Chattanooga Times Free Press

Like a wheel, but turning slower

- By Sam Tanenhaus

After Parkinson’s diagnosis, pop icon Linda Ronstadt sees future of book signing tours instead of concert tours.

SAN FRANCISCO — The first thing to know about Linda Ronstadt is that if you ring the bell at her home here, on a sedate street with views of the ocean, she’ll answer the door herself. At least she did on a recent Monday morning.

She wore a pink hoodie and jeans, her short dark hair framing the oval face that ornamented album and magazine covers throughout the 1970s and ’80s, when Ronstadt was rock ’n’ roll’s biggest and most alluring female star, with albums like “Heart Like a Wheel” “Hasten Down the Wind” and “Living in the U.S.A.” that helped define the polished music of her era.

In the living room, near the Yamaha baby grand, Ronstadt settled into a chair, rested her white hightop sneakers on an ottoman and discussed her new book, “Simple Dreams: A Musical Memoir,” which is being published this month.

In recent years, Ronstadt has drawn more attention for her outspoken politics, decidedly liberal, than for her music. Full of opinions — don’t get her started on current immigratio­n law — her words pour forth in a fluent, hyper-articulate rush.

But for many, she remains her generation’s premier female pop vocalist, and they wonder why she hasn’t released an album since

See RONSTADT, Page D6

2006 or appeared in concert since her mariachi show in 2009. For a trouper like Ronstadt, a steady presence for 40 years, silence so prolonged must have a reason. True, she is 67, but age hasn’t stopped contempora­ries like Bob Dylan, Neil Young and Emmylou Harris.

“I can’t do it, because of my health,” Ronstadt says. “I have Parkinson’s.” (The news was first reported on AARP. org on Aug. 23.)

She held out a slightly trembling hand. Her vocal cords are also affected.

“I can’t sing at all,” she says, matter- of- factly. “I’m truly not able. I can’t sing ‘Happy Birthday,’ really.”

She had been aware for more than a decade that something was wrong, but those closest to her suspected it might be just another instance of the performanc­e anxiety for which she is well known.

“You can sing,” her former manager and longtime producer, Peter Asher, remembered telling her. “You’re crazy. Don’t be insecure.” But, as usual, he added, “Linda was right.”

She got the news in June. Fearful of doctors, she had put off going to a neurologis­t until a guitarist friend, observing the unsteady hands, says she had to go.

“I never in a million years thought I had Parkinson’s, not in a million years,” she says. “Now I don’t know what to do. I have to find a support group. I have to call Michael Pollan. He’s responsibl­e for all this.” (Pollan, the brotherin-law of Michael J. Fox, who also has Parkinson’s, says Ronstadt had not discussed her illness with him.)

By “all this” she meant not her health, but the book, which was completed before doctors confirmed that she has Parkinson’s.

“I never wanted to write a book,” she says. “I never wanted anyone else to write a book. I thought, ‘ Let it end when it ends.’” She also wasn’t sure she was up to the task. A voracious reader who can quote Henry James verbatim, Ronstadt has, if anything, too much respect for the written word. But at dinner one night, Pollan, the journalist and author, urged her to reconsider.

She told him: “I don’t have any craft. I don’t have any skill. And he says everybody has at least one good story in them that they can pull out.”

There was another fact to weigh, her dwindling savings. Ronstadt released many albums but wrote very few songs, so her royalty checks are small.

“Writers make all the money,” she says. Her most memorable hits — “You’re No Good,” “Heart Like a Wheel,” “Blue Bayou” — were written by others. “I was making good money when I was touring,” she says. But now “I just can’t do it.”

“I can’t make one note,” she says. “I have a hard time calling the cab at night.”

And so a book, and the advance it would bring, began to make sense. Ronstadt read Plácido Domingo’s memoir and Rosanne Cash’s, and liked both. She also liked Keith Richards’ “Life” (she’s in it) and was impressed by how well his co-writer, James Fox, had captured his voice. But her own meeting with a prospectiv­e collaborat­or didn’t work: “I knew I would never give him any informatio­n. I’m too good at dodging questions.”

Instead, she wrote the book herself. And, now that it’s done, and instead of a concert tour, she’ll sign books in cities where she once filled arenas: Boston, Washington, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle and Portland, Ore.

“Simple Dreams” is less an autobiogra­phy than an artist’s coming-of-age story. She recalls her musical journey phase by phase, beginning with her childhood in the Sonora desert. She grew up with three siblings on a ranch outside Tucson, Ariz., where her father owned a hardware store and the Ronstadts, a musical family of mixed Anglo-Mexican heritage, were socially prominent. Ronstadt was a debutante, a “junior patroness” of the Tucson symphony.

But the desert air was saturated with other sounds pouring out of the radio and coffeehous­e microphone­s. At 18, with $30 from her father, she went to Los Angeles and two years later recorded her first hit, the anti- torch song “Different Drum,” with its teasing harpsichor­d and undertow of “longing and yearning,” in Ronstadt’s descriptio­n, in conversati­on, of the theme that would inform so much of her work in the decades to come.

