The Joe Rogan Experience - #2330 - Bono
Episode Date: May 30, 2025Bono is the lead singer of the rock band U2, as well as an activist and author. His memoir, "Bono: Stories of Surrender," is available wherever books are sold. Watch the companion film on Apple TV+, a...nd the soundtrack is available digitally and on limited edition vinyl. www.u2.com https://tv.apple.com/us/movie/bono-stories-of-surrender/umc.cmc.oxoxnpaecaatg9tzf6pgfsh2https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/804259/bono-stories-of-surrender-by-bono/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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The Joe Rogan Experience.
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I fucking love the film.
It was really great.
You saw it?
I watched it last night.
Yeah.
It was cool too because I always feel special when I got to enter in the password because
I know that nobody else has seen it yet.
You know, I got to enter in the email and the password and I watched it
and I screen mirrored it on the TV.
It was great, man.
And it's it was so like almost like a fever dream.
It was wild, like the way you set it up all black and white.
You get past the first three minutes.
Yes. I could even my own mates are like, oh, don't do that.
It's like, wow.
And it is like a fever dream.
Yeah. That opening. But that really happened to me. So it was great, man. It's like wow and it is like a fever dream. That opening but that really happened
to me. So it was great man it's great and it's also like I love the way you did it like you played
the beginning of some songs and you talked about the origin of the songs. The thing that I have a
hard time believing though is that you weren't a good singer when you were young. Well you know
punk rock you're a bit of a shouter you know know, that's really what you do. You just get up there and shout.
I'm shouting at God, I'm shouting at everyone.
I'm shouting at the band.
That scene when we're doing I Will Follow.
Yeah.
That's really true.
So I'm there and we're improvising this song
that becomes I Will Follow if you walk away, walk away,
walk away, I'm just like this woman.
We're trying to get, just do something original.
And we're really ripping off,
the irony is we're really ripping off
Public Image Limited, this Johnny Rotten
became John Lydon again for this band
called Public Image Limited back in the late 70s.
And I'm singing about, you know,
it's a suicide note really. And I'm singing about this, and, it's a suicide note really.
And I'm singing about this,
and they're saying like, what's it about?
And I said, I think it's this guy
who's gonna follow somebody into the grave.
You know, they're gonna, I think it's about,
it's a child following their mother,
missing them so much that he'll follow them into the grave.
And then we realized that our rehearsal room,
the little yellow house, is beside the cemetery
where my mother is buried.
And I have never visited her once,
or talked about her once.
And we've been rehearsing there for months.
And it's funny, you know,
you can deny somebody in know, you can deny somebody
in conversation, you can deny somebody to yourself,
but in the songs, all that shit comes out.
Wow.
Wow.
So yeah, but thank you for watching it.
That's, that's-
I loved it.
Thank you.
It was such an interesting way you put it all together.
I've never seen anybody do that like that.
Like you did, like, it's like a
documentation of your career, but in this like very unique way with like talking about
things and explaining these moments and then the music plays and it's all black and white.
It was really cool.
Yeah, there's a sort of black and white lens, a kind of clarity.
I did this series of shows in the Beacon Theater in New York, and it was going so well, we
thought we should record it.
I will tell you, the night before we opened our show in New York, my miss. Alley said, I don't think you should do this. Just please, please do
not do this to yourself in front of, you know, a New York crowd. Cancel it now. Do what most
people do on a book tour. Get somebody to interview them and just they'll come anyway.
Everyone will be happy. And I don't know, I just went for once. I didn't take her sage advice and I did it.
And the difference was with an audience, it was funny.
And she was like, oh, that's the bit
I didn't get in the rehearsals, it's funny.
So what was she thinking?
It was self-indulgent?
It just thought it was dull, self-indulgent, here you are.
I mean, all these things are a version of... Here's another great thing about me. No. I was calling it a memoir. Me booque what I wrote myself.
It's the memoir. And look, there's something narcissistic. But it's your material.
You know, that's what you get. It's not just your body, your psychology is the canvas. And, you know, I grew up, John Lennon, you know, the Beatles were everything for me.
And, you know, John Lennon made a sort of performance art out of his wedding to
Yoko and he did a bed in for peace and he was ready to look ridiculous for peace.
And, you know, I do ridiculous quite well, I'm told.
So that was my definition, you know, I do ridiculous quite well, I'm told. So that was my definition, you know, of art, really.
Yeah.
Was to just go out there.
But the thing that being in U2, which has given me
everything, took away, if it took away anything,
was, you know, people don't come along to our
shows for a belly laugh, you know what I mean? Right, right. So as a comedian, you understand that, you know,
it's like I, you know, I wrote this line, I don't know, I haven't put it in a
song yet, I don't think, but you know, I think it's, laughter is the evidence of
freedom. And I don't trust people to talk about freedom now.
I want people to be free.
If you are, if you talk, be it then, be it.
Yeah.
And so I wanted to be that on stage.
I wanted to be loose.
I wanted to be myself.
I wanted to own up to the ridiculousness of my life,
as I've just explained,
the madness of my family.
But turns out it's everyone's family,
is a little opera.
It is a bit of a soap opera,
but it's also a real opera.
These are big feelings.
You go on after your dad,
like a young, Elka as a romantic word for it?
But it's you know, you're just taking them on. Yeah, and this poor man is just he's lost his
His wife he's trying to bring up two kids. I'm just an obnoxious kind of
Thing who's some
somehow psychologically blames him for the death of my mother, because as Jim
Sheridan says to me, it doesn't have to be actually true to be psychologically true.
And that kids feel all these feelings, you know, and they don't have to be logical. And I went after my dad and I, by playing him every night
in the Beacon Theater and around the world,
I actually learned to love him, I learned to like him,
actually, I always loved him.
But I learned to like him, that was, he made me laugh more.
So I got humor, humor was the gift from that show.
And the humor was evident with the audience there.
Yeah.
But not evident when my missus came, which is why she wanted to pull the plug.
Well, rehearsals are hard. It's also hard when someone is too close to you.
They're there with you every day. Like, this is true with comedy as well. Like if someone sees your act too
many times, like if someone's traveling with you, like if my wife went to see my shows
all the time, there's parts of it she'd be like, Oh, don't do that. Oh, don't do this.
Oh, like that's not like you get too close to it. Like she's too close to you. But to
see it with fresh eyes, like to see in front of that audience the joy that they
have when the music starts playing when some of the songs that they love it's amazing like you
could feel it in the show it's like the pure joy what they get so because the people that came to
see it were hardcore fans well the one what happened was andrew dominick australian director
fans? Well, what happened was Andrew Dominic, Australian director, and he did some of the shots without any audience, just he cleared them out on a day off.
And then some of them came in which were hardcore fans as you say, and that was, in
a way that was the most terrifying because I, as a performer,
I'm drawn to spontaneous acts.
That's what, when we started out as a band,
I was attracted to performers
who I thought might leave the stage
and follow me home, mug me, or you know,
tell my fortune, or you know, whatever.
Wild people.
Well just, yeah.
I mean, and I'm still a child.
Iggy Pop, when I was growing up, was the, you know,
Patti Smith.
Patti Smith used to enter the stage,
elbowing her way through the crowd.
Myself and Larry Mullen, drummer and you two,
we left stage one night, when we Larry Mullen, drummer and you two, we left stage
one night when we were like 21, 20 years old, elving our way through the crowd to get out,
just got into a taxi in London, fucked off.
And we felt a liberation.
Breaking the fourth wall has been everything for our bands. Trying to smash it by surfing it, by jumping into the crowd.
I had the preposterous moment of going into a crowd in Los Angeles, I forget, the Forum
or somewhere like that with the white flag, right? The
nonviolent white flag, the same flag that I'm still on about, the flag of surrender,
right? In that show. But back then, I'm 23 or whatever, and I'm going into the crowd
and I see people who are, you know, pulling at me and all that. The next thing I know,
who are pulling at me and all that. The next thing I know, I'm throwing a punch,
somebody in our own audience.
That's how much nonviolence meant to me.
But I'm attracted to feral performers,
I suppose there's a word for it.
It's just you're in it and you're not fully in control of it.
Right. Mark Rylans is a great one. You're in it and you're not completely in control of it, right?
and Mark Rylance is a great one. Daniel Day Lewis walked off stage one night
Saw a ghost of his father rumor had it when he was playing Hamlet
but
Yeah, so having the crowd in who knew what was gonna happen
That unnerves me a bit. Because how do I surprise them?
Turns out by making – I became a sit-down comic.
Is that what you – if you're a stand-up for a minute, a minute, I was a sit-down comedian.
What you're doing and I think what you're saying that you're attracted to is something
that's not contrived, something that's pure.
It could be messy, it could be Patty Smith,
elbowing people, or you running through the crowds.
It's real.
And there's so much in this world that's not real.
There's so much that's manufactured,
there's so much that's produced
and run through a focus group,
and there's so much that doesn't
resonate.
Like you don't feel it as a piece of art.
You don't feel it as like a real person pouring out their emotions and their soul.
But great music, you feel, it gets into you.
It gets into your cells, you know?
No one can figure out how it works or why it works or why this does and this doesn't.
And why does Johnny Cash have such a fucking cool voice?
Like it's what is it? What is it?
Like, but there's something about real that's just it's like a vitamin.
It's like going out in the sun when it's been raining like, oh, like you soak it in.
Yeah, it is, you know.
I mean, you can just pretentious ways of describing it.
People say it's we first sang to each other before we spoke.
You know, it's like birdsong.
I don't know who said that.
It's probably on drugs.
But it could have been a scientist.
And anthropology might suggest we certainly, the goat song, you go back to Greek tragedy,
you had a drum and a voice. So it's very primal.
Yeah.
And there is, it is the language of the spirit. It, we, we, it is, it's somehow, there is worship involved whether it's God, nature, money, an
extraordinary woman has just walked across the streets but it seems to be
that music is where we are creatures of awe and wonder. You mentioned Johnny Cash. I had the blessing in my life of getting to
know him. As a believer, I don't know if you know, I'm a believer, I'm just not a very good one. But he, there was not a pious bone in his body.
And I learned that by the company he would choose,
he didn't like, he got nervous around people
who were too self-righteous.
And he had this huge spirit in him, you know,
prayerful spirit.
Myself and Adam Clayton were driving through America, I think
around the time of the Joshua Tree, and I'd met Johnny a couple years, but he said, you
know, I found out where he lived. He had a zoo in Nashville. He had a house in
Nashville. And we go in to meet June, his missus, and Johnny. And he shows us this table filled with plates of
everything. Like, wow, we're coming, just the two of us. He said, no, honey, that's
my cookbook. I'm just doing a photo sheet for my cookbook. We're in here, you know,
we're having a... So we go into their kitchen and we sat there, myself and Adam and Johnny goes, shall we pray?
And Adam wasn't a praying type at that time, but he was like, wow, it's Johnny Cash.
So, you know, we all held hands and whatever. And Johnny Cash made this beautiful poetic blessing.
I just thought like, wow, of course he's touched.
And then he just turned to Adam and just was, sure missed the drugs though.
And Adam just fell in love with him, you know, because he couldn't be pious.
He just, he had to be himself.
Yeah.
Years later, if it's years later, and we really...
Look at that.
Oh, wow, there you go.
Oh, that's so...
Oh, my God.
There it is.
That's Adam there, yeah.
Yeah.
It looks like he might have had a few tequilas.
And I don't know. But oh, wow.
I'm giving it the arty poetic face.
I am a poet, like you are.
I heard he was in trouble.
He was very ill.
Years later than this, and I called up and June answered the phone.
Excuse the poor Texans, all you Texans out there, but she was like, or Nashville in her
case, she was like, oh, Bino, wow, thank you for calling. It's so good to hear
from you. How's Dublin? How's Alley? How's the Burlington? This is a hotel, right? And I was like,
great. And we're talking, you know, phrases with June. She said, What's going on with this? And
I'm going, What's going on? I said, Look, eventually I said, look, Jim, I'm just calling because I heard John
wasn't well and I just wanted him to know and that we're thinking about him.
She said, oh, honey, we're in bed.
He's right beside me.
And he hands me the phone or she hands him the phone.
He goes, sorry about that. I'm fine.
And bless her. Actually June passed away first. And Johnny called Rick Rubin and those American
recordings were a result of a conversation he had with Rick Rubin where he said, please will you work with me because if you don't I will die. Wow. And that's what
if you hear those American recordings, amazing version of Nine Inch Nails. Hurt.
Hurt. Yeah. The version of one also to Pesh Mode's personal jeez, I mean, it's just, what a voice. Yeah.
Are you a fan of Johnny Cash?
Huge. What's your?
I used to have a dog named Johnny Cash.
Does the dog bite?
No, not anymore.
He's dead.
He didn't bite when he was alive.
He was a nice dog.
It's just I had a habit of naming my dogs
after famous singers.
Wow, we have a dog called Lemmy
Oh, wow named after Lemmy from oh, that's awesome. Yeah, it's a girl though and thinks she resents it
Yeah, the dog named Frank Sinatra and
Marshall is named after Eminem. Oh man. Well, they're two incredible people and
don't get me started on on Frank Sinatra cuz
incredible people. Don't get me started on Frank Sinatra. How long is this by the way? As long as we want to go.
Why?
Well, just Frank Sinatra. There's two questions. One of them should be Frank Sinatra because
I can go on and on and on. I learned so much from him and I got to know him and as bizarre as that sounds, he's such a name dropper Frank.
No, but I did and probably if you're interested in singing, I could tell you one miracle that
I learned from Frank Sinatra which is a version of my way and the original version, you know, it's a boast.
And years later he sang it and I have a copy of it.
It's...and Pavarotti stars in the film, as you know.
Yeah.
I play him for a moment.
But it's a version of My Way with...I mean, Pavarotti is the greatest singer on earth,
but shouldn't sing in English, friends, I do it now.
You don't want that.
And so I have a version of it without the greatest singer in the history of the world,
Pavarotti, on it.
It's just Frank singing 20 years after he'd sung My Way as a boast.
Same key, same text, same arrangement.
And now it's an apology.
Wow.
And that's a thing about singing,
and Johnny Cash had that.
I wish, I aspire to the place when my voice to try and answer
your first question when I become a singer that can do that. Sinatra most
people don't realize had a completely different voice when he was younger. His voice
when he was younger was very high-pitched and beautiful and had so much flexibility
to it and so much tone and
then probably all the cigarettes and Jack Daniels over the years sort of
hardened his voice. Skinny kid. He used to swim underwater to get
his lung expanded so he could get those bigger, bigger, bigger... Really? Yeah. We have his
mugshot out there he got
arrested he was like 125 pounds yeah he got arrested for what was the term this
seduction I think it was seduction I think he seduced a married woman yeah
yeah there he is oh look at that well he said I'm the only he said you're the only I don't know if he said cat
He said I don't certainly didn't say dude. He said you're the only something
With who wears an earring that I'm ever gonna like
You're the only cat with an earring then I'm never gonna and and I did I had a
If we're gonna talk about singers, you have to talk about Sinatra.
