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Authors: Sandra Gibson

Ain't Bad for a Pink (47 page)

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My band is starting up. We’re waiting for our drummer to get a drum kit. My best friend asked me to be in it – he came up with the name, Omblivious. The name must have come into his head. There was another band he was in called Inslave but it fell apart because everyone kept moving places – falling out. The bass guitarist decided he wanted to be the guitarist; the guitarist wanted to be the drummer. And they weren’t very good. I wasn’t part of that.

Sam Molony.
(11)

I entered the pub scene already fairly confident, competent and with an established fanbase. At the same time I was innovating: reinterpreting the music, mastering slide guitar, finger picking blues and experimenting with jazz-inspired music. I owned a van, three amps and various instruments before I was twenty and I would soon buy my own house. And throughout all this I had fought my father’s opposition.

I think it does you good to have to fight for something. The passion to circumvent all obstacles has to be there. I haven’t observed a similar drive in the current lot. I’m unimpressed by the “Me” generation funded by indulgent parental credit – they’re soft, feeble and too old. They should be thirteen not twenty. Twenty is too old! They just haven’t got the balls and I’m not saying any of this scornfully – more in a resigned way. Young people coming up don’t have the attitude to succeed. It doesn’t bode well if your parents pay for your equipment and then you refuse even to carry it out to the car, does it?

As an established musician and source of all amps I used to enjoy the company of people younger than myself. An experienced musician has useful knowledge for an aspiring musician. As the Skunk Band changed and evolved it was the young musicians who helped keep it vibrant. But the up and coming musicians no longer up and come and this saddens me. Perhaps this generation is more concerned with the paraphernalia of DJing or with the seductive power of electronic music. People buy their instruments on eBay these days; I can’t understand this – I would want to handle the instrument; I would want to talk about it in a music shop with someone who knew about it.

There are still a few lads who want the music passionately – of course there are – but far fewer than I remember.

I’d never heard of the blues guitar and then the electric guitar introduced me to the blues. I wanted to hear more of it. One of my friends was into Hendrix – that introduced me to the blues, really.

I would always choose electric guitar over everything, really. It’s just the feeling; it gives you a really good feeling. It’s just a way of expressing yourself; it’s a way of getting your noise out and your noise is only something you know, and only you can express it in your way.

Dec Higgins.
(12)

I’m into blues but I started off into heavy metal, then acoustic, jazz and swing: Hendrix, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Rory Gallagher, Tommy Emmanuel, Frank Sinatra and Metallica still. I find Nirvana depressing. I think you grow out of it. You think the swearing’s cool at that age then you learn music isn’t just that. It’s about good music.

Our band, The Riffs, plays blues. We have written blues-inspired and acoustic songs. We try to bring in keyboard, harmonica and percussion. I’m looking for a musical career. Dec wants to be a dentist who plays guitar.

Josh Bailey.
(13)

To be fair, the venue situation is against them. Kids don’t go to youth clubs to play their music so where’s the audience coming from? The pub scene is now largely dominated by old lags playing Sixties, Seventies and (some) Eighties music, proficiently and as well as the original artists. Essentially it’s a closed shop. No publican is going to risk putting on something new when his customers expect the familiar bands. How can young innovative musicians compete against musical conservatism and the reign of the cover band?

And one by one the pubs are closing down!

Synchronised Holidays

At one time you could do a gig every night because there were so many working men’s clubs. So many have closed over the years that now you’re lucky to get two gigs a month. In the Sixties and Seventies a band could make £100 a night. Bands were so much in demand that you had to tell the agents in advance when you were going on holiday – and the whole band had to go at the same time! These days a soloist can only get £80. I got £30 the other night: not enough to cover drinks and petrol. Now pubs are closing one by one.

Phil Doody.
(14)

Though it seems you can’t entirely keep the music down.

