Everyone’s
story begins with their mum and dad, right?
That’s certainly the case where my love of music is concerned. I wouldn’t say they were big music lovers; my parents’ record collection was humble, but
back in the 70s, that wasn’t terribly unusual I suppose.
I can’t
put my finger on any particular moment when music entered my life, but I can
trace it back to an early age. I would
probably have been somewhere between 5 and 7 years of age.
We had a front room. Most people
of a certain age living in Britain
will know of ‘the front room’. It was an
almost hallowed space, frequented only on special occasions. On no account were you permitted in ‘the
front room’ unless mum or dad specifically said so.
But our
front room was where the record player was.
I grew
up in a pretty unspectacular, small market town in North
Devon called Great Torrington (the ‘Great’ is somewhat
ironic). Torrington (as it is more commonly known)
was/is the kind of place where everyone knew everyone else and everyone else’s
business. Nothing ever happened. Oh, except they filmed some scenes for Tarka
the Otter there, which remains a life’s highlight for some residents. In 2012 the Olympic Flame passed through
the town. It went out! That’s the kind of place we’re talking
about. I seem to remember there being a
small record shop in the square at one point, but the main place to buy records
when growing up was Barnstaple, which boasted not only a Woolworths, but a John
Menzies and a Boots too. Yes, Boots used
to sell records, albeit rather overpriced ones.
As such,
music-buying was restricted. I contented
myself playing my parents’ records. This
was fine though. When you’re learning in
such circumstances, you have to experiment, make do with what you’re
given. And so it was that I was raised
on a varied diet of easy listening standards, country & western and, praise
be!, pop music.
The
first records I can remember coming across in ‘the front room’ belonged to my
mum: Rollin’ by the Bay City Rollers, and a various artists compilation (on
the legendary K-Tel label) called Music Explosion. I still have problems deciding how
characteristic these records were of my mum.
I like to think she retained a small essence of unpredictability
throughout her life, and here was the proof.
For
starters, she was no teenager when these records came out, yet the Rollers were
basically the then equivalent of Take That in the 90s, Westlife in the
noughties or One Direction now. There
was one crucial difference however. Yes,
they were marketed at a teenage girl demographic; yes they were stylised up to
the eyeballs in their tight tartan trousers (they were Scottish, see what they
did there?); but the Bay City Rollers were a proper band. They played and wrote their own songs, much
like other teen idols of the time (Marc Bolan, the Osmonds, etc). Nowadays, you just have to have a pretty face
and you’re in (stand up One Direction). The music is written and
performed for you, and even if you can’t sing, don’t worry – we can AutoTune
you to buggery so no one will notice.
Or, it seems, care. My mum’s copy
of Rollin’ had a gatefold sleeve, and was autographed by each member of the
band. I never established whether she
had bought it like that, or if she had actually had it signed personally, but the sigs were genuine, that I do
know. Whatever, the one thing I remember
even now is that even at such a tender age, the aesthetics meant very little to
me. Who cares what they looked like or
where the autographs came from? What
mattered was inside the packaging – the music.
I must
have played that record dozens of times.
I loved the songs. That was the
point, the songs. Production?
Arrangement? Instrumentation? None of
that meant a thing to me; it was all about the song, the whole thing, the
finished work. I was a kid, for goodness
sake! As if I gave a crap about the
technical stuff. Except with hindsight,
the techie side of things obviously made the songs what they were. That big, Phil Spector-esque wall-of-sound
production, the heavy pounding rhythm section, the vocal harmonies – all clever
stuff for sure and that’s what made the songs so appealing. But your average 6-year-old won’t tell you
that. And why should they? Let’s face it, even now, if you’re listening
to something for the first time, what is it that reels you in? The amount of reverb on the rhythm
guitar? The classy yet restrained use of
a string quartet during the bridge?
