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JET HARRIS
Jet Harris was Britain’s first bass guitar player,
the first to own a Fender Precision, and its first rock’n’roll hellraiser too
By Tom PoakFights, car crashes, affairs with starlets – Jet Harris set the template for British bass players and bad behaviour,
and along the way inspired everyone from McCartney to Lemmy
Jet Harris with Fender VI
(Image credit: Getty)“If it wasn't for Jet Harris," Paul McCartney once said, "I would never have picked up a bass guitar.” A founder member of The Shadows, and a solo star for a short period in the 60s, Jet Harris was the inspiration for an entire generation of British bass players, including McCartney, John Paul Jones and Lemmy. “Jet Harris was very innovative for his time, given the band he was in,” said Lemmy. “He gave me the idea that the bass player didn’t have to stand at the back.”
Blessed with good looks, a moody persona, a chip on his shoulder and a monkey on his back, he was Britain’s first rock’n’roll bad boy and (if you were standing far enough away) the coolest guy around. Jet was the first pro bass guitarist in the country and certainly one of the finest, first in one of the UK’s most influential bands – The Shadows – and then as a solo hitmaker who played the first Fender VI Bass to arrive on UK shores. His influence on British bass playing was so great that in 2010 Fender presented him with an award for effectively launching the bass guitar in the early 60s. But alcohol-fuelled bad behavior, gossip page scandals – including singer Cliff Richard’s affair with his wife – and a near-fatal car accident conspired to derail his career.
Born Terence Harris in 1939, and nicknamed “Jet” at school because he was a fast runner, Harris dabbled in the clarinet before being inspired by the bass notes hammered out by boogie-woogie pianist Winifred Atwell. “The bass line,” he said, “is what makes a number growl.”
Jet took to the double bass, making his own upright to begin with, playing in jazz clubs and joining a band called Tony Crombie’s Rockets that had one eye on the rock’n’roll explosion. Music was changing. When the eagle-eyed Crombie bought Jet a hollow-bodied Framus Star bass guitar, Harris became the first known musician in the UK to play an electric bass.
Jet Harris of The Shadows (then The Drifters) plays a Framus Star bass guitar with Besson hardware
during the recording of Cliff Richard's single 'Livin' Doll' at Abbey Road Studios on 28th April 1958 in London.He recorded with The Vipers, a skiffle group making the switch to rock’n’roll and played on their 1958 cover of Eddie Cochran’s Summertime Blues. Jet’s bass is the first noise you hear.
At Soho musicians hangout, the 2i's Coffee Bar, he met Brian Rankin, Bruce Cripps and Harry Webb, men who would become better known as Hank Marvin, Bruce Welch and Cliff Richard. Their band, Cliff Richard and the Drifters had already had UK hits under a different line-up. Their debut single, Move It, had gone to no.2 in the UK charts in September 1958 and is considered to be Britain’s first rock’n’roll hit.
Jet was in and made an immediate impact: The Drifters weren’t just the backing band for Cliff Richard, they had their own career. Their second single, Jet Black, was written by Harris and another great showcase for the bass player.
When US band The Drifters slapped an injunction on their debut single Feelin’ Fine, Jet suggested another name: The Shadows. In 1959, his Framus was damaged in a backstage accident and he found himself with another first: a Fender Precision bass, the first one in the country. That same year, The Drifters backed Cliff Richard on record for the first time: the result, Livin’ Doll, was a UK no.1 and started a huge run of chart success. In Jet’s tenure, the band scored 15 top 5 hits in the UK.
The Shadows’ career followed in parallel: groundbreaking instrumental Apache went to no.1 in August 1960, knocking their own track with Cliff Richard, Please Don’t Tease, off the number 1 spot. Hits like FBI, Man of Mystery, Kon Tiki and Wonderful Land followed, putting both electric and bass guitar on the map. Their influence was immense. “If it wasn't for Jet Harris, I would never have picked up a bass guitar,” said Paul McCartney.
Not only was he paving the way for a new generation of bassists, behind the scenes Harris was drawing the blueprint for rock’n’roll excess. His alcohol intake was legendary. He’d started young, to give himself some dutch courage before going onstage, but it did more than that, getting him in fights and causing friction in the band.
“Jet would have a few brown ales and it would all be over,” drummer Brian Bennett recalled. “He’d get a stream of verbal from Bruce [Welch, guitarist] and go on stage in a really black mood. As soon as Bruce was looking the other way, Jet would look back at me on the drums and mouth, ‘The effing bastard’… Dressing-room rows would end with Jet in tears.”
