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Peter Wolf: From J. Geils Band To 'Midnight Souvenirs.'

Wolf was the lead singer of the J. Geils Band, which led many to assume he was J. Geils. He explains how the band — with hits such as "Centerfold," "Freeze Frame" and "Love Stinks" — actually got its name and discusses his new country-influenced solo album, Midnight Souvenirs.

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Peter Wolf: From J. Geils Band To 'Midnight Souvenirs'

TERRY GROSS, host:

This is FRESH AIR. I'm Terry Gross, back from vacation. Thanks to Dave Davies
for hosting while I was gone.

My guest today is Peter Wolf, who has just released his seventh solo album.
From the late '60s to 1983, Wolf was the front man of the J. Geils Band, and
his electrifying performances led many people to assume he was J. Geils. The
band had the hits "Centerfold," "Freeze Frame" and "Love Stinks."

Before he was in a hit band, Peter Wolf was one of the first DJs on WBCN radio
in Boston when it started its progressive rock format. He hosted a show called
"The All-Night House Party." When he was in his teens, he got to meet and
befriend some of the blues musicians who were his heroes, like Muddy Waters and
John Lee Hooker.

Wolf's new album, "Midnight Souvenirs," reflects his love of country music.
Let's hear a track on which Wolf sings a duet with Merle Haggard.

(Soundbite of song, "Too Late for Me")

Mr. PETER WOLF (Musician): (Singing) The lovers two by two along the avenue are
such a beautiful sight to see. But as they pass me by, it makes me want to cry
'cause I know it's too late for me.

Mr. MERLE HAGGARD (Musician): It seems so long ago when someone loved me so,
and we were both, both so young and so free. I thought I still could see how
good life used to be, and I know that it's too late for me. The days go by. The
days go by...

GROSS: Peter Wolf, welcome to FRESH AIR. Bravo, that is a great song and a
great track and a brilliant idea to get Merle Haggard to sing with you. Did you
write this song knowing that you'd be doing it as a duet with Merle Haggard?

Mr. WOLF: No, I wrote this song with a gentleman whose name is Will Jennings.
And Will is a very special friend of mine, and he's quite an accomplished
songwriter. And Will and I sat down, and this song came out. We were both in
that sort of time and place. And I stayed with it for a while. And I just
thought, you know, there's just something so classic and so simple, it reminded
me of the songs of that great honkytonk era, and there was a certain sadness
about it.

And there was a Lefty Frizzell quality. And Merle Haggard embodies much of
Lefty's work in many ways, and so Merle seemed to be a natural person to maybe
ask if he would choose to participate.

GROSS: You're so associated with the blues. When did you start listening to
country music?

Mr. WOLF: Well, that's a good question. When I was growing up in The Bronx, in
New York, I was addicted to radio. And in my little three-room apartment, which
looked very much like the apartment in "The Honeymooners" TV show with Jackie
Gleason...

(Soundbite of laughter)

GROSS: Yeah.

Mr. WOLF: And there was a little kitchen. It was my mother, father, sister,
myself, two cats and a parakeet and a dog. And radio provided me with a great
outlet, and I would learn so much about music through radio.

But on a certain day, on Thursdays and Fridays, you can get from WWVA, from
Wheeling, West Virginia, in The Bronx, you can get that radio station, and
there was a coffee-drinking DJ named Lee Moore. And he would play this
bluegrass and these guys called The Stanley Brothers, and they would sing
songs...

Mr. WOLF: (Singing) (Unintelligible).

Mr. WOLF: And, you know, I thought they were women or something. It just was
the strangest sound. And it was through that that got me into country music.
And also, it was in the era when radio had such a sort of smorgasbord, may I
say, of music. So you could have Buck Owens being played right next to a Motown
song right next to a Rolling Stones song or whatever. So it wasn't as
segregated musically as it sort of seems to be today.

GROSS: So I want to play another track from your new CD, "Midnight Souvenirs,"
and this is a duet you do with Shelby Lynne that's co-written with Angelo,
who's – Angelo the producer of Kings of Leon. And do you want to say anything
about writing this song before we hear it?

Mr. WOLF: Well, I knew Angelo up in Boston. He was in a band called Face to
Face, and he moved down to Nashville to do some writing. And we have been
friends for a long time, written a lot of songs. And one day, we were just
sitting with two acoustic guitars in his living room, and we just finished – we
finished the song. And the moment the song got finished, I thought it could be
a really interesting duet.

