Chris Curtis

1941 -
2005
In his
first interview since the 1960s, Chris Curtis talked frankly
and exclusively to Spencer Leigh about his years with the
Searchers. - (Originally published in “Record Collector”, March
1998)
Around 1980 I set about
interviewing Merseybeat musicians for a BBC Radio Merseyside
series, “Let’s Go Down The Cavern”, which eventually became a
book. Very few musicians turned me down and the only abrupt
response came from Chris Curtis, the former drummer with the
Searchers. “I don’t want to talk about those days,” he said
when I rang him, “I don’t even want to be reminded of
them.”
As the weeks went by, I heard
stories about his moods and how disturbed he was. I was told
that if he had decided to help me, he would have rung every
morning at three o’clock.. Liking a good night’s sleep, I
thought I’d had a lucky escape.
In 1985 Michael Ochs came to
Liverpool to promote his book of photographs, “Rock Archives”.
He appeared on Billy Butler’s radio programme and went to the
Holiday Inn across the road for a coffee. Chris Curtis came in
with a bagful of memorabilia and handed it to him, saying, “You
should have this.” Billy and I were horrified - this American
had breezed into the city for a morning and walked out with a
bag of Searchers’ goodies. Later I learnt that Chris only
received songwriting royalities from his old recordings and his
generosity was simply making a rich man
richer.
I heard also that Chris had
boarded an early morning bus and handed out his record
collection to the surprised passengers. One of his neighbours
told me what a nice but eccentric man he
was.
From time to time, I renewed my
request for an interview, the last time being in 1992 when I
was doing the sleeve notes for the Searchers’ “EP Collection,
Volume 2” and I wanted to know who had done the original of
“Unhappy Girls”. He couldn’t help me and again he didn’t want
to be interviewed.
By December 1997, I still hadn’t
interviewed Chris Curtis but then, nor had anyone else. One
evening I was interviewing John McNally, lead guitarist of the
Searchers, on air and when I got home, my wife was talking to
Chris on the ‘phone and we found he had already left four
messages. He had been ringing up while the programme was on air
- “I agree with what John’s saying,” he kept saying, “I can
work with him again.”
So, after 17 years of trying,
Chris Curtis said yes to a radio interview. I said that I also
would like to conduct a full interview for “Record Collector”
as it was about time his side of the story was told - by all
accounts, he was the most important member of the Searchers. I
didn’t expect him to turn up but we recorded a two hour
conversation.

I liked Chris Curtis a lot. He has
had years of mental problems and he speaks quickly with his
mind wandering all over the place and lapsing into funny
voices. In his own words, he is “not Tommy Tantrum anymore”,
adding, “I think very fast, even today, and people who know me
well say, ‘Oh, it’s him.’ People who don’t know me well may
think I’m off my cake.”
Chris Curtis has come through it
all - he is confident in his ability and he is performing again
as part of a duo, Jimmy, in the Old Roan pub in the Liverpool
suburbs. He’ll even sing “Needles And Pins” if you ask
him.
SL: Did you learn many
instruments as you were growing
up?
CC: I was a blitz baby, born in
Oldham in 1941. I came to Liverpool when I was four and went to
primary school. I taught myself how to play the piano in our
parlour in 30 Florida Street in Bootle. There’s a Marks and
Spencer's there now. I knew C was the middle note and I worked
out the chords around that. The first B-side for the Searchers,
“It’s All Been A Dream”, was written on that piano. I passed
the 11-plus and went to St. Mary’s College in Crosby, where
they gave me a violin although I wanted to play the
double-bass. I played “London’s Burnin’” for five years and
each year my marks went down. The teachers said, “This boy is
not trying”, but that’s the way I was: if I didn’t get what I
wanted, I had a tantrum.
SL: When you start playing
drums?
