THE ADAM BUXTON PODCAST - EP.267 - RICHARD AYOADE & FRANK BLACK (LIVE)

Episode Date: December 1, 2025

DR BUCKLES' FRANK BLACK SELECTION (SPOTIFY)Adam talks with British writer, director, actor and comedian Richard Ayoade about Wes Anderson, the pain of returning an album, and their shared love of Pixi...es, before being joined on stage by Pixies frontman Frank Black, who sings a song from his classic solo album Teenager Of The Year and (in a conversation recorded before a Pixies show the previous evening) Frank tells Adam how he really feels about comedians making music and the trauma of his audition for David Fincher's film Zodiac.Conversations recorded face-to-face in London on 18 & 19 March 2024Thanks to Séamus Murphy-Mitchell and Becca Bryers for additional editing, and the team from Crosstown Promotions, especially Richard Walsh, Annalisa Lembo, Ben Saunders, Phil TurnerListen to Adam's album 'Buckle Up' Order Adam's book 'I Love You Byeee' Sign up for the newsletter on Adam's website (scroll down on homepage)Podcast illustration by Helen GreenNORD VPNEXCLUSIVE NordVPN Deal Try it risk-free now with a 30-day money-back guarantee!RELATED LINKSFRANK BLACK AND RICHARD AYOADE - HEY (REHEARSAL) - 2024 (YOUTUBE)FRANK BLACK AND RICHARD AYOADE - WHERE IS MY MIND (REHEARSAL) - 2024 (YOUTUBE)FRANK BLACK & THE CATHOLICS - DOG GONE Directed by Adam Buxton and Joe Cornish - 1998 (YOUTUBE)FRANK BLACK - TEENAGER OF THE YEAR 30th ANNIVERSARY EDITION - 2025 (4AD)THE UNFINISHED HARAULD HUGHES (AUDIOBOOK) - 2025 (AUDIBLE)Read by Richard Ayoade, Chris Morris, David Mitchell, Lydia Fox, Noel Fielding, Sally Hawkins, Stephen MerchantPLEASE STOP USING AI TO MAKE WES ANDERSON PARODIES by Stuart Heritage - 2023 (GUARDIAN) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 I added one more podcast to the giant podcast bin Now you have plucked that podcast out and started listening I took my microphone and found some human folk Then I recorded all the noises while we spoke My name is Adam Buxton I'm a man I want you to enjoy this that's the plan Hey, how you doing podcasts? It's Adam Buxton here. Just me today. Rosie is at home
Starting point is 00:00:38 dozing in her dog basket in my wife's office. Her favourite place to be, other than by my side, of course. She's already been for a walk today with my son Nat. And it's a cold day, so it seemed a bit mean to get her back out again. Despite the coldness, it's a beautiful Norfolk afternoon. On, as I speak, the last day of November, 2025. The authentic sounds of the countryside. Sky, incredibly clear and blue, it's not a single cloud up there. It's lovely and still and quiet. It's a Sunday.
Starting point is 00:01:28 Only the sound of birds. The odd, gentle, freezy breeze. Oh, that's cold, but fresh. And of course, the sound of a middle-aged guy doing his. podcast intro. How are you doing podcats? Hope everything's not too bad wherever you are. But look, shut up, Buckles. Tell me a bit about podcast number 267. Okay, this one includes a small selection of waffle helpings from the live podcast show that I did at the London Palladium in March 2024. When my guest was British writer, director, actor and comedian,
Starting point is 00:02:25 Richard Iowadi. I played a very small section of that night's show on the podcast that I did with Richard earlier this year. But there's a couple more bits for you tonight, also including my other guest that evening, a significant musical figure in both my life and Richard's life. Frank Black, front man of alt-rock legends, Pixies. And in his solo capacity,
Starting point is 00:02:50 the man responsible for many of my favorite songs of all time. I've done a Spotify playlist for you musos out there in case you're not familiar with Frank Black's solo stuff. I love it. Maybe sometimes even a bit more than the Pixies. Oh God, now I'm going to be thrown into Alt Rock Jail. I have also included in this podcast a chunk of chat that I recorded with Frank Black the day before the Palladium show.
Starting point is 00:03:22 And that was recorded in his dressing room at the forum in Kentish Town, where Pixies were playing that night. They were doing Bossanova from 1990 and Tromp Le Monde from 1991 back to back. And in that short dressing room chat, you will hear me talking Frank through the arrangements for the Palladium show the following night. I have met Frank, real name Charles Thompson. Okay, Charles Michael Kittredge Thompson, the fourth, to give him his full name, a few times. He was in one of our vinyl justice segments on the Adam and Joe show.
