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Post details: John Martyn, RIP

Just back from the frontline, Allan Jones has fought in the bloodiest rock'n'roll campaigns of the last 40 years. Now, safely positioned in the Uncut Watchtower, he takes time off editing Uncut to file these compelling dispatches. Allan has eight million stories to tell, and plenty of new scraps to start, too. Join him...




John Martyn, RIP

2009-01-29 16:24:57

This morning's sad news of John Martyn's death reminded me of a particularly colourful encounter I had with him, back in what they call the day, which I wrote about in my regular Stop Me If You've Heard This One Before column in Uncut in July 2004 and re-print below.

Adios, John.

Continued...

John Martyn
Leeds: February, 1975

A day of mayhem starts pleasantly with lunch at the Savoy with Billy Swan, who’s had a hit recently with a great record called “I Can Help”. Over generous portions from the most expensive menu I’ve ever seen, washed down with a couple of bottles of wine that each cost more than I earn for a week’s toil for what used to be Melody Maker, Billy tells me fantastic stories about growing up with rock’n’roll in Cape Girardeau, Missouri, where he used to see Jerry Lee Lewis and Charlie Rich in local beer joints.
By the time we get to coffee and brandies, Billy’s on an hilarious roll. He finishes with a flourish: a story about Phil Spector driving Billy, Kris Kristofferson and Carly Simon up to his Hollywood mansion and playing them rough mixes of John Lennon’s Imagine, which Spector had just produced.
“I couldn’t believe it,” Billy says with a smile I can still remember. “I thought I’d died and gone to heaven.”
There’s still some brandy left in the bottle when I have to leave. I’m due in Leeds later today to interview John Martyn, who’s meant to be recording a live album that night at a show he’s playing at the university. We get to Leeds around seven in the evening, and drive onto the university campus, where someone helpful in a very short skirt shows us to Martyn’s dressing room.
I knock on the door, provoking a great bellowing from inside. I push the door open and walk into the smallest dressing room I’ve ever seen, before or since. Martyn’s slumped in a corner, looking like he’s been drinking since the dawn of time, or slightly earlier.
“Who the fuck are you?” he wants to know, bubbles of spit in the corner of his mouth.
“I’m from Melody Maker,” is all I manage to say before the breath is knocked out of me when some fucking oaf blindsides me, smashing me into a wall before trying to hang me from a coat hook.
“If you’re Chris Welch, I’m going to fucking kill you,” I am now being told. Turns out the bearded balding maniac I’m staring in the eye is virtuoso bassist Danny Thompson, now playing with Martyn after years with folk supergroup Pentangle.
Danny’s about to introduce his fist to my face when Martyn gets unsteadily to his feet and punches the bass player in the region of his kidneys. This makes Danny grunt, but doesn’t put him down.
“Let him the fuck go,” Martyn tells Thompson gruffly. “He’s not the one you want.”
Danny lets me go and retreats to the other side of the small unpleasant room, which I now realise is stocked with so much booze it looks like an off-license store room or a bootlegger’s lock-up.
“Sorry about that,” Martyn says then. “He thought you were someone else.”
I can hear Thompson sort of growling, and decide on the spot that if the belligerent fucker comes at me again I’m going to stick a finger in one of his eyes – I’m not fussed which one – and we’ll see where we go from there.
Martyn then claps me somewhat thunderously on the shoulder, offers me a drink, which I accept, no point holding grudges, and knock back quickly before accepting another one.
