Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - Dennis DeYoung
Episode Date: May 25, 2020Rock icon and former Styx frontman DENNIS DeYOUNG joins Gilbert and Frank from his home in Chicago to talk about the birth of the Beatles, the death of rock n' roll, opening for Stevie Wonder and Fran...k Zappa and teaming with Julian Lennon for his new album "26 East, Volume One." Also, Dean Martin mocks the Stones, Alice Cooper pulls out all the stops, Eric Cartman covers "Come Sail Away" and Dennis reveals the biggest downside to being a rock star. PLUS: Dr. Demento! In praise of Antony Newley! Bob Hope wears love beads! Slim Pickens joins a Styx tour! And Dennis serenades the boys with "Babe" and "Lady"! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Baseball is finally back.
Get in on Major League action and swing for the fences with BetMGM,
the king of sportsbooks.
Log in or sign up to play along as BetMGM brings the real-time action.
Embrace a season's worth of swings with BetMGM,
your one-stop shop for all things baseball.
BetMGM.com for Ts and Cs.
19 plus to wager.
Ontario only.
Gambling problem?
Call Connex Ontario at 1-866-531-2600.
BetMGM operates pursuant
to an operating agreement
with iGaming Ontario.
Meet our summer collection
of grillable faves
that come on sticks,
in spirals,
with bite-sized bursts
of flavor and more.
From pork belly bites
full of barbecue flavor
to skewer sensations
that will keep the grill
going for dessert.
Make this your best summer yet with PC.
Hi, this is Gilbert Gottfried.
This is Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast with my co-host, Frank Santopadre.
Our guest this week is a musician, singer, songwriter,
record producer, occasional actor, theatrical composer,
raconteur, and a genuine rock and roll icon. He started out playing the accordion to please his
mother, and just a few decades later, he was selling millions of records and albums and performing to sold-out arenas all over the world.
As both a solo artist and a founding member of the creative voice behind the wildly popular pop and rock band Styx.
You know his distinct voice from hit songs like Lady, The Grand Illusion, Mr. Roboto,
Babe, This is the Time, Show Me the Way, Don't Let It End, The Best of Times, and Come Sail
Away, among others.
He was also the band's most successful writer, composing seven of the band's eighth Billboard Top Ten singles,
as well as a solo Top Ten single.
His sense of showmanship and his grandiose theatrical style
heavily influenced the group's sound in the 1970s.
He's also released seven well-received solo live albums,
including a Broadway Standards album.
As well as a theatrical performer,
he's starred in productions of Jesus Christ, Stupid Star
and composed an original stage musical based on the Hunchback
of Notre Dame. But there's more. His recent YouTube videos made right in his living room
and created to provide comfort to those affected by the current pandemic,
have garnered over a million views and generated thousands of responses.
And his brand new solo album, 26 East Volume 1, will be released on May 20th.
Volume 1 will be released on May 20th. Please welcome to the show an artist of many interests and talents
and a man who says that growing up he wanted to either play center field
for the Chicago White Sox or be Jerry Lewis.
Chicago White Sox, or be Jerry Lewis.
The pride of Roseland, Illinois, Dennis DeYoung.
Oh, my God, Frank, give Gilbert a break.
That introduction was longer than my career.
Were some of those things true, Dennis?
None of it.
I didn't even know what you were talking about.
By the way, I've got nothing to add to that.
See you guys. Good night.
Jesus. Gilbert, I mean, I don't even know how you read all that stuff.
Oh, it's torture.
Thanks. Thanks, though.
Oh.
I know.
Gilbert likes to say they double as an obituary.
You forgot to mention I'm kind to animals. Oh, I'll start all over and include it.
Yeah, please.
Go from Paradise Theater, anywhere in there.
What about this Jerry Lewis business, Dennis?
You're in the midst of a lifelong fan and somebody who knew Jerry.
Yeah, I mean, I was in an elevator, Gilbert, one day with my little daughter.
And it was in some hotel in L.A.
I just stepped there, and he was there, and he had a lozenge, I think, at the time, but
maybe not.
And so he turned to my daughter and said, oh, you're so beautiful, and I stood there,
and I never said a word because I thought to myself, that's Jerry Lewis.
Shut up.
I didn't know what to say to him because I wanted to be him.
He, he, he's like one of those people when you'd see him in person, you go, no, he can't
exist in real life.
Here's, here's, you didn't, Gilbert, you didn't know this, but this, this song was originally written for one of his movies. Ready?
Lady!
Lady!
Lady!
Have you done that in concert, Dennis?
Dennis? I have done, I don't know if I've ever done an on-concert, but for many years, I used it as a routine on radio shows, because nobody, nobody expects me to be funny, they expect me to
be, hi, I'm a rock star, I'm posing, and very serious, but really, the guys in Styx were the,
the nuttiest guys ever, and Jerry, for me, was like, you know this one, that's baby, anyway,
so I love Jerry Lewis.
I just, you know, and I was always,
till one day I was practicing falls,
you know, all these bad falls.
I hit my rib cage so hard on the side of a building,
I thought I broke a rib.
I stopped doing that.
But I wanted to be Jerry.
He's just, you know,
I don't know what he is like as a person,
but there was no one ever like him, ever. He was one of a kind.
I was always lucky,
because I could use that famous line,
well, he was always nice to me.
Yeah.
Yeah, he was nice to my daughter,
and so I didn't give him an opportunity to not be nice.
What did you listen to growing up?
I know the albums you bought, Dennis,
but were you a movie guy as a kid?
Because I know you're a movie guy now.
You're a movie buff.
We talked about Blazing Saddles.
Did you go to the Paradise Theater in Chicago?
What was the other big show place?
The Granada?
Paradise Theater was,
the story behind it as quickly as,
I walked into an art gallery,
Merrill Chase in 1980, and there was a painting, a serigraph actually, of the
Paradise Theatre by Robert Addison and it said Paradise, you know, closed
indefinitely and say wow that seems like a metaphor for America in 1980. We were
going through big changes. So I bought it, took it home, but the actual Paradise
Theatre was torn down in 1958 when I was like 11 years old.
I never saw it.
I see.
And I just used the image as a metaphor.
Did you go to movies as a kid?
I know you were a White Sox fan.
No, I was held in cap—I never went to the movies.
I was held captive in my base by my parents.
Frank, did I go to movies?
Of course I—yeah. the movie theater was the state theater
the state at least the state theater and we used to go there and you know try to sit down and have
some popcorn and then you know get our feet up off the floor when we left they were stuck so bad
but yeah i love movies and uh you know like every kid you dreamed well someday uh maybe i'll be an
actor or something and But it never happened.
Well, it did eventually.
Was the State Theater the John Dillinger Theater?
No, that's the Biograph.
The Biograph.
Yeah, that's on the north side, way far from where I lived.
Good Chicago history.
Was he watching a Clark Gable movie?
Manhattan melodrama. That's what he
was watching? Yeah, that's right.
Very good. Wow.
What, Myrna Loy? I don't know.
I know some stuff.
But at 73, Gilbert, I'm forgetting
everything. Right now, all I have on
is this hoodie and my cup.
You know, you never know when a ball could take a bad bounce in the infield.
Going back to the, go ahead. I found out something that really disappointed me because I wanted to hear stories about groupies making plaster casts of your dick
and stuff like that.
And instead, to my horror,
you've been happily married for how many years?
50.
Jesus.
50, yeah, I know.
Well, I met her in high school.
She was 15 and I was 46.
And no, that's ridiculous.
I can't even do that joke anymore.
We met at, listen to this, Gilbert.
On 2-9-64, I was supposed to go to a Catholic high school dance.
And my best friend loved, he was into the Beatles already.
Meet the Beatles.
I said, it sounds like hype, not interested.
And so he made me stand in my parents' home and watch them at 7 o'clock. He was into the Beatles already. Meet the Beatles. I said, it sounds like hype, not interested.
And so he made me stand in my parents' home and watch them at 7 o'clock before we went.
And so I watched it.
And, you know, my life was changed. I knew exactly at that moment what I wanted to do.
And that was being waste management.
But anyway, I looked at that and I said, I was already a musician. I had formed the
band in 1962, the nucleus of the band. The Panazzo brothers lived across the street. And I played
accordion, you know, if you want to hear Lydia's theme. I played accordion. And we were in a rock
band. Then I saw that Gilbert Frank. I just said, that's it.
I'm going to do that.
And so two weeks later, I went to that Catholic high school dance.
I met my wife.
So in two weeks in 1964, my professional and my personal life was set.
Good thing I didn't know it.
