Great White
Michelle LaRose talks to Jack Russell for 22nd Century Rock
Photographs by Michelle LaRose
Best known in the 80's for such hits as Rock Me,
Save Your Love and Lady Red Light, Great White was at the forefront
of the "Hair Band" movement. Moving forward as a shark must lest it perish, Great
White moves across America on a summer tour proving the old adage, the show must
go on. We were able to reel in Jack Russell to find out where Great White has
been and where they are going. This is what Mr. Russell had to say… 22CR:
Great White has a lot of "Former Members". What's the hardest part of keeping
a band together?
Jack: You know, I think the hardest part is not so much
keeping it together. We could have kept the same original guys together. You know
what I mean? I think the toughest part is, after a while, if you've been doing
this a long time, like Mark and myself have, we started this band in '78. So it's
like here you are, I'm 44 and Mark's you know, what ever he is [laughs] and it's
like you don't want to be on the road with a bunch of guys complaining and whining.
It's like "This sucks, the food's not really good, this whole town's not really
nice and I don't like this bus". It's like, You know what? I don't need that.
Unless your gonna' go out there and have a good time and just feel privileged
to do this, then stay home. So we kinda' had to let some people go in the past
just because they were whiny old guys [laughing]. That's just calling a spade
a spade here. It's like; I don't want to do this unless I'm having fun. If I have
people around me complaining all the time and not appreciating how lucky we are
to do this then I'm not going to do it anymore.
22CR:
Do you still keep in touch with any former members?
Jack: Michael yeah, and Sean McNabb
yeah. You know we talk all the time. Me and Sean are very close.
22CR:
You resigned from the band in 2001. Why did you decide to leave?
Jack:
I just wanted to do something a little bit different, you know. My solo project,
that was really out of the realm of what Great White was doing and I wanted to
do something just to get away from it for a while. I mean I've lived and breathed
this band since I was a kid and I just needed a little break, that's all I needed.
I went out and did it for a year or whatever and made my record and had a great
time and did some touring and stuff. And then I said ok I want to do Great White
again, but at that time I went, God I have such a great band, you know, I don't
want to disrupt it so I just had Mark come out and basically join my solo band
and that became Great White.
22CR: That basically answered my next question
which was, what influenced you to come back?
Jack: Well, the fact was
I could have my cake and eat it too [laughing]. We had these young guys that were
just great musicians that were just loving having a chance to be able to play.
And we were just up there kicking ass and having fun, going "God this is
what touring should be like!" I'd forgotten how pleasant it was when you
have some people that are really having fun. It made for a good time for me
you know. All the traveling, all the hard stuff, and all the pain in the ass stuff
you go through every day for that one hour and a half, two hours... If you got
people just whining and moaning for 22 hours out of the day it's just like God…
It just kinda' kills the whole two hours that you actually have fun. I've done
this for so long and I really love to sing and it's like you don't want somebody
coming to your birthday party going, "Well your cake sucks and this place is so
crappy." It's like, "Well screw you, and get out of here then! Who invited you
anyway?" [Laughing]
22CR: VH1 Classic Presents: Metal Mania: Stripped
was released in February of this year. What was Great White's contribution to
the album? Jack: We gave them a live version of Save Your Love,
which was done acoustically at the Palms hotel in Las Vegas. We were doing a video
shoot for a DVD. So we let them have that track. It's a really, really cool version
of the song. I've always liked the song acoustically.
22CR: You have
two solo albums out, Shelter Me and For You. What are the albums
like, are they anything like Great White?
Jack: Shelter Me is
more reminiscent of Great White. It's very eclectic. It's got some really heavy
stuff and some really beautiful ballads. There's actually a version of Save
Your Love on that record which is the way I've always wanted to record it
but the producers didn't want to record it like that. It was just with an acoustic
guitar and a string ensemble. That's the way I envisioned it when I wrote the
song. For You is very much adult contemporary it's more or less an album
of love songs ballads and stuff like that. More like, I'd say Sting meets Phil
Collins kinda' stuff. Just stretching out a little bit. Doing something I want
to do a little bit differently. There are some amazing musicians on there, Vinny
Caluta played drums. He was like the number one drummer in the world! He's just
incredible! Tony Levin played bass and this guy played with John Lennon! I was
like "Dude! Just stop recording for us! Just tell me some John Lennon stories!"
[Laughing].
22CR:
Your first solo album was only released in Japan? Why?
Jack: The label that I had in the states was Imago and they had just released
a Let It Rock album with Great White and I saw what a lousy job they
did with it and I begged them, "Please don't release this record". I eventually
want to release it again in the states myself. I've just been waiting for the
right time. I think the record, musically is still viable, it doesn't sound
like, "Oh that was 1996" or what ever. I think it sounds contemporary as far
as what I wanted the record to sound like.
22CR: How was it received by the Japanese?
Jack: They loved it! Everybody loves this album, which
is really frustrating to me because I would really love to have it out. There's
just so much crap going on right now. My main focus is to just be touring right
now. We still have the civil suits coming up on the fire, which is not a big deal,
but it's just a pain in the butt you know. You almost don't want to be successful.
