Next entry is here. Scroll down to part 9.
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Part 1
Most of my posts on this blog have been of a watery nature, but that's not all of me. Long before I'd ever set foot in a boat, I'd been aware of something that would be with me for the whole of my life (up to now). I'm talking about music.
When I was a kid there
was no radio or record player in the house for quite a long time, so
the only access to music was the school orchestra or the television.
The school orchestra at Buckland infants school comprised of one
teacher playing the piano, about five girls with recorders and the
rest of the class with either castanets or triangles. I was given a
triangle for a while, and then it was swapped to a school castanet
(just the one). The school castanets differed from the ones that
flamenco dancers have, and tourists bring back from Spain. The real
ones don't have a handle!
There I was as
umpteenth castanet listening to “Time and Tune” or one of the
other broacdasts that were pelted at us from the Clarke and Smith
school radio. We had to count and then at the right time do a quick
clack on the castanet. All very interesting, and not even slightly
musical. I was still interested though, and I spent the time when I
wasn't clacking (which was most of it) inspecting the “musical”
instrument. Then disaster struck! I missed my clack! Worse
still, the teacher somehow spotted it and was stood behind me as she
let loose her venom. How dare I look at the treasury tag that
she'd just spent several seconds attaching the clacky bits back to
the castanet with! This was a crime punishable surely by death!
She certainly scared my halfway there, and I would have wet myself
had I had any head of steam to do so. Result was I was summarily
drummed out of the school orchestra (Or I would have been if they had
any drums!).
None of this mattered
though because on television that afternoon after school I saw the
first of my two heroes, Wally Whyton. Along with Five o'clock Club,
this guy singing with his acoustic folk guitar (which from an old
photo looks to be some form of Martin) was a must. He was, though I
didn't know it at the time, something of the acceptable face of the
early sixties folk revival and he'd sing a number of simple
traditional songs live on air. I was hooked and, though I didn't
know it at the time, he was my introduction to the great Woody
Guthrie. Wally was, also unbeknown to me, a well established and
respected performer and had released a number of records before his
stint on children's television. He was also responsible for
introducing some co presenters in the form of Pussycat Willum, Fred
Barker and Ollie Beak. Of course these puppets got more fan mail
than him but he didn't mind. Nor did I for that matter. It was
the music that got me.
©2018
Michael Nye
Part 3
Part 5
©2018
Michael Nye
Part 6
©2018 Michael Nye
Part 2
The second of my early
heroes was the sharply dressed Bert Weedon and his beautiful Hofner
semi acoustic electric guitar. The twangy sound of the instrument
again got my attention as he also played it live on air. This all
sounded new and futuristic to my young ears and I wanted more, which
came in the form of the Shadows with their close formation stage
“dance” and that twangy sound again! I was hooked sufficiently
to never want to be unhooked.
The final early
influence on my life was the railway track that ran, on an
embankment, behind the school playground. Often small steam
shunting locos would run along the track pulling a few coal wagons.
I never knew where they went or came from, because the sum total of
my knowledge of railways was that few yards of track, and the small
train set that I shared with my brother. Whenever a loco went past
during school playtime the kids' including me all used to beg the
driver to blow the whistle (which they usually obliged us with after
sufficient commotion). Now of course they'd probably be sacked for
paying us any attention, but the result then was that pretty much all
of us (girls included) wanted to be engine drivers when we grew up.
I was, along with the rest, desirous of that career, but I also
wanted to be Bert Weedon and Wally Whyton too. A mix of the three
would come out somewhere in Joe Brown territory, and I started
pestering that I wanted a guitar. I mean the five year old me
really really wanted a guitar. I was nothing if not persistent in
my pester power and for Christmas that year I got a shiny new....
ukulele!
