Interviewer:
Cameron Edney - http://insideout666.mysite.freeserve.com
The Blizzard of Bob
A Conversation with Bob Daisley
Bob Daisley is a true pioneer in the Hard rock & Heavy metal
industry. This year marks the 40th year that Bob has been in the business,
pounding out Bass riffs & writing classic tunes with some of the
rock & metal worlds best known & most influential artists.
I recently had the pleasure of meeting with Bob and talking about
what has been an amazing musical career. We spoke about Bob’s
beginnings growing up in Sydney before taking off to England in his
early twenties. An event that sparked a career which had him playing
with the likes of Gary Moore, Rainbow, Uriah Heep and the madman of
metal Ozzy Osbourne to name a few. He also speaks candidly about his
time with the late great Randy Rhoads and Bob’s most recent
recording’s with Living Loud featuring Bob’s long time
friend and drummer extraordinaire Lee Kerslake, Steve Morse &
Australia’s own Jimmy Barnes. Get ready to come on a no holds
barred journey with the man behind such classics as, Miracle Man,
Crazy Train, Suicide Solution and Goodbye to Romance among many others.
This is one interview you know you don’t want to miss!
Metal Fanatix: First of all Bob I want to thank you for
taking the time out do this interview! It’s such an honour to
be sitting here with you being such a fan of your work I can’t
begin to tell you how thrilled I was when you agreed to do this interview.
Bob Daisley: That’s alright. It’s always
good to do interviews if they’ve got good coverage because people
want to know what really happened in so many different situations
and I like the truth to get out there.
Metal Fanatix: O.K. well lets start all the way back at
the beginning. You grew up in Chester Hill here in Sydney & picked
up the bass at the age of 14.
Bob Daisley: Yes that’s right. I had guitar
lessons when I was 13 for about a year, just learning the basics of
music. I saw a little band that had an electric bass, which I suppose
back in 64’, was a relatively new thing. Through the fifties
Fender had electric basses etc but to see one in the flesh I thought
to myself that’s what I want to do, that’s what I want
to play.
Metal Fanatix: So the bass has always been the weapon
of choice then? The thought never crossed your mind as you entered
your late teens early twenties to do some drumming or try your hand
at singing?
Bob Daisley: No if you heard me sing you wouldn’t
say that. [Laughs] The drum thing I’ve always been interested
in, drums & rhythms. Quite often when I’m in the studio
working with various different drummers whether it was Lee Kerslake
or Carmine Appice or whoever, I always make suggestions of beats &
bass drum patterns so that does come into it.
Metal Fanatix: At the age of twenty you packed up
and set off for England! That must have been an exciting but quite
scary experience all at the same time?
Bob Daisley: Yeah I’d just turned 21. It was
a big step & it was an exciting & frightening step. People
travel more nowadays its easier its cheaper but in those days in 1971
people didn’t flit around the world so easily or so frequently
& it was frightening to leave your home & your mum and dad,
your family and friends, all of a sudden you get off a plane &
next thing you know you’re in London. I knew a couple of people
there; one of the guys that we had in a band as a singer here in Sydney
was Clive Coulson, was living over there. We were in a band together
called Mecca and he worked for Led Zeppelin. Clive was originally
from London, grew up in new Zealand & then he had been working
in London with Led Zeppelin, Jeff beck & people like that &
then came back here to Australia in 1969 – 1970 and joined our
band as a singer. He had been a singer when he was younger in New
Zealand as well. Then he left our band because he got a telegram,
(in those days there were no mobile phones or emails), from Peter
Grant who was Zeppelins manager, because they wanted him to go back
to London & work with Led Zeppelin again. So he jumped on a plane
& headed back there. I looked him up when I got to London, I stayed
at his place in his tiny spare room for a few weeks until I got this
shit hole flat [Laughs]. It was horrible, first of all I was cleaning
houses & flats and doin shit kicking work like that & after
a while I got a job in a restaurant. Clive came into the restaurant
one day with a bit of paper in hand with a name & a phone number
on it. It was blues guitarist Stan Webb who was a bit of a legend
and had a band called Chicken Shack. They were one of the big name
blues bands at the time along with Savoy brown, Fleetwood Mac and
Chicken Shack were right up there as well. Stan’s was a bit
rockier blues but it was still blues it was a good break, it put me
onto the scene & I was more than happy & thankful to get it.
Metal Fanatix: In the early days you were playing
in bands such as Kahvas Jute!
Bob Daisley: Well Kahvas Jute was here in Sydney
in 1970. It’s really through Kahvas Jute that I ended up in
London. I was in Kahvas Jute with Dennis Wilson & it was going
alright. I had a bit of a funny situation with the drummer Dannie
Davidson & his wife. (She was a bit of a Yoko) [laughs] and I
was going through a bit of a tough time. I had just broken up with
my girlfriend, I said “Oh Fuck it” and I left the band
and said “you get on with it”. They wanted to go to England
earlier than I wanted to and I said “you would be better to
stay here & put the roots in down here, establish yourself here
more before we go to London” But they couldn’t wait to
get over there so I left the band & they went over in the May
of 71. Then in June I got a phone call from them in London saying
the band doesn’t sound right it doesn’t sound the same
without you, will you come over. So I said Ok, I sold my car, my Marshall
stack and I got a plane ticket. I think the day before I was supposed
to leave I got another call saying “It doesn’t matter
we found someone” [laughs]. My mum, dad, sister and friends
said fuck them you go, you show em, don’t let that put you off,
you go anyway you should go. So I was encouraged to go and off I went
by myself. I had nothing to go to and that was frightening but exciting
at the same time.
Metal Fanatix: Did you meet up with them when you
arrived in London?
Bob Daisley: Yeah. Dennis Wilson I think was a bit
embarrassed by the whole thing because it was more Dannie & his
Yoko wife that made that decision but it was all meant to happen as
it happened. It was really what helped me to go over there because
I wouldn’t have thought that I’d go to London by myself
with nothing to go to. I probably wouldn’t have done that. They
kind of dragged me over even though it didn’t work out and I
didn’t get back with them it still got me there.
Metal Fanatix: Well it sure put you on to bigger
& better things! I believe you did some recent work again with
the guys?
