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12th
PIPELINE CONVENTION 2004 -
by
Rob Bradford
Within ten minutes of arriving at the International
Students House
it was obvious that it was going to be another
"Twangtastic
Day"…
Within
a very short space of time I'd already spoken to Bill Bryan, Steve
& Helen
Terrell, Uncle Alan & Uncle Dave, Clive Poole, Jim Nugent,
George Geddes,
Paul Keyes, Trev Faull, Tony Hoffman, Maurice Preece, Kevin Wootten and
many
other fans/collectors from our beloved instro world. Phew!! It was
already like
an instrumental Who's Who and that was all before the enticing
CD/record stalls
which included some of those already mentioned plus MoviMusic with the
delightful Jolanda, Gerry Woodage's Ventures pitch, Shadsfax, Leo's Den
and Bob
"Bim-Bam" Thomas. OK I admit it, I am an instrumental CD-aholic.
Before the first group was onstage I'd already spent £100! The hall was
heaving
with numerous other poor souls who were similarly afflicted. Time to
form a
mutual support group, eh?
![]() The Theatre |
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It's
also great to mingle with instrumental stars past and present - all of
whom were
willing to stop and chat. Amongst the celebrities were John Barber
(Scorpions),
Warren Bennett (Vibratos), Mo Foster (session bassist to the stars),
Alan
Jackson (Vintage), Ivor Knight (Scorpions), Mike O'Neill (Nero!!) and
Dick Plant
(Vibratos). In addition, of course, the group members who were
performing that
day were also wandering around the venue.

Mike
O'Neill
(Nero & The Gladiators),
Peter Knight
(The Moontrekkers)
&
Ivor Knight
(The Scorpions)
(photo Steve Terrell
2004)
LOST
4 WORDS
As
a
new venture for 2004, Lost 4 Words took over the guitar room for the
afternoon.
Incredibly, they had agreed to play for virtually two hours with only a
very
short break. They had prepared a set list of no fewer than 52
instrumentals and
had sheaves of forms at the back of the room for fans to submit
requests. They
needn't have worried. In the event Lost 4 Words played an incredible 49
different instrumentals, which is a staggering achievement. They
decided to omit
their three Duane Eddy numbers on the basis that there was plenty of
that being
provided by the Duane Eddy Convention in general and the Twang Gang
specifically. They still played 52 numbers as they repeated a few items
for fans
who arrived for their second set.

Lost
4 Words in the Guitar Room
(photo Steve Terrell
2004)
These
guys certainly looked the part with their snazzy matching Hawaiian
shirts and
with two guitarists sporting red Fenders. Full marks to them for an
incredibly
varied set list including seldom played covers from such diverse
artists as the
John Barry Seven, The Dakotas, Joe Brown, The Rocking Rebels, Dick
Dale, The
Krew Kats, The Outlaws and many more. Matt Saunders (drums) and Tim
Izzard
(bass) always provided a rock solid foundation upon which guitarists
Paul Morris
(rhythm) and Jim Wootten (lead) built admirably.
Tim
and Paul made all of the announcements and the group banter, badinage,
asides
and wisecracks were often hilarious. They certainly seemed to be
enjoying
themselves and made sure that the audience did too. All of their surf
numbers
were uniformly excellent with the group donning cool Raybans for
exhilarating
romps through The Tornadoes' Bustin' Surfboards, The Pyramids'
Penetration and
other classics. During these numbers Paul was "surfing" on a suitably
psychedelic wedge!!
Other
highlights from their eclectic set included Hit And Miss, with Paul
cleverly
replicating the pizzicato strings of the JB7 original by playing his
guitar
through a synth simulator device, a truly rousing Ghost Riders In The
Sky (which
received a tremendous ovation) and a superb Hava Nagila (even more
resounding
response). You want more? How about a very ambitious arrangement of The
Good,
The Bad And The Ugly which Jim turned into a guitar workout tour de
force. A
fiery Wild Weekend was excellent and their original Lost 4 Words Theme
is a
tasty dual guitar item. Misirlou was a joyous out and out blasting
thrash. Also
full marks to Paul for an outstanding version of Albatross when he took
a rare
turn on lead guitar.
