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John Mellencamp, The Modern Mortal
TERRY GROSS, host:
This is FRESH AIR. Iâm Terry Gross. You probably know my guest, John
Mellencamp, for his hits from the â80s like âJack and Dianeâ and âSmall Town,â
and of course for his song, âThis is Our Country,â that first became famous
when it was used in a Chevrolet ad.
Democratic and Republican candidates have used his songs in their campaigns. At
the Obama inaugural celebration at the Lincoln Memorial, Mellencamp sang his
song, âPink Houses,â the one with the refrain, ainât that America for you and
me.
Mellencamp has a new CD called âLife, Death, Love and Freedom,â which has some
great songs about mortality. New York Times music critic John Pareles wrote:
Itâs an album present like a deathbed testament, bleak, solitary, bluesy and
unbowed.
Mellencamp is going to perform some old and new songs for us, but letâs start
with the opening track of his new CD. The song is called âLongest Days.â
(Soundbite of song, âLongest Daysâ)
Mr. JOHN MELLENCAMP (Singer/Songwriter): (Singing) Seems like once upon a time
ago, I was where I was supposed to be. My vision was true, and my heart was
too. There was no end to what I could dream.
I walked like a hero into the setting sun. Everyone called out my name. Death
to me was just a mystery. I was too busy raising up Cain.
But nothing lasts forever. Your best efforts don't always pay. Sometimes you
get sick, and you don't get better. That's when life is short even in its
longest days.
GROSS: John Mellencamp, welcome to FRESH AIR. I have to say, you know, I just
wasnât prepared for this song that opens the new CD. Itâs just so much about
mortality and things that arenât necessarily ever going to get better.
When I first started listening to the song, I think I was kind of depressed. It
was the middle of winter, and it really spoke to me. Sometimes you really need
songs like this. So thank you for writing it.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Thank you. The song â the song actually was that line. My
grandmother lived to be 100 years old, and itâs a funny â not a funny, ha-ha
story, but this is how the line came about. I used to go see her in the
afternoons, and sometimes sheâd make me lay in bed with her.
You know, I was like 45 years old or something, and my 100-year-old
grandmother, but she called me Buddy, and sheâd go Buddy, come and lay down
with me. And Iâd go okay.
So Iâd lay in bed with her, and weâd talk sometimes, and you know, she was
great up until about 99, and then she started kind of dementia and stuff like
that.
And one afternoon, I was laying in bed with her, and she said letâs pray, and I
said okay. And so she starts praying, and she says God, you know, Buddy and I
are ready to come home. And I went whoa, wait a minute. Grandma.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Youâre ready to come home, Buddyâs only 45, heâs not ready. And
then she turned to me and looked at me right in the face, and her face all of a
sudden looked like a little girl, and she goes Buddy, life is short in its
longest days.
And I always remembered that line, and I thought well surely, someday Iâll be
able to work that line into a song. And thatâs how that song started.
GROSS: You know, itâs funny that, you know, your grandmother wouldâve said life
is short in its longest days, because one of the things I like so much about
the song is that hook, and itâs so â although this isnât a country song, per
se, there are so many country songs that have that kind of contradictory
language in its title.
Like Roger Miller has a song called âMore and More I Miss You Less and Less,â
you know, that kind of, like, contradiction. And so you just got that from her.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Well you know, I donât really see it as a contradiction itself.
I just think itâs a true statement. I mean, I look at my kids, and I look at
myself, and I go wow, what happened? Where did this all go?
And of course, my parents were very explicit with me about you know, John, time
goes by real quick, and you know, you better enjoy, try to enjoy every moment.
My dad has been retired from his job since he was 49 years old, and heâs 79
now, and every day, he says the same thing to me. He says, did you do anything
fun for yourself today? And Iâll go no, dad, Iâm working. He goes, youâve got
to do something for yourself, have fun every day, because if you donât, then
life is going to pass you by, and youâll just â you know, what good is it?
GROSS: Now I mean, youâre obviously feeling that song that we just heard,
âLongest Days,â but itâs also great song craft. At the risk of kind of killing
the lyric, let me just, like, read a few lines.
Nothing lasts forever. Your best efforts donât always pay. Sometimes you get
sick, and you donât get better. Thatâs why life is short, even in its longest
days.
Can you talk a little bit about your process of writing a song like this? You
were telling us that the main hook, the life is short line, basically came from
your grandmother, but what about the rest of it?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Well you know, as Iâve matured as a songwriter, I realize that
if itâs out there, itâs mine. You know, everything I see and hear, I donât care
if Shakespeare wrote it, or Tennessee Williams wrote it, or if Bob Dylan wrote
it, or I see it on a sitcom. If I hear words, theyâre mine.
