In September of 1976 I had my second close
encounter with the Bay City Rollers, in Philadelphia and then Boston, where the
havoc at Logan Airport was exacerbated by the police grossly underestimating the
threat to order posed by the group’s arrival. They refused to allow the Rollers' limousine to pull up alongside their plane and as a consequence the boys had to
make their way through the airport, me alongside them, where over 1,000 fans
were waiting.
“We have the
situation under control,” a State Trooper told us, when in reality it was
nothing but. “Just walk towards the exit and you will be surrounded by other
Troopers like myself. There will also be a number of airport security men
surrounding you. If any of you fall over in the rush, it will be taken care of.
We will drag you out.”
This
didn’t sound promising, I thought, glad that I didn’t look like a Roller. The
fans did, though, and the police couldn’t tell them from the real thing in the
melee. A fan might end up in the group’s limousine while a Roller might be torn
limb from limb. The cops, of course, were livid, not just because they’d misjudged
the threat – which made them look foolish – but because they disapproved
strongly of the effect the Rollers had on America’s girlhood.
“What followed,” I wrote for MM in a piece headlined ‘Rollers American Civil War’, “was the
nearest thing to a nightmare that I have experienced while fully awake. On
leaving the plane, the tightly-knit group that comprised the five Rollers and
their immediate entourage came up against over 1,000 screaming fans who had
waited for their arrival since radio stations announced the time earlier in the
morning. The majority were held back by barricades, but it seemed only too
obvious that these would soon collapse.
“They screamed as if in terrible pain, as if red-hot
needles were being driven into their bodies. They pushed and they broke
through. They crushed against the Rollers and fury erupted, suddenly but not
without warning. The route to the limousine was, perhaps, just over 100 yards.
By the time the party had travelled half this distance, it was surrounded. They
fell down and tumbled over one another. The State Troopers, who didn’t know
Rollers from lookalikes, yelled angrily at each other at the same moment, confusing
everyone.
“Glass doors blocked the way and, in the time taken to
open them, the mob engulfed the Rollers, who stood their ground while security
people shoved off attacks from all quarters. Fans were waiting by cars and
police threw them aside, vainly trying to create a pathway. Ian Mitchell, the
newest Roller, was thrown aside too. Some cop didn’t know the genuine article
from the ranks of tartan that blurred before his eyes. Mitchell clawed his way back to the car, while Paddy
Callaghan, the Rollers’ full-time bodyguard, spread his arms wide so that his
charges could slip inside. They climbed on the car as it moved slowly away,
they fell off as it accelerated and the scare was past. Only [US tour manager] Gary
McPike had been left behind in the melee. He came along later in the luggage
van.”
I came to
learn that the Rollers’ American campaign wasn’t helped by the garrulous promoter
Sid Bernstein announcing that the group would perform in front of 55,000 at New
York’s Shea Stadium, where he’d promoted two famous Beatles’ concerts in 1965
and ’66. Fortunately, wiser heads prevailed and the Rollers played regular
halls, 3,000-seater places, apart from Toronto where they could fill an arena. They
also side-stepped the big cities like New York and Los Angeles, perhaps in
order to avoid press scrutiny. Elvis Presley did the same, both very early and very
late in his career.
I was sceptical about their US prospects until I arrived
in Boston but the truth was that what the US fans lacked in numbers they made
up in enthusiasm, all stoked by 16
magazine which specialised in promoting toothsome young pop bands to adolescent
girls.
I’d seen
Marc Bolan’s T. Rex die a death in New York when the group’s on-stage deficiencies
were brutally exposed before an audience that sat and listened instead of
screaming, but no such fate befell the Rollers who inspired the same
pandemonium they had in the UK. They had a more powerful PA system than before,
however, and I tried my best to review their shows objectively, as I would acts
whose audiences were more discerning: “The Rollers have improved beyond measure
since [I last saw them], probably through the experience of playing together as
a band more often,” I wrote. “They’ve developed into a tight, harmony-conscious
group, with few pretentions, though their limited repertoire still leaves
little or no chance for individual instrumental talent to shine.
“As main guitarist, Eric Faulkner is improving all the time,
while Stuart ‘Woody’ Wood, who has taken over on bass from Alan Longmuir, and drummer Derek Longmuir maintain a
solid rhythm section which essentially holds the band together. Newcomer Ian Mitchell, who turned 18 on the tour, plays second guitar but contributed little, apart from some vocal
harmony, and singer Les McKeown has yet to establish any real identity as a
lead vocalist. He blends in with the rest but shows no signs of pushing a
limited vocal range any further than necessary.
