06 February 2021

PARKLAND WALK

This article will cover two of my interests... abandoned old railway lines and urban exploration. The 5 kilometre Parkland Walk follows the course of the railway line that used to run between Finsbury Park and Alexandra Palace. Last year I explored the southern section between Finsbury Park and the Highgate Tunnels and in this article I'll look at the history of the route and include many of the photographs I took.

Parkland Walk


The line between Finsbury Park and Highgate dates back to the 1860s when it was constructed by the Edgware, Highgate and London Railway. Before the line actually opened it was absorbed into the Great Northern Railway (GNR) on 22 August 1867.

In 1872 and 1873 branch lines opened between Finchley to High Barnet and Highgate to Alexandra Palace. Two years later the Palace was destroyed in a fire and that section of the line closed for two years during the reconstruction. The line would face two further closures during the 1880s. By 1923 the Great Northern Railway (GNR) had become part of the London & North Eastern Railway (LNER).

In 1935 the London Underground revealed their plans (The Northern Heights Plan) to incorporate the lines into the Northern Line. Work was halted with the start of World War 2 in 1939 and by the end of the war all the plans were scrapped. Before and in the few years following the end of the war underground maps did show the routes as 'under construction.'

Passenger trains continued to run on the lines however, by July 1954, British Rail, who had taken over from the London & North Eastern Railway (LNER), ceased services.

The branch line to Alexandra Palace closed in 1957 although the section between Finsbury Park, Highgate and East Finchley remained open for freight services through to 1964. Until 1970 the line was used to transfer empty stock from the underground and two years later, in 1972, the track was lifted signalling the demise of the line.


Following the removal of the tracks most of the station platforms and buildings were demolished. Officially opened in 1984 the sections between Finsbury Park to Highgate and Highgate to Alexander Palace were designated as The Parkland Walk and followed the bridges and cuttings. One section, the tunnels and station at Highgate, were excluded from the walk. Plans to convert it to a road were, fortunately, scrapped following opposition from locals and environmentalists collectively known as 'The Friends of The Parkland Walk.' In 1990 it was declared a local nature reserve, the longest in London. 

Having looked at a brief history of the area we will now follow my walk along the route from Finsbury Park to Highgate with more detail about the various highlights that can be found along the way for those who, like me, are interested in old railway lines.

Arriving at Finsbury Park Station I made my way the short distance to Oxford Road where there is an overbridge that crosses the main line and leads to Finsbury Park. You can approach the start of the walk from either side of the line but I approached from the end of Oxford Road, turning left just before the overbridge and along the embankment that rises by a row of Victorian houses where my journey begins. 


From there I headed along the old track over Upper Tollington Park towards the next bridge which crosses Stapleton Hill Road, and the Gospel Oak to Barking line below, and was the site of Stroud Green Station. The station is no longer there but you can imagine how it was back in the late-1800s and early 1900s with platforms either side, cantilevered from the bridge, with the wooden station building on ground level underneath. What does remain on the main road below is the station master's house and the site of the old goods yard. The station closed in 1954 and stood derelict before being destroyed by fire in 1967.

The site of Stroud Green Station


Walking on I crossed Mount Pleasant Villas, where the embankment becomes a cutting, and continued beneath two more bridges which carried both Mount View Road and Crouch Hill. As you exit from the bridge there is a modern looking building on the left which, before a modern redevelopment, was originally built to house switchgear for the planned Northern Line tube extension.

One of the brick structures along the route


Entering the area known as Crouch Hill Park you pass some graffiti covered brickwork supporting the sides of the cutting and a footbridge. This is one of several that can be found on the walk.

A few more steps and you arrive at Crouch End Station. Opened in August 1867 there were two platforms and steps leading up to the station buildings built on the road bridge that crossed the line. Buildings on the platform and those on street level were demolished in 1966 and 1977.

What remains makes interesting viewing. The two platforms have survived and the steps leading up to the road pass a brick structure which I believe may have been toilets. It appears a new structure has been built on the bridge with what looks like inverted arches. I did not venture up the stairs (something for my next visit) but apparently you get a good view from there of the platforms below. 

For lovers of disused railways this is probably the most interesting part of the walk. However, there is much to be seen along the walk if you are prepared to look closely in the hedgerows.

Crouch End Station


Continuing onwards, the walk runs parallel to Hornsey Road, crosses over Stanhope Road to an embankment where another bridge crosses Northwood Road.

It is between these two bridges that another reminder of the past can be found. Remains of a brick structure can be spotted that may have been a signal man's hut. There are some steps on the left but what makes this really interesting is the fact that the roots of a tree have engulfed the brickwork.




The last section rises and then a cutting signals the end of this section of the walk. There is an exit on the left which takes you up to the road and the route you would take along Holmesdale Road, Archway Road, past Highgate Station to Muswell Hill Road and eventually rejoining the old line which takes you to Alexandra Palace.

However, it is worth walking the few extra metres first where you will find the two portals of the Highgate Tunnels. Closed to the public the two entrances are barred. One reason is the fact that the tunnels are home to the Bat Project and access is prohibited to protect them and their habitat from disturbance.

