
Interviewed By EvilG
If there was ever a person I would say "I'm not worthy" to, it would
be this man. I'm talking about one the most influential and STILL one of the
best vocalists to grace the heavy metal scene. Despite my lack of worthiness,
I was lucky enough to talk with Ronnie James Dio for thirty minutes about Dio,
Rainbow, metal and his future plans. So without any more of my rambling and
drooling, here you go my interview with the voice of heavy metal...Ronnie James
Dio!!!!
If you don't mind I'd like to start out with some questions about the past. I know there's a lot of history so the first question would be regarding the band ELF, which you were in many years ago. Have there been plans to re-release any of those albums?
Well there is actually a plan to record another album.
Right, that was my second question. (Laughter)
Yeah because I've been in contact with my cousin, Rock (Dave Fonsteine) and
our drummer, Simon Wright, is going to play. He's perfect for it because he's
small too. Ha Ha! We were going to use Joe's DeMaio to play bass on it. At this
point I'm not sure whether it will be Joey, or maybe both, but Rodger Glover
going to do some of it with us. Rodger produced all the Elf albums we did before
and I can't say no to Rodge and especially being the great player that he is.
So yeah, there are plans to do another one.
About re-released the other ones. I've seen them on CDs before. They are from
England; a company called The Connoisseur Collection. I see them all the time
and I keep saying well how come I'm not getting any money from these things…how
come I never get paid? But I have seen them before. One is a double CD called
GARGANTUAN ELF. That's got the second and third albums on it. I have seen the
first one, the one with me on the cover with a long nose curly hair and pointed
ears, the one just called ELF; I've seen that on CD as well.
Do you have any time frame in mind for when you will actually sit
down and work on this Elf project?
Well it's going to have to be a matter of when time doesn't step upon what Dio
is doing. We're not going to be finished touring until probably late May because
we have to go to Europe for a while as well and South America. So by that time
we certainly will be ready to write another album for Dio. That will take precedence.
I can't divide myself between doing one thing and doing another, I just don't
want to do that and couldn't anyway. So unfortunately, or hopefully, it will
be after we finish the next Dio album and that will hopefully give us a couple
months for the product to get revved up and out there. At that time at least
we can maybe have a start at writing all the things for it.
With regards to some of the other past bands/projects you've been
in like Ronnie Dio and the Prophets and other pre-Rainbow bands…has there
ever been talk of a box-set or re-releasing some of the early rare stuff that
people have problems finding?
Well…I can only say that I think that they should…if they find them
all they should bundle them in a box and blow them all up! (chuckles)…that's
what I think.
You'd rather forget about it?
I'd rather, yeah….and it's only because you become something so much different.
You understand why you are doing it and what you're doing. I guess erasing it
is only because I've become so different. If I listen to that I think to myself
"wow, what a wimp, what a jerk off!" But you have to remember, if
only everyone could know that when that was happening, it was pretty hard and
heavy stuff. But unfortunately you can't go around to everyone and say "don't
listen to it that way." There's just (been) such a drastic change for me…I
don't mean to keep going on and on about it but I think you'd know what I meant
if you had written an article when you were five years old critiquing something
and when you are 25 years old writing for Newsweek and someone says "oh…we
just wanted to bring up this article that you wrote, here it is." I don't
know if that equates, but you know what I mean.
With such an amazing career that has spanned about 40 years now,
have you ever though about putting it down into a book, an autobiography maybe?
Well I've done that already. It's pretty close to half finished. But that again
is a matter of time. I didn't realize quite how focused you had to be to write
some prose. When I did discover that I was quite adept at it really…from
my own autobiographical sense it's not like I'm making up stories, so it's pretty
easy to have the subject matter there. But I've found you really have to work
at it and concentrate to do it properly. I'm not a very good typist, so I do
everything with a pencil with a large eraser on it and edit it as I go along.
By the time I've finished a chapter, it's the way its going to be - obviously
I'm not egocentric enough not to give it to an editor who will probably have
a lot of suggestions when the time comes. But, I don't have the time again and
that's the problem. I'll have to find those month off periods. Which takes precedence
- the Elf album or writing a book? I don't know. I guess I can always write
a book, I can't always play with Elf.
I have a question regarding the musical climate that has changed
a lot over the span of your career. Trends and bands have come and gone so what
inspires you, Ronnie James Dio, the artist, to create in the year 2001?
