it's Tuesday, it must be Christchurch
... from February 25 through March 5, Neil Innes undertook a whirlwind tour of 7 New Zealand cities. Grant Buist, a New Zealand cartoonist with an interest in British comedy, chatted with Neil immediately after the show on February 28, 2002. This interview originally appeared in The Salient of Victoria University, Wellington, and Chaff of Massey University, Palmerston. Mssr. Buist has been cool enough to let us reprint it here on neilinnes.org along with some photos he took at the show that night. Thank you, Grant!

 

This interview took place in a dressing room backstage at Victoria University of Wellington's Memorial Theatre on February 28th, 2002. Neil's wife Yvonne and tour agent Doug Hunter pop in occasionally, and sitting in the background being very quiet is Grant's friend Peter Baillie.



GRANT BUIST: -Because my shorthand is frankly as bad as my longhand…I'll just put this here. I've prepared you a bunch of-
NEIL INNES: Hang on…
(Neil paces around the room trying to find the source of the piped music)

GB:
It's the Cherry Poppin' Daddies…
NI: Oh well, if you're happy with it.

GB:
No, I'm fine, I'm very broadminded. I liked the little duck-shaped bubble-blower.
NI: They gave it to me last year when I went to Japan.

GB:
So it's been recently added to the act? I was going to ask you about Quacksie. It's not the original Quacksie, is it?
NI: No, how did you know that? From the Internet?

GB:
It has to be customised, doesn't it? It has the bottom cut off…
NI: It comes with little black wheels on it and a string. You pull it along and have a really good time.

GB:
So when did you decide to stick it on your head?
NI: Well, I don't know. It occurred to me about the time of the second Bonzo's album 'The Doughnut In Granny's Greenhouse' and we wanted to do a booklet again, we all had to do our own pages, and I wanted to be this kind of superhero called NormalMan, and I got the tights and the outside swimming trunks and the T-shirt and the boots, and it needed something to finish it off.

GB:
That would have finished it off.
NI: Yeah, I got into Woolworth's, and I saw rows and rows of these Quacksies, and I thought "Bloody hell, what an image" for a start, and I suddenly looked at them and thought "Hang on, if I cut the wheels off, it'll make a hat.". I don't know where the idea -

GB:
You didn't think years later it would get lost or stolen, and you'd have to hunt down another one…
NI: I know. It was bizarre, because it was just before Monty Python did the Hollywood Bowl, and we'd been to Canada, and Air Canada had lost my case with the duck in it, and the Python office got onto Woolworth's and said "Where are your Quacksies?" "We haven't got any Quacksies." "But you had Quacksies". New York Head Office denying they ever had Quacksies…

GB:
It sounds like a kind of drug code, doesn't it?
NI: I've just been sent another one …this nutter called Ken Thornton, who's a really good guitarist, actually. I got him up on stage last time in Chicago, to play, and he came over to England to do some Rutles shows as well. But he bid for this Quacksie on Ebay… (laughs) They're collector's items! He sent it to me, so I've got a pristine Quacksie…

GB:
You can keep it in reserve for the next twenty years.
NI: I think as I get on in life I ought to leave the duck behind…

GB:
Is it valuable because it's a classic toy, or because you wear it on your head?
NI: (laughs) I wouldn't know.

GB:
It's probably best not to ask.
NI: It's turning into a bit of an albatross, actually.

GB:
How the hell did you get it through customs? You can't even get a boxcutter through customs nowadays, how did you get a duck?
NI: Well, it was just shipped in the props case.

GB:
They would have thought it was drugs paraphernalia.
NI: Probably. But actually none of my bags bear close examination. There's red noses, there's wigs…

GB:
If you had a video camera they'd think you'd been making some very strange movies. I wanted to ask you some questions about Dadaism…
NI: Oh, God!