Apparently the tunnels have been used for television dramas and I imagine they made ideal locations. Oh how I would like to explore those tunnels further, but alas that won't happen.


Highgate Tunnels


This walk is well worth visiting, not only to those who are interested in old railways but anyone who enjoys a nice walk through the woodlands and viewing all the wild flowers, plants and trees along the way.

I plan to walk the remaining section between Highgate and Alexandra Palace, and revisit some of the areas I missed, as soon as possible and will be adding a second part to this story.


26 January 2021

HELLO, I'M JOHNNY CASH

On 26 January 1970 Johnny Cash released his new album, Hello, I'm Johnny Cash, the second Cash album I bought, after Johnny Cash At San Quentin, and it remains my favourite of all his albums. To celebrate I am reprinting my article that originally appeared in the final issue of Johnny Cash-The Man in Black in 2019.

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Classic Albums... Revisited
Hello, I'm Johnny Cash

Side One: Southwind (Johnny Cash) / Devil To Pay (Merle Travis & Leon Rusk) / ‘Cause I Love You (Johnny Cash) / See Ruby Fall (Johnny Cash & Roy Orbison) / Route No.1, Box 144 (Johnny Cash) / Sing A Traveling Song (Kenny Jones)

Side Two: If I Were A Carpenter (Tim Hardin) / To Beat The Devil (Kris Kristofferson) / Blistered (Billy Edd Wheeler ) / Wrinkled Crinkled Wadded Dollar Bill (Vincent Matthews) / I’ve Got A Thing About Trains (Jack Clement) / Jesus Was A Carpenter (Christopher Wren)


Sessions for the album began on 17 February 1969 at the Columbia Studios in Nashville with Bob Johnston producing. The first track recorded was the Cash original
Southwind which had the distinction of being Bob Wootton’s first session with Cash.

There was a break during which time Cash recorded with Bob Dylan during his own sessions for his Nashville Skyline album,  and performed his famous concert at San Quentin. Recording continued in July and wound up early in September

Musicians and vocalists on the sessions were Bob Wootton (guitar), Carl Perkins (guitar), Marshall Grant (bass), W. S. Holland (drums), Norman Blake (dobro) and The Carter Family (vocals).

The album opens with Southwind which recalls the boom-chicka-boom style he had created back in the fifties at Sun Studios. It captures two of Cash’s favourite themes, trains and heartbreak. It features some blistering guitar by new boy Bob Wootton and great drumming from W. S. Holland and sets the standard for the rest of the album.

The Merle Travis/Leon Rusk composition, Devil To Pay, follows and was originally recorded by Travis back in 1948. The song tells of a man telling his girl to go on and take her chances with other men. She learnt how to cheat, live the high life and thinks she has nothing to lose but her soul and only has the devil to pay.

‘Cause I Love You, the second of four Cash originals, is one of two love songs on which he duets with June on the album and, with its pledge of loyalty and being faithful, could have been influenced by his recent marriage to June Carter. It is a song Cash would return to for the 1970 film and soundtrack for I Walk The Line on which there are three versions, with vocals, a string instrumental and guitar instrumental.

See Ruby Fall was co-written with Roy Orbison after they noticed a sign advertising a Tennessee tourist attraction called Ruby Falls. They pictured a woman called Ruby falling off a barstool in a honky-tonk. The song, which tells of a man who abandons his cheating/wandering woman,  features a great piano arrangement which captures the honky-tonk feel.

On Route No.1, Box 144 we hear the tale of an average boy who grew up on a farm, marries his childhood sweetheart and buys a home at Route 1, Box #44. He goes off to war, despite his wife expecting their first child, and it is not long before she receives news he has been killed in action. The town turn out to greet him when his body is returned. It was a song that Cash had wanted to write since visiting military hospitals during a visit to the Far East early in 1969.

Closing side one is Sing A Travelling Song with its theme of moving on when one wants a house and a lot of close friends’ while he loves ‘the feel of his back to the wind.’ The song features some beautiful vocal backing, especially from Anita Carter.


Tim Hardin’s classic, If I Were A Carpenter, opens side two in style and is the second duet with June Carter-Cash. The song won a Grammy for ‘Best Country performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal’ and was well-deserved.

To Beat The Devil is a Kris Kristofferson song which he wrote back in 1967 after passing Cash and seeing how messed up he was. “I thought he was his own worst enemy,” Kristofferson recalled. “Here was this man who worked so hard to get a message out to people, but I thought he was going to die in the process.” Although Cash never realised the song was written about him he did identify with the lyrics which told of personal struggles.

Next is the up-tempo Blistered a song about lust and a man who has blisters on his eyes from ‘looking at that long-legged woman up ahead.’ As the song progresses we find him getting blisters on his heart, his fingers and his throat! Once again great drumming and guitar from Holland and Wootton.

Written by Vincent Matthews, Wrinkled Crinkled Wadded Dollar Bill reflects on the freedom that can come with poverty. As he sings… ‘I’m not bound, and I never will be to my wrinkled crinkled wadded dollar bill.’

