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Our Dear Friend John
Woollard who died on 25 May 2007 aged 64
Click here for more
details

Reunion After 42
Years!
Click to contact Tez
Early
last year, we received an email from the original drummer
of the Cherokees, Jim Green. James found us via the Star Club
website and it was really good to hear from him after all this
time. Jim settled in Germany in the early seventies and has been
there ever since. He is married to Moni and has retired although
his hobby of photography now takes up quite a bit of his
time.
Naturally we were
anxious to meet up and as James was coming to England for his
sister's Golden Wedding anniversary on 1 April 2006, we travelled
north to Leeds and met up at the home of Kathryn our daughter.
Our meeting with James was great and it was just as though we
had last met up only a few days before rather than over forty years
ago and the time from 6pm until midnight sped by in a flash.
It was an emotional parting and we hope to meet up again in
the not too distant future and this time we look forward to meeting
Moni, Jim's wife. Click on the link for some of Jim's photographic
memorabilia.
Tez who enjoys
a wide musical
taste, has been a musician from an early age and a founder
member of a 1960s band the Cherokees.
His main interest these days is hard disk recording and sound
engineering: he was assistant sound engineer on “Beyond the Ledge”,
one of Fairport Convention's
Cropredy videos. He has also composed incidental music for a number
of documentary videos, most of which have been shown on Sky's
Discovery channel. The most popular by far has been the music he
did for a Sukhoi plane documentary for which he has received a
great deal of very positive feedback.
During the sixties he spent a fair bit of his of time working in
Germany at the Star Club (see below for more about this legendary
gig), Top Ten Club and appearing on German television as well
as
Ready Steady Go and the lesser known Beat Room on British
TV) and he met and worked with many of the now legendary
names, playing with such bands as Peter Green's Fleetwood
Mac, Cream, Spencer Davies, Led Zeppelin and a whole lot
more. They did regular gigs at Dunstable's famous
California
Ballroom.
In 1964 the Cherokees had a minor hit single with
“Seven Golden
Daffodils”
(click to hear it) produced by Mickey Most and appeared in an early
Michael Winner film, “
You
Must be Joking”. Later Mickey changed their name to New
York Public Library and they had a successful single with “Ain't
Gonna Eat Out My Heart Anymore", (thanks Sean for the copy). The
band still gigs with John Woollard as the remaining founder member
so please click the link to visit the NYPL website. You can e-mail Tez.
| Thanks to our friend Hazel McLean for
this little gem. Taken at the Floral Hall, Morecambe in 1964: Jim
Green (drums), Tez (lead guitar), John Woollard (vocals), Dave
Bower (rhythm guitar), Hazel, Mike Sweeney (bass) |

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New York Public
Library - The Boston Tapes
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In 1972 Tez, Top,
Pete and Dave went to Boston to record an album which alas was
never released. However, the reel-to-reel tapes,some original and
the rest favourite tracks, were recently found, remixed and are now
saved to CD.
The sleeve cover could hardly be more seventies: clockwise - Dave,
Tez, Top, Pete.
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Tez's
Star Club Memories
We made five or six visits to the Star club as the Cherokees
between 1963 and 1966 and we always stayed in the Hotel Pacific in
St Pauli. We soon learned that the owner of
the Star Club was Manfred Weislieder and as one of “his boys” we
could explore the area with impunity although we were witness to a
few violent scenes involving those who lacked Manfred’s protection.
Hans Buchenberg (or something similar) was the manager and we were
treated well.
Some of the acts/bands we played with were (in no particular
order):
Tony Sheridan who was always asking us to let him get up and play
with us – not on guitar but on drums. We always told him “no thank
you” or words to that effect! Sam the Sham; Lee Curtis; Millie (My
Boy Lollipop); Checkmates and Henry and the Road Runners from
Liverpool; Spencer Davies Group; Jackie Lynton; Tony Ashton and
later + Roy Dyke who together with Gardener became Ashton, Gardener
and Dyke (Roy celebrated his 60th birthday on February 12 2005 at
the Downtown Blues Club. Numerous buddies, among them Carl Terry
(& The Cruisers), Ted "King Size" Taylor (& The Dominoes),
and Brian Parrish (Londoners) brought him their musical
congratulations during an other instalment of "Eine Nacht im
Star-Club"); Kingsize Taylor & The Dominoes; Liver Birds;
Cream; The Londoners who became The Knack with Paul Gurvitz and
later, his brother Adrian. The guitarist Brian Parrish
(Londoners/Knack) later went on to work with Paul Gurvitz as
Parrish and Gurvitz, their career blighted by their being the next
act after the Beatles to be produced by George Martin – rubbed out
by the “follow that” syndrome!. The Gurvitz brothers went on to
form The Gun and with Ginger Baker, became the Baker Gurvitz
Army.