Over the years I have
made a good few disparaging remarks about the things but, to my five
year old eyes, here was a real musical instrument. It even looked
like a guitar. I can now see the logic Mum and Dad had was multi
faceted. The early sixties were not a time of cheap Chinese made
items, so their choices of instrument would have been somewhat
limited. They could have got me a plastic toy guitar but I assume
that, probably in their view, they may have thought this would be
patronising even to a five year old. So, probably from Bell's music
in Surbiton or Hand's in Kingston on Thames, the nice varnished wood
ukulele was purchased and, when I opened the parcel, I was well
pleased. That's when I made a big discovery. You have to learn to
play a musical instument otherwise the sound from it is anything but
musical!
©2018
Michael NyePart 3
This is where Mum
stepped into the breach. Despite being (self confessed) tone deaf,
and as able to play the uke as me, she read through the book and
offered such instruction as she could. To be fair, I did learn a
few chords and could eventually plunk my way through Swannee River.
At least I knew the chords, but, having never actually heard the song
I couldn't do any of the rhythm or melody. There was no record
player either, and certainly no Google! I felt I'd achieved
something though.
When school chose to do
some kind of concert (I think it may have been their rather ill fated
“West Indian Jamboree”) I was asked to come in with said ukulele
and do an audition. I took the box (Cardboard nicely covered with
sticky backed woodgrain effect plastic) into school and showed the
instrument off. I'm still rather surprised that anyone was
impressed, but some were. On cue I stood up to play, and went
through the chord sequence of Swannee River with no tempo, or idea of
the tune. To her credit the teacher stepped in and played the
melody (which I'd never heard before) on the piano. That just
confused me and I stood there, played one chord and just stopped.
In the “West Indian
Jamboree,” (which had nothing whatsoever to do with the area
whatsoever) I played the part of the orderly in the class performance
of “The King's Breakfast” by A.A. Milne. I stood on stage and
eventually got to say;
“You'd better tell
his majesty that many people nowadays like marmalade instead.”
Actually I think the
cow was supposed to say it but I wasn't the producer or director.
©2018
Michael Nye
Part 4
Mum was happy with the
idea that I was still a musical child. In fact, despite not letting
me sing in the choir (Apparently, I had a voice like a cement mixer.
Thank you to my teacher Mrs. Mason for telling me that one.) the
school was of the of the opinion that I was, as Mum said, musical.
If the ukulele wasn't my forte then maybe another instrument was.
Somewhere someone had the bright idea that I joined the recorder
band.
Now, anybody that was
in primary school in the mid sixties will remember the clusters of
girls walking home after school playing rounds on their recorders as
they walked. In some ways it was quite nice to hear, if a little
repetitive, there being only so many times you can hear “London's
Burning, Frère Jacques, or
London Bridge is Falling Down before you went looking for
cotton wool to stuff your ears with. The main thing to a mid
sixties boy was that the group was exclusively female, and there were
clear demarcation lines within schools at the time. I got given a
recorder but couldn't play the thing even if my life depended on it.
It squeaked, the fingering was awkward and I did my best to hide the
fact that I was trying to learn. In short I was crap at the thing
so I was never let into the recorder group. I was still thought of
as musical though. I certainly liked music, and wanted to hear
more. It took a hell of a lot of campaigning before I was allowed
my own radio, a 6 transistor pocket sized medium wave thing with a 2
inch speaker.
One of the oddities I
remember of listening to music was that I had more or less been told
that I didn't like pop music. There were not many chances (pre
radio) to hear any as the only other radio in the house was owned by
my granny who disliked all pop music as, in her opinion, all of these
so called musicians were plagiarising the Beatles. She liked the
Beatles, until they started taking drugs that is (which they promptly
did). So, in the intervening period between that and the radio I
got about ten minutes of Top of the Pops each week (unless there was
any form of tennis on the television). I remember well things like
Procol Harum with the projected Lissajous figure as a backdrop,
Arthur Brown with his head on fire, and the Animals (who my granny
absolutely hated) doing House of the Rising Sun. I still officially
didn't like pop though, even though (when I did get a radio) I
listened to the pirate radio stations, and radio Luxembourg under the
sheets with a tinny earphone. I felt it better to keep the image up
at school, where I was seen as weird as a result. It was worth it
though as it meant I could keep listening at home. So, from then
until the early seventies I became a closet pop fan.
