āI Donāt Ever Want to Grow Upā: Bootsy Collins and Matt Berninger on Freedom and Legacy

Photo by Michael Weintrob.
Bootsy Collins puts the āfunā in funk. His music consistently infuses pulpy melodies with infectious charisma that just make you want to move. With a career spanning nearly five decades, Collins continues to sound fresh and innovative. He defies categorization; over the years, heās worked with everyone from James Brown to Kali Uchis. His influence is most noticeably seen in Childish Gambinoās āRedbone,ā which pays homage to Collinsās 70s hit āIād Rather Be with You.ā In keeping with his habit of surprising collaborations, his latest album, titled The Power of the One, brings together artists and thinkers such as Snoop Dogg and Dr. Cornel West. In honor of his new project, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame legend hopped on the phone with fellow Cincinnatian Matt Berninger, the lead singer of The National, who also has a new album out titled Serpentine Prison. The pair discussed Ohioās musical legacy, James Brown, and why growing up isnāt all itās cracked up to be. āJULIANA UKIOMOGBE
āāā
MATT BERNINGER: Hi, Bootsy.
BOOTSY COLLINS: How you doing today?
BERNINGER: Iām actually pretty good. Iām in California. Itās sunny and nice. Where are you?
COLLINS: Iām in Cincinnati, Ohio. You know, one of your homies.
BERNINGER: I miss it. I havenāt been there in a little while. Whatās the vibe in Cincinnati?
COLLINS: As far as the weather, you just never know from day to day. Itās cold then itās hot. As far as musically speaking, you know how Cincinnati is. Itās very conservative. But downtown was opening up pretty good before COVID hit. People had started to come back down, but everybodyās struggling now.
BERNINGER: I wanted to talk to you about Cincinnati as a place and as a really healthy musical place. I did leave the city to pursue things in New York and now here in L.A., but I always thought Cincinnati was incredibly fertile. There were so many venues and bands.

Photo by Chantal Anderson.
COLLINS: To me, it was probably one of the best places to grow up, especially if you were into music, because you had just about every kind of music there was. You had all the clubs. Coming up back in the day, everything was pretty much available and everybody was into it. We were out there going to different places and getting gigs. It was a great experience musically, and we had fun doing it. Thatās the reputation of Cincinnati. King Records, which weāre involved with now, is the blueprint of Cincinnati because it engaged and embraced all genres of music. Everybody just did their thing. Thatās how the city developed musically.Ā
BERNINGER: My band The National is from there, but I know so many different bands like The Breeders and Guided by Voices around that areaāSouthern Ohio and Cincinnati specifically. Thereās a really fertile cross-pollination of lots of different music genres. It was there when I was first dipping my feet into going to see stuff at Bogartās and Sudsy Maloneās. But I was always wondering, how did Cincinnati get such fertile soil? I know with traveling bands going from Chicago, to this place, to New York, itās a stop-off. Itās geographically a spot where you got to try to pick up a gig on your way to New York or Chicago or Detroit, so thatās how it kind of started, right?
COLLINS: Yeah. You had all kinds, all breeds. Everybody stopped through here, and a lot of people stayed. Starting off, it was just no limits. Nobody could tell you that you couldnāt put jazz with funk or you couldnāt put rock with blues. People just took chances and did things. Itās real difficult to explain it, but it happened. Iām just glad to be a part of it, and Iām glad I had a chance to experience that side of it, because if you donāt get a chance to experience it, itās like watching a movie as opposed to being in it.
BERNINGER: Yeah, I feel you. Itās a conservative city, but there is a really healthy, progressive, artsy, strange side. If you want to, you can find a group of people that are up for anything artistically.
COLLINS: It was a lot of what I call āinside rebellionā going on. It was a really conservative city and everything, but I think inside, there was a whole lot of rebellion. It just wasnāt as loud as other places. Now everybodyās like, āWow, we didnāt know Cincinnati was like that.ā Theyāre getting a look for the first time, but itās been like that.
BERNINGER: I wanted to talk to you about when you started a band with your brother in the late ā60s, and then the two of you worked with James Brown and then eventually with Parliament. When you left Cincinnati, you started broadening your horizons. How did you evolve into what you are now?