GB:
Look, you're in a bloody university, I'm going to ask you some questions about Dadaism…
NI: Fair enough, fair enough…

GB:
How were you introduced to Dadaism? Was it through school?
NI: Well, because I went to art school… I spent five years in art school altogether. I was at Norwich Art School for two years, then I went to Goldsmiths College in London which became quite infamous later on because of McLaren, the Sex Pistols bloke…

GB:
He strikes me as the sort of person the Bonzos would have beaten up in the corridors…
NI: No, I had a hand in organising a dance which ended up in dances being banned for two years! (laughs) Well, we had a good time in the Sixties, we did…We were all in the Bonzos, we were keen on Duchamp and things like that, and drawing mustaches on Mona Lisas and things like that. I used to paint Mona Lisas a lot. I've got a leather flying jacket at home with Mona Lisa painted on the back. I've got a bowler hat -with what looks likes a bird dropping painted on it, but it's a Mona Lisa.

GB:
I've just read a book full of artist's reinterpretation's of the Mona Lisa…
NI: There is one, yeah. But Duchamp was also a sensible painter too -his 'Nude Descending a Staircase' was revolutionary.

GB:
Even if you can't quite work out what way it goes up until someone explains it to you…
NI: Actually I'm thinking about starting painting again and I'm going to do a parody -

GB:
Oh my God! Please don't do what David Bowie did and start designing wallpaper!
NI: No no no! I won't! I'm still into Dada-

GB:
You're allowed to, because you're an art student, but please don't design wallpaper…
NI: No, no, I won't, but Marcel Duchamp's 'Nude Descending a Staircase', I want to do a parody of it , but I want it to be a convict with arrows on it, and maybe a metal ball and a chain, and I'm going to call it 'Con Descending Staircase' (laughs) Boom Boom!

GB:
I've always thought of Quacksie as being a Readymade.
NI: It is! Absolutely! It's a bug, actually, once you get into the visual things, you find you don't share it with everybody, because many people are untroubled by doubt and they don't really look at things. Although it's quite amazing in London at the moment -the Tate Modern…I think people may be coming for the building because it's an extraordinary space…it's an old power station -

GB:
With a huge interior.
NI: Yeah. The Royal Academy Exhibition, millions of people are turning up, so maybe people are turning to art . But it's also media fun because of the Brit Art brigade, the Damien Hirsts…

GB:
The Tracey Emins…
NI: And the Tracey Emins… yeah, they wind up the media, and they get the colonels writing in saying "This is an absolute shower, what a waste of awards"…

GB:
There's been a backlash against them generally, hasn't there?
NI: There is, 'course there is, because it's just like everything else, it's a bit like transient pop.

GB:
What did you think of Freud's painting of the Queen?
NI: I liked it!

GB:
It's not bad, is it?
NI: I thought it was terrific! I think he's one of our greatest painters…

GB:
I think the problem is whenever anyone paints the Queen they get criticised for using use too much of the colour purple…If they just left that colour out and made it look like a stamp -but where'd be the fun in that?
NI: Mind you, there was a great photograph in the paper the other day, in the Auckland Herald, with the Queen meeting a sniper -did you see it? This great outfit he's got, with a lot of false straw on his head and in fatigues -a sniper! "Do you find it interesting? Shooting people to death in the head from a long distance? With a Walter PPK capable of taking the head off a chicken at five miles?

GB:
I was wondering, how did the Bonzos get on with the Mothers of Invention? Was there any competition?
NI: Great, though Zappa was a bit aloof. We played in Los Angeles and they all came down, and the rest of the band, we went up to Laurel Canyon and partied. But Frank didn't even say hello to anybody. He sort of came in and checked the opposition and left.

GB:
Weren't they once called a Californian version of the Bonzos?
NI: Well, that would annoy Zappa intensely. I'd have swapped. I'd have joined the Mothers of Invention, because I wanted to do more composition, things like that. To get the Bonzos to apply themselves to anything like that…I mean, we got a little way into it with a thing called 'Rhinocratic Oaths', but it was too much like hard work for them.

GB:
I think if you'd done that, you would have ended up like Brian Eno in Roxy Music. He couldn't have stood a rival focus in the group…
NI: I know, but I wouldn't have minded pinching his band.

