Courtesy of
Tony Bennett
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A FIRESIDE
CHAT WITH TONY BENNETT
Tony Bennett hails from a period in Americana where style loomed larger
than sustenance and men were less than men without a martini or scotch
in one hand and a cigar or cigarette burning from the other. Those were
the days. And although Tony was never a member of the "Rat Pack,"
he still had that swagger. At seventy-five, Tony's longevity is a tribute
to his rigorous work ethic and his sheer will to perform for the world.
At long last, he has earned his place in popular music history and has
stepped out of Frank Sinatra's shadow to become the sole living standard
bearer for the American songbook. I spoke with Tony not long after two
hijacked planes brought down the twin towers of New York's World Trade
Center. I committed to doing this interview long before September 11 and
it was my honor to interview a man whom I had admired for such a length
of time. In almost six months, it is the only interview I have done and
hopefully, I have done justice to an icon in American music, as always,
told unedited and in his own words.
FRED JUNG: Your thoughts on what has simply become known throughout the
world as 9-11.
TONY
BENNETT: Well, in New York City, I notice on all the news and newspapers
and television that they bombed New York or they bombed America. America
at War, New York City was bombed and because I travel as an entertainer
all over the world, I sing everywhere from Malaysia to Singapore to Shanghai
and then over to Europe and all of Canada and all of South America and
Australia and New Zealand, the tragedy is that they bombed the world.
They didn't bomb, and I'm not saying this to anger anybody, I just wanted
to explain how I feel about the insanity of what happened because no matter
where I travel in the world, the reason I live in New York is that everybody
that I've ever met throughout the world lives in New York, every nationality,
every religion, every type of person in the world. In the World Trade
Center, Islamic American citizens were in that building also, so they
bombed themselves. I just, it's the only way that I can explain it is
that they bombed the world. They didn't bomb New York.
FJ: Having not an ounce of musical talent to speak of, I have often wondered
when a person realizes that their gift, in your case, your voice was a
cut above and that it was not only possible, but almost an obligation
to make it your life's work.
TONY
BENNETT: I like the latter part of what you just said, Fred, that I like
this and I'd like to make it my life's work. I've always had the great
gift of knowing from as far back as I can remember and due to my upbringing
with my mom during the Depression and my brother and sister, somehow we
were gifted with a lot of optimism. My parents always gave us a lot of
optimism even though it was in the Depression and I've always known that
I wanted to sing and paint. It's not that I wanted to, I said I have to
and I still feel the same way. I'm seventy-five now and I still feel the
same way. I never stopped learning and I never stopped being interested
in what I'm doing.
FJ:
It has been well documented that you have given much of your time to greeting
and meeting with your fans. It is a quality in entertainers that has faded
with time. Why has it been a priority for you to be a man of the people?
TONY
BENNETT: Well, I've learned that from the fellow who started me out, was
Bob Hope and he was that way and I never knew any other way. They are
the people that made you and I think it's completely incorrect to just
feel that you should, let's get rid of these squares and get out of here.
I don't like that philosophy at all. I was very impressed with three people,
Stan Laurel who had retired and when I lived in Los Angeles for a while
the tour buses would go by his place and everybody would be terribly excited
about that. They would stop and get excited by Stan Laurel's house. He
would not only, they would knock on his door and ask for an autograph
and he would invite them in and give them a cup of tea. If somebody wrote
him a letter, a fan letter by hand he would write a fan letter back to
them in appreciation for them liking him. And then Louis Armstrong, when
I did the Satchmo documentary on his life, I mentioned to the producer
that I was impressed at the Waldorf Astoria when a husband and wife that
wanted a picture with him and he said to the camera girl backstage, he
said, "Make sure I get a copy also." He said to make two copies
and when I told the producer about that, he said, "You're right.
We found two hundred thousand photographs of people we never knew and
never had seen before." And his attitude was if they wanted a picture
of him, he wanted a picture of them. Ella Fitzgerald was that way also.
FJ:
Is Tony Bennett a jazz singer?
TONY
BENNETT: I just feel I am a singer. I want to feel free to sing anything
I want to sing. I'm amazed at jazz, Fred. I think it's the greatest art
form of music that has ever been invented.
