Afternoon Mood Elevator: Jonathan Richman, “Now Is Better Than Before”

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It’s nice to be reminded that longing for the past and a youth now distant with each new day is a little silly if it’s going to make you so unhappy. It’s also nice to be reminded that lasting love certainly can evolve into something wonderful. In fact, it deserves a neato guitar solo, like the one found here. Richman believes in the stuff, and also, apparently, celebrating turkeys.

Oh You’re So Silent Jonathan Richman

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illustration by Tanith Connolly

Jonathan Richman isn’t known to talk about his music or his personal life in interviews. In fact, he’s a notoriously hard man to get an interview with. He’s one of my musical heroes, so if all I can score from him is 20 minutes of looking into each other’s eyes, I’m doing it.

I get Richman’s phone number from a publicist at the San Francisco International Film Festival since they’re presenting a silent film from 1921 entitled The Phantom Carriage, and Richman is booked to accompany the film with a live score.

Richman’s answering machine is him playing a few riffs on guitar, then a beep. It actually says more than, “This is Jonathan Richman, please leave a message.” It’s like his music: joyful sing-a-longs with a sprinkle of longing, moments of loneliness and despair.

When he calls back, he remembers me from my earlier attempt at interviewing him, and I quickly explain, like I’m in a speed dating rotation and giving my resume to a girl looking at her watch, that I want to meet with him and talk about The Phantom Carriage.

His accent is slightly Boston, very nasally and bordering on a teenage boy calling his high school crush for the first time to ask her to the winter dance.

I mention a newly opened café half a block from my apartment in San Francisco to meet at, and he tells me he knows where it is. I’ve heard conflicting stories that he either lives in the Glen Park neighborhood or Mission District of San Francisco. I’m still not sure, but knowing the café’s location gave a huge clue that he lives very close to me.

Richman is in a handful of about five musicians who I’ve always wanted to interview. I tell the owner of the café that I’ll be there with Richman next week. I get a blank look. “The guy who plays the guitar in the film There’s Something About Mary,” I say.

The café owner knows who he is and has no other reference about the legendary Jonathan Richman, whose band the Modern Lovers influenced the punk rock movement of the late ‘70s and new wave of the ‘80s with songs forever embedded in our culture like “Roadrunner” and “Pablo Picasso,” both of which have been covered many times.

I tell friends, I tell acquaintances, I tell anyone I can that I’m interviewing a musical legend and one of my heroes. Ninety-five percent of the time I have to bring up the film reference for them to get it. But the five percent who do know about music and the importance of Richman, and also his reluctance to interviews, are impressed.

I even come across some Jonathan Richman sighting stories. One time he was going through his divorce and brought his guitar to Doc’s Clock and played at one of the tables. He’s San Francisco’s Sasquatch without all the hair.

“I’m not going to talk that much,” Richman warns me on the phone.

“No problem,” I say, thinking I’ll be the first interviewer who will really crack open Richman with my understanding eyes and open body language that I’ve learned from my therapist.

“Yes Tony, I sing about my personal life. My divorce was a mess. I want to tell you how I feel about these things. I have artistic blocks, here’s how I get through them. My creative process goes like this. I have a new girlfriend, she understands me and we have very open communication. I get scared on airplanes. I’m mad about what’s going on in Haiti. I’m not a religious man, but I’m very spiritual,” I fantasized.

Roadrunnah, Roadrunnaaah!

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The Modern LoversFirst published in Rock and Roll: The Hundred Best Singles
Copyright 1993
#77, Roadrunner

Another anomaly (Jonathan wouldn’t have it any other way). The single I’ve selected here was released in the U.K. in 1977; however the A-side was originally recorded, and released, as a single in the U.S., in 1975. The U.K. B-side—same song, same title, same lead singer—was recorded in 1971 (part of the legendary Modern Lovers demo tapes, produced by John Cale, unreleased until 1976). The disc gets placed here with the 1977 entries because both versions are magnificent, and rather than choose between them, I offer this two-sided, one-song single, which made it to #11 on the British charts. (Both versions also received considerable airplay in the U.S. thanks to college radio stations.)

But enough small talk. Start the music. Jonathan Richman’s “Roadrunner” is one of the most quoted rock ‘n’ roll songs of all time—that’s musical quotes, mostly— and is itself, as Mojo Nixon and Skid Roper demonstrated in their 1985 tour de force “Jesus at McDonald’s,” a brilliant (musical) restatement of the Velvet Underground’s masterpiece, “Sister Ray.” This riff may or may not be the heart of rock ‘n’ roll (we can fight about that later), but it’s certainly the heart of something. Won’t quit. Keeps turning up. Can’t get it out of our minds. That’s ‘cause it’s in our blood. Could in fact be the sound of the human circulatory system hustling to keep up with the particular stimuli of our epoch, the “modern world” Jonathan refers to again and again in the course of this (doubly) epic performance.

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