CC: I wanted to join a group as
things were going to happen. I thought I didn’t need any
training to play the drums, you just have to bash hard, so I
told my mum and dad that I wanted some drums and my dad signed
for them at Frank Hessy’s. They were very snazzy, all blue and
shiny. One Saturday afternoon when I went to make my payment, I
met Mike Pender, who’d been in primary school with me. Drummers
were hard to find and he asked me to join them for a booking in
Garston that night. My brother had a little Anglia and he took
me with my drums scrunged in on the backseat and a big tom-tom
on my knees. It was a bit like busking for me, but it wasn’t
difficult. They were doing songs I knew such as “Oh Lonesome
Me”.
SL: Would this be at the
infamous Wilson Hall?
CC: Yes, the Wilson Hall. That and
Hambleton Hall in Huyton were renowned for fights, and there
was always a fracas when you played Litherland. They needed
Brian out of the Adelphi to say, “Just drink, will ya?” I used
to hold up my cymbals in case there was any flying glass. I
realised then that chaps would fight over anything in a
skirt.
SL: This was around 1960
and I’ve been told that you had very long hair - and at the
time they’d only be you and Screamin’ Lord
Sutch.
CC: I was a couple of years before
him - I know that because we discussed it in at the Star-Club.
I’ve had mine long since I was 14. I had to have it very neat
when I was at school, but it was wilder when I worked at
Swift’s Furniture Store in Stanley
Road.
SL: Was Johnny Sandon the
lead singer when you joined the
Searchers?
CC: No, he joined not long after
me. He had a marvellous voice, and later on I recorded him
independently for Pye Records - (sings) “Your lips on mine are
soft as dew”, you know the Brook Benton song “So Many Ways”,
and he did it brilliantly. God knows what happened to the
tapes.
SL: Johnny Sandon left you
to go to play army bases in France which was a dreadful career
move.
CC: It was a goof and I felt so
sorry for him. He was a solo singer - Johnny Sandon and the
Searchers - and we decided to continue on our own. I wasn’t
sure if I could drum and sing at the same time but I knew it
was just coordination. We needed some new material and I got
hold of soul records by the Coasters and the Clovers and we’d
Blanco them up. White boys’ voices singing black man’s soul and
it worked. “Sweets For My Sweet” of course and “Goodbye My
Love” is an even better example.

SL: Where did you get the
records from? Was it the Cunard
Yanks?
CC: No, that’s a load of bollocks.
How would the sailors know to buy records by the Clovers? Some
of them brought country records in, but that was about it.
There was a second hand shop on Stanley Road by the Rotunda and
I would go from Stanley Road by bus to Young’s in my lunchhour,
and he would watch me going through boxes of 45s and I would
buy things like Bobby Comstock’s “Let’s Stomp”. I was always
looking for things - I found “Love Potion No.9” in a
second-hand shop in Hamburg when we were at the
Star-Club.
SL: If Young’s was a
second-hand shop, someone was getting rid of
them.
CC: I think he had a supplier in
America ‘cause they were always in good nick, no cracks in
them. One afternoon I went to the Gaumont Cinema in Bootle to
see “Town Without Pity” and I came out and found another record
shop. It was there that I came across “What’d I Say” by Ray
Charles and I wasn’t sure about buying it because both sides
were the same - “What’d I Say (Parts 1 and 2)”. Of course when
I got it home, I found they were quite different and I played
that brilliant riff over and over and over. I decided to sing
it myself and we used to finish every show with
it.
SL: Do you think you were
playing it before the Beatles and other
bands?
CC: I would know so, but there
were so many groups living in each other’s pockets songwise.
Roy Orbison came out with “Dream Baby” and by the end of the
week, everyone was doing it. Paul McCartney did it best. He was
really right for the song.
SL: What about Pete
Best?
CC: He was a genius. You could put
that man on a drumkit and ask him to play for 19 hours and he’d
put his head down and do it. He’d drum like a dream with real
style and stamina all night long and thayt really was the
Beatles’ sound - forget the guitars and forget the faces - you
couldn’t avoid that insistent whack, whack, whack! The rhythm
guitar went along with it and the bass chucked in the two and
four beats and George was wonderful on the guitar. His little
legs would kick out to the side when he did his own tunes. He’d
go all posh and say, “I’d like to do a tune now from Carl
Perkins, ‘Everybody’s Trying To Be My Baby’, and it’s in A.”
