“Why don’t we form a skiffle group?”
“Yeah, great...” After five minutes I said, “What’s a skiffle group?”
(Recalled by Kenney Jones, drummer of the Faces)
“Yeah, great...” After five minutes I said, “What’s a skiffle group?”
(Recalled by Kenney Jones, drummer of the Faces)
This quote taken from Andy Neill’s massive biography of the Faces, Had Me a Real Good Time: The Faces Before, During and After (Omnibus Press, 2011), pretty much sums up the whole attitude of the members of what many called the second greatest rock band in the world. (You can guess who is considered the greatest.) I saw them in concert only one time, thirty-nine years ago, at Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto. They were drunk, and loose, and fun, and they rocked the joint. Rod Stewart, Ron Wood, Ronnie Lane, Ian McLagan and Kenney Jones came together in 1970 and left a legacy of only five albums, but they cut a swath through rock’n’roll that has never fully healed.
The book is indeed huge. Someone (might’ve been Ron Wood) described it as “Bible-sized” and it is clumsy to hold, and hard to read. Another recent biography of session musician Nicky Hopkins (And on Piano…Nicky Hopkins by Julian Dawson) covers much of the same ground and is more elegantly written. But that just shows the difference between pianist Hopkins and the Faces. Hopkins came to the studio on time, did his work for as long as it took, and went home for a cuppa with his Mum. The Faces, well…didn’t do that.
The reason for the length and clumsiness has a lot to do with the story Andy Neill has to tell. It all starts (like most of these bios of British bands) with the Germans dropping bombs on England and families in disarray. Trouble is, with the Faces, there are simply too many characters. We start with Ronnie Lane and Jimmy Winston, and then switch to Kenney Jones, Steve Marriott, Ian McLagan, and bounce over to a bit about Rod Stewart, and then Ronnie Wood. Neill adds a dollop of Jeff Beck, a touch of Long John Baldry, some Rolling Stones, and then drops in Nicky Hopkins. It’s all so complicated.
The Faces |
Many errors and longstanding rumours are corrected, or put to rest in Neill’s tome. There are footnotes galore, a bibliography, discography, tour guide, and many photos to illustrate each permutation of the band. It’s the kind of book that can be dipped into here and there, not unlike the Bible. The club scene in London, shady managers (including Don Arden who kept them on salary and Andrew Loog Oldham who signed them to his Immediate label), and a description of the recording technique known as “phase-shifting” which created the psychedelic effect on “Itchycoo Park” (which was the Small Faces’ only North American hit). It’s all here. In fact, it’s hard to imagine that there’s any information Neil hasn’t included.
Ron Wood and Rod Stewart, more recently |
The Faces reformed in 2010 with Wood, Jones and McLagan adding Sex Pistols’ bassist Glen Matlock and Simply Red’s Mick Hucknall on vocals. Neill’s book concludes with a report from their performance. He quotes a review, “If you closed your eyes [Hucknall] could almost have been Stewart circa 1975. The rest of the Faces were authentically shambolic throughout. Endings were botched and verses missed…” Sounds exactly like the night I saw them at the Gardens, Sept.7, 1972.
Faces performing in 1971 (Photo by Steve Caraway) |
That day began like any other day. I packed up my bag and went off to the university where I was studying. My brother called the Fine Art Dept. and asked them to page me. “I have an extra ticket for the Faces,” he said, “Ya want it?” I met him at the highway and we hitch-hiked to Toronto. We rode in the cab of an 18-wheeler! At Maple Leaf Gardens we sat halfway back, Savoy Brown (supposed to be the opening act) didn’t get across the border. Fleetwood Mac was announced as a last minute replacement, but was just as quickly cancelled, so we were surprised to hear that White Trash would open. Without Edgar Winter! It was a Jerry LaCroix-led White Trash. They were loud, not particularly good. Then they left and the Faces stumbled on-stage, obviously under the influence, obviously having a good time. They too were loud, but they put on one of the best shows I’ve ever seen. I tell this story because it summarizes the problems of writing about this band. It’s not simple.
Andy Neill had quite a task to pull together all this information, all these people, all the various permutations, so if it’s confusing and a bit clumsy to really imagine how he felt. Neill ultimately ends up with the definitive story. The Faces virtually defined what it meant to be a band in the '70s. They could party, they could drink, and they could rock like there was no tomorrow. They could be clumsy, confusing, and they could be inspired. Neill captures every aspect. Had Me a Real Good Time is perfectly titled. We had us a real good time that night. If you care about the band, its members; if the music matters to you; or even if you want to find out why it mattered to us, Neill’s history will shed light on it. Just be sure to have some Faces music close at hand, maybe the Ron Wood anthology, Rod’s Mercury records, and Jeff Beck’s Truth, because if you want a real good time you’ll have to be listening to their music while you’re reading about their life.
Andy Neill had quite a task to pull together all this information, all these people, all the various permutations, so if it’s confusing and a bit clumsy to really imagine how he felt. Neill ultimately ends up with the definitive story. The Faces virtually defined what it meant to be a band in the '70s. They could party, they could drink, and they could rock like there was no tomorrow. They could be clumsy, confusing, and they could be inspired. Neill captures every aspect. Had Me a Real Good Time is perfectly titled. We had us a real good time that night. If you care about the band, its members; if the music matters to you; or even if you want to find out why it mattered to us, Neill’s history will shed light on it. Just be sure to have some Faces music close at hand, maybe the Ron Wood anthology, Rod’s Mercury records, and Jeff Beck’s Truth, because if you want a real good time you’ll have to be listening to their music while you’re reading about their life.
'The Ron Wood Anthology' ???
ReplyDelete'Five Guys ...' was put together by Mac R.I.P.