U2 Interviews
- Dazed and Confused (part V: Adam Clayton)
- May 1997
Dazed & Confused: Is Pop final proof that U2
have come round to seeing things the 'Adam way'?
Adam Clayton: [laughs] Yeah: it's taken them long enough! Do you mean in terms
of the music?
D&C: Yes, and in terms of the lifestyle.
AC: Hmm, well, maybe, although I see it as a record that's based around me
musically, too, to an extent.
D&C: You've quoted that line from 'Gone' I'm already gone/I felt that way
all
along as being important to you. Do you feel the band have caught up with you in
your celebration of living life to the full?
AC: Well, I never really meant that lyric to apply to me personally, in relation
to my part in the group. It was more just the general idea of the group being
together for such a long while.
D&C: After the 'Zooropa' tour you went to New York to live for a year. What
inspired you to go there?
AC: Well, when the tour ended we all came back to Dublin and the others had
families and stuff to think about and I didn't, so it wasn't the situation I was
looking for. I just thought to myself, 'Maybe I should go to New York, I'm sure
there must be something going on there'. Then I just happened to bump into
someone I knew who lived around the corner who could teach bass, so I ended up
re-learning to play as well as all the other experiences I had there.
D&C: You've said you're not in the habit of hanging out with other musicians
in your spare time.
AC: Ha Ha! Yeah, well y'know. Even when we started with the group I was never
one to sit huddled in the corner of the pub of an evening talking about bass
sounds. It's never been in my nature.
D&C: How did you feel in the course of the making of Rattle & Hum, then,
when the band set about tracking down all their musical idols?
AC: Well that was different. You've got to realise that as an Irish group a lot
of our influences tend to naturally come from America, and we were just looking
for our roots through the music we loved: it was just a perfectly nature thing
to do..
D&C: You've always been the playboy of the band. Is it odd to hear Bono
singing about 'The Playboy Mansion' metaphorically, at least after all
these years?
AC: Well, it's not really a case of me having been separate from the other
members of the band in the things I've done over the years. We've been together
as a group, travelling over the world since we were 20 years old and you have
all sorts of experiences together along the way. We've all done our bit, staying
up all night to watch the sunrise, that's the way it is. I remember years ago
going to the actual Playboy Mansion for the 'Miss Midsummer Wet Dream' night or
something, so "I've done all that.
D&C: What influenced you personally during the recording?
AC: I was listening to a lot of Massive Attack and Portishead for a good while
before we went back into the studio. Whilst we were actually in there I listened
to things like Leftfield, and then the Underworld album came out. They both
really influenced me. I don't listen to guitar bands at all.
D&C: As a fellow artist, what did you think of the KLF burning a million
pounds?
AC: I thought it was great! Whether or not they actually burnt the money isn't
the issue. It's the fact that they got everybody thinking that they did. Plus it
was funny to get to see all those journalists running around after them.
D&C: Are you looking forward to the shows?
AC: Yeah, the shows are a little odd for me because I've never been to a stadium
show in my life, so I wouldn't know what a normal one is like. I think the
biggest gig I ever went to see was years and years ago, Rory Gallagher in
Dublin; a great show, too, if I remember rightly. We've managed to get the whole
thing set up without major sponsorship and that's something in itself and
now we just have to get on with it. It's going to be something special, there's
no doubt about that.
U2 Interviews overview
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