HIS NAME WAS LARRY by Gary Pig Gold
IRWIN CHUSID (author, “Songs In The Key Of Z” ):
MARK MOTHERSBAUGH (Devo):
DENNIS P. EICHHORN (tour manager; Real Stuff Comics creator):
IRWIN CHUSID:
SOLOMON BURKE (King of Rock & Soul and Larry’s initial mentor):
LARRY: I just think I’m the best rock singer in the world.
DAVID FISCHER (Larry’s older brother):
* * * * * * * * * * LARRY: You know what happened to my career? Nothing. I have nothing, you know? Once in a while I go out and sing, but that’s very rare. I’m too scared of the music business. And I’m too scared of all the people in it. Is that sad or what?
“DERAILROADED”:
LARRY: That’s what the show-business people are like. They love to torture their entertainers. Those fuckers in show business, you know? They turned me into the psycho I’ve become.
BILLY MUMY (producer, Pronounced Normal, Nothing Scary):
DR. LOUIS SASS (Professor of Clinical Psychology, Rutgers University ) :
LARRY: I’m scared. There’s people after me. I don’t know who’s involved. I just don’t know who’s involved. It’s been a nightmare. All kinds of things have happened to me. Things that you would not believe.
“THE WILD MAN FISCHER STORY”:
LARRY: Well, my life has not been all that pleasant. My father died when I was young and my mother didn’t love me, or didn’t care about me. She used to make me eat on the sink. They made me stand up and eat on the sink. My mother didn’t love me.
GAIL ZAPPA:
“WHY I AM NORMAL”:
LARRY: The first audition I went on was for Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In. And I got it.
DAN ROWAN (Laugh-In episode # 16, 1968) :
FRANK ZAPPA (producer, An Evening with Wild Man Fischer) :
LARRY: Frank Zappa told me that he could make me a rock star. And if Frank Zappa told you that, wouldn’t you think you might be able to become a rock star? FRANK ZAPPA: But when you’re working with someone like Wild Man Fischer, the problems that arise become too much to bear.
“DO THE WILDMAN”:
FRANK ZAPPA: One thing that you must remember about Wild Man Fischer is that he actually is a wild person. And, uh, Larry is dangerous. LARRY: He loved it. He said that if he ever had a son, he wanted his son to be just like me. I swear to God he said that. FRANK ZAPPA: I spent three months working on the Wild Man Fischer album. And at the end of that time not only was I accused of robbing Wild Man Fischer and cheating Wild Man Fischer and abusing him – most of this from Wild Man Fischer himself – but the album itself did not sell a large amount of copies.
“THE WILD MAN FISCHER STORY”:
LARRY: Well, I never became a rock star. Frank Zappa fired me. That’s it.
“FRANK”:
LARRY: You got to have three things: You got to have talent. You got to have luck. And you got to have persistence. GAIL ZAPPA: I never thought that he would have a real career. And I see him now, and he looks like a very, very exhausted version of that person that I knew then. He’s almost identical. * * * * * * * * * * LARRY: Want to hear how I started a multimillion-dollar empire? “Go To Rhino Records” – you ever heard that song before?
“GO TO RHINO RECORDS”:
LARRY: That’s the first song that was ever done for Rhino Records. I started a multimillion-dollar company! I became Rhino Records’ mascot! Think about it.
“THE BOUILLABAISSE”:
DAVID FISCHER: Larry never seemed to have any money, no matter how many albums the guy was doing. It was beyond me. If they do an album on somebody and if it’s not successful, why are you doing another? And what was he supposed to get out of it? I mean, he certainly was very upset and bitter about it.
“IT’S A MONEY WORLD”:
LARRY: Show business is really hard. You really can’t trust that very many people. Rhino Records, and most people, have taken advantage of me. Here’s a song I wrote about the music business:
“DERAILROADED”:
AGREEMENT DATED 12/1/83:
“DON’T BE A SINGER”:
LARRY: I don’t want to be a rock singer no more. It’s a horrifying experience. It’s a nightmare. It’s not as good as you think it is. People use singers.
LARRY (letter to Dennis Eichhorn):
MARK MOTHERSBAUGH: He’d call me up and go “Mark, I’m quitting show biz. Do you blame me?” I’d go “No, I don’t blame you. It’s an awful business.” He would quit show business about two or three times a week.
“IT’S A HARD BUSINESS” (recorded with Rosemary Clooney):
* * * * * * * * * * LARRY: The main reason I got into the music business was to impress my family, earn a living, complete my dream. But I knew I would never be able to tour. I’m too paranoid.
RUDY RAY MOORE (The Avenging Disco Godfather):
“ONE OF A KIND MIND”:
DR. LOUIS SASS: I think there are a lot of different reasons why people are drawn to Larry’s music. One of them is a little bit like the reason why people a century or two ago would go sometimes to the asylums to look at the patients. It’s a kind of voyeurism to stare at this person who seems so weird and so uninhibited. But a second reason, of course, is that we’re really moved by what he says and the story that he tells of his life and of his sufferings. MARK MOTHERSBAUGH: He’s a force of nature. He’s like a poet. He’s a bard in the best of ways, I think. If he grew up in Mongolia, he might have been considered a shaman. And everything that he is and does would be tolerated. LARRY: I guess I’m getting older now. I can’t be a musician/singer anymore. I’m too old. I want to be a musician/singer. I want to make everybody happy.
“DO YOU EVER HAVE A GOAL IN LIFE”:
* * * * * * * * * *
GARY PIG GOLD:
Lawrence Wayne Fischer passed away on June 16, 2011.
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