

I mean, I have so many different ways of approaching a song, even Bowie I'm compared to. People compare me to Robert Plant, they compare me to Geddy Lee from Rush. Well, Henry, I'd be a liar if I told you no, I mean, I did 35 years on the road, Henry, singing cover tunes, you know what I mean? So there's gonna be something that brushes off. What music was important to you around the time of recording Gang War? This should come out properly, not piecemeal, like where someone could download a track that I had played, where some of the thunder gets stolen. The songs are actually really good, and I remember when you sent it to me months ago, I said, wow, I really want to play this on the radio, and you said, go ahead, and I said, you know what, we shouldn't. So I think Gang War should've reached the right audience, and if people are aware of what's going on, and what's going on in their own lives, I'm sure they'll appreciate it, I'm sure they'll make the connection. So many different little divisions of eclectic taste, that everybody seems to be in a different bag, and there's a lot of crossover things going on.

JUDE: Well, you know, everybody's talking about counter culture, and that doesn't make any sense to me, I can't equate that.

HENRY ROLLINS: Do you think Gang War, as far as people being open minded to something eclectic, something different, do you think we're in a better place now than we were in the early 80s?įREDERICK MICHAEL ST.