Starting point is 00:03:58 Joe and I also made a video for the song Dog Gone by Frank Black and the Catholics in 1998. You'll find a link to that in the description. And since then, we have stayed in sporadic contact. Frank is a big comedy fan. He especially likes a lot of British comedy. And I'm pretty sure that when I mentioned to him that Richard Ayawadhi was going to be my guest for the live show, that was a big part of him agreeing to come along and be my other guest and play a song from one of my favorite albums of his, Teenager of the Year. And maybe because he enjoyed his experience on the Adam Buxton podcast live show so much, he returned to the Palladium earlier this year, 2025, to play Teenager of the Year in its entirety with the original band.
Starting point is 00:04:53 that recorded that record as part of the album's 30th anniversary celebrations. If you heard my podcast with Irish musician C-MAT earlier this year, then you would have heard me talking about going to see that show, The Teenager of the Year Show, and how much I enjoyed it, despite some disruptive behavior from some of my fellow middle-aged rock guys. But let's return to the Palladium now to join myself, and Richard Iowaday on stage for some Wes Anderson chat with reference to the AI Wes Anderson memes
Starting point is 00:05:31 that did the rounds in 2023, for which people used AI image generation tools like Mid Journey, Dahl E, and stable diffusion to make trailers for films like Star Wars, The Lord of the Rings and Harry Potter, as if they had been directed by Wes Anderson. Then I talked to Richard a bit about music with both of us revealing which records by our favourite artists
Starting point is 00:05:56 we were initially dissatisfied with and took back to the shop. Then I'll be back to say a few words before my Frank Black dressing room chat, but right now, in front of a live audience at the London Palladium in March 2024 with Richard Ayawadi. Here we go. Rumble chat, let's have our ramble chat. We'll focus first on this, they'll concentrate on that, come on let's chew the fat and have the ramble chat put on your conversation coat and find your talking hat yes blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah
Starting point is 00:06:52 Are you a crier at all? A crier. Yeah, do you cry? Is there any chance you could cry? I haven't yet. No, am I crying? I don't think I'm a huge crier. I mean, I grew up in Ittswich, so there's much to be sad about.
Starting point is 00:07:11 But you learn to hold it in. Okay, so it's unlike... I'm not going to probably get you to a place where you start weeping on stage tonight. I think it could be... intriguing to try. All right. I'll bear it in mind.
Starting point is 00:07:25 Yes. But listen, Wes Anderson, working with him on Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar. Yes. That must have been amazing. Wes Anderson has come into the public consciousness in the last few years, even more so, because of the memes that popped up in the age of AI-generated imagery. It's interesting, he can never quite be captured by any of these things, because there's something just so inhumane about these.
Starting point is 00:07:53 And I find his films very humane and very restrained. Was that the first time working with him on that that you had met, or had you met before? He, when the film Submarine, came out in America, he very kindly presented a screening of it in New York with Ben Stiller, because Ben Stiller knew Wes Anderson and Ben Stiller had been a... producer on submarine. So that through no merit
Starting point is 00:08:24 it was given a very kind screening by him. So I'd met him then, 2011 or something like that. And what's it like? Just in general. Yes, what's it like? Well he's extremely well
Starting point is 00:08:41 prepared so he has what he calls a cartoon of the film which is an animated storyboard of everything that's going to happen and he's not one of those directors who films everything from lots of different angles and then pieces it together in the edit more or less everything he films is the shot that it's going to be used and it's precisely got it's a very pleasant set very kindly spirited collegiate and he's worked with the same people for a long time so they're incredibly adept
Starting point is 00:09:18 and yes it was a completely unearned joy and then how do you feel about the conversation around him especially post the memes and stuff now that he's become a kind of symbol for something fairly superficial i.e. just almost like an Instagram filter yes I in a certain way I think with someone like him
Starting point is 00:09:42 you're penalized for your originality because you can't really do memes about non-original people because you wouldn't recognize them as they show they never quite capture what he does exactly but I don't think they're sort of terrible that's all people enjoying having
Starting point is 00:10:02 their own version of some aesthetic in the same way that every band wants to be the Beatles but they're not quite the Beatles The criticism of Wes Anderson though is that he's easy to parody because all there is is the visual style there's not enough meat underneath. Deal with that.
Starting point is 00:10:22 Deal with that. Yes, I don't think there's a kind of... I don't think, okay, I'll deal with that. I don't think there's a straightforward separation between style and substance in that style is the substance. Okay? The form is the message.