Wow, it all happened.
Yeah.
And you and Suzanne celebrated 50 years, what, in January?
We tried to, but I had food poisoning. Oh, Jesus. Yeah. We were down in, uh, we were down in Boca
because I'm old enough now to go down there. And we were there and I, and I had dinner reservations
booked and, uh, I got, I ate something bad. And and and so we celebrated our 50th uh not that
great but 50 years um she's uh look she's she's a drunkard's dream if i ever did see one you know
she defends me i don't have to speak you know she's been supportive uh you know don't pick a
fight she's she's. Like, I'm
half Italian. Unfortunately,
it's the upper half.
So she says to me,
you know,
her children and her family, off limits.
You know, so she's been with
me the whole time.
She loved me before I was
anything.
And at the time, I was actually a greaser, so that shows you her devotion.
Wow.
But we've been married, raised two kids, and they've traveled with us.
Dara, are you there?
I'm here.
She's there.
We raised two children from 1976 on the road, three of us at first in a hotel room all the
time.
So this pandemic, child's play.
You guys got kids, don't you?
Gilbert, you have kids?
Yeah, two.
Yeah, well, two of us were in the road for like three or four years at the very end all the time.
And, you know, it was a testimony to the fact that I could run very fast.
Out the fence!
I think his first disappointment
was that you didn't live a life
of rock and roll debauchery, Dennis.
And his second one was that you're not able
to actually play the accordion.
I can play the accordion.
Gilbert, if you come over here and lift it up for me,
I can't lift anything yet.
That's what I mean mean I can play it no listen to this I have a brand new video that that
that premiered today on YouTube it's called to the good old days it's a duet with Julian Lennon
beautiful song and at the very it's all old home videos and you know the kind of stuff the first time i saw it
i said this looks like a ken burns documentary for christ's sake but it's really very charming
and the very last scene is me singing on the floor bare feet playing accordion because it ends with
an accordion on the record and it's everybody's favorite part and the reason i'm sitting on the
floor is because i couldn't lift it up.
I dragged it out of the car
and put it on my things,
and then I played it.
And then I put it off,
and coincidentally,
the one musical I've read
is written is
The Hunchback of Notre Dame.
Anyway.
So we're recording this on May 11th.
No one's ever going to hear this, are they?
Yeah. No.'s ever going to hear this, are they? Yeah.
No.
Well, probably not.
We're recording this on May 11th.
So today is the day that the video dropped.
It did.
Right.
Okay.
So by the time this is up, people can actually go find it.
And it's very touching.
Yeah, I sent it to you.
Yeah, it was good.
And I sent it on to Gilbert and Vera.
It was very sweet.
Honestly, it brought tears to my eyes and i well oh go ahead i'm listening i'm listening no i noticed uh an
interesting similarity to you and the beatles is like because the beatles stopped touring and
wanted to be creative and wanted to do more stuff in the studio
yeah and they and we were all we all have penises that's where the similarities end
they're listen those guys are gods and they should be gilbert lennon mccartney were adam and eve
from which all the rest of us bands were begat. That's just it. They
really invented the modern rock band, self-contained, writing songs, singing them,
arranging them. The things they did in that short period of time, for most of us musicians,
it's unfathomable. You think about it and you go, if you take one of their albums,
that's like the entire
hits of the Styx catalog.
That's how good they were.
You know, were you a Beatle fan when you were younger?
Oh, absolutely.
Okay, yeah.
Yeah, both of us.
It was just remarkable.
Yeah, what's interesting too is that a couple of times with some of Styx's concept
albums, I mean, and I saw this in interviews with you. You were kind of chasing a Beatle thing.
Always.
There's at least three albums
you were trying to do your own take on Abbey Road.
I was, and I failed miserably,
but we still had success.
I mean, you know, it was,
those two, we made good records.
And, you know, Gilbert, you're a very
funny man and you're a great comedian. Thank you. But you know, you had, you have your idols. You
looked at Jerry Lewis and say, well, I'm Gilbert. I'm not Jerry. Isn't that how you feel? Yeah.
Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. You, you watch someone and you go, I want to be in the, you know, same profession as them and I want to be connected with them, but yeah, I gotta be my own person.
records didn't sound like Beatles records. I was just trying to conceptualize the way it did. And as I directed the band myself, it was, what I learned from the Beatles was as long as you write
a great song and make a good record, that's all you need to do. You don't have to fit in one mode,
one genre. And they did everything. Because if you think about Beatlemania as much as I loved it,
if they'd have stayed there, they wouldn't have lasted the way they did.
And so I remember the first time I got Rubber Soul and I put it on and it was so different.
I thought, oh my God, what have they done?
They've ruined everything.
And then after the third listen,
I realized it was goodbye Beatlemania,
hello the future.
It was just, they were gonna do anything they wanted.
And so when I was trying to direct my guys
in my band, I thought, write a great song, baby.
People will come to hear
great songs. And that's all I tried
to do. And the Beatles
were like influenced by
the Beach Boys.
There was always...
Yeah, competition.
Yeah, Brian Wilson.
When they heard Pet Sounds,
I think that influenced Sgt. Pepper.
Yeah, they became very competitive.
Same thing happened to me
when I went to Pet Smart.
I wrote a bunch of songs.
So, Beatlemanian 64 was one impression, Dennis,
but then when you heard Rubber Soul and Sgt. Pepper and it blew your mind,
you realized that anything was possible.
Yeah, and we were crappy when those records came out.
We weren't any good at all.
We were still just kind of shedding the skin of being a wedding band.
And we were just getting into the rock and roll.
And then in 68, we got John Strzelecki, one of the original members of Styx.
And then J.Y. James Young came in 1970.
And that's when we really started to come together as a real authentic rock and roll band.
But listen, when you heard Sgt. Pepper, when I heard it, I still remember where I was.
And John, the drummer the drummer and myself we listened
to it and we went oh my god because what that record said was musicians anything is possible
do whatever you know whatever you want to do and uh it was it was a miracle but i mean unless
unless paul mccartney starts sending me some residuals, I'm not going to talk about him anymore.
I want to talk about that band, the early band.
First, The Trade Wins.
And then what?
You guys, you changed your name after that.
You became what, TW4?
Yeah.
What kind of venues were you guys playing, Dennis?
You were playing weddings, high school parties?
Mostly weddings in those days, you know.
Plenty of bar mitzvahs?
Yeah, sure, sure.
Wait a minute.
I forgot it.
I used to play it on the beat back then.
Oh, here's the one I know.
I'm sorry.
There weren't as many Jewish people in our community as...
You know, I play the tanantella.
That's us.
Yeah.
Thank you, Mr. Santo Padre.
So Styx was basically a cover band.
Yeah, in the worst possible sense.
We were covering songs from the 30s, 40s, and 50s.
We became a rock and roll cover band later.
That's why we got signed, because we were very, very popular in Chicago at imitating other bands.
And then we started trying to write our own music.
I like the part of your career where you say you guys played for potato salad.
First, the very first show we played,
and it wasn't a show, Three Kids in a Corner
at a wedding,
a lot of hot, sweaty women
in the kitchen, and
they gave us fried chicken
and potato salad. They fed us, and that was it.
It was a friend...
Seriously. It was a friend.
Seriously.
It was my parents.
My parents'
friend's daughter got married.
Didn't have a lot of money.
And so they said,
come on, kids, play.
But it was
the chance of a lifetime.
And I saw a picture.
I'm going through
all these pictures of me
throughout my life
with this video.
And there's a picture of me
and I saw this picture
and I saw an expression
on my face
I rarely see.
I looked at myself.
I didn't recognize myself.
What the?
It was abject fear.
Wow.
It was taking me.
Before we went to play, and I was thinking,
oh, my God, can I do this?
You know, try to entertain all these people.
Gilbert, did you perform for food in those days, Gil,
at some point in the early days?
Not only didn't I get food. You didn only didn't i get you didn't get money and you
didn't get food please one one time a waitress slipped me a potato and and they yelled at her
she almost got fired yeah you couldn't get food you couldn't get a glass of soda you had to pay
for it.
Here's the odd thing, Gilbert.
When you need stuff, no one will give it to you.
Once you become famous, everybody wants to give you things.
Yeah, it's like the richer you become, unless you have to buy.
I know. It's great, and I like that.
Just going through a little bit of the group.
Go ahead, Dennis.
Honey, honey.
Honey, make sure we stay rich.
I like getting shit.
Tell us about Wooden Nickel.
And I did a little research into the record company Wooden Nickel.
Oh, my God.