©2018
Michael NyePart 5
In 1971, Lindisfarne
released the single “Meet Me on the Corner.” Although not a
true pop song, it hit number 5 in the charts and I saw it on Top of
the Pops. I'd also saved my pennies and bought a Fidelity Rad 12
radio that had medium and long wave and a good deal better sound for
the £9.50 I paid for it. The previous year (with some birthday
money, and Christmas cash) spent £15 on a portable record player
which, up until that fateful day, I used to play the selection of
discarded Marble Arch easy listening records dad had given me. I
can't remember the day exactly, but for me it was probably the most
radical thing I'd done. I went out one lunchtime at school and
actually bought “Meet Me on the Corner!” I had actually gone
and bought a chart single. I played it when I got home, and there
were no comments (Mainly because I kept the volume so low that nobody
else heard it).
As a piece of youth
rebellion, going and buying a folksy single by a relatively obscure
band from Newcastle was not on a par with smoking dope and going on
the hippie trail (I was still 14 remember!) but it didn't half feel
good. It did two things. Firstly it opened the floodgate and I'd
listen to anything. I bought ex jukebox singles, bootlegged stuff
from the radio (when I bought a very cheap and tinny cassette
recorder) and generally realised that it was better not to conceal
that, all along, I had loved the music that my family really would
prefer that I did not. The second was that it rekindled my desire
to make my own music.
At the age of fifteen,
another momentous event happened. I became the proud owner of a
guitar. It was second hand and rather too obviously was an unwanted
holiday souvenir from either Spain or Gibraltar. It was made by a
company called Roca, had nylon strings an uneven fretboard and bent
tuning machines. Hardly rock and roll, but this time I was going to
learn to play it! My first attempt at tuning it resulted in a
broken bottom E string and a rather embarrassing trip to a music
shop.
“Can I have a steel
string for a guitar please.” I asked.
“What gauge do you
want?” the assistant asked.
“It's the lowest
one,” I replied.
“But what gauge,
what sort of guitar,” the assistant asked.
“It's an acoustic,”
I offered.
Eventually I was sold a
medium gauge steel Rotosound bottom e, which (as I remember) was a steel
wrapped electric string, and about as unsuitable for the guitar as it could be.
Part 6
With the help of a
neighbour's piano (which was probably a bit out of tune) and a
beginners guitar book I had the thing in tune. Next. My first
chord. C.... then G7, then G. To be honest they weren't too bad.
It took some weeks but I managed to get something.
Then came F. Aptly
named for the guitar. What an absolute PIG! Try as I might I
couldn't get it. It took months and, had I had any lighter fuel I
might just have done a Jimmy Hendrix with the damnable thing. (I
mean smashing it and setting it on fire, not actually playing it
properly.) So, in the absence of means of creating fire, I
persevered. After about three months I could do about three chords
(G and G7 in my mind kind of count as one). I could even have a go
at simple songs from the book. After six I'd bought a couple of
song books (Bob Dylan and Donovan).
A year later I finally
bought a proper set of nylon strings after I'd noticed that the steel
string had cracked the woodwork on the bridge. After fixing it with
Araldite I put the strings on and retuned the thing. The new
strings made a difference, and the guitar actually sounded
reasonable, but it wasn't steel strung, so it was time to save my
pennies up again.
I had a habit then of
spending just about every penny I had (apart from my slowly growing
collection of 1971 two pence coins that sat on my bedroom windowsill)
and had, at the age of sixteen, spent every one (£115) on a small
boat (the story of which is elsewhere in this blog, entitled “Keeping
a Bee”. Boats are a great way of ensuring a state of permanent
skintness, but they have their charm. One thing that had been a
nuisance was having to pay a bus fare every time I wanted to go and
work on the boat, so the next purchase I decided on was a bicycle.
