Goneville

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by Nick Bollinger




  GONEVILLE

  WINNER OF ADAM FOUNDATION PRIZE IN CREATIVE WRITING

  LONGLISTED FOR ROYAL SOCIETY TE APĀRANGI AWARD FOR GENERAL NON-FICTION

  ‘Enter this memoir and you enter the joy of language, the joy of music, the hurdy-gurdy of young life ... I seriously hope to read another book penned by Bollinger, he is so very, very good’

  PAULA GREEN, The Sunday Star-Times

  ‘Stunning ... As with Dylan’s Chronicles or Patti Smith’s Just Kids [a book] to return to, re-read and then re-read again’

  SIMON SWEETMAN, Off the Tracks

  'A teenager with the music bug and the freedom to roam discovers an alternative society, of rebels and refugees, musos and marijuana’

  CHRIS BOURKE, author of Blue Smoke

  'A superb book ... this is very fine journalism, dressed-down but dapper. Bollinger’s prose is crisp as a freshly ironed shirt, the fabric is colourful without being flashy, the cut is immaculate, the top-stitching stylishly understated, all excess adornment stripped away so that what remains really shines’

  GRANT SMITHIES, Fairfax Media

  ‘No stone (or stoner) unturned ... New Zealand music history at its finest’

  KARYN HAY, RadioLIVE

  ‘Bollinger is that rare writer on music ... he’s a musician himself and understands what is actually taking place when he writes about it ... In one bravura section, he sets himself the challenge of conveying in words the experience of hearing a performance by Mammal that no one is ever likely to hear. He succeeds brilliantly’

  PAUL LITTLE, North & South

  ‘Bollinger claims he didn’t set out to write a memoir, but some of the book’s crispest, most evocative writing is about personal moments’

  JAMES BELFIELD, New Zealand Listener

  ‘A great read’

  MEL HOMER and MIKE PURU, The Café, TV3

  Also by Nick Bollinger

  How to Listen to Pop Music

  100 Essential New Zealand Albums

  First edition published in 2016 by Awa Press,

  Unit 1, Level 3, 11 Vivian Street, Wellington 6011, New Zealand.

  First reprinted 2017.

  ISBN 978-1-927249-54-3

  Ebook formats

  Epub 978-1-927249-55-0

  Mobi 978-1-927249-56-7

  Copyright © Nick Bollinger 2016

  The right of Nick Bollinger to be identified as the author of this work in terms of Section 96 of the Copyright Act 1994 is hereby asserted.

  This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

  A catalogue record for this book is available from the National Library of New Zealand.

  Front cover: Rough Justice on their first trip to Auckland, 1977. From left: Stephen Jessup, Peter Kennedy, Rick Bryant, Simon Page, Nick Bollinger and Martin Highland: photograph by Murray Cammick

  Back cover: Rick Bryant, Martin Highland and Nick Bollinger, the Island of Real Café, Auckland, 1978: photograph by Murray Cammick

  Author photo: Katherine McRae

  Cover designed by Pieta Brenton, pietabrenton.com

  Typesetting by Tina Delceg

  Find more great books at awapress.com

  Produced with the assistance of

  Ebook conversion 2018 by meBooks

  For Rick

  CONTENTS

  Preface

  01 The Rick Bryant school of rock ’n’ roll

  02 Mesmerising echoes

  03 Rebels and refugees

  04 Fellow dissenters

  05 The Union Hall

  Hidden track: ‘Play Nasty for Me’

  06 ‘You can’t dress like that in the Hutt’

  07 Evangelists

  08 Peter F. and the lights

  09 Increasing sophistication

  10 Glam rock and fantasmagorical hugglemaflops

  11 A Dragon’s tale

  12 Departures

  13 The Windy City Strugglers go electric

  14 Broader theatre

  Medley: ‘Lawdy Miss Clawdy’/‘Sunshine’

  15 Preparations

  16 ‘Not the musical genius business’

