In 1965 they visited Ireland for the second time, to
play the Adelphi cinema in Middle
Abbey Street , Dublin .
It was then a big auditorium seating some 2,000 people. These touring shows
would have several other artists on the bill, with the headline act coming on
at the end for a mere thirty minutes or so. “Pop” tours, as they were called
then, invariably used the cinema chains in Britain and Ireland, as these were
the biggest indoor venues available, and things had not reached the stage of
having huge outdoor concerts. For one thing, the technology was not there: even
in the cinema gigs, the performers used the venue’s public address system for
the vocals, and quite puny (by today’s standards) amplifiers for the guitars.
So you had to have good ears to hear the
songs above the audience screams, especially if the headliners were of the
stature of the Stones or the Beatles. Mention of the Liverpudlians brings us to
a crucial element of this tale. (Elderly raconteur pauses for coughing fit and
takes sip of reviving barley water
before resuming). In those far off days, children, one was either a Stones fan
or a Beatles fan: you could not be both. I was definitely of the Beatle
persuasion; I simply liked their clever way with words. Also, they wrote their
own songs, while the arriviste Londoners were still doing “cover versions”
(their first two singles after all were written by the Beatles, while their
third, “Not Fade Away” had been a ‘fifties hit by Buddy Holly and the Crickets.
(You see? I’m getting partisan all over again).
Shortly before the Stones’ second coming I
had begun work with Hugh McLaughlin’s “Creation” magazine group. It was a small
operation then, based in Grafton
Street (where Creation arcade still stands). I was
Editorial Assistant (and tea-maker). “Creation” magazine was a glossy fashion publication
edited by the proprietor’s wife, Nuala. They had also recently launched the more
downmarket Woman’s Way magazine with
some success, and then decided it was time to target the teen market. Someone
thought it was a brilliant idea to call this new magazine Miss (this was long
before the sisterhood invented “Ms”, which used to be short for manuscript). As
the youngest member of the staff, I pointed out that “Miss” was the opposite of
“Hit”. Nobody listened, and the magazine all too soon lived up to its title.
But while it was still alive, the Stones
revisited Dublin .
Before their arrival I wrote a piece about them for Miss magazine, strongly
making out the case that the Beatles were of an entirely superior order to these
upstarts. The Stones had quite successfully managed their early publicity to
portray them as the “bad boys” of the music business. They were not quite the
anti-Christ, but they were definitely the anti-Beatles (who, paradoxically had
been quite a rough lot before Brian Epstein put them in suits and mop-top
hairstyles). The British tabloids loved to seize any opportunity to show the
Rolling Stones in a bad light. The group (not a band) under the influence of
their then manager, Andrew Loog Oldham, were happy to oblige: it kept them on
the front pages, upset the adults and endeared them to the rebellious teenagers
of both sexes. My article naturally recycled most of these stories (I think one
accused two of them of urinating on a wall at the back of a motorway petrol
station: really shocking stuff).
On the day of the Adelphi concert, the
Rolling Stones were ensconced in the Intercontinental Hotel (later Jurys) in
Ballsbridge. They were not available for interviews, and in any event, Irish
papers had little interest in the doings of rock groups, either on or off
stage. But we gung-ho journos in Miss
Magazine (photographer Val Sheehan and the present writer) decided to breach
the citadel.
Our secret weapon was a chap who had recently returned from London where he had made the acquaintance of Andrew Loog Oldham. Our friend joined us in the lobby of
the Intercontinental Hotel and persuaded the receptionist to make a phone call
to the Stones’ manager on the top floor. At first the response was “no
interviews”, but our friend had earlier sent a copy of Miss Magazine (with my anti-Stone diatribe)
to Oldham , and when he heard that the author
was downstairs we were invited up.
Okay, I didn’t quite have a “fight” with
the Rolling Stones, but it came close at one stage. I grinned manfully as they
launched sarcastic barbs at my journalistic effort. Among other things, I had
opined that Mick Jagger could not sing, and I stuck to that in his presence.
Brian Jones (that’s how long ago this was) came into the room looking quite
dapper. He grinned and agreed with me, but perhaps he was just stirring things
(or could this have been the very beginnings of the rift between Brian and the
other boys). I did tell Mick that on their records his voice was virtually
inaudible behind the guitars and drums. He jested that this was to make people
buy the records so they could learn the words. Charlie Watts merely looked
hurt; Bill Wyman said little that I recall, but Keith Richard was another
matter.
Part of my article claimed that their
previous show in the Adelphi had been a very tame affair compared to the Beatles
show there in November 1963. This seemed to particularly provoke the great
guitar man. I had impugned their reputation by suggesting that the girls had
screamed and wept louder for the Liverpudlian outfit. He advanced towards me
with the words (engraved on my memory): “I’ve a good mind to give you a bust in
the snot”. But the others restrained him. Instead of busting my snot, he then
said, “I suppose you think the Beatles are saints.” Before I could demur he
launched into an impersonation of John Lennon. Pressing a finger to the tip of
his nose to make it resemble the lattter’s acquiline proboscis, he lurched,
stiff-legged around the room, demanding in pure scouse: “Have you got a joint?
If you haven’t, you can fuck off.”
I wasn’t quite sure what he was talking
about. I remember being vaguely puzzled as to why he thought John Lennon would
get so worked up about a rib roast or any cut of meat for that matter. Shortly
thereafter I made my excuses and left, unbowed and fortunately unbloodied, too.
I never did become a Stones fan, and I’ve
never gone to another of their gigs. I’d be afraid Keith might spot me in the
crowd.
Éanna Brophy (copyright)
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