I remind Martyn that I’m here to do an interview with him. He seems to have a problem processing this when the dressing room door flies open and this sort of scruffy fucking troll staggers in, swigging vigorously from a bottle of crème de menthe. This is former Free guitarist Paul Kossoff, who will apparently be playing tonight with Martyn, Thompson and drummer John Stevens.
“Who’s this c***?” Kossoff asks Martyn, pointing at me.
“He’s from Melody Maker,” Martyn tells Kossoff. “But he’s not Chris Welch.”
Kossoff looks at Martyn like he’s being spoken to in a language he doesn’t understand and heads back out the door.
I’m still trying to get Martyn to sit down and talk when about 15 minutes later, the dwarf-like Kossoff returns, bleeding from the nose and lip and wailing like the recently bereaved.
“Fuck’s going on now?” Martyn ask, which provokes a tale of considerable woe, Kossoff now telling us he’s been set upon by homicidal students from whose clutches he has been lucky to escape with his life. Martyn’s on his feet in a flash, Danny Thompson, too. The bassist snaps an arm off a chair, brandishing it like a club. Martyn’s got a bottle he might break over someone’s head.
“Show us these fuckers,” Martyn tells Kossoff, who leads us out of the building, into the student’s union bar.
“That’s the one!” Kossoff now shouts, finger accusingly aimed at a skinny little twat, holding his girlfriend’s hand like she’s about to run off and looking at us fearfully as we approach like he thinks he’s about to be kidnapped by a death squad and driven off to a dank room in a remote location where terrible things will happen to him.
“He’s the one that hit me,” Kossoff fairly shrieks.
Martyn, moments ago ready for havoc, pauses now.
“He’s not a fucking GANG,” he says of the trembling student. “What’s going on?”
Turns out Kossoff’s drunkenly groped this bloke’s girlfriend and the bloke’s given Kossoff a shove that’s sent the guitarist tumbling down some steps. All talk of a gang attack is pathetic bollocks.
“You c***,” Martyn shouts at Kossoff, smacking him extremely hard in the face. The short-arsed former guitar hero is further surprised when Danny Thompson fetches him what I’m delighted to describe as a pretty painful thwack to the side of the head with the arm of the chair he’d snapped off in the dressing room.
This makes Kossoff cry like a girl, at which point Martyn and Thompson stalk off, laughing like people who are mad.
The next thing you know, these people are all on stage and for an hour and more the music they play is incredible – but, hell, you can hear that for yourselves on Live At Leeds, the ‘official bootleg’ album that Martyn first makes available only by mail order before Island finally release it properly.
Back in the band’s dressing room, after the show, I’m sitting with Martyn, finally getting around to the interview, when Paul Kossoff walks up to Martyn and breaks a beer bottle over his head, glass shattering everywhere.
“Everybody OUT,” Martyn screams, grabbing Kossoff in what looks like a near-fatal head-lock. “I’m going to give this c*** the kicking he’s been asking for.”
The room clears pretty sharpish at this point, and several of us stand in the corridor listening to Martyn and Kossoff go at it like rutting elks, the most alarming sounds of destruction and violent combat coming from the other side of the door - a symphony of bone-cracking, head-banging, furniture-breaking, glass-shattering detonations. This goes on for a while, then Martyn opens the door, blood all over the front of his shirt, holding Kossoff like laundry, which he then drops to the floor and kicks.
“Shall we finish that fucking interview now?” Martyn asks me, and minutes later he was waxing lyrical about the influence of Davy Graham on his music, as if this sort of thing happens every night when he’s on tour. Which it probably does.
Allan Jones

