First
in and last out, they are the unsung heroes of the rock trade and some of them
become as important as the lead singer, not that you’d know it or get the group
to admit it. The famous ones – Neil Aspinall, Ian Stewart, Richard Cole – get
mentioned in biographies but that’s because the groups they worked for became
legends and so did they. Most ply their trade conscientiously and stay out of the limelight,
often finding themselves without a job when the group breaks up, and often
without much to fall back on either.
One of the best of this hardy breed was
Graham ‘Swinn’ Swinnerton, Slade’s tour manager throughout their career, who became a victim of cancer on Monday after a long period of illness. A schoolfriend of Don Powell, Swinn helped hump the gear
for The Vendors, Powell and Dave Hill’s first band, beginning in 1964, juggling
this with his job at Woden Transformers in Bilston until Chas Chandler took
over Slade’s management in 1969 and offered him £18 a week to work full-time for
them. Swinn thus took charge of a road crew that supported Slade for the next
15 years and included their sound man Charlie – “Full poke, Charlie!” – Newham, Johnny Jones, known as JJ, Hayden Donovan and Scotsman Robbie Wilson, “whose wilful disregard
for conventional behaviour became a constant source of amusement for the touring party”, as
I put it in my Slade biography Feel The
Noize. Somehow or other Swinn – like all the best roadies a big, genial,
unflappable bloke – kept them all in order.
I interviewed Swinn for that book and he
was hilariously indiscreet, recalling tales of life on the road that involved
guns, jail, groupies, mad dashes from one gig to another and, of course, rivers
of alcohol. A firm believer in the parsimonious economic principles that always kept Slade’s
feet firmly on the ground, Swinn drove the band around in an ageing Vauxhall Velox
long after they’d topped the UK charts, picking them up from their family homes
in the Wolverhampton area and dropping them off in the early hours when the
gig was done.
Slade were amongst the hardest working
bands of their era – a key factor in their rise to prominence – and this meant
their road crew had to work hard too. Not for them the modern-day routine of an
album and a world tour followed by a year off; no, there was no slackening off
of the pace in those days, so Swinn and his merry men travelled the world with Slade, from all the
points of the compass in the UK to all over Europe, behind what was then known as the
Iron Curtain, to America, Canada, Japan and Australia, a relentless grind that lasted until
the end of the seventies. Swinn was there when The N’Betweens played to a handful of punters in Walsall pubs, he was there when Slade drew 20,000 fans to Earls Court in 1973 and he was there when Nod, Jim, Dave and Don stole the show at the Reading Festival in 1980, ever
watchful, ever dutiful to their needs. The road-weary lyrics to Slade’s 1974
hit ‘The Bangin’ Man’ were inspired by Swinn’s relentless efficiency in waking
them up in hotel rooms in time to hit the road for the next show.
When Slade went to live in New York in
1975 Swinn went with them, taking up residence in an apartment on the East
Side, not far from where Jim Lea and Dave Hill lived. Don lived downtown and
Noddy became a permanent resident at the Mayflower Hotel and, as he did in
Wolverhampton, he picked them up and drove them to gigs, this time all over
America. In the doldrums years after they returned to the UK and found
themselves disdained by punk rockers Swinn drove them to cabaret shows at
Baileys in Leicester and Watford. Nod and Don didn’t mind the cabaret shows but
Jim and Dave hated them, and they travelled separately, the former pair in what
became known as the Happy Car, the latter two in the Hospital Car. Swinn
insisted on driving the Happy Car.
Swinn stuck with Slade during the
eighties, taking on other work when his preferred clients were becalmed. When
Slade first cut down on their touring at the end of the seventies, Swinn went to work
for Saxon, taking other members of Slade’s crew with him, but his most
consistent employers after Slade were Southside Johnny & The Asbury Dukes,
Slade fans one and all, which brought him into contact with their pal Bruce Springsteen. “Bruce
would come on stage and play with them at the Stone Pony in Asbury Park,” Swinn
told Jim Lea, “and he was usually pissed, so I had to lead him off. Southside
told Bruce that I used to work for Slade and Bruce said he loved Slade. I reckon
Bruce nicked a bit of his showmanship from Nod.”
He also worked for Ian Matthews and
for The Damned and, pressed into service against his better judgement by Chas
Chandler, tour managed the reunited Animals in 1983. “Chas was as bad as the
rest of them when it came to arguing,” he told me when I interviewed him for Feel The Noize. “He once had Eric Burdon
by the scruff of the neck.” Another regular employer was The Fugees, followed
by solo stints for both Wyclef Jean and Lauryn Hill. “Swinn said they all had
$10,000 Rolex watches but were always late on stage because they couldn’t tell
the time,” says Jim. “He was amazed that when Lauryn Hill went over to do German TV
she had an entourage of 27. When Slade did it, it was just us and him.”
The last time I saw Swinn was in
November 1996 when Noddy appeared on This
Is Your Life, filmed at the Granada TV studios in Manchester. The final
guest at this show was always supposed to be the biggest surprise of the night
– a long lost relative flown in from Australia or a childhood friend unseen for
30 years – but on Nod’s show it was the Slade road crew, all five or six them,
assembled by Swinn who, in later years, became especially close to Nod.
“Our crew were feared all over the
world,” says Jim, who’d alerted me to Swinn’s condition earlier this year. “When we went to Poland, they said we couldn’t go back. So I
said, ‘Didn’t you like the group then’, and the promoter said, ‘Group fine.
