When I see local bands of today playing in front of a bunch of bored
guys I feel deeply sorry for them (basically for bands but sometimes for both).
There were times when even locals like St. Albans’ Clientelle played regularly in
crowded venues and by the standards of that time they were yet another small
time band. Stevie Trudgett (or Stevie T) shares his memories about the long and
winding road of the young band from Hertfordshire area.
Hi, Stevie! Tell us briefly about your first steps in music. Who
influenced you to be a musician? Did you take some lessons or did you learn
everything yourself?
As I grew up in the 70’s I loved all
popular music from age 10. Marc Bolan and T.Rex were the soundtrack of my
teenage years. Bolan definitely inspired me to learn guitar and play in a band.
My mum bought me a guitar and I would ask all the people I knew who played to
teach me some new chords. I quickly got the hang of it.
I know that Rik joined the band answering an ad in some paper but how
did you get in touch with Roy Powell? Did you have any other members before Roy
joined Clientelle?
Roy and I are cousins. We grew up
together and formed our first ‘band’ at 14. We wrote some very basic songs
using the few chords we could play properly. By the time we were 17 we had our
first paying gig. We called ourselves Blue Ice. I had switched to bass guitar
by now, Roy on guitar/vocal, Phil Goodfellow on drums and Steve Campbell on
lead guitar. When Steve left Bernie Devine (school friend of Phil’s) came in on
guitar. Rik joined in 1978 when Bernie left.
By the way, who came up with the name and why was it misspelled?
It was Phil who suggested the name. He
had heard it in a Steely Dan song. We just couldn’t spell, but when we found
out it was wrong we decided to keep it as it looked better.
What can you remember about Roy’s “Rokit Review”? Was it a fanzine or
something? Was it a handwritten or was it professionally done thing?
The Rocket Review started life as a
review of recent gigs written up by the fans. It was compiled by “Bermuda Dave”
a hard-core fan who was present at every gig in a very vocal way. All hand
written on Roy’s mums typewriter, and bits and pieces were stuck in and the
whole lot photocopied about 100 times. It evolved into a 12 page fanzine with
loads of people contributing to it. I have every issue here and reading it
today makes me smile. It was a good way to let everyone know where the
forthcoming gigs were.
The band emerged at the time of punk invasion. Were you into this type
of music? Did you notice when fans started to turn on to hard rock and heavy
metal again?
We were definitely influenced by the
punk scene. When you listen to the album it is very obvious. But there was always
a heavy rock backbone. Rockit Roy was a metal head, and into the heavier bands.
When the NWOBHM began we just kind of slotted into it.
Was there a rock scene in St. Albans back then? Were you friends with
Bleak House and As Above So Below or were they rivals?
There was a very healthy rock scene
in Hertfordshire. And lots of opportunities for young bands to get heard. We
were members of the Musicians Union which helped us to get known by some useful
contacts. Bleak House were a little older and wiser than us in a sense that
they had been around a bit longer. They saw us as a bit of a threat I think.
But the fans would go to both our gigs, and it wasn’t uncommon to see kids
wearing denim jackets with both Clientelle and Bleak House patches sewn on the
back. There was always a friendly rivalry with all the local bands, but nobody
seemed to mind sharing the bill with others, regardless of who ‘headlined’, As
Above So Below included.
Phil The Snakecharmer |
What was the story with two pythons during some show? Who brought them
to the show?
Ha ha. Yes, this was a gig at the
Guildford College. We were substituting for a 60’s dance band who had
cancelled, and we filled in at the last minute. The act who was on before us
was a snake charmer. It was really just a girl who danced around her basket
that contained the python. During our set, because the music was not what they
were expecting, she decided it would be fun to let the snake out of the basket.
It wriggled its way towards us during a song, and took a particular liking to
Phil on the drums. Fortunately his eyesight was very poor and he didn’t even
notice! We only played our first set, then packed up and got out of there.
The band used to play a lot in The Horn Of Plenty. Tell me about this
place. What are your best memories about the shows in this venue?
This was THE place to be. The hub of
the local music scene. The Marquee Club of St. Albans. So many fond memories of
our gigs there. It was always packed wall to wall, hot and sweaty, sticky
floor, and just a great atmosphere. Best memories: The Christmas Parties every
year, revealing Clientelle’s first line-up change when Phil left. We brought
Witik on stage in a sack, and let him out in front of everyone. The reunion
shows we did there were fantastic.
