In a new interview with Matt Wardlaw of Ultimate Classic Rock, W.A.S.P. leader Blackie Lawless spoke about the status of his long-in-the-works autobiography, which has the working title of "Tales From The Square Mile". He said (as transcribed by BLABBERMOUTH.NET): "My head has really been into this book that I've been working on. And it's really consumed most of my time. And it's been way more work than I ever thought it was gonna be. It's easily as much work as making a record, but probably more, because I've been working on this now for five years."
Blackie continued: "Since we came home [from tour] last November, I have really, really buckled down and started working on this. I'm probably halfway done now, but the amount of research that it took to get a lot of these stories correct is really time consuming. And I find that there will be times where it'll take me six, seven hours to write two paragraphs because of the amount of research that's going on. Because when I first started this, like probably everybody else, I would've thought it would've been my singular story. And that seemed reasonable at the time. But the more I got into it, the more I realized it was not just my story."
Regarding why he decided to name the book "Tales From The Square Mile", Blackie said: "What it's about is that square mile that I was living in in Hollywood at the time, and the influences that the town itself would have on not just me, but the music industry overall, and we are all tied to it, whether we know it or not. Because the way the movie studio systems were set up in the '20s, '30s and '40s had a direct influence on what the record companies would be later. So all this research, like I said, that went into to uncovering a lot of what I've been doing has just taken an enormous amount of time. But the little nuggets that I've discovered that I think people will find interesting for me were fascinating when I would uncover them. And there's a lot of goofy coincidences that have happened in it too, the things that have been uncovered. So, like I said, I think it's gonna be an interesting read when people see it. It's not your gonna be your typical rock and roll book by any stretch."
Asked what has been the most enlightening thing for him as he has taken stock of everything that was going on during his earlier years, Blackie said: "Oh, man. Well, when you write a book, especially something like this, you realize you saved yourself about 40 years of being on a psychiatrist's couch because the rabbit holes that you have to go down… It's really revealing, because we have surface memory of events that have happened in our lives, but it's not until we go to really start digging deeper at any specific event that might have happened in your life. You think you remember it, and you do on the surface, but it's not until you start really going back to wherever that event may have happened in your head and you start looking and visualizing everything that was going on at the time. And man, I'm here to tell you, there's a lot of stones that you uncover that some are good and some are not so good. But I've come to the understanding that this is not a book I could have written 20 years ago, because I wasn't in the headspace to write it. So it's been — as the old GRATEFUL DEAD song says, 'What a long, strange trip it's been.' It's been that."
As for which area covered in the book was a particular "challenge" for him to write about, Lawless said: "Childhood. Because that too is where you start going down these rabbit holes and things that you think… It reminds me of the old Peter Gabriel song, 'Digging in the dirt to find the places where we got hurt.' My dad was in the construction business, and we traveled a lot when I was a kid. I ended up going to 13 different schools by the time I graduated. So I was constantly the new kid. And it's hard to make friends. And the friends you do make, as soon as you make them, you're gone again. And that ended up having quite a bit more of an impact on me growing up than even I gave it credit for. And as men, or as boys, we were constantly being tested by the older kids and stuff like that. So there was a lot of brutality that went on with it. But I would say in a word, childhood."
Back in October 2022, Lawless told Rockin' Metal Revival about the process of writing his autobiography: "When I sat down to start writing the book, it just poured out of me. And that was an interesting process, too, because, never having done that before, you always think of the… the first thing that comes to anybody's head is the things that stand out. But what I found that more than anything is it was a process of self-discovery, because if you look at any given event that may happen in your life that's significant — we all have those; those signposts that point us in one direction or another — it's one thing to write about it, but to get to the root of it, what you have to do is go back and do some real self-examination and say, 'Okay, what led me to this? And then what led me to that?' And so forth."
He continued: "It reminds me. I've heard stories of psychiatrists, when they tell people, if they've gone through something that's intense in their life or they've lost a loved one or something like that, write them a letter," he continued. "And I found that doing this is very much like that. Because I've never done the thing that the psychiatrists have said — fortunately, I've never been put in that position — but it reminded me of hearing what they were saying, because it ends up being a letter to yourself. And you discover some interesting stuff — the good, the bad, the ugly and all that. And it's quite a revealing process, because the person you are now is not the person you were when you were doing some of those idiotic things, or when something intense happened in your life that wasn't idiotic. But again, what led you from point A to point B to become that person, and you look back on it now and you go, 'Wow, look how I've changed.'"
"Writing, whether it's lyrics or anything like that, you try to write them as multi-dimensional as you can because the listener, when they listen to it today, you want them in five years to be able to look at those same lyrics and see something totally different, because who they are in five years is not who they are right now," Lawless added. "So that's really what you're trying to do."
W.A.S.P. recently announced the "1984 To Headless" 2026 U.S. and Canada tour with KK'S PRIEST as very special guest. The tour will kick off on September 10 in California and run through October 31. W.A.S.P. will play the hits from the band's first four albums: the band's iconic debut LP in 1984, followed the next year with "The Last Command", "Inside The Electric Circus" in 1987 and "The Headless Children" in 1989.
W.A.S.P. will take the "1984 To Headless" tour to Europe and the rest of the world in 2027.
(Source: www.blabbermouth.net)
Photo by Natalia Reshetnikova (c) HeadBanger.ru