Saturday, 28 May 2016

Music and Me: 1971 to 1988



I don’t remember being unaware of music, there must have always been music in my home as far as I could tell.  I don’t remember a time before around late 1974 when I would have been three years old; I’d lived in Emsworth and Plymouth when I was younger than this but have no recollection of either so my earliest memories are of living in Gosport, near Portsmouth. My father was in the Royal Navy and thus not always around though I don’t actually recall not noticing him. My younger brother was a baby and my older sisters both seemed to be at something called “school” most of the time.  I heard this as “stool”.  I imagined they had to sit on a high, uncomfortable stool and be talked at.  I remember the television, particularly on one occasion when my mother called me from the kitchen to change the channel and I managed to break the set, to this day I don’t know how. But I don’t remember music at all. I think my father played music much more often than my mother so the television of the early 70s sticks in my mind more.  I have memories of watching Barnaby the Bear, Andy Pandy, Captain Pugwash, Rainbow and I think Trumpton or one of its variants but I don’t recall any music, even television theme tunes.

Sometime in 1975 we moved to Southbourne in West Sussex as by then my father had left the navy and our previous home had been forces married quarters. With my father being around more there was an increase of the amount of music I had in my ears. The earliest songs I remember were by Elvis Presley or Peter Sarstedt, particularly the latter’s 1969 eponymous album featuring the “No More Lollipops For You” track, which I found hilarious on account of its speeded up vocal mix at the end.  The Elvis tracks my father preferred were the songs from his movies or the more country and western themed numbers. There were also various country artists that to this day all blurred in to one with the exception of Johnny Cash, memorable to me at this time for the giggle-inducing “A Boy Named Sue” which had been recorded at his 1969 San Quentin gig.  Finally, a smattering of old rock and roll artists made it in to my father’s collection; Adam Faith, Buddy Holly and Roy Orbison were all artists I don’t remember not knowing so I must have picked them up in my consciousness  around this time.

In September 1975 I started school and music suddenly had a whole new dimension to it; singing.  I distinctly recall when my mother was dragging me by the hand to the infant school open day my major fear was not being separated from her; surprisingly, considering my reluctance to attend play school; but the prospect of being made to sing.  I can only assume my sisters, who had already transferred to the Junior School, had been teasing me about what would be expected from me when I started the educational regime.  Of course singing did not turn out to be the ordeal I’d dreaded and in fact I quite enjoyed it.  The singing in school assembly at that age was generally quasi-religious rather than full on hymns. The songs I remember most of all were “Morning Has Broken”, which though a Christian hymn had been popularised in the years preceding my educational beginnings by the then Cat Stevenson his 1971 album “Teaser and the Firecat”, and “Lord of the Dance”, ostensibly a Christian song but with pagan folk undertones. Unbeknown to me the song was at that time less than ten years old, having been written in 1967 by Sydney Carter.

By 1975 my eldest sister was 11 years old and showing an interest in popular music so this also began to have some impact on my listening ears.  I would imagine I watched Top of the Pops with my sisters and possibly other pop music themed shows but memories of this era are vague.  1977 saw the Queen’s Silver Jubilee which I recall mainly for the infant school picnic which I recall mainly for the fact that neither of my parents attended as they were both working and I had to sit with another family.  The Sex Pistol’s input to this joyous occasion passed me by completely.  The other major musical event that marked me this year was the death on August 16th of Elvis Presley.  Even with my tender years this was a massive shock, it did not seem possible that somebody so well-known and so young could just die like that. I learned of his death from a copy of The Sun left on the dining table and read the articles avidly, bewildered and enthralled all at once.  Neither parent seemed overly upset or even surprised so perhaps this was normal for pop stars (it was years later that I learned of the untimely deaths of Jimi Hendrix, Janice Joplin, Bryan Jones, Jim Morrison et cetera which even my unhip parents must have been aware of and desensitised by). Around the end of the year “Mull of Kintyre” was number one and hence played at the end of Top of the Pops for around three years, or so it seemed to my 6 year old self.

