How did you get David Bowie to guest at your
show? He hasn’t been performing live much lately.
We were thinking it would be interesting and amusing to get different
people up to guest in places. We wanted to get someone to take
Roger’s part on “Comfortably Numb” since
it’s such a two-person sort of conversation. Our tour manager
guy had been working a lot with David Bowie, said he had lunch with
him, and I said, “Ask him if he wants to come and do
‘Comfortably Numb,’” he said
he’d love to, and could he do another song as well, and I
said, “What would you like to do?” So he did
“Arnold Layne,” as well.
Do you have a sense of what you’re
doing after this DVD?
No. the DVD has been an
extraordinary amount of work
— I never thought quite how much work it was going to be,
getting that all together and working on it, and that’s taken
right up until now, basically. I’m not obsessed with a
massive ambition to conquer the world anymore. I just would like it if
people took the DVD, as the tour I did around the States was fairly
limited, a few cities, and I hope people who’ve got a great
home system, big screen, great speakers, and will invite a few friends
over for a couple of beers and sit down and dig it. I watched it last
week, and it was just fantastic. It was a great experience.
What
are your hobbies outside of music? What
will you do if you’re not working for the next few months?
I’m raising a young family, that sort of
stuff takes up an awful lot of time. First time around, when you raise
a family when you’re young and ambitious, the family sort of
takes second place to your ambition. When you get a second shot at it,
I think your attitude may change — certainly, mine has, and I
want to put them first. I’ve done an awful lot of stuff, so
while I’m definitely going to get back to it one of these
days, do another record and some more gigs, there’s not that
sense of urgency.
You mentioned something
about going out with a
lighter burden — is some of that not carrying the Pink Floyd
name with you?
Yes. There’s a load of
expectations that you
can ignore, but it’s difficult to ignore when you go out as
Pink Floyd. When you just give yourself your own name and go out,
people are going to want you to do whatever you want to do,
that’s kind of implicit in the title, isn’t it? I
felt much more at ease and much more able to maybe rehearse something
for half an hour at a soundcheck and then do it in the evening, and
take a much more relaxed approach to some of it.
The
inevitable question: The last I heard, you
were speaking of Live 8 as perhaps the end of the story of Pink Floyd.
What’s your current thoughts on the subject?
What I’ve been doing for the last couple of years —
what I was in the middle of when Live 8 came along — was my
album, and that’s what I’m thinking about.
It’s been a joy and very satisfying, and the album did very
well, even though Rolling Stone only gave it two
stars. Everything went so well, I can’t see why I would want
to be going back to that old thing. It’s very retrogressive.
I want to look forward, and looking back isn’t my joy. Roger
hasn’t written a lyric lately that has really been something
where I’ve gone, “Wow, I wish that was part of my
oeuvre.” I don’t know how one puts it, but going
back into all that just wouldn’t bring me joy. It’s
my time of life to be selfish — please myself.
You
could do it without Roger again.
Yeah, yeah. One could do that. But again, I can’t really see
why I would want to, unless I wanted a big boost for my ego or a big
boost for my bank account, neither of which I need that badly.
They offer you outrageous sums of money to do
this.
They did, yeah.
It must be strange to
say, “No,
I’m not taking that enormous sum of money.”
I can’t — it’s a very
hard thing to discuss, really. To you and to virtually everyone in the
public, they would find that a difficult thing to understand, because
believe me, when I was impoverished, I wouldn’t have turned
it down so easily. Life has dealt me a pretty fair hand, I’ve
done very well, I’ve been very, very lucky, and now I can
say, “This isn’t what I want to do.” As
they say, every man has his price, and maybe that’s true, but
whatever we’ve been offered isn’t mine.
Have
you spoken to Roger since Live 8?
Yeah. Yes, I have. He called me up about something a little while ago.
It’s nice. Of course, he was rehearsing. In the documentary
that goes with the DVD, there’s a moment of me saying hi to
Roger, where we were rehearsing, at Bray Studios near London at the
same time last year.
So there’s
been a little bit of a
thaw?
Yeah. We’re not calling each other every week and going out
for dinner every week, but the week of Live 8, we went out for dinner a
couple of times. It’s a bit more reasonable. I think there
are fundamental differences of opinion and view. As Roger likes to say,
we are musically, philosophically, and politically different.
As a Beatles
fan, there was something Lennon
and McCartney
could do together that they couldn’t do apart. Are you
willing to accept that that’s true of you and Roger
— and yet still not do it?
Yeah, I am willing to accept that. I know that art should be about
everything, and therefore, one should get over all one’s
differences to create art. But I suspect that our conjunction of people
and musicality and taste and intelligence has run out of steam. Roger
thought it had in 1975. Certainly, I don’t have any
particular desire for it. What one is willing to sacrifice for
one’s art is another whole point, and that’s beyond
that I’m willing to do right at the moment.
So
if you’re going to do another
solo record, we have a few years to wait?
Well, not too long — not as long as the last time, and
that’s twelve years, which is a little excessive.







