by heartofdavid on Tue Jun 13, 2006 12:30 pm
From “Bamboo” #11, Winter ’86 – Excerpts from John Punter Interview Part 1, which took place at Air Studio (Studio No. 2). Interviewed by Howie and Debi from the fanzine.
"...I haven’t seen Steve since…well, I saw Rich at a party here in Autumn last year. I saw Steve when he was recording with Icehouse.
What did he do with them? Single or album?
I think it was part of an album. He was in here for quite a while. Mick I haven’t seen…is he still alive?!! (laughs)
We haven’t seen Mick since October ’84 when we did an interview with him. He’s recently had David working with him. (John raises an eyebrow in surprise then smiles.)
Well, Big Bad Syl I haven’t seen for a million years!! I saw him when the ambient album was the ambient album before it became the solo album…I think it was then, and good old Rob….”
Your initial impression of them (Japan)?
The nearest thing I can equate it to, and I know a lot of people said they were Roxy clones, but I had the same feeling when I met Roxy. Chris Thomas was asked to finish the “For Your Pleasure” album which the band had stared with another producer. At that time I was Chris’s engineer and I met Roxy in Air No. 1. The feeling I got from Roxy was the same as the feeling I got from Japan. It’s difficult because people said Japan were Roxy clones and Dave was a Bryan clone and this, that and the other, which I don’t agree with, at all. It was the feeling f excitement, that was the same.
The music press always linked Japan to Roxy, mainly through David’s vocals – do you think it had anything to do with your involvement with both bands?
I dunno. When I was in Canada, I did an album with a band called Spoons and I did a lot of radio and TV interviewing – ‘coz I was quite a star out there – thank you! They always said, “John Punter of Roxy Music and Japan fame.” I didn’t like that expression, but I could see what people were getting at. But Japan were nowhere near the same as Roxy. Just think of what Roxy were. They had a rock ‘n’ roll drummer, who had nothing to do with the way Steve played. Whether David was influenced by Bryan I can’t say. There were certain inflections, but it wasn’t like he was copying Bryan – you can’t copy Bryan, Bryan is a unique entity, and in many ways David is a unique entity too.
When I said I felt the same excitement with Japan as I had with Roxy, you should make it clear Japan were not the second coming. It was that same feeling of excitement that I’d felt before. You should make a point of that.
Japan looked so outrageous, but underneath, when you spoke to them, they were dead normal, they still are, I think. Boblett (Rob Dean) was the most normal of all, when we were on tour he and I used to go off and do other things, he’s always been a mate, the fact that we still keep in touch; he’s made the effort to keep in touch.
It sounds as if Rob kept his feet on the floor.
Yeah, he did. Rob was always the down-to-earth person for me, always. Not that the others were starry-eyed, if you like, but those four were such an insular unit and Rob was on the outside, the others were so close. Not that Rob wasn’t part of that, but Rob could also be a part of something else. In the old days, to get the other guys to out in public was almost a problem. I managed to get them all down the pub at one point either when we were making “Quiet Life” or “Polaroids.” So, I briefly had all ex-members, including David, in the pub for a drink!
Did they enjoy it?
Probably not! I probably think they did it for me! But when I first met them I’d been through a very hard gig. I did the gig as a favour and it had taken longer and cost a lot more money and I was feeling guilty. I came out of that and met Japan and it was like a re-awakening. It was new, it was fresh…it was great!
How were they then, as people and musicians?
Musicians – they were brilliant, unique…I then all of them have a certain style. I don’t know any other player that plays like Mick, I don’t know any other drummer that drums like Steve. Being an ex-drummer myself, Steve doesn’t play drums the normal way. It’s always the opposite, which is very hard to conceive. I’ve never known him to play a normal pattern, it’s always a pattern reversed around a beat and he’s always had that to this style. The same with Rob. Over the years, Rob has improved tremendously, he’s playing like a demon now…and Rich was always a subtle texturizer, he created sounds that fitted in with everything else going on.
Your first project together. Did they say, “This is what we want you to do”, or did you say, “This is an idea, try this?”
The musical direction had already been decided by the band. Everyone says “Quiet Life” was such a positive change. Obviously I think I had a influence, because I was involved in it, but it wasn’t a case of me saying, “This is how we’re gonna do it lads!”
Atmosphere during the three albums you worked on, Quiet Life, Polaroids and Oil on Canvas?
John spins slowly away in his chair, smiles, puts his hand to his mouth and mutters, “You stinker.” We have to laugh.
There’s a change, isn’t there?
Yeah…yeah. Are you talking about atmosphere, how I felt, or general mood?
Both. I mean, there’s a definite change in those records.
Yeah….yeah….”Quiet Life” is still my favorite album. That is a magic album for me…it’s difficult because I know so many people are going to see this, and the band will read it too…
We’ll edit it.
No. It’s ok. I feel personally that the band were at their strongest and most togetherness during “Quiet Life.” I personally had problems during “Polaroids.” “Oil on Canvas” was in a way like getting back again, because I had missed out on “Tin Drum” (produced by Steve Nye) and what had gone on in the recording of that album and that time. So when we came to do the Pioneer’s tour and the “Oil on Canvas” album, which I always think of as a block thing, I was very pleased that they asked me to do it with them. I think we succeeded in bringing them back to what I remembered them, the sort of feeling that followed on from “Quiet Life” (the album and tour).
I very much enjoyed the Sons of Pioneers tour, it was good to get back to working with them, they seemed to lighten up. To me they all got so intense, so serious and so heavy…Whereas on “Quiet Life” and “Polaroids” there was a sense of humor, they are humorous guys! A lot of people think of them as being stiff, but Mick is one of the funniest people I’ve ever met, to the point of being stupid! He’d get everyone else going, he’d call himself the clown, he was the court-jester.
But then they seemed to get this image of “This is my Art. Nothing can interfere with it” and all that lark, but they’re really normal underneath, I think so. They always have been and they always will be.”
Hallucinating lucidity