I don't know what makes me tick. I don't know really what it is that made me
want to have done this all this time. I think probably if I have to do a self-examination
for you, it's probably that I have a really, really, really high level of desire
for whatever I put my mind to. I think when you translate that into the good
fortune I've had to be able to write, to be able to sing, without having to
be taught to do it and being given the time all my life to mature and to just
nurture it…it's just really easy. Maybe that's why I do it, because it's
just so easy. It's so easy for me to sing and to think musically and it's so
easy for me to be on a stage. In fact that's the best part of it all…that
all of this leads me to being in front of an audience because I don't walk around
my house and sing to my cat or my dogs or to people on the street. I do that
when the spirit moves me, and that's in front of an audience. I just keep doing
it because I love to do it. It's just so fulfilling for me.
The hard rock / heavy metal scene has obviously evolved during your
career. Do you think it has evolved in a way that you thought it would or is
what we call "heavy metal" today something that you never would of
dreamt to of fit under the moniker?
No I don't think so. I don't think that the progression from heavy metal music
to whatever it may be called today, whatever forms of metal music is may be
- death metal, speed metal, whatever…I didn't see it change just suddenly
overnight. It eased its way in a little, so I wasn't drastically shocked by
it. It's hard for me to say did I think that would happen, because it happened
so slowly it seemed like it was always there. I don't think I would of ever
predicted it would of gone that way. I would of always thought that it would
of stayed…I guess that's terrible isn't it really, it's a horrible perspective
on music that it would of stayed. Because of all people, me to say that…but
I would of thought that it would of perhaps hovered around the parameters perhaps
that I've always grown up with, with metal music from Sabbath to Zeppelin to
Purple to things that came after it. I always thought it would just get better
within that arena. I didn't see that it was going to be a drastic rhythm change
for a start, which is what I think brought half of it out.
You mentioned Deep Purple…you will be performing with them
in March in Tokyo, Japan. I want to ask you what it is like to perform with
Deep Purple AND with a full orchestra and you can perhaps tell me about the
songs you did and if you did and Dio material or if you would?
Well the first thing I did with them was at the Albert Hall. That was only two
nights - a Saturday and a Sunday. It was only going to be two nights and that
was to be it. I'd gone over four days before and rehearsed with the band and
had done only two songs from an album called Butterfly Ball. Rodger Glover had
written it and produced it. The show, because it was the 30th Anniversary of
John Lords writing and performing of Concerto For Group and Orchestra, which
they had did 30 years ago at the Albert Hall. So they wanted to reprise that
particular event. Each person in the band took ten to fifteen minutes to do
something that they had done in their time of that 30-year period - whether
it be solo work or whatever they wanted to do. Ian Pace played a big band thing
because he started as a big band drummer, Ian Gillan did some things from his
solo albums, etc etc.. Rodger Glover really only had Butterfly Ball to do which
anyone would know and I sang the thing so he asked me if I would do it. I said
of course I would, I would do anything for Rodger, I think he's the man…the
best. So I went over and rehearsed with them, did those two songs and went back
to thinking that that was good - we done the CD and it's on DVD and it will
be there forever and great bye. Then we went down to South America after that
and did three weeks in South America and then did 5 weeks in Europe with it
as well. So it went on a lot longer then I thought it would but because it was
such a good product. It was a joy doing it with them. We did it with the Long
Symphony Orchestra at the Albert Hall and in Europe we did it with the Transylvanian
Orchestra - they're from Romania, they are actually from Transylvania and the
call themselves the Transylvanian Orchestra. They have 90-pieces. That was an
event, traveling with 90 people but it was wonderful. The reaction was great.
It was a joy to be back with the guys from Purple again. I've know them almost
all my life…just to hang out with them again was wonderful, we had a great
time reconnecting. The music was wonderful…it was just one of the high
points of my life. I can't tell you what a joy it was, it was easy to. But when
we did the other gigs on the road (besides the Albert Hall one) I did four songs.
I did the two from Butterfly Ball and I did "Fever Dreams" from MAGICA
and I did "Rainbow In The Dark."
Are any of those going to be preformed in Tokyo, Japan in March
or will there be any additions?
Well as far as I know those will be the ones. I don't know how much work they've
been doing. I've been rather busy, so to go off and learn some more might be
difficult, but I'm not bothered. I'll have just finished the tour so I'll be
good and strong so it won't be a problem.
On a lighter note, you were featured as the band playing at a school
dance in an episode of South Park. Were you contacted for permission and how
did it come about?
Yes we were contacted and initially we said, "We don't think so because
you'll be very cruel to me." Then we were told that there was a lot of
fans of the band at the place, actually I think it was through Warner Brothers…but
they were big fans and said they'd be kind to me. And I thought (to myself),
"Look if you want to be an American icon, you better let this happen pal."