I had extraordinary times with him.
He used to send us, send me gifts every year.
I have a gold and sapphire Cartier watch he sent me.
Oh wow.
With Francis Albert on the, you know,
got, just every year he would send stuff.
And, cause we did a duet together on his first duet album, I've Got You Under My Skin.
Although we had our management received, I hope this is not, I'm not being, I'm in
awe of Japan.
So please don't take this as a cruel joke. But we did get – it was a fax back
then from Nippon EMI saying, we hear that Bono has done a duet with the Mr. Frank Sinalta
called I've Got You Under My Chicken. That's just the great –
Boston translation. under my chicken." That's just the great surrealist anthem of all time. But yeah, for
me, that was an unusual relationship and I – if I ask myself why I would go after these great singers that perhaps people of my own generation had moved on from,
but I hadn't. There is a part of me that wanted the blessing of the older generation
and probably the male. I didn't really – by now, the bit of age, I realized I didn't
have the sense to go after the same with women,
but I was looking for my father in them, you know, whether it was Willie Nelson, you know,
whether you know, Bob Dylan, Frank Sinatra, Pavar, all these people. I mean, I, I would, I kind of, I became their students really.
And the band would be like, yeah?
And I'm going, yeah.
And there's so much for me to learn from these people,
so much for all of us to learn.
These are extraordinary for a reason.
Sinatra had, you know, incredible sense of humor.
And great timing.
What I learned from him was he read the text of the song
like an actor.
So he would learn it as an actor would learn a part.
Then on the piano, he'd kind of roughly with his, you know, pianist, he'd figure
out where to be in the bar and all of that. And then when he went into the orchestra to meet them,
you know, Nelson Riddle or whatever, you actually hear him, you hear Frank Sinatra hearing the song
in its full arrangement for the first time as he's singing it.
Wow.
And that's his fresh paint. You know, it's like any painter will tell you.
That's just the – it's like Francis Bacon. It's just that first stroke or first touch football.
The great players where the ball lands at their feet, They don't stop it and pass it. They pass it as they
stop it. It's really a very high level of artistry and he had that. I learned that from
him. I learned lots of other things. I also tried to drink with him on a few occasions
which did not work out well
For me was it surreal when you were a young man and you were just starting to achieve success to
encounter these people that were
essentially heroes and
Be embraced by them and hang around them You know a lot of people feel imposter syndrome like they just, it's bizarre to be around these legendary human beings.
Like they're right there.
Like I still kind of get weirded out by it.
Even when I met you today, I'm like, oh, that's Bono.
Like it's still weird.
You know, it's still weird to meet people
that are like hugely famous.
And when you were a young man,
when U2 was just blowing up,
was it strange that the was it strange to accept
the fact that this is where we are?
We belong here.
Well, you've got to write the first time there is a part of you that doesn't think you belong
here.
Right.
And then when you're younger, you're not admitting that to yourself. And I have a few annoying,
more than a few annoying aspects
depending on who you're talking to,
but if I have an annoying gene,
part of it is when I'm at my most vulnerable,
I give it the most swagger. So we were playing the Super Bowl, we walked
on just after 9-11, big emotional moments and we're, you got eight minutes whatever
to switch over and I've got my ears in because the only way I'm in
touch with what's what's going on and we're walking through the crowd we've
got the crowd on the on the page I think one of the first times that was ever
done and and somebody goes yay and they and I can feel my ear come out. And that will mean I'm all fair.
And if you look at the film, as I've had to, of us walking up to get on stage,
I am giving it so much chin.
You just go, who is that obnoxious Irish fuck-in?
What, why does he get that attitude?
Here it is right here.
Oh, there it is.
I think I'm singing there,
so if you just go back a little bit,
you'll get the real, that's the chin.
No, just before there.
But look, not a care in the world.
And that's, I mean, bullshit is a word for it. Swagger is another word for
it.
It's a shield.
It's a shield. And as I get older, I, you know, part of the film was taking off my armor
and just dropping the sword, dropping the shield, taking it off.
And now in that moment, you wake up.
It's a bit like the dream where you're naked in front of the whole school and it's
really cold.
And then you realize, yeah, your life as you are realizing yourself now. Oh, how did this happen
to me? And how did I get to meet these extraordinary people? And so that's why I wrote the book,
Surrender. That's why I did it. But because it was just starting to realize when I was younger,
I was like, yeah, you know, Bob Dylan once asked us I was 24 and he says it was
recording there I was going to interview him and he said you want to go on stage
or whatever and do a song and I said well he said Leopard Skin pillbox hats
amazing song I saw the lyrics about to and I'd been learning to improvise as a singer.
And I went out on stage.
He said, you know, blowing in the wind.
I said, I probably got that one down.
But I didn't.
And I just walked out on stage.
And I could see it was a home crowd, Ireland. People oh well, one of ours is up there with Bob Dylan,
wow, oh it's Bob, wow, okay. And he's gonna sing,
oh my god he can't, oh he's changed the melody, oh he's changed the words
and he could just see, I mean go down in flames. And afterwards I see Bob
and I said, look I'm sorry about that I'm just it's just
the way we've been working at the moment just kind of improvising stuff and he
was like it's okay you know everything I make him up all the time and he was
generous about it nothing's fixed in time something like that. That's a great
Bob Dylan impression yeah one of my favorite moments in the film was when
your bandmates were concerned
that Pavarotti was going to show up with a camera crew. And he showed up with a camera
crew. It was just funny. It was a really well timed moment. And when you said it on stage,
it was so well timed. Because it's like here you're honoring this man who's like this incredible,
fantastic singer. but your bandmates
They've got a good instinct like this is gonna be a big press hop as well
Like this is part of the reason why he wants to do this and then that's not gonna be fun
Cuz it's gonna be weird and then boom
Yeah, one of the great one of the great arm wrestlers
emotional arm wrestlers of all time
It's interesting that there was a generosity there which he wanted opera because opera was kind of the punk of its time. Classical musicians
looked down on opera. These are stories from the street. They're too accessible, you know? Really?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Oh, that's crazy.
I would never imagine that.
Opera was much rougher.
And he instinctively knew.
And he was constantly trying to make relationships that would cross the divide and make sort
of opera popular. And so to the point where, yeah, he did, he used to call our house
and say, you know, at first it was with me, but then when he would haunt our housekeeper,
Theresa, and say like, he's got a dog, well, tell God he's late on the song, you know he do this kind of carry on and and I again this
these figures in my life I knew that I was in you know on sacred ground when I
was near him I knew this but the band they didn't have the relationship with
opera stay well actually edgesges Da was into opera,
but my dad, it was, I was using Luciano Pavarotti
to get to my da, that was the real thing.
And so as you see in the film,
I play my father just by turning my head,
and I become him, and I was trying to impress him.
I'd be in Finnegan's Pub,
where we'd be sitting, not speaking to each other.
And I'd try something and I go,
what do you think about Luciano Pavarotti calling Mouse?
And he'd go, did he get a wrong number?
You know, all that.
And so'd go, did he get a wrong number? You know, all that. And so, yeah, there was an emotional through line,
because our house was an opera.
Unfortunately, my dad was going on a hens life,
was operatic, but it's also funny.
Yeah.
Yeah, and it's also funny. Yeah. Yeah. And it's also this, you are both celebrating the brilliance of this incredible singer and
also you're taking the piss out of this whole cult of celebrity thing that comes along with
it.
Yeah.
And Princess Diana.
The best line.
Oh, the thing with your dad?
Princess Diana was hilarious. Because Edges is mother and father from Wales.
So we're with Pavarotti in Modena, I think it was, and so the princess of Wales is meeting
the great tenor and he is offered to meet you know anyone who wants
you know just family because they're from Wales to meet the princess of Wales
and he says to me look does your dad want to go and I of course know the
reason I know the answer and the reason for the answer but he says
well just just ask him. So I
ask him. I just go, Dad, listen, we wouldn't want to go meet Lady Di, you know, the princess.
What? What? Why would I want to meet a member of the British royal family? That's like asking
me, do I want to meet the winner of the lotto?
And I'm like, OK, got it, got it, got it. And then later she comes into our dressing room.
And melts him just by reaching her hand at how do you do?
And he's like, oh, very well, thank you.
And as I say, eight, very well, thank you. And as I say, 800 years of oppression
gone in a second. And if you wonder about the reasoning for having a royal family, and a lot of Irish people do, there I would say that's the reason.
Pete Slauson The weight of it, the weight of it overcame him.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's a very bizarre relationship, though.
I got one quarter Irish and I knew.
Oh boy.
The relationship between Ireland and United Kingdom and England,
it's complicated.
Were you, were you, I've read that you got into martial arts because you felt picked on at some point.
Is that true?
Yeah. Yes. Yeah.
So you don't like bullies?
No. No. No, I don't like that at all. It's the weakest inclination of the human spirit,
you know, to pick on the weak. It's terrible. It's a terrible instinct that humans have
from probably from the time where you had
to ostracize weak people because you lived in a tribe
of people barely surviving and you couldn't tolerate
any weak links in the chain.
I mean, that's essentially probably where it came from.
It probably came out of a survival instinct.
The Darwinian thing.
Yes, where everyone was barbarians
and you had to force people to be the hardest version
possible because otherwise the genes wouldn't survive.
Yeah, the survival of the fittest,
which is the world we live in.
Yeah.
I mean, this is one of the things that attracts me to
Christianity is the idea of the first will be last,
the last will be first is so radical. And it's literally the opposite of the survival of the first will be last, the last will be first is so radical.
And it's literally the opposite of the survival of the fittest.
But America, why I love America is it has, I mean, the British Empire bullied it and
it stood up.
I was, we were coming here, I was asking someone in the car about the Declaration of Independence
and how many Irish signatures there were.
It wasn't that many.
I can't remember what they were.
But they were all committing treason.
They were putting their lives, they were pledging their lives, their fortune and their sacred
honor. So America, the very essence of America is this idea of sticking to the
bully. And I know America can be a bully, we all have our moments and all that, but
it's the essence of who you are. And it happened again with the geezer with the tash. That's a great way of calling Hitler.
You know, but yeah, you know, you weren't you weren't having it. Right. And and I, you
know, as an activist, which we can talk about later, but the, you know, I remember going to, it's only a few hours
from here, but I was in Lincoln, Nebraska, and Warren Buffett came to one of our, it's
called Heart of America tour. We were raising awareness on this pandemic, this AIDS pandemic
that has killed just, you know, 30 million people at this point, and
why might America be interested? And I'm very Irish and very given a lot of that. And afterwards,
I ask the sage of Omaha for any advice. And he gives me two pieces of advice. But the
one was, don't ask people to do something simple because they won't trust you.
He said ask them to do something complicated.
What do you mean by that?
Well, he said, what are you asking people to do here?
And I said, well, I'm asking them to…we're asking them, the one campaign, we're asking
them to send a note to their local congress person. He said,
no, no, no, don't do that. Too simple. Make them do something more difficult and they'll trust you.
Maybe 10 postcards. It's harder to do. I was like, okay. And anything else? And he said something
which really changed my life and changed my conversation with this
country of yours.
He said, don't appeal to a lot conscience of America.
Don't do that.
Appeal to the greatness of America and you'll get the job done.
Americans want to be great.
That is true.
I think it is true.
And because Ireland, we work with guilt, you know, you can bring guilt people.
It's a lot of countries. You can work them just, you know, but Americans not.
Give them the chance to be the cavalry. Yeah. And they'll, I mean Omaha Beach, the
heroism of Omaha Beach, the lives poured out, you know, and to save Europe from tyranny.
That's who America is.
And, you know, I gave it the Joshua tree because I, you know, it's not just as an Irishman, but probably more because I, as an Irishman, fell under
the spell of America.
Even as kids, you know, coming here, a lot of the cooler bands would just play the coasts,
you know, the cooler UK bands or European bands.
But I wanted to be all over America.
I mean, we played, we opened for a wet t-shirt competition in Dallas.
What year was this?
81.
I was 21.
We in Austin, I don't know if anyone can remember, it was called the Clubfoot, as a bad pun,
but there was no AC, and I remember there was a tin roof, and for Irish people, we were
just being boiled. But I have really, really great memories of just busing it through this sort of mythical
landscape.
You know, there's nowhere, nowhere in this country I would want to fly over.
But I do now.
You know, we got the plane, you got the this.
But I just remember thinking, this thinking, there's so many Americas.
But the mythology of America, I was reading Sam Shepard, I was reading On the Road, I
was reading all these great writers and just opening up my imagination.
That's where the Joshua Tree came from. And yeah, it's
a mythology that then, can you imagine, I get to discover that in my
case, it's not just a mythology. I was part of something that was extraordinary. So a former governor
of this Texas, George W. Bush, conservative, starts to lead the world in the fight against the AIDS pandemic,
the greatest health crisis in 600 years
since the bubonic plague.
And I'm like, and people say, that's impossible.
It's just not going to happen.
And he does.
And it becomes a bipartisan thing,
and 26 million lives are saved.
So it's strange the way you see things. I had this,
it wasn't a naive sense of America but it was a sense that everything could be possible here.
It was somehow the landscape of America was a little more magical than everywhere else. And it
wasn't just a country, America was an idea.
Yes. Yeah. At its greatest, that is what America is. At its greatest, it's an idea. And it's
an idea that was, like I said, was founded with the concepts behind the Declaration of
Independence. And those men who wrote that, the men who signed the Bill of Rights, they were so
young. They were so young. Some of them were 18 years old at the time which is so
crazy. Jefferson was 32 or 33 when he wrote that. He's an old codger. I mean
that's why and then by the way years later he's in France I think he's in France, I think he's in France, and he loved wine. And this
emerged, I found this out because I saw a signature in a book, I was on some
tour, I like to drink red wine. I've never been to Bordeaux in my life, but I
went with some people who knew their way around wine. And they asked me to sign a book in this particular
vineyard, posh kind of vineyard.
But this was across the road from the big name sort of thing.
And I asked, I said, can I see the first book?
There's Thomas Jefferson's name in the first one.
