“It’s ironic that 80-year-old people are still suing each other”: John Fogerty reflects on decades of lawsuits with Creedence Clearwater Revival

“It’s ironic that 80-year-old people are still suing each other”: John Fogerty reflects on decades of lawsuits with Creedence Clearwater Revival

Creedence Clearwater Revival’s John Fogerty is no stranger to legal battles.
From fighting record label boss Saul Zaentz to courtroom clashes with his own bandmates, Fogerty’s career has been as defined by legal strife as it has by the songs that made CCR legendary. In 2023, after more than half a century of wrangling, he finally secured the US and worldwide rights to the band’s catalogue.
Now, at 80, Fogerty says he’s grown more at ease with his past. Asked what he sees when he looks at photos of his younger self, the guitarist tells CBS Sunday Morning: “Well, I’ve gotten more comfortable with that person in those pictures from long ago, and so I think that allows me to feel better about it, I suppose.”

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“How can I say it? I was confused about the tension and the grumbling that was going on within the band, and certainly, we ended up having a really troubled relationship with Saul, who was the owner of the label. And because it was not a big label, it became personal, because we knew that individual person and he was screwing us.”
Fogerty adds that his later victories in the music business have allowed him to look back with some relief: “The reason I’m more comfortable is because it has turned out okay now, right? But for many years, I would look at those pictures and be sad, because it was sort of a tragic thing. I think the kid doing it at the time just thought, ‘Oh, whoa. I tried really hard, and I was hoping to grow up and be [American sports icon] Babe Ruth.’”
“I mean, who knew that it would actually come true, in a sense,” he says. “But man, it was working. I thought everybody around me could see that and understood that it was working and that this was great. And I have a feeling that they didn’t see it that way.”
Asked if he’s now “at peace with Creedence”, Fogerty admits: “Yeah, I think so. It depends on what you may mean by that. The way I accept it as inevitable – I’m laughing at myself now – I have been sued innumerable times by my former bandmates, let me put it that way. Sometimes it was actually my brother Tom, but after he passed, even his widow joined with Doug [Clifford] and Stu [Cook] and sued me.”
“It’s ironic that 80-year-old people are still suing each other,” Fogerty continues. “So if you mean at peace that way, I just accept all those things as kind of inevitable. That’s all. It’s not surprising anymore.”
On a more positive note, Fogerty recently released a new album featuring re-recorded versions of Creedence classics titled Legacy: The Creedence Clearwater Revival Years.

The post “It’s ironic that 80-year-old people are still suing each other”: John Fogerty reflects on decades of lawsuits with Creedence Clearwater Revival appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.

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