Who wanted to know what key it was in? But he always said
that.
SL: Were you surprised
that the Beatles sacked Pete
Best?
CC: I was amazed. When Pete left,I
even thought of turning into a guitarist and getting him to
drum in our band. The Beatles didn’t hate Pete Best but they
didn’t want a star on the drums. Ringo was a good drummer but
he was more ordinary. At that Decca audition, I think they also
realised that Pete had so much power that no-one would know how
to record him. That’s why so many Merseyside discs are icky,
all thin and weedy - except for the Searchers’. Our engineer
knew what he was doing, but not always. “Love Potion No.9” was
our biggest seller in America and the drums are so thin on that
record. It was right for their radio stations, they like that
kind of sound.
SL: What was playing the
Cavern like?
CC: I hated it. When I was on
stage, I used to comment on the state of the lavatories and say
that the place stank of Jeyes fluid and sweat. Ray McFall told
me that if I made any more remarks like that, I wouldn’t play
there again. I’d play the lunchtime session and I’d have to put
my clothes on the line in 30 Florida Street. It was terrible,
it stank and the only reason it was popular was because Ray
McFall was clever enough to say the Beatles will be here
tonight, or Gerry.
SL: But wasn’t the sound
great there, wasn’t it like an echo chamber with it bouncing
off the walls?
CC: Not at all. Once the people
got in, the sound was dry as a bone. It just used to be thump,
thump, thump, that’s why Pete Best was so good
there.
SL: A lot of the groups
were doing the same
songs.
CC: We all loved that record by
Richie Barrett, “Some Other Guy”, and the B-side, “Tricky
Dicky”, was just as great. Every Liverpool beat group used to
latch onto that kind of strong chord thing. If we’d had the
amplification that the Who had later on, they would have been a
whole different Mersey sound, it would have been even more
guitar-orientated. The La’s used one of my guitars, a 12-string
Gretsch, and when they recorded, they said they weren’t going
to tune up: they wanted the authentic 60s sound “because the
Seachers never tuned up”! More fool you, laddies, you could
have had a bigger hit with “There She Goes” if you’d done it
right.
SL: How did you get signed
to Pye Records?
CC: The Beatles had just hit and
Les Ackerley, the manager of the Iron Door club, told us to put
some songs on tape. He let us have the club for an afternoon
and we got a weeny tape recorder and recorded the whole act. He
took it to Decca who didn’t want it, but then he took it to
Pye. Tony Hatch jumped at it as he wanted to be George Martin
to the Searchers or at least, he wanted to be on the bandwagon.
“Sweets For My Sweet” was on the tape and he asked us to record
that for our first session. Les Ackerley hoped to be our
manager but we signed with Tito Burns as we were told he could
do a lot more for us in London. I felt very sorry for Les and
for us as Tito Burns turned out to be a horrible man. He really
worked his artists too - they were always on tour or making
records. Whenever you saw the Zombies, they were like
zombies.
SL: Didn’t he manage Dusty
Springfield too?
CC: Yes and she could be funny and
vindictive like me. We were on tour with her and Roy Orbison.
When we got to Liverpool, she was really peeved with her road
manager. She rang up George Henry Lee’s and asked for some
cheap crockery and they sent it round to her dressing-room at
the Empire. One by one, she threw every piece of crockery down
the corridor and the road manager never did anything wrong
again.
SL: Why did you choose the name
Chris Curtis?
CC: I didn’t. Tony Jackson was in
the bandroom of the Cavern one lunchtime and some reporters
from the national press were there. He introduced us as himself
Tony Jackson, John McNally, Mike Pender rather than Mike
Prendergast, and me the drummer, Chris. He didn’t want to say
my name was Crummey. They asked for my surname and looking on
the Cavern’s wall for inspiration, he saw “Lee Curtis” and
said, “Chris Curtis”. When my mother saw it, she said, “Have
they got a new drummer behind your back?” She’d probably have
been happy if they had because she thought the Searchers were a
bunch of no-marks. She never liked me being in the band. Even
when we were having hit records, she wanted me to be in a bank.
