I just got an f from you, actually. This is overheard. applauding john doe, welcome. Thank you. Nice to see you. Good to be here. How is it that x is 40 years old as a band . We must be getting old. Its hard to imagine. Its magical. [evan] is it magical . No. laughing its astounding. Everything hurts, but its still astounding, yeah. Im really lucky. Less than you would think in the hurting part. Not a lot of bands, good bands and bad bands make it this long, right . Happens to be a good band, a great band that made it this long. You know, i appreciate that. Its just good fortune, and i think we still have some ambition. [evan] still playing. Its what we do. Its what we do. I saw cheap trick and its like, its kind of like seeing old blues guys. I saw John Lee Hooker and lightning hopkins, i saw those guys play and it is, you see cheap trick playing, its like, yeah, you look like an old blues guy now. chuckling well, the nice thing about it is its not the name, but a whole bunch of different people who you dont recognize, its mostly the band that we knew, right . Well, x is, for sure. And same with cheap trick. Yeah, which is a good thing. 1977 is when the band came together, and you actually came from somewhere else to get to los angeles, youre from illinois. Yep. Well, i was born in illinois and then my dad was a librarian and he got better and better jobs. [evan] so he traveled around. He went to tennessee, and then we went to wisconsin, which was where they were from, and then ended up in baltimore. And he was doing state libraries and then eventually he went to new york. He went to new york. Ran brooklyn Public Libraries and when he left and i finished high school, finished college. You went to college back at the east coast . In baltimore, yeah. Antioch college, writing. And then eventually made it out to la. Now, you have said, i was born in 1977 when i got out to los angeles. John doe. It was consequential for you, john doe, but also it was a important thing for you personally as the development of who you became to be out there. Absolutely. And i was drawn there by all the writers and film stuff. All the underbelly of Nathaniel West and all the underbelly of Nathaniel West and what los angeles represented. At that time. Well, in the past, from raymond chandler, and well, in the past, from raymond chandler, and charles bukowski, and all those charles bukowski, and all those los angeles wasnt the sunny eagles. Sunny eagles. [evan] beach boys, right . Nothing to do with that, it was all the dark side and chuckling we found it. Well, for a lot of people, at that moment who did what you came to do pretty quickly, the choice was not la but it was new york. [john] right. So, distinguish between the two for me. Why did you not make your way to new york, but instead made your way to la, what was it . sighing you made the affirmative case for la. Was it something about new york you didnt like . The weather. It was just a weather issue . Totally. Good, i like the fact that it was mundane. Yeah. Thats good. Im very simple in many ways. No, i was just sick of the east coast. From second grade through college i lived in baltimore. And its like theyre ghosts. [evan] gets old after a while. And its all closed in, and its all. And its all closed in, and its all. The west is open and the east is closed. The west is open and the east is closed. I was so sick and tired of people saying, oh, being a musician, thats really hard. You cant do that, and oh, you cant do that. And you cant do that and its like. No. Now youve just guaranteed i am gonna do it, right . Or i want a place to try and also or i want a place to try and also my folks were living in new york, so i had a free place to stay. If you wanted to visit. Yeah, so i saw the talking heads, and i saw the heartbreakers, at cbgbs and maxs and it was really clear that all that was pretty well developed. I saw patti smith at saint marks and stuff like, that, so its like i dont want to try to wedge my way into someplace that i dont really like. Right, but lets just acknowledge, whether you liked it or not, what a great time to see music there. Oh hell yeah. And also out on the west coast. The bands youre naming, the moment that youre talking about. Absolutely. What a wonderful time. You went out to la with this express idea of making music, of being in a band or doing Something Like that. Yeah, i guess. Yeah, i guess. A friend of mine and i, we sold a couple of songs to some guy that immediately disappeared. We never got paid and the songs never were published. We thought, oh we can be songwriters. Otherwise perfect. We can be songwriters. And all we need to do is sell a couple of songs. And then, and then, i think a lot of people in punk rock were misfits in the other bands. Were misfits in the other bands. In the other bands that they tried to play in. Right, and they were the ones who stood out. What do you want to play that for, and thats weird, and no we dont want to do that velvet underground song in this band. Oh, what do you want to know. And then suddenly youre surrounded by a bunch of other people that had that same experience. [evan] right, were all in the club. Or were called fags or something. And its like no, i get it. Now, x is talked about as a punk rock band and i talk about you as a punk rock guy. Do you think about punk rock today the way you thought about it back then . What is punk rock as you think back on those times . Freedom. What does it mean, freedom . Yeah. Right. Its do it yourself. Not coloring within the lines. Yeah. And it still is. Nowadays its like a bonified subculture. Does it exist in music today . Sure. Oh, absolutely. Give me an example of a band thats a punk rock band. Skating polly. Okay, this is not a band im aware of, but ill go back and. They opened for us last holiday season. Its not the case that punk rock has been absorbed into other genres, or that the soundtrack of the rebellion now hiphop, say. Right. I think that its young people going to a place where theres eight bands and the admission is 10 bucks. Well there are still places like that. Absolutely. Absolutely. In new york and london and la and san francisco, the original bands were very eclectic. The clash didnt sound like xray specs and the jam didnt sound like somebody else. Blondie didnt sound like talking heads or ramones