Two questions. What’s it like to wake up and know you have written so many wonderful songs? What are your plans for 2023?
FRED @ Issue no. 217I read a quote in a magazine recently from Susie. I thought it was interesting. “To be honest, I find the word muse to be a little demeaning. I haven’t really got time to be anyone’s muse. However, I am a frequent visitor in my husband’s songs, I seem to be always walking in and out of them. His songs look after me. And if I am to be a muse, then I am his and he is mine.” What do you think about that?
SANDRA @ Issue no. 167My dad passed away a couple of weeks ago and we gave him an Elvis themed funeral. No, we didn’t dress up in white jumpsuits, but his coffin had Elvis pictures and lyrics, and Elvis songs were played for him. I don’t know if anyone has asked you this before in The Red Hand Files, but what songs would you like played at your own funeral?
DOUG @ Issue no. 139The greatest songs, I think, you wrote under influence of drugs. How is it these days?
PETI @ Issue no. 47How can I reclaim songs of yours which I have, until recently, associated intensely with a really terrible relationship? I want them back, unharmed. Can you help me?
FREYJA @ Issue no. 40You’ve written at length in song, poetry & prose about love. What is love? Why do love songs so frequently move us? Perhaps a list of your top 10 love songs?
MACK @ Issue no. 32We are some students in an elementary school, from 12 and 13 years. We have studied with our teacher about the death in your music. We’ve got some questions about your songs. How do you represent death through your songs? And have you some guilty about your tragic evenements in your life about the death? We found you sometimes weirdos, strange and dark in your differents songs, but we like it! So how do you see yourself in your songs? Are you happy sometimes?
CHILDREN FROM THE COLLEGE OF CORSICA @ Issue no. 310