Post by Scotty Campbell on Jan 8, 2006 12:33:55 GMT -5
Billy Cowsill on CKUA
December 12, 2005
Host: Tom Coxworth
Tom: Good afternoon I’m Tom Coxworth and welcome to Folk Routes. Well we have a special program for you this afternoon. A little earlier this week I spoke with Billy Cowsill. He’s got a CD that’s going to be hitting the streets. Eight tracks recorded from 1985. Let’s start it off this way and we’ll get into some conversation with Billy right after this. A musical journey, if you could. Let’s let Billy introduce the band.
Billy: Thank you very much. I’d like to introduce the band. On the upright doghouse bass Elmare 'Spins' Spanier there. We have Colin Munn 'The Bo-hunk Funk' on guitar for ya. And in the back Chris 'The Risk' Nordquist on the drums there. My name is Billy Cowsill. Glad to be here at the Palace. Glad you’re having such a great time. It’s mostly dead guys kids. They’re gone. Hearts of gold and nuts for brains, that’s what you get in the business.
Song: Rollover Beethoven
Tom: The first thing I have to ask, because everybody will want to know. How are you doing these days? You’ve had hip surgery. You’ve had some complications for the surgery.
Billy: I’ve had three major back surgeries, and the last back surgery was up by my right lung. And they had to deflate my lung for all of about eight hours. And when they re-inflated it, it didn’t come back. You are looking at a man who is singing with one lung.
Tom: But you’re still singing.
Billy: It would appear so.
Tom: It would certainly appear so. (laughs)
Billy: Billy ‘One Lung’
Tom: Billy ‘One Lung’
Billy: Billy ‘One Lung’
Tom: But you don’t have a choice. You have to sing. I mean, you – there was the Bob Dylan interview just last night and he said something about destiny is something that only the person knows them self. And you didn’t have a choice in being a singer. Ah, even if you had wanted to be a postal carrier or something.
Billy: I was like a bird man
Tom: Yeah?
Billy: It would appear so. I was born a bird. That’s what I do. I’m a singer. I wack at the guitar a bit and people thing I’m a fairly great rhythm guitar player and it’s a real drag BUT I do it cuz that’s what I have to except. And I do it with gratitude that I’m even able to do it.
Song: Vagabond
Tom: So when you are recording a Hank Snow song or a Hank Williams song or something like that, you like to use older equipment rather than the digital equipment?
Billy: Yeah I do and that’s because it blends itself to the human voice much more warmer I find.
Tom: What was, for you, the first thing that awakened you? Not just to being in the family group, but what was the first thing that Billy Cowsill heard that went “Ah there’s something out there.” Either being part of the family or ...
Billy: There was a song called "I Want To Hold Your Hand."
Tom: That was it? The harmonies
Billy: When I heard that “I get high” “I get high” There’s that first interval, I believe right there. And that’s what brought that Everly’s third thing out.
Tom: And it was the combination …
Billy: I may have the intervals wrong here but I believe that’s what it is. But it had those two voices, so tight together, so immaculately joined that it elicited a third tone. That and "Don’t Worry Baby" by the Beach Boys.
Tom: Oh yeah
Billy: That did it to me too.
Tom: I was just reading about John Phillips and I just bought the box set of The Mama and The Papas. And he talked about getting in the studio and how they would rehearse, rehearse, rehearse, rehearse and they would get to the certain frustration and all of a sudden there were no longer four voices but there was a fifth voice. Do you find that kind of fifth voice when you hear this song?
Billy: Yeah Yes the fifth voice is provoked by harmonics. That is if you get two voices singing a fifth spread like the Everly Brothers sang. They sang, I believe, a first and a fifth. What happens is you get ‘em close enough, shimmering next to each other that a third is elicited out of that. And that third is a harmonic of the fifth and the first, I believe. So you can’t get that, you can kind of get it and things are a lot sharper and clearer and crispier with a digital signed wave, but again it’s not really a wave. It’s a function.
Tom: It doesn’t carry any warmth to it.
