By Ray Shasho
Michael Des Barres is
a perfect example of how perseverance, hard work, and a positive
outlook, can achieve many of life’s yearnings. Michael is an incredible
story; he embraced his passion for the arts and has never looked backed.
Acting lessons at the Corona Stage School led to a supporting cast
member role as “Williams,” a London East End pupil on the 1967 British
drama,
To Sir, with Love starring
Sidney Poitier. Besides acting, Michael loved music, especially
American blues and rock ‘n’ roll. He formed his first band called the
Orange Illusion in his teen years.
In 1972,
Michael Des Barres became frontman for British glam rockers and cult icons
Silverhead. The band eventually signed with Purple Records (owned by Deep Purple) and released two essential albums,
Silverhead (1972) and
16 and Savaged (1973).
Silverhead became a significant role model for future generations of glam rock groups.
After the premature disbanding of Silverhead, Michael Des Barres formed
Detective. The band was signed to
Led Zeppelin’s Swan Song label by legendary guitarist Jimmy Page in 1975.
Detective featured guitarist Michael Monarch (Steppenwolf) and Tony Kaye (Yes). The group recorded three studio albums,
Detective (1977),
It Takes One to Know One
(1978), and their third album was recorded on Atlantic Records but
never released. (Michael remains friends with Jimmy Page and Robert
Plant).
During this time
Michael Des Barres appeared on the
WKRP in Cincinnati television episode
“Hoodlum Rock” as the infamous Sir Charles 'Dog' Weatherbee of the band
Scum of the Earth.
(Rob Zombie released a song called “Scum of the Earth” in 2000, and a
heavy metal band by the name of Scum of the Earth was formed in 2003).
After the break-up of Detective, Michael Des Barres teamed up with Ex-Sex Pistol guitarist Steve Jones to form
Chequered Past.
The line-up also included bassist Nigel Harrison and drummer Clem Burke
from Blondie, and guitarist Tony Sales formerly of Utopia. (The band
recorded one album together called
Chequered Past). Des Barres also became the lead singer of the touring and Live Aid version of
The Power Station, a Duran Duran spin-off band.
Michael Des Barres penned the world-wide hit
“Obsession” with Holly Knight, which became a huge hit for the LA new wave group Animation in 1985.
Des Barres states that he loves performing in front of a live
audience in a rock ‘n’ roll band, but he’s also in love with all the
arts, and in many shapes and forms. He’s also an accomplished actor and
probably best known for playing the infamous villain
‘Murdoc’ on the popular TV series
MacGyver and ‘Alex’ in the movie
Pink Cadillac.
Michael has appeared in countless film, television, voice-over and stage roles and his credits are awe-inspiring. Visit
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0220735/ for a complete listing of his credits.
At 64,
Michael Des Barres continues to amaze, mystify and diversify.
In
April of 2012, Des Barres reunited with Silverhead and all his old
mates for the first time in 38 years. The band performed to standing
room only audiences in Japan. He’s also recently appeared on the
television series
The Finder,
Suits, and the motion picture
California Solo.
More impressively,
Michael Des Barres
returns to his mid- 1960’s roots with an incredible hard-driving rock
‘n’ roll band initiated by old school elation. The new CD is entitled
Carnaby Street and will be officially released on
July 10th.
Des Barres indicated, “I feel I’m part of a movement that is slipping
away, I have something to bring to the table that is endangered of being
swept under the carpet.”
After listening to
Carnaby Street,
two things became certain …rock ‘n’ roll needs Michael Des Barres and
we need more Michael Des Barres. The band is incredibly tight and Des
Barres’ vocals are majestic. Des Barres embellishes the essence of a
‘British rocker’ by epitomizing Rod Stewart, Noddy Holder and Steve
Marriott all in one voice. It’s an incredible musical journey back to
the swinging rock ‘n’ roll days of London.
Carnaby Street is a natural flow of raw rock energy reminiscent to the days when rock was king. The Brits are back and ready to rock!
I had a chance to chat with Michael last week about the new CD, his
inspiring music and acting career, his rock and roll mates, and creating
opportunities in life.
I found Michael to be brilliant, receptive, spiritual, charming, and a bloody rocker to the end!
Here’s my interview with the iconic British glam rocker, singer, songwriter, guitarist, actor…
Michael Des Barres, as he takes us back to the “Garden of Eden for rock ‘n’roll.”
Ray Shasho: Hello Michael, how are you?Michael Des Barres: “I’m good man, how are you?”
Ray Shasho: It’s great to be chatting with the original frontman for Scum of the Earth. Michael Des Barres:
“(All Laughing!) I get stopped for many reasons but that was definitely
one of the top five. It seemed to define some sort of a Spinal Tap
moment for the punk generation. It had an amazing penetration in the
media … and it stayed there. That show was so much fun to do.”
