We went
to the place where Catskill Creek joins the river Hudson. There's a
park with a bandstand on the river bank with a hamburger concession and
picnic tables. Every Thursday during the summer they have a concert.
This week it was a faux Beatle group. As we arrived they were
knocking out You Can't Do That and it actually sounded quite good
except that the instrumental section went by without an audible
guitar solo, lots of You Can't Do Thats but no solo.
Thank you George
and now Mister Paul McCartney all the way from Liverpool England...
There
was too much chat between songs while guitars were changed ...an
extra something for our most avid fans, we like to do them exactly as
we recorded them back in the day... Are there any Rubber Soul fans
here tonight? This ones a request for a lovely lady – I think her
name was Rita but it might be Martha my dear or Lucy in the sky,
something like that, hey up!...'
OK,
are you ready mates?
Thank
you Paul
Thank
you John
Thank
you one and all. The Beatles from the Yellow Submarine film, all
sacherine and no acidity.
You
Can't Do That was a high point. We left during the Hey Jude
singalong. A two man Mexican wave broke out – actually it was two
woman having a really great time. A large beery man slumped in
a Walmart garden chair shouted boozilly along. The whole family were
there – it was a family occasion. The wife, her sister and a cousin
or two all piled up in Walmart garden chairs. The chairs still had
their tags on, the garden chair aisle must be empty tonight but
they'll all be back tomorrow with grass stained feet and sagging
seats.
I dread
to think what next weeks attraction might be. Last week it was The
Ponytails and that was a washout apparently because the PA was
under-powered and then it broke down and the concert had to be
abandoned because The Ponytails do the sixties to a backing track and
you couldn't hear either it or them.
Not that
we could anyway because we were rocking out in Wilmington, Delaware
with Ian Hunter. The Queen is a large refurbished movie theatre with
two venues – a small one upstairs where NRBQ were playing and a
bowels to rooftop rock auditorium with every mdern rock convenience
and a lot of dining tables. And that's where we were. It put me in
mind of a land-locked liner, especially when the audience came in –
we could have been on a Saga cruise
And please don't think I mean any disrespect to either our audience or Ian's, it's just a sharp reminder that we're all getting older. A few years ago when my daughter, Luci, was working as a care assistant in a home for the elderly she called me one day with the news: Dad! We've got our first senile hippie!
And please don't think I mean any disrespect to either our audience or Ian's, it's just a sharp reminder that we're all getting older. A few years ago when my daughter, Luci, was working as a care assistant in a home for the elderly she called me one day with the news: Dad! We've got our first senile hippie!
Anyway,
apart from the weirdness of being in a place where you basically get
a better seat if you eat dinner – I've never got on with that idea,
I'm the man who told the audience at Joe's Pub in New York City that
it would have been better if they'd eaten before they came out –
the show was pretty fabulous. We got a standing ovation which sort of
surprised me because I thought we were playing quite well but I
wasn't sure if we were connecting. Ian and his band were really great
– pretty fabulous...really great – I should be writing for
Record Mirror in the early seventies: the bass guitarist and
drummer laid down a mighty beat, the two lead guitarists knocked 'em
dead and the singer had a terrific image. I see no reason why they
shouldn't make number one by Christmas!
Ian
asked us to come on and sing the backing vocals on All The Young
Dudes – that was if we didn't mind hanging around until the end.
He's the nicest person. I'm in awe of him (hope he doesn't read this)
but he's just so nice to us. I couldn't help thinking back to summer
1972 when that record first came out – it was relevant in a line
with My Generation and Friday On My Mind, it spoke to me then and I
still think of it as one of the most important pop singles of all
time. I never would have imagined that one day I'd be standing on a
stage with Ian Hunter, singing the chorus with the wife! I hoped I
sounded a bit like David Bowie but I don't know because the monitor
was turned off so we couldn't hear any of what we were singing.
There's always something.
Maxwell's the week before was one of the highlights of the year. I'm glad we got a chance to play there one last time before it closes down. It doesn't do to get too sentimental about these places – they have their day and when it's over it's ridiculous to pretend it isn't. I never subscribed to keep CBGBs open at all cost, it was a dump, it served its purpose, it was falling to bits. And punk is long dead. Likewise The Marquee Club, The Nashville Rooms, The Hope & Anchor and Dingwalls Dancehall. I miss them all but I'm glad they aren't around any longer. Though in fact the Hope & Anchor still is and it's a travesty – it bears no relation or resemblance to the place it was when it was somewhere everybody used to play. Admittedly it's a lot cleaner and you probably won't get rotgut from drinking the draught beer or wade through piss to get to the toilet, but what's the point? It hasn't even got the jukebox – it was widely acknowledged as the best jukebox in London, and I'm proud to say it had several of my forty-fives on it at one time or another.
So
what is the point here? Yes, I know – I'm going to miss Maxwell's
but the scene is changing along with the neighbourhood. It's how it
has to be. I miss the Lakeside Lounge too but that neighbourhood
might as well be a different planet now.
But life carries on -
somewhere else.
And
now I find that Mick Farren has died. I first met him back in the
seventies when he had an EP out on Stiff Records called Screwed Up –
it was actually Mick Farren & The Deviants. My copy has long gone
which makes me sad because I loved that record – Outrageous
Contageous, Let's Loot The Supermarket, Screwed Up – I'm addicted
to myself...
He
was a lovely, funny man.
While
I was making my first album Stiff Records decided I needed a fan club
and charged me and Larry Wallis with thinking up a name for it –
they probably thought it'd keep us out of trouble for a while. I came
up with The Girls In The Nude Club, Larry changed it to Fun Club and
Mick Farren came up with the killer strap line – Remember, there's one under every dress. The Stiff drones, Paul Conroy and Alan
Cowderoy were appalled, this wasn't what they'd had in mind for the
shiny new all-wholesome Stiff Records Mk 2. Mick made sure it got used
by writing about it in the NME. The record company office was
inundated with requests to join, sadly all from boys, which wasn't
quite what we'd had in mind.
I
loved all that lot – The Pink Fairies, The Deviants, The Pretty
Things, Hawkwind... the Notting Hill Gate scene I suppose it was.
They were kind and understanding, they got it, Stiff Records, the
early punk thing. If it flew in the face of what was considered to be
normal, decent and acceptable they were all for it.
The
way it's going puts me in mind of the coastal erosion at Happisburg
in Norfolk. I considered buying a house there about ten years ago.
Last time I went there the street the house had been on wasn't there
anymore – it had all fallen off the cliff onto the beach which is
now larger than it used to be and strewn with construction debris to
which vestiges of patterned wallpapers still cling. JJ Cale died the
same day as Mick Farren – you look away for a couple of seconds and
there's another one gone. Trevor Bolder died in May without me
noticing – I found out about that last week. Still, there's no
sense in getting depressed, it's all part of life's great adventure
and we really don't have any choice (in spite of what some might
say).