His driving was out of control too. In 1959, having not even passed his test, he crashed his car, injuring himself and Hank Marvin. He was fined for dangerous driving, failing to display L-plates and driving unaccompanied by a qualified driver. His friend Terry Webster recalled (opens in new tab) Jet later having “a brick handy near his accelerator – a sort of cruise control for the long journeys back to London”.
L to R: Jet Harris, Hank Marvin, Bruce Welch, Tony Meehan, posed, group shot, backstage, c.1960/1961
The Shadows (L-R): Jet Harris with Britain's first Fender Precision, Hank Marvin, Bruce Welch, Tony Meehan, c.1960/1961
(Image credit: Paul Naylor/Getty)At The Cavern in Liverpool, Harris fell off the stage during a performance of Shadoogie. “Smashed out of his head,” said Bruce Welch (opens in new tab). “As Hank helped him up and back onto the stage, I apologised to the audience. ‘I’m very sorry, Jet’s not very well,’ I said. It didn’t work. Some Scouser in the audience yelled back, ‘We know, mate – he’s pissed!’” The incident became so famous in Liverpool that Paul McCartney would copy it, pretending to fall off the stage, Jet-style.
To add to his chaotic personal life, Jet was having multiple affairs. His wife Carol found out and found revenge in an affair with frontman Cliff Richard. In his autobiography, Cliff claimed that Carol seduced him. In 2009 she told her side to the Daily Mail in a story headlined: “How I was seduced in my curlers: The only woman Cliff Richard ever made love to gives her own very different side of the story”.
“I'm not the seducer of Cliff Richard,” she said. “The truth is he never left me alone. It's all twisted now to make it seem like I was the one who did the running. I can assure you, it was all him.”
Cliff Richard performing with The Shadows in 'Expresso Bongo', directed by Val Guest, 1959.
Left to right: Bruce Welch, Cliff Richard, Jet Harris (1939 - 2011) and Hank Marvin.
The drummer, obscured by Richard, is Tony Meehan.Jet knew about the affair but continued in the band. Later he claimed that it drove him further to drink. “Put it this way,” he said, “I think what happened helped my alcoholism along the way. There were things that I couldn’t, wouldn’t, think about. I drank to forget.” Why didn’t he do something about it, he was asked. “I wanted my job. Maybe, if I’m honest, I wanted the job more than I wanted her.”
In 1962, Jet got stuck into the free backstage bar at the NME Poll Winners Party, and moments before he went on stage to collect the Best Instrumentalist Award, The Shadows sacked him. They'd had enough.
Down but not out, he wasted no time. There was more new ground to break: Jet got hold of the first Fender VI Bass to arrive in the UK and set off on a solo career, backed by a band he called The Jet Blacks. The sound of the Fender VI twangs all over his first two singles, Besame Mucho and Main Title Theme (The Man With The Golden Arm) (opens in new tab). In January 1963 he teamed up with former Drifters drummer Tony Meehan for Diamonds. It went to no.1. A young guitarist called Jimmy Page did his first session work on the single, and when they went on the road, they took a young bass player called John Paul Jones with them.
"We all wanted to look like Jet Harris,” said John Paul Jones. “I got into session playing through Jet Harris and Tony Meehan. I walked up to him on Archer Street and asked him if he needed a bass player. He said, 'No I don't, but they do,' pointing me towards the Jet Blacks. He was leaving them, so I auditioned and joined up. Later he heard about me, swapped his bass player for me, and I went on the road with them."
Despite everything, Jet seemed unstoppable.
The inevitable crash was literal and almost fatal. In September 1963, his car collided with a bus. Jet and his girlfriend, singer Billie Davis, were both hospitalised and Harris had minor brain damage requiring 34 stitches in his head. Meanwhile, the story of the married pop star with a teenage starlet in his car (Davis was 17, he was 24) was all over the papers. Although he was separated from his wife Carol, her affair with Cliff Richard was not public knowledge, and the scandal ruined both of their careers. "We were the Posh and Becks of our time,” he said later of himself and Davis. “Honest to God. We couldn’t move without cameras being poked in our faces. It was a scandal, and we never really recovered from it.’
Jet Harris and girlfriend, singer Billie Davis, July 1963, two months before their car crash.
"We were the Posh and Becks of our time," said Jet.Jet went on a spiral. Arrested in Brighton. Hospitalise in Paddington. Drunk and disorderly in Marble Arch. Banged up for drunk driving. In 1967 an audition for the fledgling Jeff Beck Group offered some redemption. “Jeff's first idea was to invite Jet Harris, once of the Shadows, to play bass, and Viv Prince, formerly of the Pretty Things, to be the drummer,” Rod Stewart wrote in his autobiography. “This was an ambitious plan – or, you might even say, raving mad. Harris looked great – he had a big peroxide hairdo – but he was still in recovery from a terrible car accident and was known to be having some struggles with alcohol. Prince's drumming style, meanwhile, made Keith Moon look conservative.” Beck got that pillar of sobriety Ronnie Wood instead.