Bob Daisley: Yeah with Tim Gaze who I worked with
in The Hoochie Coochie Men. He was the guitaist in Kahvas Jute on
that first album & Dennis Wilson was the lead singer/guitarist
in Kahvas Jute. Dennis & I had also worked together in the band
Mecca with Clive Coulson. Tim, Dennis & I wrote a few songs just
recently together & it turned out really good. Im really pleased
with it. It’s really ballsy hard rock stuff.
Metal Fanatix: Sounds great I look forward to hearing
it, I want to come back to the song writing in a moment but before
we discuss that I want to know a bit about your time in Rainbow. I
believe Ritchie Blackmore invited you to join the band?
Bob Daisley: Yeah I was at the end of a Widowmaker
tour in America in August 1977; we had a couple of shows to do at
the Whiskey. A friend of mine Dick Middleton who I had worked with
in Mungo Jerry years before was living in L.A. So I looked him up
for old time’s sake. He was also a friend of Ritchie Blackmores.
He said “Ritchie lives here and I know Rainbow is looking for
a bass player. Would you be interested?” I said well yeah I’d
be interested & he arranged a meeting where we would go out with
Ritchie have a few beers & a chat. It wouldn’t matter how
great a player you were, if he didn’t get on with you, you wouldn’t
be there. We got on fine and he invited me for an audition. I think
they had auditioned something like 35 – 40 bass players but
they couldn’t find a guy they liked. I auditioned & he put
me through the paces play this, play that, do it this way, that way
and at the end of the audition he said “Well you’ve got
the gig if you want it”. The funny thing was I said “I
don’t know I’ll think about it”. [Laughs] The only
reason I said that was because people had kind of warned me about
Rainbow & the Ritchie situation “they’ll chew you
up & spit you out”. “He’ll use you for 3 months
and then he will get someone else”. But that didn’t happen.
I did have to think about it for a while, my wife Vicki was in London
and she used to phone me at the hotel and say “look just do
it” “it’s a good stepping stone even if it does
only last just 6 months”. It lasted about 18 months but it certainly
was a great experience, it was a good learning time, an enjoyable
professional band. It was the first band I had been in that was playing
the big shows in arenas.
Metal Fanatix: I have heard that Ronnie James Dio
is a very hard man to work with. Did you find this working with him
in Rainbow?
Bob Daisley: Not in Rainbow so much because I think
everybody accepted the fact that it was Ritchie’s band, it started
off being called Ritchie Blackmores Rainbow & then by the time
the second album was released they had dropped the Ritchie Blackmore
bit & just billed it as Rainbow, but it was really Ritchie’s
band.
I did a few shows with Ronnie at the end of 1998. He called me because
he needed a bass player as his bass player at the time couldn’t
do the Scandinavian tour. Ronnie had asked me to do it. So I sat at
home with some of the records & went through the tracks &
then rehearsed with them. I flew to London, Ronnie was doing a show
there the day I arrived which I went to and had a look at. The following
night we flew to Scandinavia and did a show there. I was still jet
lagged & as my dad had just died I wasn’t in a great frame
of mind, but Ronnie was ok to work with, I mean he’s quite particular
in what he wants but he didn’t seem much different to me to
the time we spent together in Rainbow. I suppose it depends on the
individual, the situation etc.
Metal Fanatix: Going back to the song writing, every
artist has their own way of writing & composing. The fantastic
list of songs that you have written during your time with Ozzy Osbourne
alone is endless let alone your contributions in Uriah Heep, Gary
Moore and so on. For you what comes first the music or the lyrics?
Bob Daisley: Well sometimes I get lyrical ideas and
I think Ahh! There’s a good idea & just jot it down, and
sometimes we might be working out chords or riffs & you think
Ahh! Those lyrics that I jotted down that day might fit with this.
A lot of the time you just come up with riffs & then you think
well what should this song be about, the attitude of the song maybe
this or lets make it about that and then you might write lyrics for
it after that.
With a lot of the Ozzy stuff no matter what guitar player it was,
whether it was Randy, Jake or Zakk or whoever it was we would sit
down and work out a lot of the music first and then Ozzy would come
in. Ozzy’s quite good at vocal melodies but he doesn’t
write lyrics. So he would just sing any old nonsense over the top
of the music that we had written & then I’d take tapes away
of his melody’s & his phrasing then I’d write lyrics
to it.
Some of the content of it I came up with & sometimes he’d
just have a title and he’d say “Oh I’ve got this
title write it about this”. I remember there was one of the
songs from The Ultimate Sin called “Thank God for the Bomb”
& I thought well what the fuck do you write that about, it sounds
like a war monger or something. What I wrote it about was that it’s
the one thing that’s stopping major wars.
Metal Fanatix: It’s really funny I would have
thought that now Ozzy was out on his own, he would have contributed
a lot more in the way of writing lyrics?
Bob Daisley: No not at all, he’s never been
a lyricist even when he was in Black Sabbath. Geezer wrote all the
lyrics. You know he would come up with one line like in Suicide Solution.
I came up with the title & I came up with what it was going to
be about, it was about him.
Metal Fanatix: Oh Really. It’s funny you say
that because a few days back I was watching Ozzy’s video Don’t
Blame Me where he says he wrote Suicide Solution about Bon Scott?
Bob Daisley: He’s a fuck. He didn’t write
it. I know what I wrote it about. Ozzy at the time had been kicked
out of Black Sabbath & this was our first album. Ozzy was drinking
himself to death. He would start drinking at lunch time and carry
on all through the afternoon into the evening. Sometimes when we were
writing, Randy & I would go looking for him & there he’d
be passed out in front of the fireplace, pissed himself, comatose.
“Yeah this is really productive” [laughs]. “You
keep that up Ozzy we’re gonna get fuck all done & you’re
gonna kill yourself”. Ozzy came up with the first line which
I think is from something else anyway, it’s not even his but
he did say it and that was “Wine is fine but whiskeys quicker”.
That was the only line he came up with & I wrote the rest of the
song about him as a warning to killing himself with alcohol. Bon Scott
did die during the recording of that album in 1980. I remember hearing
about Bon. It was horrible, he was a mate of mine. I would certainly
admit to it if I had written it about Bon Scott because we were friends
but I wrote it about Ozzy. It’s blatant what he does you know,
in interviews & things “Well when I wrote this & when
I wrote that” That’s bullshit Ozzy and you know it!