FJ: I ask because throughout your storied career, you have been a strong
proponent of jazz music as being a cultural spine for America.
TONY
BENNETT: It is, Fred. We have two traditions. We have baseball and jazz.
Those are the only two traditions that are American. When I go to other
countries, if I go to England, they show me their theater. If I go to
Italy, they show me their music and art. If I go to France, they show
me their cooking and painting. Each country, whether it's China, wherever
it is, the first thing they do is they say this is what we've contributed
to the world and we're such a young country, we don't even know how good
we are because it's our only tradition. I mean that should be on, jazz
should be in the top forty charts instead of like on the back of the bus.
It's still on the back of the bus. It's a fiasco. It's the most important
thing that we could ever sell anybody and it's hailed all over the world
because they realize it. It's very similar to some of the things they
have created like Haiku poetry in Japan and improvisation was in western
music, just little smittens of it even there and this long extended jazz
that was invented in New Orleans is just fantastic. It's a great art to
perform and a great art to enjoy listening to and observing these great
players.
FJ:
Who are some of your favorites?
TONY
BENNETT: Well, I love Bill Evans and Charlie Parker. I like almost everybody
in jazz, the good jazz players you know the Coleman Hawkins and Lester
Young. I like all of them.
FJ: You worked with Bill Evans.
TONY
BENNETT: Yeah, that's right. I loved Bill. Bill was a genius. I had the
pleasure of performing with him. It was unbelievable.
FJ: The striking ease that Evans had at the piano was a complement to
your own lyrical style.
TONY
BENNETT: Pretty much, yes, but believe me, Fred, it's those resolvants
that he makes and how he approaches the music that made it sound so beautiful.
He had great classical training and he really knew what he was doing,
Fred. The guy was a genius. That's a loose word these days but I'm talking
about authentic genius.
FJ: This was long after your stint with Count Basie during one of the
deepest racial divides in American history.
TONY
BENNETT: I was the first white singer to sing with an African-American
band. That was the first time anybody ever did that and it was a great
experience. I worked all over with Basie, all over England, Europe and
then the United States. We played a lot together.
FJ: What stands out about the man who remains one of the most formidable
bandleaders in jazz?
TONY
BENNETT: Well, that was it. He was just so simple and magnificent. The
band was so fantastic. You could get to Minneapolis and all of a sudden,
it would become like New York City. For that night it was like New York
City. That's thrilling for everybody, no matter if they want a rock show,
the band would play at a rock show and pull all the rock and rollers out
in the aisle. They couldn't believe what they were listening to.
FJ: With the remarkable span career and the proven timelessness of your
music, is there anything left?
TONY
BENNETT: Well, that's a wonderful question, Fred, because I always feel
like I'm starting out. That's where my psyche is. That's where I'm at.
I paint everyday. I study music everyday and that's my life and I keep
growing. I keep learning. The more I learn, the less I know, so I have
to even work harder each day and it keeps me very, very much alive. Usually
guys my age, everybody says, "Gosh, what are you still, aren't you
going to retire?" Well, it's not a nine to five job. You wake up
in the morning and I have so many ideas that I tend to say how can I get
it all in. So I'm always perpetually busy and I love it. It keeps me very
much alive, very much awake about things.
FJ:
What have you found is the most cathartic thing about painting an empty
canvas?
TONY
BENNETT: Well, what happens to me is that it makes me fall in love with
life because I paint representatively and I study nature. By that I mean
people and all forms of nature, landscape and portraits. The more I study
it, the more I study the light on things and the whole craft of the various
techniques to have something really happen in a painting. I fall in love
with being alive. I love watching people, watching trees. I love the four
seasons. I love everything. No matter what the weather is, I find something
interesting to paint.
FJ:
By painting what have you learned about nature and of man?
TONY
BENNETT: Well, I can only quote, not me. I'm not a genius at it like Leonardo
da Vinci, but Leonardo, all of the inventions that he ever made, which
was unbelievable. He made the airplane. He made the helicopter. He made
the tank. He made all these various inventions and he actually invented
the submarine. Everything came from painting. That's what happens when
you observe and take in what you see. Your teacher is nature and when
you paint from nature, it never lets you down. You find something that
you never realized that you knew before. It's the best teacher in the
world.
