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![]() Vanilla Fudge Forges On: Carmine Appice Tells All ![]() By David Lee Wilson, Contributor Thursday, July 25, 2002 @ 10:47 AM ![]()
![]() ![]() CARMINE: Oh yeah! I love playing so any time that you can get me out on the road I am happy. KNAC.COM: Well, I know that it is good to see the band, I mean the original run for the band ended when I was about two! (laughs) CARMINE: A lot of people will say to me, “Aren’t you sick of it yet?” It is weird, everyone your age is sick of it already and I am just not. (laughs) It is a new experience playing with this guy. (Motions to bassist, T.M. Stevens, who was standing in for Tim Bogart for the summer.) KNAC.COM: Yeah, I bet. It was certainly interesting to hear that he was stepping in for Tim Bogart while he is ill. CARMINE: Yeah, it is fun. While Tim is out sick T.M. is here rockin.’ It is unfortunate and we are hoping that Tim will be back in August. T.M. plays with a lot of energy and I play with a lot of energy so it is a bit of a new vibe to us, a little funkier. KNAC.COM: I would imagine the dynamic between drummer and bassist would have to click in order for it to work, and from what I saw at the sound check, it is clicking! (laughs) ![]() T.M. STEVENS: I didn’t say that, I said, “HELL YEAH!” (laughs) CARMINE: Actually, he did! (laughs) T.M.: Carmine is so nasty, I just had to come out here and experience this with him. (laughs) CARMINE: So, we rehearsed for a couple of days and went to Korea and we rocked, really heavy, too. (laughs) We needed to know if Tim was going to be able to do this tour, and if he wasn’t, we wanted T.M. to do it and here he is. We recorded with him too, as a special guest, so he will be on the record. KNAC.COM: (To T.M.) Should Tim not be able to come back, are you available to stay with Vanilla Fudge? T.M.: If I have the schedule, I will put my parachute on or something! (laughs) KNAC.COM: As you say, this is an enjoyable endeavor and I would guess that you really could manage financially without it or at least make better money doing something else? CARMINE: Well, you always need to do it because, you need to do it. (laughs) Financially, yeah we could all probably go somewhere and live and never have to work again but hey, why? You know, I have a good size pension plan and I always say, “I am never going to use it because I am never going to retire!” KNAC.COM: Retirement is for old people? (laughs) CARMINE: Uh huh. That is for people who don’t like what they do and music, drums, when I am producing, whatever it is, everything that I am doing in the entertainment field is like a hobby and it has been my hobby all of my life, it is a great hobby. I have been fortunate that I have made a living working at what I love to do; a lot of people don’t do that. KNAC.COM: This phase of your career with Vanilla Fudge actually reactivated a couple of years ago, right? ![]() CARMINE: Oh yeah, it was the same kind of reaction but then after we played it, they loved it because it was heavy. KNAC.COM: Yeah, I was going to start off this whole interview by saying that you must have some super-sized balls to be coming into Detroit and wanting to play an *NSYNC or Backstreet Boys number, but having heard the versions you do of those songs on the new disc, I think you get a pass on this one! (laughs) CARMINE: Yeah, well we are not going to do a Backstreet Boys song tonight, but we will do an *NSYNC song, and I see it as being funny. Just watch the reaction to the song at the beginning and then at the end, it is like night and day. Once we play it, it is like, “Holy shit, it sounds like Vanilla Fudge!” (laughs) It is so funny, and I had someone say to me, “I didn’t know that *NSYNC took one of your songs and made it a hit?” That was pretty funny. KNAC.COM: I guess that would be the ultimate testament to what you did with the song? CARMINE: Yeah, we made it sound so much like us, and actually *NSYNC liked it. I went to school with one of the dude’s Father, Joey Fatone, Sr. So, I gave the drummer for the band the CD and said, “Play it for the guys and see what they think,” and he did and he said that they all thought that it was really cool. No one has ever done that with their music. Next we are working on that Alicia Keys song, “Falling,” and we are making that totally wild. It is fun doing that and I mean, Vanilla Fudge was known for that but some of the guys, like Vince, he wants to write new songs and says, “Why do we have to keep doing everybody else’s songs?” Basically, that is how we made it in the first place. KNAC.COM: It is your forte?