GB:
I found myself describing you to a 19 year old today. I said "I'm going to meet Neil Innes", and I ended up-
NI: Who?

GB:
After that -this is several minutes later in the same conversation -I found myself trying to tell her who Mike Oldfield was-
NI: Oh, right.

GB:
-Because I was trying to tell her who Vivian Stanshall was. I heard them playing 'Tubular Bells'
NI: I heard that…You know when the Bonzos were making their last album 'Let's Make Up and Be Friendly'…

GB:
That was your contractual obligation album, wasn't it?
NI: Well, the Pythons nicked that…we did that down at The Manor, Richard Branson's residential studio. Tom Newman was the engineer, and Mike Oldfield was the teaboy.

GB:
Really?
NI: And he was making 'Tubular Bells' when we were in the studio, and we were supposed to go down there for a fortnight, and they were having teething problems with the studio, so Richard said "Well, look, just stay there until you've finished it", and so we were down there for five weeks.

GB:
I always wondered -do you think it would have been terrible to have done your great work when you were 19? I mean, he's done a lot of great stuff, but really…
NI: Yeah, I know but-

GB:
What were you doing when you were 19? Were you still a student?
NI: I was still painting, yeah.

GB:
Do you think you would have liked who you are now?
NI: I haven't compromised much, you know. Even in show business I've been the one to say, leave all that fame and celebrity to those who enjoy it. I've never enjoyed it -that part of it. And that's why, in many ways, I was good friends with George Harrison for many years because Yvonne is a garden designer, and she's been working on the garden down there for ten years or more…

GB:
The big famous one?
NI: Yeah, we hang out afterwards in the evening and look at videos of garden centres…that's what it's come to. George wasn't interested in celebrity fame either.

GB:
He didn't have a choice though, did he?
NI: No, he didn't have a choice, and that's the awful thing. You know, it's much more fun being a Rutle than a Beatle, because it's not real…but that was real for them. It was frightening and horrendous, to be that close to seeing what it can do and the pain it causes. It's stupid, if I am in the business of going in public and entertaining, I ought to make some effort to make myself known (laughs) but I can't really. I'd rather bumble along as I am.

GB:
Do you think the Beatles were grateful in the late Seventies for the Rutles, because it took pressure off them reforming?
NI: Yes, Ringo liked it until the bit where Leggy Mountbatten goes off to Australia. Neil Aspinall and George arranged for Eric and I to see footage they had already, which became 'Anthology', and we thought, this is great, the riots and everything, and then Leggy dies, and then the whole thing …it's not entertaining! It's too real and it's too soon. It did defuse it, telling the story in that cack handed way. And getting people like Mick Jagger to come in and just change the names…

GB:
That was fantastic…
NI: It was one of those things where everyone knew what to do. It felt right at the time. We didn't need a script, everyone used the story. All you had to do was deny the Beatles ever existed, and this was the Rutles.

GB:
You'd been recording 'Archaeology' for some years before 'Anthology', hadn't you?
NI: To a degree -it was '94. We made that it in a couple of months, 'Archaeology'. But the thing was, that outtake of 'We've Arrived! (And To Prove It We're Here)' was from the first album. The first album was made in ten days, but we rehearsed for two weeks in this house in Hendon with two revoxs, two two-track machines. We just did that one as a muck about. It was one take, all that silly laughing and whatnot, we thought because the Beatles are releasing everything on 'Anthology', this is heaven sent! Just dig out those rehearsal tapes, the Rutles have got some stuff in the cupboard as well.

GB:
I have to say, I cracked up the first time I saw a photo of Ricky Fataar with the Beach Boys. I so wasn't expecting that. Even when you were singing that particular song -it's the Rutles version of a Beatles version of a Beach Boys song -it's so circular.
NI: Which one?

