He puts his licks on 'Route
66.:' rocker-turned-scorer
Warren Zevon. Bruce Fretts.
Entertainment Weekly, June 4, 1993
Full Text: COPYRIGHT Entertainment Weekly Inc. 1993
WARREN ZEVON doesn't have a favorite TV show. "That's one of
those questions like, 'Which band do you like out of Seattle?' that I'm
not equipped to answer," growls the grizzled singer-songwriter who is
best known for his 1978 hit, "Werewolves of London," and is now
scoring NBC's revamped Route 66. "My lack of a vast knowledge of
episodic TV music may have been what appealed to [the producers],"
Zevon, 46, explains. "I wouldn't know a Rockford tension cue if it was
floating in my coffee cup."
Zevon describes the new series' instrumentals as "grunge-classical"
numbers that bear no resemblance to the jazzy Nelson Riddle
arrangements from the original 1960-64 series. His gravelly voice,
which he says "sounds like Nick Nolte trying to sing the national
anthem," is heard only on the opening theme.
No stranger to film soundtracks (his songs have been heard in movies
from 1969's Midnight Cowboy to 1991's Grand Canyon), Zevon started
dabbling in TV scoring a few years ago with NBC's Drug Wars and
HBO's Tales From the Crypt. Way back in the '60s, he penned TV ad
jingles for Chevrolet's Camaro, Gallo wines, and "one of the two
principal catsup makers of the age," he recalls.
Still, if Zevon's new 66 tunes don't make people forget "Werewolves"
("a stupid song for smart people") that's just fine with him. "If you're
lucky, people like something you do early and something you do just
before you drop dead," he says. "That's as many pats on the back as
you should expect."