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 Love Tour of U.K 1974

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T O P I C    R E V I E W
harvey Posted - 08/05/2014 : 16:33:29
So here we all are again. Those that remember that is . Wednesday 8th of May 1974. 40 years ago today was the first gig of the 1974 tour with Arthur and Love . Bristol England. Colston Hall with Casablanca. My first gig as road crew to Love and Casablanca. Thanks to Outlook wiping all my contacts I used to have on Hotmail I have not been on here for some time. No longer receiving updates with what is happening on here. So anybody that remembers the tour with any memories good or bad . There used to be a colour photo on here of Arthur at Dingwalls, Camden Lock in London on 22nd May 1974 In one of the set I am backstage off at the side in the picture and other shots have pictures of my arms or me very out of focus . Now some seem to have been taken down by owner of the rights to the pictures possibly so can no longer see all of them. That was the night someone got up from the audience and punched Arthur but as I have said before he was so high it did not really affect him and he did the Rainbow London gig the next night with no ill effects as can be heard from the tape recording I made and most people on here have heard now probably. Hope everybody on here is surviving ok as well as the surviving guys in the band. Joe and John and Melvan and the people that remember the gigs on that tour 40 years ago today. Still does not seem that long ago. RIP Arthur and Robert and all the other good guys we lost over the years
Harvey the Roadie
15   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
Gill Posted - 29/06/2014 : 18:22:54
Thanks for my birthday wishes! I saw the Dingwalls gig on the 1974 tour when I was 20, which makes me another zero figure this year!


Love
Gill
Dukie Posted - 04/06/2014 : 19:31:57
My mistake - today was Gill Oakley's birthday (another UK Love fan), not Tina's, but I believe all is well with Tina, Lizzy, Caryne....
lemonade kid Posted - 04/06/2014 : 19:10:28
Cheers, Tina!

And "hi" to Lizzy B.

________________________________________________

"After silence, that which comes nearest to expressing the inexpressible is music".

-Aldous Huxley
Dukie Posted - 04/06/2014 : 18:21:29
It is Tina's birthday today, and Lizzy has sent her best wishes.
We may have to arrange another UK get-together.
John9 Posted - 04/06/2014 : 00:45:10
quote:
Originally posted by lemonade kid

quote:
Originally posted by Dukie

Thanks Harvey, I really enjoyed your stories. Now if only we could find the crew from the 1975 tour....
I saw Love in Glasgow at King Tuts on the 2003 Tour - yes, a night in Glasgow can be unforgettable. Luckily, I had some good friends with me - Scottish Keith, Lizzy B and a few others.Good Times!

Where IS Lizzy B, J9? We miss Lizzy!

________________________________________________

"After silence, that which comes nearest to expressing the inexpressible is music".

-Aldous Huxley




Hi LK - I've met Lizzy (along with Tina) only twice - at Arthur Lee birthday gatherings in York during 2010 (when Dukie also attended) and 2011. So many people have come and gone during the time we've been on this board - it would be wonderful to hear from people like Ed The Bear and Rocker once again - and Caryne of course - with whom we used to debate on just about everything under the Sun - they were great days.
Dukie Posted - 03/06/2014 : 14:49:33
Thanks Harvey - I interviewed Bruce Riley after the opening gig at Birmingham on the 1975 tour. I was supposed to interview Arthur later in the tour but it didn't happen . The three gigs that I saw were great (despite PA problems at Salisbury), and I recorded the Lyceum show -good times
harvey Posted - 02/06/2014 : 19:44:03
Sunday 2nd June 1974 was the last gig of the tour with Arthur and Love. The Greyhound in Croydon. Not a very good gig as we had to stop part of the way through as one of the Phase Linear amps powering one side of the P.A. stopped working. We got it going again but audience were pretty rowdy. After the gig we went to load the equipment and found the truck had been vandalised. Diesel fuel poured all over windscreen and the wiper blades snapped off. Difficult journey back to base as it was raining and we had to keep stopping to clean screen. So that was the end of the tour. I never met Arthur or any of the band again. Never saw them again as I was always busy working for other bands. Watched them whenever they were on TV in later years, on Jools Holland and Glastonbury. I carried on working for Casablanca so had to get up early next day to fix truck wipers as another gig at Leeds Playhouse theatre tomorrow with Bill Nelson and others.
Great Tour, Great memories, does not seem like 40 years ago. To sum it up, The band Love were a great bunch of blokes but Arthur could be very difficult to work with sometimes. Best gig of the tour was the Rainbow .
Harvey the Roadie
lemonade kid Posted - 02/06/2014 : 15:43:36
quote:
Originally posted by Dukie

