I did my first story on Badfinger in January
1971, heading up to north London to the communal house they shared in Golders
Green, a large detached mock Tudor place on a winding hill. It was sparsely
furnished but there was plenty of evidence that its occupants were musicians,
guitar and leads littering the floor and cups of tea resting on amps. I seem to
remember that one or two of their girlfriends were in residence too, as was
their manager Bill Collins, a big bloke with prematurely white long hair who seemed
to me to be a bit too old to be their manager, a bit too set in his ways,
rather like a slightly eccentric schoolmaster.
I
didn’t know much about them when I went to that house, only that they’d had a
hit single with ‘Come And Get It’ in 1969 and ‘No Matter What’ was doing well
when I interviewed them. That first hit was written and produced by Paul
McCartney and, perhaps inevitably, I began by asking them about The Beatles
connection which turned out to be a bad move. They were heartily sick of this
line of questioning as I was about to find out.
"Everyone who interviews us wants to talk about The Beatles. Sure, we were influenced by the Beatles, like
ten million other groups.
“There
are a million groups copying Led Zeppelin at the moment but nobody bothers to
criticise them for it. We like melodies
and songs and we get called a second Beatles.”
That's
Pete Ham talking. Pete is guitarist, singer, and keyboard consultant with
Badfinger, a group strangely ignored in this country since their chart success
with ‘Come And Get It’ a year ago. Now they're back in the charts again with ‘No
Matter What.”
Badfinger
are trying desperately these days to shake off the “new Beatles” image, and
there's a lot of truth in what Pete said about Zeppelin. Perhaps it was the
Apple label, a McCartney-composed hit and the soundtrack to The Magic Christian
(which starred Ringo) that did it.
The
situation is just as bad (or good), in America, where Badfinger are far more
successful than in this country. Their
recent three-month tour over there went down a bomb, and they're looking
forward to returning soon for another lengthy stay.
Badfinger
live in a big house in Golders Green and signs of their increasing wealth are
littered around. A large blue Mercedes
truck stands in the street, and workmen are currently putting finishing touches
to a mini-recording studio – sound-proofed for the neighbours' benefit – on the
ground floor.
Guitars
and amps are scattered about, but bedrooms don’t display the untidiness of most
group houses. Perhaps their tidy nature is reflected in the tidy songs they
write and sing.
Peter
Ham appears to be the father figure. Liverpool accented Joey Molland sits crosslegged
and grins cheekily. Tommy Evans, the bassist who – I can't help it – looks
remarkably like McCartney, starts sentences but doesn’t finish them, and
drummer Mike Gibbins says very little.
“Badfinger
has been my only group so I'll tell you about us,” says Pete to my initial
question. “We were going as The Iveys when we joined Apple to make some demo
tapes. That was two and a half years ago and that was when Badfinger was born. Joey
joined us about then and we decided to start again with a new name.
“It
was then that we did ‘Come And Get It’ which became a hit. Just before then we
had done a song called ‘Maybe Tomorrow’ which we thought was going to be very
successful but it wasn’t.
“When
it didn’t do anything it was quite a blow to our own judgment but, 'Come And
Get It’ came along and we did that instead. That was very big in America and we
did an album which also did well over there so we went over for 12 weeks.
“We
did 35 college dates over and had our minds blown in various directions, a week
to get used to the place but when we did it was great. It was unusual for us to
play to people who were sitting down and watching and listening for a change.
The people there seemed to have come
specifically to see you instead of just to see another group to dance to.”
“The
Beatles have done us a lot of good,” admitted Joey after a bit of pressing. “To
have been associated with them has done us a lot of good because they are great
people.”
“What
we would really love is to be accepted in this country but it doesn’t seem as
though we are yet,” said Tom.
“We're
not complaining but it's a fight for us in England,” added Joey.
“English
people think of us as the group that did 'Come And Get It.' Full stop,” said
Pete. “They don’t seem prepared to listen to other things we do, but in America
they view every number separately.”
Essentially
a melody group, how do Badfinger rate the current wave of heavy bands? “Boring,”
said Joey. “A lot of it is a load of rubbish. They play a guitar riff and write
a number around it. They should try writing a number and finding a guitar riff
to fit it. That’s much harder.
“I
think people will get back to more melodic things soon. They have all learned
to improvise now and the will use this in writing good songs. That is what we
are trying to do.”
2 comments:
Thanks Chris for sharing this. In my humble opinion Badfinger is the most underrated band in the history of pop music.
En mi opinón la banda mas subestimada de todos los tiempos y tienen el mejor legado discografico con los The Beatles, son los The Kinks de Ray Davies. Pero reconozco que los Badfinger sino llega a ser por el cerdo y cobarde de Gerente que tenían podían haber llegado mucho mas lejos, eran muy buenos y son imprescindible para el oyente que escucha la mejor música y también es cierto que estan subestimado. RIP Pete Hams y Tom Evans.
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