Bollocks! It’s the song; the
beginning, the middle, the end, the whole damn thing. We’ll worry about the intricacies later, just
gimme the song first and let me work with that!
That
record never spurred me on to learn more about the Rollers, but it did serve as
an inspiration. They were the first band
I became aware of. Well, them and the
Wombles anyway. There was a Wombles
album in the house, purchased no doubt for the benefit of my brother and I,
though for the life of me I can’t remember a thing about it now. It must have been played though, I loved the
Wombles – who didn’t? I often wondered whatever happened
to them? Did they break up or just take
an extended hiatus? I certainly don’t
remember any spin-off solo records or side projects. I hoped they hadn’t gone the same way as the Bay
City Rollers – arguments, legal wrangles, drugs, alcohol, sex scandals, child
porn… How gutted would you feel reading about Orinoco going down for gross
indecency, or esteemed violinist Madame Chaulet facing charges of selling crack
to schoolkids?
Turns
out everything is OK in Wombleland – they reformed to play Glastonbury in 2011
and can still rock with the best of ‘em!
Music
Explosion was equally, if not more significant to me in terms of influencing
my musical tastes during that time, featuring an array of styles and moods you
couldn’t get from a sole Bay City Rollers album. It was typical of compilations back
then; it was released by K-Tel and
seemed to follow the ethic that, in spite of the limitations two sides of 12”
plastic presented, there was no reason why you couldn’t cram 20-odd songs onto
each record (even if they were edited heavily in order to get them to
fit). And so it was that Music
Explosion boasted a whopping 22 chartbusting hits. Some of them have since been long forgotten –
remember ‘Guilty’ by the Pearls? Or
Barry Blue’s ‘Miss Hit And Run’?
No? Me neither… - while a few
introduced us to some burgeoning talents who would go on to become huge stars
over the following decades – Elton John, Bryan Ferry, Genesis (at the tail-end
of the Peter Gabriel era). But there
were also some eternal classics that still stand the test of time even now some
30-plus years on. Try these for size:
‘Stuck In The Middle’ by Stealers Wheel;
‘This Town Ain’t Big Enough For Both Of Us’
by Sparks, who
are still making amazingly inventive and highly original music to this day;
‘Seasons In The Sun’ by Terry Jacks,
arguably the most tear-jerking song ever written.
The
track that really captured my 6-year-old imagination though was the Rubettes’
‘Sugar Baby Love’. Blending the
bang-up-to-date glam rock with 50s doo-wop, ‘Sugar Baby Love’ captured the
uplifting mood any young child discovering pop for the first time felt. That ridiculously high vocal swoop,
irritatingly infectious melody and slick production made this the one that
would have made my first ever ‘Most Played’ list if I’d decided to make such a
thing. As the opener to side 2, it was
ideally placed for this accolade, as I didn’t have to try and carefully drop
the needle onto the miniscule gap between tracks with my clumsy young
fingers. I still can’t hear this song
without feeling cosily nostalgic about ‘the front room’ and my earliest
introduction to pop music.
A shame
then that they looked such prannets in those ghastly berets…
Soundtrack:
- Shang-a-Lang – Bay City Rollers (from ‘Rollin’’)
- Sugar Baby Love - The Rubettes (from ‘Music Explosion’)
Sugar Baby Love is a majestic piece of pop music. The best thing they did. Ohm and I do remember Barry Blue. A talent gone to waste?
ReplyDeleteGeorge
This is shaping up to be a great blog. I was born in 1970 and you have already hit a lot of memories for me: dad's ABBA records, the Wombles LP (sill proudly filed on my shelves) and the use of the word 'prannet' which I haven't heard since school. And do I detect a Cardiacs reference in the blog title? Looking forward to reading more.
ReplyDeleteI'm trying to reintroduce the word 'prannet' into day-to-day vocabulary. My kids have already been made aware of the word so it may be the next teenage slang word. Watch this space.
DeleteAs for the title - you've got it in one...