COLLINS: Wow, I think for me it really started when I got my wish of playing with my brother Phelps. That was the biggest hurdle at that time. How do I get to play with my older brother? Older treat younger brothers like dirt. He didnāt want to have me around, but the band that he always rehearsed with loved to have me around because I was always excited to watch them play. I didnāt ask for nothing. I just wanted to watch rehearsal. My brother didnāt like when I was around until one day he needed a bass player. Of course, I didnāt have a bass. I had a guitar. But I explained to him that if he got me four bass strings that I would put the bass strings on this guitar and I would be the bass player for that night. That was the night that started everything. The thing that got me wanting to be a musician was when I had to play at King Records and we became studio musicians. We met Gene Redd who was one of the top A&R engineers over there. Henry Glover, who produced all the bluegrass, the country, the R&B, gospel, was producing everything over there. He got us to do all these records. Out on the road with Hank Ballard was the first hooked-up gig that we did with James Brown. I guess at the time James Brown was trying us. He was testing. We had no idea he was testing, because maybe later on like, āYeah, we might be in his band,ā but we had no idea it was in his mind. Sure enough, as a year went by, a year or two, next thing we know, we get a call from Bobby Byrd and, āJames Brown want yāall to come on down to Augusta and play the gig.ā We thought we were going down to open the show, because thatās what we were doing, playing behind his opening acts. But little did we know, he wanted us to be his band. We didnāt find that out until we went. He sent his jet to Cincinnati, Ohio with Bobby Byrd. They picked us up at a club. We went from the limo to the Learjet. Man, explaining that whole story in sentences, you really canāt do it.

Photo by Nick Presniakov.
BERNINGER: I know. You reinvented yourself so many times. One learning experience, one opportunity, one Learjet leads to something else. All along the way, youāve been in so many different bands and collaborated with so many different artists.Ā
COLLINS: Part of the process was was not getting hooked on any one of them. It was more about the experience and the learning process. Like, if I had got hooked on Learjets, I wouldnāt have been able to come from James Brown and go to riding in cars with Funkadelic. I wasnāt stuck on none of the stuff which artists usually get stuck on. Even the really bad stuff musicians go through, I went through it and got through it. You just keep moving. If Iād got stuck on, āOkay, funk music is what got me recognized,ā but that donāt mean I donāt love jazz, I donāt love rock, I donāt love heavy metal, I donāt love country. I tip my hat to the experiences and not me, per se. It was about learning this process. āWhereās this going to take me?ā That is what was more important to me. Thatās what kept it more interesting and fun.
BERNINGER: I love that. When you talk about being stuck and then the process, I think that is what is the central motivating thing for any artistic soul. When someone feels like they can define you, that still can quickly feel like a leash or a box. That makes it hard to learn a new process. When youāre stuck with the same box, you donāt discover anything new, because youāre not in any new water, meaning youāre not with new people challenging yourself. And so, I think with art, everything you just said made it really resonate. If youāre scared of what kind of art youāre making, thatās such an invigorating feeling because at least youāre not on a leash, you know?
COLLINS: To me, it means as much as the music⦠to have that kind of freedom. I never take that for granted. I was put here to give what I got. I didnāt make what I got. That was a gift to me. Musicians didnāt make what they are given. Theyāre given that talent. It was given to you, so you give that to people, and the people reward you for it. Itās not rocket science. It just feels so good. It makes you want to keep doing it. Thatās the magic of what happened in my whole story.Ā
BERNINGER: Iāve gone off and talked about people being water. Itās this idea that if youāre blue water and somebody else is yellow water, youāre going to be a little bit green. Youāre both going to be new colors. Thatās collaboration. When I say water, you talk about light in a similar way.
COLLINS: Yeah, itās the same concept. The good thing is they both are one. We are the same thing. For me, thatās invigorating.Ā
BERNINGER: Thatās so interesting. I was raised Catholic. I donāt know if I believe in an interventionist god, but I believe in interventionist art, and I believe in interventionist people who are good. I guess Iām like a polytheist or an omnitheist, meaning we are the collective force of wonder and goodness and god and all that stuff. When I started thinking that way, it made me feel more responsible for my actions and more engaged. Somehow, it made me feel like itās not about getting to the pearly gates, itās living heaven now and trying to spread heaven now.

COLLINS: To me, itās very uplifting. Every time I talk to someone or see someone or interact with someone, I know itās a give and a take. Iām always on the giving side and Iāll always listen. Most people miss the listening part. Youāve got to learn something.Ā
BERNINGER: People keep asking me if music make a difference politically. There have been times where Iāve thought maybe it doesnāt because of how politically disconnected we are. But then I think, well, what if there hasnāt been any of this music? Where would we be without it? I grew up on the west side of Cincinnati. There were very few people that didnāt look exactly like me around me, but it was just about connection. I went to UC. I moved to the campus there. And then I moved to Brooklyn and lived there for 18 years. When youāre just with people, like you say, on the subway or in a studio or in a rock club, all these boxes or ways that we define each other just dissolve. On this record, The Power of the One, youāve got so many people on it. Your music and your whole personality are always about fun. You just canāt not move your body to your music. Itās so infectious.
