Described by
many as one of "... the most charismatic and humourous guys in the music
business" ... we catch up with the man mountain himself Mr Jon Oliva to do
some soul searching about the new album 'Global Warning' and also ask that
ultimate question currently posed on every Savatage fans lips, but more of
that later! It is with great pleasure we bring you the mighty Mr Jon
Oliva ...
MM - Firstly congratulations on your fine new
album ‘Global Warning’.
Jon -
Thank you very much.
MM - With the passing of your friend and producer
Greg Marchak shortly before you started recording the album, did you ever
consider not putting out this album?
Jon - Well we obviously very devastated when
Gregg passed away it was a very difficult time for us. Because he was with
us from day one when we started this JOP thing he was our guide and I'd
worked with him for many years before that. We didn’t really know what to do
when it first happened, we were a week away from cutting tracks and we
just finish the pre-production with him. So we were all ready to go then
when that happened, we just kinda lumbered around for four, five or six weeks.
No
one really felt like making music really, I mean we were just bummed out
obviously. After about a month and a half Chris and I started talking and
saying … “you know we all worked really hard on this including Gregg”.
| We called a meeting and everyone got together, we
said look you know it’s gonna be difficult and we're gonna have to go
through a whole no process of recording, we were already over budget. So
we said what are we gonna do? We decided let's go and do this, let's bust
our
butts. None of us took any money for it, we just put all the money into the record out of own pockets,
and I think we came out with a fine album. It
was not only out of respect for it being Gregg’s last project that he
worked on, to give it the justice it deserved, but it was also that we
knew we had a good record and we knew he would have wanted us to make sure
people got to hear it. |
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There was a huge camaraderie that got born on that
day. We all went to work and I’ve never worked so hard on an album in my
career and the amount of time that we had to finish it. Chris and myself
were pretty much working on the album full time every day for 12, 14, 16
hours or so, so it was a lot of work but we're were happy with the result.
MM - The album once again makes the statement that
this is a Jon Oliva album and not a Savatage album, was this your
intention for all three JOP albums?
Jon - Well yes you wanna do that and again
it’s no different to Savatage. Any of these songs could be on a Savatage
record put it that way. I wrote for Savatage and I’m writing for this
album. It’s
the same writer, I’m the same guy it's just I’m a little bit older and a
little bit wiser. I’m also a little bit better at what I do now, I understand it
all a lot better now than when I was 25 years old.
But I mean if Savatage was still together I would say
that half or more than half I’ve done with JOP would be on Savatage albums,
but the situation being what it is, this is my only outlet to do this type of
music. So knowing that Savatage wasn’t going to be functioning anymore I
had to make a decision. TSO don’t play any Savatage music, it's just TSO,
so the only way to keep that music alive and to do the stuff that I still
have, but that I haven’t been able to put out yet, which was written during the time I was
with Savatage, was to form a band and do it on my own.
The reason I don’t call it Savatage is out of respect
for the guys that were in the band for 25 years. It wouldn't be right
and I
don’t need to call it Savatage. I’m not trying to ride laurels or on the
success of Savatage at all. This is a whole totally different thing, it has
songs on it that if you’re a Savatage fan I can't see you not buying it.
If
I was a Savatage fan I would buy all three of these record for my
collection. To me it's all the same thing, it's just me making music which
I’ve always done, so let's just call it me. That's the new name for the band,
let's just call it ME.
It’s such a pain in the ass because you want people
to understand, people have such a connection and affection for that name Savatage,
but that's a thorn in my side at times. It's like guys can’t you figure
it out, Savatage is the Trans Siberian Orchestra now! That’s that band,
myself included. I’m in TSO also so it’s very easy to see that the band
simply turned
into TSO and has since become hugely successful in America. We're selling millions and
millions of records, selling out Madison Square gardens and places like
that. If we were still called Savatage we wouldn't have a prayer
of even getting 100 people in to Madison Square Gardens.
But I have such an affection for the Savatage music
and for my brothers music that is still unreleased and the stuff me and
him worked on. I now have this as my avenue to put that music out and to
keep playing Savatage music live and have fun
MM - Again you’re selected some of the music for
the album from your brother Chris’s tapes, do you find it hard listening
to them and picking out songs and pieces of songs without him by your
side?
