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ROGER TAYLOR
Date of birth: July 26, 1949
Full name: Roger Meddows-Taylor
Place of birth: Norfolk
Height: 5ft 10
Weight: 9 ½ stone
Colour of hair: blonde
Colour of eyes: blue
Education: Public School Truro, Cornwall, where he
obtained his O and A levels. He went to London dental college which he later
gave up in order to take a madical degree and form Queen.
Influences: The Yardbirds, The Who, Bob
Dylan, John Lennon
Favourite Colour: Silver
Favourite films: 2001, Clockwork Orange, King Kong, The
Great Race, Close Encounters
Favourite albums: Electric Ladyland (Hendrix), the
Beatles White Album
Favourite Books: „On The Road“ by Jack Kerouac and
„Dune“ by Frank Herbert
Favourite Actor: Tony Curtis
Favourite Actress: Jane Fonda
Favourite Country: will make up his mind when he sees
them all! (Queen File)
Favourite Food: Japanese
Children: He has five children, two with Dominique Beyrand: Felix Luther (* 22nd May 1980) and Rory Eleanor (* 29th May 1986) and three with Deborah Leng: Rufus Tiger (* 8th March 1991), Tiger Lily (* 10th October 1994) and Lola Daisy May (* 9th April 2000)
Important QUEEN songs: Radio Ga Ga, I’m In
Love With My Car, Innuendo (main author of lyrics)
à information taken from various
sources
His hands are soft but his beat is hard
If
Freddie Mercury identifies with the Queen of Spades - the most arrogant and vainglorious
card in the deck, he’s quick to tell you - then Roger Meddows-Taylor must be
the Queen of Hearts. At the very least he’s the heart of Queen. After all, the
drummer is the heart of any rock group; it’s his steady beat that keeps the
rest of the band alive. Thumping away in the background, surrounded by a
veritable ribcage of equipment, the drummer is the one who pumps fresh blood
into the group’s sound with every beat.
Trouble
is, drummers never get any attention until something goes wrong. Then
open-heart surgery is required and things get very messy. There have been
exceptions to this rule of course, like Keith Moon and Ginger Baker, but for
the most part it holds. Roger Meddows-Taylor looks like the latest exception.
For
although Queen is a new addition to the star gallery of the seventies and Roger
could go virtually unnoticed behind the outlandish posturings of singer Freddie
Mercury and guitarist Brian May, the 26-year-old drummer seems to be attracting
a sizable segment of the spotlight. The indications are that Taylor has at
least as many fans as any other member of the group, and it’s reliably reported
that when they go on tour he attracts even more groupies than Mercury -
although he somehow manages to stay fairly celibate on the road. “I do have a good time in America,” he
modestly admits.
Nevertheless,
Taylor seems somewhat surprised at all the attention he’s been getting. “It is hard for a drummer - because the
drummer usually sits in the back - to exert a strong personality” he says.
“Especially when you’ve got somebody
like Freddie in front. But we all sing, which is a help I think. Definitely a
help.”
Another
important element is his unique drumming style, which is extraordinarily fast
and strong. And onstage he supplements it with an added ingredient of visual
appeal. Before every concert the skins of his heavily-miked drums are loosened
and carefully coated with a fine, resinous powder - so that while he’s drumming
he appears to be surrounded by a luminous white haze.
Heavy
Meddows Kid
The
thing about Taylor, though, is that he’s really a guitarist at heart. He has
the guitarist’s love of flash and power and the guitarist’s sense of stage
presence. And ever since he was nine years old he’s been a struggling
guitarist.
He was born in Norfolk, on the east coast of
England, and he spent his teens in Cornwall, the summer resort area in the
southwest. His background was respectable and ordinary - “the boring middle
class,” he calls it - but he’s been captivated by rock ‘n roll ever since the
age of eight.
“It was like a bit of a dream then,” he
says. “I kept that all the way through
my teens. I always wanted to do it. When I was in school I was always in little
groups and stuff. I sort of stuck with it all the way through college. And eventually
it got the better of everything else. It got the better of my conditioning, my
middle-class conditioning, and then it broke out and that was it.”
He
started playing acoustic guitar at nine, and then when he was 12 he decided to
take up drums and electric guitar. “Basically
I was a frustrated guitarist,” he says. “But I seemed to be better at drums. My father just bought me a drum,
and I took to it and started adding to it and found I could get along well. I
found myself getting better quite quickly, so that sort of spurred me on. It
was at that point that I became a drummer rather than a guitarist - which I’d
always wanted to be before. I think everybody wants to be a guitarist. but I’m’
a better drummer than a guitarist anyway.”
Taylor
was a 19-year-old dental student in London when he joined his first real band -
an outfit called Smile which also included future Queen guitarist Brian May. He
quit after a year of dental college because he “just couldn’t be bothered any more,” but then he decided to go back
to school for a degree in biology from East London Polytechnic. But by that
time Queen has been formed.
“Brian and
I were very disillusioned,” he recalls. “But we had known Freddie and eventually, after about six months or so,
Freddie persuaded us to start Queen working. Which we did. It was pretty hard
going in the beginning. We had quite a few bass players, we went through about
five or six until we found John, who was the only one who really fit in.”
And after that came the problem of finding the right contract, which wasn’t
accomplished until 18 months after the band’s formation, when they hooked up
with the new production arm of Trident Studios.
