I was among the long-suffering UK music writers invited to Toronto and
Montreal for the Maple Music junket in June 1972. For five weary jet-lagged
days our party of 30 or so UK media types was shepherded around with
unrelenting efficiency like captive prisoners. Early each morning we were
roused from our beds and taken hither and thither, to recording studios, to
offices, to lunches, to meetings, to press conferences and, finally, to concerts
with ten or more acts on the bill which seemed to last forever (like six or
seven hours), only for the same thing to occur the next day, and again the
next, with a six-hour train ride from Montreal to Toronto in between, until we
were all so exhausted that all we wanted to do was sleep, but no, off we were
marched on further compulsory activities until, on the penultimate day, I
staged a protest and instead of visiting yet another boring studio (and when
you've seen one, you've seen them all) I absented myself, hired a limo and took
two girls from the party off to the Niagara Falls for an afternoon of leisurely
sightseeing.
We has a lovely time but when we returned
there was all hell to pay. The hosts were angry. We'd abused their hospitality.
I pointed out we'd had no free time for days on end, and that another visit to
an airless recording studio was pointless, especially to journalists from a city
that boasted Abbey Road and Olympic. The Brits were on my side, and threatened
to boycott the evening's concert. Hasty negotiations followed and the next
day's daytime plans were cancelled. The organisers gave everyone the day off
and even provided a coach to visit the Niagara Falls (which I always suspected
was a gesture aimed deliberately at slighting me, the trouble-maker, since in
doing so they offered a free trip for something that I had already paid for).
But Canada avenged itself on us miserable
ingrates. At the airport on the final day, as we boarded our chartered plane,
we were handed huge quantities of unexpected, loose carry-on luggage, boxes of
records, press folders, books, bottles, T-shirts and miscellaneous gifts
bearing the Maple Leaf emblem, which we struggled to carry, along with our
duty-free allowances of fags and booze, and our coats and hats and scarves and
god knows what else, and after we'd somehow crammed all this stuff into the
overhead lockers and beneath our seats and taken off into the Canadian night,
lo and behold, the plane hit a terrifying electric storm and descended 10,000
feet in a matter of seconds, with such force that the overhead lockers fell
open and all this stuff crashed down upon our heads, spilling our drinks,
landing in our food, and simultaneously we were plunged into pitch darkness as
the plane was tossed around helplessly in the unforgiving sky for what seemed
like hours but was probably only ten minutes, and many of us vomited from a
combination of terror and the lurch of the plane, and I for one was never more
frightened in my life... indeed, that was the very worst plane trip I'd ever experienced, and I can still recall
it as if it happened yesterday.
I was sat next to David Jacobs, the DJ who
had been the host of Juke Box Jury. He was as calm as the proverbial cucumber,
as urbane and suave as he was on JBJ, and his reassuring manner is something I
remember just as vividly.
6 comments:
I was on the same trip with a couple of my colleagues in Dutch radio- and tv broadcasting and I agree with Chris for 100%
You didn't pay for the Niagara trip - we split the bill between three of us (the third being my husband). And you were in the plane loo when the turbulence started and came out drenched. How we all laughed.
You are probably right Caroline, but I could swear Val Mabbs of RM came with us. I do remember we split the limo bill. I still have pix from the Niagara Falls taken that day but none of us unfortunately. I also remember being in the plane loo. What a memory you have. CC x
I was on that trip as photographer. Ritchie Yorke and I became friends and he arranged my immigration with the Ontario government, but I changed course and moved from London to Nashville. I never slept the whole four days, then drank all the way back on that plane. I went straight to the studio when we landed, processed and printed my pictures. The story was published as a feature in the Record Mirror.
Alan Messer www.alanmesser.com
Quite a good time of your life.
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