She didn’t mind my new name though - my granny’s name was
Curtin and it was very close to
that.
SL: I get the impression
that you were the leader of the Searchers, or at least, the one
giving the group its musical
direction.
CC: If that constitutes being the
leader, I guess I was. If I threw a tantrum and told someone in
the group to f- off, the next day I would want to make it up to
them. Ameliorate rather than procrastinate, I used to give them
presents just to placate them. The moment I had them thinking
on my wavelength, I knew we couldn’t go wrong. I was right ten
times out of ten with singles, so I must know something,
mustn’t I?

SL: So all the hit singles
stem from you?
CC: Pretty much. Oh, not “Sugar
And Spice”. Tony Hatch tricked us good style with that. We were
looking for a follow-up to “Sweets For My Sweet” and I was
going on the American idea: if that’s one a hit, follow it with
something similar. He sensed that was what I wanted, so he lied
to me. He told me that he had heard this bloke, Fred
Nightingale, in a pub singing “Sugar And Spice”. (Sings first
verse, then sings it again somehat differently.) Tony Hatch
used to be in the guards and you can see he wrote it himself
from a marching tune. I said, “It’s an icky title. Who in
Liverpool will go in a shop and say, Have you got ‘Sugar And
Spice’?” In the end, we said we’d do it but guess who isn’t
singing harmony. I said I’d do the oo-ee-oo bits just to carry
it through but I wasn’t going to sing those idiotic words -
(sings) “Sugar and spice and all things nice, Kisses sweeter
than wine.” I’d rather sing Paulie’s “Mary Had A Little
Lamb”.
SL: You were probably the
first UK act to record one of P.J.Proby’s songs, “Ain’t Gonna
Kiss Ya”?
CC: Tony Hatch had a box of
records and demos from obscure labels in the States and I
picked out one from a girl group called “Ain’t Gonna Kiss Ya”.
I couldn’t decide what I liked about it but I knew that there
was something there. I took the record, learned the chords and
they had a grand piano on the stage at the Star-Club and I used
to sit there and play it. I thought that instead of starting it
in a minor key, which is a bad commercial move, we should start
in C major and then as soon as you had got the “oo-oo-oo” sold,
go to the minor for the actual song, and it worked. Whenever he
saw me, he would go, “Chris Curtis, the only man who ever made
me any money in England.” When he’s sober, he’s the best singer
in the world.
SL: And then came “Needles
And Pins”.
CC: If you haven’t got the
listeners in the first few seconds, you haven’t got them, and
we had them with that. That opening A chord on “Needles And
Pins” will never be topped. It must have been a good riff as
the Byrds have used it countless times - upside down, this way,
that way.
SL: But you copied it from
Jackie de Shannon.
CC: Sort of. Our version is
simpler than hers. She goes through immense emotion on that
song - all that “Stop it now, stop it now”. That was great for
her, but it didn’t fit in with a bland, teenybop Searchers
record.
SL: And the Byrds, not the
Searchers, ended up with the street
cred.
CC: Well, they were all “Wow, man,
let’s take some drugs.” Roger McGuinn had those little blue
glasses and everyone thought he was on a trip. We wouldn’t have
wanted that kind of cred, but I don’t think they took as many
drugs as they implied. You can’t keep taking things and perform
well, at least not for long. I used to take Preludin because of
the long nights in Hamburg, just to keep me awake, but all my
playing was from the heart. I did take downers ‘cause I needed
to sleep.
SL: It must be hard to
sleep when so many exciting things are happening to you.
CC: That’s exactly it. My doctor
in Liverpool gave me something that I could never overdose on:
they would make me slow down and sleep if I wanted to. I was
grateful for that. The idea of taking mind-altering or
body-altering drugs never occured to me. God has given you your
body and you shouldn’t mess around with
it.
