"Day On
The Green"
article by UK writer Kate
Phillips for Sounds magazine
This is a picture of the tour book with The
Robin Trower Band
Bill Lordan coming down the side stairs to
the stage
photo courtesy John Thompson
Robin, Bill and Jimmy coming onto the stage
photo courtesy John Thompson
photo courtesy John Thompson
Oakland,
CA .
Oh magical
California, where it all began. Ninety degrees in the shade, and sixty
thousand in the audience --- and nobody's fighting, nobody's freaking;
nobody's drunk or even undressing.
The
massed California girls and boys, dirty blond hair and round pretty faces,
are making themselves comfortable, as if for a picnic, with blankets and
cushions and iced drinks in portable iceboxes. Tiny white jets whizz overhead
towards San Francisco airport.
Right of the stage, a man quietly dies of heat stroke-- the Medical Corps
dispose of him in seconds. And up in the stands a pregnant girl goes into
labour: it's a fine boy comes the announcement.
"Day On The Green" they call it, and all the bands playing here today are
British.
Robin Trower.
A Big Deal in the U.S., is top of the bill. The trailer they've given
him as dressing room looks like an old big grey caravan from the outside,
except that the names of the band, in pokerwork on wooden boards, are fixed
to the door, looking as if they should proclaim it "Four Winds" or "Dunromin".
But inside, instead of bunkbeds and camping stoves there is wood panalling
settes, and actually a tree - a stiff little mulberry bush in a
pot. And every available surface, down to the lampshade is plastered with
pastel coloured badges that captioned "Think Trower"
All
right: "Trower". Now what ?
But right now, at this very moment, it's Peter Frampton onstage; slender
in white jacket, white trousers, gold curls and "Jumpin' Jack Flash".
He seems to be pleasing the punters no end. Everything pleases them,
but nothing qite jolts them out of thier sunshine haze. Sunshine and guitar
heros, dope and cocacola, it's every festival you ever read about.
Backstage
the same calm prevails. Not for nothing is Bill Graham called The Most
Efficient Promotor In The World. The security's very strict, but once you've
made it to the inner sanctum of press and performers, you're enveloped
in the atmosphere of a high class garden party: raost chicken, ice cream
and parasols.
As
the afternoon wears on the Trower party dive nervously in and out of the
van. There's Bill Lordan, the American drummer, going in to change his
amazing blue silk t-shirt for something even more glamorous to wear onstage.
There's Bill Lordan's extremely beautiful chick in a Grecian gown.
There's Jimmy Dewar, bass and vocals, heading the Scottish faction, with
Jimmy Dewar's extrememly beautiful wife, and Frankie Miller, a friend who's
lost his voice, and Frankie Miller's manager, telling tales of Alex Harveys
youth. Alex Harvey's not here.
And there's Robin Trower's brother, who's also chief roadie, completely
in control and yet somehow out of place, too English : he ought to be running
a garage - a high class garage mind you - back home in Southend. And Robin
Trower's manager, Wilf Wright, also totally efficient, but perhaps a little
annoyed that Frampton's encores are going to make Robin's set late.
But
have you ever seen Peter do an encore? He does run back to the microphone
so charmingly.
And
somewhere , presumably, is Robin Trower. But nobody sees him untill music
time.
The stage set, Trower assures me later, was all Bill Grahams idea, a tribute
to the old country: all the amps are hidden by crenellated cardboard battlements,
with Union Jack pennents flying above. For Trower and Trower alone, they
use the drawbridge; it's let down jerkily at one side of the stage while
heralds blow a trumpet fanfare, guards in busbies range themselves on either
side, and the musicians stumble out rather sheepishly to greet the crowd.
Their reception,
however is the standard "Tulmultuous" model reserved for headliners.
I don't
want to be grudging, but it's my guess that whoever topped the bill in
this show would stir up the same oddly pre-stressed rapture, as long as
they were halfway competent.
Trower , of course , is much better than that : an actual virtuoso, one
has to admit it. A very pretty player, soaring and Wurlitzing about with
a lot of genuine conviction. Just the man, infact, to convince the kids
that they are watching a hero at work.
To me, though,
his playing, despite the accumulation of style and skill, is fundamentally
soft-centred, It's too pretty, almost too accomplished. And for the old
vexed question of you know who he's supposed to sound like.......
well, his record company specifically requested a journalist who hasn't
ever seen Trower before, presumably hoping the the Hendrix chestnut would
be left alone this time. But I'm going to be boring and say it anyway :
Trower does sound as if he's spent his informative years trying to copy
the "mans" style note for note, fuzz for fuzz. And that being so, one can't
help remembering two major things about Hendrix - he was a daemon, and
he had a sense of humour, and neither of those things are easy to imitate.
Stil
and all, this band is just the job to climax the ritual scene: Lordan tossing
his long blonde locks like a dream of hipness gone by, Dewar's voice strong,
but lost in the music, like vintage Cream days, and Trower in stripped
djellaba and Robin Hood boots with a great line in reptilian charm - head
poking back and forwards like a tortoise, one shimmering green leg waving
up and down on the effects pedal, crooked grin of delight permanantly spread
across the features. Picturesque adn I don't mean maybe.
But for the Trower party bill-toppers with a reputation to consolidate,
nothing but the best : trees in the trailer, black limousines to ferry
us across the Bay Bridge, and rooms at the Mark Hopkins Hotel, Nob Hill,
where the decor is all dark red brocade and everything you order arrives
in an ice bucket, even hot tea.