Jerry Weintraub was one of the partners.
The legendary Jerry Weintraub in Wooden Nickel.
A scout saw you guys playing? I met him. We met him once. Jerry Weintraub was one of the partners, the legendary Jerry Weintraub in Wooden Nickel.
A scout saw you guys playing?
I met him.
We met him once.
He was in town for Led Zeppelin,
and Elvis had been there.
He was the manager of both.
Well, he was the promoter,
and he was a character.
We spent like about 15 minutes with him,
and I respected him.
He was a smart guy but the the
record company itself wouldn't nickel think about that that's it but do i have to define it after
that no ironically named yeah they were they were imbeciles and tell us the story about how lady
became a big hit um all right gilbert, I wasn't a songwriter, and
most of the singing I had...
What happened?
Ever have my right? Earthquake?
Yeah.
What was that, Gil?
I have no idea.
Your face lit up.
So Wooden Nickel scouted you guys
and signed you to a record deal.
Okay, so the first album,
I didn't really have any songs that I had written by myself
or that I actually sang by myself that I had written.
So I wrote this song for the end of the first album called Lady.
I played it for the producer,
and he said, well, we'll save that for the second album.
So the second album comes out,
and it's on there.
And it's released.
It's a stiff.
It's just nothing.
Zip, bupkis, no, nothing.
Don't like you.
Don't care for your voice.
Your piano playing sucks.
So for the next two years, I thought, you know,
I was the reverse of Sally Fields.
I thought they hated me.
They really hated me.
I didn't understand that there was a business involved.
So two and a half years after it was released, WLS, a very big, powerful radio station in
Chicago, we were going up there to promote our fourth album called Man of Miracles.
Me and my buddy, J.Y., were in there.
We were going to just leave an album because they never saw people
like us they were too big you know we were not important we said hi we're sticks can we leave
this album and he said oh come right this way jim smith would like to talk to you he's the program
director which means he decides what music's being played we walk in there we said we're in wls we're
in this big room so So he comes out.
We give him the album.
He says, I'm not going to play anything from this.
He says, but tonight at 8 o'clock, I'm going to play John on John Records Landecker show.
I'm going to play Lady once a night because I think it's a hit.
He did that, Gilbert.
If he didn't do that, you would have never heard of me and I would not be on this show today.
So through my entire life, I knew the difference between success and failure
was so ephemeral.
You just don't know how it's going to happen.
And then he played it, and that's what happened.
It became a hit, and then we went on
to record a bunch of albums.
It was great.
A turning point.
But at that time.
So all you kids out there, I can tell you is,
you just don't know.
The only thing you can do,
I said this in the lyric of one of my songs was,
winners are losers who got up and gave it one more try.
If you don't keep getting up, Gilbert, you know this,
because people are going to suck you in the jaw
because they don't want to admit you're any good.
They're going to tell you you stink
until the minute something good happens for you.
Then they're all going to say we knew it.
But they didn't know nothing.
So to be successful is really about perseverance, isn't it, Gilbert?
Oh, yeah, absolutely.
Because I've been on stage more times having people yell, you suck.
Usually family members.
Yes.
You know, there's a lot of stories like that, Dennis,
in music history.
And we've had guests on the show that have told stories like that,
haven't we, Gil, where one DJ fell in love with a song
and was determined to push that record?
Right.
Before I lose my voice. Lady, when you're with me I'm smiling. Give me all, all, all your love. Your hands build me up when I'm sinking. Just touch me and my troubles will fade
Lady, from the moment I saw you
Standing all alone
You gave all the love that I needed
So shine like the shining rainbow
Come on baby, come on honey
Love shines in your eyes
Sparkling, clear and lonely
You're my baby
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you.
Wonderful. Wonderful.
Delightful.
That was the first song I ever wrote and sang by myself on a record.
And I wrote it about my wife.
So I've had a lot of luck writing songs about my relationship with my wife.
And she's only taken 70% off the back end.
That's all.
That's very generous of her.
Yeah.
Was that the first one you heard played on the radio?
Was there a moment?
We asked the musicians that have been on the show, Dennis.
That moment where, there it is.
I heard one of our first songs on the first album and played a little bit on a radio station that didn't matter.
But you have to understand, WLS was the most powerful radio station in America,
located in the center of the country, 50,000 clear watt channel, broadcasted from Denver
all the way to Little Rock. So to get on that station, it was a miracle. So when he told me that, I went home.
We're in this little house that we lived in, my wife and I.
And 8 o'clock, there was a little radio on top of the refrigerator.
We thought, this can't possibly happen.
And it came on, and I just got the chills right now thinking about that moment.
And we danced in the kitchen, right there, a little kitchen, not really an eat-in kitchen.
And anytime something good happens,
we have to run to a kitchen and dance.
It's just like a tradition that we, you know,
because it was like, man, it was like,
what was the first time you were on The Tonight Show, Gilbert?
What was that like?
I was never on The Tonight show with johnny carson
me neither i was on with jay leno yeah same with me i i did i did a lot with jay leno on there
they used to have me mainly for those sketches in the beginning of the show oh yeah not because uh
yeah well look um it's you know look at guys like you and me, and you too, Frank, we get a dream, right?
Whatever it is.
And we're ambitious.
Because I always think, this is crazy, don't get too deep, but I think people like us that work really hard and are driven and ambitious are trying to please somebody who can't be pleased. It's probably a mom or a dad. We know
who they are. If you want to lay down on my couch, we'll do an hour. But the deal is for me,
I played accordion. I wanted to please my mom so bad. So when the dream comes true,
even in the smallest sense,
you think, oh my God, it happened.
I'm going to feel different.
I'm going to feel better and special.
And you know what?
You don't.
You feel the same.
So what you have to do then is you pile on another dream because you keep setting goals for yourself.
But the first time I saw a lady, I'll never, ever forget it.
Saw a lady.
Heard lady.
I'll never, ever forget it. And heard lady I'll never ever forget it
and to this day
if I'm driving someplace
and one of my songs
comes on the radio
I make myself
sit in the car
until it's over with
because I'm afraid
it'll end if I don't
oh that's cool
I've heard so many stories
about comedians
and actors
growing up
going out seeing either a vaudeville show or a
movie and then acting it out for their mother. Yeah, I'm sure. You know, listen, when I, all
that Jerry Lewis stuff, I was, I just wanted attention. And I want, I wanted the approval
and love of a parent. That's what it is. And, and, she loved me. But I was, you know, boy, this is getting deep.
Anyway, the thing about my mom,
my mom was, she loved me dearly,
but all her dreams were in my basket,
if you know what I mean.
I was everything to her,
and I didn't want to disappoint her.
Her parents were both deaf,
so she grew up in a house where no one spoke.
And she always thought my singing ability was the universe giving back to the Rola family, you know, so I could sing and play music.
Isn't that wild?
It is.
How much of your success did she get to see, Dennis?
Oh, plenty.
No, she saw plenty.
Yeah.
Good.
The guys in the Panazzo brothers, their dad died like the year before things broke.
Oh, that's a shame.
Yeah, because, you know,
we think we're doing it for ourselves,
but come on, Frank, who is it?
Mom or dad?
You want one of them to...
Well, trying to make my mother laugh
because she was depressed.
There you go.
Which we've heard a lot on this show, right, Gil?
Yeah.
A lot of comedians have come on and told us
that they got into comedy
because they were trying to cheer up one parent or the other.
Gene Wilder.
I used to entertain his mother, Jan Murray.
A bunch of them.
Tons.
Yeah, of course.
It's a great motivator.
It is.
Listen, everything, you know, my mom was a, she was a hard task master.
But the truth of the matter is I wouldn't have what I have.
You know what I mean?
If you have perfect parents that are very encouraging and loving at all times and everything you do is good, you'll never amount to nothing.
You know, a little context, too, for getting that song on the radio, Dennis, is your guys,
your backs were to the wall. I mean, you'd had, what, four albums at this point that weren't
getting any traction? That's it. We were out of record. That was it. That was it.
It was not only a turning point, but one came at the absolute right time.
Yes. And I was teaching school. I taught school for three years and um then we got a
record deal so I here's what here's why I'm a little different Gilbert is because I had a wife
and a baby girl before I had a record deal so I had all this responsibility and um you know I like
to think that my parents raised me good to take responsibility for the people around you.
And so the whole doing drugs and alcohol and all that stuff, it didn't interest me.
It just didn't.
I mean, now everyone shut off the radio.
Now, yeah.
So you didn't use drugs or get laid?
No.
This is a guest you can connect to, Gilbert.