I thought, wow, this guy's dreaming up
America on some very fancy red
plonk. Not plonk, actually. Some really... I know there's lots of contradictions in America,
and I know there was slavery still and that he had slaves, And I understand, but I'm encouraged that America perhaps doesn't
exist yet, that it's still been written. If you think about it as a song, you think about it as
a piece of music, it's not finished. It's still been written. They started at those signatures.
finished. Right, right. It's still being written. They started at those signatures. Yeah. You, and if you let people like me stay, you know, we're still, you know,
you're writing it. I'm not writing. I'm the annoying fan who follows America into
the bathroom and with the liner notes, which are the declaration, going,
didn't you say this here? And get out.
Who followed me into the bathroom?
It's like, but I like the idea that this is far from finished,
this composition.
And for some people, the America that is available to you and me
doesn't exist yet, but will
and it can.
We hope that every election cycle, like this will be the one that finally makes us what
we truly believe we are.
But the country is just so co-opted by this.
First of all, you have this genuine issue with the fact that it's essentially a popularity
contest to see who gets to be running the government.
You have a popularity contest that's fueled entirely by special interests and the military
industrial complex and pharmaceutical drug companies.
It's all the opposite of an
authentic song right the thing about an authentic song where it makes your
fucking goosebumps stand up you're like god damn you think it's an AI come come
tell your story a long time ago probably 25 years ago I was on mushrooms with a
friend of mine and And we were laying
on the side of this hill overlooking this canyon. And we played in God's country. And
it was just the peak of the mushrooms and the songs, the melody, the way that song hit,
it just, it gave me this insane appreciation for things.
Like at that, it was like this very unique fusion
of the beauty of the music and the love of the experience.
Like the mushrooms bring out this like loving,
like communal quality quality like happiness and
and joy and just lying in this field looking up at this canyon and hearing
that song it was like this is what what music does it takes these moments and
wherever they're at it breaks them through the membrane into this new place
like this moment broke through this membrane and brought me to this.
I think about it all the time.
I think about that particular experience all the time.
We need the line in that when I'm singing it
is is a line that doesn't just apply to America, but applies
to us personally.
Wherever you are is, you know is we need new dreams tonight.
And you can't be living on,
we can't be living on secondhand dreams.
And that's, I think, the renewal,
I think, is what we're all looking for.
And yeah, it's something to be protected.
And I'm not protected.
That sounds like it's like.
I think you're right, though.
But I think America is more vulnerable now
than it's ever been.
It feels like America's fallen out of love with the rest of the world.
I don't think the world wants to fall out of love with America.
It just feels like.
I've had 25 years and I'm just tiny cog in,
I suppose people look at
personalities or you know
even luminous ones or ones that have ideas way above their station and think that will
you know that that might change things but it's social movements always change things and
What happened back then with
the Heart of America tour was was mind-blowing because I learned a few things that I wasn't expecting.
Like I had grown up with a couple of, more than a few bumps with evangelicals.
You know, it was like whoop. It was like, because you know, how do you,
you can't approach the subject of God without metaphor, right?
So literalism is by its nature, anti-metaphor.
And you know, Jesus, all we know is that he spoke in parables
because they're not literal.
How do you explain these as poet, poet, just music?
And I found it really difficult to be around evangelicals because they're not literal. How do you explain these as poet, as music?
And I found it really difficult to be around evangelicals because they were so,
you know, just literal about everything.
And then on that same tour where I met Warren Buffett, I ended up at a college
called Wheaton College, which is like a big, in Chicago, it's a big evangelical thing.
And they were like, they were really helpful. And there was like, I realized that these were kind of,
and this is not to be at all dismissive of some incredible people, but it was like,
I felt there was sort of narrow-minded,
what would I say, just narrow-minded, the vision, if I could just open the aperture of their vision,
just a little bit wider,
that they could be the most incredible force for good because they just worked harder,
they didn't tell lies,
they were just great people. And I think they led part of this movement that then ended
up saving 26 million lives, you know, and called PEPFAR that George Bush started and
Obama continued. Then I go to Catholics. I'd end up in Notre Dame. Now I had a few
bruises with the Catholics over the years too. And I'm meeting these people and they're
like, no, no, we believe in the aid is probably just less than 1% of government
spending.
But the part that keeps people alive is half of that.
So it's like half a percent.
Now it's not my money.
It's up to you if you want to do that.
But they did.
And lots of people came together, priests and punks,
you know, it was the wildest collection of people. And just recently, like in the last
three months, and this is not about politics because I've worked with conservatives, I've
worked with liberals, I don't care, you know, I don't have those. I'm Irish, I don't have a chance to vote.
But all of that was torn down without a heads up, without any notice, because people thought
foreign aid was like 10% of the budget or 20% and it was doing things that it shouldn't
have been doing.
And I'm sure there was some waste.
But I can tell you as a person who saw what the United States were doing around the world
and saw this, I saw America display itself at its finest.
And I remember being in the Oval Office with President
Bush and had these antiretroviral drugs. I said, paint them red,
white and blue, Mr. President. These are the best advertisements for America
there'll ever be. And he's looking at me thinking I'm taking the piss, but I'm not.
And he wasn't as it turns out. And he spoke about the least of these, which is a wild concept. I don't know if you know this,
but it's like the... it's in Matthew, I think it is. It's the only time that Jesus speaks of
judgment. It's not like what's going on in your pants. It's not like what's going on over here, over there.
The first time Jesus Christ speaks in kind of force of judgment is the way we treat the
poor, the poorest of the poor. And he says, well, in the way that you, the sick, the blind, the people who are suffering from malnutrition.
That's how you treat me. I am them. And so now, when we cut to the people, like you entered
Boston University, you taught at Boston University.
I taught martial arts there. So just recent
report, it's not proven but the surveillance enough suggests 300,000 people have already
died from just this cut off, this hard cut of USAID. So this food rotting in boats, in warehouses.
There is, this will fuck you off.
This will not, you will not be happy.
No American will, but there is, I think it's 50,000 tons
of food that are stored in Djibouti, South Africa, Dubai,
and wait for it, Houston, Texas.
And that is rotting rather than going to Gaza,
rather than going to Sudan,
because the people who know the codes
or for the warehouse are fired, they're gone.
And so this, I don't know, I just, it's, what do you think? What is,
what is that? That's not America, is it? Well, they're throwing the baby out with
the bathwater, right? This is the problem. The problem is, for sure, there
have been a lot of organizations that do tremendous good all throughout the world.
Also, for sure,
it was a money laundering operation. For sure, there was no oversight. For sure, billions
of dollars are missing. In fact, trillions that are unaccounted for, that were sent off
into various... They don't even know where because there's no receipts. The way Elon
Musk described it, he said, if any of this was done by a public
company, the company would be delisted and the executives would be in prison. But in
the United States, this is standard. When Biden left office, when it was clear that
Trump won in the 73 days, they spent $93 billion from the Department of Energy on just radical loans, just throwing money
into places.
Right.
And there's no oversight, no receipts.
The whole thing is there's a lot of fraud, a lot of money laundering.
But also, we help the world.
And when you're talking about making wells
for people in the Congo to get fresh water,
when you're talking about food and medicine
to places that don't have access,
like no way that should have been cut out.
And that should have been clear
before they make these radical cuts.
Like there's gotta be a way to keep aid
and not have fraud.
And you can't say we're gonna kill everything
so that there's no fraud.
But then you're killing all the good
and you're doing it without letting anybody know
it's gonna happen.
So it's not like they had three years to prepare,
let's build a new infrastructure,
let's make sure that everything's set up.
They want a change and they want a change quickly
and due to the nature of American politics,
they have about two years before the midterms, right?
So everything has to get done as quickly as possible.
You have to show a growth in GDP.
You have to show that the economy is booming again under these ideas.
Make America first, tariffs for the world, bring back American manufacturing, and this
mad rush to do it all as quickly as possible while cutting out as much waste as possible.
But the ironic thing is, even though Elon Musk has proposed
all these things and the Doge committee has proposed all these things, they've made no
cuts in terms of the budget. They've cut nothing. They vote against it.
It's such a tiny part. I mean, if it's big government or whatever, people want to shrink, I get the instinct. But this, the life-saving part, it's
like the little finger of the giant.
Right, exactly.
I mean, and I've met all these people. And I'm sure there's part of it, you know, there's,
I think about 10% of it goes to things like governance and,
you know, the human rights organizations. You might say that's political and we shouldn't
be involved in that. And there's reforms, I imagine, that might have been necessary.
But to have the reforms, but to destroy, to vandalize, I mean, it felt like with Glee,
these life support systems were being pulled out of the walls.
And I was reading today, you know,
it's like, I think it's in Christianity today,
and they're just talking, I think it's called Christian Relief,
one of these organizations.
And they're dealing with malnourished kids.
And they are having the conversation now
about we don't have the funds.
We have to choose which child to pull off the IVs.
And it just seems to me like a kind of,
I don't know if evil is a strong word,
too strong a word,
but what we know about pure evil is it rejoices in the
deaths, you know, of the squandering of human life, particularly children's. And
suffering. Yeah, it actually rejoices in it and I just, you know, whether it's
whether it's incompetence, whether it's unintended consequences, it's
not too late for people. Like I have conversations with Marco Rubio. He's convinced people aren't
dying yet. I don't know who's telling him or not telling him, rather. But his instincts are correct. He wants to.
He used to wear a one campaign armband.
Americans, no matter what political color,
you see them just the size.
They just grow in stature when they
know they're being useful.
I had a truck driver on that same tour.
He had tattoos all over his head and whatever, and he was just saying,
can I drive?
I heard 50% of all truck drivers in Africa are going to die.
Is that right because of this disease, AIDS?
I said, yeah.
He said, can I give you my number?
I will drive.
That's America. And yeah, the bureaucracy, the pen pushers, I get it. I
get people's frustration for it. But I just want to remind Americans of the size of their
country and I'm not talking about the geography.
The impact. size of their country and it's and I'm not talking about the geography impact I'm just the the size
of the idea the the the you know it's just it's it's just an extraordinary thing it's an idea
I think big enough to fit the whole world and when it becomes a continent you, when it becomes an island rather than a continent, I think it's a subcontinent
one. I should have gone with geography lessons more. But you know what I'm talking about.
When it shrinks, America seems to stop being America. And I know you don't want to get into wars and you shouldn't. But that don't concern you. But there's this word freedom,
land of the free. That's, and the brave, this is who we look to you for. And we look to you for and we look to you for these qualities and I believe they're
everywhere and I don't believe any one party has a has a hole on them.
No.
On these qualities but you know it's a it's a funny one for me. One of the
reasons I came on the show I wanted to on the show was I wanted to interview
you. I wanted to, I just wanted to get your take on where America is at the present time because
you're talking to everyone. You know, this is a compliment to you, but my book, you know, I wrote this book, Surrender, and
sort of, if there's a point to it at the very end, it's just, I'm shouting at God, I'm having
my wrestling match with my maker, and you just get this thing of, and you probably picked
it up by now, shut
up and listen. And I need to listen more. You are an amazing listener and I don't
know who it was, it was someone who said listening doesn't grant the other side legitimacy,
but it grants them their humanity and restores your own.
You sit in this room and you listen to everybody.
And that makes you very valuable to the country.
And I wanted to just get your take on it.
What would your advice be to me and people like me who are not part of the big industrial
complex, we just want to serve the idea of America and the people who depend on that
idea?
Yeah, I think-
What would your advice advise to me?
I would give you zero advice.
I don't know if I'm qualified to give advice, but I would say that America goes through
these great periods of overcorrection.
It goes these great periods of like you saw it during COVID during the lockdowns and the
authoritarianism and we fell into a kind of state of tyranny
where there was just massive oppression of free speech,
including government-sponsored oppression.
They were contacting different social media platforms
and banning legitimate doctors and scholars
because they had different opinions
about how things should be handled.
There was a wide-scale censorship, a push for a
changing of the First Amendment. The First Amendment needs to be overhauled.
The First Amendment doesn't apply to hate speech or to disinformation. There
was all these like new ways of talking about censorship in this country and
condoning censorship. It's very dangerous because it's all about money. It had
nothing to do with protecting people.
That's what I worry about.
The argument about free speech is that it seems
to be sponsored by a lot of people who you sense
don't really respect it so much,
but it is very economic for them to not have to,
to live with the consequences of a story. I think, well, is it the communication?
I think it's 1996, it was a long time ago, Communications Act, Decency Act, that meant
the internet did not have to apply by the same rules as the rest of the media.
So we could say anything we wanted.
And at first, that felt like liberation, but I'm not so sure anymore.
And so I mean, you can tell me more about this.
I am not a free speech absolutist, but I like – I do want to believe in free speech. But I'm nervous
that the people who are supporting free speech and using their bots and their own activists
are people from countries who would not at all respect our, your, mine ability to express ourselves.
And that's what I worry about is I think the old interweb is being played like a harp,
like an orchestra. And the people behind the curtain would surprise us, I think,
if we knew.
I think it's worse than that. I think it's programmed like an EDM concert. I think it's
not even an orchestra. I worry, and this has been substantiated by data, that more than
50% of the interactions going on on the internet and social media
are not real.
And there was a former FBI analyst that said it might be as much as 80%.
It's bots as you said.
And this is a problem with the concept of free speech.
I'm completely wholly in favor of free speech, just like the ADL
was back in the day when they let the Ku Klux Klan march. They like, look, you
got to... the way to combat bad speech is with better speech. The way to find out
whose arguments are correct is to let them debate in the marketplace of free
ideas and expose these people for what they are and have the people that are
on the sidelines
that are letting these great thinkers have these discussions say, okay, this guy makes
sense. This guy is clearly a grifter. This guy has ulterior motives. This guy has an
ideology that's very toxic and he's trying to push this on the whole world for control,
for power, for money, to benefit the special interest groups that he's a part of or whatever it is.
That the problem with free speech is you're also going to get a lot of ugliness because
there's a lot of ugliness in the world.
You're going to get a lot of people that say horrible things.
I think the only way we sort through all that is you have to let them and then you have
to let people rise up that oppose those horrible ideas and those people become heroes.
Those become the Martin the King Juniors.
Humor helps.
Like humor helps.
One thing we know about the Ku Klux Klan is if you mention the silly costumes they don't
like that.
They you know it's like they want you to be afraid or you want to be nervous but it's
like dude look at the stage gear here in ghost
It's like come on. Do you know who Darryl Davis is? No, Darryl Davis is a musician who?
he's was a traveling blues musician and
Did some shows where afterwards he met some people that told him that they were in the Ku Klux Klan
And he was like, are you kidding?
And the guy shows him his fucking Grand Wizard ID card
or whatever the hell it is.
He becomes friends with these guys.
Here's my card.
Daryl's black.
Daryl's a black man.
And becomes friends with this guy, goes to his house,
meets his family.
The guy throws the robe away, gives up his membership
in the KKK, renounces his membership,
and gives Daryl the robes, he says, I want you to have this.
