Thursday, 25 June 2009

Nopane in my brain

Lester Bullock, more famously known as Dillinger, is 56 today. How did I get to Dillinger and why is he still running around my brain? We can all post-rationalise and say we were into reggae in the lead-up to Punk. Truer to say that some of us were into Bob Marley, the first reggae ‘crossover’ artist. I first noticed Bob Marley on my Sunday morning paper round. At the age of 15, I was delivering two heavy, Sunday paper bag loads for 50 pence, to bulk up the 75 pence I got for my five-nightly, five-mile evening paper round. While I was baiting a dog and jamming several newspaper supplements through a rusty letterbox one cool November morning, a front page caught my eye. It was taken up entirely with the front cover to Natty Dread, the newly released LP from Bob Marley & The Wailers. It was the most beautiful LP cover I had ever seen. Buying the LP would have been beyond the pale (and cost over two weeks’ ‘wages’). I wasn’t yet that experimental. My meagre record collection contained albums by David Bowie, Status Quo, T Rex and Elton John. Disco, soul or black music of any kind was not for me. I lived in a quiet, traditional, mostly white Midlands county town in which it was normal to poke fun at people with dark skins. I hadn’t realised that Eric Clapton’s hit, I Shot The Sheriff, was a Marley cover. There had been Ken Boothe. But, even when Everything I Own reached number one in 1974, solitary reggae artists still seemed like novelty acts on Top Of The Pops in the early 70s. A few weeks after I saw the Natty Dread cover, however, we had Rupie Edwards’ Ire Feelings at the top of the charts. Something was stirring in me, but local conditioning and peer pressure kept it down. But not for long. By 1975, I was actually attending gigs and literally feeling the bass sound run right through me. Now, the whole world was talking about Bob Marley. I didn’t get down to London to see Bob Marley and the Wailers live at the Lyceum in the summer (my big trip was Led Zeppelin at Earl’s Court instead), but I was aware of it and rushed out to buy Live! when it emerged in December. A few months later, even The Rolling Stones had included a reggae cover version on their LP, Black and Blue. Reggae was officially OK if they said so. Then, the fledgling Virgin record company made what seemed a brave decision at the time to release The Front Line, a promotional LP of various reggae acts, including U Roy and The Mighty Diamonds, pushing these bands into appearing at the Reading Rock Festival in August. At the time, I remember thinking this was a bad idea. I attended the three days of this festival with Buffalo Johnson and a couple of other mates. The two reggae acts were literally canned off by heavy metal fans who had come to see Rory Gallagher, Ted Nugent and Black Oak Arkansas. I wanted them off, too. It was the right time, but wrong audience, wrong place. Punk was around the corner. John Peel was playing dub reggae. The old order, exemplified by the Southern Man Lynyrd Skynyrd brigade, was slipping away. I was faced with a choice that took me several months to make. The fact that I chose Punk meant that I brought reggae with me. The tie-up between Punk and Reggae was certainly odd. Even Bob Marley thought it strange at first, though he ended up releasing Punky Reggae Party as the B-side of Jamming in 1977. He could never understand why Punks desecrated themselves with safety pins and ripped clothes. In Jamaica, people were striving to get away from such things. It was only when he made the rebel connection that congruence became possible. Punk and Reggae were anti-establishment. Both were resistance movements in the heart of Babylon. Dope and weed were associated with hippies and the old order, but their prevalence in the Rasta-related reggae world meant that it was OK for Punks to indulge in an underground way. Which they did. Especially at the Roxy Club in London’s Covent Garden, the major showcase for Punk acts in the first six months on 1977, when they were banned from playing most everywhere else. The music press regularly reported the goings on at this den of iniquity. For us, in the provinces, it was our vicarious taste of the action. We would be told the playlist of host DJ Don Letts – in between the acts of adrenalin aggression from the likes of Wire, Buzzcocks and Adverts, Letts would play all the latest Jamaican 45s. In our remote Midlands hideout, we’d hear of acts like Big Youth, Culture, Lee Perry and Junior Murvin, the latter with his Police And Thieves. And, naturally, we wanted to hear what was happening. John Peel played more of it. Then The Clash finally emerged on vinyl and championed it, with their cover version of Police And Thieves. Marley was touring again and about to launch his best and most popular LP, Exodus. I’m hardly likely to forget it, as it was released on 3rd June, 1977, my 18th birthday. The Sex Pistols were number one in our hearts with God Save The Queen during Elizabeth’s Silver Jubilee. I was in the middle of my A level exams. My parents were splitting up. The first love of my life was not responding. I was exploding. I spent some of the summer of 77 recording whatever dub reggae John Peel played. And this I took with me to Bradford University at the end of September, thinking that I would be the only white person in this new universe to like Punk and Reggae. I was wrong. I very quickly met Martin, Graham and Alan, who liked both. Martin had Live! He’d played No Woman, No Cry on the mornings of his A level exams. Graham loved dub. Alan had Virgin’s Front Line LP. And, right at that very time, there emerged a single by a Jamaican artist called Dillinger, called Cokane In My Brain. Martin bought the single. He was the only one who had a record player. That’s how I got to Dillinger. Cokane In My Brain/Buckingham Palace/Ratnam Pizer. And after that, we didn’t need no fertilizer. A knife, a fork, a bottle and a cork...

