A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs - PLEDGE WEEK: “Winchester Cathedral” by the New Vaudeville Band

Episode Date: July 10, 2022

This episode is part of Pledge Week 2022. Every day this week, I’ll be posting old Patreon bonus episodes of the podcast which will have this short intro. These are short, ten- to twenty-minute ...bonus podcasts which get posted to Patreon for my paying backers every time I post a new main episode — there are well over a hundred of these in the archive now. If you like the sound of these episodes, then go to patreon.com/andrewhickey and subscribe for as little as a dollar a month or ten dollars a year to get access to all those bonus episodes, plus new ones as they appear. Click below for the transcript (more…)

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, this episode is part of Pledge Week 2022. Every day this week, I'll be posting old Patreon bonus episodes of the podcast, which will have this short intro. These are short 10 to 20 minute bonus podcasts, which get posted to Patreon for my paying backers every time I post a new main episode. There are well over 100 of these in the archive now. If you like the sound of these episodes, then go to patreon.com slash Andrew Hickey and subscribe for us. little as a dollar a month or $10 a year to get access to all those bonus episodes plus new ones as they appear. A few episodes back, we took a look at the Who's early records, and in passing we talked about the Ivy League, the studio group who sang backing vocals on their first single under that name. In this bonus episode,
Starting point is 00:01:09 we're going to look at one of the biggest hits any of the members of the Ivy League were involved in, a record that became a massive hit, won a Grammy and changed the career direction of one of the most important comedy bands in Britain. We're going to look at Winchester Cathedral by the new Godville band. In his book, Revolution in the Head, Ian McDonnell makes the point
Starting point is 00:02:05 that the quintessential line in British psychedelia is from George Harrison's It's All Too Much, where Harrison sings, Show me that I'm everywhere and get me home for tea. Whereas American psychedelia is often angry and rebellious, understandably, since it was often being made by people who were scared of being drafted to fight in a senseless war, and who were living through a time of great instability more generally.
Starting point is 00:02:29 British psychedelia was tinged with nostalgia, both for childhood and for a lost past of the empire that had now ended. Now, we're going to get into that in much, much greater detail when we look at the records the Beatles, the Kinks, the Who and others made in this period. but suffice to say that one of the several streams of thought that shaped the youth culture of Britain in the 1960s was a nationalistic one, partly in reaction to a perceived dominance by American culture and a belief that there were things about British culture that deserved celebrating too. And part and parcel of that was a celebration of the popular culture of the 1920s and 30s, the height of Britain's influence in the world. The nationalism, incidentally, was not necessarily an entirely regressive or reactionary thing,
Starting point is 00:03:17 though it certainly had those elements. There was a strong progressive element to it, and we'll be unpacking the tensions in it in future episodes. For the moment, just take it that we're not talking about the sort of flag-waving xenophobia that has tainted much of modern politics, but something more complicated. This complex relationship with the past had been evident as early as the very early 1960. with acts like the Albert and the Temperance Seven, reviving 1920s novelty songs in what would now be considered a postmodern style. That had temporarily gone me to cheer me, believe me than you, that you were the kind who would hurt me,
Starting point is 00:04:19 Desert you. That had temporarily gone into abeyance with the rise of the Beatles and the bands that followed in their wake, making guitar music inspired by American black musicians, the new popular thing in British culture. But that stream of the culture was definitely there, and it was only a matter of time before music business professionals would notice it again
Starting point is 00:04:37 and start to try to capitalize on it. and Jeff Stevens did just that. Stevens was an odd character who had entered the music business at a relatively late age. Until the age of 30 he worked in a variety of jobs including as a teacher and an air traffic controller. But he was also involved in amateur theatrics,
Starting point is 00:04:57 putting on reviews with friends for which he co-wrote songs and sketches. He then went on to write satirical sketches for radio comedy, writing for a programme hosted by Basil Boothroyd, the editor of Punch, and started submitting songs to Denmark Street publishers. Through his submissions, he got a job as a songplugger with a publishing company, and from there moved into writing songs professionally himself.
Starting point is 00:05:20 His first hit, co-written as many of his songs were with Les Reed, was Tell Me When, the debut single for the Apple Jacks, which made the top ten. Many hits as a writer and producer soon followed, including writing The Crying Game for Dave Berry, and signing Donovan and co-producing his first first. two albums and earliest hit singles. In the chilly hours and minutes of uncertainty I want to be in the warm hold of your love to feel you all around me and to take your hand along the sand
Starting point is 00:07:20 I bet our mirrors where try and catch the way. Stevens had been making hits for a couple of years when he conceived the novelty record Winchester Cathedral, which he recorded with John Carter of the Ivy League on lead vocals, imitating the style of Rudy Valley, one of the most popular singers of the 1920s who sang through a megaphone. He became popular before electronic amplification was a big thing. The record was made by session players and released under the name the new Vodville band. The record immediately began to sell. It became a massive, massive worldwide hit, selling 3 million copies
Starting point is 00:08:33 and inspiring a cover version by Rudy Valley himself. Oddly, this wasn't the last time in the 60s that a major hit would be inspired by the sound of Rudy Valley. But Stevens had a problem. People wanted the new Roadville band to tour, and he didn't actually have a touring act, so he turned to the next best thing. The Bonzo Dogdudah band were a band of Dardarist comedy performers who had a wonderful stage act, which among other things involved their lead singer Vivian Stanchol
