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The
deep roots of British pop music first became established in the
soil of cultural history when Cyril Davies met Alexis Korner; two
Englishmen that shared a passion for The Blues.
Alexis
Korner |
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Cyril Davies |
In
1956 trad. jazz and skiffle was the commercial choice of
music for teenagers in the UK. This was soon to change,
though, with the rise in popularity of the champion of
British jazz and skiffle, Chris Barber. It was during this
time that Alexis Korner was doing the rounds with Ken
Colyer's Skiffle band (a branch of the Chris Barber band),
and Cyril Davies was running the London Skiffle Club at
the Roundhouse pub in Wardour Street. Finding these styles
restrictive and unambiguous, they joined forces and
started the Thursday-nighter London Blues and Barrelhouse
Club, a truly radical move for the time. They had become
convinced that blues was THE world pop music, from
listening to imported records and inviting heroes from
America such as Sonny Terry, Brownie McGhee, and Big Bill
Broonzy to play there.
In
the years following Korner found a niche promoting blues via
journalism and broadcasting. During this time the pair were also
lending their talents other groups as the blues club scene grew.
But in late 1961 the time had come to switch from acoustic to
electric guitar and include harmonica to form a new sound with
which to inspire the underground scene. Korner and Davies formed
Blues Incorporation, the first white R&B band, at least in the
UK. Its legacy was that they allowed anyone with talent and the
right instrument to join in, which was a gateway to legendism for
many of Britain's most inspiring musicians, Charlie Watts and Art
Wood two of the earliest players. The idea that a real R&B hit
complete with these instruments still seemed very far away though.
 Blues
Incorporated
By
mid 1962 Blues Incorporated's interval spot at the Marquee had
become more popular than the Barber band itself. It was decided
that they had to find their own club: and the Ealing Jazz Club was
born, the first of its kind in Europe. Finally the glorious secret
that was known as rhythm and blues was to be shared amongst the
lucky few, joined together via advertisements in New Musical
Express.The underground awareness of this event led to the drawing
together of a crowd of enthusiasts, alienated youngsters finally
drawn together via a love of blues, people who had previously
thought were the only ones having an affair with the Devil's
Music. The music enjoyed by these trendy few was in stark contrast
to the 'popular' beat sweeping the country at the time: the smooth
sounds of Cliff Richard, Adam Faith and Elvis Presley; teenybopper
pop. The Ealing Club instead was the place to be seen:
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Mick
Jagger:
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Bill
Wyman:
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Charlie
Watts:
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"The
Ealing Club was so wet that Cyril had to put a horrible
sheet over the bandstand so that the condensation didn't
drip directly on you, but it just dripped through the
sheet. It was very dangerous because of all the
electricity and microphones" |
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"It
was a narrow and long room with a small stage at one end and
a bar at the other, the audience dividing themselves equally
between the two"
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"It
was an amazing band, but a total cacophony of sound...a
cross between R&B and Charlie Mingus, which was what
Alexis wanted" |
Throughout
their time at the Ealing club Korner and Davies continued to
influence and play host to many young wannabes.
| Bill
Wyman: |
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| "Sometimes
Brian (Jones) visited Cyril at home, where they would blow
harmonics together. Brian began to practise Davies'
technique of bending and flattening the notes..." |
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Brian
Jones
Blues
Incorporated became much more than just a little band of
enthusiasts for a particular brand of music. It developed
into an attitude. By May 1962 they were invited
back, but to a regular Thursday night residency, at the
Marquee, the venue that was fast becoming the most
prestigious centre for up-and-coming bands, with even
bigger, more excited crowds. This inspired the first
R&B LP ever made in England, R&B From The
Marquee. It was also around this time they were
causing enough of a stir among the cognoscenti to be
offered a coveted spot on the BBC's radio show Jazz
Club.
The
loose policy of letting young wannabes perform with the band
continued, with the jockeying for a position in the band
intensifying. A 19 year old Mick Jagger was participating three
nights a week in the interval, plucked from obscurity after
sending Korner a home-made tape, but by July he had quit to join
fellow wannabes Keith Richard and Brian Jones to form the infamous
Rolling Stones (they became frequent interval pleasers at Ealing,
and at the Marquee supporting Cyril Davies and The R&B All
Stars, before making it on their own.) |
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The
Marquee Club, 1962 |
| L-R:
Dave
Stevens, Dick Heckstall-Smith, Alexis Korner, Jack Bruce, Mick
Jagger, Cyril Davies |
Eventually
in 1963 the Korner/Davies collaboration came to its end; the end
of an era. The split was due to Korner's desire to add horns to
the group's line-up, which Davies hated. Cyril had always
preferred the Chicago-style blues, as opposed to Korner's more
tepid rhythm. Korner continued with Blues Incorporated, while
Davies assembled the better and amazing Cyril
Davies R&B All-Stars, complete with a heavy, strong sound.
Unfortunately this was short lived. Cyril died of leukemia in
early 1964. Alexis continued to work steadily with various
combinations of musicians until his death in 1984, but failed to
compete with the new sound of R&B-based pop against many of
the young guys who had once begged him for a chance to show what
they were made of.
 Long
John Baldry kept the remaining All-Stars as his backing
band (renamed the Hoochie Coochie Men; also a starting
point for Rod Stewart, Elton John) but the moment had
passed. Davies' vocals had a character that made the group
competitive during the blues boom of 1962-63, and his harp
playing was second to none in England; a powerful,
alternately mournful or exultant sound. Meanwhile, the
original Blues Incorporated had served as a catalyst for
the formation of numerous bands and rock gods: The
Animals, Fleetwood Mac, The Yardbirds, Cream, The Faces,
Manfred Mann, The Pretty Things, etc. The rest is history.
Although
they never achieved commercial success on a large scale, unlike
many of their protégés, the influence and nurturing Alexis
Korner and Cyril Davies gave to popular music as we know it was
immense. Let we, or the superstars, not ever forget them.
HELP NEEDED:
if anyone has any information on the whereabouts of guitarist
Bernie Watson or knows what became of him after leaving the
Bluesbreakers, please email
us!
Click
here to sign a petition to induct Nicky Hopkins into the Rock
& Roll Hall Of Fame
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