Starting point is 00:10:44 I think McLuhan has dealt with this. And, well, I don't think there's any separation in the same way that the meter of a poem. You just go, it's all just dumpty, dumpty-dum. And I actually find his films really emotional because they're restrained. And there's, especially in, there's a moment in Rushmore when finally the Jaten Swartzman character
Starting point is 00:11:08 and Bill Murray's character make up. And he offers him one of his merit badges from school and the two different ones. And it's, I think, one's either a ten, or punctuality and Bill Murray's character just goes, I'll take punctuality and it's one of the most moving moments
Starting point is 00:11:24 in the film I think and yeah, I'm an unabashed fan. I watched Rushmore on the weekend with my daughter, she's 15 and I think it was the first film for as long as I can remember that she actually sat through and really enjoyed it was great fun
Starting point is 00:11:40 I liked it much more as well than I hadn't seen it since it came out and I think I didn't give get it really. When it came out, I was too distracted by, but no one would do that. You know what mean? Right. Yes. No one would behave. No one would tolerate such a precocious. No one would blow up the death star. It's too hard. See, that's different though, because as soon as you've got space and lasers and helmets and robots, then you can do anything goes. It's a totally different emotional playing field. But then
Starting point is 00:12:18 when it's stuff you can relate to, when it's people in a high school, when it's superficially recognizable things going on, then my rational brain locks in and I need everything to be like it would be in life. You know, I feel
Starting point is 00:12:33 reassured when someone shows that they're making something and feel hugely worried when someone expects me to believe that this is actually real. So it would be very strange if you had not in any way addressed the fact that we're sitting here talking to one another and just pretended this was a drama, that would be one of the most
Starting point is 00:12:57 tense things that you could ever witness. So I quite like things where they face the audience and they sort of go, this is a film and this is for entertainment purposes and I like old Hollywood films where people speak faster than anyone could possibly speak and live in houses that are impossible for people to live in and huge ceilings and gowns. It doesn't sort of bother me. Yeah. No, I think I'm just quite unimaginative. No, I sort of, I almost think I'm so suspicious that I feel reassured by someone going, it's okay, we're pretending. I go, okay, that's good. Yeah. It just takes me ages to appreciate things. I think I remember everyone going on about how great Rushmore was when it came out. And I just thought, is it? That tends to be my response to most
Starting point is 00:13:51 things, that people are very excited about. What's this? Yeah. Oh God, another thing that's way better than anything I'll ever do. Yes, too much. Well, also, it can be sort of overwhelming seeing something as well, because you have an idea often of what you want a thing to do. And you're just thinking, this isn't doing the thing that I want the thing to do at all. Yeah. This is doing some other thing. Yeah, exactly. Or you sort of think that you know what it wants to do, and you think, no, you're doing it wrong.
Starting point is 00:14:20 If I was doing this thing, which I could easily, if I wanted to, then I would do it like this, and you've gone and screwed it up. That's the danger. Hello, my friend, it's good to see you again. I've got to say you're looking great. I love what you've done with your nipples and your knees and your shiny board paste. Richard, music, I've written down here, why is music down here, why is music so important? Feel free to be quite sincere and I might cry.
Starting point is 00:15:06 That is. Because to be serious, you and I are, can we say nerdy? I think regardless of whether we say that or not, that's the objective reality we're dealing with. Yes. I think a lot of people would imagine I love David Bowie and he is close to my heart as far as musical heroes go. David Bowie, yes.
Starting point is 00:15:30 Who would be the equivalent for you? Is it Mascus? Jay Mascus is pretty well up there as my favourite guitarist. As Bowie, I mean, Bowie is pretty, amazing. Were you very emotional when he died? Were you swept up in the wave of emotion? Yes and no.
Starting point is 00:15:51 I was in myself. I felt, actually no, yes and yes. Yes. Yes. So in a sense yes. Yes. On the one hand yes and on the other hand also yes. On both hands. Yes. It was a yes. Well my dad had died three weeks before. Didn't mind
Starting point is 00:16:09 about that too much. No, of course not. I was fine with that. He was very old. And he didn't make hunky dory. Exactly. Lest we forget. He didn't even come close. No. I mean, his early stuff was good, but the later stuff,
Starting point is 00:16:24 as indulgent, it meandered. What's the most upset you ever got about a musician dying? I found myself when Bowie died because we live past Brixton and cycling through and seeing the people out on vigils, and it was quite an emotional thing, I'd say, Bowie dying. yeah, I'd say yeah, maybe Bowie. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:47 I'm just trying to get you to do the Bowie voice, that's all I'm... Oh, yes. That's what we want. I wonder if David ever stood on this stage. I think he must have. Endulged in a bit of super
Starting point is 00:17:00 latitive theatricality. Here in the West End of London with the London boys. Yes. Now is with the London boys. Okay. One thing that I remember very fondly from watching Snub TV, this show, which was fantastic.
Starting point is 00:17:22 I think you can still find bits of it flying around on YouTube, but was watching Pixies, seeing them on Snub TV, and they filmed a video where they were just jumping across some rocks very slowly. Yes, yeah, I remember that. And they married it to one of their tracks. And it was around then that I had gone into a branch of W.H. Smith's, on the King's Road, and I go into W.H. Smith's, and they are playing Come On Pilgrim by Pixies. Okay. Because you're a Pixies fan as well, right?