COLLINS: Well, I think it stems from all of the stuff that you go through, and you take it out on people or you take it out on the world. The way I made it through was such a blessing, mainly because of my mother. I grew up in a household with no father in it. I grew up wanting to be the guy that takes care of my mother. I learned because there wasnāt nobody volunteering. I just wanted to learn from every source I could. This is not a past-tense thing. I still want to learn. I feel like Iāve been to that mountain when we were peaking as Bootsyās Rubber Band. I never want to go there again by myself. That world, that fame, that stardom, I never want to be that ever again. If I can be a platform for others, I prefer to do that. I always wanted to be in the band, but never wanted to front the band. For some reason, I always knew that that was the mug that had the target on his back, on his face, and on everything else. It was a curse and a blessing at the same time. Thatās something I donāt ever want to be again. Iād rather have people and learn from people. I can learn from a drunk or a person on the corner. It donāt matter. To me, that was my saviorālistening and learning. I want to keep that openness. When I stop being a kid is when I die. I donāt ever want to grow up, because I see what happens to grownups. Iām supposed to be one myself, but you aināt heard it from me.
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25 Things You Missed In Once Upon A Time In Hollywood
25 Things You Missed In Once Upon A Time In Hollywood
Did you catch any of these hidden clues and Easter eggs in Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon A Time In Hollywood? Subscribe to our channel:
Once Upon a Time in Hollywood has finally arrived, and is already the source of much debate. After a massive opening weekend, odds are youāve seen the film, but did you catch everything in it?
In Tarantino tradition, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood is stuffed to the gills with cameos, references, and allusions to other films and celebrities. Even more than other Tarantino movies, Hollywood history is baked into the story, it can be very easy to miss something.
Donāt despair! Your pals at ScreenRant have you covered with a detailed look at the stuff you may have missed.
Including:
An actor dedicated to capturing the essence of Charles Manson. The unusual opening credit that hints at the thematic intentions of the film. A Tarantino favourite who makes a memorable cameo. A playful insult with some fascinating real life history. A quick cameo by a 60ās icon. The background to Bruce Leeās most memorable scene. Another Tarantino stalwart with an awesome walk-on. The key to one of the movieās very best scenes. A prominent prop with a purpose. The tragic true-life story behind Cliffās marriage. An actor with a cool couple of parents. Some history behind the filmās scenes in Italy. Pitch perfect stunt casting in the movieās western sequences. The final film of an accomplished actor. A music cue which foreshadows a later plot development. A Hollywood icon who died before his scenes could be completed. Some connections between other films in the Tarantino-verse.
All these and many more in the full video!
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Charlize Theron’s Daughter Jackson Attempts Kylie Jennerās Makeup Look
Charlize TheronĀ is the ultimate jokester.Ā
On Wednesday, Dec. 9, theĀ Charlie Angel‘sĀ star took to InstagramĀ to share her own version of a classicĀ Kylie JennerĀ makeup look. The photo was originally shared to the platform on Sunday, Nov. 15 in preparation for theĀ the 2020 E! People’s Choice Awards. The full-face glam, complete with red lipstick and gold eyeshadow, was done by the actress’ 7-year-old daughterĀ Jackson Theron.Ā
The caption read, “You guys…getting ready for the #PeoplesChoiceAwards #bestmakeupartistever #alreadywinning #shantayyoustay”Ā
Clearly, the mother of two thought the style looked familiar as she later posted the photo side by side with a pic of the reality star and joked, “Who’s who?”
Kylie simply commented under the photo a string of crying laughing emojis.Ā
The makeup tutorial was surely a bonding moment for the star’s oldest daughter. Charlize also has another adopted daughter, 5-year-oldĀ August, both of whom she raises alone.Ā
Writer/Director Adam Egypt Mortimer on Archenemy
CS Interview: Writer/Director Adam Egypt Mortimer on Archenemy
Ahead of the filmās theatrical and digital debut, ComingSoon.net got the opportunity to chat with acclaimed writer/director Adam Egypt Mortimer (Daniel Isnāt Real) to discuss his work on his latest project, the superhero thrillerĀ ArchenemyĀ starring Joe Manganiello (Justice League)!
RELATED:Ā Archenemy Review: Kinetic, Colorful & Refreshingly Original Superhero Take
ComingSoon.net: How did the concept ofĀ ArchenemyĀ first come to yours and [co-story developer] Lucas Passmoreās minds?