Ray Shasho:
Michael, I want to say congrats on such an awesome and inspiring
career. I’ve heard you talk about how you’ve obtained one of your first
acting roles on “To Sir With Love” but it seems you’ve created so many
great opportunities for yourself in the entertainment business, how was
that possible for you? Michael Des Barres: “I
think you hit the nail on the head in terms of creating opportunities. I
think the way you create opportunity is to believe … it wasn’t a choice
to be an artist it was something that I never ever questioned. I really
knew deep within that what I wanted to do most was express myself in
whatever form. I could have done a sculpture, been a painter, taken
photographs or whatever, there was something inside that I wanted to get
out and the universe provided these wonderful ways of doing it. I never
really gave it that much thought, right now I’m sounding too
metaphysical for my own good. But I do believe that if you really have
faith, and you trust that you have something to offer the world, you
will be given that opportunity.”
“But I did work very hard … I was in boarding school for eight years
and spent a lot of time reading, because I didn’t have parents, and I
spent a lot of time alone. So I took advantage of my education and read
everything that I could get my hands on. By the time I was 15 or 16, I
knew kind of where I wanted to go. I loved the blues and I loved
Shakespeare. Loved Oscar Wilde and loved Elvis, and there was this
strange hybrid of influences. I wanted to act and went to drama school.
Within months we were given the opportunity to work on To Sir with Love
in 1967, which was a huge international success, and I tasted it, and
saw what it was like, and saw how Sidney handled himself. Connery was
doing Bond at the same time, so I was exposed to great charismatic
actors very early on and knew the parameters of what could happen and
how it could be done, so I watched and studied them. After the movie I
did a lot of theater which gave me a defining discipline, which when I
got addicted to everything you could become addicted to, I still had
that skeleton of discipline.”
Ray Shasho: Blues and Shakespeare, Michael you are a genuine renaissance man.Michael Des Barres: “Yea,
you know … Muddy Waters and Hamlet that about sums it up. Art is both
inspired and inspiring and that’s all ever wanted to do.”
Ray Shasho: I
want to chat about your new CD Carnaby Street. Your voice sounds
amazing man; it’s a great album, stick to being a rocker for awhile
because today’s music scene really needs you.Michael Des Barres:
“You’re so incredibly kind to say that. You know what I do … I’ve been
killing people on TV for years (laughing) and “Murdoc” was very good to
me and I love my career as an actor… however… really what I want to do
is stand on the stage of a club anywhere and plug my guitar in and sing
the f-ing blues. And it’s really all I want to do. The words and feel of
Carnaby Street is freedom through music… liberation with three chords.
You can liberate yourself in the most simplistic way. My music is no way
ironic, sarcastic, aggressive, sentimental or apologetic … it’s below
the waist music. Rock ‘n’ roll is a euphemism for f-ing and dancing. And
by saying that I don’t mean to be crude, I’m just saying perhaps that
has been lost on a generation raised on Wellbutrin and Prozac.”
“Jack White and the Stripes, The Black Keyes, Alabama Shakes, there
are innumerable bands that play authentic and genuine rock ‘n’ roll
music. And I don’t mean I’m the head of an army of authenticity because I
believe there are many people doing it. But I just want to add my take
on it since I was there. I mean there were very few people singing rock
‘n’ roll music in 1967 at many nightclubs, and are still doing that. I
am a rare breed by that definition.”
Ray Shasho: 'Carnaby Street' is just a natural flow of raw rock ‘n’ roll energy and reminiscent to the days when rock was king. Michael Des Barres:
“I recorded and mixed it in 10 days. Everything you hear on that record
was done in the moment. There were perhaps backup vocals but no
overdubs on the album. That album was done because my band is so
extraordinary and so in love with that music. You don’t THINK when
you’re playing that music. Everything you hear is one take. I wrote all
the tunes and collaborated with the very talented country artist Jesse
Dayton. I stayed in Austin, Texas for a month writing this album and met
Jesse, and he was all about the music and very inspiring. And the rest
of the record I wrote with Paul Hill, who is my bass player, and
unbelievably talented. He’s Linda Perry’s bass player for all her
productions, Tina Turner, James Blunt … the list is endless. And he has
the same DNA as I do, as does the rest of the band. I’m very proud of
the album and you’re the first person who I’ve spoken to who has heard
it. It hasn’t even been sent out particularly yet, so I do appreciate
your diligence.”
