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Andy Cahan bills himself as "the most
famous 
musician you never heard of." 
As keyboard player for the Turtles 
(not to mention associate of Ringo Starr, Jimi Hendrix, 
Little Richard, Chuck Berry, and many 
other luminaries), he's seen the up 
and down sides of the rock-music world since the 
1960s. Mostly up for Andy, who's putting together a 
book of his memoirs that you will be able to read right here... stay tuned.
 
He also has a great CD of his own material, Snarfel. 
The CD includes polished and ruff gems stretching 
from the'90s (at the beginning of the disk) to the'60s 
(at the end). As one man's collection of songwriting in 
the thick of the rock n' roll business, the disk is a 
unique piece of musical history.
  
Click here to 
hear several selections or  
click here to order a copy.
 
ASG: Who are the finest songwriters you've 
worked with? Cahan: The finest songwriters, of 
course,  are Harry Nilsson and Jimmy Seals of Seals 
and Croft. Extremely talented... extremely. 
And then of course, I wrote with Dr. John... those are 
the top three.
 ASG: So, in your opinion, Harry Nilsson was 
a great song writer?
 Cahan: Oh, incredible. He was a genius. 
He is a total genius. He was extremely intelligent. 
Like, we'd be sitting there watching Jeopardy on t.v., 
and he would know the answers before anybody. And, he's 
an incredible, incredible story teller. He could talk 
your ear off for hours and hours.
 ASG: Great vocalist? Cahan: Oh, incredible vocalist. 
He was the Beatles favorite vocalist. That's why when 
I was befriended by him for four years (the last four 
years of his life), we went over to Ringo's house a 
bunch of times. We'd also go to Timothy Leary's, 
Joe Walsh, and a whole bunch of different people.
 ASG: So, you knew Timothy Leary during some of his 
last days as well? Cahan: Yes. I was over to Timothy Leary's 
house several times. ASG: There was a lot of publicity over his 
illness.  Could you comment on that? He was planning 
to commit suicide over the internet, and....
 Cahan: Right, right. Which I think is fantastic, because he 
himself is an icon in history. He is Mr. LSD, Mr. Tune 
In, Turn On, Drop Out.
 
ASG:  Did you know him back in the San Francisco days?
 Cahan:  I only met him in the '90s. When I 
walked into his house the first thing he did was 
walk up to me and gave me a nice, big, wet kiss on 
the lips. I mean, he's just a beautiful guy. He 
had these nice young girls hangin' around with him 
and a gigantic Gumby. You know? And, his kitchen 
table was rainbow colored. It was like going back 
into the '60s.
 ASG: Lets talk about Flo and Eddie 
(Howard Kaylan and Mark Volman of the Turtles 
and the Mothers.) It seems that joining Zappa was 
a coup for Flo and Eddie at the time. Then 
in retrospect, when Zappa got injured and they had 
to quit touring with him, their career never seemed 
to recover to the Turtles level. 
Is that accurate and could you give us some insight 
on that?
 Cahan: Sure. Basically what happened is, when 
the Turtles broke up, their management owned the name 
"The Turtles." So, they couldn't use it. That's why 
they used "Fluorescent Leach" and "Eddie."  
ASG: I never knew it was
"Fluorescent Leach."
 Cahan:  "Fluorescent Leach" and "Eddie" were 
the actual names Frank Zappa named his road managers. 
So, Mark Volman and Howard Kaylan used those names 
instead of "The Turtles." Eventually, after two albums 
on Warner Brothers and two albums on Columbia, they 
finally purchased the name. I think for 
like $35,000 or something. Since about 1983 they've been 
touring, under the name "The Turtles"  
featuring Flo & Eddie.
 ASG: Can you compare the direction of rock n' roll 
today versus the '60s?
 Cahan: I have some very interesting things 
to say about rock n' roll today. Rap music does require 
talent, because you have to have allot of rhythm. Rap 
music is based on rhythm because when a vocalist is 
doing his rap, his vocals are like a drum solo. 
know like DIT-da-DIT-da-da- da, etc. So, it's all 
rhythmic. Unfortunately, there's no melodies... and, no 
understandable lyrics. See, in the '60s with the 
Animals and Rolling Stones and the Kinks, you can 
hear every lyric in the song, and there is always a 
memorable melody-hook-that you can sing. You know...
  {sings} so happy together  or I wanna hold your hand. 
You can always recognize the hook. Now today, 
there's no recognizable hooks. Maybe except for 
Alanis Morrisette, or Pearl Jam, or Soundgarden maybe. 
You know there's some groups today that definitely have 
some hooks but they're few and far between. Ninety 
percent of the music according to Andy Cahan is garbage.
 I'm sure when I was in the '60s, my parents liked Glen Miller. 
But just generally speaking, the songs are lacking 
melodic hooks.
 ASG: Do you think they would sell more if, uh....
 Cahan:I don't know because the buying audience 
is different for each market. So my kids, they're gonna buy R.E.M. and 
Snoop Doggie Dog. And, people my age are into Bruce 
Springsteen.
  ASG: Do you think the L.A. music industry is 
meaner today than in the '60s and' 70s?
 Cahan: Oh man, it's ridiculous today. 
Because in the '60s and '70s a songwriter could go 
into a publishing office or into a record company A&R 
room and sit down with his acoustic guitar or sit down 
at the good old upright piano (which was probably out 
of tune) and play a song for a person. 
And, that person could understand, "Oh, I know what 
he's tryin' to do. I see. I see. We could arrange it 
like this." That's when you could go in with just the 
bare bones, and somebody you were playing the song for 
would have the musical knowledge to picture what it's 
like arranged in a studio. Okay? 	But unfortunately now in the '90s, 
all the A&R people and the people who are supposedly 
intelligent musically, are stupid. They have to hear 
a full arranged master demo. They couldn't picture it 
with just a guitar and a voice. The personal in these Record 
companies changes every 
two or three months, and it's always the cousin of the 
uncle of the sister of the brother of the owner of the 
company. It's just ridiculous. It's absolutely insane. 
That's why I suggest to all my clients, as the Demo 
Doctor to go ahead and 
 independently produce your own CD. 
Because, when you're sending off cassettes to people to 
try and get record deals, it's like going to Las Vegas.
 The odds are against you.  That's why I started my 
"Demo Doctor" business. I have over 6,000 sounds 
ready to go.  If you have an interest in making or 
promoting a demo,
please email me - 
snarfel@rombox.com