I’ve seen you on YouTube playing everything from “Freebird” in a club to “Crossroads” with some high schoolers. Do you get a chance to rehearse in most cases?

He couldn’t have picked a scarier key on the bass?
Yeah, and there’s a great post script as well. Not long after that I got a letter from Peter Cetera who has been one of my bass heroes from back when Chicago was the Chicago Transit Authority. I got a letter signed with a cover of Bass Player Magazine and a photo saying ‘Hey, I caught you on Leno and I knew you were a fellow bass player. Admiring what you’re doing out on the campaign.’ He said, ‘nice chops on the bass too.’ My world was made. I told my wife, then I went to campaign headquarters and said, ‘You guys aren’t going to believe this...’ and I think they thought we’d one another state or something. I told them ‘I got a letter from Peter Cetera.’ I was running around holding up this letter like I had one the California lottery. What’s funny is Bass Player is one of my favorite magazines. I’ll be on an airline and people will be looking at me to see what Huckabee is reading. They’ll assume it’s the Economist or the Wall Street Journal. Instead, I’ll be pulling out Bass Player that will have a picture of some long haired guy on the cover.

Far more empowered, it’s therapeutic and relaxing. It’s also a way to express something that’s a little unusual or out of the ordinary. I think people tend to think of politicians as stiff, programmed, and orchestrated in everything. When I strap on a bass and cut loose with a local band it’s an uninhibited form of expression. Not only do I enjoy it, but I think a lot of people appreciate it and see a side of me that they wouldn’t normally see. It makes me a real person to them and not just a character or figure that they have seen on television.
Do you ever worry that you won’t be taken seriously because you’re out playing “Freebird?”
My attitude is that if somebody is going to decide that being a musician means that I’m less than serious about life, then they would probably be more comfortable voting for someone else anyway. If that doesn’t offend them, then I’ll find another way to do it. I’d rather get them out of the way and be done with it. I’m of the opinion that there are two kinds of people in the world; people who love and appreciate music and the others who don’t matter.
How do you see your faith intersecting with your music and your politics and your day to day life?
On two fronts, I was the bass player in my church praise band for seven years in Little Rock. It was a new church with seventy five people when my wife and I first started there so they needed a body with a bass more then they needed proficiency. It was a great growing experience to learn the discipline to practice every week and playing every week in a worshipful atmosphere. Music took on a whole new meaning for me in that period because it was the first time I regularly played praise and worship music. I was thoroughly enjoying it and it gave me a whole new appreciation for the praise and worship of a service in a way that I found refreshing. Music has also given me an incredible bridge to people who would never ever want to talk to me. I’ll be in a music store playing and somebody will come up that will have more metal piercings then most Buick grills and a ton of tattoos. To an average person they might be known as a left wing freak, I see them as a fellow musician. We’ll talk about favorite artists, favorite instruments, the gear that we use and all the stuff that musicians talk about. I’ve seen barriers broken down as they’re talking to a conservative, straight laced, evangelical believer, republican. I’m treating him with dignity and respect because I’m talking to him as a fellow musician. Its remarkable how that can open opportunities to talk about why playing in praise bands is important to me, and my faith, and my relationship with Christ. It’s been a pretty remarkable way to break down barriers where people otherwise would never have given me the time of day.
What other cool bass opportunities would you like to share?
Don Griffin owns West LA Music; it’s one of the most phenomenal stores in America. They sell to all the country rock stars. It’s just a premiere, big time store, and Don is a friend of mine. A lot of people who work there are famous, like the former bassist of Three Dog Night. There are some amazing stories to be told. Don owns John Entwistle’s early bass that he had with the Who; he used it on “My Generation.” The guitar is probably worth a couple hundred thousand dollars. He has it on display at his place and I was in there one day and he asked if I wanted to play it. I said ‘you have to be kidding me.’ I was thinking ‘I’m not worthy, I’m not worthy.’ I picked it up and played a few licks. I was a kid who grew up in the sixties and realized the impact of the Who. I would liken it to a golfer who was asked if he’d like to play a round with Tiger Woods clubs, just a great experience.

I think music is the universal language. It’s like fire, it can either warm us and cook our food and keep us comforted or it can burn our house down. It’s purely how we use it. You can go anywhere in the world and music can communicate where words can’t. I’ve been to 41 countries and there are many places where I can’t communicate. Two things always transcend a language, one is a smile and the other is music. Those two things can completely create a relationship like nothing else can. When people say ‘if you’re a Christian you should only listen to certain types of music’ they tend not to know much about music history. Many of the great hymns that we sing so reverently today were bar songs in Ireland or Great Britain. Like “Amazing Grace” the tune was sung in bars and new words were added to it. It’s comical to me when people talk about the holiness of certain music when they know the background and find out it wasn’t so holy after all.