So I did, and they did it, and I think they were great. They killed me, I was
on the floor it was just wonderful.
How close did we actually come to a Rainbow reunion and do you think it will
ever happen?
It came pretty close at one point but that went away. There were just a lot
of problems involved in it. There has been contact made between Ritchie's (Blackmore)
faction and my faction and Ritchie and I…but not for those purposes…I
mean, I haven't initiated that contact because I just left that up to Ritchie.
It was his band in the first place, so it was up to him to make a move and obviously
it wouldn't be that way any more - it's a different world out there now. I think
the crux of that band was always, aside from Cozy who is not with us anymore,
was always myself and Ritchie from the way we just wrote and played together.
But there is still an outside chance. As far as ever touring or doing anything
like that, I would think that that would be an absolute impossibility. It's
really hard, it's like doing the Sabbath reunion, and you think that everything
is going to change, but nothing ever does, nothing ever changes. I don't know
if at this point in my life if I want to put myself through that. I'm so happy
doing what I'm doing now. I'd have to really think about it. Let's face it,
money is a big enticer and I'm sure they are going to chuck some big bucks at
us because they already did once. But you've got to be a bit more true to yourself
then that. I would do it if I wanted to do it, if it was important…because
I think it is important to a lot of people out there. That band has become…I
don't know what happened with it, but it became this template for music for
a while and it just seems like such an important thing to so many musicians
that I think it would be a shame for them, for the ones who have never seen
it, not to see it one more time. I think it would be great but who knows, there
is always a chance.
I was going to say, Rainbow did leave quite a mark, in my opinion,
on a lot of today's newer power metal bands. (Absolutely) That's kind of evidenced
by a CD that was released a year or two ago called "To Catch A Rainbow"
which featured several Helloween members (amongst others). I was wondering what
your thoughts were on that tribute and the impact that Rainbow has had on power
metal?
Well I am always flattered by tributes. I think it's something I never expected
but that one and anyone who attempts to do it flatter me. Its just saying thank
you. So to judge it…I judge it by the thank you as opposed to what's in
it but they all do a really good job of it because they all love Rainbow so
much. All these kids who grew up that way, wanted to the singer in Rainbow and
probably always wanted to sing "Kill The King" or probably always
wanted to sing "Man On The Silver Mountain." Just as I always wanted
to sing "Smoke On The Water" or the things that you grew up with,
that's what you want to do at some point in your life. So they do it with care
and they imitate very well I think. But you know there is only one original.
And the other part of the question (impact on power metal)…like I said
before, and especially in Europe, it's had an incredible effect on so many people.
I've spoken to a lot of people in my life who were stunned by the first time
when they saw Rainbow and went on to become what they became, not because of
Rainbow but because they wanted to be like that. I know Lars Ulrich is one of
them and Yngwie Malmsteen is another. I just know so many people who I've spoken
to over there who are in bands and even bands you'd know very well go "ohh…I
saw Rainbow and for me that was ohhhh…" It's just amazing how that
band, and we were always huge in Europe but we weren't that massive in America,
at least the Rainbow I was in at the beginning of the band. I think we were
more of an underground band at that time, I don't know why. I remember playing
in, I think it was Toronto, at the Maple Leaf Gardens. They had to cut the place
back pretty drastically but I think we only drew like 1500 people or so. I thought,
"Well this isn't going to work." Then we started to do a little better
here and there but we were smart enough not to play massive places like that.
Then 25 years later it has become this band that everyone saw at Maple Leaf
Gardens. There must have been 150,000 people there and I didn't see them. That's
what happens but it's been a very important thing especially from the "duo"
combination, which works so well all the time. From Mick Jagger and Keith Richards
to Perry and Tyler, there are many more of them...I don't say we were on that
level, Ritchie and I, but we created something very unique just as Tony and
I did in Sabbath as well. You connect as two musicians who are necessary to
make it happen and it's a magical thing. Rainbow just had impact on everyone
because they hadn't heard anything like that before.
With regards to the other tribute album, the only other one I'll bring up, and
that's HOLY DIO which was another of the tributes that stood out, what did you
think of it and how much involvement did you have with it? Did you have any
involvement at all, or was it just brought to you done.
Yeah, that's exactly the way it was, yeah.
Did you think it was a fitting tribute?
I thought the best one was the European one. The HOLY DIO one wasn't as good
as that one, I didn't think. It was OK. Again, like I said before, to me, I
can't bite a thank-you. It was great.
A question regarding your personal and business relationship - and
that is with your wife, Wendy, who is also your manager. Do you ever find it
difficult to balance those to factors of your relationship?
No, never. I've never ever had a problem.
