Billy Corgan Interview In Dec 1998 Rolling Stone Magazine
Part I
Billy Corgan of the Smashing Pumpkins can't think of one new rock album that turned him on in 1998. "You don't want to know what's in my CD changer," the singer, guitarist and songwriter warns before running down his current hit list: Best of Mountain; From the Trilogy, Philip Glass, a '77 live disc by rainbow; a disc from the Lynyrd Skynard box set; a UFO best-of album; Maria Callas singing Madame Butterfly. "I'm reluctant to talk about what the next Pumpkins record is going to sound like," Corgan cracks, "but I will tell you that it's going to sound a lot like Mountain."
Six months after the release of the band's latest record, Adore, Corgan is working on a
new Pumpkins LP. He has written 14 songs and, with guitarist James Iha and bassist D'arcy,
will soon cut tracks with Flood, who co-produced the group's 1995 mega-seller Mellon
Collie and the Infinite Sadness. In spite of what Corgan calls "the cumulative
toll" of the past year, particularly the tepid public response to Adore, the Pumpkins
are far from the breakup point.
It has been a mixed-blessing '98. To date, Adore has sold about 830,000 copies in the
U.S.-far less than Mellon Collie and the Pumpkins 1993 smash Siamese Dream (4.2 million
copies each). A planned series of free shows in the U.S fell through, and Corgan's
songwriting contributions to Hole's Celebrity Skin became a bone of public contention
between Corgan and Hole's Courtney Love.
But it was a good year on tour. In Europe, the Pumpkins played well-received shows in
unconventional venues; the band also did charity gigs in fifteen North American cities,
donating more than $2.7 million in proceeds to organizations like Hale House, in New York,
and the Make A Wish Foundation in Chicago.
Corgan declines to talk about the Hole album; he hasn't listened to the final product
("Bad taste in my mouth," he says). He will talk only off the record about
Marilyn Manson's Mechanical Animals, which he was involved in an early advisory capacity.
But Corgan speaks frankly about his disappointments, the lessons learned and the immediate
future. He says that the best thing to come out of Adore is "a reaffirmation that I
love music. And I love to perform. But I got to do it my way."
Part II - The Interview
RS: How would you describe the past year-as a success, a failure or
inconclusive?
BC: My definitions of success have changed. If you'd
asked me that question a year and a half ago, and I knew what I know now, I would say it
was a failure, definitely. The person sitting in front of you-he believes it's a success.
You're talking to a guy who in a 2 year span lost his mother, lost his drummer-the person
he was closest to in the band-AND got divorced. Pumpkins or no Pumpkins, that's head-check
time. To have gone through that tunnel and come out the other side-I'm happy.
RS: If you had Adore to do all over again, is there anything you would do
differently?
BC: I would have gone further with the vision of the
record. I would have made it more opaque, more dense, more hard to reach. At some point
along the way, I tried to pull it in a little bit. The most amazing compliment I get on
this album is, people pull me aside and go, "I have been listening to this record
over and over again. I can't get it out of my stereo. When I first listened to it, I
thought it was kind of OK. But it snuck up on me and hit me like a ton of bricks."
Maybe it's like a Lou Reed, Berlin kind of record, where it's got to sit for a while, be
digested and maybe get away from the politic of a certain time.
RS: What is it about Adore that people have misunderstood?
BC: When I was on Howard Stern-I know this pissed a
lot of people off-he asked me about being disappointed about the record. I said,
"Well, I'm disappointed with our fans." Which, you can imagine, lighted up the
fucking Internet. What I was saying was, if I put out what is apparently a testy record,
at least give me the chance. Listen to it and THEN tell me you don't like it. I don't
think I got that chance.RS: Were you surprised at the lack of audience loyalty? BC:
There's definitely the moment where you go, "What happened?" You have this
feeling of desertion: Maybe they don't love you anymore. But then you realize it's not
about that. It's not a negative energy. You have not created the positive energy, whatever
it takes-that kinetic connection. At the end of the day, if people do not connect with
Adore, that is my responsibility. But in 15 years, if somebody pulls me over and says,
"Adore is the best record you ever did," I'm gonna fall over laughing.
RS: When I saw you in the studio during the Adore sessions in January,
you were recording a song, "Let Me Give the World to You," that sounded like a
total hit. Why didn't you put it on the album?
BC: Didn't fit. And I knew it was a hit song. There was another song you
didn't hear that was a total hit song, a heavier song. I would play it for people and this
is what they would say: "maximum KROQ rotation." There's no better example I can
give you of the integrity that I tried to put into that record. I knew I was cutting my
own wrist. But it's like a test, and I stayed the course. Not only through the album, but
through the tour. Now that I've passed that test, I don't have that doubt about myself
anymore. Whatever my inegrity test in was, I passed.
RS: When Adore came out, you went right to Europe and played some unusual
venues.