Please forgive the total lack of chronological order but I am
absolutely useless at dates.
Our early
days at the Star Club served as an excellent apprenticeship for a
striving band and like many bands before and after us, we returned
to England much tighter and better for our experience. There were
usually about four bands during the week, doing consecutive sets
between about 5pm and 3:30am. At weekends there were more, often
local guys and I remember the Rattles being there one time. This
regime was hard at first to get used to but with the help of a few
substances we managed to survive. We played every day apart from
National holidays and our stay was usually from four to six weeks.
I recall the fact that there was a curfew for young people under
eighteen years and at the time, the set between about 8:30 and
9:30pm was dubbed by us British bands as “Children’s’ Hour”. Ironic
really, as we weren’t much more than children ourselves although we
grew up very quickly in Hamburg!
I recall with affection playing with guitarist and drummer Griff
& Parry (I remember their having some connection with the Big
Three) At the start of this particular stint, Parry (or was it
Griff!?) “Lost his crack” (the snap in his snare sound). Sad to
say, he never found it and was miserable for the whole of the stay.
I wonder if he ever did retrieve it!
Muff Winwood (Spencer Davies Group) was reluctant to have the band
do any slow numbers and we were loud in our encouragement for them
to do “Georgia”. The band thought we were sending them up and
putting them in a position where they might do themselves
no good with the
audience who were famous for their encouragement to the bands to,
“Mak show!”. However, we assured them of our honesty and pointed to
the girls who worked behind the bar at the back of the club whose
lantern waving (a bit like the Mexican wave made famous by football
supporters) was legendary in slow songs that they liked. Muff took
the risk and absolutely brought the house down when they played
“Georgia” and the magnificent spectacle of the lantern waving
accompaniment was a sight I shall never forget. We were honoured
many times for our slow numbers with the lantern waving which was
similar at the Star Club to the lighter waving after dark in pop
concerts these days.
I remember
standing in the wings with Eric Clapton and Jack Bruce whilst
Ginger Baker remained on stage doing one of his famous drum solos.
It was the time of their first album and the number was The Toad
played to an absolutely packed house. Clapton and Bruce were both
castigating Baker’s drumming on that occasion as “Shite, he plays
like a pillock!” To us and those in the audience, Baker was
brilliant and the set was totally electrifying.
Cream’s roadie asked us if we would mind his setting up the
equipment for the band during our time on stage. Now this was a
departure from the usual courtesy afforded to bands lower on the
bill but we were happy enough for him to do it. I shall never
forget playing and then looking behind at the end of our set to see
a “Berlin Wall” of Marshall amps erected in no time at all at the
back of the stage.
Apart from the playing, the way of life for those few short weeks
is never to be forgotten: the Beer Shop – Horst , the huge gentle
giant who ran it; the Mambo, Block Hut; oxtail soup between sets;
big sausages; and of course, copious amounts of beer. There was
English breakfast at the Seaman’s Mission and Granny’s, next door
to the Beer Shop, two doors down from the Star Club, where we ate
cutlets and delicious fried eggs. We never found out Granny’s age
but she looked about 100.These inexpensive eating places were
absolute life savers to us British bands.
I did a session on one visit, at the nearby Polydor Studios,
playing guitar for Ricky Barnes and Jacky Lynton (pictured) under
the name of Boots
Wellington and His Rubber Band. Jacky was our first “famous friend”
at the club as he had a record in the Hit Parade at the time with
“Teddy Bear’s Picnic”. We struck up a firm friendship on that first
visit which has lasted to this day.
I recall the British band members’ enthusiasm for a stroll down
Winkel Strasse (Street of Windows), especially if it was rewarded
by a glimpse of the legendary Queen! The rest is a haze but at the
heart of everything was the fabulous Star Club itself and the fact
that we were unaware of contributing to a legend although we knew
it was all pretty important at the time. And we were not proved
wrong. I was there and I wouldn’t have missed it for the world.
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