And I thought for a second, well, who – boom, Shelby Lynne. The name just
popped into my mind, and I'm such a fan of Shelby Lynne's. And she has a
recording out, people don't know about it, called "I Am Shelby Lynne," and she
has a new record coming out, too, as we speak. But "I Am Shelby Lynne is one of
those great masterpieces. And I remember the first time I heard it, I was
riding in a car, and actually had to pull over to the side of the road to
listen to it.

And strangely enough, I called up a friend of mine, who was in the music
business, an A&R person by the name of Sue Drew(ph), and I asked if she could
help me find Shelby Lynne. And it turned out - she said, Pete, I'm meeting with
Shelby in an hour. And so the whole thing came together pretty quickly. And as
I say, I thought it was destiny knocking. And Shelby and I got together, and
this is what you hear.

GROSS: Okay, so this is "Tragedy" from Peter Wolf's new CD "Midnight
Souvenirs."

(Soundbite of song, "Tragedy")

Mr. WOLF: (Singing) I think I won the fool's award today, the way I made my
baby cry. I can't believe the stupid things I say without one good reason why.
I know that life has got its ups and downs. I could take whatever comes around.
But if you ever take your love from me, now that would be the tragedy.

Ms. SHELBY LYNNE (Musician): (Singing) This game of love is (unintelligible). I
thought we'd never have to hide. And all this (unintelligible).

Mr. WOLF: (Singing) Now you can hit me with a wrecking ball, throw me down the
stairs and watch me fall, but if you ever take your love from me, now that
would be the tragedy. Love so serious it always (unintelligible).

Ms. LYNNE: (Singing) Did I get my goodbye kiss? Are you telling me this is the
end?

Mr. WOLF: (Singing) ...this is the end?

GROSS: That's "Tragedy," a duet with Peter Wolf and Shelby Lynne from Peter
Wolf's new CD "Midnight Souvenirs."

You've had such an interesting life. So I want to go back to the very
beginning. Now, if what I've read is true, your grandmother was in Yiddish
theater. Your father was a singer. So what kind of music were you exposed to
when you were a child at home?

Mr. WOLF: Oh, quite a lot. My dad also was in vaudeville. And when he was about
14, 15, he left and joined the Schubert Theater, and he was what they call a
chorus boy. And so, he was on a train traveling throughout the United States,
doing plays like "Merry Widow" and "The Student Prince." And he then wanted to
become an opera singer, joined The Met Choir, then eventually the Robert Shaw
Chorale.

And so music was around, but he was a very progressive gentleman. He loved all
different kinds of music. And when I first encountered Little Richard, I
remember him standing in the room and said man, that's wild. That's great. And
he had as much enjoyment hearing Little Richard as I did. And so through him, I
got to meet so many interesting people. I got to meet Maria Tallchief, the
great ballet dancer. And I was a young kid, and I remember sitting on her lap,
saying boy, you can really dance.

GROSS: Now, your older sister danced on the Alan Freed show, is that right?

Mr. WOLF: She was on the Alan Freed show, "The Big Beat" show, and you would go
down, and had some - you know, there were favorites. Like on the Dick Clark
show, there were certain people – like The Mouseketeers started having favorite
dancers and writing them fan letters.

I would follow her to the Alan Freed "Big Beat" shows, and I remember seeing on
one show Little Richard, Chuck Berry, Fats Domino, Jerry Lee Lewis. There was
Dickie Doo & the Don'ts, the Chantels. And it was just this tremendous
pageantry.

And that was my baptism into rock 'n' roll because when Little Richard came
out, he just tore up the stage, and each performer would do one or two numbers.
And then when Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers came out, that was it. I was just
gone for good.

GROSS: Now since she danced on the Alan Freed show, and you probably watched
and got to see all the dancers and learned the dances, did that help you when
you became a front man?

Mr. WOLF: Well, it did. But the thing that really, I think, affected me the
most as a performer and as a front person, I went to a place called the High
School of Music and Art, which was a specialized – it was a city school, but
you needed to take an academic exam to get in. And to this day, I don't know
how I got in because I was a terrible student.

And I was accepted as an art student, and the school was on 135th Street in
Harlem, Convent Avenue. And once a week religiously, I would go to the Apollo
Theater. And for three years, every week I went to the Apollo. And during that
time I saw all the great artists. I saw Dinah Washington. I saw Ray Charles. I
saw James Brown. I saw Dyke and the Blazers. I saw Jackie Wilson. I saw Joe
Tex. I saw Don Covay, and it just - the list went on, but the showman and the
pageantry and the actuality of here came these performers, like the church,
were performing for that congregation.

