Loudon Wainwright III -- The Interview
Asking personal questions of Loudon Wainwright III almost feels
redundant. The 65-five-year old singer-songwriter and folk provocateur has,
over a four-decade career, made a habit of putting the events of his life and
family irrevocably on record, to the amusement of many and the consternation of
more than a few. In the immediate years following his debut in the early ‘70s,
this pattern manifested in caustic but measured re-tellings of brash youth,
marriage, child-rearing, divorce, and the fringes of a comic but fraught
personality. A more wizened but still skeptical Wainwright emerged in the
1980’s, as his voice deepened and his temper eased.
Many of Wainwright’s fans cite his 1992 album History as a career high mark, a point
worth noting because it emerged after the death of his father, a former Life magazine journalist, and feasted on
the sudden appearance of a real terminus in his distant view. Twenty years past
that masterwork Wainwright’s issued Older
Than My Old Man Now, a full meditation on “death and decay.” It’s not a
wholly funereal piece, though, because it’s a Loudon Wainwright album, where
the fine line between comedy and pathos is needle-thin. Stark end-of-life
meditations like “In C” and “The Days That We Die” exist alongside romps about
the hardship of just being plain old, such as “My Meds” and “I Remember Sex.”
Older Than My Old Man
Now features contributions from Wainwright’s friends and practically all
his family, surviving or otherwise. Wainwright’s avowed hero Ramblin’ Jack
Elliott, guitarist John Scofield and folksinger Chris Smither add counterpoint and
compliment at the album’s signpost songs. Wainwright’s children – three of
whom, Rufus, Martha and Lucy, are established musicians on their own – and his
second ex-wife Suzzy Roche make meaningful appearances. In a great conceptual
move, Wainwright’s duet partner on “I Remember Sex” is Dame Edna Everage,
Australia’s queen of frump and the just-retired alter ego of comedian Barry
Humphries.
But two tacit, departed contributors loom over the album:
Loudon Wainwright, Jr., the artist’s father and the author of the profound
narration that starts off “The Days That We Die,” and folk legend Kate
McGarrigle, the mother of Rufus and Martha and the co-writer of “Over The
Hill.” Wainwright sang and recorded the song with McGarrigle nearly 40 years
ago. In the modern update, Martha takes on McGarrigle’s role. It’s one of the
most bracing moments on the recording, and a strong reminder that as checkered
and chaotic a man’s history may be, his family supports and survives him.
I spoke with Loudon Wainwright III on the phone on May 1,
coincidentally the day his son Rufus released his new solo album.
My first thoughts
while hearing your new album were about Warren Zevon and Lee Hazlewood, two
songwriters who knowingly wrote their own epitaph albums before they died. So
my initial reaction to Older Than My Old Man Now was one of fleeting worry – “Oh, no, what’s wrong with Loudon?” Can you
tell me where this album came from?
LW3: Well,
mortality and the passage of time, death and decay – I’ve been writing about
this stuff for quite a while. I’m 65 now. When I turned 64 and, in a sense,
outlived my father – only in a sense, really – I wrote the song “Older Than My
Old Man Now.” I decided to gather together and write some material that would
just focus on this deal. Nothing’s wrong with me, as far as I can tell. I’m not
terminally ill, except in the fact that I happen to be alive. I will die. I
think my audience understands that’s going to happen to them too.
So it’s just an interesting topic, and we – the producer, Dick Connette, and I – said, “Well, how are we gonna do this and not completely bum people out?” The trick was to get some other singers involved, and also to have some sort of silly songs about death and decay, like “My Meds” and “I Remember Sex.” We’d hopefully make it 50 minutes, and enjoyable and interesting. Hopefully we accomplished that.
There’s a line in “In
C,” where you say you were “fending off the great unknown.” Were you fending
off the great unknown in your songs, or acknowledging it was there?
LW3: You can fend
off the great unknown, but eventually you’re going to rub up against it. That
goes for people of all ages and situations. But – I’m not sure what your
question is.
Have the songs that
you’ve written helped lessen your fear?
LW3: Ah, okay,
are they therapeutic in any way? (chuckles)
The answer is probably no. Writing songs doesn’t solve anything, really. It
doesn’t fix up family problems or fend death off, or fear of anything. But it’s
what’s going on, what’s rattling around in my brain. So it’s my source
material. I suppose to try and encapsulate some of these feelings in a
three-minute song is an interesting and fun exercise, and that’s what I do for
a living. I do it for practical reasons, too. But it doesn’t settle any of
these issues or solve any of these problems, I don’t think.
When fans use your
songs for therapeutic reasons, as you say, is that okay with you?
LW3: Oh, it’s
very okay! I’m delighted when someone comes up to me at this CD table, or in a
restaurant, and says my songs mean something to them or helped them through a
period. Then I get all gooey and think that’s great. I think I do provide a
service, for which I’m well-paid. The service is to affect people with the
songs, to amuse them and maybe even move them in some way. So they can
experience their own feelings about the issues that I’m writing about, which
are the issues that are happening to my audience. To everybody, pretty much.
There’s nothing arcane about the subject matter. It’s people’s lives, what
happens to them.
