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  • 30
    Oct
    2012
    4:01pm, EDT

    Chuck Berry: 'My singing days have passed'

    By Rolling Stone

    Recently, Chuck Berry made a rare move: he gave an interview. Visiting Cleveland to accept the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s American Music Masters Award, the 86-year-old met with journalists at the museum’s offices before touring an exhibit celebrating his life.

    Steve Snowden / Getty Images Contributor

    Chuck Berry in 2009

    Seated in the center of a conference table between friend Joe Edwards and his son Charles Berry Jr., wearing a captain's hat and a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame varsity jacket, Berry was humble, revealing and playful.

    "Now let me make a statement," he said at the beginning. "After being before drums for 48 years, it has taken effect in the last four months and I have a strange hiccup that comes out every time I tell the truth." The room erupted in laughter. 

    At one point, Rolling Stone asked Berry how far the country has come since the days he played segregated venues throughout the South. Berry paused for a moment.

    "I never thought that a man with the qualities, features, and all that (President Obama) has, [could] be our President," he said. "My dad said, 'You may not live to see that day,' and I believed him. I thank God that I have." Berry stopped for several seconds while his eyes welled up. "Excuse me," he said.


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    The most moving moment came when Berry discussed his own future. Explaining that he doesn't hear well, Berry turned to his friend Edwards. "If you don’t mind, Joe, explaining [questions] to me, because I am hearing very little. I’m wondering about my future," he said, raising his finger. "That’s news!"

    Berry was asked to expand. "Well, I’ll give you a little piece of poetry," he said. "Give you a song? I can’t do that. My singing days have passed. My voice is gone. My throat is worn. And my lungs are going fast.  I think that explains it."

    St. Louis Post-Dispatch writer Kevin C. Johnson argued that people still pay to see Berry monthly at St. Louis’ Blueberry Hill.

    "I’ll tell you what that is," Berry said. "They’re having a great time from memory. And I hope that I can continue to enhance their memory because it looks very dim, like I said, you know."

    Slideshow: Chuck Berry

    Launch slideshow

    More from Rolling Stone:

    • Chuck Berry statue unveiled in St. Louis
    • Flashback: John Lennon and Chuck Berry jam on 'Johnny B. Goode'
    • Stones blow through 12-song set in Paris
    Show more
    Explore related topics: music, featured, chuck-berry
  • 25
    Apr
    2012
    10:54am, EDT

    New Beatles concert film to open in movie theaters

    AP file

    The Beatles, preparing to leave London for their American tour in 1965.

    By Rolling Stone

    The Beatles' first full concert in the United States at the Washington Coliseum in Washington, D.C. will be screened in movie theaters next month, Deadline Hollywood reports. "The Beatles: The Lost Concert" will be shown in a limited engagement at theaters across the United States on May 17 and 22, with a special premiere at the Ziegfeld Theater in Manhattan on May 6.

    Photos: Rare Beatles Pictures


    Follow @ msnbc_ent

    The concert film will be proceeded by a documentary on the early rise of Beatlemania in the United States. This portion of the movie will feature new interviews with concert attendees, journalists, historians, assorted Beatles associates and contemporary stars such as Aerosmith's Steven Tyler and Joe Perry, Chuck Berry, Mark Ronson and Strokes members Albert Hammond Jr. and Nick Valensi.

    Related content:

    • Will Beatles sons form own band?
    • Did McCartney video contain sign-language errors?

     

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    Explore related topics: the-beatles, featured, steven-tyler, chuck-berry

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