It is
45 years since I survived the most hectic Christmas of my life, all in the
service of Melody Maker. Here’s how it came about.
For the final three months of 1974
I was temporarily relieved of my posting as MM's US Editor in New
York. As a result I missed John Lennon’s appearance on stage with Elton at
Madison Square Garden on November 28, the last time John faced a live audience – a continuing
source of disappointment to me. Michael Watts briefly assumed the role of
American Editor so that I might have a bit of time off and re-acquaint myself
with what was happening in the UK where MM’s
editor, Ray Coleman, decided that since I was so used to travelling I’d be best
employed around the regions, reviewing concerts and grabbing interviews outside
of London. The two most memorable of these were from contrasting ends of the musical
spectrum – arriving uninvited for a Pink Floyd show in Edinburgh on Bonfire
Night, and grabbing an interview with Rick Wright in the process, and joining
the Bay City Rollers on the road for three wildly chaotic shows in Cardiff,
Henley and Edinburgh (again) later the same month.
In truth, Ray was at
a loss to know what to do with me in London so when an invitation arrived from
Warner Brothers Records for an MM man to interview six of their
acts in America during the third week of December he pressed me into service. The
brief was to meet up with The Doobie Brothers, Little Feat, Larry Graham,
Montrose, Tower Of Power and a newly-signed group called Bonaroo, all of whom
were scheduled to tour the UK the following January. I would fly to LA on
December 14 and return six days later after catching a Doobie Brothers concert
in Kalamazoo on December 19. This would leave me a few days to write up all
these interviews before Christmas, after which I was to fly back across the
Atlantic to New York and resume my MM
role there; total December mileage just over 16,000 from ten separate flights.
All of this sounds
pretty implausible compared to the life I pursue these days as an indolent
retiree on a pension who thinks twice before driving to nearby Guildford, but back
then I simply shrugged and got on with it. Because I’d lived there for five
months in 1973 I knew my way around LA so picking up a rental car and driving
to the Beverly Wilshire Hotel in Beverly Hills, where Warners had reserved a
spectacularly agreeable room for me, wasn’t an issue. Before I left I’d called
The Who’s offices in London and secured a number for Keith Moon, then living somewhere
in LA, so after I checked in I threw caution to the wind and called him up.
Keith told me that he and a party of friends would that night be at the
Palamino in North Hollywood, a C&W music joint, so after a leisurely bath
and a bit of room service I drove there to join him. Rick Nelson was appearing and
I was rather hoping that James Burton, the great session guitarist, would be
there too but he wasn’t. Still, I watched Rick and his Stone Canyon band, was
introduced to him by Keith, hung out a while and eventually drove back to the
hotel. It was about one in the morning, but with the time change 9am the next
day for me. A long day indeed.
The
next day, a Sunday, I drove to Bel Air and up a winding drive to the mansion where
Joe Smith, the boss of Warners Records (who died earlier this month), lived
with his wife Dione. We chatted for a while about the Warners promotion and I
remember how surprised and pleased he was when I told him how much Little Feat
were revered in the UK. Later we ate lunch at a huge table in his magnificent,
wood-panelled dining room.
As it happened, the first of my interviews –
with Lowell George – was scheduled for that afternoon in the brasserie at the
Beverly Wilshire. I’d interviewed Lowell the previous September in New York
when Little Feat were in town to play the Bottom Line, and while it would be
overstating the case to say we were pals, we were certainly on nodding terms by
now, and I’d already reached the conclusion he was among the most unassuming
and congenial musicians I would ever have the pleasure of knowing. Unlike Joe
Smith, he was aware that Little Feat had something of a reputation in the UK.
“We’ve had a bunch of letters from England from people who seem interested in
the band,” he told me. “Only the other day Richard [Richie Hayward] got a
letter from someone wanting to know how he tuned his drums.”
Lowell
was pleased that Little Feat would be topping the bill at the shows in the UK,
which didn’t often happen in America. “That’s kinda unusual,” he said. “I don’t
know what the audiences will be like but we’ve received some feedback… maybe
100 letters from people all the while we’ve been going.”
Dressed
in those loose denim overalls that accentuated his rather portly figure, with
shoulder length hair and a none too tidy beard, Lowell was a modest man who
didn’t much like talking about himself. He disdained all the mannerisms of a
rock star like, say, Jimmy Page or Rod Stewart, but it would be a mistake to
assume that for all his sartorial negligence he wasn’t a hit with the ladies
too. A year later Bonnie Raitt told me, somewhat suggestively and with a
twinkle in her eye, that she and Linda Ronstadt would ‘do anything’ to get
Lowell to play on their albums. Little Feat, of course, were the toast of the
town when they came to England in January.
Bonnie & Lowell
That
night I was wined and dined by the PR from Warners and the following day we flew
together to San Francisco where I interviewed Larry Graham, bass-playing leader
of Graham Central Station, at his house in Marin County. Earlier that year, in
New York, I’d interviewed Sly Stone who’d told me, somewhat truculently, that he’d
played every instrument on all his records. Larry Graham, however – who’d been
a member of the Family Stone – said this was untrue and that he had played bass on Sly Stone’s
records. I was inclined to believe him.
