Sunday 19 February 2012

Consett in Concert



By Hazel Plater


It’s not just red dust from the steelworks that has blown out of Consett, County Durham.



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A discussion on our ‘North East Music History’ Facebook group recently, highlighted THREE fascinating stories of talented performers from the town.


  • Freddie ‘Fingers’ Lee

Born around 1940, Blackhill, Consett’s Frederick Cheeseman became a professional musician at the age of 15, starting with skiffle, then becoming successful as rockabilly recording artist Freddie ‘Fingers’ Lee. He played piano, inspired by the legendary Jerry ‘Lee’ Lewis. He also sang but, as is commonplace in the genre, you wouldn’t recognise a North East accent in his faux-American drawl. Firstly performing around the cinema circuit, he did a stint as the keyboardist in Screaming Lord Such and the Savages around 1962/3. Following this, he became part of the house band at Hamburg’s The Star Club, where The Beatles had earlier cut their teeth. From there, he went on to play in the bands of such luminaries as Chuck Berry, Little Richard and Gene Vincent.
No stranger to stage or television in the 70s, he starred, alongside Bill Haley, and Ray Campi, in the 1980 rockabilly documentary Blue Suede Shoes, where he is featured taking an axe to his piano towards the end of a live set.



In 2003, an article on Teddy Boys, The Guardian found Freddie ‘Fingers’ Lee in Consett, still recording and gigging in Europe, but planning to retire.




  • Ruth Copeland

Back in the late 60s/early 70s, word has it that it caused quite a stir locally when, blues/folk singer/songwriter Ruth Copeland from Consett, hooked up with the now legendary Parliament-Funkadelic ‘P-Funk’ collective. At around just 20 years of age she co-wrote and recorded songs with Parliament, including tracks from their 1970 debut album, ‘Osmium’ and subsequent singles ‘Come in Out of the Rain’ and ‘Breakdown’.
She was also a performer under her own name, releasing three albums. Her debut ‘Self Portrait’ was produced in collaboration with George Clinton of Parliament and was released around the same time as Osmium. Many have said that the two records are similar in style and feel. She married Motown music producer Jeffrey Bowen, who had brought her to the Invictus label, initially recording as part of the unsuccessful vocal group, New Play.




Interestingly, she recorded with then toured with the line up of Funkadelic for her second album, ‘I Am What I Am’, after the group had officially disbanded. On this tour she was the opening act for Sly Stone, who, after some difficulties, told her to leave the tour or lose the band. She lost the band. She later signed to RCA and released a third, lighter sounding album, ‘Take me to Baltimore’, which was not the hit that RCA had hoped it would be.




  • Susan Maughan 

Although she moved to Birmingham as a teenager, 60’s pop singer Susan Maughan was born and brought up in Consett. She reached #3 in the UK singles chart with her version of the Marcie Blane song ‘Bobby’s Girl’ in 1962. Although this song was a cover, she, unusually for a female singer at the time, also released a number of songs which she had written herself, having learned to do so while with the Ronnie Hancox Dance band, prior to meeting her agent. She released a great number of singles and albums in the 60s and 70s and was a popular guest on television shows such as Ready Steady Go! and The Morecambe and Wise Show. She continues to tour the 60s nostalgia circuit.






References:

Lee:
Copeland:
Maughan:

With thanks to: Gary Chaplin, Tony Stephenson and Steve Wallace from the NEMH Facebook group

Saturday 11 February 2012

The Anson = Love Shack

By Hazel Plater




You couldn’t make it up.  In the early 1970s, New Jersey born Kate Pierson, the glamorous, bouffant redhead front woman of band The B-52’s, was a barmaid in working class boozer, The Anson pub and hotel, in Wallsend, Tyne and Wear, UK.


The Anson, Wallsend, as it looks today. Image by A McCarron via geograph.com 




Wallsend?  The former shipbuilding town at the end of Roman Emperor Hadrian’s Wall?  Yes, that Wallsend.


