Little Steven got interviewed by the EVENING HERALD, an Irish newspaper published in Dublin. While the motivation for the writeup has been the syndication of Steven’s UNDERGROUND GARAGE radio program on a Dublin station, he does give some reflections about his musical career pre-1999 and promotes his latest campaign.
“We’ve been endorsed from inside the academic community which hasn’t happened before,” he reveals. “Rock’n'roll is still the last outcast. You can get curriculums on movie making or jazz but rock’n'roll has been late to the game. Bruce Springsteen, Martin Scorsese and Bono are my first three board members so it’s going to be extremely exciting.”
Although the interview doesn’t really focus on Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes, Steve does give some insight into his – an that’s been probably more than true for Southside as well – personal situation in the 1990s…
The infrastructure that had supported rock’n'roll had disappeared.
“Disintegrated. There was no support. So I just walked away.”
While the SOPRANOS (an HBO TV Series by David Chase) was a turning point in Steven’s life, music still has been the path he was following:
“So I started the radio show. Then Bruce put the band back together so I went from no job to three jobs.”
And it has all been beginning in 1964:
“On February 8 there were no bands in America. On February 10, the day after the Beatles played, everybody had one. In the suburbs they rehearsed in the garages, which is where the term comes from.
“There were 10 or 12 bands in our region. The ones who were left were the true freaks, misfits and outcasts, which were basically me and Bruce. People think, ‘You were so noble hanging in there against all the odds’,” he laughs. “But that’s nonsense. We were there because we had no choice.”
In the forelight of Superbowl Sunday, this has been a nice plug for the man behind Bruce…
Read the whole article at THE DUBLIN EVENING HERALD



