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RM) How fast did Punk spread throughout 1977?
Ron) Well, it got
going in ’76. The Wycombe Punks, because they had me to promote at
the Nags Head, got their first Sex Pistols gig there on September
3rd, which was actually 3 weeks before the 100 Club Festival. They
were on the case really early. In ’76, Wycombe and the surrounding
towns were full of Punks. By the end of that year, they even had a
black Punk in Wycombe, a guy called Marmite. He had black hair, with
a silver zigzag stripe in it. By ’77, it was all up and running
everywhere. By January or February 1977 almost everyone under the
age of 18 or 19 was a Punk.
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RM) When did the press really get hold of it?
Ron) Then. But they
were on to it before the Bill Grundy Show, the Punk Festival was
before that show and from then it was just….you know. I used to get
phone calls, from NBC and CBS in America asking if anything’s going
on, or coming off, could you let us know.
RM) That’s odd, being as the Americans claim to have invented Punk!
Ron) They were a year
or two ahead. It’s like most things. It’s like the Blues. We had to
take the Blues back to America for White America to know about it.
Cream, Rolling Stones, Fleetwood Mac, those sort of people.
RM) America’s too big and too diverse. It couldn’t host youth
movements like Punk and 2-Tone.
Ron) No. It had to
come from somewhere else. I mean, in New York it was a club scene,
in Britain it was a national scene.
RM) What did you think of those American bands?
Ron) Some of them were
really good. I didn’t think New York Dolls were as good as bands
like Johnny Thunders and the Heartbreakers. They were probably the
best Punk band I ever saw, actually.
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RM) And Blondie?
Ron) Well, Blondie.
The bass player, Nigel was a guy from the Nags Head. Tigger, we used
to call him. That was his name round Wycombe. He played at the Nags
Head before he was in Blondie. I’ve got to say that Tigger and
Blondie didn’t get on. Maybe she fancied him, and he didn’t fancy
her!
RM) He would’ve been the only British male in the late ‘70’s who
didn’t, then?!
Ron) Perhaps he knew
something we didn’t!
RM) Back to the serious stuff, Ron. The Clash flew to Belfast, had
some nice photos taken near some barricades and murals. Then they
flew home. No gigs played. What do you think about all that?
Ron) Well, it’s up to
them. Sometimes, promotional events can take over. You can be wise
after the event, it might have sounded like a good thing at the
time. Who knows, I mean, it might have been sincere. I didn’t see
them as a band who had very political motives outside of the
publicity. I’m not saying they didn’t have a heart, but sometimes
publicity sows a life of its own, you know.
RM) If they’d played, this would never have been an issue with
people over the years.
Ron) No, but they
would do benefits and things, R.A.R, and one just before Joe died,
for a fireman’s benefit.
RM) It’s ironic. The Pistols and Strummer/Jones last gigs in England
were both strike fund benefits. And the Pistols, apparently, never
cashed their cheque from that Christmas Day one.
Ron) I wasn’t a party
to any of that, but yeah, that was a good gesture. A lesson. A guy
came down to interview me, and he lived near Joe Strummer. Lived in
the same village and he was a long time journalist. He said that he
thought that Joe Strummer had a lot of heart, and it was very
typical of him that he’d go out and do a benefit as The Clash, but
commercially would only do The Mescalero’s.
RM) Back to the Pistols, now Ron. What was their early live sound
like?
Ron) I’ll tell you
something now that I’ve never told anybody before. Musically, when
the Pistols started, I thought that they were, or sounded like, a
youth club heavy metal band. Not the songs, or the vocals, or even
the presentation but the actual sound of the band. It wasn’t a weak
sound, but it wasn’t particularly pokey. Within three months, they’d
perked it up a lot.
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RM) How big an influence was Dave Goodman to their sound?
Ron) He brought a lot
of stuff to them. He gave them a lot of advice. He’d make them sound
a lot more pokey, he’d get them to do things. I spent a lot of time
with Dave Goodman, as when you’re a promoter, you’re there to open
it up. And Dave used to arrive early, you know, he’d arrive at four
in the afternoon. I’d give him a hand in with some of the gear, and
we’d spend some time together as we’d be the only ones there for a
couple of hours. I’d be answering the phone and stuff, doing other
things like that, but I got to know that guy. He never actually
spoke to me about Punk. He mentioned the Pistols, but he never
actually spoke about the Punk movement. I wish I’d recorded all
those conversations!
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RM) Did you always fill the 100 Club?