And so I will take ideas from anyplace, anywhere, anytime, and life has become
a song to me. Iâm always looking for a song.
And then what happens is that Iâll sit down, and if I have to labor over the
song, generally the song is not very good. My best songs are just given to me
from someplace outside myself. And I think itâs because I have thought about a
particular topic for so long that eventually, it assembles itself in my head or
in heaven, one of the two, sometimes in hell, and they just kind of come to me
all in a thought.
Sometimes itâs like âThe Longest Days.â I got up one morning, and the song came
to me in a complete thought. All I had to do was get up and write it down.
There was no laboring about rhymes or melody or any of that stuff. It just was
- there it is.
And when that happens, you know, youâve just kind of got to look up and go
thank you.
GROSS: Right. Well my guest is John Mellencamp, and his new CD is called âLife,
Death, Love and Freedom.â John, youâre in your studio, and you have your guitar
with you. So Iâm going to ask if you could sing another song pertaining to
mortality from the new CD, and this is called âA Ride Back Home.â
(Soundbite of song, âA Ride Back Homeâ)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: (Singing) Hey Jesus, can you give me a ride back home? I've
been out here in this world too long on my own. I won't bother you no more if
you can just get me in the door. Hey Jesus, can you give me a ride back home?
When I started out I was so young and so strong. I just let it roll off my back
when things went wrong. Now it's starting to get to me, all of this inhumanity.
Hey Jesus, can you give me a ride back home?
GROSS: Thank you, and thatâs John Mellencamp, performing a song from his new
CD, âLife, Death, Love and Freedom.â Do you mind if I ask what kind of religion
you were brought up with, like, what church was like when you were young?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Well my grandmother - back to my grandmother - made sure that I
went to church every Sunday. And sheâd come over and pick us boys up, and we
would go to the Nazarene church. And back then, that was about as close to
heaven as I ever got, because just the time to be able to spend with her, and
she was very, very religious.
But see, you know, Iâm in, and I donât even worry about it because before she
died, she said listen, Buddy, when you die, Iâll be waiting on you, and youâre
in. So I figure, you know, I donât â I got nothing to do.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Sheâs taken care of it for me. So if there is a heaven, Iâm in.
So I donât even think about. Although she did say, Buddy, youâre going to have
to stop that cussing.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: But other than that, you know, if I can just clean up my
language, Iâm pretty sure Iâm in the golden gates. So I trust her, and I
believe her, and soâ¦
Yeah, I grew up Nazarene, and thatâs where I went to church, and then finally
about 17 or 18, I just kind of quit going.
GROSS: And now?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: And now? Oh, the church would fall down if I walked in.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Iâm not a big advocate of organized American religion.
GROSS: Hereâs another mortality question, if you donât mind. You know, as Iâve
been saying, thereâs a bunch of songs on the new CD that are about mortality.
You had heart surgery in the 1990s, right? A heart attack?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: No, no, no, no, no. Yeah. I had a mild heart attack because I
smoke and because I have high cholesterol, and for 10 years before that,
doctors were telling me, John, you need to get on cholesterol medicine, and my
answer was always the same.
Am I all right now? And they go yeah, youâre all right now, but youâre heading
for disaster. Okay, well, Iâll deal with disaster when it gets here. Well, it
got here.
So I have no one to blame or anything like that about having a heart
malfunction, but I did not have open-heart surgery or anything like that.
GROSS: So this is more than 10 years ago.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Actually, it was 1994.
GROSS: So you werenât writing songs like this then, were you?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Yes, I was.
GROSS: You were?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Yeah. See, the problem is that music is so â you know, during
the â80s and the â70s, you know, the songs and the arrangements of the songs
had to be a certain way to get on the radio, and it really screwed up songs. It
really messed up â Iâve been writing about this stuff forever.
Iâve been writing about mortality. Iâve been writing about â you know, I only
write four songs. Come on.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Iâve got the same four songs, and I just rewrite them, you
know, 50 times, but Iâve got four topics that I cover. You know, I cover race,
and I cover what youâre calling mortality, and then I, you know, sometimes
write about girls, but Iâm too old to write about that now. So you know, Iâve
only got a few things I write about.
But if you listen to songs that Iâve written.
(Soundbite of music)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: (Singing) Some people ainât no damn good.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: You know, that song is about mortality. âWhen The Walls Come
Crumbling Down,â it was about the government. So because the music and the
lightness and the arrangements of the music of that time were of a certain ilk,
and even got worse in the â90s, the songs, to be able to be on the radio,
really had to take on a candy-coated appeal.
âPink Housesâ was always anti-Reaganomics. People love the ainât that America.
So, you know, people take from songs only what they want to hear, and you know,
Iâm just like everybody else.