Exactly.
Quick, somebody get Ralph Edwards in here.
Before we get off those early albums, Dennis, explain Plexiglas Toilet, which I know became a favorite of Weird Al Yankovic.
Dr. Demento.
And Dr. Demento and then Weird Al, yeah.
Well, the thing is, it was JC, John Serleski.
He was one of the original guitar players.
And he's wacky.
Guy was whack.
He was whack, the guy.
And he said, what do you think it is?
And I said, you know, we're all jerks i said okay we'll do it
but when we put it on the album uh it's not listed it's the inner cut without any listing
secret track yeah and then i i don't i only play i only did it one time in my whole life
it was in the studio and we did it with a bunch of friends don't sit down on the
plexiglass toilet said the mama to her son wait wipe the butt clean with the paper make it nice
for everyone and don't sit down on the plexiglass toilet yeah Flexi-glass toilet, yeah!
I like knowing Styx recorded us that.
Frank and... Called Flexi-glass toilet.
No one has ever got me to do that.
Ever.
We take pride.
Now, another song we could thank your wife for is Babe.
Yes.
The story goes like this.
It was her birthday in 1979 uh she supported me i thought i'll write her a song but is your is your wife listening she's right next to you yeah
i was just trying to get i was just trying to get out of buying jewelry anyway so i sat down and i
wrote this song
and I called up the Panazzos.
I said, you guys do a demo with me.
I want to give this to her and play it at a birthday party
and nothing else.
It was not for sticks.
So they said, yeah.
We go, we do the demo.
No guitar players are there,
so we don't put any guitars on it.
And I sing all the background harmony parts.
Nobody's going to hear it. It's not, who gives a shit? Nobody put any guitars on it. And I sing all the background harmony parts. Nobody's gonna hear it.
It's not, who gives a shit?
Nobody's gonna hear it.
In fact, I wrote it,
I wrote it on the grand piano.
When we got in there, the grand piano was out of tune.
So there was a Fender Rhodes in the corner
and Bobby Whiteside.
I don't know who that is, but it was his.
They rolled it out. I'd never played one. And I went, you know, I just started noodling and then rolling tape. So I did it. I gave it to my
wife and everyone at the party went, oh my God, oh my God, that doesn't suck as much as we thought
it would. So people started saying, we love this song. We love it. It was just for her, not for nobody.
And the demo became the song you've heard on the radio for 40 years.
All those harmonies are me singing by myself.
We were so afraid to change that record.
All we did was Tommy Shaw came in and played a guitar solo.
That's the record.
So that's why there's no guitars on it.
Otherwise, if I'd have
brought it to Styx, we'd have sat in the room and recorded it much differently. And so it was just
dumb, you know the best kind of luck, dumb stupid. And that's what that was. So it was for her,
and it went on to win the People's Choice Award for Best Song, which was pretty cool.
How different would it have been if it had been a Sty stick song? Would it have been a power ballad?
Yes, it would have been more guitar driven.
And, you know, it would have cost more
to have to be the guitar players.
No.
Okay.
Here we go, you ready? Babe, I'm leaving I must be on my way
The time is drawing in
The train is going
I see it in your eyes
The love that needs your tears I'll be lonely without you
And be alone to see me through
Please believe me
My heart is in your hands
Cause I won't be missing you Please believe me, my heart is in your hands.
Cause I won't be missing you.
Everybody!
You know it's you, babe.
Whenever I get weary and I've had enough Feel like giving up
You know it's you, babe
Giving me the courage and the strength I need
Please believe that it's you
Babe, I love you
Wonderful.
Yeah, to take my headsets off.
You know, you told me to wear these headsets,
but I can't hear myself playing.
Take them off.
You can't hear nothing.
We appreciate that you did that.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing colossal podcast after this.
Baseball is finally back.
Get in on major league action and swing for the fences with BetMGM,
the king of sports books.
Log in or sign up to play along as BetMGM brings the real-time action. Embrace a season's worth of swings with BetMGM. Your one-stop shop for all things baseball. BetMGM.com for T's and C's. 19 plus to wager. Ontario only. Gambling problem? Call Connex Ontario at 1-866-531-2600. BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario.
Bet MGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario.
Imagine you're in Ottawa strolling through artistic landscapes at the National Gallery of Canada.
Oh.
Then cycling past Parliament Hill.
Ah.
Before unwinding on an outdoor patio.
Oh.
Then spending an evening on a cruise along the historic Rideau Canal.
Ah.
Exploration awaits in Ottawa.
From oh to ah. Plan your Ottawa itinerary at ottawatourism.ca.
Now listen, you can cut this part if you want, all right? Because I was thinking,
Gilbert, whenever I think you, the first three words that pop into my mouth, you're never going to guess. Oh, why? Catherine Zeta-Jones.
Ah!
Oh!
I am so flattered.
Thank you.
Here's the thing about you, buddy.
Sometimes comedians say things worth thinking, right?
But you say things nobody're thinking, right?
But you say things nobody's thinking, and it's funny.
I go, where the hell did he get that?
There you go, Gilbert.
Did you see the documentary?
Is that where you came up? You saw that Catherine Zeta-Jones thing?
Who, me?
Yeah.
No, I used to sneak in when he was doing Catch a Rising Star.
Just kidding.
What is this?
Frank, what now, Frank?
I have to reveal my sources?
You don't have to reveal your sources.
Tell us about some of the acts you guys opened for and backed up in those days,
because it was everybody, Stevie Wonder and Queen and the Doobies and Genesis and Frank Zappa.
And, you know, you like to say in those days that Styx was always the bridesmaid.
Always the bridesmaid, never the bride.
And we played in front of all those bands.
You know, we were there on the ZZ Tour
on either side.
They had Cherry Pickers with Texas Longhorn
on one side, you know,
and they had a Buffalo on the other.
The backstage area was a bit rank,
but I think they came and stopped that
because they're not supposed to have
those animals up there.
We played with Aerosmith.
We were at the famous Aerosmith show in Philadelphia
where somebody threw an M-80 on the stage right at Steven Tyler
and boom, stopped the show.
I was literally sitting in the seats behind and I saw it and I said,
time to go, taxi!
Wow.
Wow.
Yeah.
What's the story
about opening for Stevie Wonder
or backing Stevie Wonder and you
decided to go out into the audience and do like
Baptist minister shtick?
Please save me from myself.
We can cut it if you don't want to tell it.
No, it's hysterical.
First of all, we got booked with Stevie Wonder.
That's the story in itself.
And that time, we were going through our glam period
where we had all these sparkly tops and bell bottoms
and platform shoes.
And the audience was at a college in Illinois.
And the audience was like, well,
we expect at least 75%, 80% African-American.
And I thought, well, what are we doing up here so we start playing this music that has nothing to do
with the audience and we're thinking oh boy so there's this one thing called children of the land
and so it's a rock and roll song and back in the club days i used to do kind of like, you know, a rabble-rousing,
crowd-pleasing, like a spring team.
Yeah, I'm the rockin', suckin',
backroom, backroom, backroom.
All that kind of crap, right?
To keep the drunks happy.
And so suddenly, I felt so desperate,
I run off the stage in the audience
with the mic in my hand
and I'm doing my rap to this,
you know, this black audience.
And soon as I was out there,
I said, this is the biggest mistake of your career. Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, know, this black audience. And as soon as I was out there, I said, this is the
biggest mistake of your career. That's a great one. I like the Zappa story, too. He was threatened
by you guys, so we only gave you three mics. I don't know if he was threatened. Here's what
happened. It was at the Kiel Auditorium in St. Louis. Frank was, you know, he was threatened here's what happened it was that the keel auditorium in st louis frank was you know he was frank and um nobody told frank there was an opening act
oh dear and so it was the right around the same period here come these uh these uh what's wrong
with those guys that they think they're david bowie that's what we looked like and we go up
and for the sound check in zappas he's furious where's the promoter i'm
going to talk to you son of a bitches there's no there is no opening at my bite all right
so he decided keel auditorium holds 10 000 people and he decided he was going to give us
give us three microphones no amplifiers, no drums were amplified.
Now, you have no idea what that sounds like.
So we played the whole show.
Basically, you hear three singers in this.
That would be the music and then three guys singing.
And so at the very end, they were booing.
And then like 14 months later, our album broke, Equinox,
and we went down there and sold out the Kiel Auditorium ourselves.
But, you know, these things happen once in a while.
And Frank wasn't really mad at us.
He was mad at the...
And I think you've said that rock and roll is dead now?
Oh, absolutely.