It's
a strange life. You can get every luxury in the world on room service,
and yet it's curiously two- dimensional, literal minded existence. You've
got all the physical comforts, and if you want any others - well ther's
always the Gideon Bible.
It's
not much like home,
Trower
is sitting alone in his suite on the fifteenth floor. He's covered his
dashing blue and white shirt with a knitted pull over- in gets cold in
San francisco at night. Except for the corner where the television stands,
the whole of the huge "gracious" room is in darkness.
Trower
is watching an old movie on the box. It's called "The Snakepit". He would,
he makes it clear, prefer to go on watching it ; but gives way politely
when opposed.
Robin Trower doesn't like journalists. Perfectly understandable, this,
and often traceable, in rock musicians, to some recently aquired trauma.
But it tends to make his conversation a bit terse. His favorite answer
to any searching (or pseudo- searching) question is a defensive " I've
never really thought about it, to be honest. " Thus :
Why have
you never really cracked it in England?
"
Ive never really thought about it, to be honest."
Requested
to think about it now, he explains that the bands music"hasn't a British
note in it" and, American taste being so far ahead of the Brits, he's never
expected audiences to be "aware" enough, en masse, to appreciate
it.
"They
like pop music in Britain, " sez Trower. "That's what they like and we
don't play pop music. That's all there is to it."
How
come El Zepp sell out in Britain then?
"Well
isn't that pop music?"
Not
to be outdone, one advances the opinion, in a roundabout sort of way, that
British taste, guitar -hero wise, is about two years ahead of American,
and that British audiences aren't excited by sub-Hendrix because they've
heard it all before.
"That's
the way you see it." Trower shrugs. And he adds further fuel to this promising
fire by informing me that (a) "no-one in England or America comes anywhere
near what we're doing" and that (b) he "hasn't heard anything come out
of Britin that was any good at all."
Phew.
Surprisingly
enough, though, his manner isn't overly offensive, though he's edgily aware
of the impression he is making. He's so certain of the statements
he makes about his own quality, and so certain at the same time that journalists
are out to number him, that he can't relax for a minute.
Because
England, proffesionally speaking, is to Trower, " just a little dot on
a map," and yet his wife and all his family still live there, he seems
just a little like a man in exile; and his well-known habit of spending
the wicked hours of night alone in his hotel room adds colour to that idea.
It's a very low-key portrait of the guitar hero. He refuses to admit any
pretensions to "image" at all, in fact.
I'd
been warned in advance of this meeting that Trower would probably tell
me that he knew more about music than I had hot dinners. What he actually
says is -
"Iv'e
probably spent more time standing on a stage than you've had hot dinners.
It's a very natural thing to me, to be onstage." He's really a businessman's
musician, wary of talking about himself. Not feeling assured, despite my
calling, that he should be forced to, I don't press the the subjects of
money ("I don't like discussing it"), his family ("I wouldn't even tell
my press agent about them"), or his age ("I think it's a daft question").
Mind
you , I am sure he is past his official age,30. He talks about his rock
and rolling days in Southend with the nostalgia of one recallign the distant
past.
"I
had me first guitar when I was fourteen. The first real band I got together
was called The Paramounts. We was a really good rock and roll band; but
not as good as the Rockefellers. They came from Ronford, Brentwood, Gidea
Park, round there, and they were fantastic. The're still going you know,
and they make these kids look daft- "
You
don't, you can't mean..... "Dr. Feelgood, yeah; I heard them on the
radio. We was playing that stuff God knows how long ago, and ten times
better than them as well.
Oh
man, that's sacrilidge, man.
But
so strong is Trower's self confidence, even the threatened fury of the
killers of Canvey I can't abash him. So, to change the subject, I ask him
how he sees the role of vocals in his songs, when his guitar is so continually
dominant.
"
Maybe you've just cracked why I'm so big, " he replies thoughtfully. "My
guitarplaying is very dominant, I know that. But Jimmy's a great singer,
and he lives with me very well.
"
And he has to be bloody good to do that. There aren't many other singers
could do ti. Most of them have no taste whatsoever. And no sense of rythem,
tone, phrasing, melody -- you name it."
Trower
freely admits that he likes to be in control of his band all of the time.
"I like to be the whole thing. And the others like to get me off. That's
what they get off on. The're pro musicians- they're not up there to pose
and fop about."
But
maybe they'd like a bit more of the limelight sometimes?
"
It'd be very hard for anyone else to dominate a group I'm in."
Now
just in case you think this guys numbered himself rotten as a primo megalomaniac
during the preceding conversation, it seems only fair to close with his
opinions on being interviewed. He puts up a pretty good case.
"
Most interviews are so much load for nothing." he says.
"For
a start, why should a musician say anything worth putting in print? It's
not his language. "
"And
I've never, except for Guitar magazine, been interviewed by another
musician. So I've no common ground with critics in general; they're not
even what you call students, let alone someone on the same level as yourself,
that you could communicate with.
"Usually
they're just pop fans, you know."
as
for revealing anything about the non-musical side of a musician -
"What's
a page? You can't put someone down in a page! You have to knwo somebody
a long time before you really know them."
"
But it makes what people say seem important. Kids read it and they say,
' oh, it's in print, it must be right.' But nobody really knows what they
are talking about. I'm guessing, you're guessing.... It should really all
just be a laugh."
"As
long as you don't get the idea thatwhat you're doing has any importance.....
"
"Even if
it's great art."
He
leans over the little black box.
"You're
not taping all this are you?"
Yup.
"That's
all then."