And there was – it was sort of one for the money, two for the show. And even
someone like Billy Stewart who's one of these fantastic singers, who is 320
pounds. He would come out, but by the time he got done, you just fell in love
with him. And the way they would tear up a stage, or Jackie Wilson would take
off his jacket and pretend he was going to throw it into the audience and just
drop it on the side of the stage. It just drove the women wild.

And you had Bobby Womack. I remember seeing Bobby up in Boston not too long
ago, and he was performing, and it was a great performance. And then Bobby said
man, the women out here look so beautiful. I want to kiss each and every one of
you. And he sat on the lip of the stage, and all the women lined up, and Bobby
kissed every woman in that audience. And that's what I call showmanship.

(Soundbite of laughter)

But also, Terry, if I may, you know, the dancing and the interaction with the
audience and communicating with the audience was the art that I learned there
at the Apollo Theater. It was very important. You didn't just come out and do a
song. You just came out, and it was your job to get the audience riled up. And
not unlike someone in church, where by the end of the performance, the audience
was up on their feet, the performer just gave it its all, and it was always 110
percent.

GROSS: My guest is singer and songwriter Peter Wolf. His new album is called
"Midnight Souvenirs." We'll talk more and hear more of his music after a break.

This is FRESH AIR.

(Soundbite of music)

GROSS: If you're just joining us, my guest is Peter Wolf, and he has a new CD
called "Midnight Souvenirs." Before being a solo artist, he was the front man
for the J. Geils Band.

You know, it's kind of interesting to me that through your father, you knew all
about vaudeville because he was in it, your grandmother in Yiddish theater. So
you had this kind of, like, old-school show business in your genes, you know,
just like that was air you breathe.

And then when you started getting involved in music, you were really interested
in blues and in early blues. And you became friends with some of the older
blues musicians as they – during the blues revival era, when they were touring
around the country, mostly probably the college circuit, college coffee houses
and clubs, and you got to meet Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf and John Lee
Hooker. It must have been amazing for you to do that. You must felt lucky to be
coming of age during a time when those performers were there.

Mr. WOLF: Oh, yeah. And the interesting thing is a lot of artists or performers
or musicians who were playing at that time got to meet Muddy and John Lee
because they were, we were all playing in sort of the same kind of venues.

But the interesting thing with me is there was this club in Boston called the
Club 47 and the Jazz Workshop, and I had an apartment that was not too far away
from these venues. And during the breaks, sometimes these artists would do one
or two shows. They'd be in a very small dressing room.

And I was waiting for Muddy Waters to arrive at this coffee house, and I sat
there from 3 o'clock in the afternoon. I just could not believe he was coming
to town. And finally, these two cars, this Cadillac car rolls up, and out comes
a station wagon behind it, and the door opens up, and out steps one of the most
handsome men I've ever seen. And there was an elegance in the same way you
would see with Duke Ellington. There was just something – there was just a
nobility with this man. He came out, and I walked up. And I said Mr. Waters,
hi. I'm, you know, such a fan, and is there any way I can help you?

And he thought I was with the club. So, he asked me if I can help him carry
some of the equipment in. And I did. And I was in the bathroom, and Otis Spann
was the piano player, and James Cotton was in the bathroom, unbeknownst – they
didn't realize then - I heard Otis Band say to James Cotton: This is a coffee
house. And James Cotton says, well, what does that mean? Well, they serve
coffee. And he goes, yeah? No whiskey or anything? He said no, man, they just
serve coffee. He said, well, what are we going to do? I don't know. Go get some
whiskey.

And I came out. I was underage. I was like 17 and a half. I said, well, I can
get you some whiskey. And he said yeah? I said yeah. And so I ran down the
street, and I went to a friend's house who was, you know, a little bit older.
It was Bob Siggins, was with the Charles River Valley Boys. He was a banjo
player.

I said Bob, can you do me a favor? Can you get me some whiskey and stuff? So we
went out, got a whiskey. I ran back, and I gave it to Otis and James. And that
began a kind of friendship. And then they realized I had an apartment. So they
said to Muddy: Hey Muddy, this young fellow has an apartment down the street.

And so every day – they were there for about 10 days - they would come and use
my apartment as a hang-in, and then James Cotton would cook up all sorts of
chicken, and it became a clubhouse. And then Muddy would tell Howlin' Wolf:
Hey, you know, there's this young guy has an apartment. So he would come by.
John Lee Hooker would come by, and all sorts of musicians would come by, and
they would just all hang.