So youâve kind of got to lift up the veil of a lot of songwritersâ songs to
really realize whatâs being said.
GROSS: Well, letâs take, I think, an excellent example of what youâre talking
about, which is âThis is Our Country,â and a lot of people know that song from
the Chevrolet Silverado ad, and it sounds like, you know, an American anthem
when you just hear the chorus.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: The chorus, right.
GROSS: But Iâm going to ask you to sing a verse from it that gives a very
different impression than what people might have walked away from in the ad.
And this is â can you do the verse that goes: And thereâs room enough here for
religion to forgive? Room enough here for science to live?
(Soundbite of song, âThis is Our Countryâ)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: (Singing) Well, thereâs room enough here.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Let me see if I can do it.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: (Singing) Well, thereâs room enough here forâ¦
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Iâve got a cigarette in my mouth. Let me take it out.
GROSS: Take it out.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Hold on. All right, here we go.
(Soundbite of song, âThis is Our Countryâ)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: (Singing) Well thereâs room enough here for science to live,
and thereâs room enough here for religion to forgive and try to understand how
the people love this land. This is our country.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Yeah, I think that, you know, simply because it was my one and
only television commercial, that outraged a lot of people, and what the song is
really about was missed. But you know, I knew that was going to happen.
But I really had no idea how much that song was going to be played.
GROSS: âThis is Our Countryâ is kind of like a plea to end the culture wars, to
be inclusive, to respect each other.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Yes.
GROSS: Do you feel it became an anthem for something else in the minds of many
people?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Well, I donât care. I mean, it became an anthem for Chevrolet,
I think.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: I mean, because how thatâs how they discovered the song because
they couldnât discover the song in the way that they discovered âPink Housesâ
or the way that they discovered, you know, âI Need a Lover.â Itâs impossible
to, you know, to discover a song that way.
GROSS: But what went through your mind when Chevrolet asked you to use it? Did
you think immediately this would be a good idea? Did you have reservations
about it?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Oh listen, I had spoken out against it. I was the same that you
are, and I still donât think that an artist should have to get involved with
Wall Street on any level.
Thatâs not what I really do. I donât write songs for commercials, but I did
this because I thought, well, perhaps they are right. I had so many people
saying John, you have turned down fortunes and fortunes of money, and now is
the time. The music business has changed. Nobody is â your songs canât grow
from the ground up anymore. So go from it from a different angle. So thatâs
what we did.
GROSS: And what did you learn from the experience?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Oh, I learned that an artist shouldnât have to do this. This is
not what my songs are about. But I also learned that Chevrolet was a better
record company than Columbia.
(Soundbite of laughter)
GROSS: Because they got your song out there?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Because â no, because â yes that, and partially, but because
they also, what they said they were going to do, they did. They kept their
word.
GROSS: Which was?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Well, record companies never keep their word. Thatâs the point
of the whole conversation. Records companies say weâre going to do this, this
and this and this, and they never did any of it.
GROSS: My guest is John Mellencamp. His new CD is called âLife, Death, Love and
Freedom.â Weâll talk more, and heâll sing more, after a break. This is FRESH
AIR.
(Soundbite of song, âSmall Townâ)
GROSS: If youâre just joining us, my guest is John Mellencamp, and he has a new
CD, which is called âLife, Death, Love and Freedom.â
(Soundbite of music)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Sorry, honey.
(Soundbite of laughter)
GROSS: Now, I also want to talk with you about âPink Houses,â which is the song
that John McCain had briefly used in his campaign, and weâll talk about what
happened with that, but play the hook from it so everybody knows the song.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Let me see how that goes.
(Soundbite of song, âPink Housesâ)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: (Singing) Ainât that America for you and me? Ainât that America
something to see, babe? Ainât that America, home of the free? Little pink
houses for you and me.
GROSS: So when you found out John McCain was using it in his campaign, and you
are a lifelong Democrat, how did you decide to handle it?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: I wouldnât say Iâm a lifelong Democrat. Iâm very liberal.
GROSS: Okay, right. You can vote whatever you want, but youâre very liberal.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Iâm very liberal, yes. Iâm very liberal.
GROSS: Got it.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Well, what happened was that I called up my publicity guy, a
guy named Bob Merlis. I said â Bob said, you know, McCainâs using your song. I
said well, he can use it if he wants to, but you probably ought to write him a
letter and say, you know, not only, you know, that you guys are using it, but
so is Barack Obama, so is John Edwards, so is Hillary Clinton, and you should
understand that Mellencamp is very liberal, and do you really think that itâs
pushing your agenda in the right direction?
I mean, youâre just really falling in line with all the other liberal
candidates. Maybe you guys should rethink using the song. We didnât tell him
not to use it. We just wrote a letter that said, you know, why donât you guys â
you guys might want to rethink about using this song, and they quit using it.