As far as the local music scene goes, although The Limelight has closed – it took a dive when Ray & Karen Bispham left – in one way it’s been good for the local pubs such as The Imp, The Brunswick, The Express, The Box, as they have bands on every week. It seems to be going well for them, when you hear how many pubs are closing. The Box is good for original material / young bands. There is a very good music scene in Crewe as there always has been, since I came to Crewe in the mid Eighties – then it was all happening at the Leisure Club in Edleston Road.

Andy Smith.
(15)

Style And Substance

There’s a guitar in the shop that somebody’s ruined by sticking three dice on it. I can’t get them off and anyway someone will like them. They won’t depress the price like they depress me. When I look in the accessories catalogues I despair – am I going to start stocking pink knobs? I’m so far out of touch that what I would call bits of plastic are called Demon Plectrums worn as a fashion statement round your neck.

It’s symptomatic of a general trivialization, a substitution of style for substance. We’ve gone through the good, creative times and now everything is on a decadent slide. Look at what has become of the musical: we had Gershwin and Rogers and Hammerstein – now we’ve got Lloyd Webber.

I’ve been looking at Blueridge Guitars in the Gremlin catalogue. They’re getting a good write-up but the Historic Series has cutaway. As far as I know cutaway isn’t historic. There’s also some brash abalone work on the machine heads. That isn’t historic either. When it was done it was done by hand and all over. Blueridge has established itself as the leading guitar brand in the US after Martin and Taylor. Why is it offering tradition but not following it?

The hype of the guitar world offers much more than a musical instrument: it offers technology and adventure, status and power, limitless variety, a wide price range and sensuous experiences. Like the food in some restaurants, guitars are described as if they will guarantee an orgasm. Directed at young people, they offer a fantasy far removed from the reality of hard work and continual practice. But today’s young people can afford them – or their parents can. And I’m not saying that style and fantasy and fun have no place in musical performance; of course it does – the Skunk Band demonstrated that – so I don’t want to be too scathing about this. Owning a beautiful object is important and everyone has a different idea of beauty.

My guitar is a BC Rich Beast. It’s black and white and it has two spikes going up like horns at the top and one big spike on the left at the bottom and a smaller one on the right. It’s off a website from a guitar shop in Surrey.

I just saw it. It looked really nice. Straight away it was the one I wanted. When I first picked it up I just felt surprised that I had it because it was such a nice guitar. It’s got sharp notes; it’s really nice to play.

It cost £240 including an amp and a limited edition BC Rich plectrum and a guitar strap. With it I also bought a stand because with such points to a guitar you need a stand because they might get chipped.

Sam Molony.
(16)

It’s great to have abundance of choice. There was so little in the Fifties and early Sixties, it was expensive and had to be ordered. You had to wait! Nowadays guitars are abundant and absolutely dynamite quality for the price: a decent guitar for a hundred pounds made by the Chinese ready for you to take away.

But sometimes I just despair when it’s nothing but
faux
leopard skin guitar straps and guitars with annoying embellishments. Stylistic razzmatazz can’t replace musical substance.

I was recently shocked that Radio Four pundits had narrowed down the field of ‘great’ guitarists to two: Clapton and Hendrix! I was surprised by the narrowness and ignorance of the discussion. One panellist had selected Jimi’s “Red House” as his best. This is nonsense. It’s his worst track: twelve bar blues in the easiest key. Trite with no surprises. What is this obsession with the most popular?

Discussion about style over substance would have to include the tribute band. A tribute band allows time to stand still at the point when the group in question was at its height. The popular songs are reproduced as faithfully as possible without deviation and it has to be admitted that some tribute bands are very good and do their work with respect, paralleling their originals without even waiting for them to retire! Everybody covers songs but it’s so deadening to slavishly copy a song without adding something of your own. But this is very popular as a swift glance at local venues will confirm. Crewe’s Limelight Club was the subject of a BBC 2
Arena
tribute to the tribute band filmed in December 2006. Free At Last, Limehouse Lizzie, Cobain, T-Rextasy, Stairway To Zeppelin, Demon, Pink Fraud, Are You Experienced, Fred Zeppelin, AB/CD and Purple Snake were all on offer.

