Ian
Whitcomb, an
English undergraduate at Trinity College Dublin, had been
involved in the local music scene ever since he arrived
there in 1961. First he joined the TCD jazz band on piano,
and later he formed a quasi-R&B band called
"Warren Whitcomb & His
Bluesmen"--whose
only appearance was at the Trinity Jazz Band Ball at the
Shelbourne Hotel in St. Stephen's Green in the winter of
1962, and a cold one it was indeed. Ian was influenced very
much not only by recordings of genuine black American
electric blues by the likes of Muddy Waters but also by the
success of British blues groups such as
Alexis Korner
and
Cyril Davies.
He was very serious about his blues and wanted to start a
proper R&B group complete with electric guitars.
Through
local jazz outfits he had met
Barry Richardson,
another English undergraduate, and he and Barry discovered
they had a mutual interest in R&B. Together they schemed to
start their own outfit. Barry, a bass player and reedman,
awas currently playing with a showband called
The Crickets
and so the first assembly consisted of members of that band
since they owned the requisite electric guitars and amps.
The agreement was that they could play with us if they
brought all the equipment with them.
Ian
played piano and did most of the frenetic singing. The rest
of the band consisted of two guitars, fender bass, drums,
and Barry on saxophone. Ian dreamed up a name
Bluesville Mfg., Inc.,
inspired by Alexis
Korner's Blues Incorporated
which was operating over on the mainland at the Ealing
Club. Bluesville
was soon hard at work learning numbers like "I'm Your
Hoochie Coochie Man" and "Built For Comfort". Ian had been
an enthusiast for gutsy boogie piano and hard blues since
the late Fifties, but bear in mind that a little earlier
he'd been the first boy at his English boarding school to
proudly display Bill Haley's first LP, "Rock Around The
Clock" and to champion Elvis as well as Danny & The Juniors.
So he was there defending original rock & roll when it was
looked down on by his peers.
One
of the first
Bluesville
appearances was at St. Anthony's Hall on the Quays. This was
a lunchtime show and Ian was several sheets to the wind on
ale and spirits when he came on stage. The result was that
he fell all over the loudspeakers. He was surprised to hear
the girls screaming in ecstasy and he realized he had a
certain sex appeal. He capitalized on this, flinging himself
around the stage and hollering and fondling the mike at
subsequent gigs--which, when not at religious centres were
invariably at tennis clubs. The local "gurriers" took to
calling the group,
"De Bluesvilles",
slotting them into the long line of Irish showbands.
But
the band was a reaction to what was seen by the In Crowd as
the enervating old-fashioned music of the showbands. What
was happening was the Irish equivalent to the beat group
mania currently infecting Britain.
The Rolling Stones
were becoming popular and as Ian bore a passing resemblance
to Mick Jagger he was frequently stopped in the street by
punters who enquired, "Are yer Mick Jaggers?". Ian took this
as a compliment. There was an even greater compliment in a
note he received which read, " I would like to have sexual
intercoarse(sic) with you at your earliest convenience,
Yours, Moira". This was framed and hung on a wall in his TCD
rooms to the amusement of his fellow history students.
By
this time
Bluesville had
taken on a new personnel due to Barry Richardson's having
joined another showband, this one called
"The Alpine Seven",
named after the manager's car. This was the band, largely,
that was to make the historic recording. TCD students,
hitherto haters of what they saw as commercial crap, now
became interested in
Bluesville.
Many of them attended a memorable show at Mount Merrion,
another religious centre, where Ian, in the middle of "Bony
Moronie", fell through some rotten floorboards. Again, the
girls screamed in intense pleasure. It was at this concert
that the band was offered a stint at the
Star Club
in Hamburg by one
Dermot Hurley.
Somehow it never materialised. It was also at this cconcert
that the band first played Ian's arrangement of an old folk
song he'd learned during the skiffle craze era called
"This Sporting Life".
The idea was to make a song that capitalized on the sound of
the Animals' "House Of The Rising Sun".
At
this stage Ian had secured a recording contract with a
Seattle label, Jerden records. He had done this while on
vacation there in the summer of 1964. The label owner,
Jerry Dennon
enjoying great success due to "Louie Louie" by the Kingsmen
which he had produced. Bluesville's first release was an
instrumental called "Soho", which consisted of Ian and Barry
plus a bass drum, but the other side was a
Bluesville
recording of "Bony Moronie" made in a Merrion Square
basement earlier in 1964. Ian was determined to make a hit
song. This meant abandoning the strict blues content, the
slavish imitation of the African-American music that had
been the driving force begin the band. But Ian knew it was
pointless to try to copy black music and that his sex appeal
and the burgeoning beat scene could catapult him and the
band into the mainstream. But he knew this could only be
done by having a hit record. And this is what he now devoted
his time to. "Sporting Life" was just one of his efforts. He
also wrote a lot of other songs such as
"Too Many Cars On The
Road" within the
hallowed walls of the TCD Library.