Starting point is 00:09:37 wearing a gold llama Elvis suit, their drummer Sam Spoons playing spoons and washboard, and comedy moments like band members holding up speech bubbles, so for example when someone took a solo, one of the other members might hold up a cardboard speech bubble, saying, wow, I'm really expressing myself. Their repertoire largely consisted of novelty tunes, some from the 50s, but mostly songs they'd learned from old 78s from the 1920s, like their first single. There's not a single noise that he can't do.
Starting point is 00:10:09 You know exactly what the popular walk is. Well, Rodman Popper pretty hog for you. He'll imitate his center, a pheasant or a grouse. But what is even better is his noise for me to him house. Hey Pluto. My brother makes no noises for the talkies. There's not a single noise that he can't do. As Bonzo's guitarist Neil Innis always told the story,
Starting point is 00:10:40 Jeff Stevens was friends with the band's trumpet player Bob Kerr, and called him up asking if the Bonzo Dog Dudar band wanted to be the touring new Vodville band. Kerr was excited. His band would get to be proper pop stars. But when he went to talk to the rest of the group, they were dismissive. There were conceptual artists and creative people and didn't want to be a manufactured pop band. Bob Kerr, on the other hand,
Starting point is 00:11:04 thought that being paid vastly more money to do exactly the same stuff he was doing for next to nothing, sounded like a great idea, and quit the band. The next thing the rest of his bandmates knew, they were watching him on top of the pops, performing with the band with the spoons player, a lead singer who wore a gold l'amé suit, and band members holding up cardboard speech bubbles.
Starting point is 00:11:25 Kerr had taken the group's entire act, and they had to reinvent themselves, turning from 1920's pastiche to modern rock music. And the chances are very good that we'll be following them up in the future. But of course, as well as an act, the new group needed a singer, and for that Stevens turned to Alan Klein. Now this is not the Alan Klein who we've mentioned in the main podcast, and who will be coming up again in future episodes. This Alan Klein was someone who had been on the margins of the music industry as a writer and performer for some time. He'd made records with Joe Meek.
Starting point is 00:12:31 And he'd co-written the musical What a Crazy World, which had been made into a film which featured his songs being sung by Joe Brown, Marty Wilde, Freddy and the Dreamers, and Harry H. Corbett. So you bar a new TV set. So you're bar a TV set. To pay off the HP debt, you got and place a bet. They need a new pair of shoes. So you bar new pair of shoes. I know, but you can't refuse. Whatever the odds, you lose. and they reach the state when you can't hesitate to keep up with each bar hussing fag.
Starting point is 00:13:08 You just keep on buying, and you never stop trying to give them all the things we never end. And they want a radiogram, so you buy them a radiogram. You're in a financial gem, but they never give a... He'd also made a single solo album, well, at least it's British, which took a satirical look at British life in the 1960s that was hugely influential on Britpop in the 1990s, so the record sold almost nothing at the time.
Starting point is 00:13:35 Day he saw a fellow who was drowning in the river, shouting out, help, help, I can't swim. He just walked on by and called out neither can I. But I don't boast about it, Jim, because I'm a red-blooded, honest-to-goodness, 20th-century Englishmen. Now the moral of this story is all too plain to see, and my heart size heavy in my breath
Starting point is 00:14:06 because if every other fellow in this country's like me it's no wonder that we're in a mess with Klein as the new lead singer the new vaudeville band were a real band and indeed they had three more top 40 hits in the UK though their most successful song after Winchester Cathedral was a song that Stevens and Les Reid wrote for them which wasn't a hit for them
Starting point is 00:14:35 That did, though, become a hit for Herman's Hermits. The new Vordville band were short-lived. They only had a handful of hits, and Bob Kerr soon left the group after falling out with their manager, Peter Grant, another figure who will definitely be hearing a lot more from in future episodes of the main podcast. Kerr formed Bob Kerr's Whooppy Band with Sam Spoons and Vernon Dudley Bow Hey Noel, two other former members of the Bonzo Dog Dudar band, and they had a quietly successful career
Starting point is 00:16:06 doing the same act that the early Bonzos had. All three men also joined in Bonzo Dog Dudar Band reunion tours in 2006 and 2016. A revived version of the new Vodville band featuring only the drummer from the touring lineup performed in the 70s and 80s to little success. But the group's biggest legacy remained their first hit, which actually won the Grammy for Best Contemporary Rock and Roll Recording in 1967,
Starting point is 00:16:33 beating out a short short song. list of Ellen Arrigby, Monday Monday, Cherish, Good Vibrations, and Last Train to Clarksville. You can decide for yourselves if Winchester Cathedral was, in hindsight, a better record than those. But whether it was or not, it was a fun record that made a lot of people happy. Jeff Stevens, its creator, is unlikely to feature further in this podcast. He wrote many more hit records, but they were almost exclusively for artists like Darner, Tom Jones, Wayne Newton, Ken Dodd, and Mary Hockin, whose careers lie largely outside the scope of a history of rock music, however broadly defined.
Starting point is 00:17:14 He had a long and successful career, but died last Christmas Eve, aged 86, from pneumonia, having been weakened by an early bout of COVID. So as we enter a second COVID Christmas, I'd just like to say I hope you're all vaccinated, boosted, and otherwise safe. I'm hoping to get one more episode and bonus out before Christmas Eve and I hope to see you all still here in the new year. Vodio Do Oh, Fodio down,
Starting point is 00:17:40 half a four day our dog dog rock and roll and bo'u-d-da-l-da-da-oh, yeah.

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