Interview by Mike Quigley
This is the original 1971 Georgia
Straight interview introduction by Mike Quigley
We enter the Holiday Inn on Howe
Street through its Southern-fried colonnade and up its Harlequin Romance
staircase into the Columbia Room with its Christmas tree light candelabras.
There we meet the Head Canadian Flack from MCA-Uni Records, who are throwing
this little cocktail party-reception for Elton John. A stereo set on a table
hums out Elton John Muzak, in contrast to the tinny string goop in the lobby
outside.
Other radio people, promoters,
photographers, newsmen, and assorted sycophants surf in and circulate. I
meet one reporter, a friend I haven't seen since high school five years
ago. I also run into deposed CKLG-FM jock Bob Ness, who remarks on the unfairness
of my Laura Nyro review to the folksinger on the programme with her. A pant-suited
woman from CHQM looks at me and says, "I don't believe I've met this
gentleman". I look to a flack beside her. He's forgotten my name, so
l introduce myself, which is the total extent of our conversation for the
evening.
Elton John finally arrives, sporting
a short-cropped Julius Caesar shag haircut, his Tumbleweed Connection sunglasses,
yellow and green velveteen trousers, a white ruffled Liberace shirt with
a blue serge-ish midicoat, white patent leather boots, and a large Donald
Duck button on his right lapel. A cheap champagne glass of warm, flat Faisca
is thrust into his hand.
Province reviewer Jeani Read, attired
in buckskin hot pants and a matching midicoat, quickly nabs the Star and
drags him off to a corner for a private interview. This gets the MCA-Uni
flacks uptight. They want him to circulate among the forty or so people
in the room, and then Meet The Press in a group session. They glide through
the crowd, whispering, "Cool it, cool it."
Elton John finally works his way
into the crowd after some polite edging from the flacks. I'm introduced
to him and he says, "Oh, you're the guy who gave me shit," referring
to my review of his Friends album and my remarks on the Agrodome. We rap
about Penderecki, the Polish composer (the opening cello riff on Sixty Years
On is taken from P's Threnody to the Victims of Hiroshima, and EJ's arranger,
Paul Buckmaster is a "real Pen-derecki freak"). But I can sense
the "lets-get-moving-cause-there's-all-these-other-people-for-him-to-meet"
feeling from the flacks and his Agent Man, so we part for the moment.
I approach EJ's clean-shaven Agent
Man when he's alone for a second. He's an older guy - in his forties, I'd
say. He's outfitted in brown shoes, beige pants, a brown shirt with white
stitching, a blue blazer with a silk handkerchief in the pocket, and a large
ruby ring on his left little finger. After some introductory trivia, I ask
him if it's possible for me to get in to see the show the following night.
He doesn't seem very interested.
He tells me he's got no control over comps. He tells me to go and see the
MCA-Uni flacks. Strange thing is they were the ones who referred me to HIM
on this matter. They've had to lay out sixty-six odd bucks for tickets to
see their own artist.
By then it's interview time, and
the TV men with their blaringly bright lights get first crack. A reporter
I know asks, "Is this going to be a disaster?" referring to the
general disorganization.
Then another group of radio, newspaper,
and rock magazine reporters sit down and rap with the Star. By this time
I don't feel much like doing an interview, though the flacks keep asking
me if McGrath and I would. So we sit down and wait and wait.
Roy Hennessey, uniformed in a flame-colored
Harry Belafonte shirt and black pants, strolls over to where we're sitting.
He says hello to me. He ignores McGrath. McGrath turns to me and J.B. Shayne
and says, "Do you think we should tell him that Hallowe'en isn't till
October?" Hennessey walks away.
Finally, it's our turn to talk.
A flack says, "We'll cut in now because these guys have been going
on too long." The Agent Man now addresses me by my first name, motioning
me to come over into the other part of the divided room. I grab my tape
recorder and McGrath, Tracey Hearst and I sit down and talk for a good thirty
minutes.