Metal Fanatix: How do you constantly come up with
new material without falling into the trap that a lot of artists do
by repeating themselves?
Bob Daisley: A lot of the subject matter is from
personal experiences or from things that I have read, other people’s
experiences, situations that sort of thing. I try to be a bit philosophical
because so many songs, don’t get me wrong there is a place for
the romantic songs you left me baby or I love you baby the boy/girl
stuff there’s nothing wrong with that but it tends to get a
bit old and I like to get away from ordinary things the more predictable
things which is why I have always tried to keep the subject matter
& the titles a bit different to your average song.
Like the song “I don’t know” Ozzy told me that when
he was in Black Sabbath that people tended to think of them as some
kind of prophet or whatever & that they might know something about
what’s gonna happen with the world all because they were in
a band called Black Sabbath [laughs]. But they were just a rock n
roll band who got the name from a hammer horror film. When Ozzy told
me that, it’s what I wrote ‘I don’t know’
about. “People look to me and say when is the final day”.
Don’t ask me I don’t know I’m just a rock n roll
singer. But that was just one of the many personal experiences. Mr.
Crowley was Ozzy’s idea.
Metal Fanatix: That’s about Allister Crowley
isn’t it?
Bob Daisley: Yeah he was into the occult, darker
things.
Metal Fanatix: I would have thought that Ozzy would
have wanted to stay away from the darker lyrics & that side of
things especially after being in Black Sabbath. I guess the same can
be said about the likes of Alice Cooper. You see them in interviews
and both are dead against the occult and all that goes with it!
Bob Daisley: Yeah well that’s right; it’s
only acting isn’t it. It’s only an image thing. It’s
like when that kid killed himself in America and they found the record
on his turntable of “Suicide Solution”, so what, he could
have read a fuckin book and blown his brains out. What his parents
didn’t look at was “why is our eighteen year old kid drunk
with a gun in his hand”? That’s the big question not what
records he is listening to. If that made people kill themselves then
you’d see people blowing their brains out all around the world
because they heard Suicide Solution. The song was just a warning about
people drinking themselves to death, Ozzy specifically.
Metal Fanatix: I’m really glad you brought
that up, it’s not like this is the only time this has happened
in music history. The same thing has happened to Judas priest &
more recently Marilyn Manson who people tried to blame for the Columbine
shootings. Some people don’t realize that the 2 kids involved
in that went bowling first but somehow Manson was to blame. It’s
ridiculous. It’s obvious to me that the individual would have
to be a little fucked up in the first place to consider killing themselves
or other people.
Bob Daisley: That’s right, Of course it may
help to throw them one way or the other but you know, you can read
into anything you want, to read into any song, book or film if you’re
looking for it. It’s like Charles Manson said The Beatles were
sending him messages in the song helter skelter from the White album.
It had fuck all to do with Charles Manson he just read into it what
he wanted to read into it.
Metal Fanatix: While we’re on the subject of
Suicide solution I’d like to know, when you first heard about
the case, being the soul writer of the song with the exception of
the first line, what was your reaction?
Bob Daisley: Well I thought it was a sad thing but
the first thing that came to my mind was what’s an eighteen
year old kid doing with a gun at his house and why aren’t his
parents looking at that. Because I knew for sure that there was nothing
negative in that song. There is nothing in it that tells people to
commit suicide. If you look into it there’s one line that says
“don’t you know what it’s really about you think
suicides the only way out”.
You’re being a fool you’re drinking yourself to death
wake up to yourself you know. That’s what the song was about,
I didn’t really feel like oh dear what have I done, what did
I write. Because I didn’t feel any responsibility for that kids
death at all. If I had written some negative demonic song that was
trying to get into peoples minds I would have thought oh fuck what
did I do? [Laughs] but it was nothing like that.
Metal Fanatix: When you look at ultimate Heavy Metal
albums, Blizzard of Ozz & Diary of a Madman are right up there,
I don’t know one person who has not owned one of these two albums
at some point of their life.
Bob Daisley: That’s one thing I feel really
proud of; it’s great that that music got recognised like that.
Metal Fanatix: I personally believe that both albums
are Ozzy’s best stuff closely followed by No More Tears. But
on those two albums in particular you spent a lot of time with Randy
Rhoads writing & recording. If there is one person I would love
to know more about its Randy. Can you tell us what it was like working
with Randy during that time & what he was like to hang out with?
Bob Daisley: I first met Randy in Jet Records office
in London in 1979. What happened was I met Ozzy in a club in London
one night. There was a band on called “Girl” and I went
to see them with a mate of mine because I knew they were signed to
Jet records. I’d been with Jet records while I was in Widowmaker
& I was out of Rainbow looking for something to do & I thought
if I go along to see Girl tonight at least I’ll know people
there from Jet records. Ozzy was signed to Jet records, he’d
been signed with Black Sabbath & then Black Sabbath fired him
but Jet records kept Ozzy and not Sabbath.
So anyway one of the Jet records blokes introduced me to Ozzy, and
Ozzy said “I want to put a band together, I’ve heard good
things about you I know you’ve come from Rainbow would you be
interested?”. I said yeah certainly.
Ozzy & I got on great, a couple of days later I got a phone call
from Jet records asking me to go up to Ozzy’s place. At the
time Ozzy was living in Stafford, he came to the station to meet me,
picked me up in his car & we drove back to his house & he
had a couple of mates there just local musician’s, we had a
bit of a play and Ozzy & I got on really well together.
Ozzy phoned Arthur Sharpe from Jet records, he was the one who introduced
us & I still remember Ozzy’s words “Oh yeah Bob &
I get on like a house on fire, the fire brigades just left”.
I had said to Ozzy if you want to get really serious about this &
you want it to be world class I don’t think those other two
guys are world class. They’re ok, they’re nice blokes
& they play ok but I don’t think it’ll work out. Ozzy
said hang on a minute, he had this rehearsal room at the side of his
house and he walked into where they were and said “hey fellas
it’s not working out pack up you can go home” [laughs]
just like that.
He came up to me and he said I know this great guitar player in L.A.
his name’s Randy Rhoads, he said he’s a guitar teacher.
When he said he was a guitar teacher I had envisioned this older guy
with a pipe and wearing slippers & an old dressing gown on [laughs]
teaching kids to play.