Daryl has done that personally.
The last time I talked to him was a few years back.
He'd done this personally to over 200 people, just by being an amazing human being, by being
a brilliant artist and hanging out with them, just being kind and
as an example of just a great human.
And they were like, I guess I'm wrong.
I guess I'm wrong.
This idea that black people are inferior and the white man is a superior race, that can't
be true because I love this guy.
And so they would just quit.
Yeah.
They'd quit.
And he has a stack.
It's a terrible theory.
But if you're in a place with only terrible theories, and that's what you grew up
There's Darrell
And they give him all his
You know good man, he's a great good man, and he's a kind like very peaceful
Like when you speak to him he's but real is amazing one of your, again, one of the reasons I'm here is
I think there is a sense that people
just wanna be part of something.
And when we were growing up,
there were clubs you could be a part of, you know, there's people you could hang out with and you knew where that was going.
But if you wanted to belong and have a sense of purpose, you ended up there. And so I think that it's okay to,
for men to admit that in this moment,
they are probably, you know, we're a little adrift.
I hear this from my daughters, I hear this from my daughters.
I hear this from my wife.
And it's like, that's where this feeling of being dislocated.
So you're attracted to these simple ideas.
You know, the concept of the gang or America, like it's a team sport between
the Reds and the Blues. America is the team. That's all. And this thing, look, I'm vulnerable.
We are all, especially when you're growing up, teenagers, you know, you are very vulnerable to those
points of view.
Yes.
I, you know, early on, we had sort of, yeah, I would say I had a, I got close to what you
might call fundamentalists.
And this is all versions of fundamentalism.
It's all a very narrow view.
And you know, what you see going on, right, in Gaza, you see Palestinian people being
held hostage by Hamas.
It's not just the Israelis that are being held hostage by Hamas, it's not just Israeli that are being held hostage by Hamas, Palestinian people and the fundamentalists in Israel in the cabinet, these far right fundamentalists.
Because at a time, you remember a few years back, everything was kind of wishy washy and
kind of the new age and whatever you have in yourself. And now these strong strong clear points of view have arrived and
it's the great overcorrection it's the great overcorrection yeah there's a real problem with
ideology and there's a real problem with fundamentalism and there's a cowardice in it and there's a
cowardice in I'm the only one that's correct there's a cowardice and not listening to any
other ideas not listening to any other positions, not listening to any other positions.
And we're being played against each other in this country.
The thing about the bots and the social media stuff
is it just accentuates this divide
between the left and the right,
which I think is mostly bullshit.
Most people are good people.
Most people just want to be happy and healthy
and have friends and family and do what they
want to do for a living and have the freedom to pursue those things. Most
people aren't trying to victimize people. Most people aren't trying to destroy
other people's lives and destroy society. They just want to live
their life, but they're being sucked into one side or the other, which is
radically opposed to each other. The great overcorrection. Did you think that President Zelensky was being bullied in that meeting in the Oval
Office? Like is that just just to think about as a playground? This is a guy, his maybe
maybe his life depends on certainly the life of many, many people you know depend on and
he had to listen to that. Well, the whole thing is strange, right?
I mean, the argument in the White House, like you don't have the right hand of cards and
you know, just the fact that this is all being done publicly is very strange, right?
There's cameras and photographers.
I don't like live podcasts.
Sometimes, I've done them before, but there's something about having an audience where you're playing to an audience
Having you know, these conversations should be just a couple people in a room. That's what I think
I think that's the ones that resonate with me the most
Yeah, this is I just think it's the best way to do it the way that resonates the most
I think the kind of conversation that you're gonna have the world leader
Shouldn't be performative and it certainly shouldn't be with a bunch of people snapping photographs
and pointing cameras and then pushing each other back and forth. You don't have the right
hand to cards. This is not cards. You are playing cards. It's a crazy way and each calling
each other disrespectful. It's a crazy way to handle any world events. It's just a crazy way and each calling each other disrespectful. It's a crazy way to handle any world events
It's just terrible platform for it. Yeah, just think of again
I think of America the Americans of Omaha Beach the people who like the level of courage
Yeah, and I think of these
people on the front line in
Europe I mean I haven't really spoken about Europe with you, but you know, if America is the melting pot, I would say Europe's the mosaic.
You know, it's all these different people who speak with a different language but have are trying for one
voice in Europe, which is you can sound like cacophony, they call it Euro babble in Brussels.
But I've really, I'm really now realizing how romantic it was, you know, with the Enlightenment,
with the Renaissance, you know, we've got, we've got a lot to offer and, and, and Europe has,
Europe's under threat. And those bots, every election now that where this candidate is
pro-Europe and pro-European unity, they are just getting a shit storm of disinformation. And I just think, wow, but it's,
I think Europe is, and America are just sexier
than these people.
Is that a trite thing to say?
But it's like they're so kinda unsexy.
You know, that's, I mean, that's, sorry,
I have to, but. Unromantic. Unrom know, that's, I mean, that's, sorry, I have to, unromantic.
Unromantic. That's right. It's just these very dull, not funny people.
Right.
And are trying to take over the world. They're not funny.
Lukashenko, Belarus, that dude is not funny. We don't have to go further.
We don't have to go further. Who do you think is the funniest world leader?
Oh my God.
Yeah, that's a really good question.
It's gotta be Trump.
He's the funniest.
Well, he has the thing that a lot of stand-up comedians have, which is he can say the thing
in the room that no one else is going to say.
Right.
And that generally creates a laugh.
And, um, but I also think he mightn't be able to take a joke.
Well, he's not good at that.
He doesn't enjoy a joke coming his way.
No, he doesn't.
I mean, Zelensky's actually a comedian. Right. I
met him before he became president. He played piano with his penis on television. It's quite
a it's it was quite a piano. I mean, it's funny to go from playing piano with your penis
to becoming the president of the Ukraine. Coming the president of the United States, by all accounts.
But he came to Ireland as a comedian.
He told me.
I didn't know.
And he played like small towns.
I think he played Dundalk or Droghada somewhere in the East Coast of Ireland.
But comedians can read a room.
I mean performers.
I think comedians are the top of the food chain because you don't have a band.
You don't have a fucking tambourine.
You don't. You just have the read of the room and the material has to be really funny.
I use this sometimes with our band.
Not a lot of our music is just experimental and innovative.
We improvise and then we try to turn it into songs.
But sometimes we'll write a pop song
and we'll end up with a pop song.
And I'll say, well, the thing about a pop song is
it is empirical.
It's like it either is or it isn't.
It's like a joke that doesn't have a punch line.
It's like a comedian does not walk out on stage and tell a joke.
And if people don't laugh, go, they just don't get it.
It just means the joke isn't funny.
So I it's not a popular theory in our band, by the way, but I hold on to it very tight.
I just say, if you can't go out and play this song and it just connects, then it's
not a pop song.
We don't, we only do a few pop songs every decade probably, because a lot of what U2
does is different kind of rock and roll, but I do
Think there's something empirical about some songs are better than the yes. I witnessed a
Witness one of the most ridiculous
Moments in in my life, but it was kind of funny
Oasis, you know, Oasis are amazing.
I just love them.
And
so.
I witnessed this.
It couldn't be a more childish fight between two of my friends.
Liam Geller was a friend at that point.
I know Noel better now.
But and Michael Hutchins, who was the singer of In Excess, and they really were doing the, my song's better than your song.
Oh no.
No, no. And I was thinking, I was laughing to myself. And then I thought, it's interesting.
Both of them have a point.
That song of theirs might be better than that.
And I started to think about it.
And comedians don't get a chance to be subjective.
It's not like Prince walks out and plays a whole new album
and can go, they just don't get it.
It's like, you're either funny or you're not.
You're going down in flames.
Have you gone down in flames?
Oh, sure.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
What was your worst gig?
Oh, I've had so many.
Especially in the early days, you're trying to figure it out.
And the thing about material is, material is essentially like a calf that's
newly born.
And it has awkward legs.
And it has to develop into a bull.
But it takes a long time.
It takes crafting.
You have to sit with it.
You have to go over the idea.
Some ideas come to you in full form.
And some ideas, you have to believe in them
you know
there's something there and you have to dig and you know trust the muse and find it and
You know sometimes those bits would just fucking bomb and you have to just like go gosh
I got banned in this should I keep working on this you have a team of writers. No
Well, no, I just write everything myself. You're kidding. No always. Yeah always have
Just like my my view on stand-up the kind of stand-up that I do is supposed to be here's the world through my eyes
this is how I'm seeing things from the most ridiculous awestruck and
Laughing at everything perspective and I have to it has to be through my lens. Well, that's amazing
I mean because I've seen you know on Saturday live when we do or I've seen some of the talks I see these
geniuses, you know crunching jokes and
Coming out with material and that's a different thing. It's a different thing
Yeah, like a Saturday Night Live monologue or you know a night show monologue or any of that kind of thing
It's a that's a different thing. The real stand up is clubs. You know.
I went to a club with Dave Chappelle to a club and he brought me to the, it was amazing.
Are you still friendly with him?
Oh, real good friends. Yeah, I love him to death. Yeah.
He's, he's, he's incredible. That's jazz.
Yes, he's a real artist.
He can go, well you know, it's like, yeah, no, I think, why am I telling them this?
I'm telling them this because, oh yeah, because people can't take a joke.
Right.
And some people, I mean, we don't need belly laughs out of our leaders.
No, you need vision and kindness.
But to deal with the Ku Klux Klan, humor helps.
To deal with the fascists or whatever. I mean certainly
Hitler in the late 30s was getting rid of the Dadaists and the Surrealists because the
language of fascism was to fight back. But they liked that language. And I mean the language
of resistance against, you know,
Hitler was to fight back.
But that suited them.
They did not like being laughed at.
Safior did not like being laughed at.
Well, because if you can mock something,
like you can have a position or an opinion on something
and someone can disagree strongly.
But if they make everyone laugh at that position,
now they've made a real point
Because it's actually an opinion that you might not have even agreed with has caused you a belly laugh
Like oh god like that's how you really get it because if you go on stage and just have a bunch of opinions and just lecture
People there's people in the audience. They'll go like well fuck you I feel differently
But if you could go on stage with that opinion and make people laugh
at something they know they shouldn't be laughing at, like, oh my god.
And you're like, then you're introducing ideas into a person.
It's a spoonful of sugar that helps the medicine go down.
Yeah, no, you're certainly the...
Because with rock stars, and again, I honestly feel like I'm just an impersonating one. I don't think I am the material really. But
people when they see me coming, they sit in their wallet, you
know, I mean, they're like, well, here he comes, and he's
gonna have a sign up and it's like, whereas comedians, people
are much more open. People will, people will, are just more open.
People will, people are just more open. I think that's a responsibility,
but it's something to be valued.
It's just, I was saying to somebody recently,
I'm not sure I trust people anymore
who aren't a little bit funny.
Yeah.
I mean funny in the, not the funny peculiar.
Right, right.
There's a place for that too.
But you know, people who make you laugh are open.
Yes, and also the contradictions of the world
and how bizarre things are, it's just ripe with humor.
And if you don't ever pick up on it,
like what are you focusing on?
Like you don't ever see the hypocrisy
and the ludicrousness of just this existence,
this temporary existence on a spinning orb
hurling through the universe
and concentrating on who gets to use what bathroom.
Like, is this like, you know what I mean?
It's like, we're weird. We're very weird.
And if you don't see that, you're not paying all attention.
You're not all in. you're certainly not balanced. Those mushrooms were working very well for you.
Yeah I'm telling you man in God's country that's the ticket. That's beautiful.
I'm so touched that album you know a lot of the songs on that were, you know, very vulnerable, you know.
And I don't know if you know, Brian, you know, was a producer, invented ambient music and
worked with David Bowie, Talking Heads, you know, and recently Coldplay and other people.
But he had a profound influence on us.
Because we didn't go to, I didn't go to art college,
all like the Beatles, the Stones,
they all went to art college.
We went to Brian Eno.
And he had this incredible musician in partnership with him
for the production of that album called Daniel Lanois,
one of the greatest musicians
you'll ever meet in your life and
That some songs come really quickly like boom you just but some are just like what you're saying
They're like the the foal the legs are going around
Yeah, and the one that was like that was where the streets have no name.
And so we were working for what felt like weeks. And Brian, you know, came in and he just said,
I am not having a spent one more minute on this song. And he went to wipe it. So he was actually going to wipe it. Wow. And so there's no other copies.
And Pat McCarthy, who was our engineer,
went on to produce Orem and Madonna.
Great dude.
He physically blocked Brian from it.
But that song, for me,
and it's not the lyric that I'm most proud of or anything because
it's Brian was just saying to us just go with your first sketch. Remember talking
about the paint on canvas? Yeah. But I'm saying it's not that clever. I want it
don't let it be clever just that's what you said that's what you said, that's what you meant. And it's the strangest thing, Joe, because we go on stage
and I sing that song, we sing that song, we play that song.
And it's like, what the fuck, we're the streets of Narnia, what's that about?
Now I started in Africa when I was with my wife, when I was a kid, and we were 25, something
like that, maybe 26.
She was 24.
And it was about the devastation that was happening in the Ethiopian famine.
And I just couldn't explain it to myself.
There was other inferences about the song, but none of them matter as much as this
question to your audience, which is, do you want to go there to this place, the place
of imagination, the place of soul, place of that other place? Do you want to go there? Do you want to go there together?
And everybody feels it. Because we all want to be outside of ourselves at a
certain time. And we all want to have that experience, that meeting with some
call it the universe, some call it God, some call it
themselves, whatever. But it's music now. I think, you know, all arts aspires
to the condition of music. But we, I was saying, we go to church in the dark, you
know, that's what rock and roll is. And we're just looking for little shards of light.
We find it in an audience.
We find our transcendence together with the movie.
We also go to church in the dark and cinema.
You sit in it, you're in you're in a dark space.
And it's projected light telling other people's stories and somebody said
cinemas is like being born like you go into the womb it's like you're floating
around in the as Jim Sheridan would say he's my here a psychological genius
Irish director my left foot the boxer from great films.
He'd say, yeah, you're in the amniotic fluid.
You're inside the motor
and you're about to come out into the light.
That's cinema.
Great cinema is that journey towards the light.
And I love that.
And I love that. But it's the same for some
people their their Cathedral is a hike the natural world yeah if you ever heard
Richard Rohr no or OH or he lives in Albuquerque. He has a thing called, it's called the Center of the
Center of Action and Contemplation and I really love it that it's that way around
and he's a Franciscan friar and but very otherworldly thoughts about the natural world and finding the the
divine in it as well as just in each other but just seeing it in the world
right I think you didn't enjoy him he's he's he's worth he's worth a read do you
is if Rogan is it Irish is a it Catholic Irish? Yeah. Right. Yeah.