It's been dead for...
It's dead in this way.
Not that there aren't
people that still want to play it,
young people who want to make it.
It's dead in that
the fundamental
mechanism by which rock music
was always delivered was through radio.
And rock
radio has disappeared. They don't play
new music. They'll play people like Styx, classic rock,
but they don't have new rock stations.
There's almost none because pop is king right now.
You know, you've got one person's cute,
and they go in there, you produce them,
and they have 30 dancers.
Nothing wrong with it.
It's all entertainment.
If people like it, who am I to say don't like that?
Life is short, as we know right now.
Entertain yourselves.
If you like it, you like it.
But rock and roll as a viable source, gone, dead.
Talk to Gene Simmons.
Get him on.
He'll tell you.
You know, we were lucky.
I lived at the greatest time in the history of mankind to be a musician.
That period, that sweet spot, never before and I don't think ever after
where as many musicians have the opportunities that we had
through that whole period to have long and fruitful careers.
I was lucky by birth.
I was there when no internet, no distractions.
You know, Gilbert, at that time, Frank, music was everything to you.
You got the albums.
You looked, you read.
Absolutely.
You were immersed.
Liner notes.
Yeah, if you could have got porn on the internet,
boom, we're out of there.
You don't care about us.
It was a great time.
It was also the time of Top 40 radio
and DJs with personalities.
And it was a golden age of radio as well as rock and roll.
The good guys.
On what station?
Oh, WMCA.
Yes, yes.
You knew each one.
They were your friends.
Yeah.
Now, you guys are both from New York, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, we grew up with Cousin Brucie and those guys.
Sure.
Harry Harrison and Ron Lundy.
I think, I don't want to sound like three guys sitting on the beach in Miami,
sitting on Miami Beach talking about our blood pressure, but really, we were lucky.
Because if we start, if you in any way kind of denigrate the music of today,
then, you know, you sound like Dean Martin did the first time he saw the Rolling Stones. The change was coming. You weren't going
to stop it. Same thing now. People like pop music. We can't stop them. That's a rather ugly moment
when the Stones were on that Dean Martin thing. And he, I know, I know exactly what you're
referring to. Yeah, I know. And he was mocking them. Well, can you imagine Dean Martin and Mick Jagger?
That just goes to show you the human voice,
a person's voice, the way it sounds when they're singing,
is so subjective, right?
How can millions of people like Mick Jagger and Dean Martin?
That's odd.
Yeah, and I heard you talking about your favorite singers,
and this connects to something we've talked about a lot, Gilbert. I heard you talking about your favorite singers, and this connects to something we've talked about a lot, Gilbert.
I heard you talking about favorite singers, and you said as much as you admired somebody like Sinatra,
you don't want to hear Sinatra attempting a rock song or even a pop song because he wasn't as suited for it.
And it brings to mind, of course, Gilbert, our favorite, Sinatra's cover of Mrs. Robinson.
for it. And it brings to mind, of course, Gilbert, our favorite Sinatra's cover of Mrs. Robinson.
Yeah. You cuckoo bird, Mrs. Robinson. That's what it reminded me of when you were talking about your favorite singers. You're talking about McCartney and Stevie Wonder and Elvis.
And when you'd see like it, not even with music, like with when you'd see like bob hope do one of his specials and he
dress up like a hippie in one part you go oh he don't don't do that yeah it was quite authentic
artists driving out of their lanes yeah well you know we're all trying to make a buck. Yeah. Here's a good question from a listener for you, Dennis, from Ray Garten.
Can Dennis tell us the one big negative thing about being a rock star that nobody warns you about in advance?
You know, probably contracts. Contracts.
Be careful what you sign when you're young.
You know, you'll sign anything
because you want the opportunity.
And those things always come back
to cause havoc in your life.
So that's the most important thing.
The rest of it,
when I was, you know,
in the heyday of all that stuff,
it would be,
it's pretty tough
to find any real negative
except for the fact that um you had to
constantly be in motion uh and you had to be it's like being a comedian you've you got to be when
you walk out there you know this gilbert nobody gives a shit if you don't feel good they don't
care what's going on you're there you, you know, to please an audience.
And that it starts out joyous. But after a while, you know, it's a job.
It really is a job. So, no, the dream is any dream is always better than the reality of the dream.
I think show business became a job for all of us a long time ago.
Yeah, absolutely. I think it's fair to say.
Well, it's like, I love when people say to me,
what do you do on times when you don't want to be funny and you don't want to tell?
And I think, well, if you're working in a grocery store
and you don't feel like working in the grocery store,
you still have to go there.
That's right. And we're lucky, though. I mean, look what we're doing. People assign far too much
credibility and love to us who do this thing. They don't know us. I wrote an album in 77 called
The Grand Illusion, which dealt with that same problem where
I told the audience, clearly, don't be fooled by the radio, TV, magazines. We create an illusion
to divert people so they can be entertained and help them not be so... Like right now,
perfect example. The universe doesn't care about us.
The universe doesn't.
It's about repeat, wash, and replenish, change.
And we don't want to think about that.
And so they say, let's go see Gilbert tonight.
He'll make us laugh.
Let's go see Dennis tonight.
He's going to sing us a song, and we'll feel better.
That's what we do.
And I used to think it was frivolous bullshit.
But now that
my audience is in their 60s, they'll tell me just how much what I did for a living made a difference
in their life. And I think, how did that happen? I was just trying to beat Aerosmith and Queen.
yeah i've i've had people come up to me and say you know when my brother or my mother was dying we would listen to our recordings of your comedy bits and and it's like you go oh my god
i i thought yeah i mean like doing meaningless shit, you know?
Someone's dying and they put on the aristocrats, Gilbert.
Does that blow your mind?
But yeah, they said how much it meant to them.
Gilbert, do we know each other well enough right now? Because I want to ask you a question.
Okay.
Dara.
She's there. She never leaves his side listen
this is a question many people
in the audience have been dying
to ask you
what does it sound like
when Gilbert Gottfried
whispers sweet nothings in your ear. Oh, Lord.
I don't think he has a whisper.
Dennis, would you like to do an imitation of me whispering sweet nothings?
Dara!
Dara!
Dara, where are those blue pills?
Where are the blue pills?
That's hilarious.
Gilbert, the last three guests have done impressions of you.
I know.
I like to turn everything over to me.
Dennis, talk about your sense. we put it in the intro, your sense of the theatrical and your desire to create concept albums for Styx.
I mean, albums like The Grand Illusion and Paradise Theater are idea driven.
Welcome to The brand illusion.
Come on in and see what's happening.
Pay the price, get your tickets for the show.
That kind of stuff.
Well, look, it's show business, I think.
Rock and roll is entertainment.
And for me, I think early on, don't laugh, I really did like Dean Martin.
I thought there was something about him.
We love him.
We wouldn't laugh.
He always made you feel you were in on the joke and made you feel at ease.
He seemed to have the ability to not take himself seriously.
And I always loved that.
He was a real entertainer.
And believe it or not, some of my nonsense I do on stage was a combination of Anthony Newley.
I loved Anthony Newley as a kid.
I love it.
I think about it.
All this, right?
But he had it down to, it felt right.
And then along came guys,
when I was just beginning to become a lead singer,
Joe Cocker, the incredible facemaker himself.
And so you kind of take all those little things
and they become a persona. Now Freddie Mercury
for instance has also been you know rightly categorized as very theatrical but I was doing
that stuff in 72 and the first Queen album was in 73. I was doing it without the tights but
still you know it's the it's show and And what I did for Styx many times,
our lighting designer,
who became Bruce Springsteen's LD
and still is to this day,
after Styx broke up, Jeff Ravitz,
he went to a theater school at Northwestern
and had a degree.
And he and I would talk about the theater,
the scrims, the way the lights move,
how to light things to make them look theatrical.
Not like Meet Me in St. Louis theatrical, but, you know, just drama.
And so we incorporated a lot of that stuff.
And really, I have to say this, Alice Cooper, we went to see him.
We were on the road and I'd never seen him.
It was 73, 70, somewhere.
And his show was, oh, my goodness.
Oh, you had the guillotine on stage and the whole thing?
Everything.
Yeah.
He had this giant white screen,
and it was a movie projected on it.
He was running, like, from way back here,
forced perspective toward the front of the stage
like he was coming at you.
And what you
couldn't tell was there were slits in the screen. So as soon as he gets right up to the screen,
he busts through the screen because it wasn't solid. And there he was on stage. I went,
I love this guy. So I love the theatrics. And if you want to go see bands that stare at their shoes,
there's plenty of them. But when you came to see Styx, it was show business.
