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The One and Only: Jerry Only
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The Misfits... Perhaps until today it is the second brand in music after KISS. The familiar skull grins even from messenger bags, T-shirts and mugs of today emo kids hardly knowing about the Misfits anything but the name. At the moment the heavy weight of the Misfits brand is lifted only by Jerry - i.e.by Jerry Only, band's current singer and art-director who turned it into a family enterprise. He is the one and only of the Misfits that hit the US stage in 1977 with Hybrid Moments and Return of The Fly.
We met Jerry to discuss what makes him the titan bearing the weight of the Misfits legend, what his current artisitc plans are and why so many people still find fascination in skeletons, skulls and horror movies.
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What are Misfits in the 21 century: a monument to Misfits of 1980’s and 1990’s, a totally different band or something else?
I think this is just an evolutionary procedure and everything moves on and grows. I think that we broke a lot of ground early in our career and we refined our sounds; we have taken what the Ramones and the Clash were doing and took it to another level and I think our new album that we have just finished is our best work for today. I think our future is brighter forward than it is behind us (laughs).
If there was a hypothetical change of the Misfits line-up would you stop doing vocals and take another vocalist?
For Elvis? Of course! (laughs) Hypothetically, yes. The thing with the vocalist is that I kept getting forced into that position; it is not something I chose. It’s funny. When you’re a kid growing up and thinking of your ambitions in music, you always think you want to be this big famous singer and I always thought I wanted to sing the National Anthem in front of the stadium full of people and I did that. And I realized it was kinda scary. It is not as glamorous as you would presume. Being a singer in this band was more of a necessity. We had to fill in when Glenn had left the band in 1983. So we came back in 1995 and I thought the band had a lot of years ahead and we gotta had somebody young who could be impressionable and who could basically be the voice of the band more than me. You know I’m 51 and when I talk, I talk from experience which is good, but I would like somebody to talk about it as a new experience as opposed to same old thing over and over. So when I picked the singer I found him to be very irresponsible and not respectful to the job at all. So what was happening - eventually I decided to take the job over and do it myself. And I think with this new record you will see that in the last 10 years I figured how to do it (laughs).
So you would give up for Elvis? What about a real person?
That’s really hard because I cannot even think of whoever would want to sing. I wanted David Vanian to sing for us when we first came back, I thought he would be very good. But you know he is kinda like me, he does his own thing. You know sometimes it is difficult to change your hat when you are comfortable in your hat. I think David Vanian would probably still be my number one choice.
Are you on speaking terms with Michale Graves?
The thing is that I tried to avoid being derogatory about Michale. I’m trying to give him … I don’t wanna say ‘respect’ but… the opportunity to mature, that’s a good word, and to develop his talents in a productive way. He is a little bit of a cry-baby. He was given a very good opportunity at the age of 19 and he flogged it away. And the thing is that I don’t really wanna talk to him because he has nothing nice to say about me and the funny thing is that he always wanted to be Curt Cobain. He was very grunge kind of a kid, he died his hair white and put beads into it like he was a surfer in Hawaii or something and he was always against the Misfits look, the whole imagery of Misfits. He was always against it. That’s why he was always on his own. He immediately wanted to be Michale Graves from the Misfits. It’s kinda ironic. And now he is working with Marky (Ramone – auth.) and it is funny because when we did our 25th Anniversary show in New York, Marky was one of the guest drummers and Michale refused to play with him. And now he works with Mark and he is wearing the makeup so it is a little bit of hypocrite. But the thing is that I want everybody to do well, I don’t do better when people do bad. I’m doing my thing and with Michale I think that if he has talent he needs to develop it and he needs to be someone who is easy to work with and not someone who is difficult to work with. And you know he is not a Mick Jagger. He can’t fool around being an idiot and expect people cater to him. But he works with Marky now, I think it’s funny but I wish them luck. I really hope that everyone does well and finds the happiness he is looking for.
Did you hear his covers of some Misfits songs, for example, Dig Up Her Bones and what do you think about it?
No I haven’t. I don’t think that Michale could play a song that the Misfits have played and make it better on his own.
A lot of bands play the Misfits covers, what is your favorite one?
I heard a cover of Return of a Fly that was on a compilation and it sounded like it was done in 1930’s. It sounded like a big band and I think it was very cool.
After the release of single Land of the Dead last autumn, you told you were about to enter the studio this July to record a full-blooded album? So how did it go?
I think it is probably our finest work, maybe the best album I heard in the last number of years. I think it is a major breakthrough with us being able to move forward and able to deal with its past. I think I will put everyone to rest telling oh we did this, we did that. Oh like everybody did everything, God bless you! The thing is that I’m not here to pat myself on the back. I just wanna make really great music for our fans and I think this is our finest hour. I am so confident with it that I am not even going to tour. I’m going to take time off and stay home with my little girl – I have a little girl at home. That’s it.
When you just came to the band with your first guitar, your main influence was David Bowie. What about Alice Cooper? Would you agree that horror punk wouldn't exist if there wasn't him laying the path for it?
