This is the final part of my memories of my first few
weeks on Melody Maker, It was all written in 2000, not long after MM had closed
down, a sad moment for many of us who’d worked on the paper, though we all
agreed it was a pale shadow of what it once was and needed putting out of its
misery.
The biggest assignment I covered
during my first summer on MM was the
Bath Festival at Shepton Mal let over
the weekend of June 27 & 28. Compared to the National Jazz & Blues
Festival at Plumpton that I’d attended the previous year, this was just huge;
perhaps as many as 150,000 people stretching away up a hill almost as far as
the eye could see. The reason was that Led Zeppelin was appearing, taking pride
of place on Sunday, the final day. I arrived on the Saturday afternoon, having
driven down from London ,
typewriter in the boot of my car, all set to report this major event like the
trusty reporter I’d trained to be. I parked my car backstage and wandered
around, eight weeks into this job and feeling unusually privileged to be inside
the inner sanctum at a major festival. The weather was fine, though it wouldn’t
stay that way, and for longer than seemed necessary I was entertained by a chap
with a guitar called Joe Jammer, evidently someone’s roadie, who was filling in
while Frank Zappa readied himself to face the crowd. Frank came and went and
was followed, curiously, by Maynard Fergeson, an ageing (by Bath standards) big
band leader who’d taken a left turn into jazz rock to appeal to a younger
audience. The highlight of the evening, though, was Pink Floyd, whom I was
seeing for the first time, premiering their new work, Atom Heart Mother, the album with the cow on the front. I listened
to them in wonderment and awe then retired for the night, driving to Bath and a
nice warm bed in a B&B, unlike everyone else who slept beneath the stars.
The next
day I drove back to the site around midday
and was astonished by the scenes in the village of Shepton M al let .
There was a phone box with a queue that stretched for over 100 yards. I
calculated that if there were three people in the queue for each two yards,
there were 150 people waiting, and that if each call lasted ten minutes, the
last person in the line would wait for 25 hours before making their call. There
were similar queues for toilets and food on the site; indeed, the contrast
between the conditions endured by the fans and those enjoyed by the artists and
their guests brought a sharp intake of breath. Backstage huge tepees had been
erected to serve as private quarters for artists while a marquee served as a
dining room in which waitresses dressed in traditional black dresses with white
aprons served three course meals and a selection of fine wines.
In the
adjoining bar I met Led Zeppelin for the first time, introduced by my new
colleague Chris Welch . Jimmy Page
was dressed as a yokel in an old coat and scarecrow’s hat, and John Paul Jones
had arrived by helicopter. Robert Plant, affable as ever, autographed a pink
backstage pass
for me*, and later in the day I passed this
memento on to a girl I knew who was in the crowd and whom I had arranged to
meet later that night. I actually got DJ John Peel to make an announcement from
the stage: “Would Lorraine meet Chris by the backstage gate in 15 minutes”.
It was my introduction to Led Zeppelin.
They played just as the sun was setting behind the stage, and mighty impressive
they were too, even though my view was restricted by being too close to the high
stage and having to crane my neck to see what was going on up there. But I
could certainly hear them. Good grief! They opened their set with the hitherto
unreleased ‘Immigrant Song’ which they attacked with all the ferocity of the
marauding Vikings Robert was singing about. Drums and bass reverberated like cannon
fire, and Page’s guitar cut through the twilight like a broadsword. Every other
band on the bill sounded decidedly limp dick compared to this onslaught. The reception was phenomenal, and they returned to the stage
for multiple encores. It was a coming of age for them, their first really huge
British show, a triumph, and there I was lapping it all up. Serious competition
for my beloved Who, I remember thinking.
Aside from the
mighty Zeppelin, Sunday’s stars were Donovan, Santana, Flock, Hot Tuna, Country
Joe, Jeff erson Airplane* (whose set was aborted amid pouring
rain due to fear of electrocution), The Byrds, who played a truly delightful
all-acoustic set and, closing the show, Dr. John .
Sunday’s music at Bath that year started at midday and finished at about 6am on
M onday morning. I saw it all and in
the misty dawn light drove immediately back to London, parked my car behind Fleet
Street, rode the elevator to the MM office and wrote my story.
It wouldn’t be the
last night without sleep that I willingly endured in seven years service on Melody Maker.
* I hadn’t been on MM long enough yet to
realise it was dreadfully uncool for rock writers to ask for an autograph. Now I wish I’d asked them all, all the
hundreds I eventually met, for their autographs.
* I even interviewed Grace Slick, she of the Jeff erson Airplane, when her group cut their set
short and dashed from the stage in the pouring rain. I followed her into their
tour bus and, much to her surprise, did a quick on-the-spot, off-the-cuff interview
before the bus pulled away.
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