They flew Randy over to London, I went into Jet records & met
Randy, I think he was 22 then & we went up on a train to Ozzy’s
house in Stafford. One thing that still sticks in my mind from then
was we had a bit of a play together and we knew something was happening
it was gelling. Randy & I looked at each other right at the same
time & said to each other “Oh I like the way you play”.
We started putting ideas together, there weren’t any lyrics
& Ozzy was just sort of singing tunes over the top of what we
were comin up with musically. We started auditioning drummers as we
were writing the stuff as well so we were trying to get things happening
while we had drummers sit in with us & some of them were good
they just weren’t right.
We would go to rehearsal places, they were live-in places where you
could rehearse day & night if you wanted to and you could live
there. I remember staying at one of the places and it was called ‘Transam
Trucking’ and I came down the next morning and Ozzy & Randy
were there & they had some words put together for one of the songs
on the first album. I can’t remember what song it was they had
spent ages on it & they had about four lines written. I read them
and thought god these are fuckin awful, I better write the lyrics.
So I wore the lyricist hat only because Randy wasn’t a lyricist
& neither was Ozzy & I thought I don’t want to be part
of embarrassing lyrics [laughs]. So off we went & rehearsed, started
putting lyrics together & right at the very end we had Lee Kerslake
audition & he was the last drummer we had on the list & we
thought lets hope he’s good & if he didn’t work out
then the record company was saying “we need to get you in the
studio to do the album, its getting later & later”.
So if Lee didn’t work out we probably would have gone into the
studio with somebody like Cozy Powell, somebody who could have done
a good enough session on the album.
But as soon as Lee started playing Randy & I looked at each other
& thought “thank fuck, where’s he been”. Lee
was drummer number thirty nine that we had auditioned, loads of them
we auditioned. Each day we had 4 – 5 drummers come in.
Jet records would phone us up & say well we’ve got another
list for ya so and so at two o’clock, someone else at three,
some one else at four but Lee worked out great, he was perfect for
the band he was just what we wanted.
Randy’s mum owned a music school and Randy started playing at
the age of five which is one the reasons he was so good at it. Having
the classical background really helped with Randy’s style of
rock guitar playing. Most rock guitar players have had a rock or blues
orientated background where Randy had a lot of classical stuff mixed
in there, which helped with a lot of chord structures & unusual
things for rock music. We used to call Randy ‘Mal’ it
was short for malnutrition [laughs] he was really skinny, he had an
athletic build & we used to call his girlfriend Jodie ‘Anna’
short for anorexia but they were both really nice and they really
suited each other. Randy was a very gentle person he was never aggressive
or loud. He was sarcastic at times and he would take the piss out
of people with out them really knowing. Randy had a very dry sense
of humour; he wasn’t your typical pie in the face American.
Sometimes we would go out to restaurants and I remember one time we
were in Ridge farm in Surrey England, Randy, Lee Kerslake & I
went down near Brighton on the coast & there was a model railway
exhibition. Randy was into model trains & so was I so the three
of us went down to see this railway exhibition. I think I’ve
got photos of that with trains running in front of Randy [laughs].
The first time Randy & I ever went to Ozzy’s house to play
together I remember standing on Stafford station with randy and at
this time nobody had a clue what was gonna happen with the band, how
big it was going to be or if we were going to have any success at
all. All of a sudden I had this thought that one day people were going
to continuously ask me “what was Randy like”? “What
was it like to play with Randy”? “What was he really like”?
I didn’t know at the time why I was having these thoughts. It
must have been a premonition of things to come.
Metal Fanatix: During the middle of the Diary of
a Madman tour I believe Lee & yourself were fired?
Bob Daisley: No, it was only about 3 or 4 days after
we finished recording the album. I’ll go back to what the band
was about, & that is the band was called Blizzard of Ozz, it wasn’t
called the Ozzy Osbourne band or just Ozzy Osbourne solo band it was
a band called Blizzard of Ozz. Ozzy’s father came up with the
idea of it & Ozzy told us about it. We thought at least that sounds
like a band, see the record company was saying to us “well just
call the act Ozzy or The Ozzy Osbourne Band”. We said fuck that,
it doesn’t sound like a band & we wanted something that
sounded like a band. The record company has said “well on the
first album we need to use the name Ozzy Osbourne”. We all said
we don’t mind if you put the Blizzard of Ozz in big writing
and underneath it “featuring Ozzy Osbourne” we don’t
mind that. We can utilize the fact that its Ozzy’s voice &
that he’s come from Sabbath and all that so what did they do?
They fucked us over. They put Ozzy Osbourne in big writing and in
smaller writing the Blizzard of Ozz which made it look like an Ozzy
Osbourne record called the Blizzard of Ozz. We thought you cunts.
Metal Fanatix: So really it’s an album with
no name?
Bob Daisley: [Laughs] Well the first album was just
supposed to be called ‘Blizzard of Ozz’ like Bad Company’s
first album was just called ‘Bad Company’ and Led Zeppelins
first album was just called ‘Led Zeppelin’. So when it
came time to do the second album actually I came up with the title
Diary of a Madman. I still remember where I was. I was walking up
Holland Park Ave near Holland park where I lived in London with Ozzy
& we were walkin up to the shops & I said “I’ve
got a good name for the next album” & he said what’s
that I said Diary of a Madman. “Oh that’s fuckin great
I love that you come up with good things”. So I came up with
that title & obviously wrote all the words for all the songs on
the album. See Sharon was on the scene then & Ozzy and Sharon
were heavily involved with each other while he was married. The whole
vibe of the band had changed; it wasn’t like a band anymore.
Sharon was all “I’m gonna promote Ozzy. It’s going
to be Ozzy Osbourne, that’s the name the act will be called.
It was all Ozzy, Ozzy, Ozzy. I think she wanted to keep Randy &
promote him as a separate entity as well and make it the Ozzy show
but they didn’t hint at anything until they got the album out
of us written & recorded. Then about 2 – 3 days after we
finished recording the album we thought well we’ll be going
to America soon to start the tour & I got a phone call from Sharon
just saying “you and Lee are out” just like that, so I
said wait a minute it’s our band, “no not any more”.