Billy: It’s icy. It’s cool. It’s crisp. It’s sharp. It’s edgy and yes you can hear more clarity. And you can hear things you never heard before coming out. But all those things were in there to begin with. They were just masked by other sign waves a bit. And I believe that there’s a way to get that without going digital.
Tom: Was it so natural, for you and the rest of the members of your family to rehearse and get that fifth voice in there?
Billy: Yep
Tom: It was just …
Billy: Well the point is we didn’t know what it was, but we knew we were doing it. We knew what it was and it made my hair stand on ends.
Tom: When you look at some of those early recordings and the technology today is easier and faster and cheaper. So are we losing a lot of what you are trying to hold on to?
Billy: I think so. I feel so. I don’t think so, I feel so. It’s a feeling thing too.
Song: Hair
Tom: Susan, Barbara, Paul, Bob, John, Harry (yes this was a mistake by Tom Coxworth) April of 1969 A #1 and I’m here with Billy Cowsill of The Cowsill family. What do you feel was a critical part for you, after you left the family, for developing the Billy style. Because you were really more punk and all country before it ever existed. You had more cowboy influence than anybody else and ...
Billy: Well there were two things I wanted to be when I grew up. One was a cowboy and one was to be a rock 'n roller. And that was it. And one was like Beatles rock ‘n roller. That was my rock ‘n roll. I missed Elvis Presley and all those early guys. I was like 8 and 9. I wasn’t 12 or 11, 13. I wasn’t a teenager when that went down. I missed it by about 2 years as far as being conscious of what it was. My young adolescent, I was growing fast. I grew into my adolescence fast. So I got the joke, as I call it, of what was stirring and what the music was doing to me because it’s very sexual, you know. Rock ‘n roll is extremely sexual music. As I would imagine, the music of my forbearers was considered sexual too. The jive and the Charleston and some things like that were considered really radical and very loaded with innuendos. And before that, and before that. I think music, to a degree, has always had a sexual influence. Even Mozart and guys like that. That was the pop music of their time, and people danced to it.
Tom: Let me ask you, when did you cross over into country? Was that in ...
Billy: I’ve always been country.
Tom: Right from the beginning?
Billy: Right from the beginning. My mother was a country-western fan. Uh, traditional country-western fan. Uh, we lived in Virginia. She just loved that hillbilly music.
Song: Jackson
Tom: When you struck out on your own, what was the, what were you going to do and what did you do? You did the solo album.
Billy: I had no idea what I was going to do, so I ended up with a #1 record in the country, started drinking, didn’t know I was an alcoholic and was soon to become one. No, I was one but soon to have it brought forth. And, uh, got married, was married to a wonderful woman who was an artist, had a son. Pregnant wife actually when we broke off. And, uh, was living in Laurel Canyon and I walked into Hormel Studios one day, which was the state of the art studio of the time. Met Geordie Hormel who introduced me to Gary Usher, who wrote ‘In My Room’ with Brian. And, uh, Gary came to me and said, “Listen, there’s a movie coming out called M.A.S.H. Would you like to sing the title song called "Suicide Is Painless"?” which is di did di did di dida Da da da da da da da da. And I listened to the song. I said “Naw.” But then he played me this acetate, this song on an acetate, I believe it was. Which for you boys and girls out there was one of the early demos. Rather than burn something out there back then we cut an acetate for the demo. It was good for about 10 plays. Then it was lacquer of shellac painted onto an aluminum disc. And it was literally an acetate. It was acetate. It was tar. But it played great for about 5-6 plays, really well and then it started deteriorating. So you had to balance your needle a little lighter. But he played me a Billy Sherrill song by this woman who was just coming out called Tammy Wynette. And the song he played me was "Stand By Your Man." And I dropped dead on the stop. It was so good, I couldn’t believe it. It was like a female George Jones, and I couldn’t believe it. It was unbelievable sounding. Unbelievable song, the production was just sterling, stellar production. And I lost it and you get by something like that, you don’t forget it.
Song: Stand By Your Man
Tom: It’s such a unique talent to tap into that, to be able to find the real root of music. If I was to put in this program music that is Billy’s music, what song from The Everly Brothers?
Billy: Um, "Cathy’s Clown"
Tom: Why does that work so much?