Jon - I find it hard listening to him talk,
that's the hardest thing. On the tapes there’s lots of conversations
and that’s
sometimes difficult and very emotional. Finding this music was like finding buried
treasure. Some of the stuff I’m like ... "oh my god!!!" ... when I hear it. I can
remember doing it with him but it was so long ago that those memories just
got wiped away. Sometimes you have to get something to jolt you and you hear a
little riff and it’s like … “OH I remember THAT!” … when if someone had put a
million dollars in front of you the day before, I wouldn’t have been
able to remember it.
But that’s the fun though, that thing that makes the
whole JOP thing so special is the fact that Chris is still a part of it. He’s had music
featured on
all but the first album. On the last two albums he’s been a part of the band in
a way. He’s written five or six songs on each of those albums, so you know it’s
like having a secret weapon, he’s our spiritual secret weapon. For some
reason it wasn’t meant to be for me to find these boxes of tapes until I really
needed them. When I needed them most they mysteriously appeared.
It’s so cool though, it’s such
a cool story and it's true. That the whole thing. Those tapes
have been ruffled around between me moving around, between me moving
between New York and Florida probably nine or time times. I’ve
unpacked at my new house and never discovered those tapes until the last
house when we were doing the last album and I was having a hard time.
We'd just moved and we were going through the boxes and boom there in the
bottom of this box was a shoe box with like forty five cassette tapes in
it! I nearly shit myself … "OH MY GOD LOOK AT THIS!" It’s so
weird how things happen sometime.
MM - Well fate has a strange way of working things
out for you.
Jon - Yes it does, fate is a prankster, it plays
tricks with you your whole life. It's strange how things happen. It all
works out for the good. We have some little bits from Chris and we’ve got
enough stuff for maybe two or three albums there. There's enough tapes left. I’m only
on to about half of them, so every album a grab a little hand full of about
five or six of them. That’s what I did for this album, then I see what’s
on them and whatever’s on them that I can use, then that becomes his
contribution. So for the next album I’ll go back to the box and grab another
handful and see what he has for us next year.
I’m riding it as long as I can obviously because it’s
like working with him all over again. A lot of the stuff I don’t
remember so it’s like brand new to me because I don’t remember it. There's stuff
on this album that I had no clue about, I just never remembered them.
MM - Global Warning is very much an eclectic mix
of styles, do you find the writing process much easier when you allow an
album to include such varying styles?
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Jon - Absolutely true and it’s a good thing,
it keeps the other stuff fresh. You don’t wanna beat one idea into the
ground like so many bands do, I’m not gonna mention any names but you buy
an album from band X and from track one to track ten it has all the same feel, all
the same tempos, it's just like a train rolling by, which sometimes is
good if you're that type of a band. |
I’ve always been a fan of classic English bands like
The Beatles, Queen, The Who and I’ve always been fascinated with the way a
band like Queen can do a song like ‘Death On Two Legs’ and then turn
around and do a song like ‘Love Of My Life’, which to me just shows an
amazing amount of versatility and talent.
I’ve always wanted to model what I do with a band,
even with Savatage we played a lot of different styles of music with
Savatage. This band are a bit more versatile players than the guys in Savatage.
Not taking anything away from the guys in Savatage, they were
great musicians, but they were more limited in styles in Savatage. We had
our sound where we either played Heavy Metal or ballads. These guys, the guys
I play with now, all came from a background of playing in a lot of
different cover bands. They were used to
playing a lot of different styles of music from top 40 to jazz, from rock n'
roll to heavy metal or pop. They played everything, so the exciting thing
about them is that I can come up with any idea and these guys can play it
and it’s cool. It's amazing watching them transform from this pop band and
then turn around and play songs off the new album which are as heavy as
anything I’ve ever done before. They do it all very naturally and
that makes
it easier for me to write in different styles, so the versatility thing
comes in and I think that’s important as it helps show a different side of you.
MM - A couple of the songs jumped out to me as
being heavily influenced by others bands, in particular the Queen like
‘Look At The World’ and the Pink Floyd like ‘Firefly’.
Jon - That’s funny you mentioned ‘Look At The
World’ because that was one of the songs I had that Chris and I had wrote.
We wrote
that song after we saw Queen in concert in 1978. I think it was the Jazz
tour and that was our first attempt at writing a song like Queen. I’d
forgotten about the song completely until I found a demo of us playing it
on one of these tapes and it was like … “Oh My God!!!” … I took it and
played it for the guys and I thought they were just gonna say ... no that’s
way too camp, too Broadway or whatever ... but we played it and we really
liked the way it sounded. We added the slide guitar stuff in, which
I thought Mat did a really great job of by the way, and it became our
little Queen tribute.
