
05.02.97 Brisbane, Australia, intro to ´Adam Raised a Cain´
"Hello....hello Brisbane....nice to be back....(someone yells) I know,
I know, I know, I was telling somebody last night I got married a few times
and it got a little confusing in there (chuckles)....but I been back and I....been
in Brisbane a few days, got a chance to sort of, you know, to do the tourist
thing....went up to, uh, Lemington National Forest and uh (cheers) yeah, it´s
very nice....got my picture taken in front of those kangaroo crossing signs
there and uh....gotta do that, that´s big back in the States, ´Kangaroo
crossing ! I´m telling you, kangaroos cross there´ (chuckles) and
it´s, uh....(?) got my picture taken with a koala bear, yeah....that´s
big with the kids, gonna be big with the kids, right (chuckles) so, uh.... working
on my Australian....G´day, mate (chuckles)(cheers) thank you, thank you,
fed a, uh, bush turkey an ice-cream cone, that was fun (chuckles)....oh, alright,
here we go....so, anyway, welcome, enjoy yourself....”
05.02.97 Brisbane, Australia, intro to ´Straight Time´
‘‘Thank you, this is a, uh....this is a song about a fellow....who
gets out of prison and he´s trying to find his way....back into his family,
back into the world and uh....I think he´s trying to figure out how to....how
to be new, everybody reaches that point in your life where your old answers,
they run out on you and uh, you gotta figure out how to be new...to get where
you wanna go....but that can be pretty hard to do, particularly, I think, when
all our old habits and things are the ways that we know ourselves....and uh,
whether, even if those things are bringing us down....so, this is somebody caught
in the middle of....of that, this is ´Straight Time´....”
05.02.97 Brisbane, Australia, intro to ´Highway 29´
‘‘Thank you, this is a, uh....song about uh....insight, I guess,
guess it´s about the price of insight, insight´s always expensive,
it seems....and uh, this is a song about sudden insight, I was telling the folks
last night, sudden insight is very expensive because that only comes after you´ve
fucked up very badly, unfortunately (chuckles) that´s when ´Oh !
Yeah, that´s ....that wasn´t me, it was somebody else, I know better
now´ (chuckles) anyway....sudden insight for a salesman here, this is
´Highway 29´....”
05.02.97 Brisbane, Australia, intro to ´It´s the Little Things
That Count´
‘‘I was, uh....visiting my mother....and I met a friend of mine
and he asked me to come over for dinner....so I borrowed my mother´s white
Cadillac....and I get on the.....interstate of a.... can’t be mentioned
right now for....uh, soon to be obvious reasons....uh, and I’m, uh....
heading in towards my friend’s house, about a 40-minute ride, but I get
in a real, uh, lot of traffic, don’t really know where I’m going....and
I decide I’m gonna practise some of my new-found maturity and I’m
gonna pull over and I’m gonna find a phone booth and call ‘em and
tell ‘em I’m gonna be late....so I get off the....the interstate
and I pull into what seems to be like a big industrial area on the fringe of
a major city (chuckles) and, and everything seems to be closed or boarded up
and I’m getting a little frustrated and I look down and a few streets
ahead, I see a bar on the corner....I pull up, I park the Cadillac, I go inside....
there’s a few people sitting around and I ask ‘em where the phone
booth is and I realise that....I only have a 20-dollar bill.....so I go to the
bartender and....I say ‘Gee, I gotta make a phonecall, can you give me
change for a twenty ?’....he says ‘Well, we don´t really give
any change around here’....I say ‘Oh, do you mean like....just nobody
in this bar gives change or has the whole community sort of banded together
and said ‘Fuck ‘em, no more change when they stop ?’...uh,
he didn’t say anything but there’s a waitress watching all of this
transpire, she comes over to me and.....holds her hand up like this and she’s
got a quarter so I say ‘Thank you’ and take the quarter and go to
the phone booth and I put the money in....dial my friend’s number....but
it seems that I’m just a little bit outside the area code and it’s
a 50-cent call....so I say to her ‘Gee’, I say, ‘this call’s
50 cents’, she says ‘Well....that’s too bad, isn’t it
? (chuckles)...but, uh....but I’ll give you another quarter if you give
me a ride home’ (no response from the crowd) that’s the story (chuckles)
this is the song......uh, oh, wait, before I start, this happened a..... very,
very long time ago....actually, actually I, I’m, I’m making all
this completely up....”