Billy: Because I’ve never had anybody who could sing it properly except Jeffrey Hatcher. And we never got around to it and it pisses me off.
Song: Cathy’s Clown
Tom: You are listening to a special feature on CKUA radio network. My name is Tom Coxworth and we’re taking a journey, a musical journey with Calgary’s own, Billy Cowsill, through his long and varied history. For a list of the songs you can go to ckua.com and check out the play list at the Folk Routes page. Billy Cowsill will have a new CD in the streets in the next few weeks. And actually it’s vintage Billy going back to 1985. Live at the Crystal Ballroom here in Calgary from 1985. More of that when we get back after these messages. Stay tuned.
Commercials
Tom: Tell me a little bit about this disc that is coming out this week.
Billy: Well Neil MacGonigill was rummaging through his dusty top drawer and came up with, uh, some ancient Billy Cowsill. And it’s me opening for k.d. lang in 1985 at the Palliser Hotel. It’s vault stuff man. It’s something you can’t get on the internet right now, but maybe we can get that up and running somehow. And what it is, it’s eight songs. So it’s like this bootleg, remastering of a board tape which happen to get recorded by Grant Macary who’s again has a level of conscience that astounds me and has the best sound system in Canada, and it came out just fine.
Tom: To tap into one of the great heroes, Hank Snow.
Billy: And that version of that is from, uh, the version I do with the funny lyrics in there are from Homer and Jethro. My mother used to get this magazine called Your Hit Parade. And, uh, the real lyrics to that song are in there with these Homer and Jethro lyrics. The comedy lyrics. And that’s what she learned and that’s what she taught me. So that’s how I’ve been singing it all these years. But the melody is just killer. So it doesn’t matter if you sang, uh, "Little Red Riding Hood" to it, it would still be cool cuz it’s such a cool driving song. So that’s what’s coming out.
Song: I’m Movin’ On
Tom: Musically, what are some of the high points that you want to put on the anthology of Billy Cowsill songs?
Billy: Standing where Paul McCartney stood on the Ed Sullivan show.
Tom: laughs Yes but we can’t play that on a record player. Did you stand right on the spot?
Billy: Right on the spot
Tom: Did they take you right over to it. Say there’s the X where they had you stand on it?
Billy: No, but I knew it.
Tom: If we but a double CD together of Billy Cowsill’s music, what is some of the music you’d put right in that CD and say “This is the one that should have been the #1 hit. This is the one ...”
Billy: The best song I ever wrote I think was "On The Floor Of Heaven".
Tom: And that was The Blue Shadows
Billy: Yep
Tom: You put yourself into the lyric? Was that lyric right out of ...?”
Billy: It came through the …. Jeffrey and I channeled a lot. That was one of those things that were evoked by the universe.
Tom: Do you still listen to those recordings today? Can you still listen to those recordings today?
Billy: Yes
Tom: As a perfectionist, do you re-record some of those things?
Billy: No
Tom: You’re happy because they are like ...
Billy: Yes
Tom: they are like an Everly Brothers song and you can’t re-record. You can’t get back again.
Billy: No we sang on serial microphone together, when we sang together in the studio.
Song: On The Floor Of Heaven
Tom: When you’re with The Co-Dependents, how does that work for you?
Billy: It works like The Beatles work. That’s why I loved that band. Because we’ve attained that kind of conviction level and that kind of comradery, and the imperceptible seething of … Well it’s comradery, that feeling that you can’t be touched. And if you just do your job really well you’re going to be adored.
Song: Sweet Nothins’
Tom: (broken tape) to keep doin’ what you’re doin’?
Billy: Well in a way no, in a way yes. In a way no because I don’t have the power that I used to, uh, invoke and so part of me wants to go no. I can’t do this because it’s too heart breaking. Breaks my heart.
Tom: Is that because you’re a perfectionist? People have always said that there is only one man. That you’re so on the mark when you’re producing voice. You can tap into, not only that fifth voice we talked about before, but you can tap into something else that that person didn’t know they had. How do you step up to a person that’s a singer and that you have to guide them. Kevin Dunn that you helped a few years ago. He said that you did some of the most amazing guiding for him. Cindy Church did the same thing.