Do you remember the show in Friends Of The Earth when the band almost
demolished the place? How did that happen? By the way, what was a typical show
of Clientelle?
I do remember a gig for FOTE but not
very well. There was an occasion when we set fire to the safety curtain at one
show. See the question below relating to this…
I don’t think there was a typical Clientelle show. It really depended on
the size of the venue. But we would always spend money on lights and special
effects. The sound was very important to us, so a good PA rig was always hired
out. Which is why we never made a lot of money.
Who is Woodnymph and how substantial was his contribution to your live
shows?
Woodnymph was a pyromaniac. He would
concoct various potions that would explode on stage at certain times during the
performance. We have some great footage of some of these. I don’t know where he
would obtain the gun powder, but we never asked. There was an occasion when he
fixed a rocket to the end of Rik’s guitar with the intention of letting it off
during a guitar solo, KISS style. It backfired and exploded on Riks hand
burning him quite badly as I recall. And another time Rockit decided it would
be a good idea to run under one of the fireworks as it exploded bare chested.
Ouch… But after time the ‘show’ was something that everyone expected.
Woodnymph's pyrotechnics in full flight |
What are your best memories about the recording of the first single “Can’t
Forget”? How did you found that Quest Studio in Luton? Why didn’t you use the
track “Destination Unknown” in the single?
It was a hot summer in 1979. We had
2 days at the studio. It was the first time we had ever been to a studio and we
were lucky to have Dave Cook looking after us. He was a very good producer and
made us feel comfortable. Bleak House and Toad the Wet Sprocket had used Quest
for their singles, so it was an obvious choice for us. “Skyflier” was the bands
anthem so we wanted to record this. “Can’t Forget” was a new song at the time and
we really liked it. “Destination Unknown” was just a bit different and we
wanted to experiment. We didn’t think it really represented what the band was
about, and as the single was intended to be used for promotion purposes, it was
left off.
What are your best memories about the show in support of Saga? Were you
received well by their fans and crew? Was it the biggest show of Clientelle?
The show with Saga was a bit of a
disappointment. It turned out that we were not to be playing on the same stage
as the Canadian proggers, but on a smaller stage downstairs. They had their own
tour support. Not the biggest show for us, but one of the first outings into
the London circuit. It did mean we were able to watch the Saga show of course!
Working hard in the studio |
Tell me about the recording of the album “Destination Unknown”. Were you
satisfied with its sound? Did it take long to record everything?
This was a great time for the band.
We were gigging a lot, so the songs were tight and well rehearsed. For that
reason it didn’t take too long to record them. It was fun doing the overdubs on
“Missing Presumed Dead”. I remember being in the control room listening to Rik
trying to get the backing vocal take right on “Play To Win”. I remember having
about 45 minutes left of our time, and deciding to record a live take of “Nice
Girl”. What you hear on the album is what we played first take. No overdubs at
all. It has a very live feel to it. We recorded the 6 new songs over 2 days,
and went back 2 evenings to mix it all. I still have a recording of us all
sitting at the mixing desk listening to the play back and deciding how it
should sound. Priceless.
Do you remember your deal with Banana Records? Was it decent enough? Did
they tried hard to push the band?
The deal with Banana Records was
purely financial. They would front the money to press the album and print the
sleeve. 500 copies only. We just needed to pay them back. So any promotion and
distribution of the record was done by us. I felt as a record company they could
have done more which would have been good for them as well, but we hoped it
would lead to greater things.
Derek Oliver of “Kerrang!” compared Clientelle to Motorhead and Judas
Priest which wasn’t really accurate. Do you remember other reviews and
responses on the album? Was it well received?
I absolutely agree. A strange
comparison which made me wonder if he actually listened to the band at all. We
had some good reviews, and some not so good. On a local scale it was well
received. The music press that did review were not that impressed and thought
it sounded “thin”.
Clientelle used to tour with Moonstone with John Payne who later went to
Asia. Do you remember that wine battle between John and Rik? Who won it? What
else antics from touring can you recall?