The penultimate track is a classic from the pen of Cowboy Jack Clement. With a familiar theme, I’ve Got A Thing About Trains laments the passing of the age of the railroad and the fact that they have had their days of glory… ‘Maybe I’m a little sentimental, ‘cause I know that things have to change, but I’d still like to go for a train ride, ‘cause I’ve got a thing about trains.’

Bringing the album to a close is the acoustic and religious themed Jesus Was A Carpenter, which was written by the author of the Cash biography Winners Got Scars Too, Christopher Wren.

Hello, I’m Johnny Cash was released in January 1970 and entered the Billboard Country Album charts on 14 February at #26 and would spend 38 weeks in the chart with a four-week stay at the top. On the Pop Chart it spent 30 weeks peaking at #6.

In the United Kingdom it was one of only a few Cash albums to chart reaching a respectable #6 during 16 weeks on the chart.

By the end of January the album qualified for a gold award from the RIAA (Record Industry Association of America).

Before the albums release two singles were issued. In October 1969 Blistered backed with See Ruby Fall was released and the a-side reached #7 on the Country Singles Chart with a run of 8-weeks while the flip fared better peaking at #4 with a 12-week chart residency. In the Pop Charts both sides charted but stalled at #50 during a brief chart run of just a few weeks.

In December If I Were A Carpenter and ‘Cause I Love You were selected for single release and the a-side just failed to hit the top spot peaking at #2 during a spell of 15-weeks on the Country Chart. Eight weeks on the Pop Chart saw it go no higher than #36.

Only one other track from the album made it to a single and even then only as a b-side. When What Is Truth was issued as Cash’s new single in March 1970 they picked Sing A Travelling Song as the flip-side. Although What Is Truth did chart the other side failed to make any impression on the charts.

A songbook was published featuring six songs from the album along with others taken from the Holy Land and San Quentin albums. It also included Trail Of Tears, which was a narration Cash recorded. There was also sheet music for songs including BlisteredSee Ruby Fall and If I Were A Carpenter.


Talking about the album Cash said, “I felt there were a lot of people who only knew me from the prison album and the TV show and I wanted to give them some music that meant a lot to me personally – a very personal album that kind of reflected my journey.” He also indicated how the album title came about, “I told Bob Johnston I wanted to introduce myself to these new fans and he said, ‘That’s great John, You should call it
Hello, I’m Johnny Cash’, and that’s what we did. I was real proud of that record.

The album first appeared on CD as part of the Bear Family box set The Man In Black 1965-1969… Plus and has also appeared on the 63-CD Complete Columbia Collection and the Readers Digest 4-CD set The Great Seventies Recordings.

There are a number of unreleased recordings from the sessions that produced Hello, I’m Johnny Cash including Come Along And Ride This Train, Six White Horses, Jimmy Howard and You’re The One I Need. The latter is an early version of Flesh And Blood.

Takes 1 and 2 of Come Along… and Six White Horses were included on the Bear Family set but hopefully Sony will re-issue the album with all the unreleased tracks and, if available, alternate versions although it is unlikely as Cash releases have dried up over the past few years.

23 January 2021

LINDA RONSTADT - A LIFE IN MUSIC

To celebrate thirty years as a published author and consultant in the music and entertainment genres I am going to post regular articles over the next twelve months celebrating some of my work. I have been very fortunate and am proud of everything I have achieved. We start with the introduction to my book Linda Ronstadt-A Life In Music which was published back in 2009 (Note: Photos added for this article).

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Often dismissed by rock historians as a product of the antiseptic Californian country-music scene, an artist who relied on watered down covers of classic rock n’ roll and pop standards, this description of Linda Ronstadt couldn’t be further from the truth. Throughout a recording career that has covered over forty years she has recorded in a remarkable variety of styles from pure country to pop, light opera to big band standards and new wave to mariachi, often taking risks beyond the reach of many critically acclaimed artists. It would be hard, if not impossible, to find another vocalist who has had a more diversified career.

Photos: (c) Unknown

In their press release for the 1993 album
Winterlight her record company managed to convey exactly what it was that made Linda Ronstadt such a special artist. “Versatile doesn’t begin to describe Linda Ronstadt’s astounding career – a wildly eclectic, devoutly adventurous journey through a myriad of styles and genres. Who else has worked with Philip Glass and Dolly Parton? Aaron Neville and Nelson Riddle? Ronstadt’s unforgettably gorgeous voice, at once technically dazzling and resonating with deep emotion, has woven a magical path from rock to mariachi, from country to opera, gathering critical and commercial success at every stop along the way.” - Elektra Press Release (November 1993)

To understand better Linda Ronstadt’s eclectic choice of material one needs to look back to her birthplace, the culture in which she was raised, her family history and those that surrounded her.

Tucson is dominated by ‘A Mountain’ which lies to the southwest of the city although its proper name is Sentinel Peak. The ‘A’ harks back to the days when students from the University of Arizona whitewashed a giant ‘A’ onto the side of the mountain and it has become an annual tradition for freshmen to repaint it. However, the history of the peak and the city’s name go back much further. When the Spaniards settled in the area in the 1600’s the village at the foot of the mountain was known as ‘Stjukshon,’ which, in Indian language translates to ‘at the foot of the dark mountain.’ It was pronounced ‘Took Son’ by the Spaniards and when the Anglos later dropped the ‘k’ sound it gave the city its current pronunciation of ‘Too-sahn.’

