(Not that the Welch-era Mac were "delicate" exactly, but they were in comparison to Dave!)

Thanks for contributing to the thread, Bob!
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Old 08-01-2008, 02:53 PM
michelej1 michelej1 is offline
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Boseman Daily Chronicle (Montana)

http://bozemandailychronicle.com/art...c/01walker.txt


Rockin’ Man: From Walsall, England, to Virginia City Dave Walker continues to make music

By JESSICA MAYRER, Chronicle staff writer

Dave Walker headlined Carnegie Hall as a front man for Savoy Brown, recorded with Fleetwood Mac and rubbed shoulders with members of Led Zeppelin and the Beatles before making his home in a trailer court and paying rent with money earned working in a Four Corners restaurant.

They say, ‘why are you washing dishes?’” he said. “And I say, ‘because I got to.’”

Walker’s life has been one of extremes. After growing up without a father in post-war, blue-collar England he went on to sing in front of thousands, party with rock ‘n’ roll royalty and in the early 1960s share a stage with the Four Seasons, Jerry Lee Lewis and the Beatles.

“They took all the pretty girls, which pissed us off,” Walker said.

But the self-described working-class son of Walsall, England, is back on an upward trajectory after hitting one of those gritty lows that makes for great song lyrics. He’s on stage again, forming The Dave Walker Band with local rock ‘n’ roll veterans Mike Gillan, Jim Lewis, Eddie T. and Chris Hall.

“In a really personal and creative way they’ve saved my ass,” Walker said from his two-story cedar home in Virginia City, overlooking the Tobacco Root Mountains.

Walker, 64, has plowed through much of his life in a blur of booze and drugs. But after his mother died two years ago, leaving an inheritance, the Brit got another chance.

He sobered up, formed the band and bought a red Porsche.

“You end up going to these (expletive) therapists,” Walker said. “That Porsche is better than any $90-per-hour (expletive) therapist.”

Last year, The Dave Walker Band released their debut album, “Walking Underwater.” They’re gearing up to play the annual outdoor music festival, Rockin’ the Rivers, on Sunday, Aug. 10.

Walker said he feels uncomfortable with his name center stage in the band’s name. The emphasis, he said, should be on the band, not him.

But his band mates appreciate Walker’s place in rock ‘n’ roll history.

“It’s like an honor. He’s like a legend,” said Eddie T., the Dave Walker Band bassist.

Eddie T.’s first major rock show was Savoy Brown featuring Walker’s bluesy growl on vocals. They performed in 1972 at the Honolulu International Center, he said.

“He’s a great singer. And the stories are great,” Eddie T. said. “He’s like a walking encyclopedia of English rock.”

And Jim Lewis, guitarist for the Dave Walker Band, remembers copying licks from Savoy Brown’s “Street Corner Talking,” LP fronted by Walker more than 30 years ago.

“It’s just kind of amazing, now I’m playing with him,” Lewis said.

Walker still looks like a rocker, with his thin frame, silver earring, brown motorcycle boots, worn Levis, immaculate mustache and long silver hair pulled back. His British accent completes the package.

As the illegitimate child of a “yank,” growing up in hardscrabble, blue-collar Britain, Walker got picked on.

“Sometimes you don’t know whether to weep or to lash out,” Walker said. “I’ve never gotten over it.”

But singing gave him a way out, at least for a little while. At 4 years old he sang “Away in a Manger” at the local Methodist church.

“People who would shun you, suddenly, you had their attention,” he said.

His mother loved to sing “Madame Butterfly.” Growing up, Walker listened to the Glenn Miller Orchestra on the radio and imitated black-faced minstrels like Al Jolson.

“That’s kind of sick, isn’t it?” he asked. “I’d go down on one knee and sing ‘Mammie.’”

“I bet you Eric Clapton would never own up to that,” he said.

By age 15, Walker was playing bars and dancehalls in Birmingham, England, with his first band, the Redcaps.

“The music thing, it really took over everything,” Walker said. “It’s the only thing I actually could do pretty well without too much effort.”

He joined Savoy Brown in 1971, continuing his musical education. Savoy Brown’s bass player, Andy Sylvester, introduced Walker to blues musicians like Freddy King and Jimmy Reed.

Walker went on to record one album with Fleetwood Mac and briefly joined Black Sabbath before leaving the music scene, he said.

“I effectively disappeared in New Mexico for 11 years,” Walker said.

Now, at home in Virginia City, Walker is surrounded by the Navajo rugs and Native American sand paintings he collected while working as a janitor in New Mexico. The Navajo creation story is tacked on a peach-colored wall in his living room above a Fender guitar that sits in the floor.

The vocalist spends a lot of time alone here with his dogs, guitars and pink petunias. He’s been married and divorced three times and has no children, “anywhere,” he said. He made much of the home’s furniture with the planer and saw on the front deck. Birds land on a Walker-made feeder outside. Water trickles into a pond he built to memorialize his mother.

“My mom always liked that kind of thing,” he said. “As much as I hate to admit it, because she was a nutter, we are a lot alike.”

He is a funny character, said Mike Gillan, drummer for the Dave Walker Band. And when he drives the Porsche, folks better watch out.

“He’s kind of crazy, that’s for sure,” Gillan said.

Musicians need to be a bit off kilter, though, Lewis said.

“People want you to be crazy,” Lewis said. “It’s a vicious, happy circle.”

The band is excited to continue playing with Walker, they say.

“He was one of our teachers,” Lewis said. The musicians now aim to impress their teacher.

And they are.

“I’m really lucky to be able to sing with these guys,” Walker said. “They’ve kind of brought me out of my shell.”

Jessica Mayrer can be reached at jmayrer@dailychronicle.com or 582-2656
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