SL: Who does the lead
vocal on “Needles And Pins” as there has been some confusion
about this.
CC: Tony Jackson was the lead
singer on “Sweets For My Sweet” and his was the best voice we
could have had for that song. Unfortunately, it wasn’t the best
voice for “Needles And Pins”. He tried it but he was singing “I
saw her today” totally without meaning, just like he was
singing the words off a page. It was much better with Mike
Pender.
SL: Did that lead to Tony
leaving the band?
CC: I didn’t like Tony Jackson
much, even from the start, and if I’d had the nous to audition
for the Searchers, I would have had someone else in the first
place. I never had any rows with him though: if he started
arguing, I would just walk away. He wanted to sing “Needles And
Pins” and he threatened to reveal something about me if I
didn’t let him. I said, “You can tell what you like, you’re not
singing on ‘Needles And Pins’.” Then I said, “Can you count to
50?” and he said, “Course I can count to 50.” I said, “Start
counting, and by the time you’ve reached 50, I’ll have phoned
Tito Burns to tell him you’re out of the band.” He was shocked
‘cause all of a sudden he was losing his source of income. The
first thing he did when he left the Searchers was get a nose
job, and guess where his singing voice had come from? His first
solo record though, “Bye Bye Baby”, was a good
one.
SL: Just before Tony went,
you recorded “Don’t Throw Your Love
Away”.
CC: Pat Pretty, the publicist in
Pye Records, was a lovely lady, who was married to Jack Bentley
from “The People”. She had come across a song on the B-side of
an American hit by the Orlons and I thought it was a great
title. The guitar riff came out similar to “Needles And Pins”,
so again it was following a hit with a semi-copy of a hit. Mike
Pender’s voice was brilliant on that, just like a little boy
wandering through the streets, and I joined in with that very
high harmony, and it really worked. It was one of the nicest
tunes that the Searchers ever did. The B-side, “I Pretend I’m
With You” was pretty good too, one of my little gems. I also
like the B-side of “Someday We’re Gonna Love Again”, “No One
Else Could Love Me”.
SL: My fault rather than
yours but “Someday We’re Gonna Love Again” is the only one of
your hit singles that I don’t go
for.
CC: Well, Dusty Springfield went
for it, she loved it! We’d been working in the ice-rink at
Blackpool and we had to fly back in a two-engine plane for the
sessioin and they said I wouldn’t be using my own drums. I
said, “Get those drums on the ‘plane.” We flew down in the
night, recorded in the morning and flew back in the afternoon.
I thought it was a good intro and the harmony is so high, it’s
like Graham Nash.
SL: So you couldn’t do it
in that key now.
CC: Oh yes, I could.
(Demonstrates, but not too well.) My throat’s a bit croaky but
I can do it.
SL: And you replaced Tony
Jackson with Frank Allen, the bass player with Cliff Bennett
and the Rebel Rousers.
CC: Yes, the two bands had met in
the Star-Club and he became a good friend and he’s a good chap.
His style was great, he had a good image and I had never seen
anyone play the bass like that. He’s very difficult to record
playing bass as he plays the note and then slaps the bass.
(Demonstrates) It’s probably because he had to keep such strong
time with Cliff Bennett as they liked hard rock. He loved “When
You Walk In The Room” ‘cause he respected Jackie de Shannon’s
writing. He couldn’t wait to sing on
it.
SL: Who decided who was
going to do the lead
vocal?
CC: Never me on a single. I was
told it wouldn’t look right on telly. John McNally wanted us to
release “This Empty Place” as a single, which is a real posh
tune and carried by some lovely piano. It’s a great tune to
sing, but I never thought I could get out from behind the
drums. I should have done a Don Henley and gone to the front,
but it never occurred to me, or anyone else. Actually, I did
come from behind the drums for “What Have They Done To The
Rain” as I sat on a high stool and played the bongos between my
knees. I remember being on stage at the Liverpool Empire and
looking at the large drop down the orchestra pit. It’s like
that Peter Cook thing, “What’s the worst job you’ve ever
had?”