The
band continued to go from strength to strength in
Dublin--there was nothing else like it in the Republic. The
sole rival was Them
in Belfast.
Bluesville played
most of the tough venues in Dublin--sometimes fights broke
out and blood mingled with the stout. Ian can remember
leaping from the stage to tackle a ruffian who'd insulted
him. The best-run place was
"Sound City"
down at Burgh Quay where the management really understood
how to present beat music. The chief mover there was a smart
young entrepreneur called
Tony Boland
who went on to work with
Sir Bob Geldof.
In
the winter 1964 Ian took the band, minus
Barry Richardson
who had graduated and was back in England working, into the
Eamonn Andrews studio in Henry Street. to perfect
"This Sporting Life".
He had tried an earlier version in Peter Sellwood's Merrion
Square basement studio (where Bluesville's first recordings,
including "Bony Moronie" had been made), but it didn't cut
the mustard. The Eamonn Andrews version, which had the
addition of Bill
Somerville-Large
on organ, was on the right track. But Ian wasn't satisfied
and during the Christmas vacation he few to Seattle and
there added a beefier organ played by one of the local big
beatsmen, Gerry
Roslie. This was
the version that was released on the Jerden label in
January, 1965 and it soon made the Seattle top ten. Sensing
a new sensation Tower records, a newly formed subsidiary of
Capitol Records, leased the master and with the giant's push
the record dented the Billboard Top Hundred.
"This Sporting Life"
garnered a lot of attention because of its odd sound--a
combination of swirling electric guitars with organ and
piano--a sound known in black gospel churches but hitherto
unheard in the world of commercial pop. This was not lost on
Tom Wilson,
the black producer of
Bob Dylan
records: when he later cut "Like A Rolling Stone" he used a
similar combination. He told an English journalist, Virginia
Ironside, that Bluesville's record was what jogged him back
to his gospel roots.
On
the strength of the record's American success
Jerry Dennon
flew to Dublin to oversee an album session for
Bluesville.
At the very end of the session the band launched into a
shuffle-beat thing that had had the girls excited in the
clubs. Ian used a phrase he'd learned in America from a
Seattle girl who'd been stimulated by his accent: "You're
turning me on", she'd said. He inserted some orgasmic
panting at the end of each chorus and made up the rest of
the words as the band played on. It was one of those
improvised affairs at the end of a session when there's a
few minutes to fill in. But this was the track that was
released as the follow-up to "Sporting Life". At first it
had no title, then it became
"The Turn On Song"
and finally
"You Turn Me On".
There was no stopping this monster--a record that Ian was
not proud of--and by July, 1965 it reached Number 8 in the
Billboard chart. Ian went to America without the band, for
reasons of economy and the fact that the band seemed
reluctant to leave Dublin. In America he toyed with the
Rolling Stones, The Beach Boys, Sam The Sham and The
Pharoahs, the Kinks, etc. But he always used pick up bands.
He missed the tight and special sound of Bluesville with its
locked-in twin guitars of
Mick Molloy
and
Deke O'Brien, and
especially the unique sound of
Ian McGarry's
drumming which utilized the bass drum in patterns hirtherto
not heard on pop records. Soon he was a bona fide teen heart
throb. However, he left a big tour (he was replaced by Tom
Jones) in order to return to TCD and sit for his finals in
modern history. He got a second class degree. The band had
been performing in his absense and this caused a little bit
of friction since Ian disliked seeing another member taking
over all the moves of his stage act. He rewarded the culprit
with an onstage blow to the head with his rolled-up copy of
"Billboard".
After
this Ian returned to America to pursue his teen idol career
and Bluesville gradually petered out. They reunited in 1966
for the Trinity College Ball but after that it was no more.
But Bluesville
have a historic place in the history of Irish rock: not only
did they inspire countless locals to get into hard rock but
they were also the first Irish-based band to get into the
American Top Ten.
For
the record the basic
Bluesville band
that recorded both
"Sporting Life"
and "You Turn Me
On", as well as
the tracks that made up the first LP were as follows:
Ian Whitcomb,
piano & vocals;
Mick Molloy, lead
guitar; Deke
O'Brien, rhythm
guitar; Gerry Ryan,
bass guitar (Bryan
Lynch of
The Greenbeats
played on "This Sporting Life");
Ian McGarry,
drums. On certain tracks
Barry Richardson
and Peter Adler
played saxophones. In the early 1980s Big Beat records, a
subsidiary of Ace (founded by Dublin's own
Ted Carroll,
who used to book Bluesville at the Rathmines Tennis Club),
released an EP called "Bluesville". For more detailed and
colorful information on Bluesville see Ian Whitcomb's books,
"Rock Odyssey",
"Whole Lotta Shakin'"
and
"After The Ball".
All these books are available at various times on eBay.
courtesy
of Ian Whitcomb 2005 |