Rockin' Around The Clock
Created | Updated Oct 29, 2003
Music that Goes Bump in the Night…
For reasons that don't need explaining, this column is dedicated with respect and affection to
David 'Screaming Lord' Sutch, musician and politician.
As the season of mists and mellow fruitfulness comes upon us, and Linus begins his annual wait for
the 'Great Pumpkin' to rise and spread joy amongst the children of the world, our thoughts turn to
Hallowe'en, and music that goes bump in the night.
Here for your awe and amazement is a short selection of acts that may not be of the highest
quality or sales, but who for whatever reason, have a special place in our hearts at this time of
year.
Screaming Jay Hawkins
Jalacy Hawkins was a semi-successful blues singer when in 1956 he wrote a romantic ballad
called 'I Put a Spell on You'. In the studio, the session producer, Arnold Maxim decide that the song
needed to be scary, but was unable to get the right performance from Hawkins and the band until
they hit on the idea of turning the session into a party with enormous quantities of alcohol flowing.
Hawkins then recorded one of the most startling vocals in the history of rock'n'roll (mostly laying
on his back with microphone in one hand and bottle in the other), descending into a series of whoops,
screams and grunts that reputedly so alarmed the singer when he was sober that he was unable to
listen to the song. But the record was a massive hit and it launched Hawkins on a career as the wild
man of rock which saw him appear on stage springing from coffins and with a permanent stage
companion, Henry the smoking skull. With the addition of tusks and rubber snakes, Hawkins laid
claim to the title of the King of Voodoo rock (virtually unchallenged), and despite numerous
accidents with flash powder, fuse boxes and other wayward stage effects, pursued his singular
career until his death in 2000 of surgical complications from a heart operation. He left the world
with few regrets, its seems, but with one very firm instruction;
'When I go, I don't want to be buried. I've been in too many damn coffins
already!'
The Monster Mash
'I was working in the lab late one night
When my eyes beheld an eerie sight'
If you are going out partying this weekend, unless your hosts are particularly joyless, you will
hear those immortal words uttered by Bobby 'Boris' Pickett, backed by the Cryptkickers. Pickett
had been a semi-successful nightclub performer with his band The Cordials, and between songs he
did impersonations, of which the best received was a 'Boris Karloff' that he had been perfecting
since he was 9 years old, when his father had owned a movie theatre at which the young Bobby had
watched 'Karloff' movies. Deciding to capitalise on the novelty, Pickett and a friend, Lenny Capizzi
dashed off the Monster Mash in time for it to reach No 1 in the Billboard charts on October 20th
1962 (despite being condemned by Elvis Presley as 'The dumbest thing I ever heard'.) Since then it
is the only song to have entered the Billboard Hot 100 on three different occasions, has sold over 4
million copies world wide and become the unofficial anthem of Halloween.
Bobby Pickett is still alive and well, and his website rather charmingly states that he is;
'Available year round and can be dug up to appear and sing a medley of his
hit.'
Screaming Lord Sutch
David 'Screaming Lord' Sutch was one of the most colourful characters to grace the British rock
scene, and later, British Politics. In the early 1960's, when the British Rock scene was mostly made
up of innocuous acts singing harmless songs for a teenage audience who were still some way from any
act of rebellion, Sutch descended with a stage act which featured coffins, skulls, hatchets and an
alarming brand of sexual innuendo that owed more to Screamin' Jay Hawkins (an obvious inspiration
– Sutch claimed he put the G back in Screaming to represent the extra gore in his act) than it did to
Bobby Pickett's much gentler jive;
'I got two horns on my head and a twinkle in my eye
I got two feet of hair and it makes the chicks all sigh
When I hit them with my great club, start to holler an' cry.'
Sutch was never a talented singer or musician but his lively stage act was one of the highlights of
the Sixties rock scene, and although he never came within a mile of having what might be termed a
hit, 'Long Black Coffin' and 'Jack the Ripper' remain fondly remembered by many.
His backing band, the Savages, at one time or another boasted such luminaries as Jeff Beck, Richie
Blackmore, Noel Redding and Jimmy Page.
Sutch also had a parallel career in politics where his 'Monster Raving Loony Party' was
the first to propose such revolutionary ideas as lowering the voting age to 18, commercial radio
stations (Sutch had briefly run one of the earliest Pirate radio stations in 1964, 'Radio Sutch') and
all day pub opening. Britain now also has its first Raving Loony parish councillor Ashburton, Devon.
