Ringo Starr still has aspirations at 82: 'My aim is to be Frank Sinatra'
Ringo Starr will tell you with a grin that heās really good at hanging.
He might go for a walk on the beach with Toto guitarist Steve Lukather, a member of his All-Starr Band for a decade, given the appropriate location. Or engage in some of his other talents, such as painting or photography. Of course, the gym always beckons the Beatles icon, a seemingly ageless 82.
āI donāt like that word, ārest,ā ā he says.
On this day, Starr is checking in from a hotel room in Florida, where the legendary drummer and his All-Starr Band ā Colin Hay, Edgar Winter, Hamish Stuart, Warren Ham, Gregg Bissonette and Lukather ā are playing a round of shows on the tour that runs through October.
Starr is disappointed that rain and lightning have thwarted his beach strolling plans, but the eternally chipper, āpeace and loveā-spouting musician is happy to talk about his third extended play in two years ā cleverly titled āEP3ā ā a four-song release featuring Lukather, Linda Perry and Dave Koz.
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Question: You are in amazing shape. What kind of regimen do you adhere to?
Answer: I go to the gym a lot. I work out to get my heart racing to shift the stuff that gets jammed in your arteries. Iām a vegetarian and I (drum) when weāre on tour. If Iām at home, Iām painting, Iām doing something. I have two ways: Iām busy or Iām not. I can handle both of those; itās the bit in the between that gets you crazy. ... Just keep moving as much as you can. If youāre in the gym, youāre on the treadmill and lifting weights and you have a program. When I get back to LA, I have my trainer three times a week. I work out nearly every weekday, sometimes six days a week. How hard is it to go and do something good for yourself for an hour?
The four songs on the new EP all have an element of positivity and hope, especially āLetās Be Friends.ā Did you look around at the world at the moment and think, OK, letās try to find some unity here?
I think I looked around the world many years ago. I think we, as far as I and the band were concerned, started looking in the ā60s in San Francisco with the hippies and we wanted a lot of peace and love. Every song Iāve done on this EP leads to peace and love. I was offered songs that I didnāt like the attitude of the song, so I didnāt (record it).
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Iām not sure people would expect to hear Dave Koz with you. How did it come about to have him on the album?
Dave Koz is getting me a lot of publicity (laughs). Heās Americaās premiere sax player. (āFree Your Soulā) is quite a long track and we felt like jamming through it. When Dave came in, it worked perfectly.
Do you think youāll add any of the new songs to the setlist on this current tour?
No. I used to say (in concert), āIād like to thank the five of you for buying my CDā (laughs). People are there to see me from the Beatles days and (hear) the Beatles songs and some songs through the rest of my life. This year for the first time, weāre doing āYellow Submarineā and I put in āOctopusās Garden.ā I never wanted to do two underwater songs. But the audience, thank you, Lord, they love it.
Youāve been doing the All-Starr Band tours for 30-plus years. Did you ever envision it going on this long and with this type of variation in musicians?
It was a good idea in 1989. Someone asked somebody to ask me, would Ringo go on tour? I didnāt have a band but I said yes. Then I said, āWhat have I said yes to?ā So I had to start calling people like Dr. John and Billy Preston and Levon Helm. The first band had three drummers. I was so insecure. ā¦ But then everybody was saying yes. I had to close up my phone book. Then I decided weāre going to change the whole band every time. You have to have hits (to be in the All-Starr Band), thatās part of the deal. Iāve had some really incredible players and several who didnāt want to put in 100%.
And they were not invited back?
No.
Whatās it like backstage before you all go on? Any rituals?
We all get backstage and the band runs on and then I have 30 seconds of fear.
Really, still?
Still! Itās so far out. It's like, oh, God, itās not going to work. My brain takes over. Thatās why I run on stage. My aim is to be Frank Sinatra and just stroll on, like (affects a smooth-crooner-with-cocked-eyebrow voice), āHey, how are you doing?ā I saw him once and I wish I could do that. He started singing behind the curtain, so relaxed. He was so great. I still havenāt managed to do that. I have a moment of fear and then I run on and as soon as I grab that mic, Iām home. It all just fades away and weāre there to have fun.
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