didnt sound. X didnt sound like the germs or x didnt sound like the germs or et cetera, et cetera. And by the way, all these years later, if you hear a song by the jam or you hear a song by the clash, on the radio or on one of the streaming services, you know instantly that its the jam or the clash. [john] yeah. Right . If you have some musical history. If you have any history with those bands. Which a lot of people have been denied, unfortunately. Well, thats one of the things about this, the world has changed, the music world has changed. Music publishing has changed, the process of putting out records has changed, touring has changed. In some ways today, trying to make that rebellion or that 10 dollars for eight bands, whatever in the kind of corporate music world of today is a little harder. Right, but see i take my hat off to green day because they did bring it to the audience that really needed it. Which were the disaffected teenagers. The ramones and us were playing to art people and grownups, like 20somethings and 30somethings. We couldnt get to the kids at hollywood high. You dont begrudge green day or bands like green day. Hell no. Their success in all this. Yeah, success is not bad. I think billy joes a really good songwriter. Yeah, well in fact he did the forward to the book that you did last year. Right, true. That is called under the big black sun, its an exploration of the scene that you were in back at the time and you and exene, but also mike watt who was in the minutemen and later in firehose and Charlotte Caffey and jane wiedlin from the gogos and dave alvin are all contributing to this, talking about their piece of that time. Right. Right. Right. He is the logical heir to that, you would say. Yes, yeah. I mean, that east bay punk rock scene with lookout records and all that, they took a lot from the la sound. They took a lot from the la sound. And were pragmatic, we want to appeal to other people. A lot more people know who green day is than know about the la punk rock scene. We did the book in that way because theres all these different stories and everybody has their own truth and even though i may really support and appreciate the fact that women were equal parts in the punk rock world. For instance. I can appreciate that. Exene and i were partners, we were equal partners. I cant tell the story from that perspective. Well, in fact not everybody has the same perspective on it. I got the opportunity to interview kim gordon some time ago. Kim gordons version of where women fit into that conversation was not necessarily the same as somebody elses, right . Right. She saw this through a different lens, and i suspect that the people in this book all had their own, its not exactly rashamon, but they all have their own version of the story. Take it together its actually a pretty good snapshot. Im acting as kind of the narrator, ill have a chapter in the beginning, the middle some, and then im doing all these interstitial pieces so that im commenting on what it was like for us to experience all these kids from east la showing up at our shows, like what, where. There are all these like beautiful brown skinned kids. Whered they come from . Yeah. And then suddenly oh, theres bands that go along with that. Theres the brat, and theres, so. Theresa from the brat wrote a chapter with tom, my coauthor and my coauthor and im like ken burns of the punk rock scene. Oh listen, being the punk rock ken burns is a brand, man. I love that. Well, the part i love about this the best is it was the book was the audio version of the book was nominated for a grammy. I know, who would have thunk it. So it was your book, the Elvis Costello memoir, patti smith and you all lost at the grammys. To carol burnett. To carol burnett. laughing you know. You know. Kind of a punk rock icon of her own, right . In a way, you know. But how wonderful that it was appreciated for what it was, that it was this distinct. Yeah, there was a hell of a lot of other books that, even within our wheelhouse that Chrissie Hynde and kim gordon. [evan] well, the Chrissie Hynde books really good, thats right, yeah. Yeah, theres a lot that didnt make the cut. Yeah, whod have thunk that. Who would imagine. chuckling very quickly, the origin story for x. You and billy zoom were the people who started this band, exene was your girlfriend at the time . No, just someone i or a friend. Friend, yeah. I met her at this writing workshop, called the venice poetry workshop. Still going on. So she was more of a poet than a band member. Yeah, she was a writer, she didnt know what she was. None of us knew what we were. Shed knew she wanted to get out of tallahassee, florida, thats what she knew. chuckling howd she get connected with the band, then . She had a song called, she had written a poem and had made it into a song called, im coming over. And it was just, im coming over, im coming over, so move over. And i said, well i played along with the way she sang, and it was clear what kind of chords should go or what notes should go with that. Or what notes should go with that. And i said, well do you think i could do this in my band . And she said, no. And she said, no. This is like the one thing that i have that is of value. Its mine. Thats the one thing. If this is gonna be sung, ill do it. And then, and then, it just developed organically. As simple as that. Yeah. Yeah. A number of records over the years, i was mentioning this to you before we came out here, that my way into x was a record that come out about 10 year later, so 30 years ago, called see how we are. And what i think is one of the alltime great rock and roll songs, fourth of july, which i feel like every fourth of july i find a reason to put on. That was actually 10 years after the band started, i went back at that point then and listened to los angeles and listened to wild gift, both of which ended up on the Rolling Stone list a couple years ago of the 500 best records of all time, pretty good to be in that band, i know, right . You got two records on that list. And at the time, i dont know that i thought of see how we are or for that matter any of those other records or those songs as punk rock as you thought of punk rock. Maybe everybodys definition of punk rock is just different. I like how you said it, that its not so much a style of music as it