What about our royalties? “End of story” she says and
I said we’ll see about that & I went to a lawyer and we
sued them. We got money out of Jet Records & Don Arden, Sharon’s
father, it finally went to court in 1986 & we got a pay out. We
thought our royalties would continue, but they didn’t &
that’s why we had to sue them again later.
Metal Fanatix: Speaking of that lawsuit; is it still
going or is it over?
Bob Daisley: Well it’s over for the minute
unless new information comes up or something different happens. See
we went to the Supreme Court in America and we got denied a trial.
We went to the lawyers at the end of 97 in L.A. and our lawyers said
“you’ve got a really good case here” & we should
have won, the first three years the judge that was involved in the
case was saying to us go for it. Every issue that came up she kept
in (it was a female judge), and then out of the blue after three fuckin
years we didn’t have a case. This from the same judge who has
been behind us all this time. So I don’t know if money changed
hands or if strings had been pulled or backs had been scratched, but
it was right at the time that the Osbournes show became really big,
right at the time that the Osbournes became richer than ever &
more connected than ever all of a sudden we didn’t have a case.
Metal Fanatix: It’s probably more Sharon than
Ozzy. You know Sharon being the way she is & handling all the
affairs.
Bob Daisley: Oh of course, Ozzy knows we were supposed
to get royalties & so does Sharon. But Ozzy tends to hide behind
her.
Metal Fanatix: Yeah I’m sure he does, he would
have grown accustomed to it over the years with all the trouble he
has been in. But I know myself if I do any work I expect & want
to be paid for it.
Bob Daisley: Of course. Its not like we’re
saying as an after thought wait, maybe we should get royalties out
of this. It was from day one we had the agreement, contracts were
drawn up & everything.
Metal
Fanatix: That brings me to the Living Loud project which
you did last year with Lee Kerslake, Steve Morse, Don Airey &
Jimmy Barnes. First of all congratulations on a job well done! Jimmy
Barnes is the last person on earth that I ever expected to hear singing
Ozzy osbourne songs.
Bob Daisley: Yeah well when his name was first suggested
to me to do it I said nah, I don’t think it would be right.
I don’t think he will suit the stuff. But July 2003 Lee &
I flew into Florida & we meet up with Steve Morse at his house,
within the first hour of playing together we thought wow this is sounding
good, this could work. (Cause you know you can put names together
but just because they’re names it doesn’t always gel).
About two days later Jimmy flew in. He was in America doing something
else & he came down & started singing the songs & I thought
fuckin hell this is really good. I just want to clear up that we didn’t
do those Ozzy songs because of what they did to those records, they
went into the studio & removed our performances because we were
suing them for our royalties that were rightfully ours anyway &
they ruined the product which is a dumb fuckin thing to do and what
an insult to Randy and the record buying public.
Metal Fanatix: I haven’t actually heard the
new re- recorded versions & from what I have heard I don’t
want to either.
Bob Daisley: Yeah I actually laughed out loud at
some of it because its fuckin awful, I thought he must be kidding,
is this done for a comedy act it’s fuckin terrible. So anyway
Lee & I have talked for probably about ten or twelve years about
doing our own tribute to Randy & those songs because we figured
if anyone had a right to do it we did because we played on the originals
& we thought maybe we can get a few different guitar players &
a couple of different keyboard players & some different singers
to do different songs. But when it was suggested to me about doing
this project with Steve Morse, Jimmy Barnes etc I had asked Gary Moore
if he would do a couple of tracks & he said he would. I thought
maybe we could get Dio on a couple, John Lord said he was going to
play on a couple of tracks & Don Airey. It was supposed to be
like a project but as soon as the four of us got in the room together
Lee, Steve, Jimmy Barnes and myself I thought no other singers no
other guitarists, this is it this is the band & as it turned out
John Lord was still gonna play on a couple of tracks & share it
with Don Airey but John became unavailable so he couldn’t do
it. We only had Don Airey which I think worked out better because
the whole things got continuity and now it’s a band.
Actually the name we wanted for the band was ‘Living Out Loud’
but we found out there was an acappella group down in Melbourne called
Living Out Loud. Cause’ we had several other names but we could
never come up with a name that somebody hadn’t fuckin used.
Every name we had thought of had been used & with Living Out Loud
we looked around & couldn’t find anyone with it so great
that’s what we’re gonna be called & then we found
this acappella group called Living Out Loud [laughs] and the album
was about to come out. We had to get the artwork together so we thought
fuck it ‘Living Loud’. I know Randy would be pleased that
Steve Morse did these songs because he was a Steve Morse fan.
Metal Fanatix: Will Living Loud be hitting the road
this year?
Bob Daisley: Well there’s talk about Living
Loud doing some stuff in August, they’re talking about shows
here first then maybe a European tour. You can keep checking my website
for more details as they come to hand.
Metal Fanatix: Now, after you left Ozzy the first
time you went on to record two albums ‘Abominog’ and ‘Head
First’ with Uriah Heep. How would you compare your time with
them to the past two, three years working with Ozzy?
Bob Daisley: Oh it was much more of a family situation.
It really felt like a nice working situation, there were no bosses
or leaders or big heads, anything like that. It was just a bunch of
blokes having fun playing music together, serious about the music
of course but it was just a lot more fun. I mean it was fun with Ozzy
when we first started when it was just me Randy & Ozzy & then
we got Lee. It was a good laugh & it was a bunch of blokes in
a band together. What ruined it was the record company & then
Sharon coming into it.
Metal Fanatix: Actually with you bringing that up
it makes me curious to know why you went back & continued to work
with Ozzy?
Well that’s a bit of a long story but I will give you a brief
outline of what happened. In 82’ when Lee & I got fired
after the diary thing we were suing Don Arden & Jet records. Ozzy
& Sharon had a big fall out with Jet records & Don Arden her
father so they came to us & said “we will help you in your
lawsuit against Jet records, we will confirm that you’re supposed
to get royalties” & they had meetings with our lawyers and
so I thought oh good they are going to help us. In 1983 we used to
go out for dinners etc, they were helping us but I didn’t realize
what scumbags they were because unbeknownst to us in 1983 they bought
the rights to Ozzy’s catalogue from Jet records. So they were
receiving our royalties & they didn’t even tell us [laughs]
we were still suing Don Arden & Jet records so we ended up suing
the wrong people but he did end up paying us out up to the point in
time that he owned the catalogue. But after that they were getting
our royalties and we didn’t know, we didn’t even find
out until the nineties. They were being sly and deceitful by pretending
to help us but at the same time in July 83 they bought Ozzy from Jet
records & Don Arden. I’ve seen the contracts. People say
“well why did you go back & work with them if you knew.”