It’s really cool that you figured that one out
because it’s an obvious Queen type of song and I like to pay homage to
them. I thought ‘Firefly’ was very John Lennon/Pink Floyd kind of thing.
It was like if John Lennon was in Pink Floyd, that was a song they would
have done. I hear a little bit of Deep Purple in some of the songs and
Sabbath were also another big band for me. It seems that for some reason
they were always UK bands. My top 5 bands are all from England. Those
were my teachers, The Beatles, Black Sabbath, The Who, Uriah Heap and Deep
Purple, I liked them a lot. They were all UK bands. I think I should have
been born in London!
MM - Now that you have three JOP albums under your
belt will your live sets concentrate more on these three albums than the
Savatage material?
Jon – It’s about 50/50, I know people want to
hear the Savatage songs and I love playing them. I’ve chosen some
different ones to take out on tour this year. I’ve taken ‘Believe’ out as
I’ve been doing it the last few tours and I’ve decided to switch it to ‘When
The Crowds Are Gone’, because I haven’t done that one for a long time. I
try to keep it about 50/50 and I like to mix it up a little. I figure one
more album with JOP and then we’ll go a little bit heavier on the JOP
stuff.
I don’t think we’re playing anything off the first album on this
tour, it’s just going to be material off the second album and this new
album. The first album was kind of like a pre-seasonal because we didn’t
really know each other that well back then. We just went into the studio and
within 4 weeks we slapped it together. We’re not too crazy on that one,
but the second one we liked a lot and this one is our best one by far, so I
think we’re going to play maybe 5 or 6 songs off the new album and 2 or 3
off the last one.
MM - Talking of live shows, what are your plans to
take this new album out on the road? (Will we see you visiting the UK?)
Jon – We start our world tour next week and
we’re doing 3 weeks in Europe before we come home, then we’re heading to
South America. After that we’re touring North America and then we’re
coming back to Europe in late October/November and that’s when you’ll see
us. We are doing UK dates on that run and we’re actually putting that
together now. I don’t know where exactly we’ll be playing but I do know
that we’re definitely going to be coming over to the UK.
We finish the
North American tour when we've played the Prog Power Festival in
Atlanta. I think that’s the first week in October, then we’re heading over
to you guys. We’ve got a heavy touring schedule coming up but
thankfully it starts
off slow. I prefer to start slow on any tour, I guess that must be my old
age. I like to dip my toe in the water a bit before they push me into the
pool! (laughs). The tour starts off pretty mellow but by the time it gets
to October/November time it’s going to be pretty much solid.
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MM – Do you find that amount of touring can wear you
down? Jon – I
hate it! I can’t stand it! The only thing I enjoy is playing the
show. That is the only thing. People have this fantasy world
about rock n’ roll and touring but let me tell you everything sucks
apart from actually playing the shows and meeting you people.
That is the only good thing about it. The travelling sucks, the
hotels suck, |
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when you’re in Spain and
everything closes at 2 pm in the afternoon it sucks. Airports suck, photo
sessions fucking suck because no one wants to do them. It’s just because
you’re all too tired and you really treasure you sleep when you’re on
tour because you don’t really sleep real good.
|
Most
of the time you’re bouncing around on one of those double decker buses and
believe me, if you think it’s easy to sleep on one of them you’ve got
another thing coming. It’s like trying to
sleep when someone’s standing next to you constantly shaking you all the
time. You don’t really sleep well and it gets to you. The only that is
good is that after the sound check, which sucks, and after the dinner
after sound check, which again usually sucks, the actual 15 minutes before
you go on stage and the 30 minutes after the show when you talk to the
people and sign stuff for them, that and the actual 2 ½ - 3 hours where
you’re actually meeting the fans and playing the shows is the only thing
that makes it all worth while.
Every other bit sucks, trying to find
somewhere to do your laundry sucks … I could just go on and on! I could
fill your whole magazine up with a list of how much it sucks being out on
the road! (laughs). You’re away from your family and you’re sick all the
time because when one person gets a cold that’s it, the whole bus is sick
for the 2 weeks. The bathroom smells like piss all the time, the beers
always warm … I could just go on and on. I think you got the point
though? MM – Yes (laughs).
MM - The band consists of a lot of very talented
individuals, do you find writing new material easier as time progresses
and you all become more aware and confident of what each other can bring
to the table?
