News and Beehive reviews

beyond-the-beehive-banner-with-ew-2-2Preparing for the Beehive bash* on Saturday evening.  We have the banner! Getting the books, the posters and the 60s quiz all ready to go.

*Chelmsford Ideas Hub, 6.30 (Hub 1 1-4 Market Square High Chelmer Chelmsford CM1 1XF)

And so here are a few recent reviews.  I know –  all these three people are people I know, and one is even a relative, but I think their views deserve to be heard!

‘Buy the book everyone I am on chapter three and it is good!’ Sue

‘On chapter 8 – it’s a great read so far.’ Christine

‘I’m half way through and can’t put it down.’ Billie

STOP PRESS

‘I am a slow reader but now on chapter four and it is still good.’ Sue

What more can I say? The book is available and will be on sale on Saturday evening, when you can get yourself a signed copy AND listen to the magical sounds of Mark Shelley and the Deans.

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You can also buy it here.

In the meantime – listen to the sounds that mark that start of the book – Green Onions, by Booker T and the MGs.

 

The Essex Girls

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The Essex Girls, out on 23 August 2018, is a book I’ve wanted to write for most of my life, because it seems the world has not paid much attention to the lives of mod, working class girls, and I wanted to redress the balance.  When I was about 10 I started to write a book about a girl who didn’t go to boarding school.  Somehow, apart from the Secret Seven books by Enid Blyton, there weren’t that many books around about children who went to day school.  All those boarding school kids had to have their adventures in the long hot summer holidays, whereas in my world we were having adventures on weekdays and weekends. I say adventures – I mean writing the local newspaper, cooking ourselves little restaurant meals, putting on plays for the other kids in the street, and following someone on the estate we were convinced was a spy and noting his movements down in our notebooks (a spy with a very dull life, it turned out).

The problem grew more acute as I got older and became a mod.  There were limitations with being a mod – if you weren’t interested in clothes and music and possibly scooters and if your mum and dad would not have let you go to Clacton or Margate on a Bank holiday, even if you’d wanted to, then there wasn’t  much going on – but there was still a life, and one with a lot of action.  The film Quadrophenia demonstrated that people were interested in mods, but the girls don’t get much of a look in, in the story.

So, out came the notebook and over the pages flew my pen, and then my word processor and then one computer after another.

I hope I’ve captured some of the essence of the excitement of Saturday nights, walking into a dance hall in time to the rhythm of Green Onions, or the smell of Wishing perfume by Avon, or seeing people you knew wearing parkas and leather coats, swooping along the road to park outside the mods’ coffee bar.  It was a great time.

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The Essex Girls is published by Bonnier Zaffre and is available to pre-order here

Georgie Fame

corn exchange (1)When jazz writer and photographer Val Wilmer  invited me to go with her to a recording of the BBC Radio 4 programme Mastertapes I didn’t know what to expect.  She had told me it was about Georgie Fame and that was enough for me to accept the invitation.
The premise of Mastertapes is that in each edition John Wilson talks to a different musician about a ‘career-defining album’. 
The musician plays tracks from the album but also other pieces, and there are questions and comments from the audience. On Monday the interviewee was to be Georgie Fame, talking about his 1964 album Rhythm and Blues at the Flamingo.

On Monday afternoon I met Val at Maida Vale tube station – we’re old friends from the time I lived down the road from her in Stoke Newington – and we walked to the BBC studios on Delaware Road. There was already a queue of people waiting to go in. But I was with Val Wilmer and so we went in at the contributors’ entrance. As we arrived we met Johnny Gunnell one of the owners of the Flamingo, and an erstwhile manager of Georgie Fame. And behind him came Eddie ‘TanTan’ Thornton, a former trumpeter with the Blue Flames.

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We made our way down to the studio and we were joined by Mick Eve, saxophonist with the Blueflames.

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Extraordinarily for me, we were all sitting on the same row, and it was the front row.  That was because Eddie and Mick were going to play, and Val and Johnny were going to be commenting on the Flamingo in the 60s, the club in Wardour Street in Soho.  I draped my leather over the chair so no-one could take my seat.

