Camden, London 28 December 1983 By Dave McNarie Nearly two full months after my initial conversation with Ronnie, I went back to his flat for a follow-up interview. He had returned from the A.R.M.S. tour of the United States earlier in the month, and was still tired from the whole ordeal. He was beginning to show symptoms of the same flu his girlfriend, Boo, was bedridden with, and Ronnie had his two boys, Ruben and Luke, to take care of. It was just after Christmas and the house was filled with the toys and noise of his boys. The phone was ringing off the hook, the kettle was on the boil, and Ronnie had me to deal with. We conducted this interview in the same location as before: the upstairs living room, next to the organ that was present the night the Faces formed so many years before. His boys played, argued, and tumbled nearby, sometimes pausing to watch the episode of "Bonanza" that was on television, or to add welcome disruptions to the "interview". It was a particular pleasure watching Ronnie interact with his children. LANE: Lets take this (phone) off. Right. Where was we? Ive been sittin here all morning, and that phone hasnt rung once. You get here, and it dont stop! DAVE: Well, I attract attention, basically. LANE: Well, you can piss off as well! DAVE: Dont worry, I will with time. Dont worry, I will with time. How are we going to start this? Have any ideas? RUBY: (Referring to television) Will you turn it up, please? Turn it up. LANE: Uh I dont know how were gonna start this. I cant remember what weve done so far. RUBY: Will you turn it up? LANE: Ive got to do an interview. Im doin an interview, Ruby. Im doin an interview on a tape recorder, and I dont want the noise of that to go on the tape recorder, because Salt Lake City wouldnt be very interested in Bonanza from England. RUBY: Are you going to do an impression of me? Am I going to be on ere? On there? (Pointing to tape recorder). LANE: Well, you will be if you keep shouting. DAVE: Basically, I thought Id come back and do an update once you got back (from the American A.R.M.S. tour). What stories do you have to tell about the tour? LANE: Well, Joe Cocker was a great addition. Joe Cocker was a fantastic addition to the lineup, and he helped out greatly. Everybody had a ball. It was a magical kind of a tour. We raised $18,000 less than a million, which is now a million dollars because its been invested, obviously. The interest has bumped it up to a million dollars. Also, my idea of starting an Action Research into MS in America has taken a bit of a rockin because I dont know how to put it together properly. I mean, I know how to put one together, but I want to put a very potent one together, you know? An effective (organization) together, not a sham, and not one thats there just to spend the money. So Ive got a little bit more research to do on all that. But it will be done! Also, I never realized when I was goin over (to the US) with this kind of naïve idea of mine that I was actually stepping on a political minefield, you know? DAVE: Oh, really? LANE: Oh, yeah! The MS Society, theyve got it all sewn up, and they dont want anybody else in there, you know? And theyre the very people that have Oh, I could tell you some very strange stories! I mean, let me tell you this story: You know this HBO, this Hyperberic Oxygen treatment? (It) basically saved my life mentally, for me, because I had no energy. I couldnt speak, at one stage. I certainly didnt have any energy to exercise or anything until I took oxygen under pressure. Now, the MS Society have pooh-hood hyperberic oxygen, and put it aside and said "its dangerous, its brain damage " Its only oxygen under pressure; its not a drug! I mean, they say that steroids are all right, and things like that, that [makes raspberry] blow you up to look like a hamster and all that. But, this oxygen under pressure is dangerous, all of a sudden! Now, I know that is absolute nonsense, and this is what I want to put about. The MS Society hired a doctor Fisher, back in the seventies, to prove once and for all that hyperberic oxygen is no use, whatsoever, to people with MS. He worked on it for some years, and he couldnt do it. His report came out in favor of the hyperberic oxygen. They asked him to go back and write his report again. Three times they sent him back to rewrite his report. The last time he finished it was in 1980. While I was still walkin about ordinarily, I might add. They didnt rush-release the report at all, because it was in favor of HBO. In actual fact, it was only released early this year, 1983. Meanwhile, Ive become crippled, ya see? Theyve dismantled his oxygen chamber. Its now in a car park in New York! He had a chamber himself, and he could not prove that oxygen was no good. He could only prove that it is of some help. Its not a cure. Dont get me wrong, its not a cure. But, its of great assistance for someone to help keep it under control, and to live with it kind of ordinarily, yknow? (To) lead a bit of a life instead of gradually becoming crippled all of the time. Anyway, thats a story about the MS Society, and its not a very nice story. Not a very nice story at all, but it happens to be the case. And I think its disgusting, ya know? DAVE: Did the tour get enough money to open your own hyperberic chamber