Vancouver Sun

Fogerty: Good son rising

Voice of Creedence survived breakup, legal battles and booze binges

- JOHN ROGERS

TOPANGA, Calif. — Although he wrote the classic song, it took John Fogerty more than 30 years to come to terms with the realizatio­n he really was one of rock music’s fortunate sons.

For one incredible, albeit short, run, this blue-collar kid from a San Francisco suburb was the leader of a band that reshaped popular music.

In 1969 Creedence Clearwater Revival sold more records and had more hit songs — including classics such as Proud Mary, Lodi, Green River and Bad Moon Rising — than even the Beatles. Three years later, it was over. The biggest band in the world imploded in one of the most acrimoniou­s splits of all time, followed by decades of lawsuits and angry allegation­s.

Though Fogerty would go on to a successful solo career, he says the split sent him into depression- driven drinking binges that lasted for days.

Dressed in his trademark plaid flannel shirt, jeans and boots, Fogerty sat down to talk about his just-released memoir, Fortunate Son: My Life, My Music, which he hopes will set the record straight about the band’s estrangeme­nt.

Asking him about the possibilit­y of a Creedence reunion used to send him into a towering rage. Now he says he’s finally let those feelings go. He doesn’t know if a reunion is possible, but he doubts it, and so do Creedence’s other surviving members.

“Things are too broken,” says drummer Doug Clifford, who tours these days with bassist Stu Cook under the name Creedence Clearwater Revisited.

Cook chuckles when he says, “I think it would be a milestone if we could just sit down and have a beer.”

Although Fogerty reminisces fondly at times about the early days of a group founded by his late brother, Tom, and the two friends he’d known since junior high school, he says things fell apart when the others came to believe they were equal to The Beatles in talent.

While The Beatles had three great songwriter­s, two great singers and four members with outsized personalit­ies, he says, Creedence had only him.

He wrote all the songs that became hits, he says, because no one else could. He sang all the leads in that instantly recognizab­le tenor for the same reason, and he arranged the band’s unique, fuzz guitar-driven sound he calls “swamp rock” because that was his vision.

While Clifford and Cook don’t disagree with that assessment, they say it was Fogerty’s unwillingn­ess to let them have any say in anything that finally destroyed Creedence.

After the band disintegra­ted, Fogerty turned to solo work, reestablis­hing his brilliance as a songwriter with Centerfiel­d. But another hit song, The Old Man Down the Road, prompted his former record label, Fantasy, to sue, claiming he’d copied it from the Creedence hit Run Through the Jungle, which he also wrote.

Although Fogerty prevailed in court, the experience left him so angry that for years he wouldn’t perform any Creedence songs and his output of new material dried up as he drank heavily. He went 11 years between recordings until Blue Moon Swamp won the Grammy for best rock album in 1997.

He credits his second wife, Julie, and their children with putting him on the path to both sobriety and musical harmony, inspiring him to sing his old songs again and write new ones.

These days, the 70-year-old Fogerty wakes at 4 a.m. most mornings to work on music before taking his daughter, Kelsy, to school. Sons Tyler and Shane play in his band, and with the book done, he’s looking to record a new album.

 ?? CASEY CURRY/INVISION/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? John Fogerty has a new memoir, Fortunate Son: My Life, My Music. In 1969 Creedence Clearwater Revival sold more records than The Beatles.
CASEY CURRY/INVISION/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS John Fogerty has a new memoir, Fortunate Son: My Life, My Music. In 1969 Creedence Clearwater Revival sold more records than The Beatles.

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