ZORO-MARIA'S SCARF - podcast episode cover

ZORO-MARIA'S SCARF

May 08, 202410 min
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This is Later with Lee Matthews, the Lee Matthews Podcast More what You Hear Weekday Afternoon's on the Drive. He's known by musicians around the world as the Minister of Groove, Zoro and internationally renowned rock star. One of the world's most respected and award winning drummers, worked with the likes of Lenny Kravitz, Bobby Brown, Frankie Valley in the Four Seasons New Edition, Jody Watley and

many men Anymore. Behind the scenes, though, he's got a lot of stories to tell, and one of those he's telling in his new memoir that he was here to talk to us about today, Maria's Scarf, a memoir of a mother's love, a son's perseverance and dreaming Big Zoro, you and I have something in common and that we were raised by a strong single mother. Then we were both very, very fortunate because we didn't choose that fate. But if you're going to be raised by somebody, a strong single other

is about the best thing you can hope for. Yeah, I don't know if you witnessed. My father passed away when I was very young, so I witnessed my mother getting stronger as I aged did you notice that too with yours. Yeah well, now, I mean I noticed that, but mine had to raise seven children alone, with more wealth from any father, and so she did get stronger. But I grew to have more respect for her

as the years went. Now she's been passed away for twenty years, but my respect meter has gone up even more and more and more because I just as you get older, you just realize how hard this had to have been. When you're a kid, you see it, but you don't really quite

understand the load they're caring. But which is why I wrote the book to honor her memory and her legacy, and to aspire mothers and fathers everywhere and never to give up on your kids, or never to give up on life, no matter how hard it looks, that things could always turn around. You of all people being raised where you were by a single mother, had every excuse in the book to turn out a lot different than you did.

And I mean that then turn out in a bad way. Yeah, well I was again, I was fortunate that everything in life is about who you're surrounded by. So you can be in the worst setting, in the worst situations, but if you have somebody who has vision that's the most important thing.

And so my mother, when I was a little kid, I asked if I could wear her scarf for a school picture because I thought she looked really cool and there was a budding rock star in me, even in the second grade that I wanted to come out, but I just wanted to look different and cool. And she knelt down tied her orange soaked scarf around my neck, and then she said, one day, my precious son, you will do something fantasmical with your life. That was the words she used,

fantastic, which was a mix between fantastic and amazing. But she had this ability to this is a woman of faith, so she had strong faith and God. So she had this ability to teach me to look past my circumstances. And she really taught me how to dream. And a lot of times she would use music to do it. She loved music immensely, so she would put on songs like Frank Sinatra's High Hopes, Young at Heart, and she would set my heart to dreaming so that I wasn't looking at the world

around me going well, this is never going to amount to anything. I look somewhere through the eyes of faith and hope, and so I'm very grateful for that because you could be in a different I could have turned out completely different had she not had vision and faith, but she taught me those two important things. You are also bringing up more remarkable similarities in our childhood's Zoro he's the drummer for Lenny Kravitz, Bobby Brown, Frankie Valley and many others.

His memoirs about his mother. And that's the significance of the scarf in the title of the piece, and is the scarf that you got to wear and the encouragement that was bere I'm that scarf well. And she was just an amazing person. And so my memoir is really about this beautiful bomb between mother and son. It's meant to inspire people. So when people ask me, you know, in four words, what will a reader get out of the book, And it's very simple. It is heartwarming, heart breaking,

absolutely hilarious. But it will leave you full of hope. And I wrote it and I've spent fifteen years working on it, literally fifteen years, but I actually started a diary at the age of ten that I kept writing in through my twenties. So in essence, I've been working on it for fifty years and I'm sixty one, but the goal is to turn it into a movie in a Netflix series. So think you know, Rudy Rocky the Blindside

for a stump. It's an epic overcoming story of you know, at one point living in a car and going to It's my story of going from the slums to the spotlight, but with the he of this incredible mother and this tight bond of my six siblings, this type family that's just there for each other. So it's really a universal story of love and hope and perseverance that leads to the dream. It leads to my dream of becoming a world renown drummer, which was my dream from a child. Maria's Scarf a memoir of