Billy: It’s, it’s, it’s just what I know. I just know it. I have absolute conviction when it comes to working with the human voice. I’m not afraid of it. I’m convinces anybody can do it. I believe it’s a learned task. I believe some are born with more of a predisposition to do so, like myself perhaps maybe. Humbly I say. But there’s a lot of people who could be singing now that aren’t. That don’t think that they have good voices, but they do because somebody said “Shut up” to them when they were really young. Everybody can sing and I have a few students that I work with. And I’m convinced that they can do anything that they want to do with their voice, if they’ll just do it.
Tom: Man we need educators like you more and more and more to help guide people. To give people the confidence. Give people that guidance that you have in your voice. Even now today, do you practice every day?
Billy: Uh, I just started picking it up again. I’ve been a bit blue and I’ve been a bit in pain. Uh, but yes up until about 2 weeks ago I was doing it every day because I had to do a show. So if a show comes up or I have to sing, I’ll take a couple weeks and exercise every single day. I have a bit of a regime that I follow for myself and uh, teach to my students that allows them to at least have a good time with themselves.
Tom: At least be comfortable with them.
Billy: Be comfortable with themselves and know that they can do things that they didn’t think they could do again because somebody told them to stand in the back of the room and keep their mouth shut. To really learn a song you got to study it.
Tom: You are still to me one of the people that have always believed in rock ‘n roll. I mean believed in the true heart of rock ‘n roll. When I first saw you, I couldn’t believe, not only that the voice came out, anybody can sing a note, but nobody can get into the song like you. Nobody can become the lyric of the song. Nobody could that song.
Billy: Because, there’s a reason for that. It’s because I get outside of the song. I don’t get into it MAN, I get outside of it and view it and love it and realize that I am delivering this the way it should be delivered. It’s from out there man. It’s not from in here. It comes through here, but it’s not anyway related to me in any way, shape or form. It’s not personal. Personable, but not personal.
Song: The Race Is On
Tom: Where did you get your writing style from?
Billy: The Beatles and uh Hank Williams mostly. Beatles, Hank, The Merseys The Merseys stuff and Hank Williams and The Beach Boys. I can only take a little bits because when I take a little bit there’s so much to it….
Tom: Oh yeah
Billy: so I couldn’t really get into a general base of information and I’m not really great at retaining it either. So what I know is just what I know and what I’ve lived mainly. You know, experience.
Tom: You made your own bed, for better or for worse, and still today you’re still making music.
Billy: Well my family is in awe of me. They look at me like that too. “Oh the diva,” they say.
Tom: The Diva (laughs) Your brother John introduced you as “Our Brian Wilson” I thought that was pretty perfect.
Billy: That’s adorable. I’m adored by them and I’m adored by my fans and I’m just so thankful for that. That’s a hard job to do.
Tom: Through all of the health situations that is that what helps you when you use the word fan. Because people want to see you back singing, One song, two songs.
Billy: Most assuredly. There’s one thing, probably above all others, that keeps me going, are the fans. And the respect and reverence that they show me. I’m am bowled away by it. I don’t get it. I don’t understand it. I’m just a singer, man. I’m just a singer.
Tom: But rock ‘n roll has brought you here.
Billy: Yep
Tom: What’s the moral of the story. Let’s uh
Billy; The moral of the story is just to keep on rockin’. Do not stop rockin’ ever. You stop rockin’, you die. That’s the moral of my story.
Song: The Fool Is The Last One to Know
Tom: Billy Cowsill here on Folk Routes this afternoon. The black sheep of the family. The contender and the vagabond. We went through a bit of a musical journey through his amazing musical career. The brand new live CD should be in the stores very likely in Megatunes certainly within the next couple weeks in time for Christmas. Check out Megatunes both in Edminton and Calgary So the live CD that was recorded in 1985. Billy has also contributed three songs to a brand new Hank Williams tribute that will be out in the next few months. Thanks a lot to Billy and thanks especially to Neil MacGonigill for setting this all up. Be sure to support local music. My name is Tom Coxworth. This is Folk Routes. You can check out Folk Routes page at ckua.com for the playlist from this last hour. Stay tuned. We’ll be right back.