But we didn’t know they were getting our royalties. What we
did know was that we beat Don Arden in court in 1986 & we got
a payout & then we knew that he went bankrupt & he had no
fuckin dough & we thought well where are our royalties going?
Maybe he’s stealing our royalties & he’s paying off
his bankruptcy fees. We didn’t know that the Osbournes were
getting them the whole time.
Metal Fanatix: You don’t talk at all now?
Bob Daisley: No
Metal Fanatix: So we shouldn’t expect to see
your name in the credits of the next Ozzy Osbourne album?
Bob Daisley: Oh no, fuck I won’t ever work
with him again.
Metal Fanatix: After recording & touring for
a couple of years with ‘Uriah Heep’ you rejoined Ozzy
for the ‘Bark At the Moon’ album & tour. Your first
show back was playing to a crowd of 700,000 people at the US festival
in May 1983. Can you tell us a bit about that?
Bob Daisley: Yeah well the figure varies. On the
day they said 400,000 then I heard 500,000. It was roughly half a
million people which is the size of Woodstock. That was very scary
because I hadn’t played those songs or worked with Ozzy for
two years & he and Sharon had already had meetings with me about
me coming in to do the ‘Bark at the Moon’ album, I said
yeah I’ll do it. Then all of a sudden I got a call from Ozzy
saying “I don’t want you to just do the album I want you
to come back and join the band and we have got a gig next week”.
I thought fuckin hell that’s being chucked in the deep end [laughs].
So I flew in to L.A got picked up, went straight to rehearsal from
the airport & I was jet lagged and trying to do these songs. We
had one rehearsal again the next day then the following day we played
at the US festival. Playing for a sea of people that was the same
size as Woodstock was very nerve racking.
Metal Fanatix: In between working with Ozzy, up until
the ‘No more Tears album’ you worked with many other talented
hard rock and heavy metal icons such as Gary Moore, Black Sabbath,
Yngwie Malmsteen, Steve Vai to name a few. Do you think that working
with such acts as these has helped you to develop the techniques that
you are using today?
Bob Daisley: Hmmm not really I don’t think
so. I’ve always had my own thoughts of what I wanted to do &
my own personal influences on music & musicians etc. Most of the
people I’ve played with really haven’t had a lot to do
with how I play or how it turns out.
Metal Fanatix: Working on Yngwie Malmsteen’s
Odyssey album must have been a challenge. I mean it’s totally
different to the stuff you were doing up to that point.
Bob Daisley: Yeah I remember I was at the end of
a Gary Moore U.S. tour in 1987. We had been on the road for about
6-7 weeks I had hooked up with this producer that I had worked with
while playing with Gary called Jeff Glixman. He was producing the
Yngwie album & he said to me “I might get you some tracks
on the Yngwie album”. While I was in L.A I also did a few tracks
on Bill Ward’s album which was fun; he’s a nice bloke
Billy Ward.
Metal Fanatix: Is that the album that featured George
Harrison too?
Bob Daisley: Oh no you’re thinking of the Gary
Moore album Still Got the Blues, George wrote a track for the album
& played rhythm guitar on it.
Metal Fanatix: That featured you on bass for that
track too? How amazing was it to record with one of the Beatles?
Bob Daisley: You know that’s one thing I sometimes
forget about. You do certain things & you go from one to the other
& you’re kind of caught in the eye of the hurricane. You’re
in the middle of it without thinking too much about it but then sometimes
I think to myself, wait a minute, I’m on a track with George
Harrison as well.
Metal Fanatix: That would be an awesome feeling knowing
you recorded a track with a Beatle, it would be like fuck it the world
can end tomorrow I’ve worked with a Beatle!
Bob Daisley: [Laughs] Its one of the ultimate things
to do is be on a track with any Beatle.
Metal Fanatix: You were touring with Gary when he
first went back to Ireland after a ten year absence, how was that
experience?
Bob Daisley: They were the first shows I ever did
with Gary at the end of 1984 early 85. I wasn’t actually in
the band. I had done an album or some tracks on an album with Gary
in 84 on Victims of the Future, then he needed a bass player and I
was still working with Ozzy but I had some time off. I had about 14
songs to learn & rehearse in a week and I did the show. We did
one show at the Marquee in London & then we went to Ireland the
next day & it was filmed for his video Emerald Isles. That was
pretty nerve racking to do all those songs and know you’re being
filmed. You can’t afford to fuck up. I can’t remember
where it was there was one in Dublin & one in Belfast and they
filmed those shows. At the end of the Belfast one Gary said “you
did great, if you’re ever not with Ozzy or if you have a fallout
& you’re looking for something, come to me & your in
my band” and it happened the next year. I was writing for the
Ultimate Sin with Ozzy & at the time I had a major falling out
with him so I left and joined Gary.
Metal Fanatix: Last year you recorded some tracks
on Gary Moore’s “Power of the Blues” album. I guess
after all these years you have become really good friends.
Bob Daisley: Yes, I did that whole album. I like
that album ‘Power of the Blues’. Even when I didn’t
work with Gary for ten years and whenever I went back to England I
would always give him a call & we’d hook up & have a
dinner together or go around to his house. Gary & I have always
had a simular sense of humour and we always have a really good laugh
together. Gary is very quick witted, quite often if there’s
a room full of people he’ll say something & I’m the
only one who gets it [laughs] and vice versa I might say something
and I can always rely on Gary to get it.
Metal Fanatix: Can you tell us what caused the cancellation
of Gary’s tour last year?
Bob Daisley: Yeah we had festivals to do throughout
the European summer, of which we played about 3 or 4 shows before
Gary injured his finger and the fluid inside got infected. Gary was
given antibiotics which didn’t work so he was taken to hospital
and put on an antibiotic drip. Eventually that did the job. Later
in the year we were meant to be doing a British tour of England, Scotland,
Wales & Ireland but they needed to lock in contracts & do
promotion ahead of the tour dates. Gary’s finger hadn’t
healed in time so it all got cancelled.