“We wanted to do it right. We wanted the
right contract with the right people. So we were really very careful. I think
we could’ve moved a bit quicker, but I think that probably was the best idea.
It took a lot of patience, a lot of faith, but we got a pretty good deal in the
end. We were offered quite a lot of deals by virtually every major company over
here, but this really seemed like the best thing to go for at the time.”
Since
then, of course, Queen has scaled the rickety ladder of success with amazing
swiftness. They’ve swept the British polls, placing first in four categories in
the most recent reader tally. But even as the drummer for one of Britain’s most
important new bands, Taylor retains his love for the guitar. When he’s not
touring with the group, that’s the instrument he most often plays. “I used to rehearse all the time,” he
says, “but we’ve been working so much on
the road lately that I’m a bit sick of the sight of drums. But also it’s a bit
impractical to practice drums where I’m living at the moment. I’m trying to
move, you know, find some place bigger to live. But I don’t practice as much as
I should.”
Taylor
lives by himself in a ground-floor flat in suburban Richmond, on the western
edge of London. “It’s got a lot of
character,” he says. “It’s got a lot
of history. All the old kings used to live down there. There’s a palace, I think.
But I certainly don’t live in it myself. We’re all basically living where we
lived before. None of us has had a chance to move because we’ve been working
really hard over the last two years.”
Boiling
over
If you
said Taylor attacks his drums with a blistering intensity, you wouldn’t be far
off. One of the consequences of his inability to practice in his home has been
his perennial victimisation by the traditional drummer’s malady - blisters.
He’s been plagued by the sores on both of Queen’s American tours, and the sight
of his bloody nubs has been shocking enough to send roadies scurrying
feverishly about in search of bandages and healing ointments.
“I’ve really had a lot of trouble,” he
confesses. “Blood everywhere and a lot
of bandages. It’s a really intense stage act. It’s in no way laid back. It’s
pretty high energy, and yeah, it’s pretty hard on the hands. At the beginning
of a tour, especially if we haven’t been playing for awhile, your hands tend to
soften up. It’s just a case of hardening them. After two or three weeks they
harden up pretty well. At the beginning of the last tour it was really bad
because we did a lot of double shows. That was tearing my hands to bits. I know
a few other guys who get a lot trouble like that. Bonham tears his hands to
shreds. The only way to get over it is to practice like hell two weeks before
you come over to do a tour. Just keep playing all the time.”
Coffee,
tea or yen?
Despite
the toll on his dukes, the man from Queen professes to enjoy the touring experience
- especially last spring’s, a 13-week affair which began in Columbus, Ohio and
ended in Japan. But who wouldn’t enjoy a tour like theirs? In most of the major
American cities their first show sold out so quickly a second had to be added;
there were riots in Chicago and at the airport when they landed in Japan.
Definitely a heady experience.
“It was amazing,” Taylor laughs. “I think it was the best tour we’ve ever
done, too, in terms of organisation, reaction, etc. The audience were without
exception excellent. We’d been told to expect less in the South and on the West
Coast than, say in the Northeast and some of the Midwest. But they were all
very good. We were all surprised at the L.A. audience and the San Francisco
audiences, which were great. In fact we had to do an extra show in LA. I think
the South was the only place where we played to a few non capacity audiences.
The audiences we got were great, but they
weren’t as big as we’d hoped. But there were really only about two dates I can
remember when the audience wasn’t packed in. We had a bit of trouble halfway
through the tour, when Freddie lost his voice completely because he’d developed
some nodes on his throat. We had to call off a week in the middle of the tour,
which was a drag. I think it just created a strain on his voice because we’d
been working so hard, really. We did a lot of double shows in the period of the
tour, and that involves playing four hours a night.”
When they got to Japan, after an eight-day layover
in a secluded beach hotel on the Hawaiian isle of Kauai, they found themselves
at the top of both the singles and the albums charts. Success was assured. It
was the first time they’d played the Land of the Rising Sun - “it costs a fortune to get all the equipment
over there,” Taylor moans - and the nation’s transistorised teens nearly
short-circuited with delight.
There
were originally hopes of an Australian tour as well, but that had to be
scrapped when the band suddenly realised they had a job to do back home So they
winged it back to Albion and closeted themselves away to write their fourth
album. “Everybody goes off to their
separate homes to get their stuff together,” Taylor says, “and then we all sort of get together
somewhere else for about two weeks and pool all of the material we have - play
around with it, pull it to pieces, throw some out, change bits, and get a sort
of rough idea, as good an idea as we can, of what shape the album’s going to
take. It’s a very soul-destroying time.”
Since
he only reads music a little, Taylor works on tape with his - you guessed it -
guitar, and then adds bass and drums. Although he’s actually fairly prolific,
only a few of his compositions have appeared on Queen’s albums. The fault, he
says, is his own.
“I’m very sort of finicky, you know. I get
something written and then I listen to it the next day and I throw it away out
of hand. Probably too finicky, but I don’t know, I get sort of fussy and go off
my own ideas very quickly. The others usually never get to hear them even.”
Since
he hates the sight of drums (at least for the moment), plays guitar at every
opportunity and even writes on his guitar, has Roger ever thought about
chucking his tom-toms altogether? “Not
in the foreseeable future,” he replies thoughtfully, “But if everything’s sort of finished...possibly. Yeah! Quite possibly!”
© Circus Magazine - 1975
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