Okay. You might enjoy him. I'm sure I would. Yeah, he's a real
beauty. He lives, got a little hermitage and, and, and yeah, and he's good. He's
great on the Enneagram as well. Do you know the Enneagram?
No.
It's a sort of archetypal thing.
It goes back to Sufi, I think early Sufi, and then the Christian fathers,
what are they called? The Desert Fathers in the
fourth century, but it's a way of
recognizing archetypes and our own.
It's not a big thing for me or anything, it's not archetypes, but I think my daughter, Eve, is an actor.
And she said a lot of writers are interested in it, and she said in some of the clever schools, they teach this, the Enneagram.
Richard was an expert in this.
I think, oh here it goes.
Oh!
Enneagram, three centers.
Oh, looks like a cult.
Of intelligence.
The mediator, peacemaker, so the perfectionist,
performer, the giver, helper, supporter,
performer, achiever, romantic individualist,
the observer, thinker, the loyal skeptic, the trooper, the epicure, enthusiast, generalist, and the protector, the leader of the boss.
What would you say you are? Oh Jesus. I don't know how you could tell. I wouldn't.
I think I just keep on keeping on. I try not to pay attention to me as much as
possible. I think there's a thing that happens what you're talking about on stage where everyone
Achieves a higher state of consciousness through a song. I think that's that's where it is really like a church
That's where it is really like a religious experience when a great song is playing that like really like it when people hear it like ah
You know, maybe it's the first couple of bars of Sunday Bloody Sunday. They hear it and they're like, yes
It's like this thing that washes over everyone collectively. We're all experiencing it together and it takes you away from yourself
You know everyone's caught up in their own struggle and their their self and how they exist in this world and all the problems of reality
And then there's something about these moments of divine inspiration where they impact people
in a very profound way.
And I think that's one of the reasons why people are so deeply drawn to music and especially
live performance.
Because music is wonderful.
Music by yourself is great.
I love listening to music in my car.
I love listening to music, period.
But music when you're in a live setting,
when everyone's experiencing it together,
it's a religious experience.
There's something attuned to it.
There's a reason why they sing in church, right?
It's a very similar result.
Yeah, I miss that.
When we were kids growing up,
the tunes weren't that great in the church.
And I said to my, I mean, no offense to whoever was there.
I agree.
But I was like, I said to our kids,
and they were all, none of them were baptized Protestant
or Catholic because my father was Catholic, my mother was.
I just said, you want to be Christian,
you want to be Christian, but you decide.
I never got religion rammed down my throat.
I'm certainly not going to put it down yours.
So we'd go, and sometimes you just get a feeling in a place.
I said, just trust that feeling.
And they might say, well, the tunes aren't that good.
And I'm like, it's OK.
But I remember when I was really young walking in and hearing like the Salvation Army
band and people singing and I remember getting the shivers just thinking these are these hymns,
these ancient songs, they really connect us. And I miss that. And I think people would return to religion if religion wasn't so
fucked up. I think people, you know, the church has to serve the people and not the other way around.
And you know, the church presently,
I don't know how many churches you'd have here
in Austin, Texas, but I'd probably say,
if there's 276 different kinds of churches,
you know, it's just one church, it's just in 276 bits and pieces. It feels
sometimes like it's at odds with science, but it's not. Science is the pursuit of truth.
the pursuit of truth. And so these are pilgrims, too.
Great scientists are trying to crack
the code of the physical world.
The great theologians are trying to crack
the code of the metaphysical world.
And nobody knows.
That's the thing about literalism,
that beautiful thing in, you know,
everyone has it at their wedding, love is patient,
love is kind, and we can roll over,
love is this, love is that,
and then it goes faith, hope, and love,
but the greatest of these is love.
And I remember talking with somebody and saying,
well, why is love more important than faith?
Why is love more important than hope?
And the clue is a few verses later
where it says, we see through the mirror darkly, but one day we'll see face to face. we know now in part, but one day we will know fully, as we ourselves are known.
You cannot be a fundamentalist and not understand that that is an explanation to just realize that you can have faith, you can have hope, but love means
you need love. We need love because we cannot be sure. Our certainties, our certainties,
that's the scary thing. And you know, I trust a feeling as a musician, I trust it when I'm
going to, you know, to sing or to improvise,
but they're not certainties, they're instincts.
And I love that you feel that music is still a communal place,
our festivals are amazing,
and people are deprived presently of a place where they feel comfortable.
I'm comfortable in the back of a cathedral. I'm comfortable at some, what's your friend,
the blues guy or a gospel church. I'm just looking for the spirit wherever I find it in a conversation.
In a song.
I can feel it when it's happening.
When we're having an honest conversation, you feel it.
It's a thing and I can put down my salesman and just have a conversation.
Because the three on that enneagram is probably my number, because it's so excruciating. But
it's the salesman. I sell ideas as well as songs, and I sometimes just have to just shut
up and listen.
I think we're all those things, just to varying degrees. And I think the spirit of the thing is what you're
talking about. This intangible moment where everybody realizes they're in it, whether
it's in a church where they're singing. One of my favorite moments with you was on the
Jimmy Fallon show, singing Ordinary Love. I loved it. We played it on the podcast. When
it happened, the next day when it got out on YouTube, I brought it. We played it on the podcast when it happened the next day when it got out on YouTube
I brought it in here and I go you gotta listen to this
This is just such an amazing rendition of a song because it's just you sitting on these chairs and
Jimmy Fallon is next to you on the table. Like this is it here. What a beauty we played this I
Want to listen to it? Let's put this on put the headphones on I fucking love this
version She wants to kiss the golden shore The sunlight wants your skin
All the beauty that's been lost before
Wants to find us again
I can't find you anymore
That's what I'm fighting for
The sea throws rocks together
But time leaves us polished off
We can't fall any further in
We can't feel ordinary love
And we cannot reach any higher
If we can't deal with ordinary love
Birds fly high in the summer sky
And rest of the breeze.
The same wind will take care of you and I.
We'll build a house in the trees.
Your heart is on my sleeve.
Did you put it there with a magic mug?
For years I would believe that the world couldn't wash us away. We can't
fall any further in. We can't feel ordinary love. And we cannot reach any higher If we can't deal with ordinary love
We can fall and disperse the rest
We can't deal with ordinary love
And we cannot reach any higher
If we can't deal with ordinary love
Roots?
Yeah, I love this part.
Oh, come on.
We can't fall any further in
We can't feel ordinary love
We cannot reach any higher
We can't deal with ordinary love
We cannot fight all any further
We cannot feel ordinary love
We cannot reach any higher
We cannot deal with quest love
Quest love Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove,
Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove,
Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove,
Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove,
Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove,
Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove,
Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove,
Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove,
Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove,
Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove,
Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, Quistlove, on a talk show. Ever. Cause it was so... First of all, it starts out so relaxed
you're just sitting on the couch and you're singing it
and you're just so
on it. You're so on it.
That everyone just gets captivated by it
and then the music builds and then you
bring it roots. It's fucking phenomenal.
And that's like, that is
what we're talking about. That's like this moment
that elevates people. It takes people
out of their life and just this joy of expression all happening simultaneously with everybody
in the crowd and then when you stand up and you start dancing and roots are playing, it
just washes over everybody.
That is, it's hard that you should bring it up because I'm sitting in a table with a couple of journalists, friends of a friend of mine,
this economist called David McWilliams.
You'd love him, by the way.
He's the guy who says, the poor think in minutes, the rich think in years, you know, they're
kind of one of the, one of us, but anyway, sitting with a bunch of people,
and they're from London, and this guy's going, yeah, he says,
McWilliams here, he's all about you two,
he's all about you, yeah,
he hasn't got any of your fucking records.
I have your records, I've got all your records,
I've fucking gone off you, right?
Gone right off you that fucking song
Ordinary love he's got a whatever glass in his hand and he's getting the the the Dutch and the British courage and the Irish courage
He's going that song
About Mandela and all that so I'll listen to it's a fucking
nothing
and then I I was watching Jimmy Fallon, you played the same song, and he said, I was in
tears.
He said, it's just something happened. So I look at it and I'm going dodgy haircut on the singer, but I am also being defensive because
I can feel something too. There is something going on. That is the thing. And you two, you know,
we're making an album at the moment and it has to be framed around that. Not that song, not that even style of songwriting, but that thing, the thing, the moment, the
spirit, whatever that is.
And the conversation you're having with your audience, with somebody, a the way, that same woman who said about listening, she said deep listening is an act
of surrender.
And so it's coming full circle for me.
Well, if you're in that audience, there's an act of surrender for sure.
And if you're an actor, if you're singing it, that's, you have to.
And everyone recognizes that.
That's why it resonates.
So I mean, I, I just think if we're a rock and roll band, there's four people in your band.
There's nobody sounds like.
Adam Clayton, you know, I mean, there's nobody sounds like Edge.
Nobody sounds like Larry Mullen and nobody wants to sound like me.
No, there's I can sing, I can sing and I'm
becoming the singer I am and that's the reason I'm still in a band because we all have to
answer that question don't we? Why would we still be in a band? We've got to feel that
it's our best album that's going to come. Yeah. If it is, it's going to be because we frame it around that moment in the room when that
happens.
Yeah.
I promise you, I can't deliver that promise for every song on the album.
I'll come back if you have me and I'll play you some of the songs,
but for the live rock and roll pieces,
it has to have that, I recognize that.
You can come back anytime you want, by the way.
Oh thank you.
Anytime.
But yeah, that's what everybody wants,
out of entertainment, out of celebration,
as everybody wants, these moments.
And that was a real moment, man.
That was a real moment that resonated through the television.
I couldn't imagine what it would have been like to be in that room.
And I was thinking that, like, God, I wish I was there.
Because, you know, you see Will Smith,
and Will Smith's in the corner,
and you see him just taken over by the music,
like, nodding his head, like, oh, my God, just in that moment.
It was so pure. Strange resonance. god just in that moment it was so strange
strange resonance I don't know if was mentioned but he played Nelson Mandela
no he played Muhammad Ali he played Muhammad Ali right right that just would
be funny that would be funny yeah but it was that's what everybody's looking for
that's what everybody's looking for out of art,
out of religion, out of just love and community.
We're looking for these moments that elevate us
above everything else.
And there's a moment when a great performance like that,
just when every one of the audience
realizes what you're doing, and we're all in it together.
And people at home are in
it like that was so powerful it's everything through the television is
like 60% of what it is in person at the most. You know we used to avoid TV
because it's actually Bruce Springsteen advice years and years ago he said be
careful being on TV because people can turn you down you know they can go off to the kitchen and
you know make coffee so it's kind of right about that it can it can take away the
mystery but you know that that studio that he's in Jimmy you know that's a
historic place.
Beatles or whatever, think of all the artists
that have been in on the, so there's something going on there.
Oh yeah.
And he's a very beautiful spirit.
He just really is.
He seems like it.
I don't know him, but he seems like a real sweetheart.
I've been out late night with him.
I've been in late night with him. I've been you know in in in all kinds of situations and
It's just a really a see-through
Heart, you know
Transparent persons just you you see
You see you see what he's thinking now how he does that
Night after night. I will never know.
Like, I'm terrified going on those shows.
This is easy for me because I'm talking,
I don't do full stops and commas.
I don't have to, you're not asking me to,
I'm just having the conversation.
But to be sharp and be on it,
I don't know if I'm going to be sharp or on it.
And part of being in U2 is I have to be true to my mood and then I have to allow the song
to take me somewhere else.
And yeah, it's a funny thing, you know.
Yeah, this performing.
There's not much psychology written about being a book about the psychology of a singer.
Probably there is for comedians or actors.
I think the problem is that only the people that can truly do it understand it, right?
That's the problem, you know the problem and then you what you're talking about confinement for the talk show
Format that's also what makes that moment so much greater is cuz it's a realize. Yes. It's just
It's it's it doesn't belong there that that format is for
hollow platitudes and selling a new television show and getting in and out
before the seven-minute commercial break it's a very it's the worst way to have a
conversation where you're gonna get the most out of people because the most that
you when you have time constraints on conversations,
you immediately feel under the gun.
So you're kind of like tense, and you're pressured,
and you don't know when.
And then the audience is staring at you,
and then there's bright lights.
Everything is wrong.
Everything is opposed to the way normal, comfortable human
conversation and connection works.
It works with silence around you and just people talking.
We're in a pub or wherever you're at,
in a living room with friends at a party.
That's the real human connection where it's open-ended
and you're just talking.
Soon as you like lock it down,
and then you have to lock it down for commercials
and you have to button this up
and there's a new person coming in in five minutes
So they gotta shuffle you out the door and hold up your album and tell everybody to buy it
And then you leave and like was that good? I guess it was good
It's like you know I mean if it's I don't I never liked doing them
I always felt confined and I would never do stand-up on them
I was always asked to do stand-up on like that's not where stand-up belongs like
But if someone can pull it off like there's been great comedians that pulled off
incredible tonight show sets,
like Richard Jenney and George Carlin.
Yeah, who's your favorite?
I mean, I'm not going to ask you about your mates,
but people that you...
We were talking earlier about singer people
that I just looked up to.
Who were the ones that formed you?
Well, when I was a child, I was probably...
I guess I was 15 or 16.
My parents took me to see Live in the Sunset Strip in a theater.
And it was Richard Pryor. He performed, he did a concert special in the theater.
I think it's his greatest performance.
And when I was there in the theater, I was laughing so hard,
and I remember very clearly looking around
at all these people and they were falling out
of their chairs laughing.
People were just falling back, slapping each other,
going, oh my God, oh my God.
Like they couldn't breathe.
And I remember thinking, this guy is doing this
just talking.
And I remember all the funny movies
that I'd seen like Stripes and all the great comedies,
Animal House, funny comedies
Nothing compared to this and this guy's just talking it was an incredibly profound moment for me
I remember I got obsessed with Richard Pryor. I started buying Richard Pryor cassettes
Well, I would buy like whatever I could you know you find them
I found a bunch that were like you had there were like weird printings of him at Red Fox's Comedy Club.
I actually found them in a truck stop once.
They were selling these cassettes.
I was like, what is this?
And then I bought them,
and they were the incredible performances.
Like 15 people in the crowd,
and he's just ranting and going on these like unhinged rants
about things and just having fun and being really loose.
And I just couldn't believe that someone could do that.
That he could just, by talking,
this theater filled with people
were just falling down laughing and just blown away.
So that was probably my first thought about standup comedy.
My first real thought, just how,
what a crazy power to have.
Like what an unbelievable thing to be able to do
with just your words.
