As a longtime social activist, would Linda Ronstadt ever consider going into politics?
“Never,” she replied.
Why not?
“Because I’m not qualified for it. I’m qualified to be a singer.”
That said, the 11-time Grammy Award-winner has never hesitated to speak her mind on a variety of subjects, musical and otherwise.
Witness her absorbing new memoir, “Feels Like Home: Song for the Sonoran Borderlands,” which was published Tuesday by Heyday. The book covers a lot of ground, including culture, music, geography, food, racism, her Mexican heritage, immigration policies and the family ties that transcend borders.
Ronstadt, 76, spoke with the San Diego Union-Tribune recently for nearly an hour. Here is our bonus Q&A with the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee.
Do you recall the classic Bo Diddley song, “Who Do You Love?”
Yeah.
He makes several references in the lyrics to rattlesnakes, but none to eating them. In “Feels Like Home,” you write that you ate snake as a girl but didn’t like the way it tasted. What kind of snake was it?