The Morning Call (Sunday)

Little Steven Van Zandt talks about his ‘Qoolest Quarantine Qollection’ radio show

- By L. Kent Wolgamott

Stuck in his New York apartment, Little

Steven Van Zandt decided he’d dig back through the archives of his weekly “Little Steven’s Undergroun­d Garage” syndicated radio program and create something special for those who are laboring under the coronaviru­s quarantine.

He called the new program “The Qoolest Quarantine Qollection” and found a host — “Trenton Quarantino,” another of his many alter egos.

“I’m thinking everybody’s home, everybody’s trapped at home, let’s give them some extra special content,” Van Zandt said in a late-April phone interview. “My syndicated show isn’t an interview show, but through the years, the guests would come on every now and then. So I thought, let’s string all of those shows together.

“Last week, it was Paul McCartney, Bruce (Springstee­n) was the week before that,” he elaborated. “Keith Richards is coming up, Ray Davies of The Kinks is coming up, Brian Wilson. They’re either acquaintan­ces or friends. It makes the conversati­on a little bit different. We’re insiders when it comes to the music business. So you can have a different conversati­on than you would with an outsider.”

The Qoolest Quarantine Qollection, a 12episode series, can be heard on more than 80 radio stations nationwide. The episodes can also be heard after they air at undergroun­dgarage.com.

Bits and pieces of the shows also turn up

during Van Zandt’s daily segments on Little Steven’s Undergroun­d Garage Sirius/XM channel 21.

Van Zandt created the Undergroun­d Garage in 2002 for a simple reason — real rock and roll had largely disappeare­d from the airwaves.

“I turned on the radio one day and I was ‘Wait a minute, what happened to this or that?’” he said. “Even the oldies stations keep changing newer and newer. Now the oldies are like the ’80s.”

So he came up with the Undergroun­d Garage concept, which he brought Sirius satellite radio in 2003.

“It was a selfish thing, first and foremost,” he said. “I grew up with great radio in the ‘60s. Why should our generation be the only generation that had any fun?”

The Sirius/XM channel has had a noticeable uptick in the last two months — “We’ve got a captive audience and people can listen for free,” Van Zandt said. They’re hearing the coolest rock ‘n’ roll records ever made.”

“There’s a fertile period of time in my mind that I call the renaissanc­e — from 1951 to ’71,” he said. “I don’t use that term lightly. The greatest music being made was also the most commercial. That only happens once in a while. The last time, there were these cats named Michelange­lo and DaVinci hanging around. We need to keep the renaissanc­e around for future generation­s.”

At the center of Van Zandt’s renaissanc­e is the British Invasion, The Beatles-led English bands that sent American kids — like Van Zandt and Springstee­n — into their garages to create the rock ‘n’ roll that gives the program and channels its name.

But that renaissanc­e isn’t just the three or four years of the British Invasion. So the Undergroun­d Garage goes back to play the music that influenced the invaders — Howlin’ Wolf, Little Richard, Elvis Presley, and follows the invasion with the Ramones, Joan Jett, Green Day, “all the way to the future where we have introduced 1,000 new bands in the 18 years,” Van Zandt said.

In between songs, Van Zandt talks about the cool culture of his renaissanc­e, hoping to pass that on to the generation­s too young to have experience­d, say, the surf craze.

“The ‘60s will never die,” he said. “People will be studying the ‘60s for years. So we throw in some cultural stuff — who invented the surfboard, who invented the drive-in theater, the hot dog.”

Or the bikini, which, as Van Zandt elucidated on a recent Sirius/XM episode, was actually invented by two French designers — they first called it “the atom” because it was so small, the second used the nuclear tests on a Pacific atoll to inspire the name “bikini.”

It was scorned, however, until Brigette Bardot wore a bikini in the

1956 movie “And God Created Woman” Bryan Hyland had a 1960 hit with “Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini” and the Beach Party movies starring Annette Funicello and Frankie Avalon hit theaters.

That kind of musical, historic and cultural knowledge is at the center of another of Van Zandt’s creations, TeachRock, a free music-based curriculum developed by his Rock and Roll Forever Foundation that’s now being used by 30,000 elementary, middle and high school teachers in all 50 states.

“We’ve got to preserve a lot of this stuff and use it, not just have it sit on a shelf like a museum,” Van Zandt said. “We’ve got a math lesson on how often The Beatles played in Hamburg. How much time did they spend on stage? That’s part of what we get them to add up. We’ve got a Billie Eilish lesson that’s thinking about her synesthesi­a, seeing music as colors. So we’ve got drawing to what they’re hearing. That’s a fascinatin­g thing to watch. We’ve got a

Greta Thunberg lesson about climate and pollution…”

TeachRock now has 200 lessons, all online, ready for teachers to use — which, said Van Zandt, has also increased during the pandemic.

Unlike many, Van Zandt isn’t going stir crazy during the quarantine.

Rather, the guitarist in Bruce Springstee­n and the E Street Band, actor, music, TV and Broadway producer, historian, activist and educator is recovering from a three-year stretch of recording and touring with his band, the

Disciples of Soul, along with other activity, like making an appearance in Martin Scorcese’s movie “The Irishman.”

“I hate to say it because of the circumstan­ces, but I’ve got to admit, I’m kind of enjoying this forced meditation,” Van Zandt said. “I’ve been going steady for so long, it’s kind of nice to be forced to stop for a minute. It’s a time for a reset, to think and analyze. That’s kind of interestin­g.”

A longtime political activist, Van Zandt is also spending time on the phone, speaking with “governors, mayors, anybody who will talk to me” urging them not to “open up” the country and to provide economic assistance to people well beyond the one-time $1,200 federal payment.

“They’re making a big mistake right now,” Van Zandt said. “This is the worst-handled emergency I’ve ever seen in my life. If we don’t get a grip on this thing, the second wave is going to be worse and if we get a second quarantine, look out.”

Had the coronaviru­s not emerged, Van Zandt very likely would be preparing for a Springstee­n and the E Street Band tour right now. But that trek has now been put off indefinite­ly.

“It’s going to be a while,” Van Zandt said of concerts. “I don’t think we’re going to see anything until we have at least a fast, reliable test. Then we can have sports and concerts, but not with an audience. There’s going to be three stages. This is the first stage, the quarantine. Then you’ll have sporting events, concert events with no audience, with people watching at home, because you can’t take the chance.

“The third stage, that could be up to a year, a year and a half, is when they have a vaccine and we can get back to something like normal. We all hope it’s quicker, but it could be 2022,” he said. “We’ve got to be prepared mentally for the worst-case scenario and then be happily surprised.”

Music writer L. Kent Wolgamott is a contributo­r to The Morning Call.

 ?? CHARLES FOX/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER ?? Steven Van Zandt, from left, Bruce Springstee­n and Patti Scialfa come together at the end of “Sherry Darling” during “The River Tour” in Philadelph­ia at the Wells Fargo Center in 2016.
CHARLES FOX/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER Steven Van Zandt, from left, Bruce Springstee­n and Patti Scialfa come together at the end of “Sherry Darling” during “The River Tour” in Philadelph­ia at the Wells Fargo Center in 2016.
 ?? JO LOPEZ PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? Little Steven Van Zandt on stage.
JO LOPEZ PHOTOGRAPH­Y Little Steven Van Zandt on stage.

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