Starting point is 00:17:54 Yes. I mean, they're amazing. Trond was the first. So I started at the end, and I distinctly remember hearing that they're broken up, and I just was, I honestly felt, I just got the CD. You can't do that. I've just got into you. It's almost like you have your own consciousness. and lives. You bastards. You cunt. But then when I played the music, when I was out of the context of W.H. Smith, I was quite intimidated by it.
Starting point is 00:18:23 I just thought I've gone above my pay grade here. You felt safe in W.H. Smiths, as do we all. And then outside of Smiths, it's dangerous. Yeah. Because I was listening to this kind of thing. So here's a clip from around that time.
Starting point is 00:18:39 Pixies on Dutch TV and a very short blast. of what they sound like. What does your mother think about your music? She's very, very proud. You don't want to sleep after setting my loins on fire. I just thought it might be a bit too much for young buckles, who basically had only just come out of the Thompson twins' face.
Starting point is 00:19:20 Yeah. And then I was dealing with that, and I took it back. Stop it. Yeah. I'm going to say something that I haven't said out loud before. I took back pod by the breeders. I couldn't cope. It was too much. I'd gone, I'd travel, I was, I'm from Ipswich.
Starting point is 00:19:47 Okay, this needs to be, and I'd travel down to London to buy it, and I just couldn't cope with it. I actually ended up going back to the same shop to buy it again. That was one of my most traumatic record purchases, and then I realized I was wrong and went back. And the only other really terrible experience, I bought Hatful of Hollow by the Smith's vinyl, got it home from a second-hand shop.
Starting point is 00:20:12 I'm going to tell all this story. it's going to be in reverse, like Memento. So, I bought the vinyl, took it back, played it, all the first side, very good, turned it over, country and western music. And he went, this is defective,
Starting point is 00:20:27 this is not good, went back to the shop, the second-hand shop, handed it over and said, there's a problem with this record that's only half-smiths, which is 50% insufficient. And then he took it and said, okay, thank you very much.
Starting point is 00:20:41 Well, this is the original factory pressing of Hatful of Hollow. That's what they do. They press it on one side and on any old kind of junk. And then the other side will be a country and western. So I'll keep this and you can have you two pounds back.
Starting point is 00:20:56 Oh. Is that really true? Yeah. Oh, you dick. I know. Yes. Yes, please. Yep
Starting point is 00:21:15 Yes. Hey, welcome back. So that was a couple of moments from my on-stage chat with Richard Iawaddy. And by the way, if you're wondering why I don't just play the whole recording from that live show, it's because there was a lot of video elements that wouldn't really work for audio only. And I think we did have a few technical problems that night as well, which interfered with some parts of the recording. Some of the music that we recorded was a bit distorted, and also with the Pixies songs, two of which Frank Black played with Richard.
Starting point is 00:21:54 There's rights issues that means I can't play them in full. If you're curious to see how Richard and Frank Black sounded together, though, you'll find links in the description of today's podcast to a couple of video clips that I just filmed on my phone from the brief rehearsal that Frank and Richard did a few hours before the... show. The first song that they played in front of the audience that night was Hey by the Pixies, which hopefully I'll be all right just playing you a short clip of. This is one of the bits that wasn't too badly distorted. So this is Frank Black on acoustic guitar and then Richard coming in with his Joey Santiago electric guitar parts.
Starting point is 00:22:43 What's true, what's say, rockley, there you know, there you go. So that gives you an idea of what they sounded like on the night playing the pixie stuff. But the day before the podcast show, I had met Frank Black in his dressing room at the forum in Kentish Town, where Pixies were playing that night. And I recorded our short chat with me talking Frank through how the podcast show at the Palladium might work. As you'll hear, one of the subjects that I thought we might discuss was the intersection of music and comedy. However, hearing how Charles felt about comedians who make music that isn't just straightforward musical comedy, didn't really encourage me to tell him that I myself had been recording my own album.
Starting point is 00:23:47 He was very diplomatic, and I know that he absolutely loves people like Tim Heidecker and Matt Berry who make music, but I got the impression that he wasn't altogether convinced that people like me, having a go at music, is a great idea. I'm a big fan of Richards. I've seen most of the programs and things that he's been associated with, My kids are all big, great comedy fans.
Starting point is 00:24:13 That's how cool. Yeah, well, he's a very nice guy, Richard. I like him. Yeah, I would imagine. But he's a big music fan, and he, you know, he went up on stage with Dinosaur Jr. He played with them. That's funny.