LANE: Well, we did, but my point is that we cant do it in America like we can over here. You see, we can open up our own chamber over here where you just breathe pure oxygen through a mask, and your relatives can learn to operate the chamber. Well, we did, but my point is that we cant do it in America like we can over here. You see, we can open up our own chamber over here where you just breathe pure oxygen through a mask, and your relatives can learn to operate the chamber. But you wont be able to do that in America. The other (system) is where you dont need a mask, the whole chamber is full of pure (pressurized) oxygen. There, youre talkin about a bomb, so youve got to have trained, proper technicians to run it. What I hope to do, I think, is to get something called an NMR scanner, which is Nuclear Magnetic Response (sic), would you believe? Its like kind of an x-ray, but its not an x-ray. But, its such a fine instrument that it can actually take a picture of your nerves, yknow? Now, what I aim to do is to get someone with MS and get them under this NMR scanner, and then put them through the treatment of the HBO, and then take a picture of them after the HBO. To prove, once and for all, that HBO does help. Its not a cure, but it does help. I dont know. Weve got a long way to go. DAVE: What would the main obstacle be in the States, then? LANE: Finding the people, I suppose. I dont know how to find the people. Ysee, ARMS over here was created by people with MS that got so frustrated at this whole attitude towards MS You know, this sort of, "Well, youve got an incurable disease, now. Youre going to get crippled for the rest of your life, but just sit back and accept it. Weve got a nice wheelchair for you out in the hall, and everythings going to be rosy. Dont make a panic, youll upset everyone." You know what I mean?! Thats what youre given. So they created ARMS, Action Research into Multiple Sclerosis, to try and get some absolute answers because we got fed up. I mean, it strikes mehorrible thing to say, this is, but Im gonna say it-- it strikes me that, in a lot of cases, MS is the bread ticket for a lot of so-called "societies" and, without it, theyd be out of a job. Ya know what I mean? Which makes me wonder about cancer and leukemia, Yknow? I wonder. I mean, like, Ive seen it and I know that is the case with MS, so whats happening with cancer and leukemia? I wonder. DAVE: How many of these hangers-on are preventing a cure? LANE: Absolutely! Preventing the cure, yeah. I mean, like, what a bread-ticket cancer is! DAVE: Yeah, Im sure it is for thousands of people. LANE: I mean, "we cant find a cure for that!
Thousands of people would be out of work! (laughter) I mean, millions of
people would be cured, but thousands of people would be out of work!" I dont know. I dont know if Im sounding sick, but, uh DAVE: Well, lets see Do you have some stories from the tour though? Winwood pulled out and Cocker LANE: Cocker took his place, yeah. DAVE: Did Paul Rodgers go over? LANE: Paul Rodgers, yeah. DAVE: Hows he doing? LANE: Oh, hes doing fine. Hes a gentleman! Yeah, he went over and helped out Jeff Becks set. Did you see the show over here? O DAVE: No. LANE: Because the video of the show over here is going to be on the telly the TV, I suppose, in America. But it wont be like the one Its a pity they didnt get a video of the ones in America, because that was so good! I mean, it really was good. The Albert Hall one was good, but DAVE: Yeah, I heard you on the phone. You said you didnt think that one was nearly as good as the stuff you did in the States. LANE: It wasnt. Oh, no. It wasnt. I mean, the more it played, obviously like any kind of band, the more it got together. And, by the time we did Madison Square Garden, it was very sharp. It really was, and I wish that had been videoed. DAVE: Youve got a video coming out. Are there going to be any albums coming out or anything like this? LANE: No, nothing like that. You know, the politics of it all got in the way, as usual! Yknow? The same old thing! Its bureaucracy and politics. Its always the same. DAVE: Yeah thats the story. Well, how many shows did you do in the States? Was it about seven? LANE: I think it was nine. Lets see. There were two in Dallas, two in San Francisco, two in LA, and two in New York. Why did I say nine? Thats eight, isnt it? Or was it three in San Francisco? I think it was three in San Francisco. It was nine. The two in Dallas financed the tour, really. DAVE: So everything else was just money in the pocket. LANE: San Francisco, LA and New York was totally for the charity. But we are definitely going to do something use the money for MS in America. I mean, Glyn Johns, the producer of the show, was most adamantand I agree with him-- that you cant raise a lot of money in one country and take it over to another. But in the long run, it doesnt really matter who gets there first, because If America finds it first, or England finds it first, its soon going to scoot across the pond. So, either countrys going to benefit from it. DAVE: Eventually, yeah. LANE: Eventually, yes, without a doubt. But I dont think there is such a cure for MS. It is such a strange disease that I do not know how much of it is kind of subconscious, yknow? DAVE: You mean that if you have a