JM: With this record I just let them be simple in their presentation, simple in their lyrical content, and didn't try to work around it It's what I do, and it's what I should've been doing for years instead of, you know, worrying about the pressure of "are they gonna play this on the radio?" I don't have to worry about that anymore.
RS: So how long ago did you stop worrying about?
JM: Probably when I was in Columbia Records. It just dawned on me that not only are they not going to play these songs on the radio, the record company is not gonna work them to be on the radio, so what am I doing? They didn't with this record when they heard it, but the record company always asks you, you got a single? Don't even ask me that anymore.
RS: Can we have an update on the Stephen King project [the "play with music" The Ghost Brothers of Darkland County]?
JM: We have another workshop in New York coming up, and from there it goes into production in Atlanta, Georgia next spring. And then if it goes well in Atlanta, then we'll come to Broadway. If it don't go well in Atlanta, we're done.
RS: What can you tell me about working with Stephen?
JM: Oh, I love Steve. Steve is nothing like everybody thinks he is. Steve and I really have a lot in common. He lives in the middle of nowhere. I live in the middle of nowhere. He's not comfortable being around a lot of people. I'm not comfortable. We just have a — you know, we're kinda antisocial guys, and, of course, we're bigmouths.
RS: How did working in this new medium, the play, challenge you both?
JM: Steve is not used to a live performance. I am. So whenever the stage goes dark, he's pumped up, man. He's excited. Somebody came and watched the last reading that we had in New York and reviewed it. The review said this is a musical that men will enjoy. Unheard of, the guy said.
RS: But your new album will come out before that — are you at all concerned about first-week sales numbers?
JM: I don't really want to play that game anymore. If it was up to me, I'd sell the record for five dollars. I'd sell the record for five bucks, and I'd sell it in ways that SoundScan doesn't count. I don't care about SoundScan. Fuck those guys.
RS: Do you see a point in the future when you might just put albums out on the Internet or something?
JM: Well, I don't know how that would work. I don't want to hang on any crosses. I already hung on enough crosses with the Chevrolet ad. You know, that was everybody saying, you know, John, you know, this is a good thing to do, and, you know, I couldn't argue. Well, if people — you saw people react to the song tonight. They loved it. When you hear the whole song, it's not really a Chevy commercial, you know? It's a rock song.
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