Yeah, I saw Robin Williams do that a few times.
I was in a room with him and I just,
he just couldn't not turn it off.
It was just, and it was wild.
It was, he was certainly not in control of it.
Right.
And that's, there's a genius comedian called Tommy Tiernan. I don't know
if you've seen him. Sure. I've heard of him. Again, when he goes out and he doesn't go
out often because I think it scares the shit out of him what he's going to say next. And
so that is the thing of having the material and then being able to blow, you know, just
let go of the material. Yeah. That's I I think, must be part of this, is it?
Yeah.
I mean, I don't know.
I am.
Yeah, it's part of it.
Yeah, these ideas, they come to you
and you just have to decide
whether to embrace them or not.
Like, don't run with this.
And you get yourself into such trouble.
Yeah.
Because you just, you say the thing
that you thought of. Yeah.
But the art is, in fact,
being able to say the thing you thought of. But the art is in fact being able to say the thing
you thought of, that's, it's a strange one.
Truly realized that, and I never had any aspirations
of comedy whatsoever when I was young.
When I was in, when I loved Richard Pryor,
I just loved it as a fan, just like I loved rock and roll,
I didn't want to be a singer, I just loved it.
And then I saw Kinnison.
And I think that was the first moment where I went,
oh, this is comedy too?
Wow.
OK, what is comedy?
Because everybody else had been telling jokes.
Or with Prior, it was like these stories of life
that was so revealing and so vulnerable, but also hilarious,
deeply fun, just like so accurate
in the caricatures of people.
And then there was Kinnison.
I was like, okay, this is comedy too.
And the first thing I ever saw of him,
I was actually introduced to him
by a girl that I worked with,
a girl that I worked with at a gym.
I worked at the Boston Athletic Club.
I was a trainer.
I was teaching people how to lift weights.
And there was a lady who was a volleyball player who I was friends
with that worked there. She worked the front desk. And she was like, I saw HBO last night.
This comedian was so funny. And in the parking lot of this gym that we worked out, she did
Sam Kinnison's bit of homosexual necrophiliacs paying a bunch of money to be with the freshest
male corpses. Have you ever seen the bit? I have not. So the bit is the guy goes, imagine this
you're at the end of your life you know you're lying now you're like well
I guess I'm dead now I'm gonna be alone with Jesus and
that's gonna be great I'm gonna be in heaven and hey! He starts rocking back and forth
What is this? It feels like someone's got a dick in my ass
You mean life keeps fucking in the ass even after you're dead?
It never ends! It never ends!
Ow! Ow!
She's doing this impression.
She's lying on the parking lot, on her stomach, going back and forth.
And I'm dying laughing. I was like, I gotta see this.
So my first introduction to Kinnison was this friend of mine, her doing it on the concrete.
Wow, you did it. That was good.
It was amazing.
No, no, you're doing her doing him.
Oh, yeah. She did a great job. She had me howling.
Who else?
Well, he was a huge one. Eddie Murphy, for sure. That was a huge one. But then again sure that was a huge one but then again that was also like I still didn't think I
was going to do stand-up until I saw Kinnison. When I first saw Kinnison that was when I was like
maybe I can do it because I had friends telling me to do it but it was friends that I did martial
arts with so we would have to from the time I was 15 till I was like 21, 22, all I did was travel around the country competing.
And I was with this such a wild combination.
If you don't mind me saying it's just like, it just the martial arts
seems so unfunny.
It's very, you know, you're, you're, you're fighting for your life.
It's very scary.
So in the, when it's terrifying like that and everyone's
nervous that's when gallows humor comes in and I was the guy who made I always
needed attention when I was young. So I was getting my attention from being
really good at fighting but then I was also getting my attention around the
also the people that really good at fighting at being funny. So when we were
all like you know a bunch of fucking crazy people
Their hobby was to travel around the country trying to kick people unconscious, right?
So this is the is my job
This is the group that I'm hanging out with and you know, most of them were older than me
I was the youngest because I was in high school at the time
Most of these were grown men and I was competing against grown men while I was in high school
Which is another crazy thing. My instructor was
Hardcore and he threw me to the grown men while I was in high school, which is another crazy thing. My instructor was hardcore and he threw me to the grown men when I was 16. It was terrifying.
But because it was so terrifying, I developed this way of releasing steam.
And so my way of releasing steam, I'd make fun of different guys that we trained with
having sex, like how he probably does it and this that and we were always just I was
Just always trying to crack people up
And I had one friend that I'm still really good friends with to this day my friend Steve Graham who talked me into doing stand-up
And I never thought I'm like you think I'm funny because you like me
I go, but you're crazy too like you're a fucking psychopath as well
Like you're you think I'm funny because you're doing the same thing that I'm doing. Like we're nutty people. We're not normal. Other people are going to think I'm an asshole.
And then...
When you walked out though, did you tell me how... was he there when you walked out on stage?
The first time?
Oh yeah, he was there the first night.
Yeah.
So can you paint me the picture?
I was at a comedy club. I was terrible. I went to open mic night, I did like five minutes, it was horrible. But I got a couple of laughs, I got a couple of
chuckles and I was like, I got off stage, I was like, I think I could do this. The weirdest
thing was like, I had probably, at that time, I was 21 years old, I had probably fought
at least a hundred times. And I was way more terrified of doing comedy. Way more scared.
Way more scared. Like fighting was scary, but I was like, I know it just has to start.
Once it starts, I know what to do. Like the real fear of comedy or of fighting was before the fight.
It was all the demons. All the thing, why am I doing this? Why are you doing this to yourself?
That's what you're really fighting in the end.
That's what you're fighting. You're fighting the fear. fear But I knew once it started wouldn't be scared at all because you don't feel fear when you're fighting because it's you're so in the moment
You're you're in the moment your ears, then you almost don't exist
You know it that you have to to operate at the highest level to have like
Instantaneous reactions and to be able to manage your pace and all these different things
You can't think about yourself or how you look or how you feel or whether your girlfriend's mad at you or whether you're gonna fail
Out of high school you have to be locked into what you're doing. So I wasn't afraid of fighting
I was afraid of everything before fighting
I was afraid of feelings and so but that's where the comedy came from the comedy came from like alleviating that
You know and right so there is a symbiosis there.
There's a thing in it. It's a task, a very complicated task. The way I describe fighting
is it's high level problem solving with dire physical consequences. Wow. That's what it really
is. You could call it fighting. You could think it's brutish and aggressive. Just say that again,
it might be the title of our new album. High level problem solving with dire physical consequences.
So as far as like sport.
I just put meta in front of the physical consequences.
Yes.
We got ourselves an album.
Yes.
It's the most consequential of all sports.
Because when someone beats you, they don't just beat you.
They take away everything you are as a man. When someone destroys you, they don't just beat you, they take away everything you are as a man.
When someone destroys you in a competition, you are not a man anymore.
You are significantly decreased in your value.
Everything about you, you feel terrible.
You are as good the day you walked in there confident and you still feel like shit.
Where you felt like you could take on the world,
you have the same skills.
You're as good as you felt when you could take on the world
and now you feel like utter dog shit.
And yet we know that failing is how we succeed.
You know the Samuel Beckett lines,
fail, fail again, fail better. I may have failed to get the quote right, but that's it, you know, fail, fail again, fail better.
I may have failed to get the quote right,
but that's it, fail, fail again, fail better.
That pain is fuel.
The pain of failure is the most potent fuel,
the most potent inspiration known to man,
and the more terrifying the failure,
whether it's failure in stand-up comedy
or it's failure in...
That's very high stakes.
If you think about it, I'm just thinking this through
this second, both your chosen passions
entail the risk of humiliation.
Yeah, you have to have that.
That's the only way you get better.
Wow.
That's the only way you really get better.
That's tricky.
Super tricky.
I grew up, my best mate, since I was three years old, he just gave me my name, Bonham.
He gave us all names, and his family names, genius really.
Painter became his painter.
His father, there was tough stuff going on on our street in their house.
He grew up... The father used to... He was kind of a religious extremist, let's call
it that.
He used to humiliate the kids by putting a bowl on their hair and cutting their hair.
So he'd walk around with these pudding boy's.
So everyone'd be like around and be like, ah!
They were just so fast.
They were all, they could all look after themselves.
And-
Like the boy named Sue.
It is the Johnny Cash song, Boy Names Sue.
They are, they, and so Googie my mate,
so I grew up sparring with him. This is literally
how we grew up. And his, so we watch all the boxing matches, all the obvious ones, and
he just really went into, his obsession became mixed martial arts. So he wants his kids,
they're going down to the gym. And then my godson, okay, his name's Noah.
And he comes, this is not a joke. This is not a joke. So Googie, my mate, since I'm three years
old, comes up and he goes, oh, he says, Noah, he wants to give up fighting, you know, cage fighting.
wants to give up fighting, you know, cage fighting. And I said, oh, that's okay.
I said, what does he want to do?
He wants to be a doctor.
And I'm like, Googie, this is a really,
your kid wants to be a doctor and you're disappointed
that he could be such a great fighter.
And I said, Googie, he wants to be a doctor.
This is, by the way, he became a doctor.
This is not this story.
That's how it ended. But I said, and he put it Gugy's, but he was such a good
fighter. I said, why did he give up?
He said, he's down the gym.
He said, I can't even beat the best guy in the gym.
If I can't beat the best guy in the gym, there's no point in me having a big
career. He said, the best guy in the gym was Conor McG point in me having a big career.
He said the best guy in the gym was Conor McGregor.
And he was a few years older.
And then two of his other kids are fighters now.
Wow.
So I've grown up around it because of my mates and his kids. But that thing of combat, being comfortable in combat, is a thing
you need to be careful of because you can end up there. And sometimes I do, you see,
because it's an art form for you, it's a, it's a, it was a, you know,
profession. It was a, it's different. But people like me, fight or flight, is a
problem because sometimes fight is on and I, and there is no fight. Right. So that's
part of the shut up and listen instructions I'm receiving from, which is,
I'm kind of born, that's with my fists up. And from every way, just growing up and being around
what I was around and experiencing what I experienced, I have that. And even in the band, I'm a bit like that. And so I've got to be careful because it's not always
somebody coming around the corner who wants to take you out.
And they might actually just want to take you out.
Right, right, right.
And it's not becoming of,
to be combative at all times.
So I'm learning to put my fist down.
I'm learning to spend those times in the morning thanking God that I'm alive
because I had a heart surgery as we talked about earlier and just waking up is great.
Just like, wow, I've just woken up.
What a thrill.
And I'm trying to get to that place with not with the world but with myself.
I've not made peace with the world.
I certainly have not.
But I am making more peace with myself which is sometimes a bit harder. And the family and listening to them
more. And yeah, that's it. This combat thing is interesting. Were you in the neighborhood,
I asked you earlier, but were there people, is there people you can remember?
Sure, from like, I was being like, on you.
Compatible? On you.
On me? On you.
Not from the time I started training.
Once I started training, I got very good, very quick,
and I became kind of known for it.
Because. People stopped picking on you then.
I was doing it in a crazy way.
It wasn't as simple as like, oh he takes karate.
It's like, no, on the weekends he's traveling around the country and fighting in tournaments.
You know, and I was winning them, you know. So it was, I found a thing very early on that I could excel at that was scary.
That people, and I realized through that thing, you can get good at anything,
you just have to put your attention and focus to it.
And well, when do you put your attention and focus
to something the most?
Well, when your literal health relies on success.
It was so scary that you couldn't half ass it.
Which is like, I have a problem with things
that involve too much personality and charisma where they
could mask truth.
And I think this is the problem with evangelical preachers.
This is the problem with politicians.
And it could be anybody.
But it's like, there's this siren call that will lead you to the rocks.
And it's believing your own bullshit and fighting was it didn't
matter what your personality was it didn't matter it's empirical yeah it did nothing
mattered it didn't matter how many people liked you if you get kicked in the head you
get fucked up and on the flip side of it I used to love when I would go to someone else's
hometown and they had all these people beating like cheering for them all these people like you know you're
gonna fuck them up all these people cheering in the corn I would love that
was my favorite thing my favorite thing so they can't help you do you have rage
me now no I'm just when you fighting, I mean, obviously what we do in music
is we try to turn rage into something beautiful
and that's what rock and roll is, the sound of,
you know, I think it was Neil Young
that said something like the sound of revenge.
Yeah.
But whatever, it's rage for sure.
There's rage, that's what separates certain bands.
You wanna know what the difference between a pop band
and a rock and roll band
It's rage. Rage against the machine. And you bet. Yeah. And fuck you I won't do what you tell me
Yeah, we had that and that was
That was coming through me and and I had to so I'm just wondering where you
Where'd you get that rage from or maybe you didn't have it? I mean, I'm told by some people that it's like Mike Tyson had rage
but
Some boxers, you know, they didn't they could they could they thought it made them weak it
Well, it gets in the way of clear thinking and you know, I had this guy named Yuri Prohaska on the podcast recently
He's brilliant fighter who's in the UFC who is the light heavyweight champion at one point in time and is still one of the top light heavyweights in the
world. And we were talking about anger and rage and that it leads you down a bad path
of decision making when you're fighting. It interferes with the flow. It interferes with
the way. And like I was saying before, when you're competing, you know, I've never competed at that
level. When you're competing at a world championship level, anything that fucks with your mind,
anything where you're doubting yourself or talking to yourself or all that is resources
that is being allocated towards something that's completely useless as opposed to being
like completely in the moment and in the zone.
If you get taken out of it for a moment, if they feel for a moment that you're thinking like and they're like you're looking for a way out, you're looking to quit, you're gone, you're done.
Like when your friend was saying that his son didn't want to be a fighter anymore,
this is my advice always, whenever someone says I'm thinking about stopping fighting, I will quit. Quit right now.
Because somewhere out there, there's someone who's not thinking about stopping at all, they're gonna fuck you up.
They're gonna come for you. They're gonna come for you It's gonna they're gonna it's gonna be terrifying
You're locked in a ring with Mike Tyson and you've been thinking about getting a regular job like yeah, you're fucked
You're fucked because there's all in people and my opinion
I love fighting but I think only all in people should be fighting and the moment you're not all in
Get out you got to get out Because the difference between an all in person
and a one foot out the door person is enormous.
It's enormous.
Even if skill level is similar,
the person who's all in is a terrifying person.
All they wanna do is this one thing.
And they're completely focused on it.
Just being the best in the world, this one thing. They're completely focused on it, just being the best in the world, this one thing.
They're going to find holes in you.
They're going to find your weaknesses.
They're going to push you in a way that maybe you didn't push yourself as far in the gym,
so come the second round, come the third round.
You start breaking down, and they're not breaking down at all.
They're breaking you down.