It's not a very good interview,
though. Elton John talks like a madman - I wouldn't have believe he could
still have so much energy after all he's already gone through. But then,
as he says, he's practically "immune" to these affairs by now.
We finish, and then the TV men
say they want to shoot another short sequence. Elton John sits down at the
grand piano in one corner of the room and plays "The Great Discovery."
A baby appears out of somewhere and is placed as a prop atop the piano.
The TV cameraman slinks around, capturring the impromptu event in a manner
which suggests the opening sequence of Blow-Up, where Verushka was photographically
fucked over by David Hemmings. The baby waves its arms and legs about. The
TV lights beat down.
There's not much of an audience
at this point. It's almost three hours since we arrived. When the song is
over, and we're on our way, the Agent Man wanders through the dispersing
crowd. He says, smiling for the second time this evening (the first being
when he called us over to do the interview), "The song really fits
- "The Greatest Discovery."
Rick: What do you think of all
this (flack cocktail party routine).... doing this kind of stuff?
Elton: I'm used to it, believe
me, I'm used to it. First time I came over to Los Angeles when it all sort
of happened, as I said before I just met so many people like this... I'm
immune to it now. I go through it all with all "Oh well, it must be
done," and that's it. I really couldn't come down here and say fuck
off... it's not me. We've been through this before, in the interview before,
that if I was a Mick Jagger person I'd just come down here and tell everyone
to piss off, but that's not me. I can't do it. They're a necessary evil,
I think.
Rick: How much are we going to
overlap here? What did you go through before?
Elton: We went through a variety
of things. Television programs. How Bernie and I got together, which is
a stock question on all these meetings.
Mike: So we won't ask you...
Elton: We just went through a lot
of things. It was quite thorough. It was quite good actually. I just said
I wish somebody would attack me, as I thought you might be a good person
to attack me.
Mike: Oh really? Why?
Elton: Well, as I was saying...
everyone's so nice to me, usually. A young college kid came into New York
and I hadn't met him and I was doing this college thing and he said, "I
think your music's rubbish," and I really quite appreciated that. We
fought hammer and nail through the whole hour and a half that I spoke to
him, and he ended up going out and buying a couple of my albums... no, it
wasn't like that. People write about me in print but they
never have the nerve to say it
in front of my face. If they really have any genuine feelings, they should
tell me, because I respect their points of view.
Mike: OK, on your latest album,
which I reviewed this week...
Elton: Friends... it's not my latest
album. It's a film soundtrack album which we contracted to do before Elton
John was ever released. As a film soundtrack album, I think it's probably
the best film soundtrack album ever released. Put that down in print.
Mike: (laughs) Do you think it
represents you, though?
Elton: Yes... no, it represents
what we had to write for the film. The whole story behind the film was they
contracted us to do three songs. There's two bits in the film where they
have a tape recorder sequence for 20 seconds or whatever it was, where everyone's
leaping up and down, and a radio sequence for 30 seconds, and they said
"You're going to have to write two songs that last for 20 and 30 seconds,
and put them on the album." I thought well that's ridiculous. Bernie
and I said, "We can't do that," so they said, "We want three
songs - the title song". They were going to call the movie The Intimate
Game, and Bernie and I said "No, we will not write any songs named
for a movie, and we suggested Friends, so we'll settle for Friends."