“I’m not ready for any person, place or thing/to try and pull the reins in on me,” Ronstadt admonishes the besotted “boy who wants to love only me.”

In the memoir, she recalls sharing a cab with singer-songwriter Jerry Jeff Walker after a night of music in Greenwich Village. Walker, his face “scarcely visible,” sang the first verse of “Heart Like a Wheel,” a ballad he’d heard Canadian sisters Kate and Anna McGarrigle sing at a folk festival. The lyric began with raw emotions but seasoned them with metaphor — the wheel that when it bends can’t be mended — and a plaintive question, “What I can’t understand/Oh please God hold my hand/

I can’t make one note. I have a hard night.”— time calling the cab at

Linda Ronstadt

Why it had to happen to me?”

Here was a story that could be sung but also interprete­d. “I felt like a bomb had exploded in my head,” Ronstadt writes.

Other songwriter­s were emerging too — Karla Bonoff, Jackson Browne, J.D. Souther, Warren Zevon — many of them living in Southern California. Gram Parsons, a prodigy from the Deep South by way of Harvard, was on the scene as well. A new country-inflected sound, sentimenta­l but sophistica­ted, was taking shape, its refined instrument­ation honed in clubs like the Ash Grove and the Troubadour and then burnished in the studio.

Ronstadt was its muse and signature performer, especially after drummer Russ Kunkel taught her how to sing behind the beat. But even as Ronstadt and her posse were extending the innovation­s of the Beatles and the Rolling Stones in the studio, figures like Dylan and Young mounted a counterrev­olt, stripping down their effects. A new epithet, “overproduc­ed,” entered the debate and then dominated it, with the advent of punk. Ronstadt made no apologies.

“I loved high- fidelity sound,” she says. “I chased it all my life.” And followed it wherever it led — to Broadway (“The Pirates of Penzance”), to the American standards she revisited with Nelson Riddle, to the keening Appalachia­n harmonies on her “Trio” recordings with Harris and Dolly Parton, to the Mexican songs that carried her back to her Sonoran roots.

Most of those records sold well and brought Ronstadt fresh accolades (and Grammys), but they also implied that she had eased into the upholstere­d wastes of “adult contempora­ry.” Even hits she recorded with Aaron Neville seemed studies in mellifluou­sness, without sharp edges. She seemed in self-exile from the action.

Her memoir is a reminder of how close to the epicenter she once had been. She opened for the Doors (and was unimpresse­d with Jim Morrison) and toured with Young, whom she reveres. A highlight of the book is her account of an all-night jam with Parsons and Richards, Parsons disappeari­ng at intervals to ingest more drugs. At one point, Richards played “Wild Horses,” a new song he had written with Mick Jagger for the next Stones album. Parsons begged to record it ahead of them. To her astonishme­nt, Richards complied.

The subtitle “Musical Memoir” signals what Ronstadt’s book is about, but also what it’s not about — the hedonistic excesses of the pop star’s life. She sidesteps the rampant drug use, although in conversati­on she acknowledg­ed, “I tried everything,” including cocaine, which she did to such excess that she needed to have her nose cauterized, twice. For Ronstadt, who was often the only woman on the bus and in the hotel, those were not always happy times.

“All the men chased girls,” she says. “They were good guys,” she reflected. “Well, no they weren’t. They were cowboys. They were gunslinger­s.”

But many remain good friends, as do most of the celebrated boyfriends, like Jerry Brown, with whom she was so close, during his first time as governor, that she was sometimes called “the first lady of California.” And yet, keeping the vow of “I Never Will Marry” (a duet she recorded with Parton), Ronstadt is single, although she has two children, ages 22 and 19, who share her three-story home.

“They can’t believe I had a life before them,” Ronstadt says, almost shrieking with laughter. “I live a very quiet life here, nothing like I did.”

Later, she perched on her front stoop, awaiting the taxi she had summoned via an iPhone app for a quick tour of her neighborho­od and her favorite spots on the Presidio, where she still walks, although her limit is now 30 minutes. She suddenly remembered that Harris was coming to town and had invited her to join her on at least one song. Ronstadt had to say no, because of the Parkinson’s.

“Every time Emmy comes to town, I wish I could get up on stage with her,” Ronstadt says. “I know I’d be allowed to, but I can’t do it.” Instead she will sit in the audience “and think the notes I’d be singing” in earlier times.

“I have no choice,” she added, withheld passion at last surging to the surface, just as it does in the songs she made her own. “If there was something I could work on, I’d work on it till I could get it back. If there was a drug I could take to get it back, I would take the drug. I’d take napalm. But I’m never going to sing again.”

 ??  ?? Linda Ronstadt, left, accepts the Life Time Achievemen­t award from Neil Portnow, president and CEO of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences in 2011.
Linda Ronstadt, left, accepts the Life Time Achievemen­t award from Neil Portnow, president and CEO of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences in 2011.
 ??  ?? The Associated Press Singer Linda Ronstadt performs at the Providence Civic Center in Providence, R.I., on Aug. 8, 1978.
The Associated Press Singer Linda Ronstadt performs at the Providence Civic Center in Providence, R.I., on Aug. 8, 1978.

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