05.02.97 Brisbane, Australia, intro to ´Red Headed Woman´
´´Thanks, uh, speaking of tongues, I´d like to move on to
a great song about a great subject right now....it may be a time, if there´s
any young children in the audience, it may be a good time to take ´em
to the pee-pee room, I´m not sure (chuckles) just a fair warning, we´re
entering into the triple X part of the (chuckles)(?) just hold the ears, yeah,
but, you see, it´s a great song about a great subject that I´ve
been trying to promote on my current world tour, cunnilingus (audience laughs)
that´s right, thank you, and I hope, thank you very much, thank you, I´m
not sure, uh, if, uh, I´m pronouncing that exactly correctly or if there´s
a particular Australian term or pronounciation, I....I asked, uh, one of my
Australian friends backstage, I said ´Gee, you know, cunnilingus, he says
´Uh, uh, uh, they´re not gonna know what you´re fucking talking
about, mate´ (chuckles) so, but I said ´No, I don´t believe
that, they, they don´t call it ´Down Under´ for nothing, you
know´ and uh (chuckles) so....so I assume that, uh, that right now as
I´m speaking that the cunnilingus hopefully is being practised throughout
Brisbane (chuckles) and uh, make it a very happy town, that´s right (chuckles)
I was telling the folks last night, I do mean practise because, uh....as you
fellas know, that´s not as easy as it looks, you know (chuckles) but it´s
like riding a bike : once you get it down, you never forget it (chuckles) so,
so, uh, uh, what can I say, it takes a lot of, you know, attention to craft
and detail and you gotta have good cheer, you gotta go in there with a good
attitude, you know, and uh (chuckles) and it takes patience, patience and more
patience, you gotta have (chuckles) and the upside is you score a lot of big
points with the Mrs. (laughter) yes (?) thank you, girls, thank you and uh (chuckles)
the next time you get into a big argument or something, you know, and, and,
like you´ve done something stupid, like all men are bound to do, you know,
uh, you can stop and say ´Oh, but, darling, remember that lovely evening
when we practised cunnilingus ?´ (chuckles) and uh, she´ll say ´If
you think that that´s gonna make a, hmmm, that was pretty nice (chuckles)
let´s try that again´, alright, so anyway....are there any red headed
women in the house out there ? (cheers)(chuckles)....”
05.02.97 Brisbane, Australia, intro to ´Two Hearts´
‘‘Oh, wow ! yeah, I felt the Macarena coming on there for a minute
(laughs) that was my mistake, you see, I should´ve called the record The
Ghost of Tom Macarena, goddammit, I would´ve sold some records (?)(chuckles)....woh
! alright (?)....just tell her that ´cunnilingus´ is Latin for ´Be
very kind to your parents´, right (laughs) very good....here´s for
my red headed woman....”
05.02.97 Brisbane, Australia, intro to ´Brothers Under the Bridges´
‘‘Here´s a, uh.....in the mid-80´s there was a....a
small group of Vietnam Vets, homeless Vietnam Vets in the States that set up
a camp....in the San Gabriel Mountains, those are the, that´s a mountain
range just outside of Los Angeles....uh....on the edge of the.....western Mojave
Desert and uh....they got tired of living on the streets of the city and they
set up this small camp way back in the mountains....and uh, this is a story
about one of ´em who, uh, has a grown daughter that he´s never seen....and
she grows up and twenty years later she, she comes into the mountains looking
for her daddy and what he tells her....this is called ´Brothers Under
the Bridges´....”
05.02.97 Brisbane, Australia, intro to ´Dry Lightning´
´´Oh, thank you....this is a, uh....a song about men and women (someone
hollers) yeah, ain´t it wonderful ? (chuckles) and uh ....I didn´t
write about men and women for a long time....I thought I was....ended up nothing
being so....wrote about men in cars....I did pretty good with that for a while....and
uh, men in cars looking at women....that worked out pretty well too....then
I wrote about men and women in cars....but not really not talking that much....so,
uh, it took me a while and a good deal of spare change to figure that out (chuckles)
but goddammit, I, I, I still don´t quite understand it (chuckles) but
uh, this is a song about, uh.... about one of those relationships where, gee,
it´s pretty good, you know....there´s something going on and you
really, you know, you care about the other person....and uh, it might work out
if you sort of weren´t so busy like fucking it up all the time, you know
(chuckles) might be alright...but uh....the only thing I did find out was, uh....in
men and women, ´almost´ never counts....it´s gotta be all
or nothing at all, so this is ´Dry, Dry Lightning´....sort of one
of those relationships where you go ´Hmmm, wonder where that person is
now ?´, not that you´d really wanna know, it´s just nice to
wonder (chuckles)....”