GROSS: When you write songs like âPink Housesâ or âThis is Our Countryâ or
âR.O.C.K. in the USA,â do you think, Iâm going to sit down and write an anthem?
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: No, not really, because if you hear me play these songs, like
you just heard me - theyâre not anthems at all. Theyâre folks songs.
GROSS: Thatâs true.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: I mean, you know, like I just played the chorus of pink houses.
Thatâs not an anthem. Thatâs a folk song. But see, thatâs what I was talking
about, and all the songs that you named were music from the â80s that had to
be, you know, dressed up in a certain way, or they werenât going to be on the
radio.
If I like, Iâm going to go out on tour, and Iâm going to play just me and
acoustic guitar, and all these songs take on a whole different feeling or
meaning when you hear me playing by myself, because theyâre not wrapped up in
the music of the time. There just songs. So Iâll give you a good example. Hold
on, listen.
(Soundbite of song, âI Need a Loverâ)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: (Singing) I need a lover that wonât drive me crazy. I need a
lover that wonât drive me mad. I need a lover that wonât drive me crazy. I need
a girl like one I ainât never had.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Itâs a whole different song.
GROSS: Yeah.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Itâs a whole different song than the song that you grew up
hearing and, you know, I grew up playing. But thatâs what the music of the time
required.
But donât get me wrong. Iâm not complaining. I was very fortunate. I had a lot
of hit records, and you know, Iâm 57 years old. Iâm still out playing shows,
and people still know my songs, and so you know, I feel very fortunate about
all that. So Iâm not complaining.
Iâm just saying that, you know, trying to be an artist inside the music
business has always been challenging for me.
GROSS: John Mellencamp will be back in the second half of the show. His new CD
is called âLife, Death, Love and Freedom.â Iâm Terry Gross, and this is FRESH
AIRâ¦
(Soundbite of song, âYoung Without Loversâ)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: (singing) Better take a look at my circle. Better take a look
around, tell all my friends. Better take a look, at the colors of the people,
young without lovers - old without friends. Better say a prayer, for the poor
and unhealthy. Better sing a song, for those who donât care. Let the people
have the right to be different, young without lovers - old without friends.
Life is an abstraction and it tries to fool us allâ¦
GROSS: This is FRESH AIR. Iâm Terry Gross back with John Mellencamp. He has a
new CD called âLife, Death, Love and Freedom.â His hits from the â80s include
âJack & Dianeâ and âSmall Town.â His song âThis is Our Countryâ became famous
when it was used in the Chevy ad. At the Obama Inaugural Celebration at the
Lincoln Memorial, Mellencamp sang his song âPink Houses.â He grew up in a small
town in Indiana, I asked him to tell us about the first records he bought.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: The first record I ever bought was âThe Twistâ - with my own
money, I bought that by Chubby Checker and I was like, maybe you know, seven or
six years old. And this girl who lived next door to us, her and I entered the
twist contest in the window of the dime store in Seymour, Indiana and we wonâ¦
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: â¦the twist contest. But we didnât really have any twist music,
so, I had to go and buy Chubby Checker. But I grew up in a household where my
dad is only 20 years older than me. So, my dad had, you know, I had access to a
lot of music and my dad thought - at the time I think he was - you know, him
and his buddy had bongo parties where theyâd bongo. So, you know, I was exposed
to Woody Guthrie, Odetta, you know, all kind of music through my fatherâs
record collection. So - and I had an older brother who is four years older than
me, who also played guitar and was really a much better singer than me.
GROSS: Could you maybe play an excerpt of a song that you feel was like in your
DNA because you heard it and loved it when you were young, either a song that
you discovered on your own or a song from your fatherâs collection thatâs just,
kind of, in your blood?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: I see.
(Soundbite of song, âThe Times They Are A-Changinââ)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: (Singing) Come gather âround people, wherever you roam, and
admit that the waters, around you have grown and soon youâll sink like a stone.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Anyway, my brother had that - brought that record home in 1963,
1962, whatever year it came out and it made a huge impression on me, that Bob
Dylan fellow.
GROSS: Now, what impact did Dylan have on you when you were young?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Well, I mean he was the ultimate song writer. You know, I never
even considered writing songs until I was much older, because I was the singer
in a rock band. You know, I was in a bar - youâd remember, you know, the mid
early â70s, mid â70s, there were so many rock bars. You know, and I was one of
those guys, you know, playing and singing and there was no reason for me to
write a song because there were so many beautiful songs out, you know, we would
- in one hand, you know, I had Bob Dylan and on the other I had Iggy Pop. You
know, and we would go from â from a Dylan song to a Stoogesâ song, all in one
set.