The Hammond organ was in place, the technicians were adjusting mics and doing sound tests and the official photographer – with a rather good camera – was taking pictures.

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The audience filed in – mainly men, mainly tucking their bus passes safely back into their back pocket, but a few women came, mod girls from the 60s. Richard Williams, journalist, was there, Tom McGuinness from Manfred Mann and McGuinness Flint, and even Martin Freeman.

And then Georgie Fame arrived with his sons Tristan Powell (who plays guitar) and James Powell (drums). At first I didn’t notice him, just a bloke in a blue windcheater and a flat cap, but when he sat at the organ, and began to play, the effect was electric. The old Blueflames stood up and did a quick run-through, playing Humpty Dumpty.

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It was just like being back in the Corn Exchange in Chelmsford, except I wasn’t wearing my brown suede or the unfortunate mustard and black patent leather shoes. The sound of the brass and the sax and of course the organ, made even a bare 50s studio come alive. I wished my best friend Christine had been there – we were always together at the Corn Exchange. We were the ones dancing near the stage, doing our mod jive, then running for the bus home at 11 o’clock, while all the boys jumped on a train or hitched a ride along the A12 to London, going up West to the all-nighters at the Flamingo.
Then the recording started. Georgie talked about his influences and musical friends and colleagues. Colin Green, his guitarist had obviously been a huge influence,

photo(16)but his was a name I didn’t know nor the people behind the making of the album (Ian Samwell, Glynn Johns). But then he talked about the music of Mose Allison, Ray Charles, Prince Buster – the names on the juke box in the Orpheus, the mods’ coffee bar in Chelmsford.
The Blueflames (at one time Billy Fury’s backing group) were re-forming for this event and played numbers from the LP and then they played Green Onions. It was wonderful.
Before the second part of the recording began, Georgie said he needed to say hello to someone he hadn’t spoken to yet, and he walked across the floor to Val. They are old friends and exchanged a few words about old jazz friends. It was a great moment (I was quietly pleased, sitting beside her, that I was wearing my new slouchy snow-cream jumper). Then he walked back to Hammond organ and the recording began. There were questions and answers from old mods and new mods.
At the end of the recording the audience filed out of the studio and those from the reserved seats mingled around among the wires and the mics – someone asked Val about photography, a man from a record company thanked her for the photos, someone else remembered a gig she’d been at and that she comes from Streatham. Georgie’s man came up and said Georgie would like to have a word with her. I said casually, ‘Shall I stay here?’ meaning ‘Let me come too! Let me come too!’ and he said, ‘No, you can come too.’
We went back stage and Val and Georgie continued their conversation about old jazzer friends.

So I have been up close to Georgie Fame. I even managed to casually mention that I had seen him at the Corn Exchange in Chelmsford. Did he remember the Corn Exchange? Of course he did – he remembered it was run by two wrestlers, something I had forgotten or never known.

I am trying to justify the fact that I have no pictures of this momentous event by saying that it would have been inappropriate, naff, not the done thing, to take a photo when we were having something akin to a normal conversation, but the truth is I had no more space on my phone.

The programmes will go out later in the year.

An Awfully Big Occasion

It is all go in Chelmsford, preparing for the launch party of A Sense of Occasion.

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The Saracen’s Head will be humming – just as it did when mods dropped in, lurching from the Lion and Lamb, via the Golden Fleece and the White Hart, parking their scooters outside, slipping out of their parkas.

The play list for the launch has been one of the most important features.  As regular visitors to this website will know, the stories in A Sense of Occasion trace the lives of four mod girls in the 60s – love loss laughter and scooters.  So the music has got to catch the essence.  The Four Tops, Spencer Davis, Green Onions, a smattering of the Beatles, James Brown, Donnie Elbert and more.  Just listening to the tracks now is like being at the Corn Exchange on a Saturday night.  Everyone smelling their best – Old Spice or Avon’s Wishing. Everyone looking their best in their suede coats and their Hush Puppies.

Books will be on sale, books will be signed.  There will be a prize for the best mod outfit. There will be lights, there will be music.  Can’t wait!

Hear more great tracks at The Sixties Made Me