Status Quo's Francis Rossi says he's known as 'the bloke that spills the beans'
“I’ve become known as the bloke that spills the beans,” whispers Francis Rossi before emitting a sharp cackle.
Status Quo’s guitarist and songwriter is explaining the premise behind his latest venture - a tell-all tour aptly titled I Talk Too Much.
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Hide AdHe, of course, is best known as the man behind the stadium-sized riffs of In The Army Now and Pictures Of Matchstick Men.
Rossi’s 2019 autobiography - also titled I Talk Too Much - gave an unguarded, sometimes uncomfortably intimate, insight into the highs and lows of his 50-year career.
It explored the success of Status Quo, who have released over 100 singles and 33 albums, the depths of his alcoholism and cocaine addiction, and the recent loss of Rick Parfitt, his bandmate and partner in crime.
And now Rossi has been preparing to embark on an intimate tour combining acoustic songs and storytelling. He wants to explore the myth of show business in close quarters.
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Hide Ad“You know those hospital gowns you see?” he enquires. “You are all covered up at the front but it’s all undone at the back with your ass hanging out. That’s showbiz to me.”
There is a catch. We speak just weeks before the coronavirus outbreak forces him to postpone the tour over safety concerns.
A few days later his team send over a statement confirming that, due to some rapid re-booking, Rossi will be back on the road in 2021 - good news for disappointed fans.
All 60 dates on his mammoth UK tour are being rescheduled, with Rossi now set to hit the likes of Scarborough, Hull, Bradford and Leeds a year later than originally planned.
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Hide Ad“It was a tough decision to postpone the tour, but the health and welfare of our fans was the top priority,” he said in a statement. “The message now is simple: fans can hold onto their tickets and we can all catch up and have a good time in spring next year.
“It’s not too long to wait - and I’d rather be meeting fans when it’s safe to do so for everyone. See you on the road. It won’t be long. Stay safe.”
Preparing for the I Talk Too Much tour entailed a great deal of soul-searching for Rossi, who celebrated his 70th birthday in May last year.
He is full of witty impressions, with a mind that is constantly probing and questioning. I ask him what he is most proud of.
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Hide AdThere’s much to choose from. An enviable career in music has spawned classic songs, a vast family and fantastical tales of rock and roll excess.
But Rossi is cautious. “One has to be careful,” he answers. “Don’t tap into my ego. I have enough trouble with that as it is.“What am I proud of? The other day I was thinking that I was proud to be British, but isn’t there a saying about pride before a fall?”
“Probably just lasting. Still being here,” he says after a pause. “And as a capitalist, I was proud that the band was that successful. As a songwriter, I was proud that I had some hit songs, albeit not particularly complicated songs. I am proud that I have got eight children and I didn’t [mess] them up too much.”
And his regrets? “Drinking,” he says without a pause. “Alcohol led me to cocaine. People telling me: ‘Oh have a drink. What kind of man are you?’ All that stuff I remember from when I was younger.”
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Hide AdLike many interesting people, Rossi is full of contradictions. He is a rock star who embraces his band’s reputation for being “uncool”, and an unerringly polite man who turns the air blue with his words, a celebrity honest about the shallowness of fame.
It is perhaps this unlikely everyman quality which has drawn so many listeners to Status Quo.
For Rossi, writing an autobiography also meant confronting old memories of Parfitt, who died from sepsis on Christmas Eve 2016.
Parfitt lived a life of excess and had suffered a heart attack and throat cancer scare, although when he passed, aged 68, he had not used cocaine for over a decade.
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Hide Ad“That bit is difficult to talk about,” Rossi admits with characteristic honesty.“It was difficult when I talked about it before, because you live it again.
“I don’t want to sound dramatic, but you really live it again. There are moments with his last heart attack, which were really not very pleasant. I would get annoyed and... not emotional necessarily.”
Rossi’s most colourful language is reserved for his ruminations on age.
“Roger Daltrey was wrong,” he chuckles before quoting My Generation, The Who’s anthem for doomed youth. “I hope I die before I get old... No I don’t. I’m trying to hang on now.
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Hide Ad“I’m extremely fit. I look after myself. Anything to stay alive.”
Rossi, known to everyone in the band as ‘Frame’ or ‘The Gomorr’ (the grand old man of rock and roll), is not joking. His teetotal daily routine features swimming, healthy eating and workouts before rehearsal.
Life, he explains, is worth sticking around for because of the kids. Rossi has eight children from two marriages, some who play music professionally, and they have prompted him to think about how his generation has treated the world.
Talk turns to the planet and Greta Thunberg. “Remember in the late Seventies, they said: ‘Prepare for an ice age.’ Well, now they are telling us it is the other way round. Then that young girl...
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Hide Ad“If she really thinks my generation and the generation that are now 40 got on this planet and said: ‘Let’s [mess] it up everyone...’ We didn’t. We thought we were doing well. We thought we were going to do the right things. We thought we were going to make it better.
“And if she thinks her generation are going to get to 50 and 60 and go ‘We didn’t make any mistakes’, she is mistaken. That’s how it goes.”
Francis Rossi’s I Talk Too Much tour will now begin on February 18, 2021, at the Shanklin Theatre on the Isle of Wight.
He is also due to tour the UK and Europe with Status Quo between October and December this year, including a date scheduled at Sheffield City Hall.