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  • Archive: Jah Wobble

    October 13, 2009 @ 2:13 pm | by Jim Carroll

    Those of you looking for a good read this weather should check out “Memoirs of a Geezer: The Autobiography of Jah Wobble” in which likable, chirpy bass warrior and Spurs fan Jah Wobble tells his life story in his own inimitable way. Publication of the book coincided with news that Public Image Ltd, the band which Wobble (nee Wardle) was in with his old mucker John Lydon, were reforming, though Wobble will play no hand, act or part in that reunion. My review of the book is here and, after the jump, you’ll find an interview with Wobble from 2004 when he was plugging his “I Could Have Been a Contender” anthology for Trojan. Best interview I’ve conducted to date in a Chinese restaurant in Manchester.

    There is a first time for everything. Musicians don’t usually turn up at the airport to pick up journalists, preferring to employ flunkeys and acolytes to do such menial tasks and act as a buffer between the act and the hack. But obviously no one ever told Jah Wobble this, because he’s waiting at Manchester Airport for the flight to arrive.

    It’s hard to imagine his one-time bandmate and old pal John Lydon being so amenable. Then again, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle, until Sid Vicious drunkenly gave him a new moniker) has never been predictable.

    Called up initially to play bass with Lydon’s post-Sex Pistols outfit, Public Image Ltd, Wobble’s musical adventures are as deep as they are wide. Over the past quarter century, he has flitted from ambient pop to world music and back via albums based around the poems of mystic poet and painter William Blake, the music for a Requiem Mass and spoken-word productions. A prolific collaborator, his studio accomplices have included Sinéad O’Connor, The Edge, Brian Eno, Ronnie Drew, Natasha Atlas, Can’s Holgar Czukay and Jaki Liebeziet, Bill Laswell, Harold Budd, Pharaoh Sanders and countless others.

    You’ll find all of these sides of Wobble on I Could Have Been a Contender, a recently released three-CD anthology of his work. He claims in the sleevenotes that the release is down to him still being pretty enough to pose for publicity photos but, while there is a current interest in all things PiL, there’s no denying that a Wobble retrospective was long overdue. And there was certainly a lot of material to consider for the release.

    “It was never going to be chronological, but it was always going to start where it all started, with Public Image,” says Wobble. “It’s a great start, like a cup of really strong coffee first thing in the morning. I wanted one CD to have the song stuff, there was another CD for the ambient stuff, which is the stuff which has Eno and Pharoah Sanders, and then there were the odds and sods, which is what is on the other CD.”

    Seated in a corner of a Chinese restaurant, with enough dim sum on the table to feed a small army, Wobble seems content with his lot. Having had a fruitful relationship with Eastwest and Island Records during the 1990s, he abandoned the major ships in 1996 to launch his own 30 Hertz label. A plethora of records has since emerged from 30 Hertz, and there are enough sales worldwide to ensure a good living.

    “I’ve found my niche in life,” he says. “I make records, I tour with my band, I do things with 30 Hertz. Occasionally, I’ll feel a little uncomfortable because I’m stressed out about this or that, but then we’ll play a fast and furious show and everything will be OK again.”

    Having survived the music industry rollercoaster for so long, Wobble is articulate and insightful about its woes. He believes the problems began when people stopped caring about the music.

    “When I went to Trojan to do this record, they started talking to me about music and I was gobsmacked. It really shocked me because for the last seven or eight years, whenever I’ve dealt with other companies, no one ever talks about the music. It’s the last consideration. Once, people in record companies were there because they loved music. Then the city boys and the accountants came in and demanded profits and got rid of that buzz” For Wobble, the only way to survive and thrive is to stay independent. “I have learned that the major way of doing things is a load of bollocks,” he says emphatically.

    The anthology’s release has given some the chance to drag out old war stories about Wobble, and he winces at the thought of these. “Sometimes I think there’s too much emphasis on the old stuff and this time around, the whole ‘Jah Wobble yob’ thing has made me very uncomfortable. For fuck’s sake, I am 46 years of age; that was years ago.”