Starting point is 00:24:28 He's my neighbor, the Jay. Oh, yes. Four doors down. That's funny. And, yeah, he was in one of Richard's films called The Double. Anyway, so I'm kind of thinking in terms of it being a little bit theatrical. And saying to Richard, I want to ask him about music anyway, he loves music, he's directed a lot of music videos, show a couple of clips, he's directed videos for Arctic monkeys and vampire weed, and a breeders clip recently. So we show a few clips of those, and then I say, I know you're a Pixies fan, I am too, we exchange Pixie, how did you get into them, and that kind of thing.
Starting point is 00:25:08 and then I say to him, can you play any? And he's like, well, I can play the riff to hey. So he has a go at that. And I say, are you going to sing? He's like, no, I'm not, I can't sing. Are you going to sing? I was like, no. And then, hey, exactly.
Starting point is 00:25:25 So I sort of, at that point, I get you out, if that's not to ensure. Yeah, yeah, yeah, no, that's up you. Then you just sort of play it through and he'll play along with you. And then I was imagining you'd come down, sit with us. I guess I was thinking we could talk about when we first met, talk about my dad a little bit. I have a clip of you and he sitting and chatting about wine in 1998. And then I found some of the rushes of the video that we did with him. I forgot that he learnt Doggone, so he could sing it.
Starting point is 00:25:57 And the audio is not very good because we didn't have him miced up or anything. We just wanted to use the lip-sing. But he's out there in the middle of the street with cars rushing past singing Doggone. in quite a nice way. So I was going to show a short clip of that. Oh, yeah, sure. You got to do that. And then a bit more chat. I thought we could talk possibly about, like, funny music. What would you talk about in that case? Like, do you like funny music? I do. And I think that there are people that do it well, and I think that there are people that
Starting point is 00:26:30 love it so much. And it's almost like they're in some kind of a dilemma between, doing it for real and also still trading in on their comedic sensibilities, right? And so they're kind of very in-between. You know what I mean? I find that a lot with Tim Heidecker. He wants to be in a band. You know, he wants to do the thing. But because of his station, he is not quite allowed to.
Starting point is 00:27:01 And so he pushes it right to the thing and like where you almost get to the point where like, well, is this still comedy music or are we just doing music here? You know what I mean? Yeah. And I feel like that sometimes they don't even know. Or it could be that they're not confused, but his audience, me or whatever, is watching. Well, I just spent the last half hour laughing at your comedy and now you're playing this really beautiful music.
Starting point is 00:27:28 Like, you know, I'm already in a certain mode. And so I'm kind of like trying to find the funny and the thing that you're doing. and maybe you're not even trying to be funny. You're trying to just be musical. Anyway, it's an interesting thing. I think actors, of course, it's the same thing, you know, and it's the same thing, right? Musicians who maybe they like the idea of like,
Starting point is 00:27:50 oh, acting and being something in front of a camera, you know, and on a stage, I understand being on a stage, and you see them, and you just go, oh, oh. Don't do that. Wow. You really can't. act, you know? And it's, more than anything, I end up having a lot of respect for people when they're, you know, so it's easy to say, to watch someone's performance, a comedic person
Starting point is 00:28:19 and say, oh, I didn't find that very funny, you know. I like this old stuff better, right? And I guess what a lot of people don't realize is how difficult it is to be funny, you know, and they just have no clue or how difficult it is to act. Well, you're just up there saying words, right? I remember what's his name? Fight Club. Oh, yes, David Fincher. David Fincher. He called me up and said, I know you're not an actor, but doing this film about the Zodiac Killer, you know, and you have a physical resemblance to the Zodiac Killer. Would you read for it? You know, no pressure. I said, fuck, all right. So, like, I went and saw an acting, coach, right, for an evening, just to say, like, I have to read this thing tomorrow. I don't know
Starting point is 00:29:08 what I'm doing. Like, give me your best two-pointers or whatever, you know. I went and bought the, the killer's boots at the Army and Navy supply store, because he was ex-Navy, and I said, well, he would have worn these Navy boots or whatever. And I tried to be a method actor for five fucking minutes, you know? Like at the boot, the Navy boots, and I went down there, and he was David Vitcher was there, his producer, they were very nice. Oh, we know you're not. an actor, it's fine. All I think was just read. We just want to hear your voice. Just read. And literally, it was like, oh, and it was just like, I couldn't speak, I couldn't finish the sentence, I could, oh, I'm sorry, and I completely fell apart in the most pathetic way.
Starting point is 00:29:53 I wasn't even trying to act. I just wanted to get through the lines, and I could not do it. But I knew part of the reason was because it was a lot harder than I realized. And I didn't have a cocky attitude about it. I knew it was, I wasn't an actor. But I thought, well, I could read. I know how to read and to speak. I can do that. No, the whole context of it and everything you're trying to read through this script
Starting point is 00:30:21 while they were ringing the other part or whatever. Could not do it. Could not do it. It was laughable. But musical comedy, I guess, is probably my station as a musician performer guy or whatever that when I am confronted with musical comedy or whatever, I'm probably a lot more, not judgmental, whatever, but I'm like the wrong audience to kind of totally feel that. Someone else who's not a musician and not a comedian, they look at that and they're just like, oh my God, two things that I love going on at the same time. But then if you're a musician, you start to go, it's kind of like if you were to go observe, you know, a musician, try to be funny and be a comedian. and you would go like, oh, I really love your music and, oh.
