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Tommy Lee (April 2005 Issue) Bigger Than Ever Tommy
Lee rushes into the rehearsal hall where Motley Crue is preparing for
their
year-long reunion tour, which begins in February, to support
their new best-of album, Red, White & Crue. (The
disc
contains new tracks recently recorded by the band.) Lee's just come
directly from NBC, where he's editing a
six-episode TV series that
takes him to college, a show he describes as semi-scripted and
semi-reality. Now he's on the
phone with none other than Steven Tyler,
discussing the Aerosmith lead singer's possible contribution to Lee's
solo
record that is in the works. And Lee's just finished a book tour
promoting his New York Times bestseller
Tommyland. Whoa!
Understandably, Tommy is exhausted.
But the Crue drummer, at 42,
whose previous life has included jail time
and anger management sessions, is looking better than ever.
Motley
Crue, with a history of multi-platinum albums and six Grammy
wins, hasn't always found the road to be easy. Their
success was often
peppered with such self-destructive behavior as drunkenness (in 1985
lead singer Vince Neil was convicted
of drunk driving and vehicular
manslaughter when his car crashed and killed two passengers), drugs
(1987's tour was
disturbed by Nikki Sixx's near fatal drug overdose),
incidents of lewd behavior, and lawsuits, as well as Lee's own
very
public domestic messes and scandals. It was an odd mix of huge musical
success combined with personal difficulties.
But through it all, few
criticized Lee's drumming. In fact, like Ringo Starr in the '60s and
Peter Criss in the
'70s, Lee was a player who inspired a lot of young
people to take up the drums.
It seems that now, finally,
Tommy Lee is realizing his contribution to
music and feeling positive about life. In fact, his mantra is, ?What
else could go
right?? So with all these projects going on, Tommy
recently sat down with MD?in the middle of completing his NBC
show, rehearsing with the Crue, and recording tracks for his new solo album.
?I'll sleep when I die,? he
says, smiling.
MD: Was your parting with Motley Crue on good or bad terms?
Tommy:
When I left five years ago, Vince and I were on very bad
terms. We had an altercation in an airport. I was on probation and
he
wanted to fight me, and I thought, If I get into a fight, I'm going
back to jail for one year minimum?and I am
definitely not going
back. I had just gotten out. So I jumped on a plane and decided that I
couldn't be in the band
anymore, even though we were finishing up a
tour at that time. Well, everybody called and said, 'dude, you've
gotta
come back, at least to finish the tour. There are only four more
shows!? So I bit the bullet, did the four shows, and then
bailed.
Now Vince and I are cordial to each other. We know what we have
together, we know what we've
created, and we know what we've
accomplished. And we know that if we can stick together and are
compassionate to
each other, we can make it work. We just can't have
any dramas. So here we go?we're gonna give it a
shot.
MD: At this point you're just beginning to play together again. But what was it like with the other
guys?
Tommy: It's been totally cool. Mick's health is getting better
day by day. [The guitarist has
a spinal disease and had a recent hip
replacement operation.] I'm hoping that by the time the tour dates are
announced,
he'll be ready. I don't know if he'll ever be 100%. We're
all hoping for 80%. But he's playing fine and
each day he moves a
little friskier. I've got my fingers crossed. I just want him to be
well.
MD: What
have you had to do to prepare for getting in shape to tour?
Tommy: I'm trying to update some of the older
songs to give them
some fresh beats. That's important. Without wrecking it or taking away
the original essence of what
people liked, I'm just trying to give the
tunes a little update.
MD: What does that entail from the
way you played twenty years ago?
Tommy: Just stylistically, our music sounded a certain way,
which was
cool. But I want to modernize my parts a little bit. That
might mean adding a few extra notes, or deleting some. I want my
drum
parts to be even funkier than they were, and at times maybe even a
littler heavier.
MD: In your book,
you described your music as pop with a rock
edge. I hadn't really thought about it as being pop until I read
that.
Tommy: When it's melodic, I consider it pop. Stuff that doesn't
have melody is the super
hard rock. When I think of a band like
Sevendust, they're heavy as hell, but they have melodies, which to
me
doesn't make them a heavy metal band. No disrespect intended, but when
I think of Slayer, there's really not a
lot of melody going on. It's
pretty agro. To me, that's heavy metal.
One of my
all-time favorite
bands is Cheap Trick?amazing melodies, great beats,
and a super rock feel. I think our direction is more along those lines.
So
going back to our material today, I'm just trying to update it so
when Motley gets heavy, it gets real
heavy.
And when in the past it might have been a bit straight, I'll be
trying to make it just a little bit funkier. Music has changed
quite a
bit since those records were made.
MD: There have been certain icons who have inspired the
kids
through the decades, like Ringo in the '60s and Peter Criss in the
'70s. You were the guy in the '80s.
What was it about you that the kids
seemed to be attracted to?
Tommy: Well, I would always be bummed
out when I'd go to a
concert and, when it was time for the drum solo, the audience would go
out to buy beer or a T-shirt,
thinking, Ah, it's the drum solo. It
didn't seem like very many drummers took the time to make it a
show.
So maybe for me, it's a two-part thing people liked: They dug the
musical side'the parts and
the power. But they also dug the showy
stuff'the twirling of the sticks, the hitting of the drum and making
the sticks
bounce off and then catching them while still playing with
one hand, or my whole kit twirling around upside down in a cage
or
flying out over the audience. I'm always trying to give the audience a
reason to never leave their seats. I always
wanted it to be, "Tommy's
gonna do a drum solo. What's it gonna be this year?? I always try to
involve the
audience too, so they feel a part of it, whether they're
all stomping their feet, clapping, or just tripping
out.
Robyn Flans
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