Illinois Entertainer August 2017 | Page 12

Mick IE: I think Hallyday is still around, too. MJ: Yeah, he is. I just saw him two weeks ago, and unfortunately, he’s a little sick at the moment. He’s got a little battle going on, actually. But he was like my big broth- er, my mentor, and he was crazy. His life was like James Dean and Marlon Brando, all rolled into one. And he was supposed to be on tour this summer. favorite subject at school. So we started an affair while traveling in the back of an IE: Then you ended up with Gary Wright and Mike Harrison in Spooky Tooth, a American station wagon, thinking we weren’t being observed. But we were. So we both got kicked off the tour because she was Dick Rivers; fiancée, unfortunate- ly. Wrong move. But that was the reason I stayed. We were together for over two years, and it was the first love of my life, and it was great. And I loved France, so I stayed on and gradually got to play with bigger and bigger artists, until I ended up with Johnny Hallyday. And that’s when I started writing quite a lot. I was getting my act together by quietly paying my dues, not in the States or in England, but in France. I was learning a lot about studio work, and there was a lot of good stuff going on there, in addition to the food and the women and the booze. band that can claim one of the most non- PC album titles, ever – You Broke My Heart So I Busted Your Jaw. MJ: That’s the one. I was on it, too. And I think Gary came up with that title, and he was the only American in the band, so I guess we figured, “Okay – we’ll let him have his way.” But the interesting thing is, the cover of that album – with all its elon- gated figures – was done by Klaus Voorman, and that was the highlight for me of that album. And there were a few good songs on there, I thought. But that was a big learning curve for me, joining Spooky Tooth. They encompassed not only rock, but a fresh kind of feel and a unique style, and there were hints of R&B in it. And it was almost like a Righteous 08•2017 Foreigner, 1977 Brothers ebb and flow with Gary and Mike – one high voice and one low. So I learned a lot about songwriting and I spent a lot of time in the studio, working with great pro- ducers. IE: It must have been gratifying to – along with your original Foreigner frontman Lou Gramm – finally be inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame recently. MJ: Yeah it was very gratifying. Very scary, too, to be performing in front of all hese incredible musicians and songwriters. mean, Billy Joel inducted us. And Sting was there, Smokey Robinson – you know just a few lightweights! It was a very, very special event for me, and it really brings i home a bit – your songs matter. IE: Full disclosure? For my own amuse ment, a few years ago I changed the lyrics to “Hot Blooded” to reflect a cultural phe Continued on page 52 12 illinoisentertainer.com august 2017