Absolutely. I love those albums for that reason.
And another thing, getting back to, you know, it always amazes me, like, like I'll be on stage doing comedy and or an actor doing a really dramatic scene, or you belting out a song,
how your mind could be like, um, gee, I wonder what I'll have for a late night act or.
It's just the way it is. Um, uh, you go out there and people say, uh, what's it like when,
you know, 20,000 people are applauding you?
I said, they're not part of it.
It's about me.
I better do my job and then they'll react properly if I've done my job.
So I go out there.
The hardest thing, as you know, Gilbert, is when you don't feel well.
That's always, and it's deadly for a singer.
That's the thing where you go and you feel, oh man, you get't feel well. That's always, and it's deadly for a singer. That's the thing where you go
and you feel, oh man,
you get the flop sweat.
But most of the time,
I've been on stage since I was 14.
It's like walking out,
it's like walking into the next room, ain't it?
You're just going there.
You're just doing it.
So, and you,
sometimes when my mind wanders,
like what you just said, right? I say, don't do that. Don't do that, you know, sometimes when my mind wanders, like what you just said, right?
Yeah.
I say, don't do that.
Don't do that, you asshole.
It's so funny because after a while, you find yourself going on autopilot.
Yeah.
But you know what the difference is?
Listen, Gilbert, I've seen you.
You go out there, autopilot for you is great
because you've honed the skill to fake everybody out.
You've got it down.
Sincerity is the key, and once you can fake it,
you're going to be home free.
You know, I miss those days of rock and roll, Dennis.
Queen shows, stick shows, you know,
something like the Kilroy Was Here album,
which opened up with the film and the performance.
I miss the rock, even something like Tommy.
I miss rock operas and the theatricality and the showmanship of that era of rock and roll.
I don't know if we'll see it again.
Well, you know, truthfully. Elton John to a certain extent, too.
These pop stars now, they have 30 people on stage.
It's the most theatrical thing I have ever seen.
I watch the Grammys, and there's like,
who pays all these people?
I can't even believe it.
They're dancing here, and there's sweatpants over there.
I go, this is unbelievable.
But as far as that goes I mean something I mean something like a story where the cunt work a concept album and it's in its and it's oh it's
like a it's like a play it's like a rock play or a rock opera the kind of things
you were trying to do with a Kilroy album yeah okay here we go. Are you very much, Mr. Raimondo, for doing the job.
Your body works, thank you very much.
Oh, that's enough of that shit.
Okay.
Where's Mr. Raimondo?
Yeah, look.
Yeah, I had a great interest in theatricality,
not in being, you know,
shuffling off the Buffalo kind of musical theater,
but combining rock and roll, the power of it,
with the ability to tell a story and entertain an audience.
And I was, and one of my heroes, Pete Townsend,
thrill of a lifetime. I went to the opening of Tommy in Chicago when he was there one of my heroes, Pete Townsend, thrill of a lifetime.
I went to the opening of Tommy in Chicago when he was there at the auditorium.
And I got a chance to meet him.
I said, Pete, I owe you money.
I've been ripping you off for now 15 years.
Well, think about it.
Well, think about it.
Those guitars on Come Sail Away, that's Pete Townsend.
I told the guitar players.
I wrote that.
I said, I want Pete Townsend here.
I did tell them that.
Anyway, he said, I know you, Dennis.
I know your work.
I thought you were very bold to try to do that Kilroy was here thing.
He said those words to me.
I was so happy.
And I said, tell J.Y. and Tommy. They hate me.
No, just kidding. They don't hate me.
So, you know, look.
It's entertainment.
The album sold a million copies,
we should point out.
Two. Two million, excuse me.
But it wasn't...
But who's...
But who's counting?
It wasn't...
Who's counting?
What, maybe a fewer albums, a couple of fewer albums than Cornerstone or than Pieces of Eight,
but it was a big success, just to kind of dispel that myth, right?
I'd like to, yes.
And thank you for helping me, i do what i can now yeah when
you were saying you were a fan of dean martin it's so funny growing up remember when uh a performer
with a drink in one hand and a cigarette in the other was the coolest thing on the planet.
Right.
My aunt, my aunt B took that real serious though with that.
She always had a drink in one hand and a cigarette.
Yeah.
Your aunt B was underrated by the way.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Actually it was Andy's aunt B, but nonetheless, I'd say that, yeah, listen, there's still, I know back in the day, our day, people would be swinging, you know, beer, Jack, for real on stage.
They did that.
I don't know how they did that stuff.
And, well, they're all dead now.
But, no, I love Bon Scott.
You know Bon Scott?
You know him, Frank?
No, I don't. Daddy D's and the dumb dad sheep.
Daddy D's.
Oh, ACDC.
Yeah, sure.
Original singer.
Sure.
Well, he was nuttier than a fruitcake.
I mean, the guy was great.
He was such a great singer and such a fantastic showman.
But he had a quart of Jack Daniels.
He'd just drink it on stage.
I thought, how the hell did they do that?
I don't know.
I didn't do that.
You didn't indulge in rock and roll excess yourself,
but you certainly witnessed it.
I couldn't.
I was a pussy.
It's interesting.
You know, I was worried about my voice all the time
because I sing all this, you know,
I sing a lot of songs all by myself with no band.
No place to hide if you suck.
Sure.
So I was afraid of, I never liked to smoke anyway,
but I just didn't, and alcohol, man, dries you out.
It's tough.
I don't know how Sinatra sang so long.
It was unbelievable.
We had Jimmy Webb and Paul Williams on the show
and this is interesting too.
And I was discussing this with Gilbert, that you say two things.
You say the melody is king, the song is king, much more so than a lyric.
But also that songwriters, you believe, are born great songwriters.
Yeah, I think so, because I know scores of great musicians who can't really write songs.
And I know a lot of songwriters who are just average musicians.
Irving Berlin, one of the great songwriters of all time,
he was just okay on piano.
What makes a great songwriter is it's still a mystery
because songwriting is a mystery.
Nobody knows.
I say that I have a piano in my living room that's got a bunch of
great songs in it. I just have to sit behind it and whack at the keys until one falls out.
But it's a very, very mysterious profession. Ask any songwriter. They don't even know where
they come from when they do come. Well, you've said that about Lady. You don't know where it
came from. No. I think back, what was I thinking? What made me do that? And I don't know.
I have no idea.
None.
It's fascinating.
Gilbert, are great comedians born?
Or can it be learned?
Oh.
Well, I don't believe in comedy classes.
No, not classes per se.
But is it something that can be acquired over time?
Or is it innate?
I think, I guess, there has to be some part of it that's innate.
Because some people, you know, it's like anything.
It's like singing, dancing.
You could become acceptable at it.
You know, if you practice singing enough, you could become a passable singer.
I think Gilbert's right, particularly with comedy. Now, if you practice singing enough, you could become a passable singer.
I think Gilbert's right, particularly with comedy.
I think, like in Gilbert's brain, there are synapses and connections that everybody doesn't have.
And they just automatically see the world, everything that happens, they see the world in terms of comedy,
of what's the joke, what's the punchline. I know a lot of people, they don't see it that way.
I'm one of those people who's not a comedian, certainly. People think I'm funny. I'm funny because I can sing. But the truth is, to be funny all the time, I think your brain works that way,
Gilbert. I think you didn't learn it.
You were born with it. Interesting. Interesting theory. Quick question from Dave Johnston. What
does Dennis think of the South Park, Eric Cartman's version of Come Sail Away?
You guys!
Um, here you go, buddy.
You got it all wrong.
He's got it all wrong.
So, uh, I don't know what South Park is.
Never heard of it.
And I got to get, I get a call.
And, um, oh my God, I'm doing a 73-year-old thing in my brain.
It's, what are the two guys guys' names? Trey Parker and...
And Matt Stone.
Matt Stone.
Sorry, Matt.
What do you expect?
So I get a call from Matt Stone.
And he says,
we'd like to do Come Sail Away.
And I said,
are you not going to do
a Barbra Streisand interview?
Yeah.
And I said, no, no, no.
We're fans.
I said, when I was in eighth grade, first year high school,
he had a radio show called the Paradise Theater.
He was a fan.
I said, go ahead, have fun.
Smartest thing I ever did in my life.
Because, no, watch this.
They were the hippest of the hip, right?
Oh, sure.
They did Come Sail Away.
And the minute they did that, the doors flew open.
And I would get request after request.
We want to use one of your songs in this movie, in this commercial.
We want to do it over here.