Allan Jones


Comments, Trackbacks:


Comment from: Goran K. [Visitor]
This is a sad day indeed, we lost a true genius. I discovered him 6-7 years ago when I bought "One World" album on friend's recommendation and I was floored of what I heard. Then I worked my way through his back catalogue buying Bless The Weather, Solid Air & Inside Out, all brilliant records that showed him as an constantly evolving artist, always experimenting and searching for new sounds and ways of expression (I was always in awe of his voice, and how he used it in context of music). Artists of this caliber are getting rarer these days. Alan, this article is probably one my favorites from "Stop Me If You've Heard This One Before" (I always read that first)column and I always laughing out loud when I read this line: "Martyn’s slumped in a corner, looking like he’s been drinking since the dawn of time, or slightly earlier", which shows the hell raising part of his personality. Anyway it's been great to read this article again, and remember Martyn as he was in his heyday. Rest in peace John, you will be sorely missed.
PermalinkPermalink 2009-01-29 @ 19:17
Comment from: Duke of Monmouth [Visitor]
Very sad news RIP
PermalinkPermalink 2009-01-29 @ 21:31
Comment from: Gilberth [Visitor]
A sad day it is. I have some fun memories of John when he was visiting Sweden. We have some drinks and told lots of stories everytime he was here. So John I miss you R.I.P.
PermalinkPermalink 2009-01-30 @ 11:47
Comment from: Rob [Visitor]
I am distraught. Martyn was the first live act I ever saw: my 13th birthday coincided with a gig he performed locally, and it was simply incredible. But what I remember most was persuading the oldies to let me hang around after to get his autograph. 30 minutes later he appeared, looking somewhat "bare" without his guitar, invited me back stage, signed my autograph book and then, with a smile, he softly said: "Would you like to share a joint?"
PermalinkPermalink 2009-01-30 @ 13:12
Comment from: LR [Visitor]
John was a true genius and inspiration and will be sorely missed. R.I.P.
PermalinkPermalink 2009-01-30 @ 14:01
Comment from: Mark Penny Montreal CANADA [Visitor]
What can one say...... Inspired artist has checked out? The man was simply unmatched in what he did; other more popular artist recognized the fact, and desperately wanted to collaborate with the man. Say what one will about Phil Collins, but the albums he produced for John in the 80's were of very high caliber, and perhaps the best things Collins has ever been associated with. "Grace and Danger" is most certainly one of the top 10 albums of the 80's (yes I know it will raise eyebrows to say this, but everyone who disputes this claim should give it a very close listen indeed). However depressing it sounds, it drags you through that darkness and finds redemption by the end of it; it's an incredible work. I recommend anyone going through a bad breakup to listen to this album; it was tremendously useful to me at the time of its release as I was also going through a similar event. Those songs found a way into my depression, and rather than push me deeper into it, helped me deal with it. A sad day for any music fan. My deepest sympathies to his friends and family; may he never be forgotten.
PermalinkPermalink 2009-01-30 @ 14:19
Comment from: Michael von Kruger [Visitor]
My daughters bought me the 'Ain't No Saint' box for Christmas. He wasn't a saint, but he was, probably, an angel. An angel with a very human side to him. A side that like fun and games, the stuff one doesn't have in heaven. The man was bursting with contradictions that he didn't really try to hide. There was grace and danger in John Martyn. Truth and beauty fighting in out. The music seemed to float in the air, part of the air, yet part of the earth as well - solid air. Sometimes it was like a smokey dreamscape, slightly out of focus, undefinable, just out of reach, like a phantom, a wisp disappearing from view into the shadows. Though it was visceral and solid too, carnal, sweating, thrusting, gorging itself on life, like an untamed beast. John Martyn will be missed not just for his music, which will probably be remembered and rediscovered for ever, like Robert Johnson or Eric Satie, he'll also be remembered for his unwillingness to compromise, for his character and how he tried to keep his honour in a vile and shallow market place, that buys and sells everything.
PermalinkPermalink 2009-01-31 @ 21:57
Comment from: Dave davies [Visitor]
RIP John - you were the MAN - saw him twice - 1973 leicester Uni with Danny Thompson & John Stevens on drums, Crates of those little bottles of Special Brew on the stage, so much hash being smoked, that you didn't need any of your own - secondary high or what! (I was only 16!) and Nottingham Rock City, probably Well Kept Secret tour, with the full monty band - brilliant and i got to meet him after the gig, as my girlfriend had a BBC pass - unfortunately the combination of my asking about Danny Thompson and the presence of what I can only describe as some horny school-girls saw him prancing off like an apologetic Greek Goat.... God Bless Yer John & May Yer Rest in Peace! Dave x
