Elmore: What are you listening to right now?
Bob Weir: I listen on iTunes. Ive got Coltranes African Nights, Stravinskys Le Sacred du Printemps, and some early Beatles.
Neil Sedaka: Christina Aguilera, who I think is brilliant; John Mayer, a genius; Corinne Bailey Rae, the most exciting newcomer for many years, and Snow Patrol, theyre fabulous.
EM: What was the first record you ever bought?
BW: Tutti Frutti, by Little Richard. I was probably about nine.
NS: I was three and my mother bought me the Moylan Sisters. Dont even ask what song it was. I loved the harmony; I was always fascinated with part singing, thats why I started a doo wop group in high school in Brighton Beach, the Tokens. The Moylan Sisters was a 78, and I remember running to the record player and slipping, and it broke it into a million pieces, and my mother went back to Kings Highway and bought me another copy, and that wasnt easy, because my father was a taxi driverMaxie the taxi.
EM: Where do you buy your music now?
BW: I dont. I download from iTunes, kind of hit-or-miss.
NS: Borders, across the street. I dont download, but my secretary now downloads for me. I go to record stores; Im from the old school.
EM: What was the first instrument you played?
BW: Piano. Some friends of my parents moved to Europe for a while, and rather than put it in storage, they left it with my parents, who insisted I take piano lessons. Im dyslexic, so reading music was impossible. But we had live-in help, and one taught me this boogie, and I took off from there.
NS: I was seven, and a neighbor had a piano, and I used to be able to pick out by ear things that I had heard on the radio, with one finger.
EM: What brought you to the instrument you now play?
BW: The friends came back from Europe and took their piano back, and I took up the trumpet. Very soon I was required to practice outside, which didnt sit well with the neighbors. When I turned 12 or 13, I took up the guitar, which was OK because I could play it in my room.
NS: I really only play keyboard instruments. I went to Juilliard and studied classical music for 14 years, and had every intention of being a concert pianist. I still play chamber music with friends at home; I love chamber music.
EM: What musician influenced you most?
BW: There were probably two. Stravinsky or McCoy Tyner. We had a fire-eating lead guitar in the Grateful Dead. My passion was for being there, with the right tone, and the surprises of innovation.
NS: George Gershwin, because he could write pop and classical, and Frank Loesser, who wrote words and music brilliantly, Jerome Kern, Rodgers and Hammerstein, Rodgers and Hart, Irving Berlin. These are pre-rock and roll, and theyre my heroes.
EM: Who would you like to write with that you havent?
BW: Dylan of course. Does anybody answer anything different?
NS: Snow Patrol said that they would have me sing on their next record, and I would like to write one song with them. It would be nice to do something with Fountains of Wayne.
EM: What was the song or event that made you realize you wanted to be in music?
BW:When I learned to tune in a radio station and heard all kinds of music. I was probably born for it. I left home on the Kesey bus when I was 18.
NS: In high school there was a two performance variety show, at the beginning of rock n roll. I was a freshman, about 15, and I wrote a song, Mr. Moon, that was a kind of slow, bump-and-grind tempo. The kids were going crazy, and the principal forbid me to do it at the second performanceit was too raunchy. If you heard it today, its meek and fragile, its nothing. The children got together and signed a petition that they wanted Mr. Moon back again. Then I was a hero in school, I could go with the leather set and the people with the ducks ass haircutI was a big shot.
EM: Who would you like in your rock and roll heaven band?
BW: Jerry on guitar, Paul McCartney on bass, McCoy Tyner on piano; Coltrane on sax, Miles on trumpet; on bone, Joshua Roseman. For a drummer, Im comfortable with my current drummer, Jay Lane. That band would be a jazz MO, wed take it for a little walk in the woods.
NS: Certainly Elton on piano, Lee Ritenour on guitar. Ive played with some great drummers over the years, but Im having a senior moment. On bass, Leland Sklar, I loved the rhythm section for James Taylor. Jim Horn played the sax solo on Laughter in the Rain, hes one of the greats. Melinda Doolittle and that gorgeous Jordin Sparks, from American Idol on backup.
EM: Whats your desert island CD?
BW: Id go nuts. Id rather listen to the wind.
NS: Id make up my own CD with the Rolling Stones, Billy Joel, Elton John, Fleetwood Mac, Stevie Wonder, B.B. King. Of existing CDs, Id take Carol Kings Tapestry. I used to date her in high school. We were close, and were from the Brill Building, both of us. She broke through first and moved to California, she wrote these great songs, and when I heard her I said, I could do that!