A thread on a Slade Facebook page brought back some of my earliest Slade experiences and inspired this post.
The first sleeve notes I ever wrote for anyone appeared on the back on Slayed, Slade’s
chart-topping 1972 LP. Chas Chander, their manager, paid me £20 in cash, and in
the text I wrote I invented some fictitious Slade fans, all of them couples,
including ‘Chris and Janet’. The truth is I wanted to impress a girl called
Janet at the time and this was a coded message that I thought might boost my chances with her. This followed a prolonged and ultimately successful campaign
on my part in Melody Maker to get
them noticed, which paid off handsomely for both MM and myself when they became the top singles act of their era.
They never forget my early support and, to this day, I’m on good terms with
them all.
The first time I saw Slade was at a
club called Samantha’s in New Burlington Street, off Regent Street. It was in late
1970 and all I remember is that it was a cellar club, very dark and there weren’t
many people in there that weekday night. They were really loud and all through
the gig Chas kept buying me whisky and cokes and yelling into my ear about
how good they were. ‘They’re like a breath of fresh eayer, mon,’ he screamed in his
thick Geordie accent, a quote I’ve used many times now.
Slade were actually deafeningly, horrendously, loud, playing a set
that mainly comprised their own souped-up arrangements of covers like ‘Hear Me
Calling’, ‘Darling Be Home Soon’ and, as a finale, ‘Born To Be Wild’ with police
sirens added for effect. If they played any early originals, like ‘In Like A
Shot From My Gun’ or ‘Know Who You Are’, they went in one ear and out of the
other because I hadn’t seen or even heard the group before.
I met them all for the first time after
their set and they were all over me, treating me with great respect, asking
questions about Melody Maker and
whether I liked their group. I liked their group a lot, and not just because I
recognised a powerful, well-drilled and very watchable (and very loud) live band when I saw one,
but because they seemed 100% natural, not a trace of ego to be found anywhere,
and they were very funny in a droll, Black Country sort of fashion. They spoke
in thick Midlands accents with cadences that rose at the end of sentences, making
statements sound like questions, and that endeared me to them too.
I saw them many times in London during
1971, at the Marquee, the Lyceum, the Temple in Soho, the Red Lion in
Leytonstone, and I went further afield, to at least one show in Scotland, where
they’d built up a following as solid as anywhere in the UK, and three memorable
shows in Holland, one in Rotterdam and two in Amsterdam where we stayed at The Thirteen
Balkans, a down-at-the-heel tavern slap bang in the middle of the famous Red
Light district. Liquor was cheap in the bar but to save everyone’s blushes I’ll draw a veil over the precise details of what occurred there after the gig at the Paradiso.
I was also there for one of those
nights when Slade Alive! was recorded
at Command Studios in Piccadilly. That was another night to remember as they’d come
straight from filming Top Of The Pops,
performing ‘Coz I Luv You’, their first self-penned chart entry which in two weeks would become their first number one, and they were on a high, adrenaline
surging like no tomorrow. The following year, of course, the hits came thick
and fast and the size of the venues increased, and I don’t think I saw them quite
as often as I had the previous year.
There are websites that list all Slade’s
early gigs – and, boy, did they work hard – but I cannot find Samantha’s club
among them and nor can I find yet another truly unforgettable night somewhere in the city of London, the financial district, where Slade had been booked for a private event in a posh ballroom. It was a Saturday and Chas had
invited me along just because it was bound to be a fun night – Slade performing, quite late, for a crowd of toffs and toffesses, all dolled up in their dinner suits and fancy frocks for some rich bugger’s 21st birthday party. They’d probably accepted the booking
because the pay was good – an early example of the current trend for big acts
to collect a whopping fee from the mega-rich to play at their parties – and Chas
had assured me there’d be plenty of free booze. He wasn’t wrong there. All of
us got utterly plastered on the beer and whisky, the set was a tad sloppy but no
one cared, least of all the guests who were also drunk and who weren’t to know that the band they’d
booked would soon be topping the charts over and over again.
All of Slade lived with their mums and dads around Wolverhampton in those days and when they stayed overnight in London they used the Edward
Hotel near Paddington Station, which just happened to be not far from where I
shared a flat with two other blokes in Bayswater. One night Nod, Jim, Dave and Don all came round to the flat for a drink and to listen to records, which surprised the
hell out of one of my flatmates’ girlfriends who was a bit of a fan and had just seen them on Top Of The Pops. I spent a few pleasant
evenings with the group in the bar of the Edward, which head roadie Swin told me charged only £4 a
night. Slade were always frugal and when I learned from them that a roast chicken dinner in the restaurant could
be had for less than a quid I went there regularly, even when Slade weren’t
around.
At the beginning of 1973, on January 7,
Slade appeared at the London Palladium, a gig that was somehow connected with celebrating the
UK’s entry into the EEC – oh the irony! Chas asked me to introduce them on stage
which I did… ‘Here they are…’ and I was well and truly drowned out by the cheers. I watched the
show with Chas from the side of the stage and recall how the balcony swayed up and down as
fans jumped and stamped their feet. I honestly thought it might collapse at one
point, and drew Chas’ attention to the potential danger, not that he’d have
been able to do anything about it. ‘Fook
me, Chris, mon,’ he said in that lovely Geordie accent as he gazed up at the fans in the circle. ‘Whatever you do, don’t say
nooothin’. They might stop the fookin’ show, mon.’
There’d have been a fookin’ riot if they’d tried to do that, mon.
Brilliant story and recollections, Chris and thanks for sharing it over on the Slade FB group!
ReplyDelete;-)
Great days Chris - remember everything well - and a great set of blokes to work with - taking them away from me to Les Perrin and trying to break them in America was Chas's and, to some degree, Slade's downfall!
ReplyDeleteI think I saw them a dozen times in 1971, all over the place. I'm still very friendly with Jim. We talk on the phone a lot, but before I retired we'd have lunch 2/3 times a year when he came down and stayed at his flat near Marble Arch.
DeleteFantstic read Chris.A fabulous band.
ReplyDeleteJust to mention that Chas left it to me, as PR, to organise the public side of the Command Studios 'live' gig - I also ran the competition for the cover and had a hand in picking the winner - that album is the only one on which I have ever had a name-check!
ReplyDeleteOn the inside cover of the LP, in the first column, is the name Leon Hickman of the Bradford Telegraph. It was Leon and me who, in 1968, persuaded the editor of the paper to have a weekly page covering pop music, written by the pair of us. He was more senior than me and took the initiative in this so it could be said that he introduced me to the life I've led since 1970. I have no idea where he is now but I'm reminded of that every time I see the cover. A Leo Hickman used to write for the Guardian and I often wondered whether it was his son.
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