When these people are in the corner singing, begging for money,
we want to do it there.
We don't care.
So I've had the most lucrative career
because I said yes to South Park.
So some people have thought,
is that an insult?
No, Cartman, the point is,
here's the song, he starts singing it,
he can't stop till the end.
That means it's memorable.
It's catchy.
And so people have misconstrued that
and to Matt and Trey, I say,
thanks, buddies.
Man, my kids, I should have them write you a letter
because you brought a lot of money into the family.
That's fun.
I think Lady turns up in an episode of The Office as well,
a karaoke version.
All over the place, everywhere.
I think, what do you call it?
Will Ferrell screams it. He's
drunk in a wedding band.
It's been used.
Simpsons.
Adam Sandler movies.
Oh, yeah. Adam's a great guy.
He's a real fan. What?
I can't hear you. You got these earplugs on.
That's my wife yelling in the other room.
You know. Oh, she's yelling
other shows and movies
that have used your song.
Yeah, but
you guys got me wearing these earmuffs.
I can't hear anything.
Tell us
about getting Julian Lennon on the new album.
Because you didn't know him.
No.
You wanted
some kind of connection to the Beatles who had inspired you so't know him. No. You wanted some kind of connection to the Beatles
who had inspired you so many years ago.
Yeah, so I wrote a song for him and I to sing,
and I did a demo right at this piano.
I just wrote it.
I thought, what would it be like if Jules and I sang,
and I wrote it, and I just sent him the demo.
I thought, I'll never hear from this guy and uh I get a message I'd be honored oh my god what about that so yeah
so I went to New York and um we recorded it at Brooklyn Sound and I came back and I finished
the record and I can't you know Gilbert it'd be it'd be like uh jerry lewis decided he wanted to
do what do a comedy bit with you oh it's not the same thing i mean listen julian is he's the
greatest but you know what i'm saying you don't expect this yeah yeah you don't expect don't you
still think you're uh you're you're you're you're you're somewhere underneath everything you're just
you're not worthy of people's attention somehow. You always fight that idea that you're,
I'm still an Italian kid with an accordion in a dream.
People come and say, Dennis, you're the greatest.
And I say, I can only feel like I'm that kid
with the accordion saying, please love me.
I don't get it.
But, you know, anyway.
I always feel like show business is a party I snuck into.
And any minute someone's going to go up with a clipboard and say, your name's not on our guest list.
Yeah. Get out of here. What are you doing in here? Right. Yeah.
So that's that's it. I can't shake that. And maybe that's I think it's good.
If you if you still have a desire to be the best you can be
and you still have some self-doubt because that's what makes you good.
Well, we had Bruce Stern on the show.
And Bruce Stern, I mean, he's, you know, a billion movies.
He's been acting God knows how long.
And he said that every time he gives a performance,
his goal is to be a better actor.
And you figure, how much better can you get?
That kind of thing comes up a lot.
It's just workmanlike artists, they're still doing it.
They're still plying their trade and trying to get good.
They got to.
150 movies later, he's trying to get good. You got him. 150 movies later, he's trying to get good.
Yes, yeah.
Yeah.
So, and you sent me the video.
Gilbert and Dara saw it as well, too.
I thought the song was so sweet to the good old days,
and it reminded me, what was interesting about it,
is it reminded me a little bit thematically
and emotionally of In My Life from Rubber Soul.
What I was thinking when I wrote it was,
how do I pay tribute to these giants
without seeming like some leech?
I had to be very careful.
I could have produced the record so beatily
because I had Jules' voice there, for God's sake.
He sounds like his dad.
But I avoided all that.
I just said, you don't do that.
You go with the song.
It's kind of a combination between,
In My Life, Let It Be, Day in the Life,
you know.
That low piano stuff.
But I didn't go hog wild on it
because I wanted it to be a song for Jules and I.
Oh, listen to that, for goodness sake.
He's being his dad and Dennis is just a poo-poo face.
So...
But that's my family.
It wasn't supposed to be that video.
It was supposed to be Jules and I were going to sing
it.
And slightly conceptual.
Then the pandemic hit.
He ended up in Europe. I ended up
here. So I tore
my house apart looking
for old home movies
and photos.
Because I had to do something.
I think it works. It's very touching do something. I think it works.
It's very touching.
Yeah, I love it.
But how am I not going to love it?
Those are all people I loved in there.
I got to put my friends and family
and the original three guys
that formed Styx,
they're in there.
You know, it makes me very emotional.
And people are responding the same way.
It makes them emotional.
And I'm not
ashamed to say it if i make people cry and they spend money i'm in and the song that opens the
album could not be any more different that with all due respect is a is a rather a rather angry
song but you gotta play that for gilbert that's for him i'm gonna play that for gilbert oh my god
gilbert if you heard that you'd you'd jump right through the screen and give me a big kiss.
I'm going to send him what you sent me.
And the album drops on May 22nd.
It does.
I'm sorry, May 20th.
Is it May 20th or May 22nd?
May 20th.
No. Try again.
22nd.
20 seconds. We'll fix that in the opening. And people Try again. 22nd.
22nd.
22nd.
So, okay.
We'll fix that in the opening.
And people have to find the video.
And tell us about what you did recently, Dennis.
Tell us about the YouTube videos.
The first one that you just made is a lark playing the best of times right in your living room.
And the reaction that you got that knocked you over.
People were saying.
That you didn't expect. My fan base, both of them,
were writing in and saying,
you've got to do one of these
home needy celebrity videos.
And I thought, do I?
And then they reminded me
of the lyrical content
of Best of Times
where I sang,
when people lock their doors and hide inside, rumor has it it's the end of paradise.
Okay, I went, put the iPad right up here, out of tune piano, can't get it tuned,
and I sang Best of Times, gave it to a friend,
because I don't know how to put it on YouTube.
He stuck it on YouTube.
In the next couple of days, it'll have a million views,
you know, in like three and a half, four weeks.
I am not Lady Gaga. I don'll have a million views, you know, in like three and a half, four weeks.
I am not Lady Gaga.
I don't get a million views like that.
It happened and it just opened,
you know, everyone's calling me.
There's extra wants to talk to me. It's, you know, AXS TV, boom, Rachel Ray.
You know, all these people are calling
because I just did that little thing.
And the comments, I wish everyone in
the world could read the comments like 7,000 of them I think I've read almost all of them
it they are the the kindest the sweetest most loving comments that when I read them I don't
know who in God's name they're talking about I see my name in there, but they have now attributed things to me that doesn't
make any sense. But I wish everyone could just take their name and stick it where those people
said those things about me. And I don't have that kind of fans. This is not false. I don't have a
million people at my beck and call. But they went there and they did that. And I still don't know
how that happened. But it happened. Then I did another one and a hundred thousand people in a week
it does make sense because if I tour all year all year right I'm lucky to play in front of 75 85
90 000 people and and it's you explain it to me but it's crazy. But I just have to say thank you to everybody that
did that for me.
I'm going to work on trying to feel worthy.
It's great.
When I saw it, we hadn't booked you yet.
We want to thank our pal Gino Salamone
too for helping
to get Dennis on the show.
Is he Sicilian?
You know, I think he is.
Are you?
My mother was La Mano, the hand. She is Sicilian? You know, I think he is. Are you? My mother was La Mano, the hand.
And she was Sicilian.
She is Sicilian.
She's 93.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
You know how to make a Sicilian omelet?
Tell me.
Steal the eggs.
Anyway.
Well, my father always thought he was slumming,
that he was marrying down by marrying a Sicilian woman.
But before we booked you,
we saw you doing Best of Times on YouTube.
And I just thought,
how the hell is this guy in such great voice?
You just sounded like you did 25 years ago.
I don't know.
Don't ask me that.
People ask me that and I say,
they keep asking me.
I don't know.
I took care of it, you know.
But really, it's dumb, stupid luck to some point.
That's just it.
It's also, and I know this, go ahead.
No, I was going to say, I know this is a delicate thing,
but I don't know how Styx isn't in the Rock Hall of Fame.
Me neither.
I mean, Journey and Kiss and Rush,
and I mean, you guys, you know,
certainly belong in that company
and rise above some of that company
in my opinion, and I don't
understand it. Dara's nodding in the
background. Sticks
is an influential act.
Dara, do they allow cursing on this
program? Please. Absolutely.
I just want...
I'd like to quote Max
Bialystock. Who do I gotta
fuck around in this town again?
Yeah.
It'll happen, Dennis.
I believe it will happen.
So how are you and Styx getting along nowadays?
We haven't spoken in 21 years.