“The concerts open with a magician, whose task is the
least enviable of anyone in the theatre, followed by a short film of the group,
which effectively whips up fever. A sort of Cape Canaveral count-down leads
into the group’s appearance... three, two, one... a light flashes, a smoke bomb
explodes and there they are.
“Much of the Rollers’ material seems based on rock and
roll that predates them by up to twenty years. Included in their current set
are ‘Party’, the old Elvis Presley number, and ‘Shout’, which was Lulu’s first
hit way, way back. Their new single, ‘I Only Want To Be With You’, was a hit
for Dusty Springfield in the early Sixties. Their own material, too, is
inspired largely by the music of Chuck Berry. Faulkner’s little solos, though
expertly played, utilise well-tried notes on well-trodden ground. And they
sometimes make mistakes – doesn’t everybody – that Wood and Longmuir manage to
cover up before too much damage occurs. Not that the audience would notice.
“Their biggest asset seems to be vocal harmonies, which,
with the enlarged PA system, came over as a dominating force. It’s a facet of
the band they should work on in the future, rather than relying solely on the
somewhat anonymous Les McKeown’s vocal attributes. He spends more time waving to
the crowd than singing anyway.
“Each concert builds up to a climax of ‘Saturday Night’
and ‘Money Honey’, and the Rollers are away without encores or fanfare. They
play for just over an hour, which means their concerts are over by 9 p.m., a
ridiculously early time by rock standards. Presumably their audiences have to
be tucked up in bed by 10 p.m. – as the Rollers themselves seem to be most
nights.”
As in the
UK, the group was strictly controlled by manager Tam Paton. “At their hotels on
the road, the group are prisoners,” I noted. “Outside, a constant vigil is
maintained by parties of fans who, as elsewhere, dress up in those rather
ungainly short/long trousers with a side stripe of tartan, tartan scarves and
badges that denote their allegiance to one particular member of the group. Obtaining
tartan material is not as easy in the US as it is in Britain and, as the
uniforms are home-made, one can only marvel at their needlework and
determination to acquire the raw materials.”
Meanwhile,
inside, the Rollers “lead a strangely celibate and temperate life-style, at
odds with just about every other band that’s travelled the Holiday Inn circuit.
They drink milk or Coke and girls are chased away by muscular bodyguards before
they pick up the scent of their tartan heroes. Even the road crew are obliged
to follow the same regulations – no booze on room service and no girls in their
rooms. The Rollers, too, exist on a diet of room service and television, though
most of them smoke constantly. Visits to radio stations punctuate their days,
but they are always obliged to exist in a goldfish bowl into which fans stare,
and from which they wave.”
I spent the
afternoon in Bostin in Eric Faulkner’s hotel room, an encounter that the girls
outside would no doubt have willingly gone without food or drink for a month to
experience. As in the UK I found him the most affable, down-to-earth and
musically inclined member of the group, perhaps even a shade embarrassed at the
reaction they received and the way they were perceived by many in my line of
work. He was certainly embarrassed about the talk of playing Shea Stadium and
the constant comparisons with The Beatles. He shook his head gloomily. “That was
hype and we really hated it,” he said. “It didn’t come from us but it made the
immediate connection between us and The Beatles. We don’t want to be another
Beatles, we want to be the Bay City Rollers. We don’t base our music on
anything in particular, just pop music.
“The older rockers, like Chuck Berry, appeal to me but
when I was in the early Rollers and we were just gigging every night, our
material was whatever was in the charts. The only Beatle song I ever played was
‘Get Back’.”
Tam Paton, shortly before he died in 2009
Tam Paton later talked to me about the
group’s forthcoming plans, their potential earnings and the likelihood that
they might become tax exiles, all of which is a bit ironic considering the
dreadful financial position in which the group would eventually find themselves.
This is another story altogether and it would be 40 years until I learned the
truth about it, or that Paton in later life ballooned to 26 stone and became a
major-league slum landlord and drug dealer. In 2016 I edited When The Screaming Stops – The Dark History
of the Bay City Rollers by Simon Spence, a 568-page Omnibus Press biography
of the group published that year in which the whole messy BCR saga is laid
bare. As the blurb on the back states: “Dazzled by sudden global
fame and corrupted by Paton’s unquenchable sexual appetites, the Bay City
Rollers soon became part of his world of depravity, victimhood, crime and
psychosis.
“Band members became hooked on drugs, and their fall
was almost as rapid as their rise, leaving them penniless and emotionally
destroyed. Three years after they fired Paton in 1979 he was finally
imprisoned, convicted of gross indecency with teenage boys.”
You have been warned.
2 comments:
I was there at Logan and I jumped on that limo like it was a slice of bacon. I’ve been searching for photos or info of that time. Thank you.
I was there too and got knocked back by one of the guards getting too close to the limo. It was complete chaos and I loved all of it!
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