FJ:
Your new studio recording, Playing with My Friends, is due to hit record
stores in a few days. Undoubtedly, there will be comparisons to Sinatra's
Duets. What prompted you want to do a various duets recording?
TONY
BENNETT: Well, what drew me, Fred, is, first of all, just the premise
of singing blues. You know as much as I've always loved it and the first
record I ever made was blues and I'm a natural at that. I'm not saying
that braggedly. I just love it. I just love to be in that mode. But what
happened with these artists, because in the past I've had this great experience
cause I've been singing fifty years of singing with Carol Bailey and Bob
Hope and Frank Sinatra and Nat Cole and Lena Horn and all these great,
very honed, great performers and done duets with them and all these new
people that Phil Ramone and my son Dan got a hold of. I was thrilled that
they wanted to perform with me and it was all live and meeting each one.
They all hit homeruns as far as I'm concerned. Each record sounds so different
from the next records. There is something different on every side. There's
Stevie Wonder and Billy Joel and Natalie Cole and Diana Krall and Bonnie
Raitt and Kay Starr. Each one of them just knocked me right out. The way
they carried on and B.B. King, Ray Charles, each one is a knock out for
me. I loved doing the album.
FJ:
And you are actually been touring with k.d. lang, who also makes an appearance
which makes for old times.
TONY
BENNETT: Yeah, actually we are doing two more concerts. We did a whole
tour already and we are doing this next Friday and Saturday. I'll be at
Radio City Music Hall, two sold out performances because everybody's concerned
about the amount of business that people may not be going out, but believe
me it's two jammed packed houses of six thousand people a night and then
we play one more concert up at the Concord Pavilion, outside of San Francisco
and that's when we close the tour. The people just love k.d. and we do
duets together and so it's a smash hit with the public and the reviewers.
FJ: Through
the years, in interviews conducted in your home or on the road, I have
never seen you in jeans or a shirt without a collar. You are a bastion
of style even in today's ever-changing fashion world. Do you even own
a pair of jeans?
TONY
BENNETT: No. I was warned by my first accompanist, Chuck Wayne, a great
guitar player and this was in the Fifties, that's how far ahead of time
he was. He said, "Make sure they don't put a ring in your nose, like
cattle and go with what everybody's doing." He said, "Stay an
individual." I grew up in an era of individualism and it's humorous
to me and tragic at the same time that everyone thinks they have to look
alike and dress alike and I mean what is it a club like the Knights of
Columbus or something? I don't get it (laughing). We are all really individuals,
whether we like it or not, and the more we get to respect ourselves, we
are all so much more wonderful when we are all different from one another,
instead of all just the same. It's different now because I wear a tie.
I walk in a room and I'm completely different than anybody in the room.
FJ:
You're a trendsetter.
TONY
BENNETT: Yeah, I have a tie. I'm the one with the tie on (laughing).
FJ: How much of an emphasis to you place in giving back to the community?
TONY
BENNETT: You've got to do that. I mean look, what a dream. I started out
during the depression in a little blue collar town called Astoria, which
is right outside of New York City and all the workers of the city, everybody,
the teachers, secretaries, stage hands, they all live in Astoria. I've
just acquired seventy million dollars from New York City to build a school
of performing arts, the Frank Sinatra School of Performing Arts and we
have you know Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward, Carol Burnett, Harry Belafonte,
Wynton Marsalis and Eli Wallach, Anne Jackson, we have all these wonderful
artists that contribute, that are going to be advisors to the school and
that's what performers are really for, just to lift everyone's spirit
up and participate in helping everybody. It's a public school, but students
have to audition to get in, but we are going to show them how to really
perform well so whey they go out, they know what they are talking about.
FJ: You've said in a previous interview that you're only as good as your
next performance.
TONY
BENNETT: Yeah, the last one's gone. It's the next one that counts.
FJ: And when this journey comes to a close, what would you like your legacy
to be?
TONY
BENNETT: Well, Fred, I am going to quote Basie on that one. They asked
him the same question and I kind of believe his philosophy. He said, "All
I wanted to be is known as a nice guy."
FJ: Then you should rest your heart as ease.
TONY
BENNETT: Thank you, Fred.
Fred Jung is the Editor-In-Chief and is in the new time slot after Friends.
Comments? Email Him
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