There's only two guys in the band, really.
So there's three of us.
When they replaced me when I was sick in 1999,
there was just the three of us left.
Now, the bass player, Chuck, oddly, on this day
that you asked me this, Gilbert,
I have all these old photos of the original band.
So sweet.
Three little kids with their tuxedos and bow ties
looking like complete assholes, smiling.
with their tuxedos and bow ties looking like complete assholes smiling.
And I reached out to Chuck, the bass player, and said,
Chuck, I got these photos.
I'd really like to use these from our youth.
And he wrote back about a month ago.
He said, absolutely, Dennis, go ahead.
We hadn't talked in 20 years.
And so I sent him the video this morning and uh he wrote me said he said it's it's just so beautiful thank you love Chuck and John we loved each other we
were like brothers and uh things happen sometimes crazy things but the three of us were we were
thick as thieves and so um I haven't talked to a uh.O.R. or Tommy in quite a long time.
But look, I love those guys.
I'm not mad at them.
And there should be one more tour, one more reunion tour.
I've been staying in for about five years.
Should be.
For the fans.
For the fans.
I don't need the money.
Kids, I'm telling you the truth.
There's nobody going to be standing at the stoplight trying to sell you a sucker in my behalf.
That's not going to be standing at the stoplight trying to sell you a sucker in my behalf. That's not going to happen.
But I just want to do it one more time.
Say thanks to the fans, wave goodbye, and exit.
That's what I want to do.
But so far, no soap.
But nonetheless, I made an album.
I have a career.
I'm a lucky guy just to have what I have.
That's nice.
I hope that reunion comes on stage at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Well, I'm going to be the first one to let you guys in on this.
I just got a call a few minutes ago.
There's going to be a reunion.
Paul, Ringo, and myself.
Well, and speaking of the Beatles,
this is just a little fun trivia note.
50 years ago today,
The Long and Winding Road was released,
the final Beatles single.
It was the inspiration to a song I wrote on Cornerstone
called First Time.
And I think I told you the story real quick.
There's a...
The strings come in you know the cha-cha cha-cha uh I love the song and so I wrote first time and
I put that same kind of string thing in first time and then I find out three years later Paul
McCartney hated those strings Phil Spector put them in there and he didn't know he did it.
So here I'm imitating Paul McCartney and he hates it.
Imagine.
Weren't you doing a little bit of McCartney at the end of Babe or am I crazy?
Ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, babe, that's the...
Yeah.
Okay, okay.
Of course.
What do you think?
Now, here's something i like to put every singer
songwriter on the spot uh can you remember like a song that was the worst song you ever wrote that
you're embarrassed by oh several um i have a sport kilbert after lady was a hit wasn't a hit because that album had five songs there were seven songs i
wrote five of them and it was rejected heartily i thought they don't like me so i tried to be
somebody else so the next album i wrote a song about a pirate then i wrote a song called the
grove of eglantine. I, listen to this,
this is how stupid people are. I'm talking about me. My friend Dave, I think he had Penthouse
magazine, and the Penthouse Forum, right? And he, I thought I read in there that in Victorian
And I thought I read in there that in Victorian England, the reference to a woman's privates was the Grove at Eglantine.
What?
Oh, God.
Stop the music.
I wrote a song called The Grove at Eglantine.
And it sounds like it's about one thing. I say, inve of eglantine just south of man's delight i like boobs so sue me so just south of man's delight
is straight down you got it that's hilarious could you sing some of that for us? It's been too long.
Hey, you there.
La, la, la, la. I don't remember.
I never played it live.
Let's plug this album, Dennis.
26 East, Volume 1.
It's a good one.
The title has to do with what?
It was the address of my parents' home where the band was founded in my
basement in 1962. Wow. That's it. And there's three locomotives on the cover on the way to
the stars. And it's representative of the three guys, the three mooks who founded the band.
I hope there's a, I do hope there's a reunion and so do millions of other people.
I hope there's a, I do hope there's a reunion and so do millions of other people.
Hey, guys, listen, Gilbert and Frank, you guys are the, you know, I do these interviews all the time.
It's been a blast to be with you guys.
Honestly, usually I'm like this.
Oh, God, someone stabbed me.
Well, we have genuine love and affection for the people we invite on here, Dennis.
So thank you for doing it.
I appreciate it.
And because you're the world's biggest Blazing Saddles fan,
which I told the co-writers, Andrew Bergman and Norman Steinberg,
and they're very flattered,
you think you could take us out with a little bit of the French mistake?
Oh, God.
Throw out your hands.
Hands on your hips.
Pa-ba-da-bum.
How are you, man? Yes, that's all. I had it memorized.
Push and throw out your tush.
About five years ago. Give him a push.
I had it memorized five years ago.
I did it on stage.
It was a rock audience, and I did it, right?
And the people had an expression
on their face that said,
I want my money back.
And I told you, Gilbert,
the man brought Slim Pickens on stage.
Yes.
Flew him to Buffalo.
Yeah, we hired Slim and...
Oh, Bert and Gilliam.
Mr. Tiger.
Yeah, Bert and Gilliam.
Yeah, Bert.
And they came out,
and it was the last show of our Paradise Theater tour.
It was a Blazing Saddles party.
And we had
long tables set up for the whole crew
and everybody had their cowboy hats
and their red kerchief and we had
beans for dinner.
And we got to sit
and shoot the shit with Slim
for about two,
three hours. It was glorious
and at the end of the show,
I brought Slim out.
And he came out and he talked to the audience.
It was unbelievable.
Here he is in front of about 15,000 people.
I don't know if the kids even knew who the hell he was.
That's great.
He was the best.
We just had just such a ball.
And I love Mel Brooks.
I love Mel Brooks. I love Mel Brooks.
I don't know.
He wasn't.
We love him.
I don't know what stranger, Gilbert.
Slim Pickens on stage with Styx?
Or knowing.
Why didn't somebody tell me my ass was this big?
Or knowing that Styx was partly inspired by Anthony Newley.
Yeah.
I wish Tony was alive. I wish Tony was alive.
I wish Tony was alive to hear that.
What kind of fool am I?
Dennis, you're a blast
and a lot of fun.
And the album is 26 East,
Volume 1.
We can't wait for Volume 2.
Please keep writing songs.
Don't retire.
Thank you, guys.
And keep doing those YouTube videos,
won't you, please?
I will do that.
And we will send you the feedback to this
one as well, which we know will be wonderful.
So we want to thank Gino again.
We want to thank Suzanne for her
help and her shouting off camera and her iPhone.
And our pal
John Murray who makes the
trains run on time. Well, this has
been Gilbert Gottfried's amazing
colossal podcast with my co-host Frank Well, this has been Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast
with my co-host, Frank Santopadre.
And we've been talking to the one rock and roll star
who never got laid.
Never even...
He never even got a handjob.
Dennis DeYoung.
Oh! Dennis DeYoung oh
thank you
thank you Dennis
this has been a blast
this is
Dennis DeYoung saying if I talk like this
for five seconds more I'll never sing again
laughing
laughing laughing if I talk like this for five seconds more, I'll never sing again.
It's so hard to say goodbye So I promise not to cry
But any tears that might be shed
Are only tears of joy
And I thank my lucky stars that we've come so very far
rising up against the odds to where we are today though there may be sadness let's all raise a glass. Cheers to us and all that's passed.
To the good old days when the world was new.
When we still believed dreams could come true To the good old days
And to all our friends
May the memories last
May they never end
So we'll go our several ways
Wishing somehow we could stay
Safe again, so safe again
In all our innocence
When we all would sing along
As they played our favorite song
Dreaming of tomorrows
Would seem so limitless
So as we come together
Let's make this moment last
Here's to us
Yeah, here's to us
And to the past
To the good old days
To the good old days, to the sweetest years
To the ones we love, through the laughs and tears
To the times ahead, may we all forgive
To the good old days, oh may they live
Funny how the years have slipped away
Always there beyond our grasp
We'll step beyond our grasp Funny how it all seems
Looking back
Oh, oh
Mr. Dennis D. Young.
See everybody's face in there?
We all in there?
Everyone smile.
Let's say hi, everybody.
Merry Christmas. Merry Christmas.
Happy Halloween. To the good old days When we all were young
To the love we shared
May our songs be sung
To the times ahead
May we all forgive
To the good old days
May they always live. And so my friends
I'll say goodbye
For time has claimed
Its prize
But the music never dies For time has claimed its prize.
But the music never dies.
Just listen and close your eyes. And welcome to paradise. © transcript Emily Beynon