The second part of my 1973 Jack
Bruce interview in which the great bassist assesses the legacy of Cream and
regrets that Lifetime wasn’t given more of a chance to develop.
Much of Jack’s recorded material, whether
it be Cream material or solo stuff, has been re-packaged recently and like most
artists he’s not too keen on the idea, although he seems resigned to the
situation.
“When
you sign a record contract, all the material you do, once it’s on tape, becomes
the property of the record company and they can do what they like with it. I
haven’t been asked about this record [The
Best Of Jack Bruce] at all, or invited to select the material. Somebody
just handed me a record and there it was.
“Also
I don’t feel I have stopped creating, so you can’t say that what is on a record
is ‘the best’ of Jack Bruce. I think the best is still to come, or at least I
hope so. It was the same with the Cream. I thought the last Cream album was a
good record, but then there was Live Cream which was fair enough because
we had actually recorded those tracks for a live album, and thrown out a lot
more. Now these have turned up again and obviously they are the second best
otherwise we’d have released them at the time. There are different versions of
the same songs but they are second best versions. I would never buy them.”
The
stretch of water that separates Jack from the other two thirds of W, B & L
helps the group, he maintains. They’re pleased to see one another after a spell
off the road and it gives them a fresher outlook on the music. “Up until the
end of this European tour we have been working very hard but that’s probably
not apparent to people in Britain because it was mostly work in America.
“We’ve
been more or less on the road all the time or recording. I never have enjoyed
being on the road, but it’s something you have to put up with. Obviously you
enjoy the couple of hours when you are on stage because that is what the whole
day is about, but the rest of it is a drag. I’m getting very paranoid about
flying because I’ve had a couple of nasty incidents.”
The
writing in the group, says Jack, is shared around. “Leslie is the lick man and
I do the harmonics and arranging and Corky does a lot of the lyrics, although
some of them are written by Pete Brown and myself. I Like Pete’s influence to
be in there because he is a very important guy. It’s nice to have that
influence carried on from the Cream because he did a lot of the lyrics in those
days. There’s a distinct evolution going on there.
“The
Cream never set out with the idea of being a success. We jut set out to make
music and it happened that we were a success. The strange thing about the
Cream, as far as England was concerned, was that we weren’t a success until the
last concert at the Albert Hall. In America we were a success from the second
time we went there. I don’t think the Cream ever filled a concert hall in
Britain until that Albert Hall show.
“It
was a pity because probably the group would have stayed together if it had been
more encouraged by the fans. It was an uphill struggle for us. I suppose there
are some old Cream fans who come to see me now, but I think it’s more a new
audience which is tremendous. We are playing to a much younger audience of
school age kids, and some people I have talked to didn’t even know I was in the
Cream.
“Cream
is a name they have heard of somewhere in the dim past. I saw the Albert Hall
film on television the other night and it was the first time I’d seen it. It
struck me then that the Cream really was a very, very good group. I did go
through a time thinking it wasn’t as good as people thought it was, but I’ve
had a re-listen to it recently and now I think it was a better group than any
of us in the group thought at the time. If we had really known how good,
potentially, that we were, I am sure we would have given it more of a chance to
develop.
“I
think the best things we did, apart from the improvised solos, were on the last
record with songs like ‘Badge’ and so on. We were really getting into a nice
sort of bag, but we didn’t continue. In another way that’s a good thing too,
but it was a shame that the things Eric and Ginger, and to a lesser extent
myself, didn’t get the recognition that they should have. I even think Blind
Faith was a tremendous group, but everybody slated it at the time. To my mind
they were the best group around at the time.
“I
thought the things that Eric did later were tremendous as well, and should have
been accepted for what they were. Ginger’s Airforce was a unique attempt to do
something different but people put it down. I’ve found that with everything I’ve
done since the Cream, people have put down before they’ve heard it because in
their minds they think it couldn’t possibly be as good as the Cream.
“In
fact, everything I’ve done since the Cream has been a step forward, both
Lifetime and this group.”
Jack
was overjoyed when the results of the MM jazz poll were shown to him. He
came second in the British and world male singer categories, fifth in the
British bass section and the Escalator Over The Hill album, with which
he was heavily involved, was voted the LP of the year in the world section.
“I’d
like to say thank-you to everybody who voted in the poll. It was really a
knockout. I’m sure Carla Bley will be really pleased. I never was regarded as a
jazz musician when I was playing jazz but now I am which is strange.
“When
I hung out with Tony Williams a lot in New York, I found a lot of the old jazz
musicians put him down for being commercial, but all he was doing was a
progressive step forward. In their mind anything that used electric instruments
was commercial and I was regarded as a rock and roll bass player. Now we’ve got
Miles Davis doing the same thing. I’d like to get together with Tony, John and
Larry Young again now.
“I
can’t help feeling that a lot of the people who put down Lifetime are the same
people who are giving the Mahavishnu Orchestra rave reviews. I was really hurt
at some of the reviews we had with that band because it was so difficult
getting them over here. I felt we were doing something that reviewers would be
knocked out with, but some of the reviews were a real drag. We thought we were
hammering out heads against a brick wall. I can’t help feeling that if Lifetime
was around now...”
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