I had just enough (£12) to get a relic of an old green Raliegh,
complete with an enclosed chain and a lot of rust. Now, usually
when you buy a bike, the assumption is that you can ride the thing.
That was something that (even at the ripe old age of 18) I had not
yet mastered. I could just about manage a straight line for about
50 yards, and it was like this that I rode home. No surprise then
that the thing (and almost me) met its end on the front of a Triumph
Herald about 3 weeks later. I flew over the handlebars and landed
in the road by the driver's door, out of which stepped the rather
annoyed driver.
“You silly boy,”
she shouted. “What on earth were you doing.”
“I think I was
falling off my bike,” I replied.
She wasn't too amused
at the result of one of us cutting a corner and the other going wide.
Surprisingly though, the bike was still rideable (despite a
severely bent frame and a pedal crank that now hit the back fork of
the thing). It clunked until I got to a bike shop, who bent the
crank a bit and offered me a trade in which I couldn't afford there
and then.
©2018 Michael Nye
Part 7
Sadly the guitar would
have to wait and I saved a bit more before returning to the bike
shop.
“Remember me?” I
smiled.
“Yes, we
straightened your bike a bit,” the guy said.
“Is there still a
trade in?” I asked.
“The cheapest new
bike we have is a Hercules, but it's £30,” he replied.
With £8 trade in I
rode off on the new Hercules for just £22. It was a lot nicer than
the Raliegh but it did have a habit of the chain coming off once a
week. Several changes of sprocket and chain eventually fixed this
(under the warranty) and I did a lot of learning to ride on it.
Perhaps my finest achievement was to come home with an 88 key Hohner
reed organ on the handlebars. I'd always fancied playing keyboards
and this plywood thing really looked nice (and it was rather cheap).
It was French polished, and packed neatly into a trunk sized
suitcase. I set off from Bells in Surbiton with 3 ½ stone of the
thing perched on the handlebar. Mostly the run was O.K. but I was
limited to straight lines only. A left turn led to severe
imbalance, and a right one caused the keyboard (which only wanted to
go in a straight line) to jam my thumb on the brake lever (which hurt
rather a lot). The thing sounded like a maltuned harmonium powered
by a low grade vacuum cleaner.
Jumping forward a
moment. When talking to our local vicar some years back, Janice (my
wife) and I complimented the rather nice harmonium he had in his
study.
“It's actually not a
true harmonium,” he replied with a knowledgeable smile. “It's
actually an American organ.”
Well, one of us had to
ask so it was me.
“What's the
difference?” I smiled.
“Well,” the vicar
said. “Harmoniums blow, and American organs suck.”
“I'm sure they
aren't that bad,” Janice replied before realising she was in a
vicarage.
Thankfully the vicar
had a good sense of humour.
Back to the Hohner.
Whether it blew or sucked, it sucked in a big way, but I learned a
few bits of keyboard with it, so I guess it wasn't a total waste of
cash.
After yet more saving,
a visit to a second hand shop got me a rather nice looking Kay jumbo
which had beautiful gold scroll work on the (Batwing style) scratch
plates. It also had beautiful multi coloured veneer on the sides
and back of the body. Visually then it was fine. Shame about the
action and sound though, and it would have helped if someone had
bothered to glue the thing together properly. In short, it was a
piece of crap. I persevered though. I lowered the action, applied
lots of Araldite to various bits of the body that was slowly
disintegrating, stuck a pack of cotton wool and a rather plush
dressing gown cord in the sound box to mellow it a bit. It did the
job for a while at least. The “gold” kept rubbing off the
scratchplates, so I kept adding more with Humbrol enamel paint left
over from my Airfix kit building days. ©2018
Michael Nye
Part 8
Part 8
I was now fed up with
working in an electronics factory, had done my City and Guilds and
wanted to do my version of dropping out, so I became an art student.