Tucson lies to the north and east of the intersection between Interstate 10 and Interstate 19, the latter leading approximately one hour’s drive down to the Mexican border at Nogales. It is the second largest city in Arizona with a sizeable Hispanic heritage and population. Spanish is a common language and there is a large Mexican influence, especially when it comes to eating with an abundance of Mexican restaurants.

It has a mix of cultures, Indian, Hispanic and Anglo, which all make their own individual mark on the area’s local arts scene. You can hear many styles of music, everything from jazz to hip-hop, salsa, a recent nightclub trend, and the Mexican styled mariachi and accordion-flavoured norteño. Mariachi originated in the central Mexican state of Jalisco in the mid-nineteenth century but only became a cultural icon in the 1930s and 40s. Lovers of this style of music had no need to travel to Mexico to listen to mariachi as some of the best examples could be found in and around the Tucson area. In fact there is an annual International Mariachi Conference that brings together some of the best musicians to the city. In contrast norteño has more of a blue-collar appeal, not quite as stylized with more flexibility in the instrumentation. However, they both have a similar repertoire based around various styles including polkas, cancion, ranchera and corrido. 

Outside of Tucson itself and moving into the vast area that is Arizona you can add the cowboy heritage which was fertile soil for a mix of country, bluegrass and old-time instrumentals. Next to the Native-American music, country and cowboy songs are most strongly associated with the area. The era of the cowboy only lasted from the close of the American Civil War to the end of the nineteenth century but its lifestyle has left its mark on music. Country and western music, as it became known, could be heard on a host of radio stations including XERF broadcasting out of Del Rio, Texas and KNIX and KMLE broadcasting out of Phoenix.

It was into this cultural mix that Linda Marie Ronstadt was born on 15th July, 1946, the third youngest of four children, with a sister, Suzi, and two brothers, Mike and Pete.

The Ronstadt family had made a remarkable contribution to the cultural and commercial history of the south-western area of the United States. Frederico José Maria Ronstadt, known later as simply Fred Ronstadt, was born in 1868 near Cananea, Sonora and spent his childhood in the area before moving to Tucson when he was fourteen. He learned the wagon-making trade but eventually, with the arrival of modern technology, it evolved into a successful hardware store. However, his real love was for all kinds of music. At the turn of the century he formed an orchestral group, Club Filarmónico de Tucson, with some friends and would often write the musical arrangements. Right up to his death he remained enthusiastic about music and continued to play. As Linda often recalled, “My grandfather used to have a band, the kind of band that plays in the middle of a public square.” His talent would be passed down the family and his daughter, using the name Luisa Espinel, would become a leading exponent of Spanish song and dance in the 1930s. Linda remembered her Aunt Luisa as a well-known star in the 20’s and 30’s with a show that she took all over the world. Luisa brought together many of the songs that she had learnt from her father and published them in a volume, published by the University of Arizona in 1946, titled Canciones de mi Padre (Songs of my Father). Fred Ronstadt also had four sons, William, Alfred, Gilbert and Edward who continued the musical tradition and singing became a regular family activity.

Linda’s mother, Ruthmary Copeman, who’s own family had a mixed heritage of German, English and Dutch, was a well-connected society lady from Michigan although, as Linda is quick to point out, she was no snob just dutiful. Linda’s maternal grandfather, Lloyd Copeman was one of the great Amercian inventors. His inventions included the first electric stove, the flexible ice cube tray and many other items. It was while Ruthmary was a member of one of the prestigious sororities at an Arizona College that she first met Gilbert and it was not long after that this handsome dark haired man asked her to marry him. Their original plan was to move to Mexico after the wedding but, with a revolution underway, their plans were thwarted and they settled in Tucson.

Photo: (c) Greenwich Entertainment

Linda’s upbringing was a happy time without major tragedies or catastrophes. The store was a successful business and meant that the family lived a fairly prosperous life and Linda even owned a horse during her childhood years. Her father taught her to ride and shoot. He would often take her brother out hunting and, although only four years old, she would tag along. She wanted her father’s attention and to be part of the gang. Although the .22 calibre gun was almost as big as she was they all used to target practice using rotten eggs. Out of the two sisters Suzi was the better shot and Linda would often tell the story of how her sister shot a pig, making it in a man’s world, something Linda thought was the ultimate you could do.

Although an accomplished businessman her father’s heart, like her grand-father’s, was in his music. He was a singer during the depression in the 1930’s and had played local clubs and functions and could often be heard on local radio. He was a talented singer with a voice that Linda would often describe as “full of honey and thick,” but family pressures put an end to any hopes of a singing career. His parents wanted him to better himself and felt a career in music was not the way to make a living. It remained a hobby and he concentrated on the hardware store. He may not have had a chance to pursue his love of music but this did not stop him from supporting his children. He encouraged them to listen to various styles of music, not necessarily the current popular trend but also people like Billie Holiday, Peggy Lee and Ella Fitzgerald. Linda resented it at the time, preferring the music that most other American teenagers were listening to, The Beach Boys, Sam Cooke, George Jones and especially the music of Elvis Presley, many of whose songs she learnt to sing.

