CHEAP TRICK Guitarist Rick Nielsen - "I Was Never Trying To Be A Guitar Hero"

July 10, 2013, 11 years ago

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Steve Patrick at Uweekly.com recently caught up with CHEAP TRICK guitarist Rick Nielsen and covered a variety of topics. An excerpt is available below:

UW: Is Cheap Trick working on a follow-up to 2009’s The Latest?

Nielsen: "Well, we are. We’re working on getting ready. Because we’re on tour right now and it’s difficult. In July I think, Robin (Zander/vocals) and I are going to be working on…we have two days set aside that we’re going to work together in Chicago, but we have to organize that because we work so much that we don’t have time to do certain things. So, it’s a plan to get together to organize to get ready to maybe do something at the end of this year or beginning of next year."

UW: I’ve always been a big fan of your image…

Nielsen: "The good looking guy?"

UW: (laughs) Yeah, that’s it. I was going to say the geeky image with the bow-tie and cap. Do you remember when you actually developed that image?

Nielsen: "Well, I was never going to be the handsome stud like you are…or, you know, like Jimmy Page. I was never trying to be a guitar hero, so I did something that I felt comfortable with. Yeah, there you go. I didn’t have to dress up. Most people, they dress up not how they feel, they dress up how they think they’re supposed to feel and I don’t have that problem. I just put on my clothes and I look like this."

Click here for the complete interview.

The Guardian's Sean Michaels reports that Cheap Trick have filed a $1 million (£600,000) lawsuit against the Canadian festival where the band were almost killed in 2011. The musicians accused the Ottawa Bluesfest of putting "economic considerations over... safety" in their maintenance of the site's main stage, which collapsed during a storm.

According to the filing by Cheap Trick Touring Inc, Bluesfest responded to the severe weather in an "unsuitable, haphazard and inadequate manner". Not only did the organisers allegedly fail to monitor the environmental conditions, but the band claim they did not check on the sturdiness of the stage or adequately prepare their staff for an emergency.

Cheap Trick were midway through their evening gig on July 17th, 2011 when wind gusts of 117kmh (73mph) began to rake the outdoor stage. "It was like the Titanic or something," their manager, Dave Frey, told Rolling Stone. "It was complete pandemonium." As the structure buckled, frontman Robin Zander began to shout, "Get off the stage! Go, go, go!" The group and more than a dozen crew-members narrowly avoided the falling struts. Three people required hospital treatment, including roadie Sandy Sanderson. Sanderson has already filed his own lawsuit against the festival, accusing organisers of gross negligence.

In addition to Bluesfest and their technical team, Cheap Trick are seeking compensation from the companies that built the festival's stage, sound and lighting rigs. A report from the Ontario ministry of labour found that although the stage was designed to withstand winds of 120kmh (74.5mph), operators neglected to remove the necessary wind-walls. These kinds of omissions "heightened the risk and increased the vulnerability to visitors, including Cheap Trick Touring".

Read more at this location.


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