GB:
The chorus of 'We've Arrived! (And To Prove It We're Here)' when you start going into the 'wheee-oo'
NI: Well, that was supposed to be a bit like 'Flying', you remember that? 'Lahh, lah lah lah lah…"

GB:
I thought the chorus was like 'Back In the USSR'…
NI: We were trying to make seagull noises as well -'Caw, caw caw' -just like that. Stupid. But Ricky was in the Beach Boys before he became a Rutle. When we did the video in New York for 'Shangri-La', Al Jardine turned up in sandals and shorts and said "Ricky, I didn't know you were a Rutle" (laughs). He was so spaced out…

GB:
You often get asked in interviews about the Sixties… do you sometimes feel like you're being held up as some kind of pundit? Someone Who Was There?
NI: Yeah, I happen to think we were very lucky to be young in the Sixties.

GB:
You went to a lot of really good parties, you knew all these people…
NI: Think of it in terms of your peer group. Imagine there was no pressure when you left college -which job would you like? It was like that. Not only that, your older brother probably had to go into National Service. We all escaped it by a year or two. So there's all these young people on the street, there was the music to play, and it was just fantastic! Nobody knew shit from shinola, they were just doing whatever you did, and you found out the hard way. Some did.

GB:
I'm actually getting jealous now.
NI: But what can you do about it?

GB:
It's gone…
NI: It was a fantastic time…I'm working on some radio shows at the moment, I've got one character called 'Old Man With Dog Who Remembers the Sixties' (laughter).The daft thing is, though, when the Bonzos were going down to flea markets and getting these silly old 78s to take back and listen to, there we were in the Sixties looking back at the Thirties , having a laugh at what people were having a laugh at then. Really, there ought to be more people in the Noughties, or whatever they are now, looking back to the Sixties and Seventies and taking the piss out of that. I mean, the music's far too po-faced, isn't it, shoegazing and image conscious…
PETER BAILLIE (who has been very quiet up till now, basking in Neil's aura): I very much enjoyed the 'Hitch-Haiku' song…

GB:
Yes, new material…
PB: That was an example of a song that probably came first lyrically-
NI: Yeah.
PB: Do you have any particular technique for writing a song?

GB:
(laughs) It's like "Where do you get your ideas from?"
NI: Someone once said to Ira Gershwin, "Mr Gershwin, which comes first, the lyrics or the melody?" And he said, "Usually the contract". But it works both ways for me. Sometimes you get a line with a tune, and you have to work out the chords to it, and the lyrics come very quickly -'Urban Spacemen' was written in an afternoon. I wrote the lyrics to 'How Sweet To Be An Idiot' on the bus with Grimms. I'd written the first line 'how sweet to be an idiot', because something had happened the night before in the hotel -we'd come back from the gig and then walked into a lift, with all these people in evening dress and ball gowns, and I was wearing something stupid, I suppose, and they said "Excuse me, what does it feel going around looking like an idiot?'. What the hell do you think you look like? So I started to think about, what's wrong with being an idiot? So I had the first verse, and Brian Patten, the poet, was sitting behind me…

GB:
Oh God, the Merseyside bunch.
NI: Brian's brilliant. He looked over and says "Worrya youse doin?" and he picks my pad up, and read 'How sweet to be an idiot / as harmless as a cloud…" and I was thinking "what comes next?" and he went "and dip my brain in joy". Thanks, Brian! I'm off!

GB:
Where did you get your appreciation of language from?
NI: I just love it. I trust words completely. They're wonderful, they're slippery.

GB:
Do you think the Bonzos would have been different if you'd done English degrees?
NI: I don't know. I started out as a seven year old learning the piano, but got to about 14 and wondered who I was working for, because you'd finish a hard Chopin polonaise and they'd give you a harder one. -"Wait a minute!" So I got a guitar and started to teach myself that, and started writing my own music. Then the lure of the painting took over, and it was only because we were all strapped for cash, you know, students, that I joined up with the band. We used to rehearse at the Royal College of Art canteen, and it was Vernon and I had the idea that , because we had to go so far, and we'd found this pub in South London, "why don't we play in a bloody pub?". That's what kicked it off. We started putting the hat around, and then the landlord would pay us to come, because it would pack the place out. We'd play five pubs a week! So…where's this question gone to?