  17 On the bus

  18 Encounters

  19 Pig’s head and pipi bolognese

  20 Showdown at the Spectrum Bar

  21 Punks and independents

  22 Goneville

  23 Off the bus

  24 Trendy lefties and ordinary blokes

  25 On the street

  26 Anything could happen

  Epilogue

  Coda: ‘Freedom St Marys’

  Acknowledgements

  Selected discography

  Sources and notes

  Photographs and images

  Index

  PREFACE

  This book is not a history, although I uncover some history in the telling. While much of it concerns music, I would hesitate to call it musicology. Nor have I set out to write a memoir, although the story starts in the memory I am writing to make better sense of some things I saw and heard when I was young, the kind of things that determine what you do with the rest of your life.

  Growing up in Wellington, I was a busy kid. I swung on vines and built forts in the Town Belt, printed my own newspapers and handed them out in the school playground, saved up to buy the latest Beatles’ singles, and made up songs. Yet by the time I reached my teens I was in a liminal zone. It was as though a world existed behind the one I was living in, a world I was catching glimpses of- as you do when someone opens a door to a room you want to enter and explore, yet the door swings shut before you get there. This was the world the music came from, and maybe other things even more important. I felt that if I could just gain access to this world all its mysteries would be explained and my real life would begin.

  But there was another world too, one that was in many ways even more remote, although I walked through it every day. This was the world where most New Zealand males seemed to feel at home. It was a place where rugby mattered more than music, where drinking beer was the only acceptable way of altering your consciousness, and old men in suits were entrusted with the interests of the nation. Women were left on the margins. This view was reinforced by newspapers, politicians, school principals, and other figures of power and authority.

  I knew I didn’t belong to that world, yet I sensed I would somehow need to navigate a path through it, defend myself against it, perhaps even challenge it. It wasn’t until many years later that I began to understand that music had a story to tell about these two versions of New Zealand, and that by listening to it, and paying attention to some of the people who created it or gave it a space in which to exist, I could learn something more about the country I lived in.

  Essentially, this book encapsulates a decade. I’ll call it the ‘70s, although for me the decade begins in 1971 - the year I turned thirteen, started college, and began to get glimpses through that mystery door- and ends in 1981, the year of the Springbok tour, when New Zealand’s two worlds came into violent collision. Inevitably, the story extends either side of this time frame. The ‘60s - a decade that New Zealand really experienced in the ‘70s, as Tim Finn once said to me in an interview — were formative, for me and the characters in this story. Other events have their beginnings in the ‘50s and even earlier. And looking back now, after more than forty years, many insights have been informed by the time that has passed in between.

  There were a lot of New Zealanders who did impor
tant things in music during this period. Not all of them will appear in these pages. The starting point for this story is simply the music that mattered to me. Some of it became popular but much still remains obscure. One reason for writing is to shine a light on some of that lost or forgotten music. Among the people who made it were a few I got to know well. In particular there’s Rick Bryant, a citizen, if ever I met one, of that other New Zealand, the world behind the door. Other people in these pages I had never spoken to before my need to understand something about my own experience led me to seek them out.

  Perhaps as significant as the musicians are two entrepreneurs. In the early ‘70s, Graeme Nesbitt and Richard Holden were both active and creative in delivering music to local audiences. They weren’t the only ones, but it would be hard to find any who possessed more singular or contrasting visions of what New Zealand’s music scene could or should be.

  The other person in this story is me. I am a reluctant character. I have tried on a number of occasions to make myself invisible or to exit these pages altogether, and in a few places I have just about succeeded. Yet, in the end, the obsessions, digressions and confessions you’ll find here — and many of the stories — are mine.

  And Goneville? It is a name that kept coming up as I was writing this book, and each time its meaning shifted a little. It’s almost Gonville, the suburb of Whanganui where Johnny Devlin, New Zealand’s first rock ‘n’ roll star, grew up, so arguably the birthplace of New Zealand rock ‘n’ roll. But it is also an imaginary place that might be every obscure New Zealand town that every obscure New Zealand band ever played. Rough Justice, a band you will read about in this book, played in many Gonevilles. It is, too, a name for the past: that other country to which you can never return. It has a touch of the hipster vernacular, the sort of word I imagine the early pot smokers might have used to describe their state of mind. It also turns up in a song by Tony Backhouse that Rough Justice used to play - ‘maybe the Goneville line is down’.

