Screaming Lord Sutch

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  • BillyE
    replied
    Hi Philip. I've heard three different performances of Lord Sutch singing "Jack the Ripper" and only in the 1977 rather discoish version do you hear him say "Mary Kelly", but I'm thinking it was always the lyric. My guess, and probably a poor guess, is he thought it more dramatic, scary, cinematic, atmosphiric, or whatever to scream, and scare the audience when he got to the name part of the song. Or at least that's how it seemed to me.

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  • George Hutchinson
    replied
    Originally posted by sdreid View Post
    I miss Lord Bucket Head.
    He still posts here, Stan. His ID is...

    No. I won't.

    PHILIP

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  • Limehouse
    replied
    Originally posted by Graham View Post
    Hi Limehouse!

    Looking at the YouTube clip I'd say Heinz wasn't singing, either! If that isn't miming, I dunno what is!

    What a shame about your close brush with stardom! Who knows what this might have led to? But family comes before fame, every time.

    A bloke I worked with years and years back played bass for various local bands around Brum, and just happened to answer an ad in Melody Maker asking for bass-players to audition as session musicians. He auditioned, and got the job as bass-player in The Overlanders, a 'synthetic' group formed by a record-company to make a cover of 'Michelle' by The Beatles. A short time later the record was at No 1 and I don't think my acquaintance even played on it! Anyway, he milked his sudden fame for all it was worth and I believe he now runs a bar in Nashville. Bloody good luck to him, I say!

    I'm close to retirement and still waiting to be discovered....sniff.

    Cheers,

    Graham
    Hi Graham,

    Melody Maker! Oh, that takes me back! I always read that in the 1970s. My husband (snob) ridicules me and says I should have read NME!

    When I lived in good old Chingford (where my family still live) a bloke up the road was a dummer in a band. He was mates with my brother-in-law and one day my sister phoned me in great excitement to tell me that Charlie was going to be in the group picked to perform the UKs entry to the Eurovision Song Contest. He was the dummer in Coco! That was the begining of the end for UK entries!! I loved the Overlander's version of Michelle.

    George/Phillip, I doubt the film was Live it Up either. My brother was 13 at the time and it was most likely wishful thinking!

    I adored Norman Wisdom as a child. I absolutely loved him to bits. A while back i saw a programme about his relationship with his family and it put me right off. he never stops being 'Norman' and always has to be showing off to everyone. Poor man, he's over 90 now and rather sweet but can't accept that he's not the big star he was. Having said that, I think he's massively popularin Albania.

    Cheers

    Limehouse

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  • sdreid
    replied
    I miss Lord Bucket Head.

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  • Graham
    replied
    Originally posted by George Hutchinson View Post
    I deal ONLY in 78s, Graham.

    Nice try about the 20s-30s blues. I know how much they sell for. I know someone who bought one for several thousand pounds two years ago.

    The answer is 'no'. I sometimes get a Billie Holiday or Bessie Smith, but if you're looking for the likes of Blind Lemon Jefferson Wee-Wee, you're barking up the wrong tree at Satan's crossroads!

    PHILIP
    Philip,

    Yes, well! I don't deal in records, but do have a huge interest in the blues and have a (very) small collection of 78's which I would never sell so don't even ask....

    ....no, I don't know of anyone who has an original Terraplane Blues, either.

    Cheers,

    Graham

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  • George Hutchinson
    replied
    I deal ONLY in 78s, Graham.

    Nice try about the 20s-30s blues. I know how much they sell for. I know someone who bought one for several thousand pounds two years ago.

    The answer is 'no'. I sometimes get a Billie Holiday or Bessie Smith, but if you're looking for the likes of Blind Lemon Jefferson Wee-Wee, you're barking up the wrong tree at Satan's crossroads!

    PHILIP

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  • Graham
    replied
    Hi Philip,

    What old records do you deal in, mate? Anything in particular, or everything in general?

    Do you ever have any REALLY OLD blues 78's through you hands?

    Cheers,

    Graham

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  • George Hutchinson
    replied
    These are great stories! I'm loving this thread.

    Limehouse - I would be surprised if the film WAS 'Live It Up', as there's no small kids in it from what I remember. Maybe you were going to be written in?!

    My dad saw the film at the cinema in London when it came out. I think it was supporting the Norman Wisdom film 'A Stitch In Time'.

    Anna - does hubby still have the demo recording? The Joe Meek Appreciation Society would be very keen in getting hold of a copy, I'm sure. It's 15 years since I left them but I guess they have a website.

    Who remembers Meek's group THE MOONTREKKERS? They did NIGHT OF THE VAMPIRE which was banned by the BBC. The lead guitarist, Gary LePort, buys old records off me sometimes.

    Whilst I remember - if you listen to the original 1963 recording of JACK THE RIPPER and not any of Sutch's later versions, he doesn't actually sing the words 'Mary Kelly' at all. I do wonder if he had even heard of her at that stage. He just mumbles something and it sounds like 'Red Blood'. However, I have footage of him from a couple of years later doing it live and he's definitely yelling 'Mary Kelly' by then. Maybe being name-specific was thought to be a step too far by Decca?