Starting point is 00:31:20 Yeah, that didn't really feel like the perfect time to say. Actually, Frank, I've been recording some songs too. But right now, we are going to head back to the London Palladium on the 19th of March 24. Frank Black has just sat down after playing Hay with Richard Iawadi on guitar. as you'll hear my own Frank, my eldest son, was in the house that night too. He'd helped me play a couple of jingles as he did a few times on that podcast tour. And he stayed on that night as a stage hand. It was lovely to have him there,
Starting point is 00:31:56 despite the potentially awkward moment of witnessing his father, confessing to his musical hero, hesitatingly, that he may have, well, kind of named his son after him. Back at the end for a bit more waffle, but right now, back to the Palladium with Frank Black, or is it Black Francis or Charles Thompson? Let's find out. Now, how should I refer to you because you have many aliases? How do you wish to be referred to on stage tonight? You got Frank.
Starting point is 00:32:32 We'll do Frank, because your son is Frank too, right? Well, you know, the honest truth is that he's called. Frank, kind of because of you. I mean, it helped that it was a name I liked anyway. You know what I mean? If your name was turd-face, I still would have liked you,
Starting point is 00:32:54 but I wouldn't have named my son after you. So, it all, the stars aligned. So yes, Frank, thank you so much for coming along tonight. Oh, it's been a pleasure. Oh, man. It's just, do you always play here at this place? This is nice. Yes.
Starting point is 00:33:08 This is where I. try stuff out and then I do the main shows at the O2 generally I find them impersonal so this is like a sort of fun indie night for me there's
Starting point is 00:33:23 Frank ah okay thank you very much right on time you can mind great work Frank that's good that's good I think you can get one more bend in it
Starting point is 00:33:39 Hey, thank you, Frank. On his way. Now, we've met before, Frank. Yes, yes. Do you remember when the first time would have been? I think you turned up at my house in Los Angeles on 2214-1-Londelius Street, West Hills, 9-1-302. think. There you go. Just came to me. Dressed as policemen? Yes. To go through your record collection for vinyl justice. That's the one. Yeah. And you improvised the theme from Beatles
Starting point is 00:34:22 About. I did. You hadn't heard of it, but you started saying, oh, watch out, Beatles about, oh, watch out, Beatles about. I was very pleased. And you also gave us some screaming lessons. because on my 50th birthday, my wife had a surprise party for me, and she had assembled some of my musical friends who had rehearsed a load of songs that they knew I really love. And one of the songs was De Beza. And I stripped my throat out so badly, and I had a few shows that week, and I had to cancel them,
Starting point is 00:35:02 because I had screamed my way through the best birthday I ever had singing De Beza. Can you give us an example for people unfamiliar with that track of what we're dealing with here? The shouting in it? Yeah. Yeah. It's just like, rah! You know, it's just a lot of, you know. How do you sing like that without immediately stripping your throat out?
Starting point is 00:35:23 Well, the guy that taught me how to shout was my neighbor, and I used to deliver flowers for his flower shop. He was from Thailand. His name was Bob Sambon Sook. and he used to be in a Thai band back in the day, I guess his day would have been in the 1960s, I'm guessing. So I used to deliver flowers for him, but he knew that I liked the music. Did you ever deliver flowers?
Starting point is 00:35:53 No. I mean, once to my wife on her birthday, but it was just the once. It's a terrible job, because about one out of every five or six deliveries, you've got to go around to the funeral. home. Oh, yes. You know how do they deliver flowers at the funeral home? You have to find a secret door that's unlocked because you don't get a signature. You have to look for a room
Starting point is 00:36:17 with flowers in it. And sometimes you don't find the room with the flowers in it. You find other rooms. And it's very stressful. Oh, man. So I don't recommend it for anybody. But anyway, Bob, I used to deliver flowers. But he knew I liked it. music so I brought over my Beatles book to his studio and he said we did pick a beetle song and he knew I liked the Beatles and we did oh darling in his little home studio and he said sing it like you hate that you know I don't want to say the word but it was a bit frightening for me I was only about 14 or so but he taught me how to shout and so I'm very grateful to Bob wherever he is today Hmm. After our time in Los Angeles, when you were very welcoming to us and it was very exciting meeting you after listening to your music all those years and then suddenly flipping through your CD collection and finding like, oh, he's got a lot of the same stuff as me. That was very satisfying. There was lots of Ramones and there was Beck was in there and Donovan was in there and all this sort of stuff that I didn't necessarily expect you to have.
