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  Billy Sheehan
   Interviewed by Gary Hill
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	Interview With          Billy Sheehan From 2000 
 
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	MSJ: This interview is available in book format (hardcover and  paperback) in      Music Street Journal: The Early Years Volume 5 at lulu.com/strangesound. 
 
You have always been a very          innovative bassist. Who were the bass players that you looked up to in          the early days? |  
	
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	| Paul Samuel Smith and Tim Bogert          were probably two of the biggest influences - both of them were. Paul          Samuel Smith played with The Yardbirds, and he was kind of an unsung hero.          Everybody talks about Jeff Beck, Jimmy Page and Eric Clapton coming through          The Yardbirds, but Paul Samuel-Smith really did a lot if interplay with          all the guitarists in the band. He was one of the first guys who had a          real trebly tone where you could hear his notes really good, also a super          deep bass tone. He had a lot of tone variation. He really worked along          with - in conjunction with - the guitarists. He was kind of an inspiration          to me early on. Tim Bogert also - he was a real renegade. He would move          way, way far away from his standard root, note-wise - really took some          chances as a player, which I thought was really cool. When I met him years          later and asked him about it, he basically said he was doing a psychedelic          version of Jamie Jamerson. So, it all comes around. |  
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	| MSJ:           Why is it you've never done          a solo album before? |  
	
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	| Well, every time I had          a chance to do a solo album I generally ended up doing a band again, rather          than going off on my own. Like when I left David Lee Roth, I had an opportunity          then to do a solo record. Instead I started Mr. Big. When Mr. Big took          a break a few years ago everybody, even the drummer, did solo records,          and I started Niacin, because I like working with people. I like bouncing          ideas off of other musicians -working on things like that, rather than          doing my own thing, but I actually worked quite hard for a while on my          own home studio situation --recording techniques. I was inspired by getting          a twelve-string baritone guitar, which is more in my vocal register. So,          a couple of things all came together at once and inspired me to do my          own solo record finally. |  
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	| MSJ: Is there anything going          on with your previous projects? |  
	
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	| Niacin has finished          new record. It will be out probably the beginning of the year. Mr. Big          did a record that's out in Japan, but there's a lot of problems within          the band. So, I think ultimately that's going to be the end of the band.          We're going to do one last tour in Japan, I think. Talas just basically          get together every couple of years or so and do a show or two. There's          no real reunion of the band, so to speak. We just as friends get together          and do a show every once in a while. We'll probably never record a record          again, just the live shows. We'll probably never write any new songs or          anything like that again. |  
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	| MSJ: You've played with all sorts          of people. Do you have any favorites? |  
	
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	| Playing with Steve          (Vai - editor) is always a blast because we both kind of got famous together.          We both had done well. In Talas I had done well. He was, of course, with          Frank Zappa, but we both really got into the public eye in the David Lee          Roth band together. So, we've got a kind of special brotherhood as a result          of that. So, playing with Steve is always a blast. I've been lucky to          play with some great guys - great drummer and guitar players and what          have you. I chalk it all up to a great experience. I've probably learned          a little bit from everybody, and they've stolen a few of my licks, too. |  
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	| MSJ: With you doing pretty much          all of the work on your new album is there any interest in getting away          from being a bassist and concentrating on singing or playing other instruments? |  
	
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	| Yeah, I probably will          go out and tour behind my solo record. I'm not sure how I'm going to do          it yet. I'll probably switch off between bass and guitar, but bass is          always my main instrument - always will be. I've always played guitar,          and always written on guitar my whole life, but the bass was always the          main instrument for me. Most of the songs I wrote in Mr. Big and Talas          I wrote generally on guitar as a writing tool for me. Although, I wrote          some things on bass, especially some of the instrumental-type things for          Niacin. I wrote a lot of that on bass. I guess I will always be a bass          player, but I'd like to go out, sing and play, switch off - do a big long          show, or a whole bunch of things - try to rise to that challenge. That's          quite a challenge to go out and do that. |  
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	| MSJ:           Are there any musicians with          whom you would like to work but have yet to have the chance? |  
	
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	| Paco de Lucía is one of my          favorite musicians in the world. He's a flamenco guitarist, and I've heard          him with a couple of electric bands where he still plays his nylon strings,          but he has a band behind him. Not a lot of people know about him, but          when they do hear him, they're pretty blown away. That would be pretty          amazing. I'd like to do some playing with Ed Van Halen one day. I did          a show with him in Chicago. We had a great time, but I've never actually          sat down and played with the guy over any period of time. Generally, I've          gotten to play with most of the people I've wanted to, which is pretty          amazing - a pretty lucky situation for me, actually. |  
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	| MSJ: What has been your biggest          Spinal Tap moment? |  
	
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	|           UFO tour 1983 - I replaced          Pete Way on a European tour with UFO and we played all these kind of tertiary          European markets, like Poland and Athens, Greece and a lot of out of the          way places. When I came back home, Spinal Tap had just come out, and I          went to the movies to see it, and it wasn't funny. I didn't laugh once.          I didn't think it was even remotely funny because I had just lived it.          I spoke with someone recently, I forgot who, who had had the same experience          because they had just been in the middle of all that. Of course, later          on it was hilarious, but if you had just got out of a situation where          it was like Spinal Tap, it wasn't funny. So, I guess my biggest one was          the UFO tour. Great guys, wonderful people, but they were just in a spot          in their life where it was a pretty wild time for them. |  
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	| MSJ:           What was the last CD you bought? |  
	
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	| The last CD I bought was a          Beatles bootleg in Japan. I found a bootleg shop in Japan where you can          buy all these amazing bootlegs. They have all these out-takes and live          shows, and there was this one Beatles bootleg that looked particularly          intriguing. I haven't opened it yet. I got some amazing bootlegs in Japan.          I actually got the Jimi Hendrix "Band of Gypsies" rehearsals on CD - the          rehearsals for the show. As a fan I must have purchased "Band of Gypsies"          four or five times over the years, so I thought it was OK that I bought          the bootleg, and it's not like it's a pirated record, but kind of for          fans only. As a matter of a fact, when I go in there, they give me all          the Mr. Big bootlegs for free, and any Billy Sheehan bootlegs or Talas          bootlegs. They give them all to me for free because the feel like they          owe it to me anyway. |  
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	| MSJ: What was the last concert you          attended? |  
	
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	| I went to see Doug Pinnick          at the Roxy here in LA on his solo tour. I'm a big Doug Pinnick fan. I          love Kings X. I support anything all of them or any of them do. |  
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