The first few years after the Beatles split, Ringo had bragging rights on his mates.
He
was all over the radio with “It Don’t Come Easy,” ”Back Off Boogaloo,”
”Photograph” and other singles at a time that John, Paul and George went through some uneven stretches.
“I had all these hits and everybody was surprised,” Starr recalled. “I don’t know why they were, but they were.”
Everyone’s favourite genial drummer still has his pride. Already a member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
as a Beatle, Starr will be inducted this weekend as an individual,
joining John, Paul and George with that distinction. He keeps busy at
age 74, touring regularly and promoting a just-released new disc,
“Postcards From Paradise.”
Besides Ringo, new inductees to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on Saturday will be Green Day, Bill Withers, Lou Reed, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Joan Jett, the Paul Butterfield Blues Band and the “5” Royales. Ringo wasn’t expecting the honour and, in fact, it has raised questions about whether there is a special Beatle entrance.
Paul told Rolling Stone
magazine recently that, when reminded Starr wasn’t in the hall on his
own, he vowed to see what he could do. “I talked to Bruce Springsteen
and I talked to Dave Grohl, and they both thought he should be in. And I said I’d do the induction. That took care of it,” he said.
Rather
than being nominated and voted upon by the full panel of musicians,
journalists and others who choose most members, Starr was selected under
a “musical excellence” category. That category has been used four
times, none before 2011.
Joel Peresman, president and CEO of the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Foundation, said these honourees are chosen
by committee. Although lobbying calls are taken, induction is a group
decision. He said that any calls that come in during the process—including, presumably, Paul’s—“are purely coincidental.”
“I
only knew about it when Paul McCartney called me and said, ‘they want
to honour you at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. I’ll be doing the
speech for you. Will you accept?'” Starr said. “I said sure, how great
is that?”
Only an occasional singer and lyricist with the Beatles,
Ringo has maintained an active recording career, particularly since
getting sober in the late 1980s. Since 1992, he’s put out as many discs
of original material as Paul, his fellow Beatle survivor, even more
if you didn’t count Paul’s classical excursions.
His Ringo 2012 disc sold fewer than 20,000 copies, according
to Nielsen Soundscan. Numbers like that are why many artists of his
generation stop making new music. Ringo may joke onstage about how few
people buy his new music, but he said making it is important to him.
“That’s
where I come from — you made records, you put them out,” he said.
“Also, for me, it’s a great excuse to hang out with a lot of friends and
a lot of great musicians. It’s part of my life. This is what I do.”
He
expresses no interest in writing a book, but has written on recent
discs songs that he considers mini-autobiographies looking back on
slices of his life. In “Liverpool 8,” he sang of leaving his hometown,
“but I never let you down.” The song “The Other Side of Liverpool”
name-checks old friends and talks about growing up poor. On the new
album, “Rory and the Hurricanes” is about the band he drummed for before
accepting an offer to join the Beatles, who then had less of a
following than the Hurricanes. Starr had sat in for ex-Beatles drummer
Pete Best a couple of times in Germany.
Could that be the best decision in rock history?
“I
was as surprised as anyone when the phone call came — ‘do you want to
join?’ — and I said sure, because I loved the band,” Ringo said. “It was
not a difficult decision because I just loved to play with those three,
not knowing where it was going to go, of course.”
Starr’s “All
Starr Band” of rotating musicians, an ingenious device to keep an active
live career, is already more than a quarter-century old. The current
incarnation features Todd Rundgren, Steve Lukather of Toto, Richard Page
of Mr. Mister and Gregg Rollie of Santana. Being a featured player on
at least one hit single is a job requirement, so band members can rotate
in the spotlight with Ringo.
He keeps adding dates, and is
already booked 22 nights in October, from Boise, Idaho and Vancouver to
Boston and Brooklyn. Starr dismisses any talk of retirement, citing
89-year-old blues guitarist B.B. King — who was performing last year
until being sidelined by health issues — as an inspiration.
“He’s sitting down, but he’s still out there,” Ringo said. “Hey, I’m already sitting down.”
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