So, you know there was no reason for me to write songs. So - but Bob Dylan was
always the - the ultimate song writer and nobody could ever write a song as
good as him and nobody ever has written a song as good as him. And you know,
so, you know, when I thought itâ¦
GROSS: So, what made you think about writing songs, not just singing them?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: I got a record deal.
GROSS: And you had to write because of that?
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Yeah.
GROSS: Really, so you hadnât written songs before that?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Oh, you know, I had written songs, you know, to get girls to
come over the house or something, but other than that, you know, I was never
really serious about song writing until probably 19, I donât know, â80
something or another. I donât know exactlyâ¦
GROSS: Oh, let me stop you - let me stop you. So when youâd write a song to get
a girl to come over the houseâ¦
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Yeah.
GROSS: â¦would you stare into her eyes in a dreamy way as you played the song?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: No, I never have to do that.
GROSS: No.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: I never had to do that, and I just - they just - they just
dropped everything.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: I donât think I was justâ¦
GROSS: If you say so.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Well, I - I donât think, I was the only one.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Thatâs my point, you know.
GROSS: Oh, oh. Okay.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: You know, Iâm not saying they dropped everything for me. They
just, you know, girls at that time, if you had a guitar, they liked you. And I
wasnât the only one. I mean, there was a long line of guys walking around my
town with a guitar case. So, yeah, I mean, you know, if I wrote a song, it was
only for the entertainment of female company or a little story that I might
write about something that happened around a house, but I never really was...
GROSS: Do you remember any of those early songs? Could I impose on you to play
a few bars of one of them?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: I donât know if I can really remember any of them. I remember
the first song that I learned on guitar.
GROSS: Okay.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: I was nine years old.
(Soundbite of song, âRailroad Billâ)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: (Singing) Railroad Bill, Railroad Bill, lived way up on
Railroad Hill. Ride, ride, ride⦠Railroad Bill, Railroad Bill, well he never
worked and he never will. Ride, ride, rideâ¦
Thatâs the first song I learned on guitar.
GROSS: I also kind of know that. Whose â whose is that?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: That was just old folk song. Iâm a folk singer, you know, and
thatâs- thatâs what I always did. You know, Iâd always been in bands, but I was
always, you know, always had an acoustic guitar and I always sang those old
American folk songs, you knowâ¦
GROSS: And â and yet - and yet I read that in one of your bar bands, you did a
lot of James Brown covers.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Oh yeah, well this one, sure. Yeah, I mean, you know, James
Brown was, you know, he was the Bob Dylan of soul. I mean, you know, sure, I
was in a band called the Crepe Soul and thatâs all we did. It was me and â and
a, I hate to identify him in this fashion, but a black kid - me and a black kid
were the lead singers. I was 14, he was 18 and everybody else in the band was
21. Now you can imagine letting a 14 year old kid get in a car today with a
bunch of 21 year old guys, going to the bar every weekend and playing? But my
parents let me do it, and that what I did and, you know, bring home $25-$35
every weekend and they were happy about it.
GROSS: So, you moved from Indiana to New York to get close to the record
industry?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Thatâs not true.
GROSS. No. Okay, go ahead.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: No, I moved from Indiana to London.
GROSS: Oh.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: And I lived in London in 1977 and â78. And the only reason I
moved to London that I â I had a record deal when I â I actually, hereâs what
happened. If you - I mean itâs a boring story, itâs the same old story, youâve
heard a million times. Anyway, I go to New York and I wanted to take a look at
New York Art Student League or I wanted to get a record deal, I didnât really
care which. I was either going to be a painter or a songwriter. Since, the Art
Student League cost a lot of money, that was out âcause I had no money. And I
went there and it wasnât this simple, but I got a record deal pretty rapidly.
And then it was - I made a couple of records that were terrible. I was managed
by the same guy that managed Bowie. And he was - he tried to recreate me into
an American David Bowie - just didnât work and him and I fought all the time.
And thatâs where Johnny Cougar came from and allâ¦
GROSS: Is that his idea?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Yeah, that was a terrible idea. I told him at that time it was
a terrible idea and of course he didnât like that. You know, he wasnât going to
take that from snappy young brats such as myself. You know, he was the P. T.
Barnum of the whole thing. He created David Bowie and reminded me of that all
the time. But anyway, so I was with him for, you know, I made a couple of
records with him that were terrible, terrible - not worth listening, not worth
looking at. And then I met a manager who was a shyster and we, he said, you
know, I canât get a record deal here in the United States for you, but if you
could come to London, I can get one in Europe.
So, we moved to London and I lived in London for two years. And it was a great
experience, and eye opening for, you know, to move from Seymour, Indiana to
London England and be living on, you know, right in Chelsea and the whole punk
rock thing was just starting to explode and there I was with the acoustic
guitar.