Jon –
Absolutely, that’s actually a great
analogy. It’s a lot easier now because I know them now and we’ve been
together for 4 years now. I’d know them personally for many years but
musically we’ve worked together for 4 years and I have no fear with these
guys. Even with Savatage I’d write something and I’d think … “nah” … and
I’d just put it on the shelf because I knew it just wasn’t going to
translate. I’d known the guys from Savatage for so long and I knew how
they would write and translate a song and I could imagine what the songs
would sound like with the guys playing them. So a lot of songs I elbowed
and I kept aside for myself to do.
With these guys it’s different though
as they can play anything. I just opened up that drawer full of ideas and
these weird things that I’d always wanted to try but would never bring to
the Savatage table, because I just knew it would have either got vetoed, or
it wouldn’t have translated right. So it’s made it easier writing wise
because now I can write anything now. It’s exciting because I can just go
away and write anything now. That doesn’t take away anything from the
guys from Savatage at all because without a doubt they are one of the best
heavy metal bands ever, but we were limited to what we could do. It was a
majority vote in Savatage so everybody had a say in everything. If we got
one guy who wanted to play a certain section a different way, then
although it wasn’t the way I’d heard the song to go, we’d play it that way
anyway, because that’s what he wanted.
With these guys I demo the songs up
and I write them up and bring them in if I need help on one section, I’ll
say I need a part for here or a part for there, let’s see what you guys
got. Sometimes they’ll bring something that works and sometimes they’ll
not. So far it’s been very, very helpful and they’ve help to finish
songs that probably wouldn’t have otherwise been finished if they hadn’t
brought their ideas into it. Again it’s because they’re a bit more
versatile players and their whole careers they’ve been playing in clubs in
different cover bands, they’ve been playing everything from Prince to
Black Sabbath, so that just goes to make it that bit easier when you’ve got
guys around you who are confident in any kind of style. That’s made it so
much easier.
MM - The album touches on some of the great
problems of today’s world from War and Terrorism to Life Issues, how
important do you think it is to touch on these issues many can relate to
when you’re writing?
Jon –
It’s a weird thing because I never
really saw myself as anyone who’d be doing that sort of preaching. I just
write what’s affecting me or what I’m thinking about. I don’t know, those
were the topics that just started to come out. I remembered seeing the
thing about global warming on tv and watching it and I liked the title a
lot and I said I’ll change it to warning, then that opened a door and I
thought I’d touch on the topics that are there in front of me every day.
I watch a lot of news and I read a lot of newspapers so that’s kind of in
front of me each day. The story ‘Adding The Cost’ for instance came from a newspaper
article where right on top of the page they were saying that there’s like 175 thousand
homeless children under the age of 10 years old wandering the streets in
certain cities in America. Then on the same page it said that last year
we spent 120 billion dollars on the war in Iraq. You’re sitting there as
an American citizen and wondering why they couldn’t fork over a couple of
million dollars for the kids? Help them out and give them a biscuit or
something? You look at this war thing and we’re all paying for it, it’s
all us the tax payers paying for it, that’s where that song came from, ‘Adding
The Cost’ and ‘Look At The World’ is the same type of thing.
I
remember watching the news and I remember the guy who started the item
said … “just look at this world we live in” … and he starts talking about
the unemployment rate and how the whole of America is addicted to
prescription drugs. America’s like the biggest drug dealer in the world.
We got the whole country strung out on drugs, that’s how I came up with
the line … “they’ve got us living on dope and gasoline” … basically that’s
all you spend your money on here in America, gasoline and your
prescription drugs to keep you from killing each other. That’s where a
lot of those ideas came from, from things I saw around me.
‘Firefly’ is
about 2 soldiers and I have 2 young nephews fighting the war in Iraq and
they came home for leave and they were talking to me about how it looks
like Fireflies or lightening-bugs when you’re being shot at across the
fields, you just see the little flashes of light from the end of the
guns. Here in America we have a little bug that come out when it’s very
warm and they’re called Fireflies. Their tales light up and when we were
kids in schools we’d try to capture them in jam-jars and they’d light up
and stuff so that’s where that idea came from.
A lot of that stuff from
this album just came as an awareness of Greg passing away and ‘O To G’
song
is a song I wrote for Greg and that goes into ‘Walk Upon The Water’, which
is a song about a dream and whether you realise you’re dead or alive.