is a subculture. Yeah. Right . It feels like pretty straight forward rock and roll to me. Well, at the time there was a line that was drawn, because it needed to be. This is now and that was then. And rather than be considered like new wave, which was sort of the nice way not to get kicked out of the party. I think claude bessy in that decline of western civilization said thats the way. Stay at the party and keep doing cocaine. Talking heads were probably new wave more than punk rock. I guess, but at any rate, so i guess, but at any rate, so we wanted to be considered that. Rather than associate with the past, even though we had roots in the past. I, as a songwriter and singer and player i, as a songwriter and singer and player made myself forget a lot of those things. Its like you hear painters talk about going to school and learning all the techniques that they need to learn to paint, and then their teachers say, now forget everything. And its like, what . But you do have to say, okay, im moving forward. But you do have to say, okay, im moving forward. Im not gonna look back right now. Its already in your dna. But the successful people in your business anin other businesses can kind of tacko the moment, and whaver x was in the ely ds, co allhe way forward now as a solo artist with this record, the westerner, but other solo records youve done over the years. Its a very different sound, its a much more stripped down sound. It sounds very different from x, and the knitters records, the side project you did, you and exene, dave alvin. Straight rockabilly, right . Right. I think the first time i listened to the first of the two knitters records, which came out in 1985, but would have been a couple years later. I didnt know that it was you all. Somebody said, you need to listen to this record. laughing and so i put on, this is a great record. This is actually the people from x, you have to be kidding me. Yeah, it was our love letter to sun records. For sure, and all that stuff. But going back to the punk rock thing. It became a little more codified, it became a little more like a sound and a thing and you could paint a picture of the person that played it and the way they danced and all that kind of stuff and so then it became a little less, but if you think about the beginnings of the hardcore scene, which is kind of where our book ends. That also was pretty eclectic. The meat puppets and black flag. Henry rollins has a chapter mumbling . And the minute men, and all these people. They were pretty different, too. But its okay. I think about you at that time, and i now have to think about you as an actor at that time as well, because i was familiar with your. At that time as well, because i was familiar with your. You were on roswell, the television series. Yes. Some years ago, 15 years ago. course, i remember one day walking past tv, boogie nights is on, one of the alltime great movies. And there you are, you played Julianne Moores characters exhusband or estranged husband. You were in a custody deal. Yeah, mhm. I dont know that i was fully aware until much later that youve been in like 50 or 60 films and tv shows and it goes all the way back to salvadore, right. The first thing you did was for oliver stone, and that would have been around 8586. Actually the first thing was with Allison Anders. First thing was an Allison Anders movie. Talk about that. Called border radio, there were a bunch of other la musicians who were part of it. We had no idea what we were, well they sort of had an idea what they were doing. They had been to ucla, and allison and kurt voss and dean lent were kind of all three running the camera and directing and writing and everything like that. And she would say, okay were gonna do this thing. Bring the blue flannel shirt that you were wearing. I look in my close theres like three or four blue flannel shirts. Which one, right. I had no idea, i picked up the one, brought it to the thing, did the thing. And then they cut this stuff together and i walk out of one door with one blue flannel shirt, and walk into the other. Walk into the phone booth with a completely different blue flannel shirt on. What interested you about acting as opposed to music . As opposed to music . I think it was just a little more internal, i think it was just a little more internal, a little more. A little more. I dont know, its like an opportunity. And allisons cool. Right. And then, oh i get to hang out with james woods. And hes reallysmart antha. And hes really smart and thats fun. Oh, i get paid and. Well, sure i guess, yeah. Nowadays, when i get the opportunity to do it. Nowadays, when i get the opportunity to do it. Its the research and trying to find out what the person should think and i got to play what the person should think and i got to play ap carter in ap carter in this Allison Anders, again, she did a thing this Allison Anders, again, she did a thing about june carter. Right, years later. Right, yeah. And jewel was playing june carter and i got to play ap carter, who was the godfather of country music. And reading all of the stuff on him, that was really the juiciest and most fun part. Doing the stuff, you just have to kind of wade in, and well like you go on law and order for an episode. Thats like work for hire, right . That was totally fun. The easiest character choices. What do i do . Hmm, be a jerk. What do i do, hmm. Be selfabsorbed. What do i do, you know. chuckling it was all laid out, cause i was playing this rock star who was kind of the whitesnake, is that who is . It was like a heavy metal or hair metal kind of. Yeah, where the tragedy in rhode island, the place caught on fire, thats what it was based on. But so thats something youre continuing to do after all this time, thats fun . [john] sure. But i guess the thing that youre doing primarily right now is youre, this record that has just come out, youre about to go on a tour for a couple weeks. Is this as much fun as it used to be to go on the road . I imagine after you get to be a certain age, youve done it for a long time, its probably not as much fun as it was, or maybe its fun in a different way. Its very simple. Its very simple. All you gotta do is show up and look good and not fall off stage. And not fall off stage. Thats the simplest way. It is a little bit of extended adolescence, in that w