She had mentioned this little gem of pop trivia to the music press in the late 70s and early 80s.  Smash Hits magazine, on 6th September 1979 revealed: “Kate Pierson, petite keyboard player and vocalist, had also travelled in Europe.  She once worked as a barmaid in Wallsend in North East England.  "I just wound up there with no money and that was the only job I could get," she recalls.  After six months pulling pints in a foreign land, she returned to America and ended up in Athens”.


In a Rolling Stone interview in 1980 the tale appears again.  Kate is quoted as saying, "I was a barmaid in Newcastle."  Newcastle upon Tyne is the nearest city to lowly Wallsend town.


I knew nothing of these articles however.  I was told this story by my co-author, Carl Taylor, as we drove to an event, promoting our book about Newcastle’s historic Riverside music venue, which was being held in Wallsend library.  I grew up in Wallsend and my grandfather was a regular in The Anson so I was intrigued.  Carl, my senior by several years, used to work in Wallsend in the 1980s.  He remembers that a friend, who he is sadly no longer in touch with, told him Kate Pierson, of The B-52’s had worked as a barmaid in The Anson.  Even then it sounded far-fetched but he remembers going into the pub back then and discovering that the management kept a photo of Kate behind the bar.  They were aware that their former barmaid had gone on to bigger things!


January 2012 and I can’t get this story out of my head.  I urge Carl to try to get back in touch with his friend for more info.  I go for lunch at The Anson and find that the current management have no idea about any now-famous former staff member.  In fact, I get some very strange looks.  I tell Carl this and he looks to investigate further, having not managed to hook up with the friend.  He finds the Rolling Stone article online and then Kate Pierson’s Facebook.  He posts on her wall:


“Hi Kate Did you work in a bar here in Newcastle before the B52's formed? Can you remember which one?”


And just over a week later, we’re into February now, she replies (it appears her ‘n’ key isn’t working):


“The a son hotel a d pub in wallsend on Tyne”.


So, from the horse’s mouth, so to speak!  I ring the The Anson pub and tell them.  They are amazed.  I post this lovely little tale on in the ‘North East Music History’ Facebook group, on my own Facebook timeline and on Twitter.  The crowd goes wild.  This then leads to me tweeting Kate, @THEKATEPIERSON.  Her ‘n’ key is working again, or she’s on a different device:


Me:  "What do you remember about The Anson pub in Wallsend? Did you actually live there? Thanks x"

A: "yes! First I lived with “ old Mary” -she was a real character -then had “bedsitter” apt"


Me: "What year was this? I'm from Wallsend and my grandfather drank in The Anson in the 70s!"

A: "it was 1971 or 1972? Was his name Gus? There was a Gus -t"

Me: "No, he was Dick Bowden. I was born in 73 so I just missed you! Thanks for the info - North East Music History!"


Kate Pierson, of the B52’s. Image by aresauburn via Flickr

I didn’t hear back if she remembered my grandfather, so I guess not. 
So there you go Wallsend. Some much needed glamour for you.  And a lost snippet of pop trivia rediscovered.
 
The North East Music History Facebook group is at: http://www.facebook.com/groups/northeastmusichistory/
 


 
References:

What We're About

Welcome to this brand new blog!  We are North East Music History - a group of people who are interested in preserving the history of music in the North East of England, UK.  We share our knowledge and information informally via our North East Music History Facebook group: http://www.facebook.com/groups/northeastmusichistory/  .


We seek to improve knowledge and understanding of North East music history, educating local residents and other interested parties about North East music venues, the bands that played, the record stores and other hangouts and the culture associated with them, across all musical genres and eras.  


Blog posts covering some of the fascinating stories brought to light in our Facebook group will follow here soon. 


I, Hazel Plater, admin of this blog, don't intend to write all the posts myself.  See, it says 'we' up above!  Please send your well written and fully researched blog posts (please see my first posting for a style guide) via Facebook:   http://www.facebook.com/hazel.plater   and you will be given full credit for your contribution. Look forward to reading your submissions!