And we had to write another song, which was Michelle's Song. They wanted
another song, which was to last a minute and ten. And for film writing,
if they want a song that's a minute and ten seconds long, then you're supposed
to write a song that's a minute and ten seconds long. You have to time it,
and all this rubbish. So we all got together, and we were panicking like
mad, and Bernie said write a song that's very short, and we did, and it
was a minute and ten seconds long, and I don't know how, by the grace of
God, that it was a minute and ten seconds. So that was Seasons. And then
they said, "We want a soundtrack album," and I said, "That's
awful," because there's very little music in the film. And we said
"it's terrible, we've only got three songs." You can't put an
album together with all that on. You know, with soundtrack albums, you get
bits with motorcars that beep, and horses galloping. So we said, right,
we're going to do this thing with the 20 and 30 second songs, then we'll
write two songs and re-record the whole album. So we recorded the whole
album once for the film, and then went back into our own studio which we
always use studio and recorded the whole soundtrack album... so people would
at least get a bit of value for their money. They get five songs instead
of three and horses galloping. It was recorded and written in four weeks,
in between the first song when I came to the States, which was a three-week
promotional trip and my first major tour, so it was recorded in between
September and October, in September in fact, as a soundtrack album... ah...
the record company are promoting it as a new Elton John album, and kids
will probably think it is a new Elton John album.
Mike: Especially since the Elton
John name is bigger than the title of the film...
Elton: Yeah, which is pissing me
off somewhat. That's 'cause the guy in London (who's a complete idiot) who
runs Paramount Records, said that he said he wanted a really great sleeve.
So the people that produced the film and made the film were really great
-- it was independently produced film from Paramount -- they said right,
and they took the Tumbleweed Connection sleeve up and said to this guy,
"Isn't this great? Look, it's got a booklet. We'd like something like
this for Friends." And like the guy who designed it, this friend of
ours, said yeah, this is a great idea. And the guy said it was rubbish -
the worst thing he'd ever seen, and he said "Wait till we come up -
we'll come up with something that'll sweep this off the board." And
they came up with that strawberry coloured rubbish. I suppose I can't blame
the Paramount Record Company for putting my name on it in big letters, cause
I would have probably done that... I don't know... I don't want to get into
that anyway. It's not an Elton John album, believe me. The album was gold
within three weeks, so that's... it's amusing; I'm knocked out, I'm very
glad that it is a gold record. But it's not an Elton John album. We've got
a live album coming out in three weeks,
Mike: Somebody said you wanted
that to be coupled with Empty Sky.
Elton: Yeah, I did. I've had these
hassles the past week. We've got two things that have been released in England
- the live album and the Empty Sky, which hasn't come out here yet anywhere,
and I wanted Empty Sky and the live album to come out for $5.98, both albums...
the fact really is, that all my albums have gone up to $5.98, which I found
out. So I wanted the live album to be a free album... you know, "Thank
you very much, America, there's a free album - Empty Sky." And, of
course, all the hierarchy that I'm concerned with said no. And I get so
pissed off with fighting. Everyone had a different idea. They wanted the
live album to come out in July, which would have been ludicrous, because
so many people are importing it, it would have been dead. And other people
wanted it not to come out at all (the live album). And some other people
wanted Empty Sky to come out first. Aww, you wouldn't believe it. So we
settled for Empty Sky not to come out yet, which is all right. They say
that it's better for my "mystique" that it should remain on import.
And the live album will come out in three weeks. And the live album is different
that the one in England because its got a different mix and time. Much better
mix and time. So that's the situation. I'm going to get criticized for that
album, because everyone will say. "Oh, fuck, not another Elton John
album!" But it has to come out now, because it has been released and
people are playing it. So I'm just going to have to face the criticism.
It's a bloody good live album. What decided for me that it was a good live
album was the CSN&Y, which I was eagerly awaiting, and I thought it
was a disaster...a total and utter disaster. I thought, "Well we can't
go much more wrong than that". I hear that the CSN&Y live album
is a gold record before it comes out... it's done two million dollars worth
of sales. There's two or three really nice things on it, but I think it's
an unmitigated disaster. I thought well, ours is so much better than that.
It's not fair to point that out, but that's what decided that it really
should come out. I don't know your opinion on the Crosby, Still, Nash &
Young album is.
Mike: It hasn't come out here yet.