Starting point is 00:37:34 But it was good. And then a couple of years later, or maybe just a year later or something, we met when you were in a band called Frank Black and the Catholics. And it was 1998. And we were doing our show, The Adam and Joe show. And we had an idea that maybe we could get you together with my dad, who was part of our TV show, Nigel Buxton, aka Bad Dad. We thought we'd sit you down just in Joe's flat in Exmouth Market. And we, that's as far as we, got as far as planning it and we just sat you both down my dad had a glass a bottle of wine that he was chugging away and he was there in his suit and tie aged 74 years old and what did you make of it i just figured that's how you did it over here in england you know with your dad and wine and all
Starting point is 00:38:28 that and so i just kind of went along with it and it seemed fine he was a very nice man as I recall. I loved it because he was on his best behavior with you because I think he knew how much you meant to me. So whereas normally he only had bad things to say about pretty much everything that I really liked. What are you listening to? What is this loathsome music you're listening to?
Starting point is 00:38:55 But then you turned up and suddenly he was all soft and excited to be there. By the way, this footage never saw. the light of day because it was mainly my dad talking about wine and some of his favorite roads in France and that's a Netflix special now anyway and then years later when I got married sorry this is just me talking to Frank Black about all the nice things he's done and memory but when I got married 2001 you were in town and I went to your rehearsal studios and you sang a song for my wife. My wife. And it was from
Starting point is 00:39:42 maybe my favorite album in the world, which is your album Teenager of the Year, one of your solo records. And you sang a song called Calistan. It's a great song. I was wondering if you might sing that tonight. It would be my pleasure. See how the Calistan goes now. Okay. Been a while. So far so good I took three days to drive down one street Radio on tune to the big fleet Invisible planes are cracking the concrete That's just what some people
Starting point is 00:40:34 say Hey Hey I put down my blanket On cigarette butt beach Saw the old man He was doing okay
Starting point is 00:40:49 He's making his last stand On old bottles and cans Around their Calistan way Hey Hey
Starting point is 00:41:05 It used to be 16 lanes It used to be Hawaii A used to be Mexican Or used to be A Spanian Nuebo Yeah
Starting point is 00:41:23 It used to be Navajo Or used to be Yippy Yeah I don't know Halfway point I went in from the weather when I went in from the weather when I got wheezy some Pachinko I play
Starting point is 00:42:04 Parchisi Insane and Still making it breezy In the valley of tar That once was L.A. Hey Hey My best friend
Starting point is 00:42:22 He's the king of Kuroki He struck up a cord And he took it away Out of the pan And into Japan Around their Calistan way Hey
Starting point is 00:42:44 Hey There used to be 16 lanes Used to be Juan Wang Yes Yeah used to be Mexican There used to be Mexico Yeah, used to be Navajo
Starting point is 00:43:06 It used to be yippy, yeah, I don't know Calistan Just a typical wedding kind of a song I love it And then we drove down I'm just going to Karen talking about my life We ended up honeymooning in California and drove up Route One and listened to that.
Starting point is 00:43:47 Anyway, thanks, man. Pleasure. Wait. Continue. You hear the collapse if there's nothing and then you ask yourself. Woo-hoo! Hey, welcome back, Podcats. That was Charles Thompson, aka Frank Black, playing the track, Callistan, one of my favourites from Teenager of the Year, live on stage at the London Palladium in March 2024. Thank you so much to everyone who came along that night. It was a lovely audience, I remember. It was the first show of that podcast tour last year. And it was lovely to have Richard there and Frank Black. and very exciting to see them both play together and enjoy each other's company.
Starting point is 00:44:50 Me and Richard sat dewy-eyed watching Frank Black playing that lovely version of Calistan, a song that we both love. And the fact that my own Frank was there too, he's also a big fan. I'm very grateful to everyone else who helped that night too. There was Seamus, my producer. I'm grateful as well to Becca Bryars, who helped me out wrangling the life. live recordings and also to all the people at cross-town promotions, especially Richard, Ben, Annalisa and Phil, and everyone at the Palladium that night. Thank you all.
Starting point is 00:45:32 Wow, it's really a very beautiful afternoon here. I'm down near the road now. You can hear the traffic. But I can't see. it from where I'm standing. All I can see is a field with gently swaying wheat beginning to grow, autumnal trees over in the copse that I'm looking at. This is the last podcast I'm putting out before Christmas. In a few days, I'm meeting Joe, and we're going to record our traditional Christmas podcast. Keep it low-key this year, face-to-face. Last couple of years, we've done the Christmas podcast in front of a live audience at the Royal Festival Hall. But this time, it's old school.