Adam Egypt Mortimer:Ā Well you have to understand, I grew up loving comics and superheroes and comic stories and I always felt like comics took those characters, those stories and the aesthetics of those stories in all kinds of wild and exciting directions, which I donāt think we have quite gotten to see yet in superhero movies. Especially when I started writing this in, like, 2015, so I was kind of thinking about what are some amazing things we could be doing with these characters that we havenāt done in movies that comic books were able to do. At a certain point, way back in the ā80s, comic creators were like, āAt this point, everybody knows what superheroes are, so now we can go buck wild,ā so I was like, āMaybe now, weāre getting to a point where if the movie audience understands what superheroes are, we donāt have to do origin stories and all of that.ā There was always a kind of longing that I had to play around with superheroes and it really started from this idea that a superhero-ish figure with a fucked-up cape is sitting in a bar drinking whiskey, that image that a superhero is some kind of fucked up person. We donāt quite have that imagery in the film, because the cape takes on a different significance, but we sort of started there and thought, āWouldnāt it be cool if The Wrestler was about a superhero,ā you know, like this idea of somebody who had a path, had a whole kind of glorious comic book world, but thatās all in the past and what he is now is a broken man looking to reclaim his glory and is that path even true. So I guess that was the origin of it and I sort of pitched that idea to Lucas, who is a good friend of mine and we wanted to work on something and I said, āLook, what about this guy who kind of thinks heās a superhero, what can we do out of that,ā and we worked off of that for a while to outline what the story is and then I ran with it.

CS: So given that extensive development time on the film, what was it like coming back to it after delivering back-to-back horror films?
AEM:Ā I think that one of the things that became really important about Archenemy and what it is as my third movie is really thinking of what did I want a movie like this, a movie about a superhero, what did I want it to feel like? Like what did I want the aesthetic to be? The way it looks and things like that, that was ā what I was learning to do on my very first movie and really implement on my second, on Daniel Isnāt Real, kind of boils down to, āHow do you make a movie?ā [laughs] This movie, youāre really watching me learn what Iām supposed to be doing when I make a movie and then my second one was like now Iām getting a sense of style and what style is and how you make a movie feel a different way. Archenemy is exciting for me in that I feel like I have developed a style and an understanding of how to get a movie to look and feel how I want it to be and then taking that outside of the horror genre and putting it into what we would conventionally call a superhero movie, although is Archenemy even a superhero movie, I donāt know. There was this feeling I had of, āOh man if I ever get to do get the chance to make this movie, itās really going to feel personal, because what genre even is it, I can go on these tangents and have these characters doing these crazy things.ā
Click here to digitally pre-orderĀ Archenemy!
CS: One of the things I loved about the film was its use of comic book-style animation for its backstory sequences, was that always in the script or was that a product of the budget?
AEM:Ā When I first started writing it, I was imagining filming the real-life stuff really gritty and really gnarly and the Chromium stuff would be Matrix-y kind of live-action, hyperrealistic live-action. As I was looking at the budget and what weād be able to do and how Iād want to spend my time shooting the movie and what our resources were, I flipped that around and thought, āWhat if we start to make the real world have the grittiness and realness, but it also has a heightened color and really deliberate way of showing thingsā and the animation becomes this kind of more and more abstracted dreamlike thing. Some of my very favorite comics that I was looking at kind of inspired it and the animation team looked at what Bill Sienkiewicz did with Elektra: Assassin and with his Daredevil graphic novel with Frank Miller where everything is so dreamlike and strange. When we committed to using animation, I remembered that one of the most disturbing, one of the most influential and one of my favorite movies is Pink Floyd: The Wall and the way that animation is used in that movie and itās a story about a guy falling apart and going crazy and what are his memories and how do they relate to the present and all of these animated moments and how they intercede, his nightmares, his fantasies, so I thought, āYeah, letās do a superhero movie where the backstory is like Pink Floyd: The Wall.ā
CS: I love it, Iām literally staring at theĀ Pink Floyd: The WallĀ movie poster I have on my wall.Ā
AEM:Ā Do you really? My friend had the poster long before either of us had even seen the movie, we were just so fascinated by it and weād star at that thing and be like, āDo you think that giant gaping mouth is a gateway into another dimension?ā It just has a haunting quality that when I did actually see that movie, it just ruined my life, I had never had an experience with a movie that was so traumatic and so disturbing and sometimes I like to think that the idea of being traumatized by a movie was so important to me that thatās what Iām looking to do. Like, āGod, I really hope some young kid will see one of my movies and be totally destroyed by it for the rest of their life.ā [laughs]

CS: Speaking of feeling destroyed by something, the cast is truly insane on this movie and gives some new sides to its stars we havenāt seen before, especially Glenn Howerton and Paul Scheer, what was it like building the ensemble?