And fortunately, I had a tape recorder, and I recorded a lot of the stories
that they were telling. But it was a way for them to relax because, really,
other than going to Europe, playing the college circuit was really new to them
because they were – it was just the chitlin circuit that they were on was sort
of dying out, and this was a whole new adventure for these great musicians.

GROSS: How long did you have this relationship?

Mr. WOLF: Oh, a very long time. There was – Marty Scorsese put out a series, a
blues series that was on video, but there was a gentleman by the name of Peter
Guralnick who put together a book from that series. And I personally think that
the book transcended the actual DVDs from the films. And there's a little story
in there that Pete encouraged me to write about my meeting Muddy, and this went
on for many years.

GROSS: One of these things you say about Muddy Waters, you described how he was
dressed, and you say Muddy was always impeccably dressed, elegant gray suit
with an off-color white shirt, perfectly knotted tie, manicured fingernails.

And I'm reading this, comparing it to how I figured you were dressing at the
time, which is probably like jeans, T-shirt. And so I guess, you know, seeing
the kind of, like, elegant dress and how important it was to Muddy Waters, what
impact did that have on you when you became a performer?

Mr. WOLF: Well, a big impact because, you see, I understood it because going to
the Apollo for all these years, dress was, it was so important. The idea of the
whole aspect of your stage clothes and the car that you had, it gave you a
credibility. And there was a sort of formal, classical sense of you didn't wear
regular clothes on stage. It would have been blasphemy. It just would've been
an insult to the audience.

You had to really put on the nines. You had to really spark up, and that was
part of your job as a musician. And if you see all the early big bands,
everybody was dressed up. You just – that was part of the requirement.

GROSS: Yes, but you came of age during the counter-culture when a lot of people
onstage were dressing in jeans and T-shirts.

Mr. WOLF: Yeah, but not me.

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. WOLF: If I wore jeans, they were black, and if I wore shoes, they were
pointy, and if I wore shirts, they had ruffles on it because I, too, was
affected by it. And the whole counter-culture, the whole Woodstock era, I was
sort of the odd man out with all of that. I was very much - being born in The
Bronx and growing up in The Bronx, there was a sort of rock tradition, and it
was pointy black boots, black jeans, black shirt, slicked-back hair and black
jacket, sometimes leather, sometimes not, and that stayed with me for quite a
long time.

GROSS: My guest, Peter Wolf, will be back in the second half of the show. His
new album is called "Midnight Souvenirs." I'm Terry Gross, and this is FRESH
AIR.

(Soundbite of music)

GROSS: This is FRESH AIR. I'm Terry Gross, back with singer and songwriter
Peter Wolf. He's just released his seventh solo album. It's called "Midnight
Souvenirs." From the late '60s to 1983, he was the front man of the J. Geils
Band. His music reflects his love of rhythm and blues, blues and country music.

I want to play something else from your new CD "Midnight Souvenirs." And, I
guess I have an odd reason for playing it here. This strikes me as a kind of
loving parody of a certain kind of rhythm and blues song from, I'd say, the
late '60s, early '70s. The song is called "Overnight Lows."

Mr. WOLF: Oh, oh yeah.

(Soundbite of laughter)

GROSS: And it just strikes me as you kind of paying tribute to a kind of song
that isn't really you, but that you really love.

Mr. WOLF: Well, yes. This is an homage to the great Philly Sound.

GROSS: Yeah, exactly. Yeah.

Mr. WOLF: That's what it's called: the Philly Sound. And Gamble and Huff and
Tom Bell and gentlemen who just, not unlike Motown, in a very short period of
time produced such great, great songs, great productions that had a certain
kind of charm, and the songs that start out were like, you know, hello. My name
is Steve. I'm an Aquarius - and these raps, and that would build into these
beautiful melodies, beautiful songs. And this was an homage to that - not a
parody, but just our - a way of showing the great love and trying to capture,
maybe in our own way, some of the charm.

GROSS: With irony.

Mr. WOLF: Yes.

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. WOLF: Lots of irony.

GROSS: And is that the only way you could do a song like this with the love rap
in the beginning is if you did in irony?

Mr. WOLF: Well, it's not the only way to do it, but many of those songs had
these kinds of raps, and it was just being something that - working with
somebody like Don Covay and people like that. And on stage, when I would
perform with the Guiles band, I would do these love raps with (unintelligible)
and, you know, love comes once, and when it comes you got to grab it fast.
Ain't no telling how long the love you grab is going to last. That's why, baby,
I'm knocking at your door and I'm saying baby, baby - and things. So that was
with things that I learned from the Apollo.