SL: “What Have They Done
To The Rain” was a very moving song and a marked change in
direction.
CC: It was written by Malvina
Reynolds, who was an old lady and a great songwriter. It was on
a little blue Fontana 45 and I thought it was a great title.
When I played it, I realised that it was a lovely tune as well.
I thought bongos would be nice instead of drums and lots of
guitars, and Tony Hatch asked if he could put some strings on
it, and it was lovely, it really made the tune. It was a great
record. It had a very profound message and considering people
didn’t know what they were listening to, it did very well. It
was the first green, ecological hit record and the most money
Malvina Reynolds ever earned was from
us.
SL: Do you really think
that people didn’t get
it?
CC: Now is different, you’ve got
the Green Party and you hear ecological voices the whole time.
After Chernobyl, we are finding out that our animals are being
poisoned so it’s what have they done to the wind as well as the
rain. It is so pertinent to today and I could see Oasis doing a
hard rock version of it. (Sings song like Liam) He wouldn’t
have to learn the words - I’m sure he has them written on the
ceiling.
SL: Yet another classic
hit came with “Goodbye My Love” and your drums are very
distinctive.
CC: They’re double-tracked, that’s
why. They recorded the rhythm track, played it back to me and I
played on top of that. The original was a gay song, “Goodbye,
My Lover, Goodbye” and we totally changed it We worked on the
record for a long time and the engineer wiped out some of the
bridge. This was six in the morning and as we didn’t want to do
it again, he spliced things together. The first person I played
that track to was Brian Epstein and he related to the rhythm
which was almost Spanish. He said, “Oh Chris, this is
wonderful.” I said, “Don’t get carried away, it’s only a
bleeding record.” He said, “I’ll bet your agent £5,000 that
this will be No.l in the first week it is released.” I said,
“You shouldn’t do that. People will say, ‘Why didn’t you manage
us if you thought the product was so good?’ It wouldn’t have
worked with Eppy as we were too similar in the way we
thought.
SL: Did you often discuss
things with him?
CC: From time to time. He played
me “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’” by the Righteous Brothers
and said, “I’ve got this for Cilla.” I said, “Do it if you
must, it will be a hit for her but the Righteous Brothers will
overtake her.” It was heartbreaking as she couldn’t sing that
song for nuts. Her best record was “Liverpool Lullaby” where
she actually sounds like a Liverpool girl. I once went in a
snowstorm to the Liverpool Empire with a song that would be
brilliant for her called “Another Heart Is Broken (In The Game
Of Life)”, one I’d written especially for her with all posh
chords on the piano. I thought she’s got to go for this, she
hasn’t had a hit in yonks, and she told me, “I don’t do songs
from cassettes.” How’s she going to hear the bloody thing? Did
she expect me to walk in with a 40-piece orchestra? And she
hasn’t had a hit since.
SL: Then after all those
B-sides, you wrote an A-side, “He’s Got No
Love”.
CC: Ah, but you know what that
tune is. You play that and then play “The Last Time” by the
Rolling Stones. We were naughty boys as I stole the
tune.
SL: But the Stones took it
from James Brown’s “Maybe The Last
Time”.
CC: We’re all the wrong side of
legal then. Aretha Franklin had an album track that I loved
called “Can’t You Just See Me”. We did the backing track and I
loved it, but then I thought, “I’m not getting enough out of
this”, and I put a whole new set of lyrics to it called “I’m
Your Lovin’ Man”. The lyrics are rubbish but I got the
money.
SL: With “What Have They
Done To The Rain” and “Take Me For What I’m Worth”, you were
defining folk-rock.
CC: I admired the belief in “Take
Me For What I’m Worth”. Instead of people saying, “I’m better
than you”, take me for what I’m worth. It’s a very profound
statement and it could have become a gay anthem. We did some
other good songs like that. I loved “Four Strong Winds”, which
I’d got on record by Bobby Bare.
SL: If you were making
these good records, why did you leave the
Searchers?
