Joe Boyd isn’t the most recognizable
name in music to most people, yet he was responsible for some of the
most important psychedelic folk music of the 1960s including Nick Drake, Shirley Collins, The Incredible String Band and Fairport Convention. In Boyd’s charming and
entertaining memoir White Bicycles, first published in 2006,
he recounts his years as a producer and tour manager to many of these musical acts. The book not only offers keen insights into some
of those unusual pop artists, it's also rich in anecdotal stories that illuminate the period. Boyd was born in Princeton, New
Jersey to a middle-class family. As he reports, “When I was a
eleven, we became the last family on our street…to get a TV set…in
the autumn of 1954 my brother Warwick and I discovered the real
reason we needed it: Bob Horn’s WFIL-TV Bandstand [that] beamed out
of Philadelphia every afternoon after school.” The charisma of Horn
as host and the vintage r&b and early rock ‘n roll to which
Boyd was exposed via the daily high school dance program, changed his
life.
Besides being inspired by
a TV show, later hosted by Dick Clark, there was also a familial connection. His
grandmother, Mary Boxall Boyd, was a concert pianist who taught him
piano as a child. But Boyd preferred to place himself under the instrument and
listen to his grandmother play Mozart. “I would sit under her grand
piano while she practiced. She viewed me as a soul mate…I took
lessons from her until I was thirteen, but never thought of myself as
a musician. Listening…became a part of my being.” In his final
push to a becoming a “producer”, Boyd read the exploits of Ralph
Peer, a field-recording producer who was the first person to
document blues and country artists for OKeh Records in the 1920s. Boyd goes on to describe his times
during his Harvard University days booking Lonnie Johnson for a rare
campus gig that launched the bluesman’s career in 1962 to a new
audience. It was his love of rural blues music that put Boyd in the
forefront of bringing white audiences in touch with virtually
forgotten musicians such as, Sleepy John Estes, the Rev. Gary Davis
and Doc Watson. As a concert producer and promoter, Boyd’s
assertive personality eventually put him into the recording studio.
But he spent most of youth travelling the southern U.S. with a major
stop in New Orleans. Boyd writes, “As jazz moved from swing towards
bebop in the late ‘30s, a group of white fanatics set about
rescuing traditional New Orleans jazz from obscurity, much as we were
trying to do blues…as the fashion shifts and the beat changes, the
intellectuals and wallflowers who have admired the music’s vitality
and originality move in to preserve or resurrect the form.” Such
was the case in New Orleans, demonstrated by Alan and Sandy Jaffe who
established Preservation Hall, and its world famous Jazz Band.