PermalinkPermalink 2009-02-02 @ 01:06
Comment from: ric [Visitor]
Saw him at Glastonbury when the was world was younger and much more innocent - i was floored by the honesty and the emotional impact of the music - no one wrote like him and no one had a greater presence on stage; a unique musician.
PermalinkPermalink 2009-02-02 @ 07:38
Comment from: Ross and Paul [Visitor]
My mate Ross told me I'd laugh out loud reading this, he was right! My memory of poor old Koss was at Redcar Jazz Club in early 70s, when he was so drugged up he just stood at the front of the stage shouting - instead of playing the All Right Now solo. What a waste, as Ian Drury would say.
PermalinkPermalink 2009-02-05 @ 07:52
Comment from: Rob [Visitor]
Thanks for the great memories, saw John many times at Birmingham Town Hall and other venues around the midlands R I P
PermalinkPermalink 2009-02-05 @ 14:09
Comment from: Artur Schouten, Netherlands [Visitor]
"I'm going home - hey,hey,hey, over the hill". Say a little prayer for the big man... Thanks for all the wonderful music, John!
PermalinkPermalink 2009-02-05 @ 20:16
Comment from: Peter Brown [Visitor]
No wonder music was so good in those days
PermalinkPermalink 2009-02-06 @ 00:28
Comment from: David Bly [Visitor]
I was lucky enough to see John Martyn play a solo electric set opening for Yes (don't laugh - give them credit for bringing him to the US with them) sometime after Solid Air. It was one of the most amazing performances I'd ever seen. Until then, even though I had most of his albums, I hadn't realised how great a guitarist he was. To this day, I remember his part of the show, but not Yes's. I was additionally saddened to hear of his hope to play with Pharoah Sanders (correct name, by the way - your obit lists it wrongly as Saunders). I saw Sanders in September 2007 and was totally amazed by him also. His age seemed to not affect him at all. It's a shame that these two musical greats never got a chance to collaborate. R.I.P. John.
PermalinkPermalink 2009-02-06 @ 05:12
Comment from: suzanne [Visitor]
What a great story. Thanks so much for telling the tale. Sounds about right! I had the privilege of hanging out with John & his merry men in the USA around the time he did his Bottom Line gig in 1983 ('85?). He wasn't quite as wild (his lady, Annie was there) but he was a handful when tippling...which was (surprise!) often. The gigs were transplendant. What a loss. I'm so sorry he's gone and heartbroken that I found out about his Joe's Pub gig in NYC after the fact. I would have been there had I known. Nothing would have stopped me. John & Pharoah Sanders recording together? I would have really enjoyed that.
PermalinkPermalink 2009-02-06 @ 11:44
Comment from: suzanne [Visitor]
Jeez! How could I forget to mention!! Live at Leeds was the 1st lp from which I heard John's music. Two musician friends of mine from the UK were staying in my apartment (one was Tony Nicol, Simon Nicol's cousin) and it was my birthday so they went to the local independent record store and bought me a bunch of music. This was the winner...hands down. So amazing. And to hear this back story??? Priceless.
PermalinkPermalink 2009-02-06 @ 11:55
Comment from: glyndebourne glistener [Visitor]
I found this page thanks to a link on Press Gazette's website, and I'm glad I did, What a great piece of writing.
PermalinkPermalink 2009-02-09 @ 16:47
Comment from: Geoff Dunn [Visitor]
Just too sad. What an amazing character. What beautiful music. What a loss!!
PermalinkPermalink 2009-02-11 @ 20:00
Comment from: Lake, not Greg [Visitor]
Sorry. I tried to read this as tragic. But this is the funniest thing I've read in a long, long time. John Martyn & Paul Kossoff - The Dangerous Brothers... Thank you Allan. Sometimes lyrical analysis isn't the way to true artistic insight.
PermalinkPermalink 2009-02-26 @ 10:31
Comment from: camilla [Visitor]
Does anyone know how to get a copy of the BBC documentary Johnny too bad, or of a way to watch it on one's laptop... or any way to watch it? Thanks!
PermalinkPermalink 2009-03-11 @ 01:00
Comment from: bob [Visitor]
search ebay
PermalinkPermalink 2009-03-23 @ 18:52
Comment from: lily longnose [Visitor]
Ahhh, Alan. This was probably the funniest piece of music journalism I've ever read. I'm totally unfamiliar with Mr. Martyns work but that'll be cured soon enough. Anyone out there have any suggestions as to where I should start? This guy sounds like a real gem of an individual. Sorry I was late to the party. Will be checking You Tube for live footage in the meantime. Cheers!
PermalinkPermalink 2009-04-08 @ 04:55
Comment from: Julia Silver Wren [Visitor]
"Johnny Too Bad" is posted in its entirety on Google Video. It is often hard to read that he was a violent man and yet his music was so other-wordly and fine. You have to come to terms with this.
PermalinkPermalink 2009-04-10 @ 20:44

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