It's a terrifying place to be when you know you're not all in and the other person's all
in. So anybody, if that was my son
He's like I'm thinking about quitting like good quit. That's what I'd say quit
I find something else you love find what you love you don't have to do this
But if you're gonna do this you gotta you gotta only do this this has to be your fucking life, right?
You're fucking life. I mean, I don't want you to be a rock star and a fighter. Shut the fuck up
You can't be both.
It's not possible.
If you wanna do that thing, that thing is your whole life.
I don't have any tattoos, but if I did.
Kind of amazing you got this far without no tattoos.
I know.
If I did, it's, I have a,
there's a quote, it's from Nietzsche,
and I wouldn't normally quote from Nietzsche,
you know, I'm not that interested in Nietzsche,
but he's written some aphorisms that I like and whatever.
But in our summer place where we go to,
there's a little trail called the Nietzsche Trail.
And he apparently came up with this
line which is for anything truly great to take place there requires and this would be my tattoo
a long obedience in the same direction.
That's good. So that's so and I think of. And I think of edge when I think of that.
I don't think of me.
I'm sort of, I'm just,
my curiosity just takes me into a place I shouldn't be.
But that long obedience in the same direction,
that's what you're talking about.
Yes. Does it apply to people to tickling if you're the biggest fighter ever and
just little tickle and it's like maybe that's that on totally got to do it. You're so filled with adrenaline field techles
You're sparked out. There's a group comedian called Ken Dodd. I
Remember from Liverpool as a kid growing up he did
His feather he's just tickled people
I'll get the tattoo. You get the feather.
The feather's awesome. It is a funny thing. That quote is so accurate. It's one of the
greatest quotes of all time.
I think it's a strong quote and it's, you know, as a person who's, he was pushing away
higher, even the concept of higher consciousness for a lot of his life. And yet, he's managing to bump into it. There's a quote of his, I swear I had read,
but when we were doing the book we couldn't find it anywhere, so I might have
made it up. But he was, because that's the history of that in our family.
Jamie'll find it. Well, it's not. It's about friendship.
And I don't think it's...
Friedrich Nietzsche?
I don't think so.
But the idea is that friendship is deeper, kind of wider.
It's less dramatic than, you know, romantic love, but it is, it's somehow the
essence of great relationships is actually friendship. I think that's Nietzsche, but
we couldn't find it, so I may have just made it up.
Though love be deeper, friendship is more wide from like Chronicles of Narnia.
Oh, I'll take that too.
Something like that.
Thank you, Jamie. I'll take it.
My dad was funny. He used to quote this playwright, Irish playwright, called Sing.
You say, because he was suspicious of nationalism, because in Ireland, you know,
you would be, because the country was nearly at civil war and along sectarian lines. So
he used to say, Ireland, what is Ireland but the land that keeps my feet from getting wet?
So that's a great quote of Sing's. So when we did the book, Surrender Book was on Knopf.
So they went off, couldn't find it anywhere.
You couldn't find the quote anywhere,
cause he made it up.
Wow.
And it's a great quote.
And I think it's okay if you say something three times,
it's yours, right?
Yeah.
So, I'll say, you know, I'm in a band
with my friends.
And that friendship is pulled and pushed and it's difficult.
And at some point one of us is usually trying
to break up the band, but it's a very deep bond.
Can I say something about that?
Yeah.
I thought it was really great about the film as well.
When you went into the fact that it's a true the film as well. Oh when is the fact that
It's a true democracy in your band. It's annoying isn't it? Well, it's
But I would expect nothing less from you. Mmm when when you said that and I wasn't aware of that
I was like, of course, of course, that's how you would set it up. Well, we well that it's fine
To be a democracy, but we share things also
Well, it's fine to be a democracy, but we share things also, the economics. Yes.
That's where he's finally.
Exactly.
And we had a manager, Paul McGuinness, for most of our life, and it was one of these
things he said, just don't ever be fighting about whose song it is, because in the background
it's like, I want my song on the album, or I've got two.
Just get rid of that.
Yeah. Just share everything and make sure that you all feel like a stake in each
other. Yes. And so the arguments in you too are never about, well this is my
idea, so you're really stepping on my toes. We've developed a sort of band ego, bigger than individual egos, even an ego as
big as mine. This is bigger. This is even bigger. And it's the quiet ones. But yeah,
I think we've learned to just, the great, we don't argue about what's very good. Sorry, we do argue about what's very good.
We don't argue about what's great.
So if we're talking about, is that good?
That chorus, nah, that guitar, nah.
But it's all for a purpose.
We're all just talking about it.
We never, but when it's great, people just back off.
We just know. It's like greatness has its own,
what's the word, has its own, brings with it a certain acquiescence to that thing.
And then you learn that very good is the enemy of greatness. It's not even next-door neighbors. Like we used to be
with you two, we were really crap or great, but then we got very good, very
dangerous. Being very good is not helpful because there's a chasm between
what is very good and great greatness. What you were talking about there back on Jimmy Fallon,
that's a moment of greatness. It's not, which is different from saying we
were great. It was great. And very good could be just sitting there playing the
song. It's a very fine song and these are very fine players.
But that could just be very good.
It didn't make that moment that resonated so deeply with me that I brought it up.
We played it multiple times on this podcast over the years.
I'm really happy you did.
And that's what my friend, I forget his name, or my friend that I just met for the first time at the kitchen table who
had the guts to say, he's so disappointed because the recording of that song was just
very good. That's really what he was saying.
Yes, yes. You hadn't captured like that. But I think that unique moment of the way you guys did it is what
made it so special is because you know Jimmy Fallon sitting there Will Smith is
sitting there and you're just on these chairs and you're singing on the chair
and so you're moving on the chair and then eventually everything picks up and
you're standing up and dancing and the whole crowd like felt it was like this
build up to it at all flowed together but it just I haven't seen that back by the way so
really no no I haven't seen I'm probably saw it on the night or the next day so
I haven't I sent that to everybody yeah I send that to all my friends when it
soon as it came out online I was like you got to see this. Well thank you for that but
there might be something to do with the fact that the four members of that band
feel equally involved in that song. There might be and that the democracy, which is such a pain in the hole, is actually one of the reasons
that when U2 walks onto a stage, people tell me even if they're not bands, you know, they
just come along as guests, their hair come up in the back of their neck.
And I explain, actually that happens to us too. It's a strange
thing when we walk out. And it seems to me, I haven't figured this out, that the universe
conspires to break up great relationships, right? You fall in love, it's romantic,
it's because this is families now.
This doesn't have to be your partner in life,
your wife, your husband, your families, kids, everything.
It's just the whole world just seems set against
it's them surviving. All the. It just pulls at us. Like gravity itself,
you're resisting. And so when you manage to get through it and you're standing there,
the forest, and there's something going on that feels like you've resisted gravity or whatever
the forces that pull you apart. There's something about it and some nights it's really not
easy and – but I mean not the music but the friendship. But we we've we're through it right now and you feel it in these recordings and
You'll feel us
In a way
Rediscovering each other that's amazing haven't been playing free
We just played in London
acoustically at the Ivan Avella's was the first time in five years the four of us played together because Larry had a back injury and so but yeah there's something in the
chemistry. Well there's also the fact that you guys continue to create because
one of the things that happens to great bands is they become a prisoner to
their old songs. Yeah we gotta be a bit careful there. Yeah a lot of bands like
Ordinary Love that's what's so beautiful
because that's in the last...
Is that, that's like 10 years old or something.
Something along those lines, yeah.
Which is a mere minute if you've been around for...
We'll be around, I think the first time we met
in Larry's kitchen is, it will be 50 years next fall in the kitchen. Wow. Drummer wants musicians,
whatever. We're literally, and in the film, you know, we've got the kitchen table,
we've got the chairs, you know, because I'm on the road with, you know, 250 Mack trucks and a space station
and whatever else with you too.
But here you could put everything into a station wagon.
It's like literally a table and chairs.
And the chairs are Edge, Adam and Larry.
And I've got to, you know, I use the kitchen table as operating theater.
So it starts with the heart surgery.
It's the hospital bed where my father says goodbye to me with the expletive.
And it's the kitchen table where all operas really begin in the kitchen, don't they? It's like you're sitting there,
and in our case, it'd be me, my father, my brother,
mother's past, and it's just male rage,
and it's different shapes and forms.
So I get to be on the road with a table and chairs,
but then I get to bring out the chair.
There's Larry, yeah, there's Edge, there's Adam.
I introduced them as chairs.
And it was amazing for me to have that experience
of doing things and telling their story.
If their memoirs come out, I'm fucked.
But, no, I really am.
But it's over.
And I'm done with the past.
I'm not sure the past is done with me,
but I'm doing my very best to deal with the past
in order to get to the present to
make this the sound of the future. So the songs on the next album
when you are
or
whomever you're with or your kids or whatever are out
at the Joshua tree or whatever it is park or at the lake
here in Austin, Texas and you're listening to our new album that we will
take you somewhere because it has to be these songs have to be they have to be
everything or what's the point. Right. What is the creative process for you when you are,
when you have a concept for a song,
when you have an idea, like how does it work?
Do you do ideas just come to you?
Do you sit until they come to you?
Do you sit in front of a pad and write them down?
Is that that has never been an issue.
Like edge of myself with the sort of song starters. is that that has never been an issue.
Like, Edge and myself are the sort of song starters.
And I mean, he is.
I think we were counting them up the last time.
He'd like 526.
He said, 526 songs I have here.
I said, Edge, they're not songs.
They're ideas. And he goes, well, this one's a song. And I said, Edge, they're not songs, they're ideas.
And he goes, well, this one's a song.
And I go, oh, yeah, that might be.
And I will have and have stuffed in my phone and paper
and Air India sick bags and whatever else
I've written in my life and the glimpses that you get.
And I don't write out of misery, which is great
because I know some people have to be really miserable before they write. I write out of
joy a lot of the time. Sometimes I'm writing my way out of a situation. But most times I'm riding my way into something.
And especially with this next album,
I just think the world needs,
it needs some wild guitar music,
but it also does not need the blues.
Right.
We're in the blues right now.
Yeah.
And-
Well, we're in danger. We're in danger blues right now. Yeah. And, um, well we're in danger. We're in danger. But you, you did say, um,
one of your recent podcasts, you were saying, hold on a second,
still more people got access to water and
heat and air conditioning and have in the history of the
planet. So we've got to keep, we just don't wanna lose that perspective.
And we don't wanna, you know, this credible thing
in 20 years, if you think about it,
I mean, maternal mortality,
halved, more than halved.
And people coming out of extreme poverty.
Some of this is China, some of this is capitalism,
some of this is that. But it's, I do, I don't want to lose the sense of the next chapter
could be our best. And, and that's going to need vision. Yeah, and I'm talking about you two's new album
But but that is part of it because art changes the collective consciousness of a civilization and
Songs that really deeply resonate with young people that have a that that are great songs that also have a message and carry with them
Conversations that people have about the songs and about what's going on in the world. It shifts consciousness. It shifts consciousness in a positive
way and those young people may grow up to become people that aren't corrupt
politicians, that aren't corrupt congressmen, that don't give in to the
lobbyists and the special interest groups but really look out for their
constituents and they get into it for the right reasons. Because everybody's gonna be co-opted if you don't.
You're right.
Yeah, we better be good then.
And for me, the go-to group with the Beatles.
And I had this moment where Paul McCartney
picked me up at John Lennon Airport. He was driving the car and brought
me and kind of showed me where the different neighborhoods of the Beatles and which is
an amazing experience. And he'd stop and he'd say, Oh, this is where this happened. And
that's what I mean. He said, do you mind me telling you this? And I'm like, are you kidding?
And then he stopped at the traffic lights and he said, oh yeah, that's where I had
like our first real kind of conversation, you know, with me and John. I said, hold on a second,
I'm a bit of a Beatle student. Didn't you have that when you were in the Quarrymen and such? He
says, no, no, no, no, it was different level. He bought a bar of chocolate and after the war, you know, chocolate was really hard to come by, you know,
it was kind of a real luxury.
And he bought the bar of chocolate
and he didn't give me a square.
He broke it, Cadbury's milk chocolate, broke it in half.
And I said, oh, so you're into sharing too?
He said, yeah.
And he says, I don't know why I'm telling you that.
And he drove on and I just thought,
oh, I know why you're telling me that.
Greatest collaboration, not just in music,
in the history of music,
maybe the greatest collaboration in the history of culture
started with Half. Wow!
They shared, they gave it. My mate Googie, who I just spoke about, who knows all
about you and knows all about your sport, he taught me everything he had and
and they came in it was tough at times as I told you
in their hacks and he just gave me half of it every you got just half so when I
were in you too and our manager McGinnis says you should share everything I was
like yeah I've been sharing everything I've been sharing everything anyway and
it's and even now Edge and we're sitting in our house, we
share this place in the south of France, we've been there for 30 years, all our families
have kind of grown up there, French are too into themselves to bother us, which is really
the way we like it. And we sit there and we think the real owners are going to come.
Right.
You know what I mean?
Cause we still, we still don't really believe this has happened to us.
And you know what?
I think that's probably right because we don't really own this stuff. You, you, you, you get it for a short period and then you hand it on.
I think it, I think something about the
four and the way we share is in the sound of our music.
I think so too.
Is that too?
No, no, no. I think you're dead right.
I think that when you, you know, and I was just standing there with the tambourine, Jimmy
Fallon, and he's, but it's him playing the tambourine and and yeah there's something
again there's not much scholarship about this type of stuff that you can read up
but it resonates right you can feel yeah I believe it I think there's something
to it it's a you've got you've made decisions that have sort of affirmed this commitment to a higher goal.
It's not a hierarchy of who's the lead singer, who's this, who's that.
It's not who's the big star.
It's just we're all together to do this thing.
I'm in a band where every member of the band thinks they're the leader.
I think that's every band. And I voted for this. Yeah. And
it's sort of great. I think it's worked out. Yeah. And you guys are still together, you
know, which is also a giant win, you know. I mean, that's one of the most difficult things
for bands. You never know. You could run down the road any minute. But whilst we're running
down the road, it's a thrill. we're whilst we're running down the road
it's it's a it's a it's a thrill. I think that's also what makes you great is the same feeling that some of the real owners are going to come like like you never really buy into it even though it's you
and that's yeah that's real that I think we all should have that and I think if you lose that
you're in trouble by the way I think we should all have that. And I think if you lose that, you're in trouble. I think we should all have that.
I think that that's right.
I call this, I'm going to learn some of this from my wife.
He used to say, don't look up to me.
Don't look down at me as a woman.
Look across to me.
That's where I am. Okay? And there was a lesson in that about horizontal
relationships rather than vertical ones. I don't have a boss. I don't want to be a boss.
