
Cheap Trick Bassist
Pete Comita

An Interview with Mark Rowe
After Tom Petersson left Cheap Trick in 1980 he was replaced on 12-string bass by Pete Comita. Comita toured with Cheap Trick for just over a year. We recently tracked Pete down and had a chance to chat with him. Thanks Pete!
Who
is Pete Comita? If you had to describe yourself in a single paragraph, what
would you say?
I'm a pretty
easy going guy who's not real crazy about confrontations. I guess being as
pretty easy going as I am can be a detriment but I am who I am and I've finally
come to accept that. I believe in giving everyone a chance until they prove me
wrong, then they're gone in my book. Sometimes it is hard for me to accept the
ways of the world because at times they are are cruel and unforgiving but I try
to see the glass half full these days. Life is what it is and I'm stuck with
it for the duration. I've been blessed most my life because I've always been
able to do just what I love, music. I've never had a straight job, always been
my own boss, and freedom is what I love the most. Music has given that to me,
so I've been a pretty lucky guy.
When
did you first become involved with music and the guitar?
When
I was about 14, I was watching the Ed Sullivan show and on came The Beatles. I
already heard their songs on the radio and loved them. But when I saw that only
four guys were making all that music and my two sisters were screaming and
girls fainting on TV, I knew that was what I wanted to do. It was my birthday
and my dad gave me a choice: He would either buy me a dog or a bass guitar. I
chose the bass. In those days no one played rock music so I learned the bass
line to "Mr. Tambourine Man" by The Byrds. I immediately got a gig with this
band whose singer's brother-in-law owned the biggest club in Chicago "This Cellar". The band was called U.S. Male. At 14 I was playing in front of 1500
people every weekend. So I played bass for the next three years. The second I heard
Jimmy Hendrix I said goodbye to the bass and started playing guitar.
Tell
us about when you were playing in d’Thumbs with Jon Brant.
I
was in a band called Beowolf and John was a bass player working at a clothing
shop. He wasn't very good but we took him anyway. We played clubs around
Chicago in various other bands together for years. Then I got an offer to start
this new band with the singer of the biggest band in town, Pez Band. His
name was Cliff Johnson of Off-Broadway fame. So I dragged John along with me. The Thumbs became the biggest band in town till Cheap Trick came along. Then they were our biggest competition, and also my favorite band.
How
did you become involved with CT? It must have been a huge thrill to be playing
with a major rock band having graduated from high school only a couple of years
earlier!
I'll try to keep this as short as
I can. Cheap Trick's manager called me in L.A. and asked me if I knew how to play slide
guitar. I had only played slide on one song in my life, "Dancing Days" by Led
Zeppelin. I lied and said I was great at it. So he said I would have a ticket to New York the next morning to audition for
Foghat. I borrowed all the Foghat cassettes I could find and stayed up all
night learning their songs. To my amazement I got the gig. While on the road
with them their manager came to my room and suddenly fired me. I was
devastated. I went home to Chicago to my dad's house and a week later Cheap Trick's
manager asked me if I could play bass the next day at the Maple Leaf Gardens with
Cheap Trick. No rehearsal, just sound check. They told me Tom was sick and
could I handle it. I told them to send me a ticket. I never even held a 12-string
bass before.

Promotional photos with
Pete playing a 4-string bass at the practice facility on West State Street in
Rockford, Illinois.
The next day the reviews in the papers said, "Tom was his normal shining self". Then I finished off three more shows in Canada. Cheap Trick was my favorite all-time band. It all happened so fast I thought it was a dream. But two weeks later they asked me if I could go to Japan. Now I knew something was up because you can't be sick in this business for over two weeks. We played four shows in Japan and on the plane on the way home Rick asked me to join the band. He told me Tom had been fired. I thought I had died and went to heaven. And for the next year that's what it was. The whole Foghat thing was just a ploy to see if I could handle playing concerts. Pretty conniving, huh? As far as the age difference, I think I'll pass on that one, I lie anyway.
You wrote on your MySpace blog that
Robin Zander stole the song, “I Can’t Take It” that was included on Cheap
Trick's "Next Position Please" album. Tell us about this. Are there any other songs on which you
were not properly credited?
"I Can't Take It" was a
combination of two songs I had written before I joined Cheap Trick. One day, in the limo,
I played a cassette for Robin of those songs. One was called "I Can't
Take It",
the other, "Move'n On". Robin said he liked those songs and wanted to work on
them with me. So one day I went to his house in Rockford and arranged both
songs to make one. I already had the melody and music to those songs, and the
title "I Can't Take It". Robin helped me arrange that song, but arranging
isn't writing. I quit the band during the recording of the album "One
On One". Most of
the bass playing on that record is me, although I didn't get credit. The lick
in the intro of "If You Want My Love" I came up with and played it on the bass. Rick decided to use it and played it on guitar on the record. Those are the
only things I wasn't credited for.

