Excerpts from a conversation with
Andre 'Mr Rhythm' Williams
By Dan Epstein
Andre Williams * Read the whole article in UGLY THINGS #17Andre Williams* see -
Andre Williams

Now, at the ripe old age of 61 or 64 (depending on who you
talk to), Andre is back, relatively clean, and just as dapper as ever -- not to
mention sleazy.
ANDRE: I'm gonna
tell you something, Dan; back then, it was a struggle! Back then, all of my
peers said, 'Oh, that nigger can't sing!' You know, I was the only one talkin'
that stuff, and Fortune was a small label. Right now, I'm bigger than I was at
my highest point in '59 and '60; I'm makin' more money in one night than I was makin' in a month; it's just a complete different turnaround. And now that I
see that these kids, when I go to play at a club, the club is packed, and I got
people from 18 years-old to 50 in the club! Man, I guess I'm just getting the
blessings from my mother. She died when I was six, when we was in the projects
in Chicago. I remember when she died, she was telling my aunties, 'Take
care of Zeffrey' -- that's my first name -- 'cuz she knew I was a real
somethin' different kinda little guy. Maybe she was just lookin' down on me,
man, because I never thought I would live to get 61 years-old. Number two: I
never thought that I would see the stage again. Number three, I never thought
I'd get this kind of attention; I never thought I'd look as well as I look.
Everything that I never thought would happen, is happening.
UT:Spending all
that time in the studio (in the '50s) probably also taught you how to make
records...
ANDRE:Yeah; not only
figuring out how records was made, it brought me to the realization that I
could write! I didn't have no prior musical training, but I could put those
damn songs together in five or ten minutes. I could get a guitar player and a
drummer, get me a drink or smoke me a half a joint, and BAM -- I could come up
with a song. But it was always something related to something in my life that I
had seen or done, or seen somebody else do. I never wrote fantasy. Everything
that I've ever written relates to something that I have been indirectly or
directly connected with.
ANDRE:Well see, I
was in and out of Motown from around '61 to '65. I almost started Berry [in the
business], and we had a friendship going, but I could never conform to his way
of doing business, and I could never be a yes-man and suck up to him, so he
fired me! But when he'd fire me, then he'd get a guilty conscience or something,
and he call me back. I'd go back and work maybe six or seven months, then mess
up again and he'd fire me again . He kept sayin', 'Andre, I want to make
you a millionaire, but you don't wanna be a millionaire; you don't wanna do
things the way they supposed to be done! You got your own way of doing things,
and I can't have that here at my company! I can't let you ruin my
company!' And I'd say, 'Well then, screw it, man. Bye!' And I'd
leave and go somewhere, and get a hit -- like, I'd go to Chicago and do
'Shake a Tail Feather' with the
Five Du-Tones -- and Berry'd send a telegram sayin', 'Come back to
Detroit!' (laughs) You know? Everytime I'd catch a hit like 'Twine
Time,' he'd send for me, because he didn't want his soldiers out there. He
was a selfish cat.
UT:So you went over
to Chess after '65?
ANDRE:Yeah. Well
see, Chess was always interested in me, but they were scared of me; matter of
fact, a lot of companies were really scared of me, because I was known to be a
very erratic, wild, hellraiser. They wanted to do business with me, but they was
leery, 'cuz they didn't know when I might pull out a gun and jump on their desk
and moon 'em, or whatever. They say, 'Man, I'd like to get some of
Andre's stuff, but damn; I don't know if I could put up with this guy.'
Chess was the same way, but Leonard always liked me; he said, 'You a wild
motherfucker! Boy, If I could ever corral you, I could make you a millionaire,
but Andre you so wild!'
UT:Is 'The
Stroke' [one of Andre's raunchier 1960s sides] from your Chess
period?
ANDRE:Oh yeah;
that's on Checker. 'The Stroke' was done as the follow-up for
'Cadillac Jack.' I did 'Cadillac Jack' and it sold pretty
good, so then I did 'The Stroke.' The other side was really supposed to be the
A-side, which was 'Humpin', Bumpin' and Thumpin'.'
UT:It's funny,
because 'Cadillac Jack' is real smooth, and 'The Stroke' and 'Humpin', Bumpin' and Thumpin'' are just completely out of
control.
ANDRE:Well, they
was out of control because I was drunk as hell in the studio!
Heh-heh-heh-heh-heh!
UT:Well, that would
explain it.
ANDRE:Yeah, and
then they were unarranged songs. That was what you call a 'head'
session. Monk Higgins and The Dells did
'Cadillac Jack' with me, so
that was kind of laid out and arranged. We just got together and popped out those other
ones.
The minute something good would jump up, something bad would
come in play, and trip it over, or I would knock it over, and it kept going on
and on until I just said 'The hell with it, I'm too old, there's nothing
else gonna happen, I'll just do this.' And then I went down to Ike Turner,
and that was the worst experience of my entire life. I stayed out there about
18 months, and when I come out of there I was weighin' about 97 pounds and I
was half-dead. I was a walkin' fuckin' skeleton, Dan! After that, I just gave
up. That's when the drug thing had caught me real bad, and then it just
spiralled downhill. I mean down, four stories below the gutter. Sub-basement.
Like it was a journey just to climb up to the curb.