December 12, 2005
Host: Tom Coxworth
Tom: Good afternoon I’m Tom Coxworth and welcome to Folk Routes. Well we have a special program for you this afternoon. A little earlier this week I spoke with Billy Cowsill. He’s got a CD that’s going to be hitting the streets. Eight tracks recorded from 1985. Let’s start it off this way and we’ll get into some conversation with Billy right after this. A musical journey, if you could. Let’s let Billy introduce the band.
Billy: Thank you very much. I’d like to introduce the band. On the upright doghouse bass Elmare 'Spins' Spanier there. We have Colin Munn 'The Bo-hunk Funk' on guitar for ya. And in the back Chris 'The Risk' Nordquist on the drums there. My name is Billy Cowsill. Glad to be here at the Palace. Glad you’re having such a great time. It’s mostly dead guys kids. They’re gone. Hearts of gold and nuts for brains, that’s what you get in the business.
Song: Rollover Beethoven
Tom: The first thing I have to ask, because everybody will want to know. How are you doing these days? You’ve had hip surgery. You’ve had some complications for the surgery.
Billy: I’ve had three major back surgeries, and the last back surgery was up by my right lung. And they had to deflate my lung for all of about eight hours. And when they re-inflated it, it didn’t come back. You are looking at a man who is singing with one lung.
Tom: But you’re still singing.
Billy: It would appear so.
Tom: It would certainly appear so. (laughs)
Billy: Billy ‘One Lung’
Tom: Billy ‘One Lung’
Billy: Billy ‘One Lung’
Tom: But you don’t have a choice. You have to sing. I mean, you – there was the Bob Dylan interview just last night and he said something about destiny is something that only the person knows them self. And you didn’t have a choice in being a singer. Ah, even if you had wanted to be a postal carrier or something.
Billy: I was like a bird man
Tom: Yeah?
Billy: It would appear so. I was born a bird. That’s what I do. I’m a singer. I wack at the guitar a bit and people thing I’m a fairly great rhythm guitar player and it’s a real drag BUT I do it cuz that’s what I have to except. And I do it with gratitude that I’m even able to do it.
Song: Vagabond
Tom: So when you are recording a Hank Snow song or a Hank Williams song or something like that, you like to use older equipment rather than the digital equipment?
Billy: Yeah I do and that’s because it blends itself to the human voice much more warmer I find.
Tom: What was, for you, the first thing that awakened you? Not just to being in the family group, but what was the first thing that Billy Cowsill heard that went “Ah there’s something out there.” Either being part of the family or ...
Billy: There was a song called "I Want To Hold Your Hand."
Tom: That was it? The harmonies
Billy: When I heard that “I get high” “I get high” There’s that first interval, I believe right there. And that’s what brought that Everly’s third thing out.
Tom: And it was the combination …
Billy: I may have the intervals wrong here but I believe that’s what it is. But it had those two voices, so tight together, so immaculately joined that it elicited a third tone. That and "Don’t Worry Baby" by the Beach Boys.
Tom: Oh yeah
Billy: That did it to me too.
Tom: I was just reading about John Phillips and I just bought the box set of The Mama and The Papas. And he talked about getting in the studio and how they would rehearse, rehearse, rehearse, rehearse and they would get to the certain frustration and all of a sudden there were no longer four voices but there was a fifth voice. Do you find that kind of fifth voice when you hear this song?
Billy: Yeah Yes the fifth voice is provoked by harmonics. That is if you get two voices singing a fifth spread like the Everly Brothers sang. They sang, I believe, a first and a fifth. What happens is you get ‘em close enough, shimmering next to each other that a third is elicited out of that. And that third is a harmonic of the fifth and the first, I believe. So you can’t get that, you can kind of get it and things are a lot sharper and clearer and crispier with a digital signed wave, but again it’s not really a wave. It’s a function.
Tom: It doesn’t carry any warmth to it.
Billy: It’s icy. It’s cool. It’s crisp. It’s sharp. It’s edgy and yes you can hear more clarity. And you can hear things you never heard before coming out. But all those things were in there to begin with. They were just masked by other sign waves a bit. And I believe that there’s a way to get that without going digital.