GROSS: Well, all right. So it was really hard for you to get rid of the Cougar
thing, wasnât it?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Oh, itâs still - itâs never go - it will never leave. I still
walk down the street and people would say, hey John Cougar, you know, I hear it
all time. Or John Cougar Mellencamp â Iâll be introduced that way. But as you
know, thatâs what itâs - thatâs what it was, you know. I mean thatâs - thatâs
what people, you know, knew me as at that time and thatâs - you know, thatâs
just the fate. Thatâs, you know, thatâs the way God handed it out to me and
thatâs the cards Iâm dealt and so I deal with it.
GROSS: Now, let me ask you about one of your early hits - and this is âJack &
Dianeâ from 1982. There is a great line in that, life goes on even after the
thrill of living is gone.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: So, there you go. Now weâre talking about mortality again.
GROSS: Yes, exactly, you know, that occurred to me.
(Soundbite of laughter)
GROSS: That definitely occurred to me. Can you talk about how that line came to
you?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Well actually, they are putting together a boxed set of my
songs. And the guy was just here yesterday whoâs producing it, was working on
it and they - this guy is leaving no stone unturned. So, he found a song that I
had written before âJack & Dianeâ called âGinny(ph) at 16â that had some of the
same lines from âJack & Dianeâ in it - that I had abandoned in that song âGinny
at 16â and turned it into âJack & Diane.â And in the original writing of âJack
& Diane,â he discovered that Jack was black. So even back then, I was talking
about interracial things, but for some reason rather had abandoned that idea.
So âJack & Dianeâ was originally about an interracial couple. But I guess in
1981, I think may be I decided, may be this is a little too - pushing it too
far. Because, you know, this country is a pretty racist place and so -
particularly in â81.
GROSS: Can you do a few bars of âJack & Diane?â
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Yeah, hold on.
(Soundbite of song, âJack & Dianeâ)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: (Singing) Little ditty about Jack and Diane, two American kids
growinâ up in the heartland, Jackie gonna be a football star, Dianeâs debutante
backseat of Jackieâs car. Suckinâ on chilli dog outside the Tastee-Freez,
Dianeâs sittinâ on Jackieâs lap, heâs got his hands between her knees. Jackie
say, hey Diane lets run off, behind a shady trees, dribble off those Bobby
Brooks, let me do what I please and Jackie say a, oh yeah life goes on, long
after the thrill of livinâ is gone, oh yeah life goes on, long after the thrill
of livinâ is gone they walk on, oh yeah life goes on, long after the thrill of
livinâ is gone, oh yeah life goes on, long after the thrill of livinâ is gone
they walk on.
Thatâs it.
GROSS: Did you know when youâre writing that that it would be a really good to
put in like details in the song, like - like the Tastee-Freez, the - the chilli
dogs, I mean, like story writers think of details like that, songwriters donât
always.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Well, I donât know, you know - I donât know. I can say this
very crudely to you, a lot of those songs back then were not really written in
my mind. They were written, you know, below my belt. They were songs that were
only - only emotional. There was no - I wasnât sophisticated enough to think,
oh I should put a detail in here. You know, I was - it was - I was a guy in a
band in a bar and, you know, I saw what people did and partook - and what
people did in those bars. I was part of that scene in the Midwest. And it was
a, you know, it was a rough ass crowd some nights and some nights it wasnât,
you know.
So, thatâs where songs like âLonely Olâ Nightâ came from. Music was a sideline
for me at that time. You know, all my songs were written below my belt. And
then, as I got older, they, kind of, raised up to my head and became more, you
know, you should pay attention to what youâre writing because people are
actually listening.
GROSS: My guest is John Mellencamp. His new CD is called âLife, Death, Love and
Freedom.â Weâll talk more after a break. This is FRESH AIR.
(Soundbite of song, âPink Housesâ)
GROSS: My guest is John Mellencamp and his new CD is called âLife, Death, Love
and Freedom.â I wanted to ask you something, and this gets back to what we were
talking about early on, about mortality. And this question might strike you as
kind of odd and a real stretch, and may be it is, but I know that youâre born
with a tumor on your spine.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: I was born with Spina Bifida.
GROSS: Thatâs like an opening in your spine, isnât it?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Yes, thatâs what it is.
GROSS: Thatâs really dangerous.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Well, in 1951 it was deadly. In 1951, you know, they would
operate on people with, you know, with pinking sheers and screw drivers.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: And, you know, they were still giving people lobotomies in
1951, you know. So the medical world was pretty not developed, not like today.
And I was born with Spina Bifida, and it used to be practice to let the baby
lay there for two or three weeks, and if the baby survives, then they would
operate on the baby. Thank God for me, that there was a young doctor named Dr.