Whether you can realise when you’re just having a really bad dream from
when you’re passing away, that was inspired from Greg and how quickly that
all happened. I’d had a dream one night and I thought I was dead, I
wasn’t really dead but I was having a dream and that’s where that song was
born from.
A lot of it is real personal stuff, I’m just singing about
what’s affecting my life and I guess I’m not comfortable at aiming for a
particular market. I don’t care about a market or whether it sells a
hundred or a million records, for me, for my brother and for the Savatage
fans that want to here this stuff, it’s not about preaching for peace,
although I am in a way, I’m just trying to make people aware of it I
guess.
MM - When can we expect something new from your
Tran-Siberian Orchestra in the near future?
Jon – Yes maybe by 2030! (laughs). We’re
finishing our new album and I think it’s going to be all done by July.
We’re finishing it up now and they’re actually working diligently at it.
I was in the studio last week finishing off the vocals for it. Paul is a
perfectionist and he’s got the patience of stone because I would have shot
myself 3 times already. We’ve been working on the album for over 2
years. Actually Paul and I have been working on it for 3 years because
that’s when we started writing it. Now it’s getting to the point where
there’s stuff that’s finished and it’s a really great album. It’s got some
really fantastic pieces on it and I definitely think it’s the best album
we’ve done with TSO by far. I’m really excited about that, I just wish
we’d hurry up so I can get paid! (laughs).
MM - Am I right in thinking you started out on bass and
then progressed on to
keyboards and vocals? Do you still keep your hand in on the bass and are
there any other instruments you can play?
Jon –
Actually I started on drums. I play a
lot of drums and actually I play a lot of the drums on the Savatage
records but people just aren’t aware of it. I did play bass a lot and I
have a couple of bass guitars. I play guitar a lot more now than when I
was in Savatage, obviously with Chris being gone I’ve played a lot of the
guitars on this album too. I’ve played on every song n fact. I play all
the acoustic guitars, I play all the clean guitars, all that stuff is me.
I enjoy it and I have a good time doing it but I keep my hand in on
everything.
MM – Wow that’s amazing to have someone who’s so
multi-talented and can also sing and write the songs as well! You’re
usually blessed with one or the other.
Jon –
I was totally blessed with that and I
thank God every night believe me.
MM - Can you remember the first live show went to,
who was it and what affect did this have (if any) on the career path you
have taken.
Jon – Black Sabbath was my first concert ever
and that was all I needed. I've on the road to debauchery ever since
that show and I’ll never forget it. It was at the San Diego sports arena when
I was 13 years old and they had just released Sabbath Bloody Sabbath and
it was quite an event.
I followed them around after that. I followed them
the next night to Los Angeles and saw them and scouted tickets. Then I
saw them again later that Summer at the California Jam. Sabbath were my
first concert ever and they started the whole pathetic ride that I’m now
on. It was great though, I loved every second of it and I wouldn’t change
it for the world.
MM - Throughout your career you have had some
fantastic highs and some real low points, however you always seem to come
through with a genuine warmth and smile.
What keeps you going against all odds?
Jon – Drugs! (laughs). No, seriously I don’t
know. I’m a real people person and I don’t try to put forward anything
that I’m not. I am who I am and I am as God made me, you either like me
or you don’t, that’s always been my attitude. I was brought up to treat
people the way you want to be treated and I remember that these people who
are fans and are out there buying your music are putting food on your
table. If it wasn’t for them coming out to see you do what you’re doing
and buying your records you wouldn’t be doing what you’re doing right
now. The last thing you want to be doing is treating them like shit
because they’re paying for you to do what you’re doing, but so many of
these rock guys treat their fans like total shit and it really annoys me
when I see that.
I saw that a couple of times in the younger days of
my career and I said, you know what, I’ll never do that to anybody. I
tell you what it was, it was Kiss, I met Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley
once backstage in North Carolina and this was early on in our career and
they were doing a show there and they were total assholes to us for no
fucking reason whatsoever. Yngwie Malmsteen was another one, we went to
meet him and he turned around and had us thrown out of his dressing room!
I was like fuck you, who the hell do you think you are? I wanted to say
to Gene Simmons, dude, you’re not the fucking Beatles man, believe me,
you’re not even in the same book.