Ron) Well, after the
first couple of months, it filled out, yeah. I mean, the Pistols
didn’t pull a crowd for about their first six gigs. We’re talking
about 50 – 80 people, the Bromley Contingent and a few interested
parties!
RM) Some people must’ve come in to watch the Pistols out of
curiosity? Maybe just walking by the club, then deciding to see what
was going on in there, and finding their lives would never be quite
the same again?
Ron) Yeah, I think
that younger people who come down to see it would change. They’d
come down the first night with long hair and flares, and by the
third night they’d seen them they’d come down in drainpipes and Punk
haircut, you know?
RM) What about the other clubs, Ron, like the Roxy?
Ron) Went to the Roxy,
yes, many times. It was a bit of a pokey hole actually. The Roxy
didn’t last long. The Vortex I went to. The stories I used to hear
about that place! It was more of a disco crowd, actually.
Rent-a-Punk, you know? It wasn’t for the faint hearted, not very
savoury!
RM) Did you get to read many of the fanzines?
Ron) Yeah, I did. I
used to see them all. We had one out in the Home Counties called the
Buckshee Press, which is a piss take of the Bucks Free Press, of
course there was Sniffin’ Glue, we used to see that at the 100 Club
all the time. There were others, too, I came across them all over
the place, actually, some of them were just one issue, you know, and
just a couple of pages.
RM) Did you know Mark Perry and the music hacks the time?
Ron) Yeah, I knew
Mark. Caroline Coon, too. Caroline has been very kind to me in her
books, and things, you know. In fact she blamed me, or congratulated
me for the whole of Punk in one of them, special thanks to Ron
Watts, and that’s nice! Caroline was the first dedicated journalist
who wanted to see Punk happen. And, I’m glad in a way that it
happened for her, too, because she put her money on the table, you
know? Same as I did. She ran that Release thing, which got all the
hippies out of jail for cannabis. She was ahead of her time, I mean
seriously, you can’t lock someone up for 6 months for smoking
cannabis!
RM) Changing tack again, Ron. What did you think of Malcolm Mclaren?
Ron) I like Malcolm
personally. No doubt, you know, I’m not just saying that. On first
impressions he looked like an Edwardian gentleman. He’d got that off
to a tee, I’d never seen anyone look like him, actually. I never had
any bad dealings with him, and he was always very straightforward.
RM) People either loved or loathed Mclaren. John Lydon isn’t a fan.
Ron) Yeah, I think it
was more of a financial thing, but I mean, John Lydon should also
remember that without Mclaren he probably wouldn’t have been in
them. Mclaren set the scene going, I was the first to pick it up,
from that, before recording deals, but he never stuffed me like he
stuffed the record companies. They made a lot of money, initially.
RM) Did the record companies drop the band so willingly because it
was Jubilee year?
Ron) Well, the Pistols
were full on and did it. I mean, “God Save The Queen” become one of
the biggest selling British hit singles, didn’t it? It’s still
selling now! And they wouldn’t let it on the shelves, would they.
Bless ‘em!
RM) You were on the legendary ’77 boat trip up the Thames, when the
Pistols played and Mclaren got arrested. What was that like?
Ron) It was lovely!
You should’ve been there, honestly. The band were ok, they just did
their normal gig. I enjoyed seeing people that you wouldn’t expect,
talking to each other. When you’ve got the boss of Virgin, that
business empire, talking to Sid Vicious, can you imagine what sort
of conversation they had?! I’d loved to have taken a tape recorder
in there!
RM) Do you think the police raid on the boat was planned?
Ron) I tell you what,
I was amazed at that. I was actually on deck, and the boat was going
downstream, back towards Westminster Pier. The Pistols were playing,
and it got a bit jostley. You know, a bit of charging about in a
small space ‘cause it wasn’t very big, the boat, really. So, I went
out on to the deck by the railings, and a couple of other people
come and joined me. There was plenty of food and drink, and I had a
beer and a chicken leg or something, you know. And I’m looking and I
can see these two police boats, and they were a way off. Downstream,
I could see two more police boats, and they were a way off, too. I
carried on eating the chicken and drinking the beer, looked round,
and they were all there, together, at the same time! I mean, the
degree of professionalism was just amazing! And then they were on
that boat, in force, like about twelve or fifteen coppers, in
moments. The boat was quite high sided, but they were up there. And
you know what they were doing, they were up there and on that boat
and we were escorted into the Westminster Pier basin.
RM) Then Mclaren was nicked. Do you reckon he did just enough to get
the publicity of an arrest without being charged with anything
serious?