Jet struggled with alcohol and over the next couple of decades worked as a bus conductor, hospital porter, taxi driver, brick layer. Declared bankrupt in 1988, he got sober in 1996 and stayed that way til the end of his life, making a modest return to performing and playing. In 1998, Fender gave him a Lifetime Achievement Award for his role in popularising the bass guitar in Britain. He played regularly, did a theatre show called Me and My Shadows and was joined by a special guest: Billie Davis. UK rock'n'roll Marty Wilde took him on the road and the end of tour show featured original Shadows Hank Marvin, Bruce Welch, Licorice Locking (who had replaced Jet) and Brian Bennett on stage onstage with Jet and the rest of the show's company.
In 2010 he was made a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the New Year Honours list and died the following year on 18 March, 2011, after suffering from throat cancer. Britain's first bass player – his basslines reverberate still.
In 1962 I sang the duet with Jet on his B Side hit “SOME PEOPLE” A side hit”THE MAN WITH THE GOLDEN ARM “MAIN TITLE THEME”. I was bass player in Jet’s new band The JETBLACKS after he left THE SHADOWS. I was so excited that it had charted as a B side hit although I would remain anonymous. (Story of my life)
PART II
JET HARRIS and TERRY WEBSTER “SOME PEOPLE”
Singer Musician and Classic Pop RecreationsJet took me to ABBEY Road studios to add the harmony part to the song for producer JACK GOOD. Jack played a backing track for us to sing over and took maybe 30 minutes to complete after a couple of takes. The backing track was maybe by Valerie and the Eagles as they were involved with the film music although I seem to remember Jet saying it was The Tremelo’s.
On our way to the studio in his Volvo saloon. Jet said this song was crap and wanted me to add a harmony? ” He said ” If it’s a hit I’ll cut you in on the royalties.” I never bothered to ask if there were any royalties up to his dying day. Although we hadn’t spoken for 40 years I was surprised to receive an E mail simply saying ” Hello Terry, How are you?” I replied but he never answered and that was it. He passed away a few months later.
My sister Jean and I hoped to see him at Wakefield Theatre Royal but he was too ill to appear.
As the years have flown it was assumed on Internet sites that Tony Meehan was the other voice on ‘Some People’. Tony was not a vocalist and not too involved with the early Jack Good productions until “The Hully Gully”. Jack went to America which I suppose would lead to to Tony taking over. It is quite amusing to see the actors in the film miming to our voices, especially as one of them is a girl.
Surprised to find Jet was in the Vipers.So pleased to get this picture recently 2020 from Niels de Wit of the Netherlands.
Dutch TV 1962
Jet Harris Fender twangy 6 string bass, Glenn Hughes baritone sax Dave ‘Quincy’ Davies tenor sax, Terry Webster bass guitar.
Hidden: Mick Underwood drums, Barry Lovegrove guitar.New JETBLACKS line up was featured with Jet on the Brit film ‘Just For Fun’ “The Man From Nowhere”. Me bass guitar, Jim Ellis Drums, Pete Carter guitar, Dave Quincy tenor sax, Glen Hughes baritone sax.
JET HARRIS DAVE QUINCY TERRY WEBSTER
JET BLACK JUST 4 FUN
JET AND THE JETBLACKSBefore our personal involvement with Jet, my sister and me were Patti Brook and the Diamonds. Like a dream come true, we were part of the first Shadows tour without Cliff after their monster hit ‘Apache’. I was totally in awe and although the Shad’s were really friendly my shyness kept me at a distance but enjoying the experience.
Our band from Wakefield wasn’t really good enough and it was a matter of time before we had to split. I used to dream of a band who could do vocal harmony without me showing them note for note. (In later years the Rockin Berries fulfilled that ambition.) I stayed with my sister for a while on guitar and vocals but I thought she could manage better without me so I left her to a solo career, I went back up north to various day jobs. Patti toured with famous names of the time. Cliff and the Shadows, Billy Fury, Lonnie Donegan and even The Beatles.
Patti remembers screaming girls around the ABC theatre in Blackpool. She found Paul McCartney in the dressing room picking his nose. She said “Stop picking your nose! They’re waiting for your autograph out there!”