    PHILIP

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  • Graham
    replied
    Hi Limehouse!

    Looking at the YouTube clip I'd say Heinz wasn't singing, either! If that isn't miming, I dunno what is!

    What a shame about your close brush with stardom! Who knows what this might have led to? But family comes before fame, every time.

    A bloke I worked with years and years back played bass for various local bands around Brum, and just happened to answer an ad in Melody Maker asking for bass-players to audition as session musicians. He auditioned, and got the job as bass-player in The Overlanders, a 'synthetic' group formed by a record-company to make a cover of 'Michelle' by The Beatles. A short time later the record was at No 1 and I don't think my acquaintance even played on it! Anyway, he milked his sudden fame for all it was worth and I believe he now runs a bar in Nashville. Bloody good luck to him, I say!

    I'm close to retirement and still waiting to be discovered....sniff.

    Cheers,

    Graham

    Leave a comment:


  • Limehouse
    replied
    Originally posted by George Hutchinson View Post
    Hi Limehouse - yeah, I've got a copy of it. It's awful in many respects but quite charming in a way. It was an England that probably never existed in a time certainly before I did. I met Heinz Burt once and spent a couple of hours sat next to him in a car. He was obnoxious. Odd to think that three of the boys in the 'band' all died within a few years of each other (Steve Marriott, Heinz Burt and David Hemmings) when they were the youngest ones in the movie. Mind you, thinking of it I think most of the people in that film have since died. It was 1963.

    PHILIP

    Here is a link to a clip. Dosen't look much like Heinz is playing that guitar! My, but he was a pretty boy wasn't he? No wonder poor Joe fancied him.



    There is a family story that when I was 5, my dad was working on the garden of a posh house in Buckhurst Hill, Essex (he got lucrative gardening jobs from his main job as a milkman) and I was 'helping him out'. The owner of the house came out with drinks and started to chat to me. He had heard me singing. He asked my dad if I went to stage school! No, dad said, she's just a little show off! Anyway, this chap asked if I could appear in a film he was hoping to make. My dad was a bit suspicious, but it turned out to be a genuine offer. Dad said yes, but mum said 'no way'. Anyway, before any decision could be made mum had a massive stroke and our family was plunged into a rather long crisis. I never got to make the film and don't even remember any of this happening, except for mum's stroke. My brother (8 years older than me, swears the film was 'Live it Up'.

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  • George Hutchinson
    replied
    Hi Graham

    That wouldn't surprise me. Heinz didn't play on the Tornados actual recordings, and most of his early vocals were actually not him either. Both bass and vocals were done by Dave Adams.

    PHILIP

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  • ChrisGeorge
    replied
    Hi Philip

    I enjoyed seeing the photograph. Great stuff. Many thanks!

    Chris

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  • Graham
    replied
    Hi Philip

    A mate of mine recalls seing Heinz somewhere in Birmingham way back in the 1960's, and he swears that Heinz was 'miming' his bass-playing to someone behind the scenery! Wouldn't doubt it, either!

    "Telstar" was No 1 at the time I had my very first girl-friend...aaaahhhhh!

    Cheers,

    Graham

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  • anna
    replied
    PS....What a great picture Philip..
    I can always remember liking Sutch as a child whenever my parents watched the boring election programmes, he added a certain something to the occasion don't 'ya think!!!
    As you have probably guessed, I am not a child of the 60's, but can indeed remember the winter of '63.....John F Kennedy and the Beatles..so the song goes( Life in a Northern Town)....I had measles.
    I have been with Gerry for some years so he has taught me about Dylan(mostly) and other 60's facts.....which I can't remember.

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  • anna
    replied
    Hi all,
    My chappie Gerry was signed by Joe Meek at his offices just before he died.
    Gerry also did a "demo" with the guys who played "Telstar"...it's one of his proudest possessions...Gerry was a bit of a loose cannon and was always skipping school to play his guitar.Fancying his chances,and it being the
    60's,he went off to Meeks offices with his mate.Meek came back to the office,while the boys were standing outside and fancied Gerry's mate,who didn't fancy Meek and legged it.Gerry stayed,chatted to Meek and played for him.The demo followed and Meek gave Gerry money to kit himself out and phoned Gerry's mum to explain things to her!!!Gerry is always talking about it...think he said the offices were dingy.....have to ask him again.
    Talking of groups singing about Jack the Ripper.I was flicking channels late one night and saw a Confessions film....Holiday camp rep setting. Robin Askwith formed a group called "Kipper" who sang a song about Jack the Ripper.
    I love the Carry-On's,Confessions,On the Busses....love looking at the 70's settings,seems like yesterday.....you do notice the difference with the amount of people and cars and the nice shops etc.Different world than today...know which one I prefer.

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