The most personal music landmark in 1978 was my first 7” single which was bought for me by my Auntie Joan.  She was visiting us from her home town of Salisbury and bought for me “The Smurf Song” by Father Abraham and The Smurfs and for my younger brother “You’re the one that I want” By John Travolta and Olivia Newton John. Yes, I got the novelty single and my brother got the song from the teen focussed Grease soundtrack. It was many years later I realised that The Smurf Song was also kept from number one by the single my brother was given, which was quite prophetic in a way.  I do remember watching the clips from Grease on Top of the Pops while it and at least one other song from the movie was number one which is my only specific memory of the show around this time.

The next song to really make a mark on me despite having never owned it in any capacity was “I Will Survive” by Gloria Gaynor in 1979. I must have heard it many times but I have a distinct memory of hearing it in a car; which must have been a hire car as our family never owned one until the mid-eighties; probably on a summer day coming back from a daytrip out.  The song would go on to be a karaoke staple for recently dumped women of little originality but when performed by Gloria Gaynor it truly makes the hairs on my neck get up and dance. It probably has more to do with the associated memory than the song itself but nevertheless this was my first favourite song. I have vague recollections of the Abba in Switzerland special on the BBC around 1979 as well but as it was some considerable time before I could admit to my camp fondness for that particular act I will gloss over that happening just now. But I can say that by the end of 1979 I was very much a regular viewer of TOTP and the Pink Floyd video for Another Brick In The Wall which was the last number one of the seventies, I’m pretty sure at this time it was the animated sequences by Gerald Scarfe in the video that held my attention the most and brilliance of Pink Floyd’s music would continue to elude me for some considerable time.

In 1979 I had started Junior School in Southbourne and music started to be noticed more and more.  A friend got what would be called a crew-cut these days but coming off the back of the seventies we all thought of it as a skinhead, knowing nothing of the right wing connotations that has attached itself to such a look by this time. The 1980 release of “Baggy Trousers” by Madness made a huge impact on most of the boys in my year, a few of whom started to wear Harrington jackets but of course my parents were not that cool.  My own personal tastes that year were forged largely by my sisters’ interest in Adam Ant who was finding success with his “Kings of the Wild Frontier” album and the singles thereof and my own young loins were starting to stir but not really knowing why when confronted with the delectable Toyah Wilcox and her hits “It’s a Mystery” (from Four from Toyah), “I want to break free” and “Thunder in the Mountains” in 1981. Presumably the rock’n’roll side of my tastes were the reason for my strange fondness around this time for Shakin’ Stevens who had a string of hits in ’81 and ’82.  My sisters’ would let me have the Shakin’ Stevens and Toyah posters from their Smash Hits and Jackie magazines. Around this time I also bought my first record: A 12" vinyl album, The Best of Bond, which actually covered music from the first three Connery Bond films.  I seem to recall it was 20p at a jumble sale. 

The rock’n’roll influences didn’t end there. One of my best friends around this time, a chubby, short lad called Matty Stringer, had older brothers who were Teddy Boys.  I knew very little of Teds, Mods, Punks, Skins et cetera at such a young age and I certainly didn’t know that the older Stringer boys often would themselves in scrapes for their look.  By this time Teddy Boys were certainly not that fashionable, what with Skins, Rude Boys and Girls, post-punks and the beginnings of New Romantic starting to shine through.  Anyway, Matt’s brothers held Elvis parties which my younger brother and I were sometimes invited to.  They were held in their long back garden on warm summer evenings and we drank pop, listened to Elvis and tapped our feet in a way that we had been taught to as Teds.  Fashionable or not I have very fond memories of these nights.

Further recollections of my time at Junior School are largely filled with TV shows and less to do with pop music.  Much as I watched Top of the Pops, not much made a deep impression on me and I was just as likely to see music on either Tizwas or Number 73 so unless the kids at school were talking about it.  Thus my mixed memories’ of the time leading up to September 1983 and in no particular order include Musical Youth’s Pass the Dutchie, The Kids From Fame, The Jam splitting up (There is no way I’d have been cool enough to have noticed this if I hadn’t heard the announcement on Radio 1when I was sick in bed), Eddy Grant, Dexy’s Midnight Runners, Captain Sensible (his connection with The Damned completely unknown to us), Bucks Fizz winning the Eurovision song contest, The Human League, Gary Numan, John Lennon getting shot and the headmaster announcing it in assembly, David Bowie’s Let’s dance video, Men At Works Down Under and Trio’s Da Da Da. 
In September 1983 I went to The Bourne Community School in Southbourne, West Sussex.  I was not quite 12 years old but this, figuratively, is where my teens began.  The first number one single of my time at secondary school was Red Red Wine by UB40.  I grew to hate UB40 in time but I am jumping ahead. Around this time I bought my first 7" single (new and bought by myself) which was The Pipes of Peace by Paul McCartney for which I apologize. Another album which I really remember around this time was Paul Young's  No Parlez which I own a vinyl copy of today. 