(The seat was not contested by any other parties.)
I had the privilege of meeting David Sutch twice, once after a gig at my local (where he greatly
alarmed the organisers by setting fire to his top hat while performing 'Great Balls of Fire')
and once outside Downing Street. On both occasions he was happy to chat about both politics and
music, and was witty about both subjects. His tragic suicide in 1999, brought on by depression and
mounting debts, robbed both politics and music of a much loved figure.
The Damned
Punk rock produced the unlikeliest heroes. Whilst the 'Sex Pistols' spat and raged at whatever
was going like glue sniffing Marlon Brandoes and the Clash demanded a riot of their own, 'The
Damned' staged their own very English revolt at the end of the Pier. Formed by guitarist Brian
James, drummer Rat Scabies recruited vocalist Dave Vanian when he heard the then gravedigger
singing Alice Coopers 'Dead Babies' when attending the funeral of his sister. In a typically English
fashion, though, The Damned's propensity for shocking was always fatally undermined, usually by
Captain Sensibles penchant for appearing on stage dressed as a nurse, a girl guide or merely as a
naked man.
And so their career was destined to continue. Kicked off the 'Anarchy in the UK' tour for not
being political enough (of course, their chaotic comedy antics were far more subversive than the
Pistols teeth grinding demise), James abandoned the band after their second album, but the band
refused to die, rising like a re-animated corpse to produce 'Machine Gun Etiquette' and 'The Black
Album', the former seeing Vanian fully adopt the alter ego of a vampire (rumours abounded that he
and his then wife slept in a custom made double coffin), the latter seeing them explore subjects such
a psychosis and an anthem in honour of that symbol of horror, Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.
Vanian it was clear, had a wish to pursue a more Gothic vision of rock'n'roll in such songs as
'Twisted Nerve', a dark and sombre confession by a serial killer, but thanks to the antics of
Captain Sensible and a revolving roster of bass players that would do 'Spinal Tap' proud, The
Damned continued to be more Hammer Horror than Wuthering Heights. As if to underline the point,
their best selling original song remains their ode to the Victorian Penny Dreadful character, the
rather comic vampire, Grimly Fiendish.
And so they continue to this day. After a prolonged absence from the recording studio, Vanian
and Sensible, along with former Gun Clubber and Sister of Mercy, Patricia Morrison (rocks very
own Morticia Adams is now Mrs Dave Vanian) produced an album in 2001 that rejoiced in the
distinctly Beano-ish title Grave Disorder. Still firmly rooted in the lurid Technicolor world of
Hammer Horror, fake blood and silly puns, it is to be hoped that 'The Damned' continue to be the
haunted house at the end of the pier for many years to come.
The Cramps
Just as 'The Damned' were beginning their own version of 'Carry On Gothic' in the UK, a random
hitchhiking encounter threw together Erick Purkhiser and Kristy Wallace. The two natives of Akron,
Ohio discovered a mutual love of old rock'n'roll and Science-fiction 'B' movies. They decided there
and then to form a band, de-camped to New York, adopted the names Lux Interior and Poison Ivy
Rorschach and launched into a 26 year career in search of bad taste and loud music.
Eschewing such traditional niceties as bass guitars (the classic 'Cramps' sound is Ivy's lead
guitar with rhythm provided by the most basic of drum sets and a second, heavily distorted guitar),
'The Cramps' obsessions with PVC, leopardskin prints, sex and horror rapidly became a cult
favourite. Album titles such as 'Gravest Hits', 'Off The Bone', 'Stay Sick' and 'Fiends of Dope
Island' indicate not only a sense of humour but also a healthy lack of good taste, which is ironic
given that the bands best known song is 'Good Taste' from their 'Smell of Female';
'You've got good taste,
You've got good taste
Come and sit on my…
Lap'
If 'The Damned' are a Hammer Horror movie, then 'The Cramps' are a musical journey through
the films of such greats as Herschell Gordon Lewis, director of such classics as '2000 Maniacs',
although the band themselves firmly deny that they are play acting in anyway, but rather an
expression of their lives as they have lived them.
Whatever the truth of the matter, 'The Cramps' remain the true champions of shlock'n'roll, for
who else could write a song called 'Eyeball in My Martini' and sing it with a straight face? After
all, 'The Cramps' live in a world where it is Halloween every day;
'You know some like it hot and down there it's hot as Hell.
Don't forget to write.
Aloha from Hell.'
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