When I play the new
album all the way through, I was reminded of the last two songs on the History
album, “Sometimes I Forget,” about your
father’s death, and “Handful of Dust,” the latter of which had lyrics by your
father. On this album you partner with other members of your family, and your
ex-wives.
LW3: And my
father. He’s back!
Right. It brings out
the idea that there are generations behind these songs. What’s the role of
family in your overall work?
LW3: Yeah. I’ve
been doing that for years and years, writing about people in my family. My
kids, from when they were little to right up to the present. My parents,
certainly. I’ve written about my grandparents. Sisters and brothers are
mentioned. The people in my family, just like in your family, they’re the
biggest people in my life. The biggest characters in the play, so to speak, or
the drama. Or the soap opera, however you’re feeling about it at the time.
These are the people that I have very strong feelings for, so I write about
them. They’re in the songs, they always have been, and I suspect they always will
be.
All three of your
children helped on this album…
LW3: Actually there’s four of them. Even my 18-year-old daughter,
who’s a college student, sings on the first track.
Could you sense any
trepidation or sadness from them about working on Dad’s album that’s about
death and decay?
LW3: I wasn’t
aware of that. They’re used to what I do (laughs).
You’ll have to ask them what they feel about it. But everybody was pretty
cheerful about coming on and singing on the record. I’ve toured with all my
kids – the three that are singers, Rufus, Martha and Lucy – and we’ve done
shows together, sung together on
records. So it wasn’t anything particularly out of the ordinary. It felt
comfortable to be in the recording studio with them.
Rufus covered “One Man
Guy,” a song of yours. I was wondering if you see any qualities of your
songwriting or musicianship that you see your children carrying on?
LW3: Well… you
know, they’re three very distinctly different performers, I think. Sometimes
when I watch Martha perform, and she lifts up her leg and stomps, that reminds
me of me (laughs). It’s mostly little
stuff. They’re all their own performers, which is a good thing. They have gifts
that I don’t have. Rufus writes these beautiful, incredible melodies. I
basically use the same guitar chords I learned when I was 15 over and over
again. Lucy has a kind of quiet, simplicity which none of us have. It’s quite
different and unto itself. When I say “simplicity” I mean her vocal quality –
she’s a great songwriter too. Everybody’s different and that’s a good thing. I
suppose there are similarities and things you can point out and say, “Oh, I
know where that comes from.” I’m probably not objective enough to really know.
There’s a line on the
introduction to “The Days That We Die” that your father wrote – “It’s not that
I want to set the record straight – that could make matters worse.”
LW3: Yeah. That’s
a big thing. I recognize that recitation my father wrote, back in the 1980’s –
that actual thing of setting the record straight, that’s related to what Rufus
sings in the song, which is “If I have to win, you’re the one that I lose.”
Being right, being the person that’s right in any kind of a conflict is always
a trap. I have to be right, and you’re wrong. It doesn’t really help things.
That goes for global politics too.
When I heard “Ghost
Blues,” I thought it was the most joyful song on the album in the way. It’s
strange because it’s from the perspective of someone who’s already dead. Once
the great unknown is unsuccessfully fended off, does that seem like it’s a
release?
LW3: Well, I say
in the song that being a ghost is not so great. You’re hungry, you’re tired,
you can’t get rest. Then I say, to finish off that couplet, “Oblivion would be
best.” I don’t know what being a ghost would be like, I was just imagining it
in the song. But yeah, I like to think there will be a release and relief.
Actually an older song of mine that I wrote in the ‘80s
called “Out Of This World,” on a record called I’m
Alright, actually used those words about release and relief. I
think. I could be wrong about that. I used it somewhere else. Maybe it’s in a
shitty love song, I don’t know (laughs). But I talk about being off the hook,
too. In another song on the record, “Somebody Else I Know Just Died,” I write
of being released.
You bring up
survivor’s guilt as well. Was that something that informed the album all the
way through?
LW3: I think
people have guilt in general. That’s unfortunately an aspect of being alive.
But there’s also this idea of survivor’s guilt, of being the person that
doesn’t get hit by the bus. You’re delighted that you’re not that person, but then
you feel kind of bad about it. That’s one of the reasons it’s hard to watch the
news, seeing other people’s misfortune. Certainly people that you know who have
died or preceded you, there’s this guilt. In the case of an ex-wife, that’s an
obvious one.
I was thinking about
the early ‘70s when you emerged. Singer-songwriters at the time tended to be
confessional. It was associated with taking a big risk, like appearing too
vulnerable or getting hurt all over again. You’ve been pretty confessional, and
mostly literal, for your entire career, but it seems – forgive me for saying
this – that it was fairly easy for you to do so. Did you ever have any fears
about your approach?
LW3: Well, it’s
my beat. It’s my waterfront, so to speak. I started writing about myself right
from the get-go, as you say. “In Delaware when I was younger” was the first
line on my first record. It just felt that was where my material was going to
come from, in terms of my own life. In terms of confessing…?
Not necessarily
“confessional” in the Catholic sense, but more direct.