Those are the things that I learned from listening to a lot of the Philly
music, so it was something that we felt if we could do it with respect and
dignity and charm, let's try it. So that's what we attempted to accomplish.

GROSS: Okay, this is really fun. This is "Overnight Lows," and this is from
Peter Wolf's new CD, "Midnight Souvenirs."

(Soundbite of song, "Overnight Lows")

Mr. WOLF: (Rapping) You know some people are always running away from love.
Huh. I guess I've been doing that for a long, long, long, long time. And when I
first met you at Audrey's house, well, heh, you know, I didn't think much about
it. But then I realized you was looking at me and I was looking at you and you
were looking me, I was looking at you, and all of a sudden we were looking at
each other together. But baby, now I realize lovers can never say goodbye. So I
was a fool girl to let you walk away. I didn't care where I thought I'd find
somebody else. So I told you girl you go out and do your own thing. Now after a
while, I realize the mistakes I made.

You know, I can't take back the words I said and I can't undo the things I've
done. But tonight, you know, tonight I'm sitting here in the kitchen, right in
the dark, sitting all alone in my underwear with a cold baloney sandwich and a
confused, confused heart there, girl. And let me tell you something, oh,
listen: (Singing) call me. Oh, call me girl. Ooh, yeah. I'm so lonely.

Unidentified Group: (Singing) Overnight highs, overnight lows, poking around,
nowhere to go.

Mr. WOLF: (Singing) I got nowhere to go, girl.

Unidentified Group: (Singing) Overnight highs, overnight lows, all through the
town, end of the road. Yeah.

GROSS: That's "Overnight Lows" from Peter Wolf's new CD "Midnight Souvenirs."
And producing this must have been fun, too, you know, getting, like, the
strings and the backup singers.

Mr. WOLF: Oh, yeah. And as we produced it, we really - our respect for these
type of recordings from that era grew even stronger. And then there was like
hey, where's the sitar guitar? Who knows where we can get a sitar guitar? And
boy...

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. WOLF: ...you know, it's not as easy as you think. So, yes. This one was a
lot of fun.

GROSS: So when you had a band called the Hallucinations, and then...

Mr. WOLF: Oh yeah.

GROSS: ...and then it was J. Geils after that.

Mr. WOLF: Right.

GROSS: You know, you and J. Geils and had the J. Geils Band, which was
initially like more of a blues band. But when you started to perform with that
band, did you have to create a stage persona for yourself as the front man,
figure out like how you're going to put yourself together, what kind of
movement or dancing you were going to do on stage, you know, what the whole
personality of you would be?

Mr. WOLF: Well, the Hallucinations, the first band you mentioned, I was in art
school. I was - I spent - I really didn't quite graduate high school, so I
spent a good deal of time hitchhiking around the country pretending I was an
art student and just walking into a university. And someone told me about the
Boston Museum School of Fine Arts. And so I got there and brought in the
paintings and they told me it's like a $7 admission fee or something. And weeks
later, I ended up getting this scholarship and I was accepted to the school,
and that brought me to Boston.

And I was looking for a place to stay, and this gentleman comes up to me and
asked if I knew somebody who was looking for a place to stay. And I said yeah,
I am. And it turned out to be David Lynch, the filmmaker. And David and I lived
together in Boston for about a year. And he went off to start movies, and I
went off to join this band called the Hallucinations, who were made up of all
art students, and we were like a neo-punk band. We were so entrenched in this
music. We didn't really quite know how to play it so well. But we had 10-foot
guitar chords, and we would jump into the audience and just go totally wild,
which eventually happened years later at CBGB's, where many of the bands would
just - it was just total energy. And...

GROSS: Were you uninhibited from the start?

Mr. WOLF: Yes. I think if I gave it any thought, I would never do it. And I was
- really had a - I had a great - I almost had a nervous breakdown at one point,
because I was painting all my life and the music became - I was getting so
transfixed in it and I was painting less and less, and I knew I might have to
leave school. And the idea of being a musician, it frightened me because, you
know, was I crazy? Was this, like, just a silly dream? Was this just an
adolescent dream?

And there was a place called Mass Mental. It was a hospital, an actual mental
hospital where you hear people in cages screaming from the windows and stuff.
And I was so having such anxiety about leaving this great - because all my
life, I was painting. And I once walked into this place and said, I think I
need to be here.

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. WOLF: And the doctor said why? I said doc, I'm just really nervous. And he
said, well, what's it about? I said well, I want to do this music thing, but
I've been working so hard with the painting. And he said, well, Peter, you know
you can - why don't I suggest this: Take a year and you can always go back to
school, but you might not be able to pursue this dream with your friends if you
have this band. And give yourself a year, and if it doesn't work out, go back
to school. And if it works out, well, then, the question will be answered.