markgriffiths@idealconsulting.co.uk

7 comments:

  1. One day (when I have enough room) I will get out my vinyl again from its garage lair. One of those tracks I want to record (because I can't seem to find anywhere) else is Ragnampiza. I have always loved it because the lyrics sooo bad, and remember singing it so often because of it.

    But you are right about Reggae, it was a strange bedfellow for Punk. I still maintain the first 'punk' no.1 was an underground reggae song we heard at every small punk gig and it eventually got a mainstream release - uptown top rankin.

    As for the reasons. Well I can't speak for others but there were 2 elements at play for me.

    I would consider that I first found myself interested in Reggae precisely because it was a counter culture despised by the "nestheads". I wanted to dissassociate from them even though they were my friends at school (save for a very few). I wanted nothing to do with the music of Bad Co, Free, Gillan, ELO, Tull and a plethora of other prog rock bands. NOT because I didn't like the music. I did, and still do, like some of it. But because I didn't like what they stood for. They seemed to be for an older age group, for crustiness old and dirt.

    So I think was intrigued by Reggae first as a fashion thing. But I may be wrong, it may have been reggae that turned to me a counter culture as I recall that I have played No Woman No Cry before I have sat every exam - including my mock O-levels. So I must have bought the single on release in 1975. I recall none of my friends ever liked or understood it. Maybe on reflection reggae kicked me off and I was looking for punk from that moment. Certainly I was looking for something but the Graham Parker, Be Bop Deluxe and even my imported pre-UK release of Frampton Comes alive weren't it.

    Back to Reggae. I have always liked the groove, the fact that songs are melodically very different but structured into a very tight offbeat rhythm. (This was of course the antithesis of much prog rock). On John Peel I heard dub reggae and that blew me away. Toasting (an early form of rapping) on a record was new, but the dub effects from King Tubby were amazing.

    He deconstructed songs successively removing some (and occasionally all) instruments and melody to reduce the lengthened song to an occasional echoed drum beat or a bass line. With this device he amplified the effect it had as each element was added back to the complete sound - I loved it - I love it. Modern record production techniques and effects owe so much to King Tubby.

    Back to Dillinger - just one argument. c. r. a. p. is how you spell New York.

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  2. Great idea! Bring your 'big black CDs' out of your garage and into your life. Last year, I had a custom-built vinyl shrine put up in our spare bedroom, where a horrible, 70s, white melamine cupboard used to be. OK, it means visitors have nowhere to put their clothes, but I can just walk in at any time and select from a well-catalogued and easily accessible collection of 7 inch, 12 inch vinyl, tape cassettes and CDs. I have four drawers full of the 7 inchers - with their cardboard separators (just like an old record shop) denoting not the name of the band, however, but month of release. If I want a dose of, say, May 77, I just go to the drawer, pull out the singles and play them in the order of release. And I'm there!! Who needs cocaine running around their brain?