It’s something that stuck with me and
something that really got under my skin and I thought I’d never treat
anybody like that. When people have bought my records if I can’t take 5
minutes to talk to them and sign their stuff, whether it’s their shoe or
an album, then I’m a piece of shit man and I’m taking advantage of the
gift that I’ve been given. It’s not right and it really pisses me off
when I talk to people and they say that they’ve met this guy or that guy
and that he was a total asshole. I say don’t go buying his records then,
that will teach him a fucking lesson! (laughs).
I just try to be nice to
everybody and I’ve just got a good sense of humour. You have to have a
good sense of humour in this business, if you don’t have a sense of humour
in this business, if you don’t then the guys that don’t have a good sense
of humour are either not in the business any more or they’ve killed
themselves so … I figure it’s best not to be too serious about everything
because all the serious people end up dead! I’ll laugh along with
anybody.
MM – You’re probably sick of people asking this
next question and I apologise but it has to be asked …
Jon – Oh let me guess what’s coming next, when
are Savatage going to do another show? Is that what it is?
MM – Yes! I’m so sorry but I’d be lynched if I
didn’t ask it!
Jon - No that’s OK. I can answer it for you without
you even asking it. There are no plans at all to do anything under the
name Savatage at this time, mainly because of the TSO’s schedule. We have
talked about it, we do want to do something one day, that’s why you won’t
see any of us using the name because the name is being held there in the
closet until we have a break in the action. That could be next year or
that could be 3 years from now.
We’ve released a statement after the last meeting we
had about it basically saying that there isn’t going to be any shows, it’s
going to be an album project. It’s going to be a compilation of songs
throughout the bands career with alternate mixes and alternate guitar
solo’s and then there’s a few songs that we have held aside that we’re
going to re-record and maybe do a bit of work on the old ‘Sirens’ and
‘The Dungeons Are Calling’ tapes and I may re-sing some things and we may add
some instruments to them, but that’s going to be done at a time that we
deem it possible to do it where we can give it 4 or 5 months to do it, as
that’s how long we’ve decided it’s going to take. It’s not something we
can do in a month. It may even take half a year to a year of time
dedicated to do it the right way.
If we’re going to do it then we want to
do it the right way. We don’t want to just slap something out there just
to shut everybody up because that would be wrong. That would be
cheating. We’ve got a lot of stuff but we just don’t have enough time to
do it. This TSO thing is like a freight train running down the tracks at
high speed right now. To do anything to stop that right now would be
professional suicide. There’s not enough Savatage fans out there in the
world to stop something that’s providing a living for everybody to take a
year off to do something that’s gonna loose money, that would be just
insane.
Some of the diehard fans just don’t get it. It’s like anybody,
if you were offered to do the same job you’re doing now some place else
for 10 times the amount of money, what are you going to do? Are you going
to stay where you’re at and struggle or are you going to take the exact
same job at another location for 10 times the pay that you’re getting paid
now? Anybody that tells me they’re going to stay where they are and only
get paid $10 an hour and not go to the place that’s paying them $100 an
hour is a liar! Anybody is going to go and do whatever it takes to take
care of themselves and their families, that’s what you’re here for.
If
you’re a husband and you have a wife and you’re doing one job that could
be paying you $10 an hour and you could be doing the same job elsewhere
and get paid £100 an hour what are you going to do? You’re going to go
and make the $100 an hour so you can provide for your family, it’s a no brainer and if anyone tries to argue that point with me, well you’re just
being stubborn and unrealistic.
That’s the whole thing with the Savatage
thing, we had to change the name of the band because we were starving, we
were folding, we were going under. As soon as we changed the name after
‘Poets And Madmen’ to TSO look at what’s happened. It’s the same guys,
it’s basically the same music, it’s just a little bit more versatile and
cross-over, but it’s basically all the same people and the same writers
under a different name. It baffles my mind why people still bring up the
whole Savatage thing. It’s like Savatage are doing fine, they’re just
called something else now.
MM - Finally do you have parting words for all our
readers out their and your fans who have supported your throughout.
Jon –
Oh I love jolly old England and I lived
there for a year you know, I lived in Dorset Square right across the
street from Marylebone Station, where the Beatles filmed the Hard Days
Night. Which was also a really big thing for me to be living right across
the street from where they filmed that.
I just want to say thank you and
I love you guys and I hope you enjoy the record and I look forward to
seeing you some time in the fall in the UK and just keep on rocking! Take
care of each other.
MM - We'd like to thank Jon for being
such good humoured and honest with us in this interview and for taking the
time out to chat with us today. We wish him and his fellow band
members every success with the new album and look forward to seeing them
out on tour later in the year.