And it seemed such a simple solution that this great weight was lifted off of
me. And I remember walking out of there, and I felt, yeah. This is what I can
do. I could really dedicate my life to this for this next year. And that
happened, and I never looked back.

GROSS: As an art student, what you were for years, did you know that you could
sing?

Mr. WOLF: Oh, no. Terry, I consider myself music fan, and there are singers
that I respect. I don't put myself in that category. I am still learning about
singing, and I feel I'm just starting to get there. It just seems...

GROSS: But is this why you were so afraid to become a musician, because you
felt like you were a fan of music, but you really couldn't sing?

Mr. WOLF: Well, first of all, what helped - I was dyslexic, and the idea of
music, learning stuff became so hard. Where so many of my friends could, you
know, pick up a song real quickly, and for me to have to learn the song, I
almost had to go through three different processes in my brain to somehow, in
this dyslexic way, to get the song.

GROSS: Even if you were singing it or if it was just the melody, or are you
talking about playing an instrument?

Mr. WOLF: All of it.

GROSS: All of it.

Mr. WOLF: I mean, the melodies, everything. It comes to me very - it's not an
easy thing. It's very, very hard. I have to do a tremendous amount of work
before I can really feel somewhat comfortable for it. And...

GROSS: So what do you do to learn a song?

Mr. WOLF: Well, I put - I'm a great believer in collaboration. And for
instance, I just performed a song in tribute to Jesse Stone, who was a great
songwriter, did a lot of songs for "Shake, Rattle and Roll" and a lot of songs
for Ray Charles and was one of the great, Brill Building songwriters. And he
had a song that Clyde McPhatter from the Drifters sang called "Money Honey."

It's a very - it's not a complicated song, but to get it right, it took me a
while. And I just sat down with some friends, and we just went over it and
drilled it and went over it and drilled, and until it sort of becomes second
nature. And I have to do that.

GROSS: My guest is singer and songwriter Peter Wolf. His new album is called
"Midnight Souvenirs."

We'll talk more and hear more of his music after a break.

This is FRESH AIR.

(Soundbite of music)

GROSS: If you're just joining us, my guest is Peter Wolf. He has a new solo CD,
which is called "Midnight Souvenirs." I say solo, but there's some really great
duets on it, too, including duets with Shelby Lynne and Merle Haggard. And
you've had such an interesting life. You know, I mean, you were also a DJ at
WBCN, which became, like, the big progressive rock, or a big progressive rock
station in Boston. But you were there on the station as a DJ when it first
switched to a, you know, a progressive rock format. And tell us the name of
your on-air character.

Mr. WOLF: Oh, I was the Wolfa Goofa Mama Toofa - Peter Wolf making your knees
freeze, your bladder splatter. If it's in you, it's got to come out. Welcome
the O'Jays, the little ladies of the night. The kid from Alabama, keeping it
all here. (unintelligible) a little fun. We're going to be rocking it out until
the sun, so give us a call and don't just stall. Doing it to it and getting
right through it. If it's in you, it's got to come out. So come on baby, let's
scream and shout.

And that went on from midnight to seven in the morning. And since it was the
only real music that was pounding away on the FM airways, when musicians would
come to town, they heard about it and they would listen and come in, and so I
got to interview people like Roland Kirk. I got to interview Carla Thomas. I
got to interview Howlin' Wolf. I got to interview Muddy Waters, Van Morrison,
Jimmy Page, Robert Plant. I can't even think of so many people that stopped by.

GROSS: You know, it's interesting. Like, you had your radio show and this like
great persona and played great stuff and all this rhyming stuff. Your father
had a radio show, too, right, called the Boy Baritone?

Mr. WOLF: He was the Boy Baritone, and it was in the era where they would have
singers, but there were song pluggers, is what it was called. And they would
sometimes be in department stores and music stores, and there would be a piano
player, and they'd - and sheet music was very important. And so if you heard a
song, people would buy sheet music and they would go home, and many people had
Apollo pianos. And that's how you learned songs, and people would learn the
latest songs.

And my dad had a show - 15-minute show "Allen Blankfield: Boy Baritone." And he
would sing the latest songs from Tin Pan Alley. And the publishers would give
him the song, and there'd be a pianist, and he'd sing the songs. And if you
liked the songs, you would go to your local record store or furniture store,
where a lot of recording stuff was sold, and buy the sheet music.