Well, I did evening classes in art and English language as a
starter. It was whilst doing these that I decided to have a go at
being a real student, and managed to get an interview at Epsom school
of art and design for the foundation course. Feeling I'd stand a
better chance if I told a couple of porkies I said I wanted to do
industrial design (which I had no intention of doing.) I was pretty
surprised to be accepted, and even more so to pass the O.levels in
art and English. I now had enough (if I chose to) to actually get
to a polytechnic after the foundation year!
At Epsom there were a
few musicians (people that could play more than one chord on a
battered Egmond guitar) and I soon realised both how crap I was, and
how rubbish my Kay guitar was. It was around then that Eko
(remember them) had adverts in the music papers (I used to buy Melody
Maker) suggesting that you buy your second guitar first. I thought
it a bit dumb but it had my interest. I had some cash saved from
work so, yet again one Saturday, I cycled to Hands music centre in
Kingston to look at guitars. My preference was for a Kimbara, but
when I tried it, I really didn't like it. I tried a couple and then
I was handed an Eko Navajo which was quite nice. Next came the
Ranger 6. That was nice in a big way so I put my prejudices aside
and tried to work out how I could afford it. I tried a Yamaha
(costing 3 times as much as the Eko) as I thought, and came to the
conclusion that the Eko was the better sounding instrument. After
sorting out a trade in on the Hohner reed organ, and the Kay
(complete with cotton wool and pyjama cord) I put a deposit down and
returned with said items (thanks to my dad for the lift) and the deal
was done.
Whilst Eko guitars were
not really revered by anybody, I was quite happy with the thing.
The action was adjustable with two stout screws on the sides of the
alloy bridge mount, it had an electric style bolt on neck and it was
built like a brick outhouse. Comparing it to the Kay would be a bit
of an insult but I'll try anyway.
The Eko was what they
Kay would have liked to be. It was about the same size, far less
decorated, and had a very good sound straight out of the box. In
short, it was pretty good. I later found that the top of the range
Kay (which I didn't have) was made by Eko to a lower spec than their
own range. The Kay version had a single piece neck made of inferior
wood (the Eko had a three piece laminate neck that is beautiful to
look at and easy to play. The Kay had the variety of tuners that
came as three on a strip, and were a bit graunchy. The Eko ones
were separate open ones and not too bad. On each count the Kay had
corners cut to make a budget version of the Eko that wasn't worth
buying.
I've since found out
that, as well as making one instrument for Kay, Eko made the famous
Vox teardrop guitars and various other items for other people. ©2018
Michael Nye
Part 9
There's been a bit of
a gap here! Probably because I have written two books in the
interim. I only intended to write one over a couple of years, but
you can't stop when you get the bit between your teeth. You can
call this gap a representation of the years that I have owned that
Eko Ranger Six (which I still have as my most often played
instrument).
After over 40 years of
continuous use, it still tunes up well (though I have had to replace
the tuners due to hairline cracks in the plastic keys). Due to fret
wear I have carefully re-profiled the most worn of the frets so that
it still plays well, and, as an additional modification, I placed a
piece of black felt between the zero fret and the nut. This
corrected some odd string buzzes that only I appear to have been able
to hear. That's more or less it. The instrument has mellowed over
time, is in good condition and still plays really well. I like the
adjustable bridge, which can be tweaked to give exactly the right
string height. Most of all I like the fact hat the thing was built
to last. Plywood it may well be but it's good plywood, all joints
are well glued, and the bolt on neck mounts onto a massive chunk of
wood which is probably strong enough to make the guitar a reasonable
substitute for a cricket bat (don't try that one at home... or
anywhere). In all it was £52 well spent! ©2019
Michael Nye