While Cliff and the Shadows were on a summer season in Blackpool 1961, Jet confided in my singer sister Patti at the beginning of their relationship that lasted almost 2 years, that he was leaving The Shadows. There was a vacancy in his future band The Nite Sounds who needed a guitarist that could sing. I’m free!! Off to London I auditioned at Fulham’s Cafe Des Artistes (Twist Club) and got the job. Not long after the band was re formed and re named The Jetblacks. I asked Jet if I could switch to bass guitar and he consented.
Although Jet was a big star his car was a humble Ford Zephyr and I was struck at his ordinariness after telling me he had a brick handy near his accelerator… a sort of cruise control for the long journeys back to London. (No motorways then) Jet had moved back in with his mum and dad who were a lovely down to earth couple living humbly in their terrace house in Wilsden where we were always welcome. Here we went through ideas for his stage show.Thanks to Bradford Timeline’s amazing website for posters relating to our exciting tour times.
There were only pictures of Patti used for publicity.
The Shadows The Dallas Boys Patti Brook & The Diamonds Frank Ifield The Brooks Brothers The Trebletones Tony Marsh (compere)
Patty Brook & The Diamonds The Trebletones The Dallas Boys ~ The Shadows ~ Full copy of programme (Flickr)
JET WHO WAS IN A RELATIONSHIP WITH MY SISTER
SINGER PATTI BROOK LOVED COMING UP NORTH TO OUR HOME TOWN OF WAKEFIELD
THESE ARE PERSONAL FAMILY PICTURES RELATING TO THAT PERIOD.
Jet with sisters Pat and Jean
Jet and Graham 1962ish Jet
with Terry’s sisters Patti and Jean and with Jean’s 12 year old son Graham
Jet loved to come up North and visit the pubs along with my sisters and brother- in law John
who was a good drinking partner for Jet.
I think Jet could escape the world of fame and back to being an ordinary guy.
'On The Beach' 1961 Patti with Cliff Hank Tony Jet
‘On The Beach’ 1961 St Annes on Sea during Cliff’s summer season at Blackpool ABC.
Patti (sitting top r next to baby) with Cliff Hank Tony Jet
Patti stepping out with the ShadowsI was proud to audition and be accepted as guitar and vocals for a place in Jet’s new band. The audition was at the Cafe Des Artistes a basement ‘Twist’ club in Fulham and be accepted. The ‘Nite Sounds’ band was supposed to go to Germany to get ‘worked in’ but the leader of the band turned out to be unreliable and the promise of Germany was a big fib, so an emergency band was organised thanks to guitarist Barry Lovegrove from Heston Middlesex who knew a few musicians . This gave us tenor sax player Dave Quincy and baritone sax man Glenn Hughes. Barry had a drummer mate Mick Underwood who was only 16 (Mick, years later became a top rock drummer with The Outlaws,The Herd, Iain Gillan of Deep Purple.)
The cutting from Melody Maker 1962.“Jet Harris and the Jetblacks rehearse at The Talk of The Town
for their forthcoming tour with Sam Cooke and Little Richard.
Left to right: Barry Lovegrove Glenn Hughes Michael Underwood Quincy Davis and Terry Webster”.16 year old Mick Underwood was like me quite inexperienced but the jazz loving sax men felt he had to be replaced along with Barry after we completed the Little Richard tour 1962. Embarrassing for me as Barry and his lovely mum let me stay at their house in Heston and he also found the musicians for the band.
I managed to keep in with modern jazzers Dave and Glenn who would switch to piano and drums for swinging jam sessions Glen on drums and Dave on piano with me on bass. They would show me all the essential jazz licks and tunes. I am lucky that although a non reader of music my ear holes soon picked things up. Also I had taken an interest in guitar jazz chords a couple of years earlier. My bible was ‘The Mickey Baker Book of Jazz guitar chords’. That book enabled me to understand almost any kind of music standards away from 4 chord Rock n Roll.
I got on great with Glenn who wasn’t a jazz snob like Dave and liked a bit of a laugh and he would say “Come on Tel!, Rock n Roll!” doing a bad Elvis impression singing a made up filthy lyric and waving his baritone sax around like a guitar. Glenn was a good friend and my fashion guru. He was a couple of years older than me at 21. We used to play snooker at an exclusive allnighter snooker club on Great Windmill Street and I have a memory of us leaving at 3.am New Years morning 1963 walking up a deserted snow covered Regent Street with just one set of tyre tracks from a taxi and throwing snowballs at the overhanging street decorations. Just to knock the snow off you understand. We both went to see the first Bond film DR NO. Sad that Glenn died so young in a fire accident while with the Georgie Fame band a few years later. RIP Glenn.