John Payne could really drink. It
was after a Rock Extravaganza at Dunstable Queensway Hall, that Rik and John
decided to have the drinking contest. I thought it was Tequila but I could be
wrong. Another time Rockit wanted to do a costume change half way through the
set. He changed in the toilet back stage, but locked himself in. He missed the
rest of song. Boulder (road manager) rescued him. Van breaking down after support
gig with Steve Getts Dirty White Boys. Hitching it home, and Phil falling down
a ditch. Rockit and Rik getting arrested 2 hours before showtime for squirting
people with a water pistol at the local park…. Phil getting strangled in mid
song by an angry punter when he said we were “too loud”. Some of the other acts who used to make up
part of the Clientelle “show” were: The Edmonton Sisters (bikers from North
London who dressed as women and performed a song and dance routine), Enrico
Wlly and his Performing Squid (a hippy and his dead squid pickled in a jar) and
BigBird the first punk poet (in the vain of John Cooper Clarke).
Witik, Stevie, Rockit and Rik,1982 |
When Phil left Martin “Witik” Whitewick replaced him. Tell me about him
a bit. What kind of drummer he was? Why did he spend less than a year in the
band?
Witik was a very heavy drummer.
Solid. He surprised us by accepting the invitation to join Clientelle from Toad
the Wet Sprocket. TTWS were managed by Ian “Sparky” Harrison, and each member
had a separate contract, which gave Sparky 10 % of all earnings. When he left
TTWS the contract still stood. He paid the 10% from his own earnings at each
gig so that was fine, but when it came to the Hawkwind tour Sparky demanded
that his cut was paid from the bands fee. There was no way out of it for Witik,
and reluctantly had to leave and go back to TTWS. But his time with us did us
good. It hardened up our sound, and the songs we wrote during his time at the
drum kit reflected that. We matured as players.
Martin left 3 days before the tour with Hawkwind and Dave Ashcroft
stepped in which was insane. Did you rehearse like crazy those 3 days or were
you forced to change your set a bit and drop off some songs?
Dave was an obvious replacement at
such short notice. He was already a good friend of the band, a top drummer, and
new most of the songs as he operated the lights for us on occasion. We did
rehearse solidly for 3 days though, but as our set was only to be 30 minutes we
soon nailed it.
Rockit, Rik, StevieT, Dave Ashcroft, 1983 |
What are your best memories about the tour? How did it become possible?
Did Hawkwind and their crew treat you well? Was it a lot of fun or were Terry
and the rest of them are tired of touring?
The tour was a lot of fun. Every bad
boys dream! It came to us via Barry Clarke who was a local concert promoter with
contacts at Hawkwind from the early days. He was the
closest we came to having a manager. It was February and very cold. Snowy on
some days I remember. The opening night at Bradford was a bit of a nightmare.
Just about to start the show/tour when there was a power failure at the venue. So
the start of Dave’s Clientelle days was a drum solo! What a way to open for
Hawkwind! The band and crew treated us very well. We always got a sound check
and an invite to the after show parties.
It seems that after the tour the band was about to split-up: Dave was
replaced by Ian Disspain but he quit soon after that and so did Rick. Why was
that? Were you disappointed with the tour or were some member just sick and
tired of trying to get a major deal?
I can’t remember exactly why or when
Dave left. It was a shame, but he is a very versatile drummer and I think he
wanted to push himself more. But he kept coming back for the reunions so I
think he liked his time with us. The tour was a great success and on the back
of it we had 2 nights at the Marquee club. There was interest in the band, but
Clientelle never really had any management. This was frustrating for us.
Another record deal had just fallen through as well. When Dave left Rik decided
to give it one last push, so Ian was recruited and a photo shoot, rehearsals
and writing got underway. 2 gigs at The Greyhound with Stray went well. But
when Ian got a better offer, Rik couldn’t face going through the whole process
again with another drummer.
Tell me about the live album “Live Takes”. When and where was it
recorded and what songs were on it?
After the disappointment of the deal
with Rarn Records falling through, we wanted a recording that was up to date
with where the band were. The Hawkwind tour provided just the thing when the
out front sound engineer gave us a tape of our show in St Helens. It was
recorded straight from the mixing desk, so was good quality. We did the same at
a local gig in Watford and set about listening to the songs and selecting some
for a cassette tape we could sell at gigs. We had also recorded a spoken day to
day diary from the Hawkwind tour which was interesting to play back, so thought
we could include some of the narrative in between the tracks. We brought a load
of cheap cassette tapes and copied them ourselves.
The track listing was: “She Likes To
Ride (Fast Bikes)”, “Rock ‘n’ Roll Leader”, “Movin’ On”, “She Takes Me High”, “Got
a Feeling”, “Journey’s End”, “Workday Blues”, “Class of Her Own”, “Battle of
Avalon (parts 1 & 2)”.