    The Public Image thing also has currency, but Wobble doesn’t complain because he knows it gave him the kickstart he required.

    “Back then, I was terribly callow and suffered from a real lack of self-esteem. But there was another side to me when I started bass, I would lose myself in the playing. I don’t think I would have become a musician if John (Lydon) hadn’t got me into PiL. I certainly wouldn’t have gone and looked for it.”

    He remembers the PiL days as “dark, destructive and nihilistic,” a far cry from the Wobble of later. “I prefer warm and light and people who are open, and I think collaborators pick up on my natural enthusiasm for the music.”

    Besides this anthology and forthcoming live shows, Wobble continues to be prolific, working on three different albums at the moment. Each release reaches an audience (”about 5,000 people around the world get it; that’s a lot of people, especially if you put them all in one room”) and Wobble hopes this anthology will up that number significantly.

    Still, he’s nothing if not pragmatic. “Occasionally you get asked that question: What would you do if you weren’t doing music? I always say, well, I’d drive a lorry or be a postman, and the interviewer is always surprised by that. But I mean it. It’s something I think about every month, what would I do if this all goes tits up. I need to work. I’m used to grafting and getting my hands dirty. I’m a fiercely independent geezer and I’ve always looked after myself in this game.”

    © 2004 The Irish Times

  • 20 Comments »

    1.
    October 13, 2009
    5:39 pm

    sounds like a good book. must be something about bass players and books. i’m currently reading peter hook’s book about the hacienda and next up is My Bass and Other Animals by Guy Pratt.

    Comment by petee
    2.
    October 13, 2009
    6:15 pm

    petee - is that Hooky book any use? I’ve read one rave review and one so-so one of it.

    Comment by Jim Carroll
    3.
    October 13, 2009
    9:21 pm

    I’m enjoying it. he’s mainly quite drunk making very bad decisions. he seems to be quite a good story teller

    Comment by petee
    4.
    October 13, 2009
    9:46 pm

    I read Guy Pratt’s book a while back (and saw his stand-up show in a seriously empty Academy last month).

    It’s a fun read. He has piles of anecdotes and it’s quite remarkable that he got away with some of the stuff he did. Lucky guy in the right place with the ability to talk and smile his way out of trouble.

    It’s perhaps lacking in the revelations department but there are worse ways of wasting your time…

    Comment by James D
    5.
    October 13, 2009
    10:09 pm

    looking forward to this book - currently (still) reading “the rest is noise” by alex ross

    great stuff
    :)

    Comment by Leigh O'Gorman
    6.
    October 13, 2009
    10:12 pm

    You lost me at Spurs fan.

    Comment by kilian
    7.
    October 14, 2009
    9:29 am

    Speaking of book recommendations, I’m giving Garth Cartwright’s “More Miles Than Money: Journeys Through American Music” the thumbs-up. Read this on holidays and it was a fine read - Cartwright taking a dusty road trip along the highways and byways of American music, travelling from Los Angeles and San Francisco through the south-west and onto Mississippi, Nashville, Memphis and Chicago, to see if his obsessive view of American roots music shaped up to the reality.

    Comment by Jim Carroll
    8.
    October 14, 2009
    12:12 pm

    Wobble was always going to be a legend after his contribution to Screamadelica.

    Comment by hugger
    9.
    October 14, 2009
    12:29 pm

    On a book tip, did you see the review of the new Nick Cave novel on The View last night? I’d have never put Joe Duffy down for a fan - I wonder if someone had complained to Liveline about the content would he have defended it?