AEM:Ā Itās pretty amazing, starting with Joe, who is the most handsome man in Hollywood, heās like the sexiest man alive, and putting him in like, āObviously, your character just smells terrible, weāre going to fuck up your teeth.ā He was so excited to get scruffy and dirty. A lot of these guys, like Joe, theyāre known for being handsome and popular, but heās a trained theater actor, and itās the same with Glen. He was like, āIām very funny, I have a funny show, but I didnāt go into this for comedy, I went into it for drama,ā so working with all these actors, we had a great opportunity to let them do things they havenāt done before. I think in all three of those cases, we get to deconstruct how they look and play with what you know them as and what they look like in those movies. With Glenn, with the blonde hair and the mustache, and then Paul Scheer, the character that Paul plays was written to be just in red underwear. Taking Paul and giving him all of the tattoos, I remember a friend of mine came to visit set the day we were shooting with Paul and it took him all day and by the end of the day he walked up to me and went, āI just realized thatās Paul Scheer.ā [chuckles] Thatās something thatās so fun as a director to know that you have this material that these amazing actors will want to do because it means getting to do something they donāt do and nobodyās really seen them do before and that means we all have such an exciting world to play with.
CS: The character of Indigo is also a wonderful central heart to the story, what was it like conducting the search to find the perfect actress for her?
AEM:Ā Indigo had to be such an emotionally electric person, so working with my casting directors, who were the same people that helped me get Sasha Lane on Daniel Isnāt Real, they just have this incredible sense of younger actors. They told me about her and she came in and she did an audition and was just 100 percent superstar material, she just has all of this energy and you just love her, but sheās also super cool and she has the look, so once she came in and I met her and she auditioned for it, it was kind of a no-brainer. I hate when people use that phrase, there was so much brain involved in figuring it out [laughs]. Skylan was somebody else, they brought him in to read for her brother, and we did a series of tests where we had Zolee interact with a couple of different kids and really looked for that brother/sister feeling that really felt like they grew up together and that they have this chemistry and this energy and the two of them together were just spectacular. Skylan is also just so lovable and I just wanted him to be okay, the key in the movies I make is that you want to cast people who are lovable and you want to hug and you just watch for an hour and a half as they get slowly destroyed [laughs].
RELATED:Ā CS Video: Mortal Interview With Co-Writer/Director AndrĆ© Ćvredal
Written and directed by Adam Egypt Mortimer (Daniel Isnāt Real) from a story by Mortimer and Lucas Passmore (No Good Heroes), the film stars Joe Manganiello (True Blood), Skylan Brooks (Empire), Zolee Griggs (W-Tang: An American Saga), Paul Scheer (Black Monday), Amy Seimetz (Pet Semetary) and Glenn Howerton (Itās Always Sunny in Philadelphia).
In Archenemy, Max Fist (Manganiello) claims to be a hero from another dimension who fell through time and space to Earth, where he has no powers. No one believes his stories except for a local teen named Hamster. Together, they take to the streets to wipe out the local drug syndicate and its vicious crime boss known as The Manager.
ArchenemyĀ was produced by SpectreVisionās Daniel Noah, Lisa Whalen, and Elijah Wood along with Kim Sherman, Mortimer, Joe and Nick Manganiello.
ArchenemyĀ will be released in theaters, On Demand and Digital on December 11, 2020.
Washed Out to Perform Free Pitchfork Live Virtual Concert
Pitchfork is pleased to announce the next installment of Pitchfork Live. Washed Out, the musical project of singer-songwriter Ernest Greene, will perform live on Friday, December 18 at 6 p.m. Eastern. The set will be streamed for a one-time broadcast from Atlanta, Georgia. You can watch Washed Out on Pitchforkās YouTube channel.
Washed Out recently released his album Purple Noon on Sub Pop. Greeneās previous Washed Out LP Mister Mellow came out in 2017. Read more about Washed Out in Pitchforkās feature āHow Chillwaveās Brief Moment in the Sun Cast a Long Shadow Over the 2010s.ā
Watch the live stream here:
Retro Disco Dance 70s 80s 90s Nonstop – Best Golden Disco Songs Remix 70s 80s 90s Eurodisco Music
Retro Disco Dance 70s 80s 90s Nonstop – Best Golden Disco Songs Remix 70s 80s 90s Eurodisco Music
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