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  3. Now that sounds like a vinyl shrine I'd love to see. I know it contains a lot of pearls that I have yet to replace.

    It seemed like such a good idea to share the record buying and cost. But its hard to replace when you can't remember artists or the titles (the Billy the Goose effect). I have only recently found The Misunderstood - The Children of the Sun (Feb 1966) - after searching the long lost images in my mind of those evenings in C25. I know that there are many others.

    Typical of you to order by date. I'd prefer to try and order by mood. How did/does it make me feel/remind me of feeling. But of course thats a crap idea as each Album can summon so many different emotions. As you know I have no training in Librarianship so indexing is beyond my compass.

    I trust that you are now able to enjoy your vinyl at normal speeds, or do you still secretly hanker to hear them at 48 and 36 rpm on the old Amstrad tower?

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  4. Martin, you can pray at the vinyl shrine any time you happen to come this way. When you have to visitLichfield, Stratford is not that far away.
    Aha - dates and memory!! My favourite subjects. The Misunderstood. I bought that when living in your room at 48A Whetley Hill. It was a re-release on Cherry Red Records, which came out on 1st January, 1981 (to place the timing in your memory, that was shortly before you and I took the bus from Birmingham Digbeth to Bradford; then, on 4th January, we went to see New Order at the F Club in Leeds - one of their first ever gigs).
    But, sometimes with memory I'm not so sure. In my mind, I lived at C27 and you lived at C26. Now you're saying C25. Does it matter? Well, yes. Ordering and re-ordering the memory is what keeps the mind keen. Yes, I do order by date, but not because I trained as a librarian. Despite appearances, I have a very orderly mind. To persuade my contrary mind to drop Pink Floyd, Genesis and their ilk, I had to prove that Punk worked. As I've said, this took time, when there very few Punk records out. So, my progress through Punk was literally, record by record. I had thought that most of the release dates were burned on my brain. Subsequent research has often proved me wrong. But, it was simply that I could not like The Sex Pistols until I had accepted The Ramones and The Damned. I could get on with The Stranglers because I'd liked The Doors. I could accept The Clash at face value, until their second album, Give Em Enough Dope, when they finally revealed their James Dean fetish and journey into Americana. I'm So Bored With The USA became I'm So Fascinated With The USA. All this progress, therefore, came in a certain order. So it makes sense for me to see things by date. They are my doors of perception.
    I can now see that my Amstrad tower, besides being a step in Sugar's unlikely but inevitable trajectory to business czar, educated my ear to unusual sound, providing a basis for the avant-garde and jazz I now love. That wonderwork of electronic wizardry that so baffled Dean I actually received for my 21st birthday. The other two things I remember about that day was my dad driving over a rabbit and Lauren throwing up all over my sister. It truly was a memorable day and one on which I felt my life had ended.

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  5. C26, C30, C60 - yes I care that I can't recall as I should.

    But there you go. You mention a couple of facts from your second by second inbuilt life blog and my old picture based memory splutters inot life and I can start to re construct. I can now recall Digbeth a little, apart from a much later Ants gig (with blood) and Reddingtons Rare Records - but that New Order gig - yup I have that in close view.

    Look forward to a trip to Warwick - we are over at my Mum and Dad's in mid August. I'll be in touch.

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  6. I am returning to this post, prompted by the 'shuffle' selections I enjoyed whilst cycling yesterday and my recollections of being on a quest.

    The first track was a Billy Bragg song about his disappointment with the realities of socialist societies - "Waiting for the great leap forward". Putting aside the socialist theme and considering the title; this is what I was looking for on 1975/76. I longed to move from the dead centre of England and find something new, exciting, something that spoke to me - my great leap forward.

    The next track was one that gave me a false hope, a cul de sac, Maid in Heaven by Be Bop Deluxe. I even bought two dissappointing albums but all I really like still is the chopping guitar on this track - chucka ducka chucka ducka.