Heimberger at Rileyâs Children Hospital in Indianapolis. He said weâve got to
stop just letting these kids die and letting them lay there because they wonât
survive. So letâs â the minute we see it, letâs operate on them.
And thatâs what he did with me. And generally, if you are born with that
disease wherever they operate on you from, you are crippled from that point
down. My hole in my spine was right below my ears, so I should have been
crippled from the neck down.
GROSS: Do you think, and this is the part thatâs really the stretch - because
you were born so vulnerable and that you had a condition that nearly killed
you, that could have killed you, do you think that you have some like retention
of that and that thereâs something like deep inside that has always been in
touch with mortality and vulnerability because of that? I mean then even if you
werenât aware of that, your parents would have been.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Well my parents didnât even tell me until I was, until some kid
at school said to me when I was about in sixth, seventh - fifth or sixth grade,
Iâm sure. I was sitting in class and some kid goes, man, whatâs that big scar
across the back of your neck? And I said - what scar? I didnât know there was
scar on the back of my neck. Apparently my parents told my brothers not to say
anything to me and they never said anything to me, and so I remember going home
and going, whatâs the scar on my neck? And then I got the whole nine yards. And
at, you know, nine or ten years old, I didnât much care.
GROSS: You didnât?
Mr. MELLENCAMP: No at that time I didnât care because I figured, well, you
know, Iâm been a normal kid thus far, I have no reason to believe that I wonât
be anything but a normal kid. And I played football and I ran track, and played
baseball and, you know, I did everything everybody else did. But, you know, I
donât that see that scar on the back of my neck but, you know, Iâve been
married to Elaine for 17 years and she said the first time she kissed me and
she put her hand on the back of my neck, she thought, what the - world is that.
(Soundbite of laughter)
GROSS: Can I close by asking you to do a song that you did not write, that you
really love, thatâs by somebody else.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Okay, I will play a song that I have played at every party.
GROSS: Oh great, okay.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: That - this is my party song, you know, when they hand me a
guitar and say John play something.
(Soundbite of song, âEarlybird Caféâ)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: (Singing) Everybody Everybody's laughin' at the Earlybird Café.
I've been headed there since yesterday, I believe I've lost my way. Charlotte's
there in organdy, Billy's there in suede. Y'know thereâs money's in their
pockets, and all their dues are paid. There's wine on every table, and food on
every plate. Well I hope I get there pretty soon, before it gets too late.
Well I ran on down the road awhile to the other side of town, my clothes was
gettin' wrinkled, and my socks was fallin' down, but I could not stop to pull
them up, for fear that I'd be late so I kept on runnin' down the road until I
saw the gate - of the Earlybird Cafe, glowin' golden like the sun, everybody
kept on singing: Come on in, we've just begun.
So I went on in, and I set right down, and I ordered me up some wine, my talk
was fast and clever and the women all were fine. Charlotte asked me where I'd
been with my jade and ivory eyes, I told her I'd been hung up, with some beggar
in disguise. Well she laughed like temple bells, she kissed me on the cheek and
said: you know it's hard to be alive sometimes but it's easy to be dead.
GROSS: You know I feel like I should know that song and I donât, please tell me
something about the song.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Itâs old folk song and it was originally recorded by, might
even been written by, a band called Jerry Hahn Brotherhood, which was a band
that I saw play probably in 1968 - opening up for Frank Zappa and The Mothers
Of Invention. And they played that song and I went â wow. But thatâs my party
song. I have been playing this since, I have been playing that song since I was
17 years old.
GROSS: To really cheer up the party.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Yeah. I think itâs a beautiful song.
GROSS: It is. It is. It has been really great to talk with you. I really
appreciate youâre doing this and thank you for playing for us. I think itâs
just really generous of you. I really appreciate it.
Mr. MELLENCAMP: Itâs my pleasure.
GROSS: John Mellencampâs new CD is called âLife, Death, Love and Freedomâ.
Hereâs another song from it, this is â âDonât need this bodyâ.
(Soundbite of song, âDonât need this bodyâ)
Mr. MELLENCAMP: (Singing) Ainât a gonna need this body much longer, ainât a
gonna need this body much more, I put in a ten million hours, washed up and
worn out for sure. Well all my friends are sick or dying, and Iâm here all by
myself, all I got left is a head full of memories, and a thought of my upcoming
death.
GROSS: You can hear more songs from John Mellencampâs new CD âLife, Death, Love
and Freedomâ and hear our interview too on our Web site freshair.npr.org. This
is FRESH AIR.
