THE GIGS THAT GOT AWAYJerry
Lee Lewis was due to play at the
Gaumont on 21 June 1958, but this date
was part of the schedule for the tour
where The Killer was sent home in
disgrace after marrying his teenaged
cousin. The Treniers took his place as
headliners.
Eddie
Cochran was due to have appeared at
the Gaumont Theatre on 6 May 1960 as
part of his double header tour with
Gene Vincent. He was of course
tragically killed in a car crash on
the A4 near Chippenham in April, and
was replaced by Jerry Keller.
I once
heard a rumour once that the Sex
Pistols had Salisbury pencilled in as
part of their anonymous ‘SPOTS’ tour
in 1977 – can you imagine the
reaction?.
Another rumour but who
knows? The story goes that the
Students Union where offered Dexys
Midnight Runners for the College of
Technology’s 1980 Xmas dance. Dexys
had a huge smash that year with ‘Geno’
but the Union bods opted to go with
the now unmentionabale Gary Glitter.
Few tickets were sold and the gig was
pulled.
Black Grape and Dodgy were
due to headline an open-air bash at
Hudsons Field in the early 1990s. The
licence application was turned down.
Ryan Adams was due to play a show
at Stonehenge as part of the 2007
Salisbury International Arts Festival.
The show was cancelled because
organisers hadn't anticipated the high
demand for tickets.....for the first
popular music event at Stonehenge in
more than twenty years.....like,
hellooooo.....
SONG AND ALBUM
TITLES AND
SLEEVES
'Salisbury Plain' is an old folk song
recorded by Mr Fox, Saffron
Summerfield, Elmer Gantrys Velvet
Opera and Martin Carthy and Dave
Swarbrick. Another folk song 'The Earl
of Salisbury' has been recorded by
Pentangle, John Renbourn and The BBC
Symphony Orchestra.
Richie Havens
released an album called 'Stonehenge'
(Verve VLP 6021 - 1969)
Ten Years
After took the heads obsession with
the tumbledown circle a step further
and released the album ‘Stonedhenge’
(Deram DML 1029 - 1969)
Uriah Heep
released an album called ‘Salisbury’
(released on Vertigo 6360 028 in 1971)
Mike Oldfield recorded a track
entitled 'Woodhenge'
Spinal Tap
recorded a song
called ‘Stonehenge’
The Levellers
recorded ‘The Battle Of The
Beanfield’, about a confrontation
between police and travellers at an
early 80s Stonehenge Festival.
Shots of Stonehenge have appeared on
the following covers:
Out Of The
Past Vol 1 (A Jot Records doo wop
compilation album)
The Association
(album by The Association) (Warner
Brothers W(S) 1800 - 1969)
Holy
Magick (album by Graham Bond) (Vertigo
6360 021 – 1971)
The Soft
Boys' 'Only The Stones Remain' 7"
single (Armageddon AS 029 - 1981) and
album (Armageddon BYE 1 - 1982)
Lola
(7" single by
Cud)
There was an obscure 1960s
American band named The Druids of
Stonehenge. They have had an EP
reissued on Sundazed records.
THE BEATLES ON THE PLAIN
From 3 to 5 May 1965 the Beatles were
filming part of the ‘Help!’ movie at
Knighton Down near Larkhill. The fabs
booked in at the Antrobus Arms in
Amesbury at 11.20pm on Sunday the 2nd
and departed during the afternoon of
Thursday the 6th. A lot of filming was
completed including an open- air mimed
performance of 'I Need You' amongst
troops from the real-life 3 Division,
which was at the time using the Plain
for exercises. The Antrobus recently
underwent a change in ownership and
the new people have revamped one of
the rooms with a Beatles theme.As well
as the film, various stills have
appeared of The Beatles on The Plain,
including on a French EP cover that
can be seen at
www.rateyourmusic.com/list/snellius/bea
tles__french_discography___eps
THE IVY LEAGUE AT THE
CATHEDRAL
Gordon Griffiths: ‘In
December 1965 the Ivy League, who’d had
one or two hits, issued a Christmas EP
on the Piccadilly label, called ‘The
Holly and The Ivy League’. A
promotional film, probably for Top of
the Pops, was recorded in the Cloisters
in the Cathedral. I remember going to
watch the filming as a (young) reporter
for the Salisbury
Times, which carried a picture and
short piece. It was a grey, misty
morning, suggesting it was during the
preceding November or October.
http://www.oocities.com/fabgear6366/ivyl
eague.htm links to a page which lists
the tracks on the EP'.
More From
Gordon: ‘I've been able to check it
out, and I'm glad to say the memory was
pretty accurate - Searching the
Salisbury Times for something else I
found my brief report, appearing in
the "Here and There" column, written
under the nom de plume Christopher,
with two photos. It is headed (quite
inaccurately!) "Guitars and drums in
Cloisters" and says the Ivy League were
filming two carols, The Holly and the
Ivy and Good King Wenceslas, for the
Christmas Day edition of Day by Day
(the Southern TV news magazine
programme introduced by Barry Westwood,
I think). The date of the paper was 10
December 1965 (which would have been a
Friday) and it says the recording was
the previous Monday. So I was a month
or so out, but that's not bad after 45
years!’
SOME STUFF
THAT WON'T FIT IN
ELSEWHERE
23558538 Gunner
Ravenscroft J (that's John Peel to you
and I) was one of many thousands to
have completed a part of his National
Service with the Royal Artillery at
Larkhill.
One of the promo clips for
John and Yoko's 'Happy Xmas - War Is
Over' includes some footage of the
Cathedral.
Between leaving Deep
Purple in 1973 and forming his own
band in 1975, Ian Gillan concentrated
on business matters including
investing in a motorcycle business in
Salisbury
Mark Price (later of All
About Eve) was the kid seen pushing
his bike in the ‘Hovis’ advert filmed
at Gold Hill in Shaftesbury
Billy Bragg’s song ‘Island Of No
Return’ includes the lines ‘After all
this it won’t be the same, messing
about on Salisbury Plain’.
Andrew
Collins’ biography of Billy Bragg
(‘Still Suitable For Miners’) makes a
passing reference to a ‘dirty weekend’
in Salisbury (or was it ‘a bunk up’ –
I can’t remember now).
Kate
Bush's 'Sat In Your Lap' has a lyric
about going to a monastery in Salisbury
or something or other.
The BRIT award
presented to the KLF for ‘Best British
Group’ of 1992, was later ‘found’
buried in a field near Stonehenge.
Whilst on probation in November 2007,
Pete Doherty of Babyshambles and ex-
Libertines fame paid a visit to the
Sharp Practice tattoo parlour. He
wanted an anchor done but the shop
staff were too busy to fit him in
without an appointment. He later
visited the Kludo bar where he stuck to
tomato juice.
Former Blur bassist and modern day
blessed cheesemaker Alex James was a
panel member on BBC One's 'Question
Time' recorded at the City Hall on 24
January 2008 and broadcast later that
very same evening.
REM's critically
acclaimed 2008 album 'Accelerate'
includes a track called 'Living Well
Is The Best Revenge'. The song title
is taken from a line by George
Herbert, the Metaphysical poet who was
the Parson of Bemerton between 1630
and 1633.
In July 2010 Status Quo
filmed the video for a revamped version
of In The Army Now at Bulford Camp –
all proceeds from the single will go to
charity: the British Forces Foundation
and Help For Heroes.
In the extras on
the DVD version of the rather
brilliant 'Oil City Confidential',
Wilko Johnson makes a passing reference
to Salisbury when talking about a pre-
fame Dr Feelgood being enlisted
wholesale to back Heinz on a tour of
the west country.