Road crew, no, no, no!’”
RIP Swinn.
Thank you Chris :)
ReplyDeleteExcellent tribute. Wish I'd met him.
ReplyDeleteGreat blog Chris. Every time I saw Swinn he always seemed as sharply dressed as the band. Stu R.
ReplyDeleteThat's an excellent read,thank you Chris. R.I.P Swinn
ReplyDeleteA fitting tribute to a loyal and hardworking man. Thanks Chris, you did him justice. RIP Swinn.
ReplyDeleteWell said Chris ,a fine tribute.Chris S.
ReplyDeleteas a lifetime Sladefan i like to say thank you for the article, may he rest in peace!
ReplyDeleteAndre Verhage (netherlands).
Nice tribute Chris...great read as ever. Swin was a great roadie and a great bloke. He let me get back stage at many a Slade gig . Cheers Graham may you R.I.P. ......Thanks for the memory. Daz.
ReplyDeleteNice one Chris. Nice!
ReplyDeleteRIP Swinn
This is one of your finest pieces of writing Chris...Thankyou...and thankyou Swinn.
ReplyDeleteAlan Tucker
Thank you for this Chris..... Swinn RIP
ReplyDeleteThank chris for this nice tribute to Swinn..RIP
ReplyDeleteAndre from Canada
Always thought of Slade as a five piece. Swinn was as much part of the band as the four on stage. It was an honour to know him. J2
ReplyDeleteThank you very much for the fine obituary, Chris. Very sad to hear from passing of Swinn, such an important personality in Slade's history.
ReplyDeleteLet me know if we can also publish this on RockShot Magazine?
ReplyDeleteI am not familiar with RockShot magazine but that's ok with me me so long as I get a credit © 2015 Chris Charlesworth, Just Backdated.
DeleteGreat obituary.... Knew Swinn from the age of 15 although I hadn't seen him much of late. So sad to hear of his passing.
ReplyDeleteRIP dear Swinn
Marg x
So sorry to hear about Swinn, What a nice tribute written by Chriss Charlesworth. I never met Swinn, but heard a lot about him on the grapevine. This is from a long standing SLADE FAN since 1970/71.
ReplyDeleteRest in peace Swinn
Michael Van Overstraeten
A very dear friend. We will miss you xxx
ReplyDeleteThank you for all your comments on my tribute to Swin. It makes the effort worthwhile. I am also pleased to report that as of this morning it has had almost 1,500 hits, far more than any other Slade-related post and, indeed, more than most posts on Just Backdated.
ReplyDeleteOnly just seen this. So sad. He was a real superstar and helped me immensely when I worked for the group's publicist in the mid 70s
ReplyDeleteI've just come across your post by accident while looking for something completely different, although also Swinnerton-related. Sad to hear of his passing, my dad Iain Swinnerton often mentioned him as 'one of the famous Swinnertons', and I think he may have even worked for the Swinnerton steel company in Stourbridge at one point, although I'll have to check that with my dad (who ran the company until it's closure after the 80s steel strike). There is a Swinnerton family history society that's been going since the 70s, started by my dad, which has a thrice-yearly magazine that I now edit - would you mind if I reproduce your piece (which was great by the way - I didn't know about all the other bands he worked with, and was especially excited to know about Southside Johnny, always one of my favourite bands!) in the magazine? Cheers, Alastair Swinnerton.
ReplyDeleteThank you Alastair. You will be happy to know that my tribute to Swinn also appeared in the Wolverhampton Express & Star who called to ask permission to reprint it. Of course I said yes.
DeleteThank you Chris, I just talked to my dad about this, and it turns out he's never known where Graham fitted into the wider family, as he's not on our database. All we know is that he was from Wolverhampton. I don't suppose you know anything about his early background do you?
DeleteI'm afraid I don't, sorry. All I know is what I wrote in my tribute to him.
DeleteOK, thanks Chris. Now having great fun going through your old posts - many, many memories from the 70s!
ReplyDeleteAs an erstwhile member of the Slade lighting crew (Poland included) I didn’t realise quite how notorious we were.
ReplyDeleteI came across this by accident. Sorry to hear of Swinn’s passing. We all worked our arses off, because that’s what you did.
Swinn was a great pal, and drinking buddy with Nod and the guys in The Trumpet. Went to many great parties at his many houses...he moved around a lot....with a particularly riotous one in Tettenhall with all the Southside boys after a gig at the Robin in Bilston. Was talking to Don and Jim about him earlier this year. RIP mate
ReplyDeleteI don't exactly know where I belong in this discussion, I never did any online research into my great uncle, but I'm rather happy I did.
ReplyDeleteGraham Swinnerton, while I never knew him on the same level as any other of my family members and as I never had the same connection as any of my family members. It's a real shame to have found out that he's no longer with us. I've known for a while not that he wasn't with us anymore but I never knew why and low and behold in the Christmas spirit I research my great uncles name and here we are.
I am sorry if I stick out like a sore thumb for not having much to say, however it's a shame he's gone the way my family spoke about him and the stories of him we have he sounded like a right chap and he is as we all know. His brother, or better than my grandfather is still kicking it bless him.
I hope more people find out and hear about slade from it's rise to it's eventual fall and every member who helped rise it to what it is now.
Rest in Peace Graham.