The
audience fluctuated between 30 and 100+ during the afternoon and really
I can't
praise the group too highly for their stamina, skill and great sense of
fun.
Thanks guys, you did a fantastic job. One final point, when will there
be a Lost
4 Words CD?
![Text Box: LOST 4 WORDS: The Rise And Fall Of Flingle Bunt / Theme From Shane / Dream Of The West / Bustin' Surfboards / Riders In The Sky / The Mexican / Tequila / The Good, The Bad & The Ugly / Walk Don't Run / In The Chattanooga Mood / Hit & Miss / Man Of Mystery / The Stranger / Sunset Riders / Lost 4 Words Theme / Miserlou / Hava Nagila / Pipeline / Magic Carpet / Samovar / Wonderful Land / Shazam / Quatermasster's Stores / Peter Gunn / Kon-Tiki / Yellow Jacket / Diamonds / Scarlett O'Hara / Apache / FBI / Wipe Out / Valley Of The Sioux / James Bond Theme / Theme For Young Lovers / Dance On / Secret Agent Man / Shindig / Sleepwalk / The Savage / Albatross / Telstar / Guitar Boogie / Theme From A Summer Place / Time Is Tight / Red River Rock / Green Onions / Penetration / Just For Jerry / Wild Weekend / Hava Nagila (reprise) / The Mexican (reprise) / Apache (reprise) [omitted numbers: 40 Miles Of Bad Road / The Marauder / Rebel Rouser]](conven3.gif)
ALAN
JONES & FRIENDS
Great
idea - take a former Shadows bassist and form a group around him with
some
really talented musicians. Yup - great idea and it worked a treat!
Alan
Jones is undoubtedly one of the UK's all time great bassists. He
started out
playing lead guitar (very good he is too!) until falling under the
spell of a
certain Mr J Harris whereupon he switched to bass. Alan became part of
the
Johnny Howard Group which led to numerous radio (& TV?)
appearances and then
on to sessions. In the 1970s/80s Alan Jones was one of the UK's leading
session
men, playing on literally thousands of session tracks including
(apparently) no
fewer than 33 No.1 hits. Between 1978 and 1989 Alan toured and recorded
with The
Shadows until a serious car accident curtailed his career and almost
ended his
life. By the time that Alan was fully recovered, the session scene was
all but
over and the Shadows had broken up. However, the genial Mr Jones was
part of
Barry Gibson's Local Heroes and is part of Bruce's Moonlight Shadows.
He is now
a regular at Pipeline and many other conventions.

Alan Jones & Friends -
backstage -
(photo Steve Terrell
2004)
What
of Alan's Friends? Ian McCutcheon has been playing guitar for well over
40 years
and he is a very accomplished player. Ian's outstanding series of
Shadows
Workout CDs provide superb backing tracks for those who wish to emulate
Hank B
Marvin. I always marvel at Ian's skill as he quite often (courtesy of
overdubbing) plays lead, rhythm, bass, second guitar etc. Drummer
Martin Verrill
is a lifelong Shadows fan and he is well known to us as Legend's
drummer. Rhythm
guitarist John Woodward is a lifelong fan of Bruce Welch and Amy Harper
(keyboards) has backed various ex-Shads as well as providing keyboards
for
numerous instrumental combos.
For
the purposes of the usual Pipeline balance, Alan Jones &
Friends were there
to provide fans with a healthy dose of Shadows instrumentals. This they
proceeded to do with considerable aplomb. A feisty Flingle Bunt set the
tone
straight away with the whole band really fired up and immediately
afterwards
they tore into Man Of Mystery complete with screaming guitar solos.
David Martin
maintains that the rhythm part for Temptation is even more murderous
than The
Savage. Well, John Woodward was more than equal to the task as the
group
delivered another top class performance.