Yes. I mean, I have that relationship with the band that is equal. I have it with my mates.
I have that relationship with the band that is equal. I have it with my mates.
And it's just the way I know it to be the most efficient.
And the boss is the boss.
I mean, Bruce, it's an amazing thing what he does.
And it's his vision.
And he's found a team around him to help him realize his visions.
Like you going out on the boards, you write your own material, it's your point of view.
That's not, I'm part of, I think isn't there two stories they say in the cinema?
There's the gang and the man against the... Stranger Comes to Town, I think, is
one. That's... And then there's the Stranger Goes Off and the Odyssey. But usually there's
a gang. That's a different story. That's a third story, maybe. I'm in the gang.
Yeah. Comedians are in a gang, too.
We're in a gang at a club.
We're in a gang together.
We all convene together.
I mean, a gang in terms of a collaborative gang, too.
We work together.
We work on ideas together.
We talk about bits together.
Especially in my place at the Comedy Mothership,
it's set up like that.
The whole club is set up entirely for comedians. Completely different pay structure than any other club.
It pays way more than other clubs do.
The comedians get most of the money.
We get most of the money from liquor, essentially.
Liquor and a small percentage of the ticket sales.
But most of it goes to the comics.
And the vibe of the place is not that it's my place. The vibe is that this is our place. I
Paid the bill, but I shouldn't have had that much money in the first place
It's ridiculous
like the whole thing is crazy like that you could do something like this and if you could do something like this you're supposed to
If you're the person that for whatever reason the universe has blessed you with zeroes throw it at something fun
Let's do it.
And so it's ours.
And so there's there's that in comedy too.
You can't look it sounds clear, actually, as I say, but you know, I've lived with you
can't out give God.
No, it's like, you know, you just the more you know, more you that's and that's what
I'm saying also about the blessing on America.
You know, one of the things I do like about some of these churches is not the ones
that put pressure on you, but you know, people will give some cash every week to help
with what's going on, you know, far away places, whatever, and they tithe.
I think they call it tithing.
And it's just part of the blessing of America. It's this, okay, so it's
less than 1%. It's half of 1% of the government budget to keep all these people alive all
over the world. They love America. Because they love America, they're not going to be
a problem for America. They don't't love it takes them away from terrorism takes
them away from anti-americanism it takes them puts points in the direction of
freedom that's a blessing so if you count your zeros and you said that's mine
that's ours we're not sharing that with those people. The definition of neighbor is, oh, just next door.
Be careful.
Because there is a bigger blessing out there.
There's just a bigger blessing.
And it's-
There most certainly is.
And it sounds like you're in it.
And it is in the business where you'll see it
because people have a great mouth on them I have a big fucking mouth but it's
not about what you're talking about it's what you're doing it's how you're living
it's how you it's that's the you too thing is not just about the songs it's
the it's the way you did you use the word way a about the songs. It's the way.
Did you use the word way a minute ago?
You said it's the way when you're fighting.
Yeah.
Anything that takes you away.
Sure.
What did you mean by that?
There's a great quote by Miyamoto Musashi.
This is the guy I actually have tattooed on my right arm.
Once you understand the way broadly, you can see it in all things.
Beautiful. Yeah and the the concept is he was the greatest samurai that ever lived. He killed 60 men in one-on-one combat with swords. He got to the point
where he was killing people so easily he decided to stop using
swords and he would like fashion a wooden sword out of an ore from a boat on the way over to go kill
The guy so it was like googie. He it was an extraordinary human being but he wrote a book on strategy called the book of five rings
Yeah, and go Rino show the book of five rings. It's this book is all about where's he from?
Japan all about how you it's from the 1400s, you had to be balanced in everything.
To be a great warrior, you had to be great at calligraphy.
You had to be great at poetry.
You had to be an artist.
You had to be able to meditate.
You had to be balanced.
You had to know the way.
And don't let any bullshit, this is the modern interpretation, don't let your ego, don't let other people's perceptions,
don't let insecurities in, don't let anything seem,
stay on the way.
And the way is like this way of thought,
that once you, you know, everybody says,
how you do anything is how you do everything.
This was his earliest version of it.
This is wonderful to hear.
Once you understand the way broadly,
you will see it in all things
it's that Nietzsche this path to greatness once you
Realize what that is like? Oh, this is this is this intense focus and dedication to something that could be applied to anything
You could be applied you could apply it to being a better father
You could apply it being someone who writes books you could you could apply it to music. You could apply it to anything.
But that's what it is.
It's like finding what the thing is
and throwing the essence of you at that thing,
like really doing it.
And to do that correctly, you can't have macho issues.
You can't have insecurity,
things that you're compensating for, you have to be pure.
You have to fight. It's a constant struggle.
Stunning. There are stunning insights in my path, or I suppose, or whatever you call it,
my practice. I have this, I am the way, the truth and the life. This is what I learned from Jesus. Become a
bumper sticker, probably taken the meaning of it away, but it's the
same thing. I've got to, because when know, rather than to lead, to be no greater love and all
that. All this stuff, unfortunately this language has been ruined for you guys. I'm so sorry.
Kind of, but no. But it's powerful. It's real. And this Jesus is a long way from the one that you meet on these
kind of sales programs. But it is humility and it is service and
it is discipline and it is not my will, thy will. It is indeed surrender. And anyone,
wherever they are in the world, Japan in 1400s or the 15th century, wherever we are,
anyone, scientists, you know, the pursuit of truth, it just gathers. There's something about,
I'm trying to think of the word,
the gathering where we will all end up in the same place if we're really,
and I'm not talking about a life after death,
as if to enter a competition.
But we're in the same,
conciliance I think is the word.
I think it was, I don't know who wrote a book
called Conciliance, but it's the idea that all disciplines,
all art forms, everything comes together on a point,
a kind of convergence, but the word is conciliance. And if it isn't, I just made up a great word. It's a great word. There you go, Jamie.
Well, that, that, those moments that were... That's the book. Where great art hits that peak.
Oh, really good. Thank you. That's really good. Jamie's the best. How did you not nod off?
How long have I been talking? I mean, I'm three hours.
Because I this happening. I don't know why you this is my family at this point to be
gone to bed. It'd be just the two of us at the fire locked in. Jamie's locked in. Like
see you later, dude. That thing though is like what we all it's what we know how hard
it is to reach to like ordinary love Like, when you guys were doing that,
we know that that's not a first take.
You know, that's not like you just wrote the song
and you guys were out there jamming.
No, that's a polished song.
And the fact that you're doing this
and you're doing it acoustic,
right there, sitting on a chair,
like, everything is off, right?
Like, you're not on the stage,
there's not a spotlight on you. There's no mist
There's no lights like all the theatrics are removed. You're in a brightly lit studio
Sitting down with a bunch of people beside you which is like the most unrock and roll thing of all time
Yeah, right. It's corporate almost like no one does that
Yeah, I got a corporate haircut, but yet you fucking nailed it.
That moment, it took everybody to a better place.
That's what we're all hoping for in everything.
We're hoping from our leaders, we're hoping for that one speech, that one JFK speech where
you just go, oh my God, yes.
That's the prayer. We don't want to be...
Clinton when he was young, he had some bangers. Obama when he was young.
They had these speeches that made us feel better about human, as human beings, better about the country.
That's the danger of the conflicted times that we're in, is that people don't feel good even about America.
There's people that think that the American flag is a symbol of injustice. It's like it's that's a crazy thought like America's you too.
It's not just you too, man, but it's us. It's all of us human beings
regardless of your political ideology and we got to think of that first. We're a
community. We're a neighborhood. You know, we should think of ourselves as a giant
neighborhood and we don't. We think of ourselves as a giant neighborhood.
And we don't.
We think of ourselves as opposing tribes that are in this battle to stay in control of whatever
the direction of the country is.
And it's being orchestrated by artificial intelligence bots that are constantly battling with people online and state actors and
intelligence agencies and money and all this shit is together and it's all confusing
Everybody as to what is the purpose of being a human being that's alive with other human beings the purpose is community
Communing we're supposed to be a United states. We're supposed to be a community and
All the differences that we have the political differences in the idea
they should be so fucking secondary that it should be a
small part of the elections a
Small part of the election should be policy because we should just all agree that we should figure out
You want to have a good use of AI? Figure out what's the objective best use of resources to support the collective whole,
and how does that get accomplished? How does that get accomplished without fraud and waste?
And what's the best way to navigate where it doesn't have fraud? That should be done,
whether it's Democrats or Republicans, it should be like, what are we looking for?
We're looking to clean up the lakes. We're looking to stop pollution
We're looking for clean energy sources. We're looking for education. We're looking for health care
We reach it housing for each we're looking to get people off the streets that have mental health issues and get them help and don't
Just give them fentanyl and give them money for needles. That's stupid. Don't let them camp on the street
That's stupid also stupid ignoring them, right? That's stupid too.
So, some real resources.
And once we do that, we could all do better.
The whole country can do better.
We'll be less at each other's throats.
There'll be less anxiety.
It can be accomplished.
But we have to address the primary factor in this country
for crime and horrible behavior. It's completely
disenfranchised neighborhoods. It's areas that have been fucked since the 1940s
and they're not doing anything to change them and no one's pouring
any resources to try. There's no plans to try to revitalize these communities and
elevate these people out of like dire poverty and gang violence and
And drug use there's there's a way to do it. It's not impossible, but there's no resources put out at all
That should be another thing that shouldn't be a Republican thing or a Democrat thing
Why should we spend money on that? But it shouldn't be it should be the community of the people who?
voted on them. It shouldn't be, it should be community. Look, the people who voted for
Donald Trump, who I'm not a fan of, and I know you have respect for him and I
respect that, but the people who voted for him, I have immense respect for them
and their sense that they felt left out of the American dream, a lot of people.
And in so many ways, when the world got globalized
and a lot of people did very well out of that,
particularly in the global South,
but everyone in America, I think,
a lot of people, a lot of communities paid the price for that and
I don't know what the pie was grown, NAFTA I think was supposed to be a trillion
dollars and ended up being the pie was, I think was one and a half trillion. So
there was enough money to reinvest in communities but it never happened. And so people were pissed off. If, if, and I'm, I think we should be
with those people. I'm not sure this is going to be the answer that they're looking for.
And if it's not, I would encourage people, because I'm not American, I don't vote, I'm
Irish. Just, you'll know. I trust in the wisdom of crowds.
I really do.
I mean, you too.
And Americans will know.
And they must.
I can see where they're going right now.
They're trying out this new version of themself.
And where we're not interested in the wider world as
much we're trying to fix our own problems I would say they are bound up
in each other and I would say there's a higher purpose for America than the one
that's being offered presently but I don't want to get into the policy I
think it's an overcorrection yeah I think I just don't, you know, I really hope so because we really, really, really need you.
The world, we need America.
And this European project, we have a land war on the outskirts of Europe.
It is the most astonishing thing.
And we don't know what's next. Poland. It is the most astonishing thing.
We don't know what's next.
Poland.
Have you ever...
The Polish people, if two million Ukrainians staying with them, never complain.
These are the most remarkable people you'll ever meet.
There's all that money that was invested in by, guess who, George C. Marshall, an American general who became Secretary of State, who
had the cleverness to say after the war, the Second World War, and I think it was like
4% of the GDP was invested in the rebuilding of Europe. And the idea was we have to make Europe succeed. And that's how we will defeat communism.
And so when Ronald Reagan, you know, pronounced a death sentence on the Soviet Union, and
the reason Mikhail Gorbachev threw his hands up and said,
we've got to, this project is over,
is because he knew that people could see it was dysfunctional.
He knew that was a better life across the wall,
the other side of the iron curtain.
Sometimes it takes putting your money where your mouth is to show what freedom is.
America did that.
We owe America and we need you. That's all I want to say. We need you
and together, wow, there's 450 million people in Europe. It's like, you know, we
don't be fighting with Canadians and Mexicans
here. You put all this together, this is formidable. And these boring people who are listening
to you're probably tuning in now, what are they saying? They said something about the
good country. Like it and they hear the mushroom like you wouldn't know you've
never been lifted by music sir you know you know you wouldn't know they send
people to death but some bologna of the bum this is like come on it's like you
come in your times up and you And I know we want to rewrite history
and all the rest of it, but you can't do that.
We are free people and it is great to be free.
And I, I don't want to stop singing songs about freedom.
I want to be it.
And that's what we talked about earlier.
And that's, that's it.
I think as human beings, there's a constant struggle.
I think there's a constant struggle to find the path.
And I think we go through a series of overcorrections
and a series of going really far left and really far right.
And you know, an order disorder, real.
Yeah.
That's Richard Rohr's thing.
It's part of the battle of good and evil
There's there's a thing that what do you believe this good and evil I do I do I believe it
I think it's naive to think that if evil acts occur. There is no true evil
I think it's naive and evil acts are undisputable and the concept of evil has always existed
I think we can become part of it. Yes. You've seen it outside a
pub when people, somebody's down, kid goes down, people are just kicking. You've seen it at a football
match. Well, probably in American football you don't, but in Europe, in football, in soccer,
you see mad violence and it's like a spirit. You can watch it in a crowd. Yeah, and and it's we've you know
We've all been part of it. No, it's not like we're separate from it. Right. It's an it's an entanglement, right but
Rarely is evil so obvious is great
It's a great book
By by Bulgakov called a master in theguerite. Have you heard of it?
No.
Because the devil appears in the rooftops of Moscow and he goes,
Oh, this is going to be fun.
Nobody believes I exist.
It's one of the great, the stone sympathy for the devil.
I think that's inspired by it.
But this it's, it's insidious sometimes.
Evil is harder to spot.
But I think we know, we kind of know it when we see it at full force.
We just can't be afraid of sounding foolish.
And when you say that I think evil is a real thing, you can sound-
You can't measure it.
You can't prove it exists.
But you know, that's where I say, you know,
but science, you know, science, we need science.
We don't need science to prove that evil exists.
We need religion to suggest that it exists and how we might deal with it.
And in ourselves first, I would suggest, you were talking about
fighting the biggest opponent you would appear is indeed yourself. You're up against yourself.
I've got to that place and I'm not a sportsman competent, but just in my own walk, I really
is wow, all these people I thought I was you know I was up against
you know in my head it's it's yourself. Yes. I love this thing of the way I'm going to remember
that and I love the truth and and I love I love I love I love being alive I love the life I'm
gonna I'm gonna hold on to that. Please do. And keep doing whatever you're doing, man. I appreciate you very much.
Thank you. Thank you for coming here. It was a lot of fun.
Absolutely. I loved it.
And absolutely.
I enjoyed it.
I love you.
I love you too. Bye!