Still
in SF, I spent the following morning with horn blowers Tower of Power before
flying back to LA to interview Ronnie Montrose and Bonnaroo. The next day I
flew to Detroit, spent a night alone in a hotel near the airport and in the
morning caught a plane to Kalamazoo where the Doobie Brothers were waiting for
me. Before their show at the 6,000-seater Wings Stadium I talked to their
guitarist Tom Johnston who was at pains to emphasise the eclectic nature of his
group’s make-up. “What makes the Doobie Brothers in the first place is Pat
[Simmons] who comes from a folk background, John [Hartman] who comes from a
hard rock background, Keith [Knudson] who comes from the blues, me from a soul
and blues background and now Jeff [Baxter] from a jazz, country and rock
background. Tiran [Porter] comes from all kids of backgrounds, so we have just about
everything.”
Nowadays
Gibson guitars are made in Nashville but in 1974 the company was based in Kalamazoo
so the morning after the show I found Gibson’s number in the phone book by my
bed and called them up. An obliging PR man came on the line, invited me round
and took me on an hour-long tour of the works. I saw the whole manufacturing process,
how a plank of wood was turned into a Les Paul, a Flying V or a J45. There were
mechanical saws that cut the wood to patterns, varnishing rooms and hot air
drying cupboards, benches where beading was attached and fretboards lined with
frets, and an electronics department where pick-ups were assembled and mounted.
At the end of the production line were half a dozen booths in which guitarists
played every single guitar for about 15 minutes each to check they were OK to
leave the factory. Those that weren’t went into a reject room, even if all that
was wrong with them was a scratch or slight discolouration. Most would end up
in the furnace I was told, but the PR guy wouldn’t let me take away a condemned
guitar as a souvenir. No chance, he said. In the fullness of time I turned the
visit into another MM feature.
The Gibson factory in Kalamazoo. I recall entering by the door on the bottom left.
It
was now December 20. I hung out with the Doobie Brothers when I got back and
when I mentioned to Jeff Baxter that I’d been to the Gibson factory earlier in
the day he seemed disappointed I hadn’t invited him along. I rather wished I
had as that would have given me an unusual angle for a story about the man
who’d played guitar on the first three Steely Dan albums.
From
Kalamazoo in the late afternoon it was but a short hop to Detroit and a direct connection
back to London – or so I thought. When I tried to check in at Detroit the nice
girl at the British Airways desk told me the travel agents had made a mistake
and no London flight was leaving that evening. At first it seemed like I would
have to wait 24 hours for the next London-bound flight but because another BA
girl’s boyfriend just happened to be the pilot on a Delta flight leaving soon
for Chicago I could squeeze onto that plane and get a connection to London from
there. Carrying my luggage, I was marched across the tarmac to this
plane, searched at the top of the steps and directed to a first-class seat. Off
we went into the December night sky, with me settling back with what turned out
to be the first of an endless supply of free drinks, a stiff Bloody Mary as I
recall.
O’Hare
Airport, the busiest airport in the world, was snowed in and my flight went
into a holding pattern that lasted for two hours. The runways were snowbound
and planes could take off and land only in brief windows when a runway was
cleared. After a few minutes it needed to be cleared again. More free drinks
appeared, and as I sipped vodka after vodka I watched the hands on my
wristwatch slip past the time when my connection to London was due to leave.
Christmas was rapidly approaching. Would I spend it at O’Hare?
Eventually
we landed. Inside, the airport was a shambles, overcrowded, chaotic, bags and
delayed passengers everywhere, many of them asleep. I fought my way through the
turmoil and laughingly discovered my connection to London had yet to leave. I
checked in, hours late, and got a boarding pass and, yes, vouchers for complimentary
drinks at the bar nearest the departure gate. I took full advantage of them
until it eventually ran out of booze then wearily joined my fellow passengers
waiting to take off for London.
Finally,
somewhere around 3am on December 21, we boarded, took our seats and waited
until a runway was cleared. Once in the sky, perhaps an hour later, we were
offered – yes – free drinks to compensate for our inconvenience. Then came the
bombshell. The plane would not fly direct to London but to New York JFK first
in order to refuel. Evidently the snow on the runway had prevented refuelling
at Chicago.
Many
passengers, animated through drink, began to jeer but to no avail. About two
hours later we touched down at JFK and stayed on the ground for at least four hours.
Then, sleepless but fortified by yet more free drink, we got going again,
crossed the Atlantic and eventually landed at Heathrow. It was the night before
Christmas Eve and I was exhausted, jet-lagged and sleep deprived. Somewhere
along the way I’d lost almost a whole day.
A
friend met me at Heathrow with the news he was hosting a party at his house in nearby
Egham where I was staying that night. I passed out in a bedroom long before
midnight. The next day I was reliably informed that later in the evening an
amorous couple had joined me on the bed, undressed, did what couples do in those
circumstances, put their clothes back on and left. I slept through the entire
encounter.
The day after, Christmas Eve, I drove a rented car to Skipton in Yorkshire where I spent Christmas with my dad and sister, alternately asleep or drunk. On the day after Boxing Day I drove back down to London, spent two days writing up all my interviews from the US trip and, on December 29, flew back to New York to resume my duties as Melody Maker’s US editor. The Manhattan skyline never looked more inviting than it did as my plane descended into JFK that night.
The day after, Christmas Eve, I drove a rented car to Skipton in Yorkshire where I spent Christmas with my dad and sister, alternately asleep or drunk. On the day after Boxing Day I drove back down to London, spent two days writing up all my interviews from the US trip and, on December 29, flew back to New York to resume my duties as Melody Maker’s US editor. The Manhattan skyline never looked more inviting than it did as my plane descended into JFK that night.
And
the January 11, 1974, edition of Melody
Maker included more pieces with my byline than any other ever.
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