Elton: Noo...that's right, I went
to a record shop today and I couldn't believe it. I said to the woman, "Have
you got Brown Sugar by The Rolling Stones? And she said yes, and then she
said no, we've ordered some and they're coming in next week and she had
only ordered ten of it. (laughs)
Mike: One of the things that bothered
me, that I sort of hinted at in my review, was that I have a lot of respect
for you as an artist, but there's also this thing about mystique...I mean,
Rick and I were one of the first people in this area to hear your album
because we got it from MCA in the States, before it was released here, and
now there's a lot of, what you call hype, behind you. And what do you think
of all this?
Elton: I know there's a lot of
hype. I'm over in England and I'm not really aware of what's going on. I
have somebody who's trying to control it, one person. There's hype, but
there's hype with everybody. Record companies, believe me, no matter what
record company you're with, they're going to try to hype you, because, really,
all record companies are interested in is making money. We have a very good
relationship with MCA, a really fantastic relationship. I'd rather be hyped
in the way I am than to be hyped in the way that Warner-Reprise hype their
artists. I think their ads are so hip they're actually revolting. And there's
no new artists to break through on Warner Reprise Kinney Group Records,
that I can think of in the last two or three years. I mean, they've just
managed to break Gordon Lightfoot, which I thought was tremendous of them.
I think that kind of hype is more revolting... I'd rather be saying, "Here
is the great Elton John - buy him!" than, "Well, fellows... do
a very clever advert". I'm not into that at all. It's just a very snobbish
way of saying "We're trying to be hip" and most of the people
at Warner Brothers aren't hip. I really don't mind. It's up to me to prove
it, whether I'm worth it or not, or whatever it is. I mean, people have
to decide for themselves. It's wrong for a person to decide that you're
a hype just by listening to the adverts. They should go out and buy the
records, discover whether you're a hype or not, or go and see you live.
If then you've failed...if then they've seen or heard you and they think
you're a hype, then that's fair enough - they've had a chance to listen
to you. I don't think you can avoid it, can you? I mean, how can you possibly
avoid being hyped? It's impossible. Some people don't get hyped enough,
people like David Ackles, who could well be hyped as much as I've been.
But once you're successful, they're going to try to get as much hype going
as possible. And you have to live with that - it's a fact of life. Right?
Rick: Yeah...I'm just listening...trying
to keep up with you. And asking you a question.
Elton: I'm glad we've had this
opportunity to talk about this. (To Mike) I read your article last night,
and I was very impressed by it. No, I really liked it... there was a review
of Friends in Rock Magazine which took about twelve lines and really slated
(sic) it, and it amused me... not amused me, but I'd quite like to meet
the person who wrote that review and talk to him, because I get so bored
with people saying, "Oh here we are Wonder-Dog of 1973." The whole
magazine (Georgia Straight) was quite interesting... I read a lot of that
sort of thing. "Mikey Muzak" quite amused me.
Mike: (laughs) That was a step
down...it used to be Mikey Music...
Elton: I actually heard Your Song
on Muzak the other day and it freaked me out. I thought to myself, you have
arrived. But wait till The Supremes album gets to the shops. And Rolling
Stone reviews that with my (unintelligible) but I really do like The Supremes
and no one believes me.
Mike: I like Henry Mancini and
nobody believes me...
Elton: You like Henry Mancini?
I was on the Henry Mancini Show in America about four weeks ago. It was
a Special. They just filmed a bit of me playing live...we have the same
Agency, so, you know...
Tracey Lee: It's like Andy Williams...
Elton: Oh, Andy Williams is a joke.
