Smashing Pumpkins’ Corgan isn’t looking back


By Jill Lawless

Associated Press

LONDON

The Smashing Pumpkins are dead. Long live the Smashing Pumpkins.

It’s fair to say lead singer Billy Corgan has an ambivalent relationship with his band — and with the music industry, the media, fellow musicians and his fans.

“People say, ‘Are you going to break up the band?”’ Corgan said backstage before a recent London show. “What band is there to break up? There is no band.”

Corgan may be the Pumpkins’ only remaining original member, but the non-band has just released its eighth studio album, “Monuments to an Elegy.” A slice of grungy pop-rock featuring guitarist Jeff Schroeder, who joined the Pumpkins in 2007, and Motley Crue drummer Tommy Lee, it’s received good reviews — but not good enough for Corgan.

“There’s no way this is a three-out-of five record,” he said, grumbling about one newspaper’s assessment.

You might think that sounds a bit thin-skinned for the man behind two best-selling 1990s albums — “Siamese Dream” and “Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness” — now regarded as classics.

But Corgan is not the type to rest on his laurels. He says he abhors nostalgia, and turned down good money to do a retro “Siamese Dream” tour.

“I know exactly where that goes,” he said. “That’s Vegas.”

Corgan is an icon of ’90s American indie rock, perhaps second only to his late friend Kurt Cobain.

In the decades since, Corgan has revealed a willingness to speak his mind on everything from politics to astrology and a knack for nursing a grudge. He has had a public spat with Cobain’s widow, Courtney Love, and recently berated Anderson Cooper after the CNN host poked fun at Corgan’s cat-cuddling cover shoot for Paws Chicago magazine.

Swaddled in a sweater and scarf backstage at a London club, 47-year-old Corgan is sensitive to the cold — and to criticism. He is alternately confident and insecure of his place in music history, which makes him both prickly and refreshingly honest.

“Imagine if every week of your life for the rest of your life, somebody’d be walking down the street going, ‘Here’s a picture of you when you were 18. Didn’t you have a better hairstyle then? Look at this T-shirt you were wearing. Don’t you want to wear that T-shirt again?’ That’s what it’s like,” he said.