CC: We were touring South-East
Asia and we ended up in Australia and can you think of a more
daft bill than the Rolling Stones and the Searchers? We
couldn’t compete with Mick Jagger or Keith Richards. They know
how to work an audience so the audience was chanting, “We want
the Stones” while we were on and I couldn’t handle that. I
enjoyed being with Keith as he can play an acoustic guitar like
a dream, wonderful stuff, stuff that I couldn’t possibly do.
The Stones’ success is down to him. Mick Jagger’s lyrics are
usually pretty stupid but there is always good work on the
backing track. Keith asked me to give “Take It Or Leave It” a
whirl. I thought it could be a single but I’d left the band by
then. They did it with their new drummer and it was
pitiful.
SL: So what happened in
Australia?
CC: I hated Australia. I thought
it was a country of dreadful people and I was off me cake. I
fell off the stage and I still have the scar on my leg. (Pull
up trouser leg to show me.) I went out with an Australian girl
who said, “You need some sleep, darling, come home with me.”
She had this marvellous flat, more like half an apartment
building, with a wonderful view over the harbour. During the
night I was drinking coffee and thought I would leave before
she woke up. The windows were open and it was a heavy door. I
opened it but it came back and smashed on this finger. Nearly
took it off, but I went back to them with my bad leg and my bad
finger. I went to my doctor’s bag to find something for the
pain in my finger, and I found that they had emptied the entire
contents, all my tranquillisers, down the lavatory. They
thought they were doing me a favour, and I told them that was
it, I couldn’t take anymore, but they made me finish the tour.
On the way back home, I wrote a Searchers’ song on a sick bag
but it wasn’t used as I left the group. When I got back to
Bootle, they tore the nail out at the
hospital.
SL: You soon found
yourself in opposition to the Searchers as you produced Paul
and Barry Ryan’s “Have You Ever Loved
Somebody”.
CC: I was recording Paul and Barry
Ryan for their stepfather, Harold Davidson, who is Sinatra’s
best mate, so you do what you’re told. Graham Nash had given me
the song and I liked the title, the answer could either be
happy or sad, yes or no. John McNally asked me what I was
working on and I played him the song. He went behind by my back
to the publisher and got a copy for himself. They recorded a
very icky version - the vocal wasn’t that good and it sounds
like there’s a rat running across the snare drum. Paul and
Barry Ryan, who were lovely people, did it much better. I was
recording a Welsh group called Ten Feet and they backed them on
that. I told them that I wanted a drum sound that sounded like
it was coming from the back of a hall to the front and the
guitar was to go (Demonstrates) and it worked and I was well
pleased. Because of the Searchers’ version, the publisher asked
me to hold back on Paul and Barry Ryan, so I went to Harold
Davidson and said, “This is a No.l”. He said, “We’ll have to
move fast. I’ll get them on ‘Ready, Steady, Go’ this Friday and
on such and such next Tuesday”, and he did what he said he’d
do. Tito Burns, who handled the Searchers, said to me, “You
bastard, you bastard”, and I said, “Excuse me, one bastard’s
enough around here.” He said, “You’ve ruined the Searchers.” I
said, “I’ve had nothing to do with them, they had something to
do with me. They’ve tried to be smart arses and it hasn’t
worked.”
SL: Did you do much else
with Paul and Barry
Ryan?
CC: I got friendly with Jackie de
Shannon who used to come and see me in the flat I had round the
corner from Harrod’s. Through her, I got to know Sharon
Sheeley, who suggested that we did a few songs together. She
was living with Gordon Waller at the time, whom I didn’t like
at all - bit of a tearaway and he gave her a hard time. We
wrote a song for Paul and Barry,
“Night-time”.
SL: You also made a single
with Alma Cogan.
