Debby Rao of
KNAC.COM
recently conducted an interview with
RATT drummer
Bobby Blotzer. A
couple of excerpts from the chat follow:
KNAC.COM: Who initiated
RATT getting back together again?
Blotzer: I am going to
step out and just say on both re-unions, '97 and this one, it was I calling
everybody.
Stephen [
Pearcy, vocals] may have made the claim that
he did, but he might be forgetting I spent three years talking to him, talking
to
Warren [
DeMartini, guitar], talking to
Juan
[
Croucier, bass]. I knew the moment we step into a room, or get on the
phone and everybody hears each other and we start with the pleasantries first,
and then we dig into the bullshit that is all it is going to take. Because
everybody realizes there is a lot more good times, than there were bad times.
The bad times tend to outshine the good shit. Fact of the matter is, we had a
lot of good times; we made a huge stamp in history.
KNAC.COM: The
rhythm section sounds awesome along with bassist
Robbie
Crane.
Blotzer: Well, he is a great bass player and one of the
greatest human beings you will ever meet. Everybody loves the guy. I wish I had
a personality like his. I need him in
RATT. For the fans, I wanted
Juan to come back, just so the fans could see the four surviving members.
But
Juan is unreasonable. Completely unreasonable to deal with. The fact
that he axed himself out of the equation was good for me because I love playing
with
Robbie. We never fight, we never argue, he is not an ego freak.
Robbie is a total team player. He is a good buffer between all the people
on the tour. Anybody that knows
Robbie will understand that quote right
there. [
John]
Corabi is playing rhythm [guitar]. This is
Corabi's seventh year with us.
Corabi started with us in the
summer of 2000. It is like; these guys aren't new really anymore. Except with
Stephen in the fold now.
KNAC.COM: Yes, and it feels good
to have
Stephen back I might add. In the past,
Stephen has told me
that
Robbin [
Crosby] was the gentle giant. Would you say in a way
that
Robbie Crane is the new peacemaker of the
band?
Blotzer: That is a very good question. He is a little more
diplomatic.
Robbin did that a lot of times. But
Robbin, I am not
saying anything bad about
Robbin, because I loved him, and deeply miss
him, but
Robbin would ride the fence on lot stuff, yeah know? At times, I
would be going, "Dude speak up right now what you said to me on the phone last
night." Which I would say to anybody in this band if they changed their tune in
the middle of having a meeting pertaining to something.
Crane is pretty
good, it hard to explain and not be long-winded on it, but they both equally
have that diplomatic flair and it is very welcome. Because, I knew
Juan,
he created so many problems in the initial phone calls of trying to get this
thing together. I was telling these guys, "Do you not see what I am seeing here?
We haven't even stepped into a rehearsal room yet and this cat is making all of
all these demands and saying all this junk. I am telling you right now, you can
out vote me on it, but I give it a month into the tour and it is going to be
unbearable. It is going to be back to the same hijinks and it is going to be a
drag." Unfortunately,
Juan and I go back to bands, when we were sixteen
years old. I respect him as a musician and everything. He is making decisions
again that is affecting him, he is probably going to definitely regret. He has
so much animosity, it is like, "Dude, let it go." It is not benefiting him by
harboring this junk. Get over it, OK?! He has been out of the band sixteen
years. I am onstage every night, and I thank God every night, at least two or
three times a night. I am amazed that I ever made it this far. There are so many
great bands and musicians in the world. Not everybody gets his or her shot.
Thank God, I got the break. I go to
Juan, "You should be on your knees
right now thanking the guy upstairs for giving you the opportunity to do this
again." I go to
Juan, "Dude, once you get on this stage, you will
understand. It has been a long time, since you have been up there and you are a
great performer." I don't take it for granted anymore. I still don't like the
whole traveling trip. The fans coming out, and spending their hard earned money
and giving you the support and backing you, means more than
anything.
KNAC.COM: What about new music?
Stephen told me
that you have the mobile studio out on the road on the bus.
Blotzer: Yes, we do. Right now
Stephen and Warren have
been writing. I have some stuff in the can that I have written. I talked to
Stephen and said I know you are working with Warren right now, but when
you have some time if you want to mess with this
So there is talk about a new
record here for 2008. We have two new things coming out on
Rhino Records,
which is a greatest-hits [collection] called
"Tell The World: The Very Best
Of Ratt", which is going to have a bunch of the singles stuff again and some
other stuff that hasn't been on any best of collection. That is July 31, it
comes out on
Rhino. At that same time, we have a DVD, with all of the old
videos. That is also available on
Rhino. We were going to (include) one
(song) that we wrote with
Juan. It was his initial writing on the song,
and we did the
RATT touch on it. He has prevented it from being on this
record, for spiteful reasons, is my guess. It was within our rights to put it on
there, but it was this sort of thing, he has this lawyer contact us. We really
don't want to go through this bullshit with the lawyer. So we are like, "Hey,
dude, whatever. See ya later." But it was a good song, and we wanted to put it
on. It is sitting there doing nothing. It was recorded for
"Reach For The
Sky", and it never made it on the record. It was a good song and recorded
real well. It is like; he is doing nothing with music, and being he is just
being spiteful, it will ultimately cost him money in royalties for not being
there in publishing. Good move,
Juan, thank you. So that is what is going
on with the new stuff.
KNAC.COM: Will
RATT remain out on
the road after the
POISON tour wraps up?
Blotzer: There is
a bunch of different scenarios being kicked around. We might go to Europe and
tour there for three weeks and then Japan. Or we might go back here and tour
with a "yet-to-be-named" other band and due theatres and stuff like that. I was
hoping we do that because it is just a lot of markets we are not hitting. I
would like to go to Europe; we haven't been there in a long time. We haven't
been to Japan for ten years
nine years, actually.
Read the entire
interview at
KNAC.COM.