Tom: Was it so natural, for you and the rest of the members of your family to rehearse and get that fifth voice in there?
Billy: Yep
Tom: It was just …
Billy: Well the point is we didn’t know what it was, but we knew we were doing it. We knew what it was and it made my hair stand on ends.
Tom: When you look at some of those early recordings and the technology today is easier and faster and cheaper. So are we losing a lot of what you are trying to hold on to?
Billy: I think so. I feel so. I don’t think so, I feel so. It’s a feeling thing too.
Song: Hair
Tom: Susan, Barbara, Paul, Bob, John, Harry (yes this was a mistake by Tom Coxworth) April of 1969 A #1 and I’m here with Billy Cowsill of The Cowsill family. What do you feel was a critical part for you, after you left the family, for developing the Billy style. Because you were really more punk and all country before it ever existed. You had more cowboy influence than anybody else and ...
Billy: Well there were two things I wanted to be when I grew up. One was a cowboy and one was to be a rock 'n roller. And that was it. And one was like Beatles rock ‘n roller. That was my rock ‘n roll. I missed Elvis Presley and all those early guys. I was like 8 and 9. I wasn’t 12 or 11, 13. I wasn’t a teenager when that went down. I missed it by about 2 years as far as being conscious of what it was. My young adolescent, I was growing fast. I grew into my adolescence fast. So I got the joke, as I call it, of what was stirring and what the music was doing to me because it’s very sexual, you know. Rock ‘n roll is extremely sexual music. As I would imagine, the music of my forbearers was considered sexual too. The jive and the Charleston and some things like that were considered really radical and very loaded with innuendos. And before that, and before that. I think music, to a degree, has always had a sexual influence. Even Mozart and guys like that. That was the pop music of their time, and people danced to it.
Tom: Let me ask you, when did you cross over into country? Was that in ...
Billy: I’ve always been country.
Tom: Right from the beginning?
Billy: Right from the beginning. My mother was a country-western fan. Uh, traditional country-western fan. Uh, we lived in Virginia. She just loved that hillbilly music.
Song: Jackson
Tom: When you struck out on your own, what was the, what were you going to do and what did you do? You did the solo album.
Billy: I had no idea what I was going to do, so I ended up with a #1 record in the country, started drinking, didn’t know I was an alcoholic and was soon to become one. No, I was one but soon to have it brought forth. And, uh, got married, was married to a wonderful woman who was an artist, had a son. Pregnant wife actually when we broke off. And, uh, was living in Laurel Canyon and I walked into Hormel Studios one day, which was the state of the art studio of the time. Met Geordie Hormel who introduced me to Gary Usher, who wrote ‘In My Room’ with Brian. And, uh, Gary came to me and said, “Listen, there’s a movie coming out called M.A.S.H. Would you like to sing the title song called "Suicide Is Painless"?” which is di did di did di dida Da da da da da da da da. And I listened to the song. I said “Naw.” But then he played me this acetate, this song on an acetate, I believe it was. Which for you boys and girls out there was one of the early demos. Rather than burn something out there back then we cut an acetate for the demo. It was good for about 10 plays. Then it was lacquer of shellac painted onto an aluminum disc. And it was literally an acetate. It was acetate. It was tar. But it played great for about 5-6 plays, really well and then it started deteriorating. So you had to balance your needle a little lighter. But he played me a Billy Sherrill song by this woman who was just coming out called Tammy Wynette. And the song he played me was "Stand By Your Man." And I dropped dead on the stop. It was so good, I couldn’t believe it. It was like a female George Jones, and I couldn’t believe it. It was unbelievable sounding. Unbelievable song, the production was just sterling, stellar production. And I lost it and you get by something like that, you don’t forget it.
Song: Stand By Your Man
Tom: It’s such a unique talent to tap into that, to be able to find the real root of music. If I was to put in this program music that is Billy’s music, what song from The Everly Brothers?
Billy: Um, "Cathy’s Clown"
Tom: Why does that work so much?
Billy: Because I’ve never had anybody who could sing it properly except Jeffrey Hatcher. And we never got around to it and it pisses me off.