I would sit with Jet at his parents house and go through tunes with him. He was the first to admit that switching from bass to lead guitar was going to be a bit difficult. It may be that to cope with all this his drink addiction took a turn for the worse.
I came up with ideas like Peter Gunn and the Magnificent 7 theme for our first live tour and help with other stuff. I asked Jet if he would mind me switching from rhythm guitar to bass and he let me. I really wanted to be a bass player. The best thing I found about being linked to a top band like The Shadows was being taken to Jennings music store on Charing Cross Road and be GIVEN free gratis the instrument and amplifier of choice. In my case I picked a Fender Jazz bass and was recommended to try the first ‘Piggy back’ transister amp and bass cabinet fresh from the US. Later on leaving the band it hit me as I had to give it all back and buy a bass guitar and amp on Hire Purchase.
I suppose due to his marriage breakdown it was convenient to live with his parents. There Jet would play me stuff he was recording with producer Jack Good such as “Besame Mucho” which was his first solo hit and Theme from “The Man With A Golden Arm“. Jet played me an American record ‘Real Wild Child’. He wanted to do a cover version as it would suit his moody rebel image while not requiring a great voice. He liked to joke “I’m mean! I tear wings off flies!”He loved The Coasters record ‘Shoppin For Clothes’ and we would chuckle at the amusing lyrics but not one we could perform on stage. He told me about his early days playing double bass at the 2 I’s coffee bar and played a bass sequence he had learned from a modern jazz player. I recognised it as the bassline for The Shadows instrumental “NIVRAM”. He taught me it. Mmmm jazz…. Nice! Because Jet wasn’t keen on the song SOME PEOPLE and only being a B side, he asked me to add an Everley’s type harmony. I laughed at his promise to cut me in on royalties if it was a hit, but the record did better than expected and was a B side hit. Jet never kept his promise. Dont know if there would have been any royalties really. STORY OF MY LIFE! JACK GOOD WAS IMPRESSED WITH MY HARMONY CONTRIBUTION AND SAID “I COULD HAVE DONE SOMETHING FOR YOU… WHAT A SHAME I’M GOING TO AMERICA”.(right place wrong time) (Bring me a stick of Rock back Jack!!)
One of our first gigs with Jet was at a ballroom with a revolving stage. facing the back wall and out of sight. Jet and us played the dramatic moody intro of the “Peter Gunn” theme as the stage would revolve slowly to face the audience. Halfway round guitarist Barry’s foot accidentally caught the mains plug leaving everything unamplified with just drums and sax’s playing into thin air. It was comical as the stage carried on revolving past the audience and back to where we started. Embarrassing as re plugged and looking less cool we had to make a second rotatating entrance……..
While with Jet we were looked after by Sam Curtis, a great bloke who was formally Cliff and the Shadows road manager . Sam drove a new white or cream coloured Commer Dormobile. That to me at that time looked almost space age. Hard to imagine this was the transport for the Shadows amplifiers and drums and now The Jetblacks stuff. As far as I remember we used microphones and P A amplification that was at the venues in those days. Sam’s real name was Schmuel Gurvitz. He was very proud that his son played with a band called The Londoners and later I find with Ginger Baker in the Baker Gurvitz Army.
PEA SOUPER!
Being a northerner I had never truly experienced a London ‘Pea Souper’. There we were in ’62 with the Commer caravanette loaded with gear and the 6 of us having to get to a South West London gig. The Smog was so thick we had maybe six feet visibility. Leaving Jet’s parents house in Wilsden it proved tricky making our way to the better lit North Circular. After just a few yards Jet grabbed a torch and walked in front of the truck until we got there. He was wearing an expensive looking overcoat with velvet collar. I thought how odd to see this national pop icon briskly getting on with the job of road guide.Just for fun, Jet used to love driving along with the window open and wave at someone at a bus stop, ” Oi Oi!” as if he knew them and watching their reaction as they would wave back confused as he drove on. They wouldn’t have known in that instance that it was the famous Jet Harris of The Shadows.
Click
We are in Jet’s book “IN SPITE OF EVERYTHING” ‘Out of the frying pan.’www.terrywebster.co.uk 004 It felt very much like we were in the elite of pop music being with a hit recording artiste and under the top management of the Grade/Delfont organisation. We had a manager Roy Moseley, tailored mohair suits by Dougie Millings, free instruments and amplifiers and we were on a £40 per week retainer whether we worked or not. That was quite a wedge compared with £5 per week as a van driver. A London bedsit was £3 per week rent to give an idea.
Our first gig with Jet was at the Princess Theatre Torquay and a national TV slot on “Spot The Tune” followed by a trip by ferry to Amsterdam for a Dutch Television show. I cant remember what we mimed to. It was a first trip to Europe for the band and very exciting.