However, that early exposure to different styles would help her in the future and looking back she was grateful that her father taught her to appreciate a wider variety of music. The family would often sit around and sing together as a unit as she would often recall during her many interviews. “My sister and two brothers were musical and we all sang together. I sang all the time when I was growing up. We used to sing with my father, too. He really gave me a keen appreciation for every kind of music.” In those early days she would sing soprano, the high notes. It wasn’t until later that she discovered what she herself called her “chest voice”, the voice that would go on to captivate her audiences worldwide.

Linda grew up listening to Mexican music. Her favourite female singer at that time was Lola Beltran, and she has always credited mariachi music as having a strong influence on her own style of singing. “I grew up in Tucson, and one of the major influences on my life was Mexican music. My father sang it, and sang it great. I grew up listening to mariachi, which I still love, and which believe it or not, had a strong influence on my singing style.” Country music was also a major influence, especially Hank Williams. Linda was six years old when her sister fell in love with his music and as she shared a bedroom it seemed obvious that Suzi’s taste in music would rub off on her. Many a time they would sit and listen to radio XERF and the music of Williams, Jimmie Rodgers and The Carter Family. The station played a mix of top forty hits and country music throughout the day and in the evening rhythm and blues, known as ‘Race Records’. At the time you couldn’t find anybody playing that type of music in Arizona! On Sundays they would catch the black and white gospel music broadcast over the airwaves.

The hot summer months and blistering temperatures in Arizona would force people indoors and Linda would often lay on the concrete floor to keep cool, pressing her ears to the radio. Apparently she had learnt how to turn the family radio on back when she was just three years old and would often try to imitate the music that she heard coming from the small speaker.

She was also exposed to the music of Gilbert and Sullivan at an early stage. Her sister appeared in a school production of H.M.S. Pinafore and Linda watched the show taking in all the music and learning the lyrics to most of the songs. Her grandfather was another link to Gilbert & Sullivan’s operettas and in 1896 had written an arrangement of Pirates of Penzance.

Her love of music sat side-by-side with her love of the independent life that living on a ranch allowed. However, this early freedom would cause many problems at school, with all the restrictions that were associated with that institution, and she rebelled.

Photo (c) Elektra/Asylum

Linda hated school and would often daydream about being a singer, or being in love. She attended a Catholic school and, it has often been said, she did not get on with the Nuns, believing them to be uptight, though this could have been down to her preoccupation with boys! She was a flirt and a tease in those early college days, a budding lolita who wore lipstick, sexy clothes and painted nails, a born seductress. As she told Time magazine, “They hated the way I talked about boys. I was too giggly and wore too much lipstick and dressed too sexy.” She was also wicked. During her time at the Catholic School she would write the answers to the catechism high up on her legs. There was a young priest who had just been ordained and during the tests she would slide her dress up high to read the answers knowing full well that the young priest could see. Embarrassed, he would turn away. Albeit hard to believe, her ultimate fantasy was to seduce a priest. She would often look back on these times with pride at the effect her flirting had on boys but with a touch of sheepishness at how naughty she was. While other girls she grew up with held dreams of finishing college, marrying and having a family, Linda was adamant that marriage and children were not an option, it was a singing career for her. She once said, “Since I was six years old I have been looking for the perfect boyfriend,” although she also commented that she would never give up singing for any old boyfriend.

With her brother and sister, Mike and Suzi, she started a folk trio making the rounds of the local Tucson clubs, coffee houses and campus music venues. They called themselves The Three Ronstadts, a trio that she would often describe as “The Anita Kerr Singers of Tucson”, and later they changed their name to the New Union Ramblers. They performed a repertoire of folk, country and Mexican music and although they were never going to set the music world alight it was a start. Linda was really nervous about getting up and singing in front of a crowd and their debut appearance must have been a nightmare for her.

Photo: (c) Unknown

Fortunately it didn’t take long before she was addicted to performing and, although later in her career there were still signs of nervousness, she soon learned to cope with stage fright. Playing bass with the trio was an old friend, Bobby Kimmel, who would play a major part in Linda’s early career. He loved Linda’s voice and he encouraged her to become a professional singer. Realising that to make any headway in the business he would have to get out of Tucson, Kimmel headed west to California. This was in 1963, and a year later he invited her to join him and form a band in Los Angeles.

Her brothers and sister would go on to take different career paths. Mike went to work in the hardware store and helped to run it while Pete, who Linda always credited as having the most talent vocally, joined the police force and would end up as Chief of Police in Tucson. Suzi would eventually get married and raise a family.

Meanwhile Linda was studying at Arizona State University at this time but after just one semester she decided she’d had enough. So in 1964, with just $30 in her hand, Linda left behind the clubs of Tucson and headed for Los Angeles, her childhood dreams still very much alive.

13 January 2021

HOW DO YOU LIKE IT?