Song: Cathy’s Clown
Tom: You are listening to a special feature on CKUA radio network. My name is Tom Coxworth and we’re taking a journey, a musical journey with Calgary’s own, Billy Cowsill, through his long and varied history. For a list of the songs you can go to ckua.com and check out the play list at the Folk Routes page. Billy Cowsill will have a new CD in the streets in the next few weeks. And actually it’s vintage Billy going back to 1985. Live at the Crystal Ballroom here in Calgary from 1985. More of that when we get back after these messages. Stay tuned.
Commercials
Tom: Tell me a little bit about this disc that is coming out this week.
Billy: Well Neil MacGonigill was rummaging through his dusty top drawer and came up with, uh, some ancient Billy Cowsill. And it’s me opening for k.d. lang in 1985 at the Palliser Hotel. It’s vault stuff man. It’s something you can’t get on the internet right now, but maybe we can get that up and running somehow. And what it is, it’s eight songs. So it’s like this bootleg, remastering of a board tape which happen to get recorded by Grant Macary who’s again has a level of conscience that astounds me and has the best sound system in Canada, and it came out just fine.
Tom: To tap into one of the great heroes, Hank Snow.
Billy: And that version of that is from, uh, the version I do with the funny lyrics in there are from Homer and Jethro. My mother used to get this magazine called Your Hit Parade. And, uh, the real lyrics to that song are in there with these Homer and Jethro lyrics. The comedy lyrics. And that’s what she learned and that’s what she taught me. So that’s how I’ve been singing it all these years. But the melody is just killer. So it doesn’t matter if you sang, uh, "Little Red Riding Hood" to it, it would still be cool cuz it’s such a cool driving song. So that’s what’s coming out.
Song: I’m Movin’ On
Tom: Musically, what are some of the high points that you want to put on the anthology of Billy Cowsill songs?
Billy: Standing where Paul McCartney stood on the Ed Sullivan show.
Tom: laughs Yes but we can’t play that on a record player. Did you stand right on the spot?
Billy: Right on the spot
Tom: Did they take you right over to it. Say there’s the X where they had you stand on it?
Billy: No, but I knew it.
Tom: If we but a double CD together of Billy Cowsill’s music, what is some of the music you’d put right in that CD and say “This is the one that should have been the #1 hit. This is the one ...”
Billy: The best song I ever wrote I think was "On The Floor Of Heaven".
Tom: And that was The Blue Shadows
Billy: Yep
Tom: You put yourself into the lyric? Was that lyric right out of ...?”
Billy: It came through the …. Jeffrey and I channeled a lot. That was one of those things that were evoked by the universe.
Tom: Do you still listen to those recordings today? Can you still listen to those recordings today?
Billy: Yes
Tom: As a perfectionist, do you re-record some of those things?
Billy: No
Tom: You’re happy because they are like ...
Billy: Yes
Tom: they are like an Everly Brothers song and you can’t re-record. You can’t get back again.
Billy: No we sang on serial microphone together, when we sang together in the studio.
Song: On The Floor Of Heaven
Tom: When you’re with The Co-Dependents, how does that work for you?
Billy: It works like The Beatles work. That’s why I loved that band. Because we’ve attained that kind of conviction level and that kind of comradery, and the imperceptible seething of … Well it’s comradery, that feeling that you can’t be touched. And if you just do your job really well you’re going to be adored.
Song: Sweet Nothins’
Tom: (broken tape) to keep doin’ what you’re doin’?
Billy: Well in a way no, in a way yes. In a way no because I don’t have the power that I used to, uh, invoke and so part of me wants to go no. I can’t do this because it’s too heart breaking. Breaks my heart.
Tom: Is that because you’re a perfectionist? People have always said that there is only one man. That you’re so on the mark when you’re producing voice. You can tap into, not only that fifth voice we talked about before, but you can tap into something else that that person didn’t know they had. How do you step up to a person that’s a singer and that you have to guide them. Kevin Dunn that you helped a few years ago. He said that you did some of the most amazing guiding for him. Cindy Church did the same thing.
