By GINA VIVINETTO, Times Pop Music Critic
© St. Petersburg Times, published July 14, 2000
C.C. DeVille is on the phone. He's excited about the Poison tour.
He's excited about his new band Samantha 7. If you've seen VH-1's
Behind The Music about Poison, the guitarist's primary band that
scored hits with Talk Dirty To Me and Every Rose Has Its Thorn, you
know DeVille has a gravelly Brooklyn squawk that only further
heightens his, ah, colorful personality.
Although DeVille's bleached-blond hair isn't as big -- hey, it's not
the 1980s anymore -- and despite the fact that he's been clean and
sober for five years, DeVille, 38, shows he's still got the rock star
goods: major attitude, bawdy sense of humor and a signature way with
the four-letter words.
Now touring with Poison again and just getting Samantha 7 started,
DeVille gives his thoughts on teen pop, lead singer Bret Michaels'
hair, and what it's like for a rock star to get really fat.
Q: Is it true you're classically trained?
A: I studied music theory at New York University.
Q: NYU? You're a brainy son of a gun.
A: No, I'm not. I'm an a---. I left NYU to be a star. I wanted to be
an entertainer in an unconventional way.
Q: Who are your guitar idols?
A: Man, Johnny Thunders (New York Dolls) was the hippest guy in the
world to me. I also loved Rick Nielsen from Cheap Trick and Richie
Stotts from the Plasmatics.
Q: So you dig punk rock?
A: Oh yeah, yeah. That's my background. And, see, I like songs.
That's why I love the Samantha 7 record. It's got songs. That's
why 'N Sync and Britney Spears do so well. There's a bunch of really
great songs on those albums.
Q: Do you miss the big hair?
A: At the time I didn't think my hair was so over the top. Now I look
back and I think, "What the f--? I can see why everyone talks about it."
Q: Everyone's getting back into that 1980s hair metal.
A: There's a real resurgence for that stuff, but it became
so bloated. That's why everyone loved Nirvana. It was a reaction to
all that. Everyone heard Nirvana and went, "Oh, thank God, we're so
sick of the makeup and the shaking the hips and stuff. Enough already
with the f--- pouting."
Q: Does rock and roll keep you young?
A: My running keeps me young. I run eight to 10 miles every day.
Q: Only a handful of rock stars have gotten fat. Jim Morrison, Ann
Wilson of Heart. Last year the press crucified Rob Thomas of Matchbox
Twenty for putting on weight. What was your experience?
A: I put on 80 pounds when I got sober. I never planned on going back
into music. Let me tell you, you can be a junkie in this industry and
as long as you don't put it in people's faces -- it's a "Don't ask,
don't tell" policy -- but if you're overweight, everyone says, "That's
disgusting." It jeopardizes your career. It's all about looks, man.
Hollywood is so superficial.
When I wanted to get back into music, I knew I had to take the weight
off. I started running and jogging. That became compulsive, but I can
control it. Plus it's good. It's about time I started being compulsive
about things that are good for me.
Q: Was it hard to write music when you got clean?
A: At first it's hard. You can't create like you used to when you
first get sober. But all the creativity comes back eventually. And
you have to be creative in the first place; the drugs don't make you
creative.
Q: Like Brian Wilson?
A: Brian Wilson was a genius. He kills me, that f--. He's my favorite.
That Pet Sounds album blows me away.
Q: What do you think about those guys like Tommy Lee who can't seem
to get it together?
A: I know for me, I needed to get better. I like Tommy Lee a lot.
He's the archetypal prodigal son. He's a rebel. Let's face it, rock
and roll has gotten a little wimpy. I'm guilty of it, too. I mean,
who wants their rock stars to be running?
Q: What's your favorite food?
A: Sushi. The sashimi kind. I love brown rice. And Diet Coke and Diet
Dr Pepper.
Q: Do the guys in Poison still have those knock-down, drag-out fights?
A: We're all getting along fantastic. We've been in Poison since 1985,
15 years. It's like a marriage. My mom would say, "You guys fight,
you make up, you fight, you make up.' Then at some point you realize
this is a part of you. Me and my brother saw my parents bicker, but it
was never an issue. We knew they would never split up. It's like that.
Q: The truth: Why does Bret always wear that bandana? Is he bald?
A: I don't know.
Q: You're just being diplomatic.
A: I wouldn't even know about that situation.