LW3: Yeah. I
think everybody writes a certain way. Sometimes people were irritated that I
was spilling the beans, so to speak. Talking about my life over and over again.
It’s an acquired taste, you either like it or you don’t. But it’s something
that I’ve been doing and will continue to do. It’s just my subject matter. Or
as I say in “In C,” “my favorite protagonist: me.”
You’ve always seemed
to avoid easy sentiment, even when the song might be justified in having some,
like “Five Years Old” or “Your Mother And I.” Was that a conscious avoidance?
LW3: Well, it’s
never too late. I could slip into that. I don’t know – you just try to make the
best song you can and avoid the pitfalls you can avoid. That’s all I’m trying
to do.
I studied to be an actor. I went to acting school before I
wrote songs. When they talk about good acting, they talk about “truthful
acting.” Something that’s connected to the truth. I think that’s what I’ve been
trying to do with the songs. Which is not to say that I don’t do things like
exaggeration. I gussy things up a little bit, edit things down, leave things
out, add a few things there. But I think – I hope, anyway – that the songs are
connected to something that’s truthful.
Ironically, the most
sentimental song on the album for me might be your duet with Dame Edna, “I
Remember Sex.” If think about the other songs you’ve written about sex –
“Mine’s Not So Big,” “It’s Love And I Hate It,” or in a way “Motel Blues” – sex
wasn’t very romantic in those songs. In this one, at least there’s a more of a
sentimental reflection.
LW3: I think that
has something to do with my duet partner.
I was wondering if
there was any sexual tension in the air.
LW3: Well, we
weren’t in the same air! I recorded my part of that song with the piano player
in New York, and then we sent it over to London and Barry Humphries did his
part. I probably shouldn’t tell you that, but what the hell. But there’s a lot
of frisson in the air.
Has your live
performing style been the same, or has it changed over the years? It’s one of
the more entertaining folk-song evenings one can have.
LW3: That’s my
job, you know – I gotta go out there for 75 minutes and get ‘em, entertain ‘em.
I’m probably doing certain things slower than I used to. I see myself as an
entertainer. I try to make the audience laugh and shut ‘em up and make ‘em
scratch their heads or burst into tears in their ginger ale. I just want to
take them on a little bit of a trip. That’s my goal. That’s what I get paid
for.
How did your duet with
Ramblin’ Jack Elliott come together?
LW3: He’s a big
hero of mine. He’s one of the reasons I do this. He’s not a songwriter per se, although he’s written a few
songs. But as an entertainer, he’s just a wonderful one. He’s my favorite guitar
player ever – I get all my guitar playing from Ramblin’ Jack. I used to see him
when I was a kid and teenager. Then I met him when I got into this business. I
probably met him at a folk festival or something 30 years ago. I’d go to his
shows. It’s like a pilgrimage. He went to a few of my shows. He just seemed
like a logical choice to do that song with. We had a wonderful afternoon out
there in Studio City, California doing it.
I also wanted to talk
about the Charlie Poole project, which wasn’t just a traditional tribute album.
You also contributed your own thoughts to your covers of Poole’s songs.
LW3: That
project, coincidentally, was like this new record, produced by my friend Dick
Connette. It was Dick’s idea to do the Charlie Poole project. He knew I was a
fan and had been since the early ‘70s when I first heard Poole. Dick thought it
would be interesting to record the songs that Poole recorded.
Again, like Jack Elliott, Poole was not a songwriter but a
great interpreter. So we’d do those old songs, and then write some new songs
that would try to capture the spirit of that performer. Dick and I wrote nine
songs. I think there are 35 tracks on the album. So that was his idea, and it
turned out to be a great one. Fun record to make. It won a Grammy! I have a lot
to thank Dick for. It was wonderful to work with Dick on this record again.
There’s an upcoming album
you’re on called “Occupy This Album,” inspired by the Occupy movement. Out of
all the folksingers that ever came around, I’d venture you’d be the least
likely to play a protest. What was your contribution?
LW3: Well,
actually I have put out topical songs over the years. I put out a record in the
early ‘90s called Social Studies. The
track on the Occupy record was from
my last record, a little independent record called 10 Songs For The New Depression. The song they used was not a song
that I wrote – it was a great song called “The Panic Is On” by a black singer,
Hezekiah Jenkins. I covered it. It seemed like a cool thing to have from that
record, a song from the other Depression. The first Depression.
The original!
LW3: Right, the
original. The one and only. Well, the one and unfortunately not only. But I do
write topical songs. I used to write songs for NPR. It’s fun to get out of the
confessional thing and write about other people’s shit, too.
Overall, how have you
seen your songwriting change? Can you typify any evolution you’ve gone through
as a writer in the last 40 years?
LW3: You know, I
don’t think it has changed much. I’ve changed. I’ve gotten older, and my voice
has gotten deeper. I’m not out of control as I was when I was 20 and 30 years
old. Running around, getting crazy every night. When we put together the box
set 40 Odd Years, I had to go back
and listen to all my records. The first thing that struck me was that the
writer in the song has been the same all the way along, although the voice is
different. I don’t know that I’ve changed that much. But I might not be the
best one to judge that.
Comments