defeatist attitude, it will be worse for you LANE: Absolutely! Oh, without a doubt. Yeah, if youve got a defeatist attitude itll certainly get you down. And, of course, the way the disease comes on, its all kind of aimed its whole strategy is to make you feel like that, to make you feel defeatist. You get so weak. You get unbelievably weak! Ive never been a strong man, but I never realized what weak meant until I got MS, yknow? (Laughs) You havent even got the strength to think straight! DAVE: Ive had those lots of times, but I dont think its the same thing. LANE: Well, I dont know. It all adds up to the same thing, in the end. DAVE: How did it effect you? Can you describe, basically, how its effected you from the period of time that you found out you had it, or figured that you had it. Like you say, at first it was just, basically, a numb feeling here and there? LANE: Yeah. A bit of double vision, a numb feeling. You kind of wonder "I wonder what that is??" And it would go away, so you wouldnt take much notice. So, next time it came, youd sit it out and wait for it to go away. And then the numbness, each time it comes back its a little bit worse, a fraction worse. Yknow, its got plenty of time to work on you. Its in no hurry to knock you down straight away. Another thing that Ive found, talking to people that have it, is that theyve all been through some kind of an emotional upheaval, like a death in the family. Or theyve been raped. Something horrible has happened in their life, a real emotional upheaval. And then MS appears about six months later, a year later. Ysee, I dont believe there IS a cure for MS. I think a lot of its got to do with whats up there (pointing to head). DAVE: Mental attitude. LANE: Mental attitude, yes. And, of course, the last thing you want to hear The thing that people with MS are being told is, "Relax. Dont do anything. Relax. Dont worry." Yknow what I mean? "The wheelchairs in the hall, and its awaiting you." You know what I mean? And the whole thing is crazy! Id say, "nuts! You forget all that! You fuck!" Like, "fuck!" Yknow what I mean? Who would let somebody push their life around, where you stop looking around like it is "somebody" doing it? Start fighting it like it is somebody doin it, and then I think youve got a chance of getting on top of it. But you dont just let it insidiously crawl all over you, because it certainly will. Cor! Ive got a long way to go yet, but Im gonna beat this thing. I know I am. (Pause) I think Ive got the fight Ive always wanted!! (Laughter) DAVE: Go on and describe how it ceased up your body. LANE: Oh, dear, I cant remember that. Well, it started in my left arm and hand. I went to put a bass guitar on a song I wrote and I couldnt do it. I thought, "Thats strange." It was really odd. It was like my arm had become a piece of dead meat that was attached to my body, yknow? It is really quite a strange disease, this one. DAVE: What is it? Just like the feeling when youve slept on it wrong and its all numb? What is it? Just like the feeling when youve slept on it wrong and its all numb? LANE: Yeah! Thats it! Yeah, thats it. And you go to lift it up or something and theres nothing there! All of the connections theres no connection to it. As I said, its like a lump of dead meat hanging off your shoulder! Its hard to believe that its happening to you, as well. Its very hard to believe that thats happening to you. Its the kind of thing youd have nightmares about, I suppose. Thats another thing that happens to people with MS. Of course, they wont believe that theyve got it. With me, I wouldnt believe that Id got it. DAVE: "Oh, that couldnt happen to me!" That sort of LANE: Yeah! "Its not my kind of lifestyle, man!!" Yknow?? So I had to got through all that shit to come up to where I am now, which, I think, is a much healthier way of lookin at it. But, My God, I would like to get something concrete together. I would like to think that, by the time Im finished, if someone like (I was) seven years ago has just been told that theyve got it, they could find out a bit more about it and how to handle it. I couldnt take it seriously, especially the attitude that Im tellin you about! I couldnt believe it was happening! Lifes always been good to me, and Ive always thought, "what a great world it is we live in." And, all of a sudden , krckk!, overnight it changed. Youve got this thing, and people are telling you, "dont worry!" (Laughs). Its weird. Its really weird. Anyway, well see if we cant get to the bottom of it. DAVE: Theres no ARMS group in the States yet? Or is it just now starting? LANE: Its just now starting. DAVE: Do you have any other stories about what went on during the tour? LANE: Well Nothing really stands out. The whole tour was happy, yknow. Everybody breezed along and enjoyed each others company. It was magic. DAVE: Did you do any playing yourself? LANE: I didnt do any playing. I did a couple of songs. I did "Goodnight, Irene," again at the end because Eric [Clapton] wanted me to! I did "April Fool" off of the Rough Mix album, and I could sing it better. And I found out that Id actually got in contact with my voice again, which was a pleasant surprise. I bought that Gretsch guitar over there. What you think of that?
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