Starting point is 00:46:25 That episode, of course, will be with you on Christmas Day. Speaking of Christmas Day, I pre-recorded a show the other day with Deb Grant, who co-hosts the new music Fix Daily with Tom Ravenscroft on Six Music. but I believe she's sitting in for Lauren Leverne a few days over Christmas and I don't know exactly when the show that I recorded with her is going to go out but it might be Christmas Day. Anyway, look out for it. The format was that we were playing each other a selection of songs that were new to the other person
Starting point is 00:47:03 and talking about why we liked them. I got quite emotional at one point. but it was so nice meeting Deb I hadn't met her before I loved the songs that she picked for me it was fun playing her the ones that I picked for her and I hope you will enjoy it so look out for that show around Christmas on Six Music
Starting point is 00:47:26 Speaking of getting emotional Don't worry I'll try and keep a lid on the wobbly voice but talking to Frank Black there about my dad and doing that dog gone video, which is a really happy memory. It wasn't stress-free making the video, but I really love the result. I love the fact that my dad ended up being part of the Frank Black
Starting point is 00:47:51 musical universe. Anyway, it's, as I speak, exactly 10 years since he died. This is the kind of day he would have loved as well. Very beautiful, but cold. Like my wife. Oh, come on. That was, in case you're listening, that was a joke. You're very beautiful and hot. I think she'd hate me saying that even more. But yeah, 10 years, I was already doing the podcast. But a lot of other things were very different. Since then, I have talked about him a lot.
Starting point is 00:48:34 Written about him in two books, particularly in Rumble book. and also a bit in, I Love You Bye. But as regular listeners will know, he pops up a great deal in my conversations with my guests. And I think about him all the time. I think about mum all the time as well. But it's different. Dad relationship, that's a weird one.
Starting point is 00:49:01 It's not a competition, though, is it? I finished audiobooking Anthony Hopkins memoir the other day. I really enjoyed it. It's read by Kenneth Branner. I mean, I guess I knew Kenneth Branner's a good actor, but he knocks it out of the park. I suppose he is doing an Anthony Hopkins impression. And the first couple of minutes, I was a little bit worried.
Starting point is 00:49:27 But actually, it's really good and not too extreme. He just does a brilliant job. And there's a lot of really moving stuff in there. I read a review that said, Oh, it's quite melancholy This book. I suppose it is, in a way. It's a lot of stuff about mortality and regret
Starting point is 00:49:46 and sadness over decisions that Anthony Hopkins made in his life and challenges that he's faced personal challenges and lots of very interesting stuff about the craft of acting as well. He's one of my favorite actors, I think. I'd recommend it if you like his stuff. But there's a lot of, uh,
Starting point is 00:50:08 you know, dad angst in that book, as there is in, I guess, most memoirs, isn't there? I don't think anyone's relationship with their dad or either of their parents is ever totally straightforward. I was lucky in so many ways with my parents and what they did for me. And yet, you know, you're always feeling like you could have been closer, you could have done things differently, you're angry at this, you're resentful at that, you're regretful at the other. And you miss them badly when they're gone and you wish so much that you had another chance just to just to sit down and tell them what you've been doing and ask them what they think about what's going on in the world and ask all the questions you never asked and give them a hug and say,
Starting point is 00:51:03 Thank you. I love you. But of course the truth is that if you could, they'd be exactly the same, and you'd probably have an argument, or it'd just be a bit awkward, like before. I don't know. Anyway, if you're listening and you're in a similar spot, if you're in the process of saying goodbye to your dad,
Starting point is 00:51:28 or maybe you have done recently, well, I'm sorry, and you'll be all right. there's actually a few rewards on the other side of it let me tell you um but in good ways and bad ways it never quite goes away hey come over here hey good to see you thank you so much for listening and for coming back have i said all my other thank yous thanks to everyone at a cast Thanks to Helen Green. She does the artwork. Thanks to Seamus, Becca Bryars. But thank you most of all for coming along.
Starting point is 00:52:11 And until next time, we share the same Sonic Space. Maybe on another episode or maybe on Christmas Day. Please go carefully. It's crazy out there. And in case it's youthful, I love you. That was a long, Frank Black one. Subscribe, like and subscribe, please like and subscribe, please like and subscribe. Give me like a smile and a thumbs up. Nice like a fun for me bum's up.
Starting point is 00:53:16 Like a little bit of thumbs up. I'm going to be a good. We're saying. Another. Okay. . I'm going to be. I'm a lot.
Starting point is 00:53:42 I'm a good. P. It's. I'm a. So, you know. I'm a. I'm a.
Starting point is 00:53:51 I don't know. I'm going to be. I'm going to be. I'm going to. I'm going to. And so. Thank you. I.
Starting point is 00:54:03 Thank you. Thank you.

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