BC: We played a botanical garden in Brussels. We
played Tivoli Gardens, in Copenhagen. We played on the water somewhere in Sweden. We did
all these crazy things, and the energy was so amazing. Then we come to America and it's
like [makes the sound of squealing brakes]. That was weird, because we came in with such a
positive energy, and we'd set up the charity tour. RS: What was the inspiration for the
charity shows? BC: The original impetus was, we wanted to play free in 20 American cities:
Give us your park, we'll set it up. It was that 70's feeling-out in the park, listening to
music. We thought it would be fantastic. And we got no, no, no from everywhere, including
Chicago. [The Pumpkins ultimately played a free show in Minneapolis for 100,00 people].
RS: How did the free tour then turn into a charity tour?
BC: We didn't want to let go of the idea of doing something different.
The whole thing was to stick with the vibe of Adore through thick and thin. So we thought,
"We'll do theaters but the give the money away. And if we are going to give money
away, are we giving enough away? What is the point of rolling in, saying it's for charity
and giving 20 grand?" That's when we decided to belly up to the bar and put out money
where our mouths are.
RS: What about the shows? On the first night at Radio City Music Hall,
New York, you encored with "Transmission" by Joy Division, and pulled kids from
the audience onstage.
BC: It started as a spontaneous act. Then we put it in
the show, because it was too perfect. If we had a good show, we played
"Transmission." At the end, we'd pull kids out of the audience and give them our
instruments. We'd leave the stage and the kids would continue to play. The sound, the
exuberant teenage cacophony, was the beautiful way to end it. I remember, after we played
in L.A., Gene Simmons from KISS saying, "That's one of the greatest things I've ever
seen in my life, for you to break the fourth wall and make the audience part of the
show." Which is a pretty good compliment, because he's a consummate showman.
RS: Were there any other inspiring nights?
BC: We were so confident that we did
5 or 6 shows where we did the whole Adore album, all fifteen songs-if you don't count the
last joke [the short piano coda "17"].
RS: Did you play the songs in the same
order as on the record?
BC: Nope. THAT would be suicide. Playing the whole fucking
album, that's pretty close. On the entire tour we played at most five songs from Mellon
Collie. We did none before Mellon Collie. Everything else was Adore. We went up with
it-and we sank with it.
RS: In the 1960's, superstars like the Beatles and the Beach
Boys were releasing two albums a year, plus singles. The industry standard now is 2 years
between albums; you had a 3 year gap between Mellon Collie and Adore. Don't you think that
has a lot to do with the problems of audience loyalty?
BC: You want to know what's funny? Some people in my
world think we didn't wait long enough, because the Mellon Collie wave was so strong:
"The people didn't have a chance to get away from you." There's a thought in the
music business that you have to have a downtime so that people can stop being sick of you.
Now for someone like me, who writes thirty-plus songs a year, what the fuck am I supposed
to do? I can only put out so many B-Sides. the desire to hit a big home run is dominating
the emusic business. And the idea of great music finding a good audience is not enough-to
the music business.
RS: Which leads to my next question: Is rock dead? If so, does
it matter?
BC: Believe it or not, I'm guilty if saying the same
thing [laughs]. I'm on Howard Stern; I say rock is dead. Angry phone calls:
"Nashville Pussy are better than you guys." I don't care. Rock & roll is not
about what you play, it's about how you play it. It's the spirit, OK? My Rock & roll -
alternative music - has been co-opted, become something easily imitable. So when I seek
inside myself for what I want to do, my guide is: Is it pushy? Is it edgy? Is it going to
make people uncomfortable? For the first four years of the Pumpkins, we didn't get a lot
of applause. We gota lot of head scratching. Then we got a lot of applause and patted
ourselves on the backs for being so smart. Look where it got us. It's hard to go back to
the head scratching,but maybe that's what you gotta do. It is that uncomfortableness, that
uncertainty that is the heart of Rock & roll.
RS: When you look at the BIllboard album charts now, are you
pissed that you're not up there with 'N Sync and Shania Twain? Or relieved?
BC: Neither. On a cultural-observation level, I'm
horrified, because there doesn't seem to be any value. But this is not new. We kid
ourselves into thinking, "Ha, ha, ha, the Seventies will never happen again."
But I look around and everyone's doing cocaine and listening to techno while drinking
their cappuccinos - what's the difference here?
RS: Have you ever listened to a Backstreet Boys record just
to see what the hoo-ha is about?
BC: No. I have a kind of pleasant apathy toward all
that kind of stuff. It doesn't disturb me. What disturbs me is things that are given more
weight than they deserve. There is so much that is disappointingly unreaching and
unprogressive.
RS: But that's not what the charts are about. Bob Dylan never
had a triple-platinum album. Frank Zappa had one Top Ten LP in his lifetime. Nick Drake
died without having a record on any chart. The point is, do you want to be loved now, or
do you want to be remembered?
BC: Both [laughs].
RS: But if you can't have both...
BC: I don't have any sentimental notion of how people
are going to remember me. I'm prepared to spend the rest of my life playing clubs, if that
means Im playing music that I believe in. Don't forget, I've tasted the top. There were
great moments, and there were shitty moments. But I won't go to my grave wondering what it
was like. I hit a homerun in the World Series. Even if they send me back to the minors, I
did it.
-David Fricke