Jet was a big star at that time and I was very impressed when he took me and my sister Patti to a more upmarket than I was used to Chinese restaurant on Edgware Road. They had a finger bowl? Wow! Luckily I didn’t drink it. We did have a bottle of wine at the table. To me and my sister that was something only the rich could afford. The bill came to £7.00 for three people. I had never seen that amount spent on a dinner before. You could say I was very much in awe.
Gene Vincent My sister Patti recalls she along with Jet and the Dallas Boys being held at gunpoint so they couldn’t leave the dressing room. It was Gene’s idea of a bit of American fun……L.O.L.. I remember Jet swearing angrily at the memory. www.terrywebster.co.uk 005 At last we were to join the Little Richard, Sam Cooke tour and conveniently for me the first show was to be at the Gaumont Doncaster just 20 miles away from home. I didn’t recognise Little Richard when I arrived at afternoon rehearsals. TV as it was in those days would only ever show a clip of Little Richard with a large mop of hair singing “The Girl Can’t Help It” from the film of that title, seemingly dwarfed by a huge grand piano. Here in Doncaster was this bigger round faced guy with short cropped hair singing gospel songs. Richards intention was to do gospel/spiritual songs in his show rather than rock n roll? He had with him a young 15 year old Billy Preston to do the necessary organ accompaniment. Billy’s parents had relented to let him come to the UK as it was not to do Rock n roll with Richard. After Richards memorable entrance from the back of the theatre and down the aisle in grand preacher style to the stage wearing a long white robe he eventually bored the audience to death by not singing his hits they and I had come to hear. The promoter had to get through to Richard that it would be the “Kiss of death” for the show if he didn’t do his famed Rock n roll. Apparently Sam Cooke was asked to talk some sense into Little Richard who had to relent and changed his routine to do what was expected. On the Little Richard tour bus Sounds Incorporated drummer Tony the bleach blonde haired drummer (A trend initiated by Jet) along with Glen our baritone sax player had make up applied to their faces by the Breakaways girl group. When we stopped at Aylesbury they jokingly minced off the bus to the chemists arm in arm complete with handbags to buy some ‘condoms’. Little Richards face was beaming. “Ooh they are Evil!”. He cried, sounding like a very camp preacher.
JET HARRIS AND THE JETBLACKS LITTLE RICHARD SAM COOKE TOUR
Thrilled to find existing posters courtesy of Bradford Timeline website
(THE BEATLES WERE INCLUDED ON THE LIVERPOOL DATE)
October 1962 – Doncaster (Gaumont) 09 – Mansfield (Granada) 10 – Birmingham (Town Hall) 11 – Grantham (Granada) 12 – Shrewsbury (Granada) 13 – Woolwich (Granada) 14 – Brighton (Hippodrome) 15 – Bristol (Colston Hall) 16 – Southampton (Gaumont) 17 – Bedford (Granada) 18 – Maidstone (Granada) 19 – Kingston (Granada) 20 – Slough (Adelphi) 21 – Walthamstow (Granada) 22 – Newcastle (City Hall) 23 – Sheffield (City Hall) 24 – Kettering (Granada) 25 – Harrow (Granada) 26 – Aylesbury (Granada) 27 – Tooting (Granada) 28 – Liverpool (Empire)Sam Cooke Ticket – Doncaster ~ Little Richard ~ Sam Cooke ~Jet Harris & The Jetblacks ~ Breakaways ~ Sounds Incorporated ~ Bob Bain (compere) ~ Little Richard was not on the 12th and 26th shows ~ Sam Cooke missed the first and last shows~ Promoter : Don Arden
Jet Harris ~ Sounds Incorporated
Full copy of programme (Flickr)
Full copy of Granada programme (Flickr)
Little Richard (Front cover) ~ The Breakaways
Jet Dic n Sam
I was too shy to ask for a pose with Little Richard or Sam Cooke. But I did ask for their autograph. Richard gave me his autograph and his address and told me to write to him in Philadelphia. This spooked me a bit and I didn’t keep it. Starry eyed I asked Sam to sign my copy of “Twistin The Night Away”he did so graciously but like an idiot in my nervousness just let him sign the record sleeve which I eventually lost. I still have the disc. If only I had camera in those days. But,it would be rather uncool in those circumstances.
Pictures were usually grabbed by professionals assigned to the shows.As a shy 19 year old I was totally in awe of the main stars and only able to relax with backing musicians such as sitting on the tour bus with then unknown 15 year old Billy Preston or Sam’s guitar man, a gentle giant of a guy who I believe was called Cliff White. He told me he was on parole for a manslaughter charge due to some road accident back in the US but was allowed to do the tour with Sam. I was impressed as he told me his guitar work was on my favourite Sam Cook hits. “Twistin The Night Away” “Chain Gang” “You Send Me”etc.