GROSS: So I'm just thinking about how different those two radio shows were.
Your father's from the song plugging era, where the main thing was to sell
sheet music and your show.

Mr. WOLF: They were very different. But, you see, I would go with my father
with his brother, who managed my father, managed - also managed a champion
baton twirler...

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. WOLF: ...managed the world's strongest man and a gorilla. And they would -
his office...

GROSS: Vaudeville.

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. WOLF: His office was at the automat off of 42nd Street, right next to Jack
Dempsey's, and they would all meet. This was sort of like a "Danny Rose" -
"Broadway Danny Rose" film that Woody Allen did. There would be people with
parrots and this and that.

These people had a different act. One guy would do different voices or imitate
cars. And one would do bird whistles. And they were all there and everyone
would sit around the table and they'd all talk about work or out of work. And
everyone had a copy of Variety under their arm. And...

GROSS: Did you feel any connection to that when you got into the music
business? Like when the J. Geils Band was really popular, did you feel any
connection to that old school, vaudeville era that your father was from?

Mr. WOLF: Well, there was a commitment. It was something that you were honored
to be there. And I think one of the things about the Geils Band I’m very proud
of, is we worked really hard on stage. And we really gave it 110 percent.

GROSS: Did you ever expect that the Geils Band would actually have hits?

Mr. WOLF: No, we never expect the Geils band would even get out of Boston.
That's why it was called the J. Geils band, because when the Hallucinations
broke up, this first band of art students, they were all going off in these
artist retreats and things and some of them were just getting a little bit too
crazy. And I met J., who was very serious, and he and the harmonica player,
Magic Dick and the bass player, they really were great students of the music I
loved and we put it together.

But he had a manager that didn't quite like me and was afraid that I was going
to steal J. away or something. So he said, if you want to play with J., you can
play with J., but it has to be under the name J. Geils. And so I said, I don't
care. You know, we just want to play music.

And that lasted for about a year and a half. And within that time, we built
such a big following. And you're in New England, you're not thinking about the
bigger world. And we figure, well, people know us in New England.

Bill Graham invited us down to the Fillmore East and we were to open up for
Black Sabbath. And people were, want Black Sabbath, Black Sabbath. And they
were just sort of screaming out. And then Bill, who'd never seen us before, got
out to the audience said, ladies and gentlemen, I invited this band to come and
play. I've never seen them before. I think some of you are being really rude,
people who don't want to see this band — I'll allow you with your ticket stubs
to leave — and come back in afterwards, but I would like to see this band and
I'd appreciate if you give me and other people who'd like to see this band the
opportunity.

And we went out on stage and five encores later, Bill was just enraptured. He
came upstage and he walked in the dressing room and came up to me and says, J.,
you are fantastic.

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. WOLF: I said, Bill, I’m not J. He goes, you're not? And I go, no. I say I’m
Pete Wolf. He goes, well, who the hell is J. Geils? And I said, oh, that's -
it's the guitar player. And he goes, why is that? And I go, oh well, don’t get
me started. So that’s how it all began.

GROSS: My guest is singer and songwriter Peter Wolf. His new album is called
"Midnight Souvenirs."

We'll talk more after a break.

This is FRESH AIR.

(Soundbite of music)

GROSS: My guest is singer and songwriter Peter Wolf. He has new solo album
called "Midnight Souvenirs." When we left off, we were talking about his years
as the front man of the J. Geils Band.

Do you have a favorite of the J. Geils' tracks?

Mr. WOLF: No, but I do have a favorite album. And the favorite album for me and
the template of the J. Geils Band was an album put together by James Brown
"Live at the Apollo, Volume I." And that was an album that James' record
company didn’t want to make. James funded it himself. And to me, the way that
record starts and doesn’t stop, and song leads into song, is the same, from
seeing many of the shows at the Apollo when I was putting together the Geils
Band, that was the formula we used for our shows.

And so I think the album that to me I would say represents the band that I love
is an album called "Full House" that was recorded in our adopted city of
Detroit. And it's like it was decisive moment of J. Geils Band on stage, and
it's a communion between us and the audience and the energy is captured in
there. And because of that, I think it's my favorite.

GROSS: Let's play something from that. Do you want to choose a track?

Mr. WOLF: Well, maybe either "First I Look at the Purse" or "Hard Driving Man,"
or "Looking for a Love" - Bobby Womack song. Either or, ladies choice.

GROSS: I think I’m going to go with "Looking for a Love."

(Soundbite of cheering and applause)

(Soundbite of song, "Looking for a Love)

Mr. WOLF: (Singing) Somebody help me. Somebody help me now. Oh, somebody help
me now. Somebody help me find my baby. Somebody help me find my baby right now.