How long has she been your manager anyway?
Let's see…1983.
Ok…Craig Goldy, recorded one Dio CD with you, DREAM EVIL,
and then he left the band. Why did he leave the band back then anyway?
He was just dissatisfied with his life and with what was going on I guess….and
the people he was playing with. I was very surprised that he left and called
and said "I'm going." Now since he's been back, obviously the first
thing he said was "all I can tell you is that that was the biggest mistake
I ever made." You do what you have to do in life, I understand. If you
are not happy doing something then, good I don't want to be around you anyway,
not if I have to make music with you. So Craig left for his own personal reasons
and to have him back again is wonderful. He's matured so much, he's such a calmer
person, and he knows what he's doing and what he wants. He's a great musician
and a great guitar player, a great friend. I couldn't of been luckier to get
Craig back again.
Do you think he was a big part of the reason why a more traditional
sound emerged on the MAGICA CD?
I think so. I think you'd have to definitely say that. Craig's sound, although
it has thickened and broadened out a lot since the DREAM EVIL days and he plays
slightly differently I find….I think he knows what it's supposed to sound
like for Dio. I think he knew that when he came into the band the first time
and he knew what I wanted this time, it was just there. We've never had a problem.
It was just one of these magical things where we just sat down and wrote and
played like 12 hours a day and didn't know what time it was. I really haven't
experienced that for a really long, long, long, long time. In fact, maybe never.
It's a just a special relationship that we've built up musically and personally
too because we're good friends and we've know each other for so long. But without
him, I could of never written MAGICA, no way.
At the beginning of the writing process, wasn't the idea of having
two guitar players discussed - as in keeping Tracy G and having Craig?
That's right, that's very true. So many people had criticized Tracy for the
kind of guitar player that he was, that he didn't fit inside of this band. They
criticized him for such a long period of time that we just had to have a look
around. Obviously we were not pleasing the people who are our certainly our
fan base anymore, they still come but they don't seem as happy as they used
to be. Maybe some of them stayed home. So I wanted to stay loyal to Tracy. In
fact I love Tracy, I think Tracy is a great guitar player. But he was just the
wrong style of guitar player for the typical Dio sound I guess. So I wanted
to bring another guitar player into it so we'd have two - we'd have the best
of both worlds, Tracy and Craig. Tracy could of stayed in the band, I didn't
want to lose him, but when I brought it up Craig said yes but Tracy said, "look
it's not Craig, it could be anybody. I can't play with another guitar player."
I understand that. Some people can and some people can't. Some people can sing
with others and some can't - it's not a problem. So Tracy was gone and that
left us with Craig so everything really worked out for us really well. I really
wanted one guitar player anyway but I was willing, for Tracy's sake, just as
a friend and fellow musician, to not do that to him. But he chose to do it himself.
MAGICA represents your first concept album. Is this idea something
you've had on the back burner or have wanted to do for many years?
It's something I've been wanting to do for a long time but nothing that I ever
thought about doing. None of the bits of this particular piece had been inherited
from any past thoughts that I've had at all because the way I write is I write
for the moment, I write for the project. Now I write a concept piece and I have
to start at the beginning and it started with the title MAGICA and it went form
there. I just started to write a fantasy story about MAGICA. What was MAGICA
going to be? Well I made it a book and so on and so forth and away it goes.
Then wrote the songs and musically wrote it around the story. It's really easy
to do. It's the easiest album that I've ever written because it led me every
time I had to turn around and write something musically or lyrically it was
exactly where I needed to go. It was something I've wanted to do, but again,
a new process and one I couldn't of done without Craig.
Do you think you would do a concept album again?
I think what I'll probably do is, I know what I'll do next time. This will be
a lot more straightforward album - the next one. Just more song orientated,
not a concept of any kind. I think that's probably what's expected but we're
going to do something more straightforward. Then (after that) probably the next
two albums will be parts two and three of MAGICA because I want to make it a
trilogy.
Back in 1985 you were the mastermind behind the Hear n' Aid project.
I know since then your involvement with helping those who are less fortunate
has continued in an organization called Children of the Night. I was wondering
what plans, if any, exist for a Hear n' Aid part two??
We are going to do one for Children of the Night, which will basically follow
the same pattern as the Hear n' Aid project. It will be one song, Craig and
I have already written the song and that will feature five or six guitar players
and five or six singers. We will have other songs that will be given to us by
bands of things that haven't been released yet. So it will be a full CD. At
the same time we are going to re-release the Hear n' Aid album on CD because
it's only ever been released in Japan on CD.
Will you invite back any of the same vocalists or guitar players
who preformed on the first one.