Ray Shasho: I’ve always been a huge fan of British rock … another reason why I love this CD.Michael Des Barres: “Well
that’s what it is … that’s why it’s got a Union Jack on the cover, and
why I called it Carnaby Street. When I was a kid … 15, 16, 17, I would
go and see Georgie Fame, Alexis Korner, Long John Baldry … Rod, Terry
Reid, Beck, and then Hendrix and so on and so on. So when I was acting
my little ass off, I was listening and so taken by the revolution that
was happening every minute. Can you imagine what it was like in London
in 1967? It was everything you think it was. Every ten feet was a
gorgeous girl, with a gorgeous boy, in gorgeous clothes, listening to
stunning music. It was the Garden of Eden for rock ‘n’roll.”
Ray Shasho: You’re
kind of a cult figure because of the TV character ‘Murdoc’ on MacGyver,
but you also have cult status for being the frontman in the bands
Silverhead and Detective. Why were those incredible bands short-lived?Michael Des Barres:
“Well one word and you’ve heard it before, it begins with D and ends
with S. And that’s the reason. I look back at those days and don’t
regret the fact that we didn’t sell 25- million albums, for me they were
some of the best rock and roll bands ever. I’m so proud of being a
member of those bands and what we were capable of… even in those
circumstances.”
“We were 19 in Silverhead and never experienced about going to Japan
or the states, and the temptations were so incredible and we succumbed
to them. In Detective we were sponsored by
Led Zeppelin
at the height of their decadence, so the fact that we even put an album
out is a miracle. We were very indulgent and addictive and we succumbed
to those things. But even given those circumstances, we made some great
records and people have enjoyed them. But all I know is that I’m happy.
I’m happy it happened because I’ve learned a lot about what life is.”
“The fact that I’m doing this now …money is not the issue, it’s not
like I’m hungry to pay my rent, I’m doing this for the fact… I feel I’m
part of a movement that is slipping away. I feel I have something to
bring to the table that is endangered of being swept under the carpet.”
Ray Shasho: I heard Rod Stewart, Steve Marriott and Noddy Holder on Carnaby Street.Michael Des Barres:
“I think Noddy Holder was the best of them all. Noddy Holder had the
greatest, humorous, bluesy voice of any of them. I have the deepest
respect for Noddy, we came up at the same time and I adored him. His
voice was like Steve’s … so big. Silverhead opened for Humble Pie a
couple of times and I would just sit there and be astonished at this
little tiny fellow and this incredible voice. Recently, I did a gig with
Jerry Shirley and a tribute to Humble Pie. Steve was an actor, he went
to drama school and played the Artful Dodger, we’d all go on auditions
before the world changed and everyone was in high heels and eye makeup.”
Ray Shasho: I think you’re one of the only singers around that can hit the same notes like they could.Michael Des Barres: “I
find it really easy for some reason. (Laughing) I’m 64, and a few years
ago when I decided I was going to make a record, I played every
nightclub that would let me play and my voice came back, still stronger
than ever.”
“It’s interesting, Robert Plant has remained a really good friend,
and I love him and Jimmy you know, and there’s a reason he doesn’t want
to sing those songs anymore. He turned to me one day and said, “I just
can’t sing about lemon juice down my leg anymore …I just can’t do it, it
would be like a 15 year old playing Romeo.” And he’s the one that has
been incredibly creative with his career.”
Ray Shasho: I enjoyed the interview you did on You Tube with Pete Townshend and Gene Simmons. Did you have your own radio show too?Michael Des Barres:
“I was asked once but didn’t enjoy it very much. I love Gene, and Pete
is a God you know, and love to interview people as you do, it’s a
wonderful conversation to have but I don’t want to do it every day. I
love to work and I have to work … it’s a compulsion.”
Ray Shasho: The Silverhead reunion this year in Japan had to be a blast.Michael Des Barres: “Thirty-eight
years I haven’t seen these guys… accept for Nigel. We all live in
different countries so we had to regroup in Tokyo. Picture this… walking
into a room in Tokyo with all the gear there and all these glam kids
outside screaming and yelling, and we walk in there and I see these guys
that I haven’t seen in 38 years, and the first half an hour is … I’m so
sorry that I slept with your girlfriend … and it’s all very intimate,
but within a half an hour its turn the f*** down I can’t hear myself! We
only rehearsed for three days and to grasp it all in that short time
frame was not an easy thing.”
“With Silverhead, we were always the band that was trying to seduce
the audience; we were touring with Uriah Heep, Deep Purple etc. Always
trying to win the audience over … skinny little bastards with makeup on
in Mobile, Alabama in 1972 … we were a target for the boys and a
different kind of target for the girls. We had a big bulls-eye on our
ass!”