  It’s a place you could almost find on a map, but not quite.

  01

  THE RICK BRYANT SCHOOL OF ROCK ‘N’ ROLL

  Wellington, April 1977. The cottage perches on the side of a steep hill in the shadow of the Chinese embassy. Flakes of pale paint hang from the weatherboards. I’ve climbed the zigzag path and crooked wooden stairs and now stand on the veranda under a rusted corrugated-iron awning. Below me on the narrow road are Jaguars, early 1950s models, going nowhere. One has a flat tyre. Another has a window missing and a brick wedged hard against the front wheel. And there is yet another up the street, a maroon Mark VII, its nose just visible around the sharp bend. Once, outside a concert at Downstage Theatre, I saw the man who has summoned me here drive slowly past in this car with a police car on his tail.

  And on the road, occupying the space of three cars, is the bus, an ex-Railways Bedford with patches of the original lime green showing through its unfinished repaint. It has been decorated with Renaissance cherubs, slightly grazed, as though they may have flown too close to the ground. Above the windscreen the destination sign reads ROCK ‘N’ ROLL. On the long panel down one side, in bold baroque capitals, are the words ROUGH JUSTICE.

  I knock and the door opens. The woman is in her early twenties, perhaps two or three years older than me, with fair hair and a wide smile. ‘You must be Nick. I’m Janet.’ This is Janet Clouston, who has phoned the day before to say that Rick Bryant has requested a visit. The call was unexpected: I don’t really know Rick, although I know a lot of stories about him. It feels as though this is becoming one of them.

  Janet leads me through a dark hallway into a sitting room lined from floor to ceiling with books. It’s like an antiquarian’s storeroom. I see Shakespeare and Proust and Beckett and a history of the opium trade. The only collection this size I’ve ever seen is my father’s. A bright poster on a wall proclaims: A ROCK BAND ON TOUR - BETTER CALL GROUND CONTROL. Arranged on a sideboard is a collection of ceramic plates bearing images of crayfish. I don’t see Rick but, like the telltale scent when you enter a creature’s lair, the earthy smell of pot tells me he is home. Then, through a doorway to another room, I notice him, flat on a bed, his head wreathed in smoke.

  Removing the joint from his mouth, Rick beckons me, thanks me for coming, winces with pain, and motions me to take a seat. Between drags he explains that he has hurt his fucking back making repairs to the bus but expects to be on his feet again in a few days. His band, Rough Justice, which he formed after his release from prison last year, has broken up. Three members handed in their notice mid-tour, so he left them on the roadside somewhere in the central North Island and drove off.

  He pauses, gazes into the middle distance, and releases a long loud staccato laugh as he recalls the mutineers’ misjudgement, then curses at the effect laughter has on his herniated disc. He’s starting a new band, he says, and he’s keeping the name Rough Justice. After all, it’s his fucking name, isn’t it? And anyway Janet has already painted it on the bus. He has two musicians signed up. Would I consider being the third?

  I have been listening to Rick sing since I was thirteen. Now, seated at his bedside as he outlines his proposal, I feel as though I’m being asked to become a character in a book that, until this moment, might have been a work of fiction. I am eighteen. In the two years since I left school I have stayed up all night, slept all day, practised my bass playing, fallen hopelessly in love, and performed occasionally with a group called The Windy City Strugglers. I have been fired from building sites, failed as a furniture mover, and almost succeeded as a cellarman until I lost control of a booze-stacked trolley and flooded the kitchen of the Commercial Travellers’ Club. A couple of months ago I enrolled at university, acting on the advice I imagine my father would have given me. A bright bugger like you might have more fun doing a few papers than mopping up after a bunch of alcoholic salesmen,’ I could hear him say. But joining a full-time band sounded even better. And there was no one to tell me not to.