CC: Yes, she was lovely, just the
nicest person in the whole wide world. She was very up on the
groups, she loved John Lennon and her best friend was the
manager of the Ad-Lib in Leicester Square, which is where the
bands used to meet. I wrote “Snakes And Snails” for her and she
was made up with it. I got Bobby Ore on drums, John Paul Jones
on bass, Jimmy Page, Vic Flick and Joe Moretti on guitars and
they played out of their skins. She didn’t realise that she’d
have to sing over a heavy rock backing and she loved it. The
backing vocalists were Dusty Springfield, Doris Troy, Rosetta
Hightower from the Orlons, and me. Boy, did we have
fun.
SL: And your solo single
was “Aggravation”, certainly a song with a
message!
CC: Yeah, don’t give me any,
that’s it. It’s a Joe South song and it had a good riff. I had
Jimmy Page, Joe Moretti, John Paul Jones and Vic Flick on that
record. I did my Tom Jones hard rock voice and I was really
loud. I knew I had a voice that would record well but it
wouldn’t have worked with Tony Hatch as he was not a funky
chap. I just did the one single ‘cause I’d had enough. I’d
shown I could do it. That song, “Aggravation”, is on a
compilation, “It Happened Here”, a 10-inch LP that came out on
PRT. There’s “Just A Little Bit” by the Undertakers and then
“Aggravation” by me and they sound great together - like real
rock’n’roll.
SL: You had the idea of
forming a heavy group though, didn’t
you?
CC: Yes, my money was running out
and I had an idea for doing a band called the Roundabout where
you have a nucleus of musicians who come and go with myself as
the lynchpin. I met Jon Lord, who was living in a dump, and I
flew Ritchie Blackmore and his girlfriend over from Germany. I
introduced them to a friend of Vicki Wickham, who was the
editor on “Ready Steady Go!”. He was Tony Edwards, who was in
the clothing business. He thought I wasn’t right for the group
and they left me behind. I met him a few weeks later and he
told me that they had changed their name to Deep Purple. He
arranged for them to record a song that I had been playing to
Jon Lord for months, “Hush” by Joe South, and it became a very
big hit for them in the States.
SL: In the end, you jacked
it all in and took an office
job.
CC: I joined the Inland Revenue in
1969 and it was difficult for me, but the people in the office
were lovely. They went out of their way to be nice to me, and I
stayed there for 19 years. I’m retired now, but my health
suffered. I think it’s the sick building syndrome, but I didn’t
have the money to challenge
them.
SL: I’ve heard some demos
that you made in the mid-70s with a local producer, Bernard
Whitty.
CC: There was an accountant, Alan
Willey, who worked in the Revenue and was one of the best
guitarists I’d ever heard. He asked me to join his band,
Western Union, but I used to jump up and down playing rhythm,
which didn’t go well with all these synthesised instruments. He
recommended Bernard to me and I got a batch of songs together
and put them down. I was living in hope and wanted to do some
demos for Elvis. I was really pleased with “Wait Until
Tomorrow” and “Down To Earth”. I also liked one called “Don’t
Make Love In A Doorway” on which I played 12-string and did a
Gerry Rafferty impression.
SL: And what do you do
now?
CC: My life now centres around the
parish church called the Holy Rosary and the priest, Canon
Bill, is just brilliant. He wants me to get the kids back into
church. It’s simple really. You need to have more fun in church
- have some folk music and some rock’n’roll. I’m also singing
in the Old Roan pub, and it’s a very friendly thing. As soon as
I come in, people say, “Sing ‘Needles And Pins’” and I do it
halfway, up to where the drums come in, and then go into
something else. I especially like doing Tim Hardin songs. I
love “Don’t Make Promises” and I don’t know how Rod Stewart has
missed that one. I produced a version by Michael Aldred from
“Ready Steady Go!”, who died a couple of years ago. I’m still
writing, better than ever actually. If you keep at your craft
for long enough., you’re bound to
improve.
SL: Chris Curtis, thanks
very much for your
time.
CC: I’ve enjoyed this very much.
Will that we be all for now, Dr
Spence?
SPENCER
LEIGH
Visit
Spencer Leigh's web site
Ed. Many
thanks to Spencer for granting us permission to re-print this
fascinating insight into the history of the
Searchers
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