I did find the nerve to ask Little Richard if he had met Elvis and he replied.” I’ve met Elvis. He’s real pretty!” End of conversation.
On the tour bus I would occasionally sit with a young 15 year old Billy Preston who was beyond his years in sexual talk and although 3 years older I was still quite a naive teenager. It amused him that I was a bit uncomfortable with certain subjects and he curled up on his seat pretending to sleep then poked a finger at my rear a couple of times,eyes closed with a cheeky smirk on his face. In true butch Yorkshire twang I shouted ” Gi ORR! which means ‘Give Over’ or ‘Give Up’ to posher folks. Naughty Boy! It was a surprise years later to recognise this was the same guy who would play on The Beatles ” Get Back” and a big recording star through the 70’s and 80’s.
October ’62
Jet was really angry as we hit Liverpool Empire, this unheard of group THE BEATLES had bigger billing in the theatre programme. “Look at this! Who’s these F****ing Beatles!! Look at the size of my name!”. “Yeah!” we all agreed…………………..Boo!. These upstarts stood in the wings sniggering as Jet dropped a few bum notes here and there, worse for wear after an earlier pub visit.A great memory on that tour was as our bus drove away from some town up in Lancashire was when someone amongst the American party started up singing the spiritual “Amen” and we were all compelled to join in with the hand clapping and chorus. We were treated to ad lib verses from Little Richard and Sam Cooke like………”I ‘ve been to Birmingham Friday Night ! ” etc and relating to what had been goin on. If only I had a cassette recorder but they were quite an expensive luxury item in ’62 for such as me. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SuEo4mt6M8w
I am the bass player on this film clip Line up: Me bass guitar, Jim Ellis Drums, Pete Carter guitar, Dave Quincey tenor sax, Glen Hughes Baritone sax.
We were directed to stay very moody and static. I had to keep a spotlight focused on my left eye. “Action” Pete the guitarist sneezed and managed to strike a serious face just in time for the panning camera. The quick adjustment from sneeze to serious face tickled me. By the time the camera panned to me I was choking hysterics. CUT! Cried the director angrily. Quince the sax man mocked my “Wakefield monkey grin”. You stupid boy!
About “Man From Nowhere” From Jet’s book “In Spite Of Everything”
ClickI didn’t mind Jet drinking as it gave me the chance to drive him and my sister around in his brand new (The Saint) Volvo Sports car. In night time blizzard conditions travelling back to London on the A5, I was trying to keep up with Road manager Sam as he was scorching along in his Commer Dormobile I went into a skid across the trunk road and coming to a halt up an embankment. Jet slept through it to my relief. I reversed back and carried on. How different things could have been had the roads been busy or worse no embankment to slow me up. Could have been another Rock Star statistic. Thank you Lord!
JETBLACKS IN IRELANDGlen Pete Quince Terry Jim and some kids.
Jetblacks in Ireland Our new line up with Jim Ellis on drums was really beginning to gel as we toured Ireland with Jet but Tony Meehan decided to join Jet on the road after their number one hit “Diamonds”. Rehearsals began at The Roebuck pub, in Tottenham Court Road. This was the same rehearsal room we had used when auditioning drummers and guitarists to replace young and in experienced drummer Mick Underwood and guitarist Barry Lovegrove. Jazz musicians Glenn and Quince invited drummers well respected on the jazz circuit who had shiny kits and great drumming skills. The audition involved a jazz jam followed by a simple Rock n Roll test. They failed miserably on Rock n Roll.
A friendly skinny 6ft 4? eastender from Hackney called Jimmy Ellis came in and set up a borrowed ‘ Rogers’ kit that he seemed to dwarf. Jazz! Glenn and Quince nearly swallowed their sax mouthpieces as it swung like the clappers!. Rock n roll! The biz! Jim had been around the London scene for some time, his brother was also a talented horn player.. Jim got the gig and we became best buddies playing together for the next 4 years. Still good mates. Jim has lived Sweden for the last 30 years.
Tony Meehan changed the line up, firstly of course dispensing with my mate Jim the drummer and also replacing guitarist Pete with Joe Morretti and Chris Hughes replacing Quince on Tenor sax. I have to say there was no indication that I was to be replaced but sheets of music were being dished out at rehearsals and these new guys seemed a bit more musically serious and so I offered my bass playing roll to a guy who was standing by called John Baldwin he later became famously known as John Paul Jones of Led Zep.
