
A self-described "saloon singer," Pat Guadagno lives up to his nickname, having played professionally around the Shore for about 20 years and averaging 10 shows a week in the summer at local clubs.
Guadagno's packed calendar -- which includes a free show with Bobby Strange at 7 p.m. Friday (Aug. 22) in Red Bank’s Riverside Gardens Park, plus gigs at McLoone's Pier House in Long Branch on Saturday (Aug. 23) and Wednesday (Aug. 27) -- is the fact that Guadagno is not a songwriter. Instead, he presents his own interpretations of classic numbers by the likes of Bob Dylan and the work of more obscure songwriters such as Fred Knobloch’s “King of Fools,” as evidenced on Guadagno's 2003 album, "Live at the City Lights Saloon."
Guadagno recently spoke with Metromix Jersey Shore about his secret to staying busy and what writers are the most rewarding to cover.Q&A: Pat Guadagno
What's your secret for being able to get out
there and play as much as you do?
I don't know; I still love doing it. I guess
working other jobs that I didn’t like doing
quite as much as this. I love working nights and
having days off -- it’s kind of cool.
You're known for putting your own spin on other
writers' material.
Yeah, that kind of came out of necessity from my
songwriting. I realized that I could arrange
other people’s music better than my own songs,
so I decided to do that full-time and it’s kind
of caught on. It was a struggle for a long time
because, really, in this industry, you don't get
any respect if you're not a singer/songwriter
and you're just kind of recognized as a cover
band or a "Margaritaville" kind of player.
But lately it's kind of caught on, and I'm
starting to get some respect as an entertainer
as opposed to just singing other people's music.
One song that I arranged was picked up on a
Showtime series, so that was a real pleasure for
me.
That was the Warren Zevon song "Don’t Let Us Get
Sick" (used on the series "Californication"),
right?
Yeah.
And
how did that come about?
That was really just from my record being on
iTunes. Somebody out in L.A. heard the version,
liked it, called me up and asked if they could
use it. It was all just kind of one of those
things, the way it happened.
Do
you think the fact that you were invited to play
the Songwriters in the Park series has to do
with the increased respect you've been getting
as an entertainer?
Yeah ... I was invited to play the Light of Day
concert and do one of their songwriters circles,
and I got up there and I’m not sure whether they
realized because a lot of the stuff I do is
pretty obscure, so they think it's mine without
looking at the credit. I always give the
songwriters credit for their material. But I got
up there onstage and confessed that I was not a
songwriter. .. That kind of started the ball
rolling, and I guess with the release of the
album, some of the radio stations starting
picking up on the different versions of other
people’s music and Sirius Radio is starting to
play some of it. They have a show called
"Coffeehouse Covers," where they’ve been a lot
of my music on there.
I
saw on your Web site they've been playing "Bus
Stop" (originally performed by the Hollies),
right?
Yeah.
With your performances, is it an effort of yours
to bring attention to some of the lesser-known
songwriters out there, like Fred Knobloch?
Yeah, yeah it is. I travel to Nashville a lot
and just have the utmost respect for the guys,
the songwriters in Nashville, that really keep
the whole machine going. A lot of their stuff
doesn't get released on the country Top 40; it's
just a lot of great material that otherwise
doesn't get any kind of airplay, so I kind of
find their songs and do the ones that I want.
One of the things I love about my job is I just
do songs I like. I’m not in a position when I
have to play stuff I don't particularly like or
do what everybody does, mainly.
Over the years, are there any songs that you've
played countless times and still continue to
surprise you?
Yeah. I guess because I’m not a songwriter I’m
just really taken by lyrics and I think that's
why I do a lot of Bob (Dylan) songs because I’m
in love with his lyrics, and Tom Waits is
another guy that I really respect.
As a matter of fact, I'm working on a Tom Waits
show that we're going to do in the fall. We
don’t have a date for it yet. I realized, when I
was playing one night, that I do a lot of his
stuff, too, so we’re gonna throw together a Tom
Waits night. …. I’ve always loved his stuff, and
the nice thing about the Tom Waits stuff and the
Bob Dylan stuff is that it's melodic and their
treatment of it is more of a songwriters'
treatment, so it lends itself to creativity.
They're almost like rough copies of the songs
and they're in their purest form, so they lend
themselves to license.
Are
there any plans for another record, a follow-up
to "Live at the City Lights Saloon"?
Yeah, I've been working on one; I hope it will
be out this year. As a matter of fact, I’m on my
way to the studio. I've got a lot of stuff
recorded, I'm just trying to throw something
together that makes sense, as far as an album’s
concerned.