To clarify, you state that most of the bass work
on the "One On One" album is yours although
you were uncredited. That's bound to be a controversial claim given that Jon
Brant and Rick Nielsen are widely regarded as the bassists on that album. Did you record the demo's
for those songs or is it your playing on the actual released recordings? Did
you use a 12-string bass on any of those songs?
Well, unless
John played note for note everything I played on the masters, it's me. I have
all the out takes and demos of that album. I never listened to the finished
album so John may have played on a few tracks. I'm pretty sure the record was
finished by the time I split. I used an Alembic 8-string on two tracks but
no 12-string. My experience has been that producers aren't real crazy about 12-strings in the studio. Roy Thomas Baker produced that album and he didn't even
want to hear the 12-string. My favorite bass sound I ever recorded was with
Jack Douglas on a song called "Born to Raise Hell". It was an Alembic 8-string
and Jack let me crank the amp as loud as I wanted. Jack Douglas was by far the
best producer I ever worked with. His attitude - No stress, no worries, just
rock.
How active were you in the CT songwriting
process?
I was never involved in any songwriting with
the band but we recorded " Reach Out" written by Bob James (Montrose) and
myself for the movie soundtrack "Heavy Metal". One day I saw Robin
and he told me he wanted to record "I Can't Take It" for their next album, "Next Position
Please", but he couldn't tell the band I had anything to do with it or they
wouldn't put it on the record because they were pissed that I quit. He said
after it was recorded he would tell them my involvement and we would settle up
on the details. After the record was released I saw him once again at a club. I went up to him and asked him if he had told the band the truth about the
song. He looked directly into my eyes and said, "What are you talking about
Pete?" I was in complete disbelief. I'll give credit where credited is
due: Robin wrote the rest of the lyrics, but that's it. More than anything it
hurt my feelings because I thought we were friends. I'm not worried about any
backlash that may result in this disclosure for reasons I choose not to reveal
at this time. If Robin ever develops a conscience maybe he'll do the right
thing, but I won't hold my breath.


You started out playing Rick’s
white Hamer 12-string bass. Did you like it?
No, the action was too high and
it didn't sustain enough.
Was
it tough making the transition from guitar to 12-string bass?
At first it was very difficult
because my hands weren't strong enough yet. The first time I played it I was in
love because it sounded, to me, like a giant grand piano.

You
then got the tiger-striped standard 12. Tell us about that.
I considered it more zebra
striped. I went to Hamer and asked Joel to make me a 12 with an Explorer
body, but smaller. I told him to surprise me with the rest of the details and
boy, did he ever. The look, sound and all the rest was Joel's creation. The
only thing I asked for was a scaled-down Explorer body and a little growl and
he came up with it. I really like Joel.
What
rig were you using on stage with CT? Did it give you the sound you wanted?
I was using three SVT's and one
Marshall guitar amp stack. That Zebra striped 12 was rigged so the low bass
strings went to the SVT's and the high guitar strings went to the Marshall. Eventually I asked him to wire all the strings together so they would all come
out of one amp. I loved the clean sound but it never got enough distortion when
I wanted it.
Did the Zebra 12 originally have two output
jacks then? Or was it wired with an onboard crossover to allow the highs to be
split from the lows?
The Zebra
originally came with three outputs. Each string could have gone to a different
amp. Joel really went high-tech on that bass. He had LED's running all the way
up the neck and my name mysteriously hidden in the paint job. I
asked Joel to wire all the inputs together because it was less brain damage, faster to
switch basses and no one would've ever noticed the difference live anyway.
In the live Cheap Trick concert video of
Chicagofest ’81 it looked as though there was some tension between you and the
other band members. Is this correct?
Very observant! I had already
quit by then and that was the source of the tension. Rick was too great of a
showman to be concerned about anything I was doing on stage. Bunny was always
irritated anyway and Robin was his normal self, I thought. They were mad because
they were too lazy to look for a new bass player so I literally put Jon Brant
in that band.
Why
did you leave Cheap Trick?
I wanted to go back to the guitar.
In
addition to playing bass with Cheap Trick you played guitar with Foghat, Enuff
Z’Nuff and Black Oak Arkansas. (Black Oak Arkansas is one of my favorites, btw.)
What are your favorite memories about those bands?
Foghat! What a mixture of of diverse personalities. What stands out the most is the
singer, Dave. I never heard him say a word unless he was on stage. I mean never!
Enuff Z’Nuff was just pure fun. I couldn't take anything really serious with
them because they were such goofs. But they had great songs. Black Oak Arkansas
was fun too. But you had to be careful of Jim Dandy swinging that sword on
stage. It came a little too close for comfort a few times.
What have you been doing lately? Any new albums
or projects in the works?
Presently I'm writing and
recording my latest work. I'm pretty satisfied with what I've been coming up
with lately. The only thing it's lacking, to be honest, is Robin's voice. I plan
on forming a cool band whose members think like I do in regards to music. Or at
least look good.

Do
you still have or play any 12-string basses?
Unfortunately I sold my Zebra
striped bass a few years ago because it was just gathering dust under my bed
for years. I wanted it to be put to better use because that bass was screaming
to be played. I wish I still had it.
When
you’re not playing music, how do you spend your time?
Somewhere along the way I figured
out I feel the best while not thinking of myself but actually doing something
unselfish or unrewarding for someone else. I read a lot hoping to change my
perspective of this crazy world - or at least accept it.
One thing I’ve always wanted to know about touring musicians: When you’re on the road, how do you get your laundry done? Do you send it out or find a Laundromat and do it yourself?
Thanks Pete! Be sure to let us know about your future projects!
Be sure to check out Pete's
MySpace page!
Published September 1, 2008