The
affable Alan Jones made the introductions in his genuinely modest and
laid back
fashion. Wonderful Land offered the chance to slow the tempo down a
little and
also to introduce Amy Harper on keyboards. Dressed in the obligatory
black top
and black jeans, Amy sat quietly in the background - but she is an
excellent
keyboard player who fulfils her role admirably.
Ian McCutcheon demonstrated that he has excellent ballad technique in stark contrast to his fiery playing during Man Of Mystery and Temptation. A superb Gonzalez saw the group rocking out yet again whilst the tricky Thing-Me-Jig enabled both Ian and Alan to show off their respective chops. Somewhere was simply beautiful with John Woodward's tastefully crafted arpeggios underscoring Ian's super lead guitar work. John's rhythm wrist was tested again on The Savage as the group blazed away in fine style. Well done Martin Verrill for replicating Tony's drum figures on this one. Amy returned to recreate the Norrie Paramor strings on Atlantis to good effect.
Then
we were treated to I Wish I Could Shimmy… before Alan excelled himself
with a
magnificent version of Nivram. Cricket Bat Boogie isn't a simple number
to play,
but the band made it sound easy. Argentina was a tour de force by all
concerned
- a fine group performance and very moving indeed. A bouncy Foot Tapper
was
followed by a wild Riders In The Sky and that was topped by an even
wilder FBI.
Alan Jones & Friends finished with - what else? - Apache. The
rapturous
applause was testament both to the enduring popularity of Alan Jones
and the
skill, enthusiasm and commitment of his Friends. Thanks Alan, Ian,
Martin, John
and Amy - you made a lot more friends (& fans) courtesy of your
excellent
performances.
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THE
PACKABEATS
Every
year there seems to be a Pipeline exclusive. This year was no exception
with an
appearance by the complete original line-up of The Packabeats who had
last
appeared onstage together in 1964! Actually lead guitarist Malcolm
Lenny was at
pains to point out that drummer Ian "Stoo" Stewart had founded the
original group and that most of the onstage line-up didn't actually
join The
Packabeats until mid-1961 after the release of Gypsy Beat. Well, the
line-up
that played between 1961 and 1964 is original enough for me!

The Packabeats -
Malcolm
Lenny turned out to be a brilliant front man as he introduced the
various
instrumentals. He mixed humorous anecdotes with laconic witticisms and
self-
deprecating personal put-downs. Not only that, he revealed himself to
be a
lead/rhythm guitarist of considerable talent. It's a mark of confidence
for any
act to start their set with their biggest hit. The Packabeats did just
that as
they faithfully re-created the chunky sound of their minor classic
Gypsy Beat.
The group obviously had high hopes of further chart success when they
signed up
with Joe Meek's RGM Sound outfit. Indeed, their single Evening In Paris
/ The
Traitors fully deserved to be a big hit. To long-standing instro fans
it remains
as one of the finest double-sided releases never to chart. This was an
excellent
live performance with the entire group on top form.
Chattanooga
Choo Choo was also splendid, being nothing like The Shadows' familiar
arrangement. No, this was highly spirited with jazzy tinges and
inflections.
Malcolm switched to a simpler, heavier style of playing to faithfully
capture
the mood of Duane Eddy's The Lonely One. In similar vein was 40 Miles
Of Bad
Road - Ian Stewart thought that the title could be updated to M40 Miles
Of Bad
Road!
Versatility
was perhaps The Packabeats' trademark as they now delivered a spirited
Walk
Don't Run which mixed elements of Chet Atkins, Johnny Smith, John Barry
and The
Ventures and yet still sounded fresh and original. With the group
lending
excellent support, Malcolm switched to a kind of simple wah-wah /
chorus effect
to come up with a lively romp through Teensville. Referring to Santo
&
Johnny's Sleepwalk, Malcolm revealed that The Packabeats always
preferred the
follow up release Teardrop. This was a beautifully crafted and
sensitive
performance of great style and charm.
