Up until June 72, I'd organised the band nights at the Umbrella and helped with Pete Waterman's venue at the Walgrave pub.
This was my first go at organising an experimental mixed media event. I'd been going to Liz Lovatt's (Heather) Folk and Poetry nights at the Umbrella and had just mastered enough guitar to accompany myself with poems and few songs. These were my first gigs. The Umbrella got me started on so much!
I was flabbergasted to find the Umbrella had put my name of the posters. I was pleased but embarrassed. maybe the Umbrella advertised it as a 'Trev Teasdel Folk Night' as a warning (cause I didn't put it on myself folks - too humble!). Perhaps they were saying 'be careful this might be different, strange, weird!' which is cool 'cos it was!!
The main bit was a bit like a continuation Liz's folk poetry nights but I was beginning to mix things up a bit, experiment. I didn't know what I wanted but I wanted 'different' and thought it might have to be the people that came that would make it different. The main result of 'different' came in an acoustic jam session -inviting people to jam around me reading a poems and playing guitar. Then came the idea that they had to play an instrument that they were unfamiliar with (and good musicians can usually get something out of an unfamiliar instrument but they wouldn't play what they were used to playing - it would be different - stretching. It didn't matter if it didn't work - I set it with the audience that this was experimental. It kind of worked and I distributed percussive instruments to the audience and told them they had to join in. Some of the percussive instruments weren't instruments at all, well they were when we employed the objects as such! Chair backs, boxes, books -anything. It was all getting a bit incoherent and people were disappearing fast! I began to think it had all failed and that people were leaving in disgust. When it got really sparse - I went downstairs in despair only to hear a jam in the coffee bar. I figured they were setting up a rival event! Just as I decided that they all rushed upstairs passed me. Confused and curious I followed only to discover that 'Bin' - a jazz drummer who hung out at the Umbrella, had an idea to organise the percussion in a really creative way. Instead of banging on any old way - it was all co-ordinated and inspired. The breaking of the mould had inspired them to do something really creative and you know everyone really enjoyed it. the gap between audience and artists had been transcended. I couldn't say that it would happen everytime but it certainly was a 'Humpoesic Happening'. The term Humpoesic was invented by me for a competition in Record Mirror in 1969. The Scaffold wanted a word that described what they did -ie Music, poetry and humour. I made the word up from those words. You could extend the word into Humpoesictry! I never sent it in but later used for this event and another I did when I moved to Teesside in 1980.
For the second one we had some singer songwriter friends. As blogged elsewhere, musicians from the Birmingham Streetpress tried to come through but were thwarted by transport probs. I lived in a communal house in Shilton, and several musicians lived there at various times - Dave Lewis, Steve Brimstone (Derek's son), and Nigel Clark of Cardinal. I'd met Nigel at the Butts tech - we were both apprentice electricians. He was heavily in to psychology and introduced me to lots of books - Psychology of thinking, RD Laing etc etc. This inspired my songwriting as we both liked Paul Simon songs which were about alienation in various forms. He put music and sang one of my earliest efforts written when I was 17! The Ups and Downs in the Life of Mr Toil and Strife!!. Later I swapped psychology for Sociology when I discovered New Society on a London News stand in 1969. I'd gone with my mate to Apple with book of original lyrics! As we walked down the street -Paul McCartney ran past us - his hair brushed back as in Let it be. There were the Apple groupies outside. We didn't go in though - lost our bottle. Get Back had been recorded on the roof top a little while before and was still riding high on the charts and Ballad of John and Yoko was top of the chart (June 1969. I was 18. Nigel gave me my first song books - The Beatles and Dylan's Bringing it All Back Home. He taught me to play a 12 bar piece on guitar and alerted me to Joni Mitchell. I never heard him sing my songs but he played some with his group at St Osburgs. He lived and played out in a folk club in Harbury. I hadn't seen him for a while when he came to the Humpoesic Happening. My friend Sue Pritchard
was there from Birmingham and joined in with the singing. We only had too Humpoesic Happenings but it set me on my way and I began playing at the Streetpress gigs in Birmingham and in various folk clubs and inbetween sets of friends bands like Fisson, Mick Green Blues Band.
Here is a poem I did to music - it was the counter part to one of Lyndie B's both written in Birmingham in a communal house.
Dance candle dance for me,
Let me see you pirouette
and jump high in the air.
Graceful turns and flickers
in time to the sounds of Cohen.
Burn your way into frozen hearts
and melt the hate within.
Dance candle, dance for me
before the light is gone forever.
Before we lose our sight
to live forever in the darkness
of our blackened hearts.
When at last you die exhausted.
We live on in memory of your love
and dance for you in life.
Dance Candle, dance for me
and give a little light to the world.
Lyndie B.
TACE IS LATIN FOR CANDLE
Lo...the flame flees and flickers like a bee
Catapults its message - 'Mute'
Casts shadow harlequins in a scene for silhouettes.
Commands the voice of grievance to perpetual sleep
For a word would blemish the skin of serenity
and silence slays battalions of hate.
Lo, TACE IS LATIN FOR A CANDLE
Upon the straying steeds of days sable deeds
Rides with spurs of peace
Aphrodite's flaming police.
Yes we have fenced with words, fed the eagles not the birds
While love hides behind
the shield of hate's battlefield
and the tempest of our wroth writhes
with the pangs of peace
Proud victory smirks the flames
Lo - TACE IS LATIN FOR A CANDLE
Trev Teasdel (Birmingham 1971) - (Poem performed with guitar
SOME OF THE PREVIOUS POETRY AND FOLK SESSIONS
Heather Lovett (AKA Liz Lovett / Varney) organised regular Poetry And folk (or unplugged sessions - before the term was coined) from 1971. The first of these were in the Umbrella Theatre and then upstairs.
These were my my first experience of performing - I'd just about learned to play guitar by the autumn of 71 and did a few T Rex covers - Cosmic Dancer and Cat's Steven's Sad Lisa and had begun accompanying my poems on guitar. Singing my own songs began around that time.
An earlier session was organised by Geoff Pegg and Norman Wheatley. (Geoff Pegg was chairman of the programme committee). Tuesday Evenings.
Some of the blurbs read -
"Poetry and Folk - A session for poets and folk singers, where new ideas may be read or sang, and discussion is encouraged. Not for performers only - you can listen if you do not wish to take part."
"A folk based session featuring a guest folk group from Coventry called Toadstool, whose members include John Brown, who is no stranger tot he Umbrella club. there will other singers, musicians and poets present at what should be a very enjoyable evening of poetry and folk. Look out next month for an event featuring a well-known poet.(Could it be Roger McGough?). (April 71 - Umbrella Programme).
In November 1971 BRUCE NORRIS (who became a poetry editor for Hobo for a short while in 1973) organised FOLK AND POETRY CONCERT on Sat 6th November.
"A folk music and poetry concert will be held in the lounge of the club on Saturday 6th November starting at 8pm promptly. Performers should be present at 7.30pm to make final arrangements. The following club members and friends will be singing or playing; Norman Wheatley (guitarist, singer and poet) Alison Lovett - Folk Singer, Jim Burland - Guitarist, Bruce Norris - Poet. There Will a charge of 10p for attendance at this concert.." (Umbrella Programme.).
A special Folk and story telling with shadow puppets concert was held Monday 13th November 1971 with MAGIC
LANTERN featuring Taffy Thomas, Peter Coe, Sheila Thomas, Christine Coe. at St. Mary's Hall - near the Golden Cross.
UMBRELLA FOLK CLUB
C 1969 - 70 Saturday night was the always popular traditional style Folk Club night.
Comments