It took a long time for bass player Stu Cook to find his musical direction. Before he was in the Blue Velvets and the Golliwogs, and way before those two bands morphed into Creedence Clearwater Revival, Cook was a trumpet player, then a pianist, then a guitarist.
"But I only played the bottom four strings, so the logical progression was to play bass," says Cook, 65, by phone from his home in Austin, Texas. He and Creedence drummer Doug "Cosmo" Clifford and their bandmates, who make up Creedence Clearwater Revisited, are touring all over the country this summer.
Creedence Clearwater Revival was the hottest band in America in the late '60s and early '70s, with nine Top-10 hits, and three albums released in their busiest year, 1969.
"It was a whirlwind. It was a quiet rocket ride," recalls Cook of what happened when the band finally hit. "We knew each other since junior high school, and we had been recording for years as the Golliwogs, and getting some minor success.
"We would find work over the years in places like Lodi," he adds, laughing at his reference to the depressing Creedence song about a struggling musician.
Then "Suzie Q" hit the charts, then "Proud Mary," then "Bad Moon Rising." The band was prepared for it musically, but not emotionally.
"It's such a fragile business," says Cook. "Nobody wants to talk to you till suddenly the phone won't stop ringing. You're on the out till you're on the in, and it was like someone threw a switch. You try to hang on, but things are happening so fast. You can quickly get unconnected. You start to believe that you're who they tell you you are. And that's a duality that's very difficult to keep grounded in."
Inevitably, there were arguments about the direction of the band between singer-guitarist-songwriter John Fogerty and everyone else. They split up in 1972, yet their music became a staple of classic rock radio, and their songs became the darlings of film soundtracks, including "Twilight Zone: The Movie," "Forrest Gump" and "The Big Lebowski."
"Whenever you're on a soundtrack it helps to sell the whole catalogue," says Cook. "In 'The Big Lebowski,' starring Jeff Bridges, Creedence was even written into the script. When the Dude's car in stolen, he reports that there's a Creedence tape in it."