By
way of contrast again, the guys delivered a truly rockin' Tennessee
Waltz which
was loosely constructed, according to Malcolm, in the style of Bill
Black's
Combo. Next up was a version of Dream Lover which was combination of
the actual
release and how the group originally envisaged it. Definitely all the
better for
that! They may have preferred Teardrop to Sleepwalk, but The Packabeats
were
obviously very fond of the latter too as they presented their smooth
and silky
version to the Pipeline audience. Ringing the changes again, the group
powered
their way through a punchy version of Diamonds, offering Ian Stewart
the chance
to showcase his impressive Tony Meehan chops.
Equally
impressive was bassist Ted Harvey's performance as he played the lead
throughout
on the bass guitar. Excellent! It seems that almost everyone who played
guitar
in the early 1960s was a fan of Buddy Holly. The Packabeats were no
exception
and they duly paid homage with a rocking instrumental version of
Buddy's Rave
On.
Equally
fine and just as rockin' was Packabeat. This was the B-side of Dream
Lover and
many people, including the Packabeats themselves, felt that "Packabeat"
should have been the A-side. Again, most fans regard the fabulous The
Traitors
as The Packabeats' finest recording as well as being amongst the upper
echelon
of Joe Meek's instrumental productions. Well… Ian, Malcolm, Ted and
Derrick
were really on fire as they blasted their way through an absolutely
fantastic
live version which received a huge ovation from the audience. The
Packabeats
ended as they had begun by revisiting Gypsy Beat.
The
group also mentioned their vocalist Tony Holland (who could not feature
at an
instrumental convention). They stressed that they were never purely an
instrumental group and always appeared as Tony Holland &The
Packabeats. Tony
has serious health problems at the moment and I'm sure that all
Pipeliners would
like their best wishes & hopes for a recovery to be passed on
to him.
The group appeared to be visibly touched by the genuinely warm response to their appearance. To be honest, I don't really know what my own expectations were before The Packabeats took to the stage. Whatever they were - they were certainly exceeded! They had a totally unique sound and style all of their own, which is quite an achievement in itself. Judging by this performance, I hope that the group don't hang up their instruments for good just yet.

"1961"
Wow,
what a musical pedigree these guys have! Ronnie Gustafsson is well
known to all
instrumental fans as a lead guitarist par excellence specialising in
that early
'60s Shadows sound. The original "1961" group was rightly hailed as a
classic instrumental incarnation. However, the group disbanded not long
after
the 1995 Pipeline Convention. Ronnie recently revived "1961" and he
has assembled a top class set of players. For starters rhythm guitarist
Stefan
Linder (a staunch Shadows fan) is a graduate of both Stockholm's Royal
Academy
Of Music and the M.I. of Los Angeles. He is a professional session
player and
guitar teacher. Drummer Roger Palm is also a top session player and
drum/percussion teacher. He has played on over 4,000 recordings
including many
of Abba's greatest hits! Bassist Jan Bergman took up the instrument in
1963,
being inspired by Jet Harris. He too is a graduate of Stockholm's Royal
Academy
Of Music and he is one of Sweden's top session players. As I said,
quite a
musical pedigree.

1961 -
Let
me say at the outset that these guys were absolutely superb - sheer
class!
Naturally they all have years of training and vast experience at the
very
highest musical levels. Because of this their performances were
ultra-tight,
spot on and (apparently) effortless! As Ronnie said to me: "These guys
read
music as easily as you or I would read a newspaper."
"1961"
opened up with the first of many, many originals from the prolific and
awesomely
talented Lennart Clerwall. He really does have the knack of writing
material
which sounds as though it dates from those halcyon days of the early
'60s.
Second Street is a close relative of The Boys and the superb rhythm
section
urged Ronnie's classic twanging lead along in fine style. Fairytale is
a brand
new Clerwall number - a lovely guitar ballad in the grand manner of the
instrumental tradition.
Sticking
to the early Shadows era, Ronnie and "1961" opted next for a fine
reading of The Stranger. Spanish Tango (another masterful composition
from
Lennart Clerwall) is one of my favourite "1961" tracks. The
fantastically tight, taut and percussive playing from bass, drums and
rhythm
allowed Ronnie to develop his flowing, romantic lead (contrasting with
stately
clipped passages) to wonderful effect in a performance of great
eloquence.