22CR: Mark Kendall also has a new solo album out, 2.0. What is his solo
effort like? Jack: It's very bluesy. It's really bluesy. It's a bit different
than Great White. I really like it. It's a great record. It's his first attempt
at really going out and doing it on the vocals, you know. He did surprisingly
well as far as I was concerned for not being a lead vocalist He sings a hell of
a lot better than I play guitar! [Laughing] It's a good record. I'd recommend
it. Definitely!
22CR: Do you incorporate any of your solo material into
the Great White shows? Jack: Yes, we do actually. We do. Mark has a song
and I do one of my songs off For You, yeah.
22CR: In 1999 you
released Great Zeppelin, a tribute to Led Zeppelin. It's rare to see a
band do a cover album like that, why did you do a cover album?
Jack:
We did this just for ourselves, honestly. People kept bugging us for years because
they heard us do a couple Zeppelin songs over the years and they went, "God you
guys did it so well, just do a whole show!" I went, "Well you know what? That would
be a lot of fun!" It was coming around Christmas time and it's like, you know guys
let's just go do two or three shows in L.A. just for fun. We decided to record
it for ourselves so we'd have it so as we got older we could go "Hey let's check
out that show we played." We recorded it and I didn't think about it for a couple
years and we were in the studio one day, I came across the tapes and
said, "You know what? Lets listen to these things." Then we put them back and we
mixed them down and it was like God this is actually pretty good. So we decided
to go ahead and release it. It became this underground thing and people just responded
really well to it. It's a fun record for me. I love to listen to it.
22CR:
What are a few of your favorite songs on that album? Jack: I like Ramble
On, No Quarter, Stairway To Heaven, The Rover, Tangerine
and In The Light. The whole album just came out really, really well. It
was so much fun because these guys were such a huge inspiration to me. It was
kinda' like when we were playing those shows you could almost feel what it must
have been like to be those guys. It's like Cool Man!!! It's like being Robert
Plant in 1977 just going, God I'm like the biggest thing in the whole world! It
must have been amazing! Just singing those songs, going "God we wrote these songs!"
How cool! It was a lot of fun. I really enjoyed it.
22CR: Are you currently
writing any new songs? Jack: We have some stuff in the can. I'm not
right at the moment writing. I'm the kind of guy that doesn't do his homework
until the night before. So once they tell me we are starting to record on this
date I'll give myself a month and I'll start writing the songs. I work better
under pressure like that. If I have all the time in the world, I'll take it. I'm
great at procrastinating.
22CR: So no plans for a new Great White album?
Jack: We're thinking about getting into the studio at the end of the
year. After the touring is over. Getting into the studio at the end of the year
and whip up something new. I think its time. It's been a long, long time since
we had a new album out. We haven't released a new album since '99. That's the
longest we've ever gone without making a record.
22CR: Are there any
plans for another solo album?
Jack: You know what? Yeah! I always think
that's going to be in the works. There are just so many balls in the air right
now. It's like ok when do I do this? When do I do that? When do I have time
to spend with my family? I just have to wait and see where each
one lands. For me, things always kinda' happen at the right time they
just kinda' say, "Look you're supposed to do me right now." So, yeah, ok, I'll
record you right now. I let things land where they're supposed too. I don't try
to force life anymore.
22CR: What can we expect from a Great
White show?
Jack: [Laughing] Folk music! Just a great time. Great White
is very much a people's band you know. We like to get the audience involved in
the show. I don't want people to feel like they're watching me. I want them to
feel like they're part of the show. That's important to me. It always felt
weird when people are looking up at you. I don't feel like I'm bigger than anybody
else. I just want to have this experience with them.
22CR:
Your tour ends September 10th in Texas. What will Great White be doing after the
tour ends?
Jack: I'm taking a break. I'm going down to Cancun for ten
days. Yeah, I have to go to the Caribbean somewhere. Get some sun and
recharge my batteries.
22CR: Your bio states you like fishing, scuba
diving and shark fishing. Shark fishing! What kind of sharks do you fish?
Jack: [Laughing] I like fishing more than I like breathing! That's funny because
a friend of mine came over yesterday and wants me to get into this fishing show
with him and we used to go shark fishing all the time. We'd both take our boats
out and fish close together. So he wants to do this fishing show so we're trying
to get that together, that'll be fun.
22CR:
Have you ever caught a Great White?
Jack: I've hooked a Great White before, it was about 16 feet long. At that
time there was a moratorium on them anyway so if you hook em' you don't
want to bring em' in. You want to release it anyway. You don't want to kill
the fish.
22CR: Sixteen feet is small for a Great White isn't
it?
Jack: It's a big fish! I mean, you're in a 31-foot boat and this
thing's about 2000 lbs of fish! It's a fun little fish! The biggest one I've seen
is 20 feet, that's the biggest I've ever seen. That was on a friend of mine's
boat off San Clemente Island. This fish was actually out of the water pushing
on the transom with his nose and my friend had a stick trying to hit it in the
head it was just toying with the boat! It wasn't trying to eat it or anything
else! It was just playing around like it was this big ball in the water. It was
amazing!
22CR: Thank you for taking the time to speak with 22nd Century
today. Jack: Thank you so much. I really appreciate it. Have a good one.
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