I'm looking for a love. I'm looking for a love. I'm looking here and there. I’m
searching everywhere. I'm looking for a love to call my own.

Oh, baby. Gonna get up in the morning and rub my head. I'm looking for a love
to call my own. Fix my breakfast and bring it to my bed, I'm looking for a love
to call my own. Do my love do it all the time. I'm looking for a love to call
my own.

With lots of love and kisses but people until then. I'm looking for a love to
call my own.

I'm looking for a love. I'm looking for a love. I'm looking here and there. I'm
searching everywhere. I'm looking for a love to call my own.

Well, I want you to stay in my corner all the way, yeah. I'm looking for a love
to call my own. Stick by me, baby...

GROSS: That's my guest Peter Wolf with the J. Geils Band. Peter Wolf has a new
solo CD, which is called "Midnight Souvenirs."

You were talking about how "Live at the Apollo" - "James Brown: Live at the
Apollo" was kind of like your model for a while. But you didn’t have like a guy
introducing you...

(Soundbite of laughter)

GROSS: ...as like the greatest, the way James Brown did.

Mr. WOLF: No. No. No, we didn’t have, ladies and gentlemen it is star time and
I'm...

GROSS: Exactly, yeah.

Mr. WOLF: But what we did have is, the band would go out and do a couple of
instrumentals and then I would walk out. And I remember playing in Worcester,
Mass, and I had these patent leather shoes and tight peg pants and ruffled
shirt and a jacket and all these kind of fake diamond rings on. And we were
opening up for this lady by the name of Janice Joplin.

And she was watching the band from the side doing this instrumental and we were
kicking it in pretty hard. And she looked at me and she said, man, who is that
band? I said that’s the J. Geils Band. And she said, are they an instrumental
band? And I said, no. And she says, where is the singer? I said, hold on,
honey.

And I walked out and I started singing. And all of a sudden, I could see her
walking out into the audience and sitting smack in the front row and she
watched the entire show. And then backstage, we got together and spent many a
night yakking and talking.

And she was - because, you know, we came from the same place. She loved the R&B
music. She came out of, I believe Texas, and understood all the country honky-
tonk. It was a melting pot for us. And she was - she, too, believed in the show
was the thing. You can sing the song, you can do a record, but if people are
going to come see ya, you got to give it to them. You got to get down there and
sweat for them.

GROSS: Is there anybody that you don’t know?

(Soundbite of laughter)

GROSS: You seem to know everybody.

Mr. WOLF: Well, I don’t know, Terry.

(Soundbite of laughter)

GROSS: You were roommates with David Lynch.

Mr. WOLF: Right.

GROSS: You knew Van Morrison just on the cusp of his fame. Did you tour with
The Beatles?

Mr. WOLF: I never toured with The Beatles, but I spent many quality - good
quality time with every Beatle, except Ringo Starr. And I have some fun stories
of John Lennon during the lost weekend in...

GROSS: Oh, well, you could tell one of those.

Mr. WOLF: Oh, I...

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. WOLF: They're all kind of episodic. But there was a lot of Remy Martin and
milk, and Harry Nilsson. And it went on for several days and several nights.
And we ended up in the studio with Jimmy Iovine, who became quite a big
producer who's still involved in the music industry. He was the engineer. I was
singing. John was playing guitar. Harry Nilsson was on drums. For some - I
don’t know how he appeared - the bass player for Alice Cooper.

And while we were recording all this stuff, in came Paul Simon and Art
Garfunkel with this lady that I think maybe Paul was dating by the name of
Diane Keaton who just singing, I think, at the Blue Angel or something before
she got into acting.

And it just ended up being this like two day craziness where Harry, John and I
would get out and - let's put it this way, too much, too soon, too twit, too
fast. And there were a lot of adventures and I think time would not allow. But
the cognac and milk flowed freely.

GROSS: Peter Wolf, it's really been fun to talk with you. Thank you so much.

Mr. WOLF: Well, thank you so very much.

GROSS: Peter Wolf's new album is called "Midnight Souvenirs." You can hear two
tracks from it on our Web site, his duet with Merle Haggard, "It's Too Late For
Me," and his duet with Shelby Lynne, "Tragedy." And when you go to our Web
site, freshair.npr.org, you can also download Podcasts of our show.

(Soundbite of music)
..COST:
$00.00
..INDX:
125498015

Transcripts are created on a rush deadline, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of Fresh Air interviews and reviews are the audio recordings of each segment.

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