a mother's love, a son's perseverance and dreaming big Drummer. Zoro is the author of the book you mentioned music. My household as well as a child always filled with music. Sometimes it was Frank Sinatra, sometimes it was show tunes. Mom wanted us to have culture, so at the tender age of eight, she was bringing us to see West Side Story. She was bringing

us to see the sound of music, that kind of thing. Oh yeah, and so our mothers were similar because at seven I got to go see the Temptations and the Supremes and concert which I grew up in Compton, California. We loved soul music, but we loved all kinds of music. And then at twelve she scrimped and saved and took me to see Frank Sinatra in concert. And so she was always playing music and doing the best she could

to enrich our lives with those experiences. And what's very interesting in my mother's case, even though I grew up in a jay poverty, she and her former life before I was born, she was the daughter of a Supreme Court justice in Mexico City, so she came very well to do, aristocratic family, diplomatic family who had presidents and movie stars. Over of course, that

wasn't my childhood at all. Mine was so far removed from that. But as I got older, I realized she was who she was, and she carried herself as that person she grew up being, even though her life didn't turn out like that, and she wanted to be an actress but was not able to do that because life got in the way. So me succeeding as a drummer I got to live her dreams for her. And she was an

immigrant from mexic Go City and moved to Los Angeles. So sometimes it's the it's the parents who set the stage for the second generation to make it, you know, And in that case, that was her. And so it warmed my heart that that she loved what I got to do. And one of her favorite groups was Frankie Valley in the fourth Seasons, and I surprised her one time with I told her I got her tickets to go see the group, but I didn't tell her I was the drummer. And and then

she goes to the group. She was super excited. She goes, Oh, I wish you could come with me. I'm like, no, I can't because I got a different gig that night. And then and then the burdens get pulled back. Frankie comes out singing who loves You pretty Baby? And all of a sudden she sees me on stage and I can hear her scream from the audience. It was really you know, it really, it was really sweet. Why are the drums for you? Zoro? Uh? You know, it's one of those things I think instruments tick you. I

didn't really drums. I just had rhythm in me from what I was born, and I was always hitting things with my hands. And in fact, that there's some super eight footage. I was in that program, the Big Brother's Big Sisters program when I was a kid. I wasn't a drummer. Then I was ten, twelve, ten or twelve years old, and before they died, the Big brother and Big Sister that were my mentors, they gave me this super eight footage that I had never seen, and it was

me banging on their son's drum set. He was a professional drummer and I had never even picked up a pair of sticks. But when I saw the footage, man, I got so emotional because I was like it was a prophetic super eight footage because I know that i'd become a drummer, but I was always drawn to the rhythm and always drawn to the you know, to the drums, and it's one of those things I think it's just sort of God given. It's just in you, and all you have to do is

be by it, and then it's like a magnet. It draws you towards that that thing. And so when I saw drummers, or when I heard funky rhythms. I was just man. I was all into it, and I actually never started until I got discovered as the janitor at my high school. I was the after school janitor, and my job was to clean the school and the last part of the job was to clean the band room. And so after I was done cleaning the bandroom, I had like ten minutes

left and I would sneak on the drums and just played them. I had never taken lessons, I didn't have stakes. But the band director caught me one day and he goes, kid, he goes, you got an amazing rhythmic gift. And that's how I got on all the school band programs, was being the janitor at the high school. It really isn't a remarkable story. And he tells all about it in Maria's Scarf, a memoir of a mother's love, a son's perseverance and dreaming. Big professional and gifted drummer.

Zoro. You know his work with Lenny Kravitz, Frankie Valley and Sean Lennon and many others, and now his writing is out everywhere. Thank you for bringing the story to a Zorro, and I look forward to seeing it on the screen. Well, thank you so much. It's been an honor and a privileged to be on your station. And thanks for great questions. I

really appreciate it. Thanks for listening to Later with Lee Matthews, the Lee Matthews Podcast, and remember to listen to The Drive Live weekday afternoons from five to seven and iHeartMedia presentation

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