Title: 1992 St. Louis Interview Post by: walktall2010 on January 27, 2012, 12:15:59 am Renaissance Rocker
The world's a canvas for John Mellencamp, who paints pictures with words and brush By Paul A. Harris, St. Louis Post-Dispatch June 22, 1992 FOR TWO DECADES, John Mellencamp has pursued the contours of the American emotional landscape via the rock 'n' roll song. Lately, this pursuit has spread from the recording studio to the more intimate confines of his art studio. Mellencamp, who will appear Wednesday at Riverport Amphitheatre, continues to tour and record. But he has been increasingly channeling his creative energy through a paintbrush. ''As a matter of fact, I'm doing a painting right now for Playboy,'' Mellencamp said in a recent phone interview. ''That's what I was doing this morning. It's an illustration for one of their stories. ''I don't know if it's because I'm unhappy with the music business, but I just enjoy painting right now. One reason is because I get to be by myself. I've been in bands since I was 12 years old. I've been around guys in bands, with tattoos and motorcycle jackets, my entire life. So being able to stand in front of an easel - just that, to me, is really enjoyable.'' Mellencamp took up painting as a pastime in 1988. Soon after that, he began formal study with portrait artist Jan Royce in Bloomington, Ind., where he lives, and with David Leffel at the Art Students League in New York. ''When I first started painting, I got really excited,'' Mellencamp recalled. ''It was like finding rock 'n' roll for the first time. ''When a kid today finds out about rock 'n' roll, I would imagine he'd want to go back and chase the origins of the music. He'd find out about people like Robert Johnson, for example. So when a kid finds Robert Johnson, at least in my mind, he'd have to be excited as hell. ''To me, it was the same with painting. I got introduced to painting through impressionism, which is sweet but not very real. Then, when I started really diving into the art itself, it was like, 'Man, there's been a lot of great painters-' '' Having absorbed his fill of impressionism, Mellencamp turned his attention to the American social realists and to a painter utterly familiar to visitors to the St. Louis Art Museum - German expressionist Max Beckmann. ''When I found Beckmann's work, I thought, 'This is it for me,' '' Mellencamp said. ''He was the Bob Dylan of painting for me. ''When Hitler threw all of the expressionist paintings out of the German museums because those paintings didn't express the way he thought German life should be viewed, Max Beckmann's paintings were the first ones thrown out.'' Beckmann came to America in 1947 and eventually settled in St. Louis, where he taught for a time at Washington University. Morton D. May, chairman and president of May Department Stores, accumulated the most comprehensive collection of Beckmann paintings in the world and bequeathed it to the permanent collection of the St. Louis Art Museum. In Beckmann's work, Mellencamp discovered the same qualities of anguish and desolation that the singer frequently wove into his songs. The flat emotional effect and the lurid qualities of light and texture that one encounters in Beckmann's work are also present in Mellencamp's paintings. ''I think the human condition is the most interesting thing,'' Mellencamp said. ''It's kind of like the best songs I've ever written - like 'Jackie Brown' or 'Big Daddy.' To me, they reflect what Beckmann's paintings are reflecting - the same inner upheaval of one's emotions.'' This emotional texture also is evident in ''Falling From Grace,'' the movie that Mellencamp directed and in which he appears with Mariel Hemingway, Claude Akins and Kay Lenz. ''Falling From Grace,'' which has a screenplay by novelist and screenwriter Larry McMurty, focuses on a fictional country singer who returns to unresolved relationships and family conflicts in his small Indiana hometown. Although the critics generally received ''Falling From Grace'' warmly, the film had only a brief run in the movie houses. Mellencamp blames a lack of advertising from the film company (Columbia) and American moviegoers' indifference to small-scale movies with complex, introspective themes. ''I thought 'Falling From Grace' was a good little movie,'' Mellencamp said. ''That was a nice little folk song that Larry McMurtry wrote and that we turned into a movie. ''But the fact of the matter is, it wasn't a racehorse. It wasn't something that could come out of the chute real strong and finish real quick, and make millions for the comapny. You know, movie companies aren't interested in making a couple million bucks. It's got to be 'Terminator 3' or they're just not interested. ''It was a nice little story, but it wasn't a big, zillion-dollar box- office hit. Ten years ago - 20 years, maybe - people found those little movies interesting. They just don't anymore.'' Mellencamp expresses absolutely no desire to repeat his film experience, either as a director or as an actor. ''I really resent anybody asking me, 'How's your film career going?' '' he said. ''I ain't got no film career. That's obvious. ''I'm not really an actor. Nor do I want to be. I don't even know that I think that much of the profession, to be honest with you. ''Musicians are a lot more sane than actors are. I mean, can you imagine a guy wanting to be an actor? Think about it: You're going to put on these clothes, you're going to put makeup on your face, you're going to act like you're sad or you're happy . . . It's a weird thing for a guy to do. ''I've never been camera shy - I've had my picture taken so much. But I just felt kind of silly at times.'' Mellencamp's disenchantment with the commercialism of the film industry extends to the music business. ''Whenever We Wanted,'' his latest album with the exception of the soundtrack for ''Falling From Grace,'' came out in 1991 and was his 11th recording. He says the current music business is not the same industry that gave him his start as a recording artist in the early 1970s. ''The music business is really a sickening place to be right now,'' said Mellencamp. ''Inside the business, nobody cares about anything except how many records did they sell. That's all that's important. In 1992, that is the bottom line. ''Nobody signs acts with the idea of longevity. Today, I'd hate to be John Mellencamp at 22 years old, which is when I started making records. I'd hate to be trying to get a record deal now. Doing what I do, you wouldn't get a record deal.'' Mellencamp says he still finds fulfillment in making an album. What he dislikes is the commercialism that follows. ''I love making records,'' he said. ''But boy, once that's over, it becomes an ----kickin'. It becomes like when you were a kid and your dad took you out in the back yard and spanked you. ''You've got to turn it over to other people. And then, what they do with it, and worse, what people write about it . . . All of the commercialism - it's just silly. ''I'd like to find a role model, but I can't. Who am I supposed to look up to? I don't get it. Doesn't it drive you nuts? Don't you ever get sick of going to concerts and seeing Budweiser signs hanging everywhere? God, it's sickening.'' Mellencamp won't make tour-promotion deals with corporate sponsors. But he won't condemn his contemporaries for doing so, in light of the wholesale corporate sponsorship that currently pervades popular music. Most of all, he tries to keep the musical aspects of his career in perspective. ''I'm just going to do what I always do. I'm a blue shirt, a pair of bluejeans. I've never been a pop singer. I've never had no weird hair to get my songs over. I've never been that way. I'm going to do what I do, and if it falls out of fashion, then it falls out of fashion.'' Title: Re: 1992 St. Louis Interview Post by: PeterJackman on November 05, 2012, 04:27:30 am So what you were interested in apart from racing purposes?
Title: Re: 1992 St. Louis Interview Post by: Maradona10 on November 06, 2012, 04:29:07 pm I really enjoy all the old articles.
I have a James Brown Reader book edited by Alan Leeds (the guy that does all the liner notes for JB releases and was once JB's road manager) that compiles some really great articles on JB from throughout the years; there's Racing in the Street: A Bruce Springsteen Reader by June Skinner Sawyers which as cool. I wonder if a collection of classic Mellencamp articles would be a viable commercial proposition? It'd be a better read than Born in a Small Town which, for me, was somewhat poorly researched. |