If asked which artist or group reached number one with their first three singles many people would say Elvis Presley or The Beatles but they would be wrong as it was another Mersey Beat group who lay claim to this achievement. It was 1963 and, in common with The Beatles, Gerry and the Pacemakers were from Liverpool and were managed by Brian Epstein. However, unlike the 'Fab Four' they became the first ever act to hit the top spot with their first three releases, a feat not equalled for 20 years. With the recent sad news of Gerry Marsden's passing I am going to take a look back at their early years and successes.

Gerry Marsden formed the group in 1959 with his brother Fred on drums, Les Chadwick on bass, Arthur Mack on piano while he played lead guitar and lead vocals. In 1961 Mack was replaced by Les McGuire. Originally they called themselves The Mars-Bars but had to change their name when the Mars Company complained!

Playing the same clubs in Liverpool and Hamburg as The Beatles they soon came to the attention of Brian Epstein who signed them in mid-1962 and would negotiate a record deal with Columbia Records where they would record at Abbey Road Studios under the guidance of George Martin.

Their first session was held on 22nd January 1963 where they recorded the Mitch Miller composition How Do You Do It and Away From You, written by Marsden & Chadwick. Released as a single in March it reached number one where it stayed for three weeks before being knocked off the top spot by The Beatles with From Me To You.

Interestingly How Do You Do It was also recorded by The Beatles and George Martin wanted them to release the song for their first single. They reluctantly recorded the song but convinced Martin that their own song, Love Me Do, was a better choice. The Beatles version finally found a release on Anthology 1.

Gerry and the Pacemakers released two more singles in 1963. In May I Like It backed with It's Happened To Me followed the pattern of the previous single with a Mitch Miller composition backed by another Marsden/Chadwick song. Hello Little Girl, a Lennon & McCartney composition, was recorded and considered as their second single but I Like It was chosen instead. A good decision as, like their debut single, it hit the top spot. Ironically it replaced From Me To You at number one and would hold that position for four weeks.

For their third single Marsden recalled a song he had seen in the film Carousel as a youngster. Written by Richard Rodgers & Oscar Hammerstein II, You'll Never Walk Alone was recorded on 2 July 1963 while the flipside, It's Alright, a Marsden original, was recorded a few weeks later in August. Released in October it seemed unlikely that they would be able to repeat the success of their first two singles. However, in late October it hit number one for the first of four weeks at that position. They became the first group to ever reach number one with their first three singles. The friendly rivalry between them and The Beatles continued when You'll Never Walk Alone was knocked off the top spot by She Loves You.

By 1964 Marsden was writing most of their material including their fourth single, I'm The One, which stalled at number two and stopped them having four consecutive number ones. They never managed another number one but did chart with several songs including Don't Let The Sun Catch You Crying, It's Gonna Be Alright, Ferry Cross The Mersey, I'll Be There and Walk Hand In Hand.

A popular draw on the concert circuit they toured the length and breadth of the UK, often on the same bill as The Beatles, as well as touring America. A concert at the Oakland Auditorium in California on 24 October 1964 was recorded and an extended play album, Gerry In California issued featuring four tracks, Dizzy Miss Lizzy, What'd I Say, My Babe and Away From You.

Often referred to as their version of The Beatles A Hard Days Night film the band starred in the 1965 musical Ferry Cross The Mersey. Marsden wrote most of the soundtrack which featured catchy songs like I'll Wait For You, It's Gonna Be Alright, Fall In Love and Why Oh Why. Also appearing in the movie, and on the soundtrack, were The Fourmost and Cilla Black who contributed I Love You Too and Is It Love. The incidental music was provided by The George Martin Orchestra and one track was also added to the album, All Quiet On The Mersey Front.

They only released two albums, How Do You Like It, a play on their first two singles which funnily enough didn't include either song, and the soundtrack to Ferry Cross The Mersey. The albums reached number two and nineteen respectively.

A popular format at the time, they also issued several extended play albums with titles like How Do You Do It, I'm The One, Don't Let The Sun Catch You Crying and Rip It Up

In America their recordings were issued on the New York based record label Laurie. Their biggest stateside hit was Don't Let The Sun Catch You Crying which peaked at number four. They also coupled How Do You Do It with You'll Never Walk Alone and I Like It with Jambalaya which gave them top ten and top twenty hits. America also had their own album releases... Don't Let The Sun Catch You Crying, Gerry And The Pacemakers' Second Album, I'll Be There and Girl On A Swing.

Over the years there have been many compilations and the best being At Abbey Road 1963-1966 and You'll Never Walk Along (The EMI Years - 1963-1966). The first featured all the hits along with unreleased recordings and studio chatter while the latter, a four-disc set with 123 tracks, included mono and stereo versions, early takes, undubbed ('no strings') versions and unreleased material. It was also the first time the complete Oakland Auditorium concert had been released.

By late 1965 their popularity was declining both in the UK and America and in 1967 they disbanded. However, their catchy, bouncy and lightweight songs driven along by guitar, drums, piano and Marsden's chirpy vocals were likeable and hold fond memories for many people.