    After this came a track that summed up the place I was moving on from, Jeepster. A brilliant track, but Marc Bolan had moved on from being the worlds most beautiful and talented man in 1972 and had disappeared up his own arse by 1975. Strange that he had regained some cache again by summer '77, only to die. Of course his last TV show (with David Bowie) was the first TV show I ever saw in Revis Barber an hour after I arrived.

    After this was Montiverdi's Zeffiro Torna - 16th century castrati music. A later choice, but just to prove that my quest for new has continued (in spurts) forever.

    After this was Ether by the Gang of Four. Here was something that sounded new and exciting, edgy and young. But Ether was actually framed by 'shuffle' between Voodoo Chile and Foxy Lady and I couldn't help but notice that these sound exciting and edgy too - and they don't have that sense of antiseptic socialist puritanism I always felt when seeing Gang of Four.

    Then came the real deal. I Fall by the Damned. Riotous, exuberant, young, loud, accessible - perfect. Just the kind of thing my Dad would hate - after all he was 45!

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  7. Shuffling is a powerful concept - probably the biggest technological shift that CDs enabled (aside, that is, from extra storage capacity). You get to listen to your music in a different way. All those Bowie LPs whose song intros you'd be playing in your head seconds before they actually kicked in, because you had programmed your brain to hear them in that order. All of a sudden, they're coming at you, cut up, in a different order, discombobulating your mind (Bowie would have liked that). In an MP3 player, however, it takes it to the ultimate extreme. The idea that you throw all the songs of your life up into the air and leave it open to chance what comes next. It's actually a very brave thing to do. Or, you have to get yourself into a very relaxed frame of mind to allow this to take place. Now, I don't have as many downloaded tracks as you, Martin. My Creative Zen Vision M 60GB is only at half capacity with 4,780 tracks. I'm careful what I let in. But I very rarely allow myself the 'total shuffle' experience. If I did, I'd be likely to get 'Round Midnight' by Michel Camilo, a cheeky piano version that's full of zip and energy; followed by 'Till I Die' by The Beach Boys from the 'Surf's Up' album, a very emotional track which plunges me completely; followed by 'A' from 'The Affectionate Punch' LP, the inferior re-recording that Mackenzie did later, which makes me want to go back to the original LP; then 'Don't Sit Down', an outtake from Bowie on the Space Oddity LP, which runs out after 40 seconds, which annoys me about the fillers they put on CD collections; followed by 'Wings Of Love' by Level 42, which makes part of me want to get up and dance, but it's Monday morning and I feel very reflective; and, finally, 'Stepping Stone' by the Pistols, which just about finishes me off on this shuffling malarkey. And proves my point about why I just don't do this. But I do shuffle within genres. With the entire David Sylvian catalogue at my disposal, it's great to shuffle within those 240 tracks. And I do have a great '1977' playlist, covering everything from 'Low' and 'Bollocks' to Kraftwerk and Donna Summer. Or, within the 700 jazz tracks I've accumulated over the last year. But, even then, I have to be careful. There are as many different jazz styles, as there are musical genres. The whole thing about shuffling is that it's like scrambling your brain. It's all 'your music', but each song is attached to a different memory. Listening to that list above has made me feel quite queasy. I find that I have to live quite a controlled life these days. And that jazz helps - it's easy to go up and down a notch or two within extremes that run from exuberant Latin Jazz to fairly middle-of-the-road ear-balm. One thing I've noticed about the 18-year-old self I'm reconnecting with, however, is not the exuberance or the energy or the desire for life. I was very life-denying when I was that age. I just wanted to smash it up. I did not like what I could see of the adult world into which I was being dragged kicking and screaming. Let's face it, my parents hadn't shown me anything that was worth having. I didn't then realise that you could change your world right then and there and do what you wanted. Despite being part of the privileged elite that went to University in those days, I bought the 'No Future' model with every penny I had. While I forgive my young self for his naivety, I am also still very aware of his will to destruction. So, to cut a long story short, when I shuffle, I do so in a controlled way.

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