05.02.97 Brisbane, Australia, intro to ´Long Time Coming´
‘‘Thank you, this is a, uh, sort of a continuation on that theme....this
is uh....(?) and uh, but this is kind of a happy song, you know, I don´t
too many of those because, uh, people generally don´t like ´em,
you know (chuckles) but uh, this is sort of, they, they come back and bite you
in the ass later too, that´s right (chuckles)(?) but uh, oh, but you gotta
give it a, you gotta roll the dice and see what happens.....this is a new song
called ´Long Time Coming´....(?)....”
05.02.97 Brisbane, Australia, intro to ´Sinaloa Cowboys´
´´Thank you, this is, uh, I´d like to introduce Kevin Buell
right there (chuckles)....my compandre, traveling companion, my guitar man,
guru....yogi....financial counsellor....sexual advisor (chuckles) the Dr.Ruth
of rock and roll, that man is, I´m telling you....very often I call him
up (?)(chuckles) but uh....I was, uh....this is a, uh....before I had, we had
our kids, I used to....I still do sometimes but I used to get away with these
three friends of mine and we´d travel all through the United States and
we´d, uh, it was about six years ago, we took a trip through, uh....uh,
the Southwestern part of the country, out through Arizona and Nevada and, uh,
uh, the California desert and....we´d stay off all the interstates and
we´d just take all the little state- and county roads....and uh, it´s
still very, very beautiful but uh....it was.....in the fall, I was in this little
desert town in Western Arizona and uh....sort of classic little desert town,
there´s hundreds of ´em out there every hundred miles or so....they
have four corners and there´s a grocery store, a gas-station, there´s
a motel and there´s a bar....all the, uh, elements for a human life to
flourish, right (chuckles) in one spot, they, they´ve figured it out but
uh....it was late at night, we were in one of these motels where, I was telling
the folks last night, you can, uh, lay down at the end of your bed and if the
door´s open, you can touch your car, you know, in the parking lot (chuckles)
´Yeah, uh, it´s still there´ ´Check the car´ but
uh, but uh, and it was about 11.30 at night, these two Mexican men came in from
the West, they were driving a truck, took the room next to us and one was a
young kid, he was kind of high and, uh, the other was a fellow about my age
and, uh, he come over and start looking at our motorcycles and ....we got talking
and he had a younger brother that´d died in a....Southern California motorcycle
accident a few months earlier....and he talked for about an hour about his....his
brother, there was something in his voice that always sort of stayed in the
back of my head, you know.....and uh....part of it is, I think, I was just about
to....be, to be a dad and.....the first thing that happens, you know, is you´re
always worried about protecting, you know, protecting ´em, you know that
the world isn´t set up for you to really do that in the end....but uh....so
this fella had, he´d suffered the loss of his brother and I, I was....I
don´t know how people put themselves back together after that, how they
get the world feel right again....you know....but I was writing a song on, uh....two
brothers that get caught up in the Central California drug trade, Mexican gangs
come up and hire migrant workers from the Central Valley to work in, in the
drug labs, they´re the ones that, you can make as much in a night as you
would in, in a year of traveling from Mexico to Oregon.... doing, you know,
back-breaking work so....but they´re the ones that usually get busted
or killed and....and uh....I kept hearing this fella´s voice in the back
of my head so I dedicate this to him every night, my mysterious friend wherever
he may be.... this is called, uh, ´Sinaloa Cowboys´.....”