  I’m not sure I’m good enough to play in Rick’s band. I am in awe of all the different bass players I have seen in his various bands - Steve Hemmens, Patrick Bleakley, and particularly Mark Hornibrook - but could there be a better way to learn? Rick asks what I’m studying, tells me an intelligent person who has grown up around books doesn’t need to go to university, wonders if I realise that Captain Beefheart ripped it all off Howlin’ Wolf, and by the way have I read any Evelyn Waugh?

  He says he has some business to attend to. It’s not clear what the nature of this business is, but he seems to be able to conduct it by telephone from his current prone position, and suggests I adjourn to the sitting room where there is a good stereo and help myself to a glass of wine.

  He has albums I’ve never seen by names I’ve come to know as standard-bearers of soul music - James Brown, Aretha Franklin, Bobby ‘Blue’ Bland - and others I’ve never heard of- Rasputin’s Stash, Ten Wheel Drive, Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes. ‘Let me know if you hear anything you think we could learn,’ Rick calls from the other room. Aretha is singing ‘Baby I Love You’, I’m sipping from a jar of something plum-coloured and soul-warming, and my brief university career has just come to an end.

  02

  MESMERISING ECHOES

  Wellington Station was shaking like the inside of a speaker box. I was twelve, in my last year of primary school, and had signed up, with my brother, to play a small part in a children’s television serial about a group of schoolkids who catch a bank robber. The director, Derek Morton, was a friend of our older cousin Alun Bollinger, which is how two kids like us, with no experience in acting or television, came to be involved. Derek also knew the filmmaker, Geoff Murphy, who had come up with the story, and Bruno Lawrence, a drummer and actor who was playing one of the robbers.

  I was more interested in music than movie-making. The Beatles had been my obsession since a Christmas several years before, when Alun and his sister Sue had played me some of their new records. Nothing before had ever made
me feel as good as the shot of rhythm and noise that was ‘Twist and Shout’. From that day on I sought out The Beatles everywhere. I listened to the Sunset Show, five p.m. every weekday on Radio 2ZB, where their songs would be sandwiched between miserably slow stuff such as Andy Williams singing ‘On the Street Where You Live’ and tunes I liked almost as much as The Beatles’, like Manfred Mann’s ‘Do Wah Diddy Diddy’ and The Supremes’ ‘Baby Love’. But The Beatles had my loyalty. I saved my pocket money, one shilling a week, until I had enough to buy my own 45 of ‘Twist and Shout’, followed by others: ‘Can’t Buy Me Love’, ‘A Hard Day’s Night’, ‘I Feel Fine’, ‘Ticket To Ride’.

  When The Beatles came to New Zealand I failed to persuade my parents to let me go and see them. After all, I had just turned six. But Dad agreed to take me to A Hard Day’s Night. It was a matinee and the theatre was half empty, but sitting in the front row were two girls who screamed and sobbed throughout the film.

  Over the next few years The Beatles would change in fascinating and unpredictable ways. ‘Strawberry Fields Forever’. ‘I Am the Walrus’. ‘Revolution’. Their records taught me to listen, and I would willingly receive any new combination of sounds they threw at me. When my father read me a newspaper story about the band bringing London traffic to a halt by playing a concert on a rooftop, I persuaded my brother and a couple of friends after school to climb on to the roof of the Cable Car station, where I shouted Beatles’ songs until the authorities ordered us down.

  I augmented my collection of singles with LPs I’d get for Christmas or birthdays if I was lucky. But I could never afford all the music I wanted, so I was looking forward to the money I’d earn from the television programme. It took up more time than I expected. What was initially proposed as three weeks’ work, mostly during school holidays, dragged on for half the year. We would regularly find Derek waiting for us at the school gate at three o’clock, ready to whisk us to Newtown where, in those prehealth-and-safety days, he would have us scaling walls, jumping off roofs, running up and down stairwells chased by a fat man dressed as a policeman, and wielding samurai swords in vacant lots, while he tried to get as much footage as he could before the light died.

 

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