We were hanging around L.A. -- I wanted to get home, it was Christmas, and
I wanted to get home. We hang around for a week, and we get a rehearsal
every day, and they say, right, you do two numbers. We pre-record the backtrack,
fine... and we do a big thing at the end which originally started by Andy
Williams wanting to do Love The One You're With, which is OK by me, and
it's going to be Mama Cass, me, Ray Charles and Andy Williams. Ray Charles
didn't come -- I can't blame Ray Charles, he's probably been through all
this before, he didn't come to any of the rehearsals, and he didn't want
to sing Love The One You're With, so then it was gonna be My Sweet Lord,
and he didn't want to sing that, they got down to Heaven Help Us All, and
he didn't want to sing that, but they said it was that or nothing, so we
all sang that. Ohhh, and they cut one of our numbers off. We spent all day
and I did my Goodbye, Andy bit and they never showed it which was a real
drag because I was quite good in it.
Tracey Lee: Didn't they show the
one where you sang...
Elton: In England we saw with Heaven
Help Us All, and Mama Cass stood in front of me, which was most annoying...I
had no chance..that was my big moment....and Mama Cass just goes (makes
elbowing move)
Tracey Lee: You were lucky you
weren't there the night Ike and Tina were on and Andy Williams sung with
her (laughs)
Elton: Oh, I've got a lot of respect
for Andy...for a start, he was very nice to me...but he was really trying
to think of all these...he was really more aware of things than I thought
he was. He was reading off all these albums that he wanted to choose things
off to sing, and the guy could still be singing...
Tracey Lee: Moon River...
Elton: On The Street Where You
Live...and he does set himself up, which I like.
Mike: I think he produced the latest
Everly Brothers album...
Elton: No. On the Barnaby label?
No, those things are on the Warners label...
Mike: I'm sure he had something
to do with that.
Elton: No, I mean, like, you could
be a Tony Bennett... I've got no respect for people like Tony Bennett because
they're just bores. Andy Williams has got a very pleasant voice. He sends
himself up.
Tracey Lee: I don't really like
him..
Elton: No, I wouldn't watch his
show by choice, but the guy's aware, at least he's aware of what's going
on. He's into modern music. He has a lot of quite good guests on his show..Ike
and Tina Turner, Smokey...and me. (laughs) And that's my last and first
time on the Andy Williams Show.
Mike: And how do you like Canada,
Elton John?
Elton: I dunno. It was pissing
with rain all day. The first thing I noticed was that the air was fresh.
It really was. It was cold, but it's not like England. And Elizabeth is
on the coins, isn't she. There you go. It seems English to me. That could
change, yeah. But it does seem English to me, and I think that's nice. Some
people in the hotel are English, and you get people saying (unintelligible)...because
we get so many hassles travelling. No, I just had my hair cut. I had my
hair cut cause it was in terrible condition. I was going to Hawaii and I
was going to swim every day and it was long, really, down to there (gestures)
Mike: Well, Elton John, what's
coming up for you in the way of albums?
Elton: I have a live one with Mae
West coming out in four years time...if we can both get on the same microphone...she's
put on a little weight. (laughs) There's a new album coming out, I hope...there's
going to be this bloody live album...get that out of the way...and then
there won't be anything from me for about six months. By that time we should
have two albums ready. I still don't want there to be anything after the
live album for a long time because I think people are going to criticize
the live album coming out, and they are going to cut me up, and they are
going to say its being rammed down their throats, and I'm getting fed up
with it.
Mike: Is it being rammed down their
throats as much in Britain as it is in North America?
Elton: It was...well, no...cause
there's only one radio station. So you don't get it rammed down your throat
so much, right? No, the English people sort of reacted to me after I was
a success in North America. The albums both went zooming up the charts...the
new one's come straight in at 20. They've been very nice to us over here
and the English sort of reaction has been very understanding and we have
more criticism...it's funny....you get criticized for different things over
there than you do over here. The Friends album has got to be criticized
more over here...but in England, it's got rave reviews. So you can't win
in both territories. I don't mind. You can't please everybody. I never intended
to try and please everybody. I can't believe this is happening anyways.
I can't believe we've sold one million albums of Elton John. It seems ludicrious.