05.02.97 Brisbane, Australia, intro to ´The Line´
‘‘Thank you, this uh, this next is set down in Southern California,
right on the, uh....the border between San Diego and....and Mexico....there´s
a lot of young guys that get out of.... they get out of the army and they go
to work for the California border patrol and that´s a confusing job....it´s
uh....you know, there´s a Mexican writer Carlos Fuentes said California
was Mexico till about 1848 so the border sits there like a scar....and it´s
been an issue in the States, the immigration issue has been so abused....during
the last American election, you know, there´s always been people coming
across the border, doing work that....nobody else wants to do for a pay that
nobody else will take at the behest of American businesses....and in return
they get some medical care if they got sick or, or their kids would have the
chance of a better education than they had but uh....anyway, this is about a
fella, fella, a young border patrolman trying to....trying to figure out where
that line is down there....this is called ´The Line´....”
05.02.97 Brisbane, Australia, intro to ´Balboa Park´
´´Thank you....here´s another, here´s another song that´s
set on the border down there, uh.... it´s a song about kids....and uh,
it´s a funny thing, you know, before I.....before I had my own kids, a
lot of my friends had ´em first and so, you know, like they´d come
running over and they had the baby pictures and that´s great for the first
two or three weeks but then they keep coming in with the baby pictures and everything´s
about the baby and the baby´s in the diaper, baby´s out of the diaper,
baby´s pissing in the pot for the first time, uh, baby´s doing this,
doing that and uh.... it gets a little tiring after a while....but uh, but then
it´s worse ´cause they sort of, they get a little older and they
bring ´em over....and uh.....you know, you can´t, like I was telling
the folks last night, I lived alone for 30 years and I really don´t like
anybody touching my shit so ....but they come over and they, they just start
running around and you can´t really yell at somebody else´s kid
so all you can do is sit there and go (snickers quietly) ´Ooh, he´s
got a lot of energy´....´Ooh, ooh, yeah´ (chuckles) ´Oh,
gee´, you know (chuckles) but the thing is that, it´s a funny thing,
after you have your own of course, you know, you become sensitive to, to everybody
else´s, you know, and uh, people always wonder what the main difference
that the kids make in your life is, I always say, like, children got a window
onto the grace that´s in the world ´cause they haven´t closed
themselves up yet and that that grace comes through them and it comes into your
life and it´s sort of like a bonus, I guess, you know (chuckles) and uh....that´s
something that on your own, I think, as an adult, it can get harder to get a
hold of....which is why I think people seek out art and films and uh, uh, music
and engage in unusual sexual practises also (chuckles) it gets that grace back
in (?) but uh....uh, this is a song about kids that come across the border and
they´re 12 or 13 or 14, 15 years old and uh, the thing about that grace
is it is the parents´....role to, you´re protective of that, you
know, you shepherd that, that very thing....and uh, it´s your job (chuckles)
and this is about kids that really don´t have anybody to do that for ´em
and so they end up coming across the border, they end up in this strip called
Twelfth Street....out on the street and uh, it´s a song about what happens
when that grace....goes unprotected, gets violated.....this is called ´Balboa
Park´....”
05.02.97 Brisbane, Australia, intro to ´Across the Border´
´´Thank you, I, uh....I grew up in a house where there wasn´t
a whole lot of books or talk about culture or what it could do for you and uh....everybody
was sort of busy working and keeping, trying to keep their heads above water....and
uh, so the first thing that really had an effect on me was the, was the radio,
my mother would play the radio constantly, you know, she was, when I was in
grammar school, she was still a young gal and she really liked that rock and
roll music, you know, and uh....so I´d come down into the kitchen in the
morning and the radio´d be on and I´d listen to all those, you know,
great Top 40-records and, and I´d be sitting there with my little Catholic
school uniform on and my sister´d be there beside me, we´d be eating
our cornflakes....and slowly I felt like I started to hear this message....it
seemed to be saying ´There´s a party going....you´re missing
it, little boy....don´t go to school´ (chuckles) and oh, man, there
was just, there was something in those voices, there was this whole world of
fun and, uh, and sex and danger and, and the idea like there was, you know,
life was to be risked, you know, there was....and it was the first really, it
was like the message from outside my little town, from outer space, for all
intents and purposes, you know, and uh, uh, it really gave you a sense that