Oh of course! Undoubtedly. I think Alice Cooper is an icon and his earlier stuff is much better than his later stuff. That happens with many bands. Ok, Billion Dollar Baby I thought was great, probably the greatest horror rock album of all times. I saw his Welcome to My Nightmare tour many times ‘cause I was at high school at those times. I was maybe 16 years old and I went to watch Alice Couper for 5 times. I’m a very big fan of Alice Cooper, I was actually introduced to him at Madison Square Garden so I got to hang out with him for a while. And you know I think Alice Cooper is phenomenal. I think he is more connected with us than David Bowie. The reason why David Bowie was an influence on me was that I has a few important for me bands before like Aerosmith. I think I saw KISS too. But when I saw David Bowie first time I was working at a high school doing art photography, commercial art, doing images you know. Like an artist. The music which I was seeing with my friends was much more of a southern rock that really didn’t catch my attention. I saw David Bowie and I saw the connection between what I was able to do or what I was able to give as an artist and connected with music. And when I saw the connection it was like light a light bulb over my head. I was: ”This is what we have to do”. But also David inspired us in another way because he is always changing what he does. I like that Ziggie Stardust stuff and Diamond Dog stuff I really liked. Then he started doing Young Americans and then it was followed by his Station to Station which was a techno kinda move. Then he did Low which is garbage. And David Bowie would change his image to fit something that he found in the world that was now going to be new and coming in. He was hanging out in very city of the world. And he produced Iggy Pop album and he did that because of the punk scene that was becoming popular. He worked with Iggy Pop and wrote songs for him. And the thing with Bowie is that I never liked that he kept changing – I thought if you had something good you had to stick with it. So when I started my band I wanted to make sure that I have exactly the same look and the same sound and same equipment and the same clothes. I wanted to keep it genial. I wanted to create a standard for a band. When you come to see the band – you know what you are getting, there is no surprise.
How do you think why the horror side in music as well as in movies and literature attracts such a huge amount of fans, perhaps the biggest of all genres?
I just figured this out a while ago. It’s a fear of being devoured by another creature: sharks, or dinosaurs, or aliens. It’s the fear - maybe the fear of some disaster, of being vulnerable; the fear of being vulnerable and the imagination of the endless options of being eaten (laughs). It’s what I figured out. I guess it comes to fact that we all were snails crawling in the oceans. We don’t wanna be eaten; you just try to avoid that at all costs. So that’s why I think it is something that we just can’t escape. And like I always tell people say: “It’s your image, your band, why you do this political and not this not that”? When the movie and the camera were invented, it was Frankenstein made first and it was followed with the Phantom of the Opera which are probably visually the most amazing things and these things are still relevant over the century later. Now politics doesn’t stand up, social statuses don’t stand up - so that’s pretty much it. Horror seems to have the endless or timeless lifespan. I think that’s why our band is as popular as it was. That’s why we will still remain as something of an icon in this rock world; it’s because of this formula. You know, science fiction is eternal.
The band and the songs they are so much based on death images, are you yourself afraid of death?
Not at all. I’ve come to terms with it. Like I said – it’s just a fear of being devoured. That is part that everybody thinks they gonna live forever and they are not going to die. Well, the entire universe will eventually die. And that’s billions of stars and billions of planets. I don’t know I think that we portrayed it in a good light. I don’t think we promote evil. We are productive kind of thing. I think a lot of fans who follow us are of the more intelligent people, like from 10 per cent intelligence folks who level upon the top and they are usually artists, writers. The kids that we attract are usually very brilliant in school. When you look at our lyrics, when you look at our songs, when you look at our art structure, it is very well perceived. And it’s done in such a tasteful way. We draw from these fans contributing their feelings and their emotions and they artwork that we use. A lot of artwork has been done by our fans. The guys who make horror movies doing special effects in Hollywood for I think Buffy the Vampire Slayer Everything told me once: “You guys might not the biggest thing here on the East Coast, but the entire horror industry listens to your stuff all day when they work. Everything that has been created in Hollywood that has been done related to horror movies was done listening to your stuff”. And that’s anyway is a big compliment.
Did you have any mystical-/horror- related accidents in your life?
Yeah sure, I think everybody does. Of course I ran into some crazy things especially in New Orleans, Chicago, places like that. Places that have their own soul. There were people being oppressed and it is a lot of turbulence that remains behind I think like in New Orleans. And I can feel it, you know! You get certain things that come up. I think that the message is meant for you more that it is meant for discussion and everybody has that. I was talking to Sean – a bass player from White Zombie and she had experiences like this when she was a kid. I think it is a very personal thing because a lot of people are skeptical about that. I believe that there is you know something that opens up a little bit If someone has a very sad emotion. Good emotions also leaved the trace behind. You can go to a place with a good karma and you can feel that. I don’t think it’s all negative; once again it’s just a fear of being devoured that scares. Let’s stick with it.
Interview done by Victoria Maksimovich
28 äåê 2010
ïðîñìîòðîâ: 8931
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