CARMINE: So, when you heard the *NSYNC song what did you think? KNAC.COM: Well, when I first saw that you were going to do it I thought, “Oh God, not this,” but then when I heard it, it basically became the track that I kept repeating, so I guess that means I liked it! (laughs) I just don’t want to be known as an *NSYNC fan for Christ’s sake! (laughs) They do have some very well written songs, though. CARMINE: Yeah, it is a great song. I remember hearing it on the radio and saying to myself, “What a great song.” A lot of people won’t even give it the chance, you know? “Oh it is *NSYNC? Naw.” But they really have some good songs. KNAC.COM: You would think that rock radio would be into it because it is a classic band doing a contemporary number. CARMINE: That is what we are going to do. We are releasing the record in September on a real release, and we are going to go after classic-rock radio on that song, just to start. Then college radio and rock radio, it is like, you guys still have some great radio stations here. I put on WRIF, I didn’t even know what it was at first, but man they had everything on there, new Aerosmith and Soundgarden and Nugent and Def Leppard and Creed… and it was just great. LA doesn’t have any music any more. Classic rock or KROQ, and then you are done. There is no way to get any new airplay in LA, and that is sad. KNAC.COM: Yeah, WRIF is kind of like the watermark station for the country, really, because of the pretty open format. It is like, 16 to 60 and then beyond that, so no need to flip around for variety. Doug Podell is the guy there; you should call him about this record in fact. CARMINE: Yeah. I think that the DJ’s would like nothing better than to say, “Yeah, here is the new *NSYNC song, guys!” (laughs) It would fuck ‘em all up! Then the thing starts and they would go, “What the hell is this?” I have edited versions of the song already, I have the *NSYNC song edited down to three minutes and fifty seconds, and the other one down to about four, but still, Vanilla Fudge songs are pretty long! (laughs) You have to be objective about it because the full song is like eight minutes long! (laughs) KNAC.COM: When you say “The real album,” does that mean this one I am holding is an advance or something? CARMINE: That is the record that you got now, except that we are changing a song, we are taking one song off and putting “Do You Think I’m Sexy?” on there, and then we are changing the title to The Return and we are going to add more artwork. This one we have, basically, just been selling at our gigs and we have not been pushing it in interviews or to radio or to be reviewed, but if we are coming into a town and we are doing a gig at a radio station, we will do a song or two off of it, just to play something, but we are not really pushing it and there is still a good buzz going on around it. There is a good buzz going on around the band in general, we are getting more gigs and better gigs now than last year. Everyone is saying, “Oh, Vanilla Fudge is back,” and we are playing good-sized venues with a good package but the touring scene is really weird right now. KNAC.COM: I saw that you had Marcie (formerly Mark, vocalist of King Kobra) Free on the guest list for tonight, what is the status of King Kobra? ![]() CARMINE: No, nobody knew that it was out and I am glad because they also screwed up the mastering. They mastered it and re-mastered it and fucked it all up, and it was sad. KNAC.COM: What about Cactus, anything ever likely to happen with that band? CARMINE: Yeah! We have been recording some new Cactus stuff for a concept that we have. What we are going to try and do is do a new Cactus record, we have four or five songs already, but since Rusty is dead, we are trying to get people who are Cactus fans -- who are singers -- to come in and sing, and so far a couple of people have said that they would do it. Lemmy from Motorhead and Doug from King’s X said that they would do it, and I am trying to get Michael Anthony to sing a track because all the guys in Van Halen were big Cactus fans. I approached David Lee Roth about it, but you never know with him. I know he is a big Cactus fan because a few years ago he asked me to put a band together with him and he was going to do some Cactus songs and he said, “I figured I might as well call you and get the original instead of trying to get someone to try and learn how to play Cactus.” Eddie [Van Halen], I talked to him last week and told him that we were going out and doing a Vanilla Fudge tour and he said, “Why don’t you do a Cactus tour? Cactus was rockin! Cactus ruled!” And then I said, “Why don’t you give me a song for Cactus? (laughs) People keep saying, “When are you going to do something with Cactus?” so we decided that we would try and do this. We recorded the stuff and then this tour came up and so when this all levels out, probably toward the winter, we will probably work on getting the actual singers together for the tracks that we have and then actually go get the record deal and there are a few labels that are interested in doing a Cactus tribute album sort of thing with new songs. Kid Rock is supposed to be a fan, and Jim Mcarty [guitarist for Cactus] knows him, so that would be cool. We would have Kid Rock, Lemmy and Doug; that would be a good start. KNAC.COM: I read something about a tour you did years ago with Ozzy… well, let me ask it like this, I expect that you have read or at least heard that you were referenced in the Motley Crue book? CARMINE: Yeah. KNAC.COM: So the incident with Sharon Osbourne and her cutting your face out of all your shirts at the merchandise booth, that actually happened? CARMINE: Oh yeah, it actually happened. (laughs) KNAC.COM: I have spoken with a few of Ozzy’s former band members, in particular Bob Daisley and Lee Kerslake, and they have had their problems with the Osbourne’s business practices. As an artist, how do you feel about what happened with the Osbourne group going in and re-recording parts of the first two solo discs in order to eliminate Daisley and Kerslake’s work? ![]() ![]() CARMINE: Well, it is easier actually because you do your gig, you get in the bus and drive, you sleep, you know it is a routine, but like today, we had to leave Minneapolis and flights were delayed and then we get all the stuff into a rental van and we unload it and then we have to go through all of the damned security and all that hassle and then you fly, you get out and you have to go and get another rental truck. It is just much easier to come off a gig and load yourself in a bus and drive to the next city and get a hotel and sleep, wake up do the gig and then leave. You have your own schedule so it is much cooler. (Special thanks to Tommy, the Vanilla Fudge tour manager, for his kind assistance with this interview.)
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