Metal Fanatix: You have done a lot of work with Eric
Singer as well. Do you guys keep in touch?
Bob Daisley: Oh yeah we swap emails from time to
time & he usually calls me when he’s coming to Australia.
I went to see him when he was out here playing with Kiss back in 2001.
Yeah he’s a nice bloke Eric. I first met Eric when we did a
Black Sabbath album together “The Eternal Idol” back in
1986.
Metal Fanatix: That was probably the first time I
had ever heard of the guy.
Bob Daisley: That was the first time I’d ever
heard of him as well [laughs]
Metal Fanatix: Eric had gone on to work with Gary
Moore as well?
Bob Daisley: Yeah I got him that gig with Gary, well
I mean I didn’t get him the gig I suggested him to Gary, it
was him who got the gig because he was good enough for it, you know
I put him up for it because I knew that Gary would like him &
he did.
Metal Fanatix: I’d like to ask you about the
‘No More Tears’ album. You’re credited on the album
for playing bass & so is Mike Inez. You never wrote any song for
the album, I’m just curious to what songs you did play on?
Bob Daisley: I played on all of them. Mike Inez didn’t
play a note on any of it. I wrote a lot of lyrics for all the songs
& then Sharon didn’t want to pay me & then they didn’t
want to use them. I think they got ideas from lyrics I had written.
I can’t remember if it was on the album cover or if it was in
an interview where they say lyrical inspiration came from me, but
yeah I’d written all the fuckin lyrics for all the songs &
then they said that they didn’t want to use them because they
didn’t want to pay. Just like on the Black Sabbath album “The
Eternal Idol” it says Dave Spitz and myself. Dave was a bass
player that Black Sabbath had at the time. But Dave didn’t play
a note on that album.
Metal Fanatix: That’s a rockin Sabbath album
what was Tony Iommi like to work with?
Bob Daisley: Yeah I think it’s a great album,
Tony Iommi played great on that album & so did Eric Singer. Tony
was great; I got on with Tony really well. They wanted me to join
the band because we worked well together & I remember him saying
at the time I haven’t had this rapport with writing with somebody
since Geezer. We kept in contact for a while & swapped Xmas cards,
I’d phone him once in a while but I haven’t spoken to
him in years.
Metal Fanatix: Out of all the albums that you’ve
played on & that’s one big list [laughs] what would be your
favourites to listen too?
Bob Daisley:Well I don’t know if it’s
maybe because its one of the freshest ones but the living loud I particularly
like, I had a big say in how it sounded & how it went, co-produced
the album I really like that one. I suppose Blizzard of Ozz has a
bit of nostalgia for me. It’s a long time ago what 25 years
now but when I put that on it just reminds me of good times, good
creative times, working with Randy, fun with Ozzy & then getting
Lee in the band. It just reminds me of all the good times [laughs].
You know, there’s lots of albums, but those two stand out and
there’s one album, the Kahvas Jute album that’s really
special. Even my daughters, (one of my daughters is twenty & the
other is twenty five) but when they were teenagers listening to all
other sorts of music they would put Kahvas Jute on & they’d
say “dad, this is the best thing you’ve ever done”.
Out of all the other albums I ever did that’s their favourite.
Metal Fanatix: What sort of music are your daughters
listening to now & what do they think about having a rock star
dad?
Bob Daisley: My youngest daughter listens to rock
stuff like Jet, Black Leather Motorcycle Club and she’s a big
fan of Led Zeppelin, Hendrix and The Beatles. She’s a major
Beatles fan. They both like a lot of the English bands. My eldest
daughter loves Hendrix. I think when they were younger I used to jokingly
say to them hey you don’t know how cool a dad you have. They
would give you that look and say Ahh! “We listen to pump up
the jam & chart music” which was their music for that time
& they didn’t realize what dad had done because they didn’t
really know much about my whole musical history but they know much
more about it now. They see the website & the letters that fans
write in & they think it’s a bit weird sometimes when they
see other people saying stuff about their dad [laughs].
Metal Fanatix: Out of all the newer hard rock/metal
bands is there anyone that you are listening to?
Bob Daisley: I think Jet is pretty good & there
was a band in England that was quite good. I think they’ve broken
up now, called Kula Shaker. I don’t know; I think there was
a really magical time in the 60s & 70s that didn’t seem
to happen again you know. Where’s the Jimi Hendrix of today?
Metal Fanatix: Well you can even look at bands like
Metallica & their last album St Anger where they decided not to
record any solos!
Bob Daisley: I know yeah, Metallica are a good band
& they served a purpose of that type of stuff, which was kind
of a new music even though it was definitive of other older rock stuff
but it was still a new music as much of the way that they did it &
that’s great. They were a good band. There are lots of those
sorts of bands that are around that are certainly valid. I like bands
like Led Zeppelin because they were blues based & blues doesn’t
seem to age. I was actually at a friends house the other day he’s
only in his thirties and he was playing Led Zeppelin 1 & I said
‘do you realize in three more years that album is gonna be forty
years old?’ [Laughs] so he was probably one or two when the
album was released & here he is playing it now & I said fuck
it still holds up. It could have been released yesterday. Hendrix
stuff too, it still sounds fresh today.
Metal Fanatix: Well that’s right you can turn
on many of the mainstream radio stations across the world and you
will still hear Hendrix & Zeppelin being played, On the other
hand take a band like Iron Maiden for example, another great band
but they never get the airplay they deserve.
Bob Daisley: Well that’s right. That’s
one thing I’m really pleased about with the albums ‘Blizzard
of Ozz’ & ‘Diary of a Madman’. Because they
have become milestones in rock history they will probably have airplay
forever. Well for as long as rock is being played they will be played.
Metal Fanatix: What advice do you have for up and
coming bands?
Bob Daisley: Be dedicated. Give it 100%. Practice
all the time, practice along with records & all different types
of music to get the different feels & different styles. During
the 60’s & 70’s people tended to think that it was
cool to be out of it by getting stoned & taking drugs etc. I don’t
go along with that cause quite often it can sound good while you’re
on drugs but then you listen to it the next day & realise its
not very good after all. I’m not saying be straight, I’m
saying have fun, party, get pissed but don’t let the music suffer.