Shazam, of course, gave all of the group members the opportunity to
show off
their mini solos very slickly indeed. These guys have all taken part in
literally thousands of sessions, recordings and performances - yet
there was a
great sense of fun and stylish energy in their playing.

The
Flight To Paradise has a beginning and ending in the style of My
Resistance Is
Low whilst the middle eight is loosely based around one of those
maddening
polkas - the original title of which escapes me. (As 1950s children in
the
Midlands we used to sing it to the repetitive lyric of "You can't put
your
muck in our dustbin, because our dustbin's full!" Maybe one of our
knowledgeable readers will be able to put me out of my Oompah misery!)
Flowers,
Raki-Taki, Scary Town, My Lonely Heart and Sea Shell were all brand new
numbers
from the Clerwall brothers, Lennart and Hans. They were all quality
items and I
believe that "1961" have plans to record a new CD so hopefully all of
these tracks will be on there. By turns they were dramatic, powerful,
gently
wistful, yearning and nostalgic - and all points in between.
Perfidia
and The Frightened City were mighty fine too with the former
illustrating the
skilful use of dynamics and phrasing to masterly effect whilst the
latter was
both frenzied and technically brilliant.
Ronnie Gustafsson
- (photo Steve Terrell
2004)
Hooray For The Brave Soldiers was
splendidly played but, for me at least, it's one of Lenny Clerwall's
very few
nondescript compositions. Riding Cossack has many other titles in the
UK: Song
Of The Plains, Cavalry Of The Steppes, Samovar etc, etc. Very
atmospheric and
tasteful playing from "1961", and they rounded off their set with a
rousing FBI.
Last
year there was a poll to judge who came closest to achieving "That
Sound" of Hank and The Shadows ca.1960-1962. The main contenders were
judged to be Roy from FBI, Colin Pryce-Jones, Phil Kelly and Ronnie
Gustafsson.
Listening to Ronnie at Pipeline (and listening to my "1961" CDs again)
there are definitely times when you could swear that it was indeed Hank
playing.
Sure it helps to have the correct guitar, amplifier, echo box etc, etc.
But what
Ronnie also has is immense talent and a genuine commitment to the
music.
I
spent quite a lot of time talking the members of "1961" on the social
gathering the night before Pipeline. What struck me most was simply how
avuncular and modest they were. Great musicians and really pleasant
people to be
with. Come to think of it - what we had from every member of "1961"
was virtually an instrumental master class. Thanks guys. Oh, by the
way, Ronnie
Gustaffson is a great fan of Tommy Cooper - I just thought you'd all
like to
know that.
Two
years ago The Charades were virtually unknown in the UK, but boy they
completely
blew us away at Pipeline 2002 with devastating effect. I was an
immediate
convert and quickly wanted to obtain all of the group's recordings.
Good as they
(the CDs) are, it's surely the group's live performances that are
simply
awesome. I would agree with what many long-time fans and aficionados
said in the
blurb of their Action CD: that The Charades were simply sensational.
I
was
able to spend some time chatting to the band and their delightful
entourage
(managers, wives, partners, relatives, friends etc.) at The Bonnington
Hotel the
night before Pipeline. Like so many of the bands I have met they were
all
charming, friendly, funny, modest and enthusiastic.
Surprisingly
they were also a little worried. Worried? The source of their concern
was that
two years previously they were not headliners and there was little or
no
audience expectation, hence, to some extent, no pressure. They then
delivered
one of the greatest performances ever witnessed in 10 years of Pipeline
Conventions. Now it was 2004 and The Charades were top of the bill,
this time
around would they still be able to live up to everyone's high
expectations? I
think it's fair to say that the answer was a resounding "Yes!!"