Because at the time we made it...we were knocked out when it came into the
British charts at 47...live is very strange...very strange...I don't think
it's affected me as a person - I used to be equally outspoken... or the
same sort of person I was before it happened. I've seen so much hype and
I've had so much hype and I've had so many interviews that it's all really
gotten over my head, and I've been able to handle it, because I'm sort of....
if I'd have been 17 years old and just fresh out of college, I would probably
been sort of.... oh... I just don't want to think about it. So I ... what
does it all mean? I'm quite happy the way things are. I'm happy just to
make music...what a great ending...I'm just happy to make my music, he said,
and we left him sitting there, crying. (all laugh) And tomorrow night it's
going to be echoesville at the Agradome...
Mike: Agrodome...we did a fake
commercial for the Agrodome once...it was something like: "Get together
with the cows"...you know, it's a cow palace..
Elton: Yeah, they've got the plastic
cows on it. Yeah, we've got a lighting man, because I think lighting is
very important, and he said he just couldn't believe it...he went in there
today and saw these eight-foot papier maché cows hanging from the
ceiling, which I thought was very nice...that appeals to me very much.
Tracey Lee: Well, it's the place
where they hold all the horse shows...
Elton: Yeah, cow palace...so we'll
be playing with piles of horse manure
Tracey Lee: I went and saw Liberace
there and they didn't even cover the floor and all these dolls in their
spikey heel shoes were sinking three inches into the mud floors...
Elton: I like Liberace very much.
He appeals to me.
Tracey Lee: It was one of the best
concerts I ever attended...
Elton: He's just so outrageous.
He's like a middle-aged Mick Jagger. It freaks me out. Well, what else?
You must have some more questions.
Rick: Speaking about the music,
you know ... with the last three albums (Quigley and I actually do have
copies of Empty Sky), we've noticed that the piano work and the melody line
and the rhythms are starting to repeat themselves, and we were wondering
if it's just because you happen to do these albums in a relatively short
time.
Elton: This is always amusing...
"the melody line"... Such as what? I mean, this guy in Rock Magazine
said Honey Roll sounds like Burn Down the Mission, which I thought was vaguely
amusing - the guy should be put into an institution.
Rick: Well, you've got to admit
that it's starting to. . . like, it might be because you've just got a heavily
stylized way of playing and you pick it up really easily, therefore whenever
you keep playing these things, the style comes out...it's very predominant.
Your songs really remind me of each other.
Elton: Well, which ones?
Rick: Well, I don't know which
ones offhand. That's what I mean about the style thing.
Mike: That's what I was sort of
saying in my review...like, some of the songs in there reminded me of earlier
things...and I wondered if you were going to branch out into something else
like, you know, cut out the piano have some sort of orchestra or what...
Elton: No, well, you see none of
these need an orchestra. They need a piano...like, we could have had piano
on Love Song...(unintelligible) but some need piano more than others...
Rick: I was just wondering, the
fact that it all did happen in a relatively short space of time. . .like
if you were composing things all the time, instead of having earlier things
already written, it would tend to. .
Elton: Well, all the new songs
we've done are going to be on the next album. Elton John, Tumbleweed, all
the songs on both albums were all written before the albums were recorded.
We had two albums worth of stuff. And by the next album comes out, we'll
have two albums worth of stuff. I can see that you must repeat yourself,
in a way. A lot of people... I suppose I always defend myself, it's pretty
natural. I know what you mean about the beat, a lot of our songs...
Mike: Like the dum-de-dum-de-dum
(beginning of Your Song) riff happens a lot.
Elton: Well, I like that. But if
you listen to a lot of Leon Russell's stuff, who's my idol, and I won't
have a word said against him, a lot of his piano playing sounds similar.
It's just a style you get into. I hope I can branch out... that's got me
worried...