Yeah, if they are available I will, sure. I don't want all of the same ones
this time. Yngwie wants to do it so he did on the last one, so there's that
possibility. As far as other guitar players go, I think Vivian (Cambell) will
contribute so that would be great. Bruce Dickinson is going to sing on it…we
haven't really finalized all the people yet because it's a matter of time and
when we can do it. With all the touring and other albums arriving…it will
probably happen when we come back from doing this album, I'm sure that's when
we're going to have to fit everything in.
Will you call it Children of the Night then, of Hear n' Aid Part
II?
I'm sure it will be Children of the Night. It has nothing really to do with
Hear n' Aid. That was for (famine) relief for Africa, this is something totally
different.
Regarding Yngwie Malmsteen, you have recorded with him in the past on "Dream
On."
"Dream On" and those things they put the guitar player on quite a
bit later. So when I sang that song, there was no guitar on it.
So you've never got to sit and work with him on anything like that?
No, I wouldn't do that anyway. They asked him to be the guitar player and it's
up to him to show his chops. I'm assuming that's what his fans want to hear
(ed. note: fuckin eh!!!). I wouldn't be so pretentious to do that unless it
was my gig. If it was my gig I'd DAMN well do it, I can tell you that.
Would you ever consider future collaboration with Yngwie?
Aaaa…Never say no.
I think it would be kinda cool!
Ok…well I've said this before and I love Yngwie. I think he's a great
person and I'm one of the few people who really like him. He's been great with
me, he's been very respectful, he's a great player. My only thing is, if I worked
with Yngwie, I would just want him to be more of a person on a band than "I'm
Yngwie Malmsteen." I think that's what it is all about, being a person
in a band. That's what a band is, when musicians get together to play - they
are in a band. They feed off each other, they invent things together, and they
enjoy it together. The band is not the reason for me to be out there in front
of THEM and sing. That's not my job. My job is to be a part of that band. I'm
just afraid that Yngwie feels that his job is to be in front of that band. So
it makes it hard sometimes from a musical standpoint. But I love him and we
had a great time on the tour and he did a great job.
You're touring now, not with Yngwie bur with Armored Saint? (Yeah
and Lynch Mob) Doro was also on the bill with Yngwie, how did that go over?
Doro was GREAT. Doro was rock and roll, she's rock and roll. She's a great person.
I love Doro. I've known her for a long time. She opened for us, she had a band
from Germany called Warlock a while ago and…I think that must have been
like 90-91, something like that. I met her then, she was great then and she's
even better now. She's great, the hardest working girl I've ever seen. She really
works hard and loves the music and she's going to do really well here. She went
down really well with the audiences.
With regards to your voice, you've been singing for quite a while, so do you
have to take any measures to keep your voice in such excellent shape such as
avoiding smoking, drinking, eating healthier foods…anything like that
or are you just gifted?
It's not smoking and also really knowing how to do it. Technique is the thing
that is most important. If you know how to song, then you are not going to hurt
yourself. You can always do it because the other roots you can take to not injure
yourself. Your voice is your instrument and you should know it really well and
that's what the problem is. People think they can just go out and screech and
scream and it goes away. I just don't smoke and I try to look after myself but
I'm a musician and I drink, I can't help it (laughs). You know, it's boring
out there on the road. I'm too long in the tooth to stop doing it now.
To wrap up I want to ask you about something people have asked you
about before but will no doubt continue to talk about, and that is the sign
created by raising your index and little finger. Some call it the "devils
hand" or the "evil eye." I would like to know if you were the
first one to introduce this to the metal world and what this symbol represents
to you?
I doubt very much if I would be the first one who ever did that. That's like
saying I invented the wheel, I'm sure someone did that at some other point.
I think you'd have to say that I made it fashionable. I used it so much and
all the time and it had become my trademark until the Brittany Spears audience
decided to do it as well. So it kind of lost it's meaning with that. But it
was…I was in Sabbath at the time. It was symbol that I thought was reflective
of what that band was supposed to be all about. It's NOT the devil's sign like
we're here with the devil. It's an Italian thing I got from my Grandmother called
the "Meloik" (ed. note: not sure of the spelling). It's to ward off
the Evil Eye or to give the Evil Eye, depending on which way you do it. It's
just a symbol but it had magical incantations and attitudes to it and I felt
it worked very well with Sabbath. So I became very noted for it and then everybody
else started to pick up on it and away it went. But I would never say I take
credit for being the first to do it. I say because I did it so much that it
became the symbol of rock and roll of some kind.
You are the first I remember form back in the 80's who I say use
it the most.
That's right (laughs).