22 March 2024

A Distant Signal: Scott Walker


 

Scott Walker died five years ago today, the 22nd of March. I first heard about it on Radio 4's Today Programme on the morning of the 25th and immediately sat down to write the following.

 The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore, as recorded by the Walker Brothers, is one of those rare non-Beatles songs remembered from childhood before I became any kind of conscious music fan (the Beatles, part of a fraternal bond, were obligatory). But even when I started buying records, for a long time I didn't have - didn't want - a copy of it in any form, fearful of holding the experience up to the light. This went beyond stereo/mono snobbery or any notion of good taste or coolness: for me the magic was in the memory of the warmth and fuzziness of first hearing it on a medium wave radio in another room in another house. 

When young I was friends with a boy who lived in a nearby street and while we were playing together indoors his elder brother would be strumming a guitar - I can't remember whether he had any ability - or listening to the radio in the next room: a friendly enough presence but not of us. Possibly he had been assigned to babysit or was just idly relaxing at home after school; I can't remember. But The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine ..., heard at a distance via an AM signal, has become part of that generalised memory of a brief but much-valued friendship. 

 Some years later - and I'm aware this is going to sound as though strings, not necessarily arranged by Wally Stott, are called for - I recall envying boys such as my friend, who had been given a genuine Action Man for Christmas or a birthday, as I gazed longingly at its cheapo Hong Kong equivalent in the window display of a shop in Burnside on my way home from school. I couldn't afford it, even though the price was around a third of the real thing, and secretly went without school dinners for a week or two, saving up the money. (Not quite as secret as all that, as I was blackmailed about this matter by my elder brother, though that's but a trifle here.) 

Eventually I was able to secure my prize but knew I couldn't play openly with it, and so this knock-off Action Man, this Chinese imposter in a bright orange jumpsuit, was hidden in the pocket of a heavy, dark unused coat in the wardrobe in my bedroom. And at some point - most likely in my imagination, as I wouldn't have had, or thought to ask for, a radio by then - one summer evening with the curtains closed but orange light filling the room I recall opening the wardrobe, seeing the arms of the boy-doll hanging out of the pocket and suddenly hearing the song, which became associated forever after with a sense of the sadness of that need for subterfuge. I had my Action Man - of sorts - but realised I could only ever enjoy it furtively. 

 Which I suppose was about recognising, in my childish way, the sadness and joy intertwined in that Walker Brothers record - and particularly in the voice of Scott Walker. I didn't hear My Ship Is Coming In until about ten years later but instantly grasped the same quality, even though the lyrics of that song were all about good times on the horizon. 

Eventually, more than three decades later, I bought a Walker Brothers compilation CD which included both songs but the stereo separation made The Sun ... seem far removed from those good and bad memories and I regretted having made it dwindle into one more track to be summoned up at will instead of an experience better left at a distance, unexplored but instinctively understood. 

Now I have heard the Four Seasons' original as well as the Walker Brothers' version numerous times on any number of nostalgia stations, AM, FM and digital, and can call up mono and stereo versions of the Walker Brothers' recording on youtube or spotify. The mono comes closer to that early memory but even if the sound of an original 45 could be processed to simulate a 1960s medium wave radio heard from an adjoining room I don't suppose it would really conjure back that sense of hearing something strange and magical: a sadness and a pain in that distinctive, echoing baritone which was also somehow joyful and celebratory. 

The song's opening line may have been what sparked the association with my illicit plaything and made that radio start playing in my head. But I think it was also an early example, perhaps the first I experienced, of the way in which music can answer, or name, a confusion of emotions, even if they are not directly addressed in the song, and bring a kind of comfort: I didn't know or understand about the pain which attends relationships, but that simple pleasure which could not be enjoyed openly, and that mix of sadness and happiness in my childish mind, found a response in the voice of Scott Walker. I didn't have the experience or imagination to understand what he was singing about; I only knew it was important.

5 March 2024

New Peter Skellern CD on kickstarter - pledge by March 8th

 

For those who might be interested, Richard Moore, who has already put together two comprehensive collections of Peter Skellern's recordings, thus rescuing Skellernites or Skellernatics like me from the frustration of earlier random collections, is doing it once more for Happy Endings,  the album of the TV series for which Skellern wrote the songs and in which he appeared. 

The songs were issued on LP at the time - that's the image which adorns the top of this post - but the forthcoming CD expands that compilation - and judging by Mr Moore's earlier CD releases it is likely to be in top-notch sound, and comes, moreover, with the approval of the Skellern family. There are only a few days left so hurry, if you're interested. It's great that someone has taken the time to put together the kind of release which major companies obviously don't think will be cost-effective. 

I must admit I'm not that familiar with Happy Endings, having only sampled it briefly on youtube but it's surely worth taking a punt if you like Peter Skellern's work, as the chance to get such a CD might not come round again. Prices begin at £13 for a CD with UK postage, though it's more if you want a credit on the disc (why?) or if you want a copy of one of Mr Moore's earlier Skellern collections thrown in (makes more sense to me). You can find fuller details about the different pledging options and see a short video of extracts from the TV series on the kickstarter website here:

Other posts about Peter Skellern:

If - and the thing is, I suppose, remotely possible - you are new to this blog I've written two posts about Peter Skellern, one forever unfinished piece devoted to his music in general entitled Not Without a Fan:


 And the other specifically about the wall-to-wall frolicking of the Decca album Holding My Own, entitled  Music for Pleasure:


 


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