Ron) I saw that. He
got a lot of press out of it, yeah. He knew. Everybody turned to me,
to try and sort it all out. One of them was a Countess!
RM) Ron, you mentioned that no other bands were on the boat. Was
there a real rivalry between these new bands at the time?
Ron) The Jam were the
young upstarts according to the Pistols, you know. The Clash were
their biggest rivals at the time. The Damned, they had no time for.
RM) Why don’t The Damned get their due credit? In my opinion, they
should.
Ron) I don’t know. A
lot of people say they’re just a Punk cocktail act. You don’t see a
lot about them, and yet they were the first to get a single out and
they could play. Scabies could play. Brian James come up brilliant,
but then he’d have done anything, if they’d have asked him to join
Led Zeppelin he’d have done that, and Captain (Sensible), well I
like Captain. |
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RM) Buzzcocks were, from what I’ve heard on bootlegs, a bit rough to
start with. They really hit a rich seam once they got up and
running.
Ron) If the Buzzcocks
could make it, anybody could. I wasn’t impressed, really. But what’s
in the future’s in the future, you never know what is at the time.
They blossomed.
RM) And Magazine? Did you rate them?
Ron) Yeah, I did.
Brilliant guitarist, John McGeoch. And Penetration, they were a good
band, and X-Ray Spex.
RM) Which bands are you the most pleased to have seen play?
Ron) Well, I mean, it’s all of them. But where do you start?!
Alright, the Pistols and The Clash, definitely, yeah. The Jam -
pleased to see them anywhere, anytime. I did enjoy the Damned at an
early stage, but they’re not in the top 5. And Sham 69, and The
Heartbreakers.
RM) I heard “Pretty Vacant” on the radio in my car earlier today,
and I got the old goose bumps. Does any of the music from that time
affect you the same?
Ron) All the early
Pistols stuff, yeah!
RM) What’s your view on Punk and Reggae getting married?
Ron) Yeah, if people
want to get together and cross pollinate ideas, then that’s alright.
It was the underbelly, twice. You had the white working class and
the black working class responding to each other at last!
RM) Some Punk bands who had a go at playing Reggae were better than
others. Ruts, SLF and of course The Clash all cracked it in their
own styles…
Ron) The worst Reggae
act I ever saw, were The Slits. Actually, probably just the worst
act!
RM) Do you think that Punk and Reggae blending in ’77 was the root
of Two Tone?
Ron) Yes. I’m sure it
came out of that. I used to have a lot of Reggae acts on in that
club, aside from Punk and the Blues and everything. I’d put on
Steele Pulse, or an American Blues artist like Muddy Waters, as long
as it was what I liked.
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RM) Your best front men and women?
Ron) I’m thinking
about this one…The best oddball front man was Wayne County. Best
front woman, from what I saw, Faye Fife.
RM) You rate Faye Fife over Poly Styrene?
Ron) You’re putting me
on the spot there! I’d put them equal for different reasons. Faye
used to put on a great act. They were perennially at the club and at
the Nags Head. Because I had so many venues, when they were coming
down again, I needed to know, because that’s three bookings to give
them. It was always like, “get your diary out, mate, when you coming
down?” If I gave them three bookings, they’d come down, and they
could fill it out with other stuff, do the rounds. X-Ray Spex were
good, too. Really good band. The Rezillos are still going, actually. |
RM) I watched a documentary on TV the other night about that Stiff
Records tour. The one where they hired a train from BR.
Ron) They did the
first night for me, at High Wycombe, yeah. There were some funny
people there! Wreckless Eric was at the Punk thing I did in
Blackpool this year. It took me about an hour to recognise him. I
kept looking and looking and vaguely remembered him. Not a nice
bloke.
RM) Here’s the last one, Ron. Punk lit a fuse for many people. I’m
one (albeit two years late), the other people who contributed
questions to this interview are others and there’s millions more. As
Ed Armchair puts it, his fuse is still burning to this day, and has
affected virtually every aspect of his life since it was lit. Do you
have the same feelings about Punk as we do?
Ron) Yes. I got going
through that and it still survives. My first love in music was, and
is, Blues. I see a lot of similarities between Punk and Blues. They
both come from the underbelly of a society, and they’ve both
triumphed against all the odds. They both spoke for their people of
that time and place. They’ll reverberate forever. Punk freshened up
a stale music scene and the Blues were the bedrock for twentieth and
twenty-first century music.
RM) Ron, thanks for your time and best of luck with your new
projects.
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