Terry, Stevie T, Rockit and Bernie, 1984 |
How come that Bernie Devine who was in the band before Rik returned to
Clientelle? Did he change your approach to songwriting and live performance?
Bernie was available at the time,
and we asked him to join the new look Clientelle. The song writing definitely
changed. It was almost a completely new set of songs. But we didn’t have quite
enough for a 90 minute set, so 2 or 3 had lengthy guitar solos at the end!
Why did you decide to extend the line-up with Bernie’s brother John who
played keyboards? How did you fans receive the new line-up?
John played keyboards for us at the
recording sessions for the new demo. They fitted in well with the new songs and
gave the band a new sound altogether. It was the 80’s! I think the fans liked
the new set but were a bit confused because we kept the name. We did a 20
minute slot in the set of some old ‘Telle favorites though.
In 1985 Clientelle recorded the demo with the songs “The Jet Set”,
“Black Cloud”, “'71 (Still Boppin')”. Where was it recorded and who
produced/engineered it? How do you view the demo nowadays? Was it a more
matured approach to the music or did you try to be more commercial to get some
airplays?
It was recorded at Bombay studios in
St Albans and produced by Steve Rodford (the son of Kinks bassist Jim Rodford).
Personally I love the demo, and can remember coming back from lunch and
listening outside the door to Bernie playing the acoustic guitar parts on “Black
Cloud”. Terry’s BIG drum sound is so typical of the era. We were certainly
aiming at the commercial side of the music biz and airplays with that one.
As far as I understand, the band was basically done by 1985. What
happened?
We had a couple of bad gigs. The
spark had fizzled out. The last official gig was supporting Y&T and
although we played well, the young crowd that followed us had grown up and
moved on. It was time to call it a day.
As far as I understand, Rik Taylor died in 2000’s. When did it happen
and what caused it? Tell me about the show in his memory. Did you play
Clientelle’s songs with your ex-bandmates?
Rik suffered a suspected heart
attack in November 2008 and died instantly. He was with Dave Ashcroft at the
time. I had just made contact with him again after a few years. Thank goodness
for Facebook. A memorial gig was arranged by his close friends, and the who’s
who of the local music scene turned up to perform in his honour. For reasons
only he knows, Rockit did not want to be part of it, so Dave, Bernie and myself
performed 3 Clientelle classics — “Nice Girl”, “Movin’ On” and “Skyflier”. It
was a fitting tribute.
Rik memorial gig: Stevie, Bernie and Dave |
Were you involved in the re-issue of the album in 2015? Where and when
did the songs “Journeys End”, “Workday Blues”, “Class Of Her Own” and “Movin'
On” were recorded? Did they remain unreleased until the re-issue came out?
Yes I was involved in that. Sonic
Age approached us with the idea of a re-issue of “Destination Unknown” with
bonus tracks. We were a bit peeved about some dodgy bootlegs that were
available so agreed to their terms. Those 4 tracks were recorded at The Horn of
Plenty at a reunion gig in 2001. Dave is drumming. I took the decision to add
some keyboards in the middle section of “Movin’ On” because I know Rik had big
ideas for that song, but as we never recorded it in the studio this was as good
a chance as any to see what it could have been. I am pleased with the end
result overall.
What you’ve been up to since the 80’s? Did you play in any other band
after Clientelle?
Due to bringing up a young family, I
didn’t do much musically for the next 10 years after 1985. But the urge to
perform is never far away. In the late 90’s I played with a few covers bands.
Then formed a 3 piece “Heavy Traffic”. Both my sons play in bands, and I was
pleased to produce their first CD. My first venture to that side of making
music. These days I play with another ‘Steve’ in an acoustic duo called
G&T. Very bluesy…
Do you still stay in touch with your ex-bandmates?
I am still on speaking terms with
all of them, but the only one I have regular contact with is Phil. We are
writing songs together and that is a lot of fun. He writes a lyric, sends it to
me, I put it to music and send it back to him. He adds some ideas, sends it to
me and so on… Thank goodness for the internet!
Feel free to add anything you want about your time with Clientelle and
beyond.
Just an all round positive
experience and some great memories. Pity we never took the next step up the
ladder. I do have an archive of recorded material though. Including master
tapes for “Live Takes”, the complete Hawkwind tour diaries, rehearsals from
very early on and various live recordings from over the years. It is good to
listen and see how the band evolved. Box set anyone…?
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