The Australian Pink Floyd sent me tickets and a backstage pass to see them at the National Indoor Arena in Birmingham: a stunning performance. Stunning. In terms of virtuosity and theatricality it transcended the original Pink Floyd. Of course, these days the technology is more sophisticated but I liked the touches of humour reflecting the Australian theme. It’s much more than a tribute band and anyone who loves this style of music would have been transported to another world. APF are now so popular they’re considering assembling an Australian Pink Floyd Two with another set of musicians. It was good to see Gareth Darlington – he’s the sound man – and Damien Darlington (guitar, vocals, keyboard) backstage, though I must say the post-gig socialising was sober compared to my old Jack Daniels days.

Pink Floyd and the Australian Pink Floyd parallel one another. They’re both still communicating something across the generations; we’re going to see them and our sons and daughters are going to see them as well. The two bands work together: Pink Floyd have sanctioned what the Australian Pink Floyd does and APF have played at Pink Floyd’s parties. They have the Pink Floyd pig and some of the Pink Floyd road crew working with them but they are also acclaimed in their own right – APF did two nights at the Royal Albert Hall.

A mere tribute band can’t continue to communicate like this; there has to be true feeling. Pink Floyd have asked APF to lay off a few high profile venues to give them a chance! So it’s all good-humoured and has life in it.

Substance.

Talking Of Age

In terms of my musical prospects things are not looking too good. Through my damaged hands there’s a physical impairment to my performance and a psychological issue regarding confidence. I’m never going to be able to say I’m too old to play the blues; lack of eyesight, lack of digits, lack of sobriety, lack of an instrument, lack of liberty, lack of sanity has never been an excuse for any of the old men of blues. But I’ve had to come to terms with the fact that my right hand probably won’t stand up to sustained playing though it is healing slowly. I’m back doing a few gigs with Des: it’s gentle and it’s fun. I also went solo at Square One recently. I was pleased with my performance that was partly fuelled by anger at some unjustified criticism.

Talking of age, as well as the epidemic of tribute bands there’s been a recent trend for the resurrection of famous groups from the Sixties or Seventies – some look as if they’ve come from beyond the grave. “Codger Rock” or “Zimmer Frame Rock” has been very successful and what emerges is that fans want to remember their favourite groups exactly as they were. One of the claims regarding Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin was that he had not diminished: he was exactly the same as he ever was. At a fairly recent Bob Dylan gig a fan – domed head and a long straggly curtain of hair – was beside himself because Dylan had changed his early songs out of all recognition. The fan couldn’t tolerate the change; he wanted things as he remembered them. I’m with Dylan.

Heavy Metal is back: I saw Whitesnake – still good, David Coverdale – originally with Deep Purple, a band called The Answer – got the essence of the music – not just covers – bang on. It’s because their parents are into it. My lad Jordan is a brilliant guitarist. He plays Seventies rock; he’s never listened to anything else.

Wayne Davies (Slim).
(17)

Always Something New To Learn

There are positives to counterbalance the down sides. A musician always has something new to learn. Why be repetitive? Complacency is the enemy. During the summer of 2006 I spent some time learning new chords with Andy Boote. I felt enthusiastic. I’m a non-musician; I have to relate everything back to a keyboard because that’s the instrument I did have formal training in. But when someone presents you with a jazz turnaround that can be repeated up the neck as you can with barre chords, then it opens up a whole new field of Django Reinhardt /Charlie Christian style music. They evolved it in the first place so that they could play guitar with jazz ensembles and change key easily by using the chords in different positions on the neck, rather than changing chord shapes. Changing the finger configuration rather than moving the hand up and down the neck enhanced the speed of playing.

It led me to think about Lonnie Johnson and Scrapper Blackwell and the jazz influence in their blues – Leroy Carr obviously being a link – and I decided I wanted to extend my playing by learning Andy’s jazz and rockabilly chords, which in time I’ll be able to embellish by finger-style playing. Hopefully it’ll enable me to play more complex blues as well as doing this thing with Andy on the jazz side.

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