The
Charades - Hannu & Jari -
In
2002 they pinned everyone to their seats in seconds with the opening
blast of
Hawaii Five-0. 2004 was no different as Jari Moberg again thrashed out
that
ultra fast frenzied opening drum roll (as very few players can) and the
group
tore into More in impressive style. Now, the original is a beautiful
fairly slow
tender ballad but, as ever, The Charades have turned it into a
rip-roaring
powerhouse instrumental. The Ventures recorded a fine version of
Slaughter On 10th.
Avenue, but what a fantastic version this was. As Dave Burke attests
"They
match, and sometimes even eclipse, their own
heroes." They certainly did with a vicious, thrilling
interpretation. It was their winning formula: basically the Ventures
arrangement
but simply (!!??) played louder and faster.
The
great skill of this entire band is their amazingly tight ensemble
playing. Bass,
drums, lead and rhythm are always exactly spot on, even when the guys
are
playing at breakneck speed. Hannu is an outstanding player, but he is
made to
sound even better because of the fantastic musicians providing the
backing.
Leo's rock-solid pulsating bass lays a great foundation but he's also
talented
enough to add little runs, fills and variations and he really throws
himself
into his bass playing. Drummer Jari Moberg is a powerfully built guy.
He uses
his strength allied to great technique to thrash out his percussive
barrage of
sound. It may be the wrong genre, but he's a kind of John Bonham of the
instro
world. I'm sure that his heroes are Mel Taylor, Brian Bennett, Tony
Meehan
(& probably many others). The fact is that he's fast and he's
very strong.
His playing is enormously energetic. Finally, the rhythm playing.
Incredibly
fast, tight, crisp and propulsive. Where do these guys come from? In
2002 it was
the fantastic Marko Rahikainen. Unfortunately he couldn't make Pipeline
2004 and
was replaced by Samu Wuori - who was equally impressive. Again, to
quote Dave
Burke "Together they are magnificent." Amen to that. But, back to the
music.

The
Charades -
Who
would dare to turn Shirley Bassey's gloriously kitsch, smouldering
torch song
Hey Big Spender into an instrumental? The very thought of it is simply
outrageous but, guess what? The Charades pull off the impossible. It
really did
work! The Shadows' Geronimo is seldom covered and The Charades give it
a decent
makeover in their own inimitable fashion. Changing Dimensions is a
great
original simply drenched in monstrous echo and dripping with cavernous
reverb
sounds as the group pound along in aggressive and menacing fashion.
The
Charades take many well-known vocal tracks and arrange them as superb
instrumentals with great skill and flair. In this respect California
Dreaming,
Keep On Running (great fuzz sounds), Dancing In The Street and even
Summer In
The City all turned out supremely well as exciting and exhilirating
instrumentals. Ame No Midosuji (a lovely Ventures original) gave The
Charades a
rare opportunity to slow things down and chill out. A Little Bit Beat!
A Little
Bit Go! is an original composition by Hannu in similar vein.
Occasionally The
Charades do play quietly and slowly. Yeah they can do beautiful
sometimes, very
effectively too.
Wow!
Jari's opening drum roll was probably his most fearsome yet as Hannu,
Samu and
Leo ripped through a glorious No Trespassing with a vengeance. Just how
does
Hannu achieve that high "springy" twanging effect? Action In Space and
In Motion are on the way to becoming Charades classics but, for me,
Secret Agent
Man was just out of this world. The kitsch 60s spy classic was always a
brilliant Ventures track. The Charades did it again, took an
outstanding track
and moulded it into an even more incandescent supernova of an instro.
Magnificent stuff. The Charades were back, and they didn't disappoint.
Pipeline
2004… another Instro-Fest, another triumph. The great Alan Jones and
his
talented friends gave us fabulous Shadows instrumentals. The Packabeats
were
truly unique – and what a wonderful "hidden" talent Malcolm Lenny
was. "1961" gave us superb musicianship, many original melodies and
the majestic guitar of Ronnie Gustafsson. The Charades gave us power,
skill and
exuberant vitality allied to the stunning guitar skills of Hannu
Kononen. Truly
another Twangtastic Day. Thanks to all of the artistes and a special
big thanks
to Alan and Dave, long may they flourish!