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Mellencamp Muses About Mortality, 'Love'
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Different Year, Same 'Marienbad'
..TEXT:
DAVE DAVIES, host:
..TEXT:
Ever since it won the Golden Lion at the 1961 Venice Film Festival, the French
film âLast Year at Marienbad,â by Alain Resnais, has inspired wildly divergent
passions, often in the same person. The British critic Geoff Andrew declared it
as, quote, âeither some sort of masterpiece, or meaningless twaddle,â unquote.
..TEXT:
The movie is now out in a new, two-disc version from Criterion, with a restored
high definition digital transfer. Our critic-at-large, John Powers, says itâs
like a monument from an earlier era.
..TEXT:
JOHN POWERS: Itâs been almost half a century since America entered the short-
lived glory days of the art film, movies that not only tackled serious themes,
but did so with a strikingly modernist insistence on style. Such films felt new
and exciting back then. And though it now sounds unbelievable, audiences
actually left the theatre arguing about whether theyâd seen something
revelatory or something merely pretentious.
..TEXT:
No movie was more controversial than Alain Resnaisâ 1961 âLast Year at
Marienbad,â which became so notorious, that Iâd seen it parodied before I
actually ever saw the film at my college film society. I still remember how
stoked I was to be able to see it, and frankly, how bored and baffled I was
when I did.
..TEXT:
Here was art cinema with a vengeance. The guy who introduced the film called it
great, and I left the theatre asking my girlfriend: Can something be great if
itâs not any good? Yet the funny thing about âLast Year at Marienbadâ is that
it stayed with me over the decades, far more than many movies Iâd thought
better at the time.
..TEXT:
Still, this was never enough to get me to watch it again, until a few days ago.
Thatâs when I checked out the new DVD version from Criterion, whose ravishing
black-and-white widescreen transfer captures the beauty of Sacha Viernyâs
images in a way that few viewers have ever seen. The story, if you can call it
that, takes place at a resort whose chateau is filled with grand rooms, endless
corridors, and enough Rococo decor to have Liberace screaming for mercy.
..TEXT:
Surrounded by socialites who stand around like zombies, a (unintelligible)
Italian man named X, played by Giorgio Albertazzi, pursues a glamorous French
woman named Y. Thatâs a riveting Delphine Seyrig, hair swooped tight across her
forehead and clad in a series of spectacular gowns designed by Coco Chanel.
..TEXT:
Over and over, X tells her that theyâd had an affair the previous year, perhaps
in the Czech spa town of Marienbad and that sheâd agreed to leave M, a faintly
Draculean figure whoâs either her husband or her lover. Over and over, Y
resists Xâs entreaties, insisting - truthfully or not - that she doesnât even
remember having met him. And thatâs pretty much it.
..TEXT:
As Resnaisâ camera glides through the chateau and its spectacular grounds, X
and Y play out versions of the same scene so many times, that we soon grasp
that all the usual guideposts of a movie have been deliberately erased. The
script, by avant-garde novelist Alain Robbe-Grillet, refuses to tell us whether
what weâre seeing is taking place in the past, the present or the future, or
whether it actually took place at all. Fantasy and reality, past and present,
have been telescoped into an eternal now.
..TEXT:
Over the years, there have been countless theories of what this all might mean.
Is the movie a parable of an era haunted by nuclear war? Is it about the
repressed memory of a rape? Or could it all be just an intellectual game? Me, I
think Resnais is making a connection between two different kinds of wooing.
Just as X tries to win over the reluctant Y, the movie itself is trying to
seduce us into entering its imaginary world, which, like all movie worlds, is
outside time.
..TEXT:
Half a century later, the world Resnais wants us to enter remains as unsettling
as quicksand, and far more timeless than, say, âBreathlessâ or âLa Dolce Vita.â
He himself saw the film as an experiment, an exercise in high style. And whatâs
striking is that this hypnotic work feels far more radical, more avant-garde
than anything I saw at Cannes this year, much less anything that will actually
open in our theatres.
..TEXT:
It now seems incredible that such a movie could have been released
commercially, let alone become an international touchstone, one that would
inspire a zillion fashion shoots and perfume commercials, influencing
everything from Stanley Kubrickâs âThe Shining,â to music videos by Blur.
..TEXT:
Does this mean I now like the movie? I canât honestly say that I do, but liking
it seems almost beside the point. âLast Year at Marienbadâ is one of those
primal experiences thatâs somehow just there, like the Grand Canyon, or the
Acropolis, or maybe Las Vegas. However you feel about it, this is one movie you
never forget, even if you canât remember much of anything that happens in it.
..TEXT:
DAVIES: John Powers is film critic for Vogue. You can download podcasts of our
show at freshair.npr.org.
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Transcripts are created on a rush deadline, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of Fresh Air interviews and reviews are the audio recordings of each segment.