As I progressed in to my teens I started to develop my own interests in music.  I was by now influenced by the tastes of my sister, Cathrynn, who had a record player and the teen girls interest in music which varied enormously.  Having grown out of Adam Ant, along with the rest of the English speaking world, she owned albums by The Beat and Haircut 100 which I used to listen to but the one she made me a copy of on cassette was Construction Time Again by Depeche Mode.  The austere industrial sounds they employed had a profound effect on my and I developed an interest in anything electronic sounding.  I still didn’t have my own equipment to play music on, my younger brother had a radio-cassette player made by Ingersoll, on which I’d record songs from the radio, and he also had a “walkman” (with a small “w” because it wasn’t a Walkman ©, it was a personal stereo made by someone like Alba).  

With the Depeche Mode influence now upon me I started to record songs like New Order’s Blue Monday, The Art of Noise’s Close To The Edit and Paul Hardcastle’s Nineteen.  Anything with a sampler and keyboards were game.  One evening my parents came home from a night out having won some albums from the DJ, one of which was the Who’s Afraid Of The Art Of Noise album, which kinda blew my mind at the time being largely experimental and not very commercial at all, unlike their later dalliances with Max Headroom, Tom Jones and Duane Eddy.  I also had an interest in Electro hip-hop, largely forged by peer pressure but helped along by the likes of Doug E Fresh sampling the Inspector Gadget music for their single The Show.  Eventually I got my own stereo, a Toshiba with a single tape deck, which was annoying as I couldn’t copy tapes myself but had to ask my friend Mark to do it.

The first cassettes I got that year were Madonna’s Like A Virgin (a teen crush that had started with Live Aid, a pivotal music moment), Depeche Mode’s Singles 81-85 and Kate Bush’s Hounds Of Love.  By the Christmas of 1987 I’d added Fleetwood Mac’s Tango In The Night, The Pretenders Singles, Alison Moyet’s Alf and pretty much everything Simple Minds and U2 had done up to that point.

I’d been aware of Simple Minds, I’d recorded songs like Alive and Kicking, Sanctify Yourself and Don’t You Forget About Me from the radio but oddly enough it was the weakest single from the Once Upon A Time album, Ghostdancing, which really grabbed me.  Ghostdancing was little more than a jam with meaningless, ad-libbed lyrics that had gotten too big for its boots but it had a killer riff and I decided that they were my new favourite band and set about collecting their back catalogue.  I started with Once Upon A Time, an obvious choice but for my next few choices price dictated what I bought so the mini album Sister Feelings Call (1981) and the early effort Real to Real Cacophony (1979), both of which were some way from the later pompous and commercial stadium sound that had attracted me in the first place.  Real to Real in particular had an art-rock sound unlike anything I’d ever come across before and the first stirrings of pretentious git were rousing in me.  

I had also been very much influenced by Mark’s fondness for The Pet Shop Boys and hadn’t completely given up on Pop so the likes of Erasure also had me listening.  Eventually though my tastes were changing from those of Smash Hits though I continued reading for most of my school days.  My fondness for Simple Minds and U2 was in full swing, Mark had a mutual interest in U2 and more money so while I had the albums he’d have all the 12” singles, imports and bootlegs.  Then my loins moved me on to the next stage.  I had a massive crush on a girl called Lucy and through her got in to The Cure.  There was little effort involved here; the eclectic and often irreverent style they employed in their poppier efforts appealed to me and as I grew older the more melancholy aspects of their back catalogue meant more and more to me.  I went out with Lucy for a bit, not for long because I discovered alcohol and did something bad whilst drunk which she found out about.  Shame, lovely girl she was.

And so it was that in 1988 when I started college I turned up on day one with back-combed hair, black jeans, a black blazer and great big, white Hi-Tech trainers with the tongue sticking out, a la Robert Smith.  Being a “Cure fan” characterized me all the way through college and to a lesser extent, all the way through life.