SPS: Your original name, was it John Paul Baldwin?
JPJ: No. Just John Baldwin. No middle name. It’s not common in England, middle names.
SPS: I have a brother, John Paul Sauer.
JPJ: Oh, right? There’s a lot more John Pauls these days, especially in Ireland, after the pope.
SPS: When did you change your name?
JPJ: I'd forgotten, to be honest, until I read the Andrew Oldham book. Andrew Loog Oldham – and he reminded me in there that in fact he thought of the name. [inaudible] movie poster for John Paul Jones the American. So, working that back, it would have been 1964.
SPS: So, after – I guess it started out when you started playing at those American naval bases over in England?
JPJ: No, I had done all that. I was John Baldwin. It was really when I became an arranger for Andrew Oldham. That was its purpose. And also I had a single out at the same time. Oh, that’s right! He produced it. He produced my first single. And that came out under John Paul Jones.
SPS: Now, I know that you were a session musician. Why was it that you put out the "Baja" single?
JPJ: I wasn't a session musician before "Baja." I was just, just breaking into it, which means like maybe a couple of sessions a week as opposed to when I left it about three sessions a day.
SPS: So we're talking about something like 30 years ago you were looking at solo stardom!
JPJ: Yeah. Well, I'd been in a band. I'd had enough of the road.
SPS: The guys from the Tornados?
JPJ: No, it was the guys from the Shadows, Jet Harris and Tony Meehan. ... And we were playing for like 200-500 people a night. ...
SPS: Backtracking a little bit, there was something I wanted to know about your dad and your mom. They toured together on some sort of an act?
JPJ: That's right. They had what you'd call a vaudeville act.
SPS: What was that basically?
JPJ: Musical comedy. It was actually based around -- she was the singer, and she had a really incompetent accompanist or willfully difficult accompanist. He’d start playing, he’d do like long introductions. [Singing:] "Oh, sweet mystery of love…" And then a bell would ring. He goes to the piano, he’d pull out an alarm clock, and the audience gags. So she’d never really get through a song.
SPS: How old do you think you were? I read that you'd toured with them.
JPJ: That's right.
SPS: Was that even before your teens?
JPJ: Oh yeah. That's probably right. ...
SPS: Your dad then played for the Ambrose Orchestra. Were you along with him on there?
JPJ: No, that was before.
SPS: I've always wondered the date that you were married.
JPJ: The date that I was married? I don't know if she'd necessarily want it printed, to be honest.
SPS: There goes out the next question. I was gonna ask when your three daughters were born.
JPJ: Yeah. Information like that…
SPS: And your social security number?
JPJ: [Laughs]