16 December 2020

A WHOLE LOTTA SHAKY

Shakin' Stevens was the UK's biggest selling singles artist of the 1980s with over thirty Top 40 hit singles, four chart-toppers, a string of successful albums and sell out tours across the UK and Europe. However, it wasn't an overnight success.

His recording and performing career had started in the late-1960's when, having changed his name from Michael Barratt, he fronted the rock 'n' roll band Shakin' Stevens and The Sunsets. They gained a recording contract with Parlophone Records and released the album A Legend, produced by Dave Edmunds who would go on to play a part in his later career. They toured night after night across the length and breadth of the UK but didn't achieve the success they deserved. However, in Europe they had several hits and were also a regular on the concert circuit.

In 1977, following the death of Elvis Presley, Jack Good was holding auditions for his West End musical Elvis! He had seen the Sunsets at a gig in London and asked Shaky, as he was often called at this time, to audition for the middle-period Elvis. Good was so impressed and offered him the role. A cast album was released featuring many of his songs from the show including King CreoleDixieland RockGot A Lot Of Livin' To Do and Tupelo Mississipi FlashThe show ran for six-months during which time The Sunsets were expecting him to return but his career was set to take him on a more successful path.

Following the closing of the musical, Jack Good revived the Oh Boy! show and Shaky was a regular on this and the follow-up show, Let's Rock, which ran for thirty weeks and was broadcast here and in the USA.

During this period, pre- and post- Elvis!, Shaky had the chance to record material with Charlie Gillett and Mike Hurst for Track Records. Several singles were released including Somebody Touched Me, Never, Spooky and Treat Her Right. He then teamed up with two new producers, Mike Shaw and John Fenton and recorded an album, Shakin' Stevens, released in 1978 and which featured sax player Alan Holmes from the legendary band Sounds Incorporated. Unfortunately Track Records closed down soon after but his future was assured and he was signed up by Epic Records, who released some of his recently recorded material. Several unreleased recordings and rarities from this period found a release on an album titled The Track Years, released in 1983 after he had hit the big time.

This led to his first chart success with a re-worked cover of Hot Dog, a song originally recorded by Buck Owens and a career move that would make him one of the most successful recording and touring artists of the 1980s. He signed a management deal with Freya Miller in 1979 and she suggested he end his association with The Sunsets and pursue a solo career.

Hot Dog, and the follow-up Hey Mae, were successful and a sign of what was to come but his career really took off with the release of the single Marie, Marie and in concert he would often credit the song as... "the one which kicked it all off for me."

His first number one was another re-working of an old song, This Ole House, originally recorded by Rosemary Clooney. He followed with a run of top ten hits including three more that reached the top spot... Green Door, Oh Julie and Merry Christmas Everyone

He was a regular on TV shows including Top Of The Pops, toured every year to sell-out audiences across the UK and Europe and released hit after hit including You Drive Me Crazy, Give Me Your Heart TonightA Love Worth Waiting For, Teardrops, Breaking Up My Heart, Cry Just A Little Bit and A Letter To You. It wasn't only the singles that charted and he placed several albums on the chart including Marie Marie (later renamed This Ole House to capitalise on the success of the single), Shaky (which reached number one), The Bob Won't Stop, Lipstick, Powder And Paint and A Whole Lotta Shaky.


By the 1990s success started to slip away and although still a big draw on the concert circuit his records failed to make much impression on the charts. His highest placed single from this period was another festive offering, The Best Christmas Of Them All which only just scraped into the top twenty. He only released two albums in the nineties, There Are Two Kinds Of Music... Rock 'N' Roll and Merry Christmas Everyone.

It would be sixteen years before he would release a new album, Now Listen, and a further nine years before his most recent studio album, the excellent Echoes Of Our Times, an album based on research into his family history and a complete departure from his rock and roll days. It became his first chart album to reach the top thirty in over three decades.

With the advent of CD, and despite all the hit singles and albums, Shaky's back-catalogue was largely ignored by the record companies and it was several years before his material started appearing on CD and even then it was mainly hit compilations like The Epic Years, The Hits Of..., The Collection and Red Hot And Rockin'. This changed in 2009 with the release of the 10-CD and digital download, The Epic Masters which included all his albums, except Merry Christmas Everyone. I could never understand why it was omitted but maybe the fact it had already been released on CD was the reason it wasn't included. Each CD featured bonus tracks and there was a CD of 12" extended mixes. However, this still left plenty of material unavailable on CD.

This brings us to the release of what is without doubt the definitive Shakin' Stevens release... Fire In The Blood.


The set contains 19 CDs with 266 tracks, many making their first appearance on CD and many more rare and unreleased tracks.

The set includes all his studio albums from Shakin' Stevens to Echoes Of Our Times. What I really like about this new release is the fact that the albums are presented as the originals with no bonus tracks. 

With the exception of some 'live' b-sides, Shaky never released a live album and this new set gives us two. First up is a recording from The Paris Theatre in London first broadcast on Radio in 1980. Highlights from this show include Don't Bug Me Baby, Don't Knock Upon My Door, A Big Hunk Of Love and Marie, Marie. I actually recorded this off the radio at the time and still have the cassette.  The second is a recording from his 2019 tour of Europe and the UK which features many of the tracks from his current album, Echoes Of Our Times, along with several earlier hits. Both are welcome additions to this impressive collection.