“When we went to Japan a few months ago and we played, everybody new
every syllable to every song and for the first time in our lives, they
knew who we were. It was a phenomenon and shocking to us. After that
first gig, Robbie was in a corner literally with tears flowing down his
cheeks. It was a very emotional closure for the band. We would have
never experienced the closure if we would have gone on to make multiple
albums in that one band …it would have been a different life.”
Ray Shasho: You’re
the second rock star that I’ve interviewed who played a part in
Seinfeld. Joe Lala of (Blues Image, Stephen Stills and Manassas), was in
“The Face Painter” episode. He’s the only rocker who I know that became
a veteran actor besides you. I know David Bowie and Mick Jagger played
some parts but not to the extent of you and Joe.Michael Des Barres: “I worked with Mick … I did
The Man from Elysian Fields with him and Andy Garcia, James Coburn… and he was fantastic in it … great movie!”
Ray Shasho: I hope Mick and the Stones can do one more tour … maybe a goodbye tour of some sorts.Michael Des Barres: “I
don’t think it will be a tour per se, they’ll probably do 10-12 cities,
2 or 3 nights in those cities and call it a day. Maybe not even a tour,
they might do a satellite thing. I can’t imagine Keith, Charlie is 71
now; I just don’t see them doing a year and a half of vigorous touring. I
imagine they’ll do selective cities or a satellite show.”
Ray Shasho:
You’re still good friends with Jimmy Page, how’s he doing? Michael Des Barres: “Great…
unbelievably well. Joyous, doesn’t live in the past, lives in the
moment and does his thing. I would love to make an album with Jimmy.
I’ve said many times to him let’s do it. But right now this record
Carnaby Street is terribly important to me and I think people are going
to be shocked about how I’m singing, what the songs are, and a bit of a
revelation for people who didn’t get it the first time.”
Ray Shasho: Did you actually turn down singing the role for Judas on the soundtrack of Jesus Christ Superstar?Michael Des Barres:
“I did yea. The last thing I wanted to do back then was to go into a
studio at 3:20 and sing “What’s the buzz tell me what’s a happening.”
There was no way that I had the discipline at that time, because I was
learning about life, sex, love and how to go f*ing wild. I didn’t want
to have to show up at a particular time and do someone else’s work. I
wanted to create my own work.”
Ray Shasho: Michael a final question, you are incredibly fit, how do you do it man?Michael Des Barres: “It’s
very simple … I get up very early and drink a gallon of black coffee,
then read about myself on the internet(laughing), then go to the gym
and do my cardio … don’t have a trainer I know exactly what I’m doing.
An hour and fifteen minutes in the gym, come home and shower, sit-down
with a guitar around my neck or some lines to learn and get on with the
work. In terms of food … I don’t eat sugar, potatoes or bread. I eat
lean fish, no red meat, eat a lot of vegetables and fruit, and drink a
lot of water. But I strongly suggest that sugar is the worst thing you
could do. I just love being able to walk down the street with my head
held high, my shoulders back, Buddy Guy in my iPod, and the love of a
good woman.”
Ray Shasho: Michael,
thank you so much for spending time with me today and more importantly
for all the great rock ‘n’ roll music you continue to bring to us all.Michael Des Barres: “Thank you so much Ray and have a GREAT day!”
The new release from The Michael Des Barres Band
Carnaby Street will be officially released on
July 10th and is available for
pre-order at
amazon.com or
www.desbarres.comMichael Des Barres official website www.desbarres.comSpecial thanks to the great Billy James at
Glass Onyon PROfficial website
http://glassonyonpublicity.wordpress.com/
Contact Classic Rock Music Reporter Ray Shasho at
rockraymond.shasho@gmail.com
Buy Ray’s very special memoir called
‘CHECK THE Gs’ -
The True Story of an Eclectic American Family and Their Wacky Family Business… You’ll LIVE IT!
Also available for download on
NOOK or
KINDLE edition for
JUST .99 CENTS at
amazon.com or
barnesandnoble.com -Please help support Ray so he can continue to bring you quality classic rock music reporting.
~~Pacific
Book Review says Ray Shasho is a product of the second half of the 20th
century, made in the USA from parts around the world, and within him is
every trend in music, television, politics and culture contributing to
his philosophical and comically analytical reflections collected in his
fine book of memories. I found Check the Gs to be pure entertainment,
fantastic fun and a catalyst to igniting so many memories of my own
life, as I too am within a few years of Ray. So to all, I say if you
have a bit of grey hair (or no hair), buy this book! It’s a great gift
for your “over-the-hill” friends, or for their kids, if they are the
history buffs of younger generations trying to figure out why we are the
way we are.
© Copyright rayshasho.com. All Rights Reserved