Billy: It’s, it’s, it’s just what I know. I just know it. I have absolute conviction when it comes to working with the human voice. I’m not afraid of it. I’m convinces anybody can do it. I believe it’s a learned task. I believe some are born with more of a predisposition to do so, like myself perhaps maybe. Humbly I say. But there’s a lot of people who could be singing now that aren’t. That don’t think that they have good voices, but they do because somebody said “Shut up” to them when they were really young. Everybody can sing and I have a few students that I work with. And I’m convinced that they can do anything that they want to do with their voice, if they’ll just do it.
Tom: Man we need educators like you more and more and more to help guide people. To give people the confidence. Give people that guidance that you have in your voice. Even now today, do you practice every day?
Billy: Uh, I just started picking it up again. I’ve been a bit blue and I’ve been a bit in pain. Uh, but yes up until about 2 weeks ago I was doing it every day because I had to do a show. So if a show comes up or I have to sing, I’ll take a couple weeks and exercise every single day. I have a bit of a regime that I follow for myself and uh, teach to my students that allows them to at least have a good time with themselves.
Tom: At least be comfortable with them.
Billy: Be comfortable with themselves and know that they can do things that they didn’t think they could do again because somebody told them to stand in the back of the room and keep their mouth shut. To really learn a song you got to study it.
Tom: You are still to me one of the people that have always believed in rock ‘n roll. I mean believed in the true heart of rock ‘n roll. When I first saw you, I couldn’t believe, not only that the voice came out, anybody can sing a note, but nobody can get into the song like you. Nobody can become the lyric of the song. Nobody could that song.
Billy: Because, there’s a reason for that. It’s because I get outside of the song. I don’t get into it MAN, I get outside of it and view it and love it and realize that I am delivering this the way it should be delivered. It’s from out there man. It’s not from in here. It comes through here, but it’s not anyway related to me in any way, shape or form. It’s not personal. Personable, but not personal.
Song: The Race Is On
Tom: Where did you get your writing style from?
Billy: The Beatles and uh Hank Williams mostly. Beatles, Hank, The Merseys The Merseys stuff and Hank Williams and The Beach Boys. I can only take a little bits because when I take a little bit there’s so much to it….
Tom: Oh yeah
Billy: so I couldn’t really get into a general base of information and I’m not really great at retaining it either. So what I know is just what I know and what I’ve lived mainly. You know, experience.
Tom: You made your own bed, for better or for worse, and still today you’re still making music.
Billy: Well my family is in awe of me. They look at me like that too. “Oh the diva,” they say.
Tom: The Diva (laughs) Your brother John introduced you as “Our Brian Wilson” I thought that was pretty perfect.
Billy: That’s adorable. I’m adored by them and I’m adored by my fans and I’m just so thankful for that. That’s a hard job to do.
Tom: Through all of the health situations that is that what helps you when you use the word fan. Because people want to see you back singing, One song, two songs.
Billy: Most assuredly. There’s one thing, probably above all others, that keeps me going, are the fans. And the respect and reverence that they show me. I’m am bowled away by it. I don’t get it. I don’t understand it. I’m just a singer, man. I’m just a singer.
Tom: But rock ‘n roll has brought you here.
Billy: Yep
Tom: What’s the moral of the story. Let’s uh
Billy; The moral of the story is just to keep on rockin’. Do not stop rockin’ ever. You stop rockin’, you die. That’s the moral of my story.
Song: The Fool Is The Last One to Know
Tom: Billy Cowsill here on Folk Routes this afternoon. The black sheep of the family. The contender and the vagabond. We went through a bit of a musical journey through his amazing musical career. The brand new live CD should be in the stores very likely in Megatunes certainly within the next couple weeks in time for Christmas. Check out Megatunes both in Edminton and Calgary So the live CD that was recorded in 1985. Billy has also contributed three songs to a brand new Hank Williams tribute that will be out in the next few months. Thanks a lot to Billy and thanks especially to Neil MacGonigill for setting this all up. Be sure to support local music. My name is Tom Coxworth. This is Folk Routes. You can check out Folk Routes page at ckua.com for the playlist from this last hour. Stay tuned. We’ll be right back.