Mike: You're going to start playing
(unintelligible) riffs next
Elton: It's just a style you get
into... I copied Leon Russell, and that was it. I did. I heard the Delaney
and Bonnie album on Elektra and I just went through the roof. I nearly retired
at that point. I figured there wasn't much point in playing anymore. And
the first time I ever met him, he was in the front row of the Troubadour
in Los Angeles. It was the second night we were there and I thought awww...I
was great until the last number and I saw this... this great bloody most
incredible looking person in the world... and I saw him there and my knees
went zzzippp!... and he invited me up to his house and I thought he's going
to invite me up there and tie me to a chair and whip me and say "This
is how to play the piano!"...and ohhh... I was really scared... and
I've never been scared of meeting anyone... like I've met Dylan and everybody
and I really haven't given a fuck... excuse me...
Mike: We'll cut that out.
Elton: Cut the french out, yeah...
this is the western part of Canada...and I was petrified meeting him...
but aww... he's so sweet...he's really great. A lot of people got the wrong
idea... interviewers think he's a big, moody so-and-so because he doesn't
say anything, but that's Leon. He just sits there and goes "Yeaoh".
I grant you that some of the songs may sound the same, but if they do, that
is very deceptive. I can't tell, because I never listen to my own recordings.
Perhaps I should.
Mike: (FM announcer's voice) Tell
me, Elton John, for all the classical fans out there... who are your favoutire
classical composers?
Elton: Tchaikovsky and Sibelius
Mike: Are you being esoteric?
Elton: No, I really like Tchaikovsky...
I'm very romantic as a rule... I like Tchaikovsky and (unintelligble) I'm
not really into Mozart.. He's too twiddley... I like Bach... the only Bach
I really like are his organ pieces.. you know..ta-dah!... if I really play,
I like Tchaikovsky... and the only reason I said Tchaikovsky is because
I've seen a film called The Music Lover which is about his life.. has it
come here?
Mike: It's been here
Elton: It's the most amazing film
I've ever seen... I've seen it about 8,000 times. The music is core. It's
a drag that he's so popular because the music's really good. I mean, everyone's
heard the 1812 and no one will now buy an 1812 record because it's the classical
record that everybody has. But it's just amazing.
Mike: They played that here last
night.
Elton: The 1812? Beautiful! Unbelievable.
The guy was a genius. I like Stravinsky as well. I like lyrical composers
and I think Sibelius and Stravinsky are really good. And I like Terry Riley,
(unintelligible) John Cale...he's only ever had one album...(unintelligible)...I
like Turkish street music, there's no end to what I like.. you put it on...there's
a woman singer, an Indian singer called Subbalakshmi
Mike: How do you spell that?
Elton: S-u-bb-al-a-k-s-h-m-i. If
you can get any of her albums -- there's about four -- she's amazing! You
wouldn't believe it. You wouldn't think such things were possible with the
human voice. And Dionne Warwick's good. There you go.
Mike: OK... I think we had better
wrap this up very shortly...do you have any final questions, Tricky Rick?
Rick: No...
Elton: Tricky Rick?... you sound
like a Top 40 DJ...
Mike: It is... we've got a thing
called Radio H-Y-P-E
Rick: It's a mythical radio station
and we're the two disc jockeys... AM and FM
Elton: (speaks fast) Tricky Rick..Tricky
Rick...
Mike: The FM disc jockey talk like...(lowers
voice, speaks very slowly) hmmm, well...hmmm... stoned...Elton John...far
out... yeah
Elton: Yes, you're perfectly right...
FM disc jockeys always speak like... (slows down)..."and now we have
some Carole King..." (speeds up) "and that was Stevie Wonder...we
can work it out...on the Boss Top 40...yeah, groovy"...
(we all do various voices)
Elton: And the FM ones always try
to sound stoned...and you go and visit the radio stations and they're all
88 years old people with beards!
(all laugh)
Elton: It's all a laugh, isn't
it? That's what it is .. a laugh... It's the best thing in the world. It's
the greatest high in the whole world to just sit down and kill yourself
laughing... God's natural high... apart from other things.