DAVE'S
DIARY - 14 NOVEMBER 2006 - DOCTOR HOOK
DR
HOOK COOK MUSHROOMS FOR WILLIE
When Ray
Sawyer recorded I Hope I Didn't Take Too Many Mushrooms for his
new Dr Hook album he didn't realise how prophetic the song would be for
Willie Nelson.
"It was perfect timing," co-founder Ray Sawyer joked to Nu Country
TV on the eve of his band's latest Australian tour that brings it to Crown
Casino on November 23.
"That's obviously what I thought when I saw the news. Willie seems
to be alright."
Nelson, 73 and elder sister Bobbie, 75, were busted for possession of
marijuana and psychedelic mushrooms on their tour bus in Louisiana in
September.
Ironically, the song was one of five penned for Dr Hook disc Too Many
Mushrooms by John Carter Cash - son of the late Man In Black and latter
day executive producer of the Walk The Line movie.
"John also wrote Anybody Got Any Ganja for our new album,"
added Sawyer whose career started at 14 as a drummer.
"John and Jeff Williams came up with the idea. Their songs seem to
appeal to college kids, typically Dr Hook. We also did a cover of The
Games People Play - Joe South did it originally. We also have a song
inspired by the first cartoon characters on TV.
Those hand puppets. Our song says what happened to them? Also where are
Buddy Holly, Janis Joplin, Elvis and all of those legends who have died?"
Sawyer, who has worn an eye patch since losing an eye in a 1967 car accident
while working between bands as a lumberjack in Oregon, believes his song
69 Years Of Uninterrupted Love, is timely and accurate.
"I've been married to my wife Linda now for 37 years," Sawyer,
now 69 and father of two, revealed in a call from his home in Daytona
Beach, Florida.
"It was a crazy thing I wrote 10 or 12 years ago. It was OK. I kind
of liked it. It feels like 69 in my mind. We moved here from Nashville
about 15 years ago. Everyone in Nashville is a songwriter - even the guy
pumping your gas. I wanted to get away from it."
ALABAMA RAISED
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Sawyer,
born on February 1, 1937, in Chicksaw, Alabama, is a salty survivor
in a career that claimed some of the co-founders of the band.
He released singles Rockin' Satellite in 1960 and I'm Gonna
Leave in 1962 for the Sandy label in Mobile, Alabama.
Sawyer also cut a self-titled solo country album on Capitol in 1977
that was launched with the single Daddy's Little Girl.
Fellow singer Dennis Locorriere released solo discs Running With
Scissors in 1996, Alone in 2003, One Of The Lucky Ones,
Live In Liverpool and has Dennis Locorriere Celebrates Dr
Hook Hits And History set for 2007. |
He also cut
Out Of The Dark in 2000 on Eagle Records featuring 13 original
tunes - some co-written with former Asleep At The Wheel guitarist Leroy
Preston.
"I'm doing really good considering our lifestyle was so wild and
crazy," Sawyer said.
"That was a roller coaster - that was the fast lane. These days we
keep fit playing so many shows. I lose 5 or 6 pounds when we're out for
3 weeks. It keeps me healthy."
Sawyer is the only original band member in Dr Hook but not the only family
member.
His son Casey, now 27, has played drums in his band for 14 years.
"Casey started playing percussion with me when he was 13," Sawyer
said.
"I would take him out on the road during school holidays. One year
we were going to Scandinavia and doing Norway, Denmark and Sweden. So
he asked his teacher if he could be off for two weeks - she said absolutely,
he could learn more there than in a schoolroom for a year. When he finished
his high school he joined my band full time. He's good enough to have
his own band. He's not a writer but a very good drummer."
Sawyer had hooked up again with original producer and manager Ron Haffkine
who turned the band onto a plethora of hits penned by late former Playboy
cartoonist Shel Silverstein.
SHEL
SILVERSTEIN
Those hits
included Sylvia's Mother, Cover Of The Rolling Stone, Ballad Of Lucy
Jordan, Everybody's Making It Big But Me, I Got Stoned And I Missed It
and Queen Of The Silver Dollar.
"We did a new video clip when we recut Cover Of The Rolling Stone
with a different beat," Sawyer revealed.
"It's up on our My Space page."
Dr Hook broke in 1970 when it cut Silverstein song Last Morning
for Dustin Hoffman movie Who Is Harry Kellerman And Why Is He Saying
Those Terrible Things About Me?
Haffkine produced the soundtrack of the Tony Richardson Ned Kelly
movie, starring Mick Jagger, in 1969.
It featured Silverstein songs performed by Kris Kristofferson, Waylon
Jennings, Tom Ghent and Jagger.
"I was there when Waylon was cutting his tracks in New York,"
Sawyer recalled.
"That's when I first met Waylon and later on he became a very good
friend of mine.
Actually that's why Ron Haffkine and I got back together. When Waylon
died and Shel had just died I said life is too short and called him. We
didn't have any bad blood - Ron and I.
I had just decided I wanted to do something else. That was the reason
I called him - we were talking about Shel and about Waylon and life. We
decided to go back to studio and have fun. Waylon was on one of our albums
on Storms Never Last - a song his wife Jessi Colter wrote. His
son Shooter is doing well. I saw him on TV recently. Shooter was born
after I left for Florida. I enjoyed Shooter playing Waylon in Walk
The Line. Also Waylon Payne playing Jerry Lee Lewis. It was a good
movie. Johnny picked Joaquin Phoenix to play him."
Silverstein died alone of a heart attack at 66 on May 9, 1999 at his Key
West, Florida home, and Waylon died in Arizona at 64 of diabetes on February
13, 2002.
AUSTRALIAN
TOURS
Sawyer
has fond memories of his Australian tours with the band that featured
Dennis Locorriere who owns the name and leases it to him for touring.
"We must have been there at least 20 times," Sawyer recalled.
I reminded him of an early eighties tour when one band member was
beaten up in Sydney.
"He wore a Dr Hook tour jacket in wrong part of Sydney and somebody
thought he had money and jumped him," Sawyer explained.
"We also helped raise funds and helped build a rehab room there." |
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WHERE
IT ALL STARTED
Prior to
forming Dr. Hook And The Medicine Show, Sawyer, George Cummings and Billy
Francis were members of an Alabama group called The Chocolate Papers.
They morphed into Dr Hook in New Jersey in 1968 as they added Rik Elswit,
Dennis Locorriere and later Jay David to the ranks.
Most hits were on Columbia/CBS before the band moved to Capitol in 1975
and made the album Bankrupt about their financial plight.
It contained the huge hit - Sam Cooke penned Only Sixteen, and
was followed by A Little Bit More in 1976 with a Couple More
Years and Makin' Love And Music in 1977 with Walk Right
In - revamp of The Rooftop Singers staple.
Later albums featured Sharing The Night Together, When You're In Love
With A Beautiful Woman, Sexy Eyes and Baby Makes Her Blue Jeans
Talk.
Sawyer left in 1982 to pursue a solo career and Locorriere took over the
reigns until he resumed solo pursuits in 1985.
Then in 1989 Sawyer began touring again as Dr Hook Featuring Ray Sawyer.
In 1995 he released an album containing re-recordings of classic Dr. Hook
hits under the name Dr. Hook featuring Ray Sawyer.
He was inducted into the Alabama Music Hall Of Fame in April of 2005.
Dr Hook, featuring Ray Sawyer, plays The Palms At Crown - Thursday November
23.
Prices - Adult - $79.90*
Bookings - Ticketek 1300 795 012 - www.ticketek.com.au
CLICK HERE for full gig details in
Tonkgirl's Gig Guide.
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