The musician, 66, tells Candice Pires about free love, Funkadelic, coming to earthly consciousness and getting away from being Bootsy
My mother never said to me: You cant do that. When it came to finishing high school or going on the road with James Brown, I decided to go. She knew I wasnt really choosing anything harmful. She just wanted me to have fun with whatever I was doing. She was my backbone.
You have to be detached from things in order to really love them, and know that theyre not yours. I can say: Youre mine, but thats not true; when I go, I go and when you go, you go. I came up in the days of free love, so its easier for me to lock into that.
LSD was a big part of why I left James Browns band. I promised myself Id never do it during a show, but we had a father-son relationship, and he pestered me so much not to do it that one day I just did. My bass turned into a snake and I cant even remember playing. After, he called me in the back room, as he always did, and was explaining how terrible I was even when I wasnt taking LSD. I laughed so hard I was on the floor. To him, that was very disrespectful. He had his bodyguard throw me out.
My time in Funkadelic was about creativity. I was 21 and there were no rules. The best time was when we crossed the border to Canada in cars filled with smoke George [Clinton] had rented a big place on a lake and there were about 20 of us and we recorded America Eats Its Young. The deepest thing to happen was getting busted in Toronto for mescaline and going to jail overnight.
If I hadnt been a musician, Id have been an artist. Everything I wore on stage I drew on paper and gave to the designer. The star sunglasses, the space bass, all the leather stuff. Even how the stage looked.
I got worn out from being Bootsy. Going into the 80s, I was trying to get away from him. He was hitting up the festivals, the stadiums, headlining for 100,000 people. He was like a monster. The business side got really big and ugly because I didnt know what I was doing. I was just there to play music, and the next thing I knew, everything had turned around.
Ive got around 30 paintings in my house that I paid a guy to do. Theres Michael Jackson, Sting, Marilyn Monroe, Snoop Dogg. Ive also got one of Metallica my boy Robert [Trujillo, the bass player] is a good friend of mine. Theyre all people who arent just followers.
I came to my earthly consciousness in 1984. I was riding a street bike in the woods and was high it was like I was asking for it. I flipped over a few times and was told I wasnt going to play bass again. I was laid up for months and did a lot of thinking. Once I got the focus off me, I found I didnt need the drugs. When I later worked with Deee-Lite, it was perfect for me I got to just be in the band and not be the star.
My mother named me Bootsy. My birth name is William Earl Collins. I asked her why and she just said, Because you looked like a Bootsy. I left it at that.
Bootsy Collinss new album, World Wide Funk, is out now (bootsycollins.com)