    Comment by Ivor
    10.
    October 14, 2009
    12:34 pm

    Ivor - Joe Duffy’s rock’n'roll cred has been long established - dude was hnging out at the Glasvegas and Fleet Foxes gigs last year. How he squares that with his support for Brush Sheils and those Funny Friday jokers must be down to his large six figure salary

    Comment by Jim Carroll
    11.
    October 14, 2009
    12:44 pm

    Jim, I think there was a bit more to it than rock cred last night. I thought it was very odd telly. Fintan O’Toole, a professed fan of Cave seemed flummoxed by the book and its misogyny yet was trying hard to find virtue it, Cait O’Riordan, when she wasn’t patronising Joe, was just appalled and Joe and John Kelly just thought it was a cracking good read.

    Comment by Ivor
    12.
    October 14, 2009
    12:55 pm

    Ivor - have not read the book, not a fan of ol Nick and, strangely, have heard no reports from anyone about his Dublin show this week.

    Comment by Jim Carroll
    13.
    October 14, 2009
    1:30 pm

    Music books, you say?

    Just started ‘Celine Dion: Let’s Talk About Love’, one of the books in the 33 1/3 series.

    Yes, that’s right, the pocket sized series that has covered The VU and Nico, Exile On Main Street, Dusty In Memphis etc now has a tome on the Canadian warbler’s album that contains the godawful Titanic theme. So says the blurb “This book is a riveting investigation of what it means to love music and what it means to hate music, both of good and bad taste”.

    Interesting so far…

    Comment by Noise Annoys
    14.
    October 14, 2009
    2:12 pm

    I reviewed the show t’other night for the IT, but I’d love to hear what other people thought of it, Im still a bit perplexed and not convinced it was worth the 40 quid that most people shelled out.
    It was very odd watching the View, Joe holding up his hands and saying ‘I don’t know who this Nick Cave pop star is’ was hilarious. Cait O’Riordan’s points were a bit infuriating - there is a horrible character in here, therefore it’s a horrible book and I’m horrified by Nick Cave now. Confusing the book’s main character with the author is a bit amateur and hating a book because the characters are a bit horrible seem short sighted.

    Comment by Lar
    15.
    October 14, 2009
    2:14 pm

    and here be the link
    http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/features/2009/1014/1224256601814.html

    Sorry for hijacking the thread by the by Jim, feel free to ignore. Im just curious for feedback on the gig.

    Comment by Lar
    16.
    October 14, 2009
    2:30 pm

    Lar - no worries - just curious too that there seems to have been nil buzz about the show. Read your review at lunchtime - typically, I always miss stuff like this when I read the paper online! - and the gig sounds like a weird one. Was it sold out?

    Comment by Jim Carroll
    17.
    October 14, 2009
    2:39 pm

    Yep, and lot’s of people outside looking for tickets. One dude even had a sign. I’ve seen him quite a few times now and it never ceases to amaze just how devoted and worshippy the fans are. I heard plenty of people at it say it was brilliant but it was far from it. Fintan O’Toole mentioned the gig briefly on the View as well, would like to hear his take on it.

    Comment by Lar
    18.
    October 14, 2009
    2:53 pm

    Interesting review Lar and the words I take from it most are “more than a little self-indulgent” - I think that can sum-up Cave for most of the last decade, dabbling in movie scripts, novels, dirgy soundtracks and dodgy side-projects. I think people are just afraid to say “Sorry Nick, this is a bit crap…”. Maybe that’s why Mick Harvey left the band.

    Comment by Ivor
    19.
    October 14, 2009
    2:58 pm

    So many of NC’s fans are prepared to put up with everything he does in the hope that he strikes gold every now and then. As I said above, I’m not a fan but I have enjoyed some of the live shows I’ve seen - his gig at the Electric Picnic in 2005 was fantastic, for instance. The more I hear about this new novel, the more I’ll be keeping well away from it.

    Comment by Jim Carroll
    20.
    October 15, 2009
    12:56 pm

    When it comes to Nick Cave, I just limit myself to the Bad Seeds stuff. Which is mostly fantastic.

    Comment by Neill

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