People talk about Derek And The Dominos being a real disaster area, strung out on heroin and booze, but you would never have known that if youād seen them live that autumn. They were phenomenal. From the side of the stage, I took mental notes about their performance. Eric Clapton was the star, but it was their keyboard player, Bobby Whitlock, that I watched like a hawk. He was from Memphis, learned his craft hanging around Stax Studios and played with that soulful, Deep Southern gospel feel. Touring with them or Leon was like being on the road with Patti LaBelle or Major Lance when I was in Bluesology: you watched and you learned, from people who had more experience than you.
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And then, catastrophe struck: Long John Baldry had a huge hit single. Obviously, this would usually have been the cause of great rejoicing, but āLet The Heartaches Beginā was an appalling record, a syrupy, middle-of-the-road, Housewivesā Choice ballad. It was a million miles from the kind of music John should have been making, and it was Number One for weeks, never off the radio. Iād say I didnāt know what he was thinking, but I knew exactly what he was thinking, and I couldnāt really blame him. Heād been slogging around for years and this was the first time heād made any money. The blues cellars stopped booking us and we started playing the supper clubs, which paid better. Often weād play two a night. They werenāt interested in Johnās pivotal role in the British blues boom or his mastery of the 12-string guitar. They just wanted to see someone whoād been on television. Occasionally, I got the feeling they werenāt that interested in music, full stop. In some clubs, if you played over your allotted time, theyād simply close the curtains on you, mid-song. On the plus side, at least the supper club audiences enjoyed āThe Threshing Machineā more than the mods did.
It was the song that was playing when I had my sudden moment of clarity in South Shields. Ever since I was a kid, Iād dreamed of being a musician. Those dreams had taken many forms: sometimes I was Little Richard, sometimes Jerry Lee Lewis, sometimes Ray Charles. But whatever form they had taken, none of them had involved standing onstage in a supper club outside of Newcastle, not playing a Vox Continental organ, while Long John Baldry alternately crooned to the accompaniment of a tape recorder and angrily threatened to fine members of the audience fifty pounds. And yet, here I was. Much as I loved John, I had to do something else.
They were also the product of the bedroom at Frome Court. At the time we were writing, two artists were constantly on the Littlewoods stereo. One was the rock/soul duo Delaney and Bonnie. I was completely obsessed with the way their keyboardist, Leon Russell, played. It was like heād somehow climbed into my head and worked out exactly how I wanted to play piano before I did. Heād managed to synthesize all the music I loved ā rock and roll, blues, gospel, country ā into one, perfectly natural style.
And the other was The Band. We played their first two albums over and over again. Like Leon Russellās piano playing, their songs felt like someone switching a torch on and showing us a new path to follow, a way we could do what we wanted to do. āChest Feverā, āTears Of Rageā, āThe Weightā: this was what we craved to write.
It wasnāt just The Band who wanted to meet us. It was their managers, Albert Grossman and Bennett Glotzer. They were legendary American music business figures, particularly Grossman, a renowned tough guy whoād managed Bob Dylan since the early sixties. He had reacted to another client, Janis Joplin, becoming addicted to heroin not by intervening but by taking a life insurance policy out on her. Word must have reached them that I was currently without a manager. Ray Williams was a lovely man, I owed him a great deal and he was incredibly loyal ā heād even named his daughter Amoreena, after another of the Tumbleweed Connection songs ā but after the first American trip, Iād talked it over with the rest of the band, and no one thought he was the right person to look after us. But nor were Grossman and Glotzer, as I realized the moment I met them.
Iāve been a professional musician for my entire adult life, but Iāve never got bored with playing live. Even when I thought I had ā when I was playing the cabaret circuit with Long John Baldry, or in the mid-seventies, when I was just exhausted ā I obviously hadnāt. You could tell by the way I would grandly announce my retirement, then end up back onstage weeks later. Throughout my life that feeling I get before I go on each night, the mix of adrenalin and anxiety, has never changed, and thank God it hasnāt, because that feeling is fucking great. Itās addictive. You might get sick of the travelling, the promotion, all the stuff that surrounds playing live, but that feeling will always keep you coming back for more.