But wait, there is more. Four discs of live, rare and previously unreleased tracks, most of which are making their first appearance on CD. Many of his singles were never included on albums and these are also present on these discs. Along with the extended versions, remixes, acoustic versions, b-sides and live tracks are two previously unreleased songs, I Need You Now and Wild At Heart.

The music is matched by the deluxe packaging. Presented in a bound 12" x 12" illustrated hard-backed book with an essay by Paul Sexton it also includes a reproduction promo poster, the Oh Julie sheet music, a 36-page tour brochure, art prints and an autograph book signed by Shakin' Stevens. An impressive package which, with a retail price of under £100, has to be one of the best 'value-for-money' career retrospectives I've ever seen.

I have followed Shaky's career since 1977 when I first saw him in the Elvis! musical and went twice more before its run ended. I bought every single and album and have seen him in concert more than a dozen times. I was also fortunate to have worked for him on a number of archive related projects covering his recording and touring career. This new set is a reminder of those great singles, albums and concerts and is worth every penny. Pick up a copy while you can as I am sure it will soon become a collectors item and end up being offered for crazy prices on various online sites.

There is 'A Whole Lotta Shaky' for your money.

02 December 2020

JOHNNY CASH THE OUTTAKES

Having already released The Everly Brothers The Outtakes and Janis Martin The Outtakes which, as the titles suggest, contained outtakes and false starts, in early 2007 Bear Family Records turned their attention to Johnny Cash with a three-CD set of outtakes, false starts and studio chat from the Sun Records period. I was fortunate to have been approached to compile the set and write the liner-notes. In this article I will look back at the work that was involved in putting the set together. 


Towards the end of 2006 I was approached by Richard Weize, owner of Bear Family Family, who asked if I would be interested in putting together the set and, of course, I agreed.

My first task was to work out which outtakes had already been issued on the Man In Black 1954-1958 and other releases and compile a spreadsheet detailing where these could be found. I then received nine CDs with various outtakes, false starts and studio chat that also contained some material that had been out before. Unfortunately there were many Sun tracks for which no alternates have survived although what was there made interesting listening.

With a release date set for late-February 2007 I was working to a tight deadline and had to supply a final track listing by the beginning of January. I copied all the material onto the computer as it would be easier to stop and start songs or pick out particular passages than would have been possible on a standard CD player. There were several problems I encountered during the initial stages, not least of which was the lack of information regarding the different versions. Sam Phillips was notoriously bad at keeping records and with no written notes or take numbers to go by it was a case of going through each and every track listening for differences. It wasn’t made any easier by the fact that many of the outtakes sounded so similar.

It took several weeks before I had the final track listing finalised which I then compiled on a spreadsheet and forwarded it to the record company. It would be a while before I received the remastered tracks to approve and in the meantime I made a start on the liner-notes.


Rather than writing a track-by-track guide I chose to write an overview of Cash's career at Sun Records while picking out those tracks that were noticeably different and deserved a more detailed description. By the end of January the liner-notes were completed and sent off to the designers to start work on the artwork and booklet.

In due course CD-R copies of the remastered tracks arrived and needed to be checked. I listened to all three CDs comparing them to my list to ensure the right versions had been used and compiled in the correct running order. Fortunately, with only a few minor exceptions which would be corrected before release, everything was fine. I was really impressed with the sound quality which to my ears had never sounded so good.

My next job was to check and approve the artwork and booklet which all looked fine except for the odd typo and layout error. I confirmed this and waited while production of the set took place.

I was impressed with the final product. The three CDs, which were made to look like reels of tape, were housed in individual sleeves with the track listings detailed on the back. The 100 page booklet included my comprehensive liner notes, recording session details, period photos and, as a bonus, a wealth of previously unseen photos of Cash and good friend Johnny Horton on a fishing trip. These were not from the period but were a welcome addition. All this was housed in a reproduction tape-box which looked very classy.


The set featured 111 tracks, presented in chronological order, with over 50 previously unreleased. The listener was able to hear work in progress and the subtle differences between each take as the songs developed in the studio. You would hear Cash fluff a lyric or guitarist Luther Perkins miss a note meaning another take was required. Many of the songs were recorded in two or three takes but a few required many more before a finished master was sucessfully 'in the can.' Among these were the eight takes of Don't Make Me Go and the eleven takes of Always Alone.

Among the fifty previously unreleased tracks were multiple takes of songs including Folsom Prison Blues, Don't Make Me Go, Katy Too, Get Rhythm, Always Alone, Thanks A Lot, I Just Thought You'd Like To Know and It's Just About Time.

I don't need to say how proud I am of this set. I've worked on many Johnny Cash projects over the years and this ranks high on the list.

'Whether it's the thrill of hearing a previously unknown lyric, a slightly different instrumental sound or eavesdropping on a vocal or guitar fluff, this collection offers the most penetrating look beyond the famous master recordings made by a man who has become a towering figure in American music.' - Bear Family Records Press Release