One thing I learnt early on in the biz was the bitterness we ‘Rock n Rollers’ would face when in the company of what I refer to as serious musicians usually into Jazz. This had been an ongoing battle with our sax player Quince who let us know he hated Rock n Roll, though he did have his lighter moments. I found that my strong natural ear for music compensated for the lack of musical education.. A gift I noticed that many sight reading musicians lacked. Nowadays thanks to modern technology I can create orchestrations purely by ‘ear as my albums over the last 2 decades demonstrate.. Drummer Jim Ellis was very similar to me in that respect but could also read music and has been a great encouragement to this day.
It was embarrassing on stage at times when Jet had a few too many. On The LITTLE RICHARD show at Liverpool Empire I remember the then unknown BEATLES sniggering in the wings of the stage because of Jet’s bum notes due to alcaholic fuzz. “You can laugh!” I sneared to myself.
An incident drummer Jim never forgot was travelling to a gig where some comments were made to Jet about his drinking. “Er…Chaps!” he sneered with an evil grin wiping his forehead with his chequebook. (Put up and shut up.)
Knowing Jet was going straight to the pub on our arrival at Dunstable, the band made a pact to have it out with him if he did another drunken show. It was an embarrassing show for us at Dunstable California Ballroom. In the dressing room there was a full size snooker table, the atmosphere was tense but nobody spoke up. So quiet little me from Wakefield did it. I called him a naughty swear word on behalf of the band. Jet threatened to kill me. The band stood in his way as he tried to get at me circling the snooker table with me backing off as I am a non violent person. To my relief, the guys in the band still blocking Jets way. “Nah! Hit me!”. said Glen pointing at his chin. The manager burst in hearing the hullabaloo giving us a good telling off for being so rowdy and threatened to report us to our Delfont management. Fortunately Jet seemed to respect me more after that episode and we were okay the next day.
We were at Bath City Hall when Jet heard ‘Diamonds’ was number one with Tony Meehan. Tony at that point was happy being a record producer and would leave the touring to Jet and the Jetblacks. Jet opened a bottle of ‘champers’ for us to toast their hit.
We would start to worry that a change was on the way…….
Rock n Roll LEGENDS!……RIP
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After quitting the Jet Harris Tony Meehan band it reality hit me as I had to hand back the Fender Jazz bass and Amplifier. I then bought a custom made bass amp from a father/son business just off Wardour Street, the son being Pepi Rush. Speaker cabinets were screwed together in those days and would often work loose and rattle horribly. Mine rattled even more after letting this bass player chap called Jack Bruce borrow it while we were supporting The Graham Bond Organisation at the 100 Club Oxford street while I was a member of the Wes Minster 5 in ’64. Jack using a quite humble tone said quite in his Scottish accent he had just switched from double bass to bass guitar and didn’t have a bass amp/cabinet could he borrow mine. He blew the hell out of it he was so loud. Rattled me too but worth it just to name drop with that story.
WE CARRIED ON AS THE JETBLACKS ex Jet Harris. Performing at Dance venues around the country. Although something to brag about now, performing at The Liverpool Cavern was a low pay gig for the not quite famous yet brigade. Beatles included. After their first hit their money doubled to £40 before becoming unaffordable.
Jet in his pre Fender days with Cliff.
EDITOR'S NOTE
Bill Hillman Remembers Seeing Jet Harris in Concert
On August 12, 1977, during our second tour of England, we had a free night after a day in the studio.
Mick, our English bass player friend, took us to the Fiesta Club in Stockton -- a large show and dance and disco club.
There was a good house band, MC and English C&W singer that played to a full house.
We were excited about seeing the night's feature act: Jet Harris and the Diamonds (original Shadows bass player).
We are longtime Shadows fans and have played many of their songs on stage and on record through the years so we were excited about seeing one of our bass/guitar idols -- Jet Harris in person.
The feature act, however, was a bit of a let down.
Jet was a small, balding, spaced out, and tipsy man who struggled on bass through most of their act.
His lead guitarist did all the Shadows and Ventures leads.
The highlight of the show was when Jet Harris eventually ended the set by playing "Diamonds" & "Rhythm and Greens" -- on a terribly out-of-tune Stratocaster.
Frightful!
A humorous memory from that night made me chuckle a bit, though.
During the evening a group of guys in the washroom asked Mick if his "American" friend was Kenny Rogers.
They were fooled by my accent, long hair and beard. :)
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TONY MEEHAN |
ON US GUITARS |
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Bill and Sue-On Hillman
www.hillmanweb.com
Contact: hillmans@wcgwave.ca