GB:
No no, it's interesting…
NI: So we started writing our own songs, and when you start writing song lyrics, you really get interested in words, and working with the poets as well. I was putting music to some of Brian's poems, so I really began to see the economy and power of words.

GB:
I have to say that I was disappointed you didn't sing 'Shangri-La', because, other people have told you this, their favourite lyric of yours is the opening lines.
NI: "Did you ever get the feeling / That the truth is less revealing / Than a downright lie". I don't know what to do, really. My feeling is that not too many people down this way know the Rutles.

GB:
That audience tonight, I think you could have gotten them singing the coda at the end, like on 'Archaeology'.
NI: "Lah-dee-doo-dah, lah-dee-dah…"

GB:
You could have gotten them doing that.
NI: In Dunedin, the first night, I did an hour and thirty-five minutes. It was far too long.

GB:
Really?
NI: Yeah, I've been cutting it back.

GB:
It was a good audience tonight.
NI: It was a lovely audience. They were good in Dunedin. I had one mad heckling woman who came up when I had the mustache on -I didn't do it tonight because I get fur up there, you see -I've got the mustache on for John Paul Satire , and she said "Take the mustache off" and I said "Ah ahm terribly sorry, madame, I don't do 'eckling". It's all I could think of saying, because if they're being witty, let's all share the joke, but I couldn't hear what she was saying. She gave up, because most people were paying attention, so it went away. Christchurch was a little more reserved, but they joined in.

GB:
I don't know what was wrong with the Auckland one…perhaps it was the whole Chris Knox thing. He plays a lot of Orientations, so perhaps…
NI: 150 people, 150 tickets and they've all gone. So he thought they'd taken the tickets, and then not come. There probably weren't more than about 40 people.

GB:
Well, perhaps there was something really interesting on television…
NI: The cricket!
GB:
It was the cricket!

GB:
I've been reading a couple of books and no-one seems to agree how old you are.
NI: Fifty-seven.

GB:
Oh, so you were born in 1944.
NI: Last time I saw Eric he said "I've just been reading a book…I didn't know you were 60!" I said 'I'm not bloody 60!" It's some book on Pythons and thing s like that.

GB:
Aren't you glad I didn't ask any questions about the Pythons?
NI: (mock-gruffly)Yeah, well, they're boring, they're past it.

GB:
You had a couple of digs at John Cleese.
NI: I thought it was a lovely letter! I've never said that story before. I've always had this problem with poetry, if someone's got something to say, why don't you just come straight out and say it? Which is so barbaric, with no understanding of the poetic process at all.

GB:
Just be glad I didn't ask you, what do you think of New Zealand, because everyone asks that just after you get off the plane.
NI: Yeah, I know, it happened to me. But it reminded me of what English television used to be like, when you get the big Hollywood star being asked "what do you think of England?" It's almost like saying "Do you like us? Say something nice about us"

GB:
Imagine that with 150 years of general insecurity and you've got a pretty good description of the New Zealand psyche.
NI: I do like it, because I live out in the country in England anyway, and people do spend the time of day. Anywhere you go here, you can have a natter with someone.

GB:
So how much longer are you here in Wellington for?
NI: Oh, we leave tomorrow.

GB:
You should go to the Botanical Gardens.
NI: Well, we've been doing just about every Botanical Garden. We've only got to go to Palmerston North, so we might have a look.
YVONNE INNES: We're going to the Man- the Manuwe
PB: Manuwera Gardens.

GB:
Ours is nicer.

 
COMMUNITY PHOTO GALLERY   TOUR DATES    AUDIO     CHORDS     VIDEO     PHOTOS    MESSAGE BOARD

Home | By Title | By 1st Line | Bonzo Dog Band | Grimms/ World | RWT/Rutles/Python | Solo

A  |  B  |  C  | D  | E-F  | G  |  H  | I  | J-K  |  L  |  M |  N  |  O-P  |  Q-R  |  S  |  T  |  U-W-Y

 Site Map     E-Mail Us!    Links   Text-Only