Ringo Starr is back on the road with a little help from his friends
Editor鈥檚 note: As Go was about to go to press, Ringo Starr and his All Starr Band announced that the Pittsburgh tour date and 11 others would be canceled after two band members tested positive for COVID-19. Starr said the canceled dates would be added to the fall leg of the tour sometime in the fall, but a new date for the show has not yet been set.
His fortune presumably secure and his legacy even more so, Ringo Starr has no need to tour.
The former Beatles drummer who is a couple of weeks shy of his 82nd birthday could comfortably stay close to his Los Angeles mansion and putter around in his home studio, create some art and maintain the rigorous diet and exercise regimen that has led to him looking and performing like someone decades younger.
Yet during the enforced layoff from the road over the last two years due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Starr said he was itching the whole time to get back in front of audiences.
鈥淭wo-and-a-half years has been really difficult,鈥 he explained last month in an online press conference from suburban Toronto the day before his latest North American tour got underway. 鈥淚 love to play, as you can tell. I put the All Starrs together 33 years ago, and I was in a couple of bands before that, and for me that鈥檚 what it鈥檚 all about 鈥 playing and having an audience.鈥
As always, Starr is hitting the highway with a little help from some high-profile musical friends. Since 1989, Starr has been taking various editions of his All Starr Band out with him, with lineups consisting of fellow veteran rockers who have notched hits of their own. Past iterations have included Peter Frampton, Billy Preston, Joe Walsh, Todd Rundgren and Billy Squier, among many, many others. This time around, Starr is surrounding himself with multi-instrumentalist and 鈥淔rankenstein鈥 creator Edgar Winter, former Men at Work frontman Colin Hay, Toto guitarist Steve Lukather, former Average White Band bassist Hamish Stuart, percussionist Warren Ham and second drummer Gregg Bissonette. They will be at PPG Paints Arena in Pittsburgh Satuday, playing a show that was originally scheduled for June 20, 2020, was postponed to June 18, 2021, and ended up being moved back one more year as the pandemic dragged on.
鈥淚t was the first time we ever had to go through anything like that,鈥 Starr said.
Since 1988, Starr has replaced the alcoholism that could have made him into another rock and roll casualty with a kind of workaholism. He鈥檚 regularly released new music, though it has not found the same level of chart success he enjoyed with the Beatles or in the early days in his solo career, and his All Starr tours have become more and more frequent. In the 22 years since the turn of the century, he has not been out playing live in only seven of those years, with two of them the result of the pandemic.
Without an All Starr trek to look toward, Starr put out two EPs, 鈥淶oom In鈥 and 鈥淐hange the World,鈥 and has completed a third one that has yet to be released. He also played drums on albums by other artists, turning up on new discs by Hay and Winter, as well as onetime All Starr Sheila E., and country singer Ray Wylie Hubbard.
鈥淭hey just send the files to my studio,鈥 Starr explained. Playing drums for fellow musicians 鈥渨as great for me in the pandemic, that I was asked to play on all these records, with different styles, different attitudes. So, overall musically, I鈥檝e been compensating a lot because I couldn鈥檛 go out on the road.鈥
Another preoccupation has been art. Starr has released books of his photographs and paintings and has an online gallery 鈥 www.ringostarrart.com 鈥 where visitors can look at his work and buy posters, signed prints and other merchandise. More recently, Starr has expanded into digital art, samples of which were auctioned off this week.
鈥淚 started doing computer art in the 1990s on tour, because there鈥檚 a lot of downtime in the hotel room and I started to paint,鈥 he said.
Over the years, the All Starr tours have been predicated on the idea that all the participants would play 鈥渢he songs you know and love,鈥 and on this tour Starr offers up solo hits like 鈥淏ack off Boogaloo,鈥 鈥淚t Don鈥檛 Come Easy鈥 and 鈥淧hotograph,鈥 as well as Beatles classics like 鈥淵ellow Submarine鈥 and 鈥淚 Wanna Be Your Man.鈥 For the first time ever on an All Starr tour, he is also playing 鈥淥ctopus鈥檚 Garden,鈥 his contribution to the Fab Four鈥檚 鈥淎bbey Road鈥 album.
Given the undying fascination the world has with the Beatles, it鈥檚 inevitable that Starr is still asked about the group more than a half-century after they went their separate ways. He had nothing but compliments for the eight-hour 鈥淕et Back鈥 documentary that looked inside the turbulent January 1969 sessions that yielded the 鈥淟et It Be鈥 album and movie and aired on Disney Plus in November. Edited together by 鈥淟ord of the Rings鈥 maestro Peter Jackson using footage that had long languished in the Beatles鈥 archives, Starr said he preferred 鈥淕et Back鈥濃榮 more expansive and nuanced look at the band鈥檚 musical and personal relationships to the more downbeat 鈥淟et It Be鈥 movie, which has not been available on home video or been screened on television in 40 years.
He explained, 鈥淚 never liked (鈥楲et It Be鈥) because it was so narrow. 鈥 All the down parts. We were laughing and having fun and we played great. I thought it was too down.鈥
Starr will be in Pittsburgh on the 80th birthday of Paul McCartney, the other surviving Beatle. McCartney just finished a round of shows in the United States, and Starr is due to be back out in North America in September and October, playing in markets as large as Mexico City and as small as Mount Pleasant, Mich. Despite many of their contemporaries quitting live work or charting farewell tours, neither Starr nor McCartney seem inclined just yet to entertain the 鈥渞鈥 word 鈥 retirement.
鈥淢y mother, she had this great line,鈥 Starr recalled. 鈥淪he said, 鈥榊ou know what, son?鈥 I always feel you鈥檙e at your happiest when you鈥檙e playing. And deep inside, I am. 鈥 And people say, 鈥榃hat about retirement?鈥 Well, I鈥檓 a musician, I don鈥檛 need to retire. As long as I can pick up those sticks, I got a gig.鈥