The one thing I will advise anybody & everybody is not to smoke.
It kills so many people & it’s presented as being either
cool or tough or glamorous. Go to a fucking lung cancer ward &
you will soon see that it’s not all that cool or glamorous.
Not everyone will die from it but the ones who don’t die usually
end up suffering later on in life with emphysema & blockages etc.
I went to the hospital one day to visit my mum and there was this
woman sitting in a wheelchair. She would have been in her mid forties
I guess & she had no legs & I asked the nurse ‘what
happened to her, has she been in a car crash?’ and it turns
out she had both legs amputated because she was a smoker. I didn’t
know that you could lose limbs from smoking. All thanks to the tobacco
industry.
Metal Fanatix: Who is the one person you have always
wanted to work with but have never had a chance to?
Bob Daisley: Jeff Beck. I love Jeff Beck’s
playing. I used to call him Jeff Best [laughs].
Metal Fanatix: You’ve never thought of picking
up the phone and trying to organise something?
Bob Daisley: I have met him & we chatted but
there has never been a situation where the both of us could work together,
I’d love to though. He’s a brilliant player he’s
one of the best ever.
Metal Fanatix: You have been playing now for almost
40 years, what would you say have been your greatest achievements
to date?
Bob Daisley: Just look at the list of people I have
had the privilege of playing with & the list of albums that I’ve
had the privilege of being on. Although I’ve been part of them
myself as far as writing, producing and playing on them, I still feel
privileged that my career has gone as well as it has, because there
have been major players that haven’t done half the stuff that
I have.
Metal Fanatix: Do you have any idea what the figures
are for each album sold?
Bob Daisley: No not really. They would never tell
us. I would imagine at least 10 million each album, probably even
more than that.
Metal Fanatix: In a few words what comes to mind
when I mention the following songs/albums?
Bob Daisley:
Long Live Rock N Roll: I
suppose looking back now I can see what they meant & what the
purpose of having that title was. But at the time back in 1977 when
we did that album I kind of thought the idea of it was a little bit
corny. I can see why it was called that now. It is basically rock
n roll even though there were bands around like Deep Purple &
Black Sabbath but its still rock n roll.
That's The Way That Is It: Uriah
Heep. That wasn’t one of our songs, I think it was a song by
Paul Bliss, it’s a good song. The version we did I liked and
that song represents the frustration of Uriah Heep for me because
I thought that that band at that time could have done so much better
than they did. That song got into the top 40 in America but the record
company didn’t follow it up and they should have promoted the
shit out of it. I remember getting a phone call from Ozzy when I was
still living in London & he was living in L.A. & the Uriah
Heep album “Abominog” had just been released. Ozzy phoned
me raving about it. He said “This is a fuckin great album, I
love it. I’m gonna get a sandwich board made & walk up &
down Sunset boulevard telling people to buy it cause its fuckin great”.
It sold some and it was more of a frustration. It was a good band
& a nice working situation. They were good guys & it should
have gone further than it did.
Crazy
Train: Well crazy train was my title.
Randy had this effect on his pedal board & I use to say it sounds
like a train & Ozzy had this saying “you’re going
off the fuckin rails; you’re off the rails man”. Off the
rails used to mean you’re off the wall you’re cuckoo &
that’s pretty well how I came up with the title. But I wanted
to be philosophical about the song so it was 1979 when we started
writing that song, 1980 by the time I had finished the lyrics &
there were things going on around the world at that time. The Berlin
Wall was still up, the Cold War between Russia & America was still
going & it was a frightening situation. That’s why those
lines were in the song “Heirs of a cold war, Inheriting trouble
we’re mentally numb” it was driving all the young people
nuts thinking that the fuckin big one could start tomorrow between
America & Russia “Millions of people living as foes”
that’s crazy why do you need that shit.
Miracle Man: It might have
been John Sinclair who came up with the Miracle Man theme. Miracle
Man was written about a headline at the time where this bloke who
was one of those preacher bible types called Jimmy Swaggert was busted
in a motel with a hooker [laughs] so we called him Miracle Man &
I wrote the song about him being the ‘Miracle Man’. I
think I had little Jimmy Swaggert in the song & Ozzy changed it
to little Jimmy Sinner cause he didn’t want to mention his name.
You know I don’t mind that he was in a hotel with a hooker but
just don’t fuckin preach to everybody else that they’re
going to hell if they do it!
After the War: Well Gary always had a real
connection being from Ireland with what’s going on there all
the political issues & wars between the North & South of Ireland
& the British and what have you. A lot of the songs that Gary
did like, ‘Out in the Fields’ & ‘Wild Frontier’,
they were all Irish flavoured and war connected songs & other
songs like Johnny Boy & sad songs like that are really about Phil
Lynott, because when Phil died, that really cut Gary up.
Metal Fanatix: If you could put a band together consisting
of musicians passed on or present who would they be & what would
you call the band?
Bob Daisley: I’d have Brian Jones rhythm guitar/harmonia,
Jeff Beck guitar, John Bonham on drums and Paul Rodgers vocals from
around the ‘Free’ era. I would call it ‘The Free
Rolling Led Birds’ [laughs].
Metal Fanatix: Lastly Bob thanks again for arranging
to meet me today it’s been a total pleasure to meet you &
listen to some of these great stories you have shared & learn
more about some of my all time favourite songs. Do you have any last
words you have for our readers?
Bob Daisley: I just hope they get to really know
the truth about what happened with the music & things I’ve
gone through over the years because anybody can say anything they
like in interviews & I'm not mentioning anybody in particular
but anybody really can do that. There’s been so many lies told
over the years & I’d like eventually to see the truth especially
about the Blizzard & Diary records & what happened and who
did what and who wrote what etc. But I suppose at the end of the day
it doesn’t matter that much as long as people enjoy the music.
I know fans like to know the truth & what really went on and I
hope some of this interview has helped them with some of that.
Make sure you check out the following websites:
http://www.bobdaisley.com
- Bob’s Official website
http://www.livingloud.com.au
- Living Loud Official website
http://insideout666.mysite.freeserve.com
- Inside Out 666 Past Interview’s
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/INSIDE_OUT666
- Dedicated to 40 years of Hard rock & Heavy Metal music
© Cameron Edney April 2005 Not to be re-printed in any form without
written permission. |
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