there was a world to be won outside of just the world that you knew, you know,
and in that way those records were truly subversive, truly subversive....and
uh, they lasted, for me, they really resonated for me for a long time.... then
I got a little older and a friend of mine showed me John Ford´s Grapes
of Wrath....and that, for me, was sort of the second part of the puzzle, you
know, uh....I found something in that film and in the Steinbeck novel that,
that made some of those voices make sense, that there was a world to be risked
and won for a reason, there was an old-fashioned sense of heroism in that story,
somebody risking what they have for an idea that was bigger than they were....that
was worth doing....but uh, there´s a scene at the end of the film that
sort of encapsules the whole thing, you know, Tom Joad´s killed a vigilante
man who killed his friend and he´s gotta leave his family and they´ve
come thousands of miles and they have nothing, they´ve lost their home.....and
he´s gonna have to tell his mother that she´s gonna lose her son
now and there´s nothing they can do about it.... he steps into her cabin
at night and he touches her real gently and they step out underneath these dark
trees and he says ´I gotta go now, Ma´ and she says, she says ´Well,
I knew this day would come but....how am I gonna know if you´re alive
now ? how am I gonna know that you haven´t been hurt, that you´ll
be alright ? Will I ever see you again ?´, he says ´I don´t
know, I don´t know, all I know´s I gotta go out and see what´s
wrong and see if there´s anything I can do about it....you´ll see
me ´cause at night I´ll be in that darkness that surrounds you when
you´re sleeping....and I´ll be in men´s voices when they´re
yelling ´cause they´re angry and I´ll be in kids´ laughter
when they´re coming in and they know that there´s food on the table
and that they got a home and that they´re safe´....he says ´You´ll
see me, Ma´ and he disappears into the night, the next day the Joads are
heading north looking for work and the father says ´What are we gonna
do without Tommy ?´, the mother says ´Well, we´re gonna keep
going´ ....so this is a song about how people keep going, how even after
the world deals you its harshest blows and reveals itself, as it will to all
of us at some time or another, how people fall back on faith and hope and love
and ultimately....on one another ´cause that´s all there is ....”
05.02.97 Brisbane, Australia, intro to ´Does This Bus Stop at 82nd Street
?´
´´Thank you....thank you very much....alright, this is for all my
real old friends, old fans out there....”
05.02.97 Brisbane, Australia, intro to ´This Hard Land´
´´(?) if you can hold those little flashcameras, I promise at the
end of the night I´ll step on up and you can take all the pictures you
want, alright ?....appreciate it, this is uh....when we came, uh, coming down
to Australia, a local organization got in touch with me, they´re the South
Brisbane Immigration and Community Legal Service and they´re a (?) for
the asylum seekers and uh....they´ll be out in the lobby, now, basically
they work here in the Brisbane area and they provide counsel and legal assistance
to, uh, the refugee and the immigrant community and they sort of work to ensure
that the right to justice doesn´t depend on how much money you have or
the color of your skin or where you´re from so....they´ll be out
in the lobby, they have some information, you could check them out if you like,
I´m gonna do this for them....”
05.02.97 Brisbane, Australia, intro to ‘There Will Never Be Any Other
For Me But You’
´´Thank you, thank you, gonna do a little more here, this is for
all the....the lovers in the crowd tonight, ladies and gentlemen, that´s
right, this is ´The Boss in....in a romantic mood´ (chuckles)....we
got anybody out there about to get married ? (few yells)....about to get divorced
? (few yells) ....alright, this is for you too here, you know what I´m
saying...it´s a song, kind of covers all the bases, uh....alright....meditation
on love....my message....starts off a little....unusually....for a romantic
piece....but, uh, don´t let that scare you, pull your girl close ....put
your arm around her....give her a little kiss on the cheek....”
05.02.97 Brisbane, Australia, intro to ´If I Should Fall Behind´
´´Thank you very much....want to thank everybody for coming out
to the shows we did here in Brisbane, thank you very much, uh....you know....you
see, you know, I hadn´t, uh, it was so, it was such a long time since
I´ve been back, I was a little nervous, I said ´Gee (?) they´ll
pissed off or mad ?´ (chuckles) but, but, uh, I wanna thank you for making
me feel so at home, it´s been, uh, I´ve had just great audiences
here both nights, you´ve been very lovely and I really appreciate it and
having the room to come up here and play like this is a, is a gift that you
give you so thank you very much, I appreciate it....you´re beautiful (chuckles)....”
Compiled by : Johanna Pirttijärvi