Thanks Harvey, I really enjoyed your stories. Now if only we could find the crew from the 1975 tour....
I saw Love in Glasgow at King Tuts on the 2003 Tour - yes, a night in Glasgow can be unforgettable. Luckily, I had some good friends with me - Scottish Keith, Lizzy B and a few others.Good Times!

Where IS Lizzy B, J9? We miss Lizzy!

________________________________________________

"After silence, that which comes nearest to expressing the inexpressible is music".

-Aldous Huxley
John9 Posted - 01/06/2014 : 17:31:59
Supporting the slimmed down version of Love in 1975 was Dog Soldier - I have only just found out that they had been formed the previous year by Lancashire's very own (and now sadly,late) Keef Hartley. That surprises me because I remember them as having been painfully loud - in comparison Love sounded like ethereal soft rock...although I think I was lucky to catch them (Love) on an especially good night.
harvey Posted - 01/06/2014 : 16:06:06
Tonight was the Oxford Brasenose College gig . For their late May Ball. We drove down from the JB's at Dudley gig which was Casablanca only not Arthur and Love as has been suggested on here . Nice hot day I remember but difficult get in at Oxford as we had to find a member of staff with a security key to let us in which cost us time. Gig was in a large tent in the quadrangle. Line up was Arthur and Love, Casablanca , and Blackfoot Sue who were a British pop band really, who had had a few hits. Two brothers, Tom and Ted Farmer were the mainstay of the band one played drums and sang and was the central focus. I had worked with them before and knew them and their crew. Bands were all put up in the rooms at the college and partying all the time. The gig was a demonstration of what the upper class well educated students get up to . All of them completely legless all evening, getting on stage and grabbing microphone. Spent most of the evening throwing people off stage, Arthur threw a few off, P.A. stack got knocked over. Security was supposed to be by Oxford University Rugby club but they were a bit outnumbered. At the start of the evening the power went off and Blackfoot Sue's roadie and I went to find out why. Someone had wrapped a rope round the main isolator switch on the wall inside the college and pulled on it and pulled the isolator box off the wall. Everybody said it was a rival college trying to ruin the evening. I managed to fix it all again and everything was ok. As I say the evening gradually got worse and worse with more and more drunks throwing themselves about. Managed to get through the evening and eventually about 3 am, all students lying on floor too drunk to stand. We and all the bands stayed overnight in the college, partying again. I spent most of the night on the stairs stopping unwanted people getting into the party. In the morning we took out our frustration on the college milk carton machine that kept taking money and not working so we smashed it and took all the milk cartons and distributed them. Beautiful sunny day in Oxford but ruined by disgraceful behaviour of students. All the bands played well but totally unappreciated . Great memories. With reference to the 75 tour crew the only one I know was on 74 and 75 was Bruce Riley.
Harvey the Roadie
Dukie Posted - 01/06/2014 : 15:04:09
Thanks Harvey, I really enjoyed your stories. Now if only we could find the crew from the 1975 tour....
I saw Love in Glasgow at King Tuts on the 2003 Tour - yes, a night in Glasgow can be unforgettable. Luckily, I had some good friends with me - Scottish Keith, Lizzy B and a few others.Good Times!
lemonade kid Posted - 31/05/2014 : 22:10:12
Thanks for all these Love/tour posts, Harv! Very Good!

________________________________________________

"After silence, that which comes nearest to expressing the inexpressible is music".

-Aldous Huxley
harvey Posted - 30/05/2014 : 15:10:14
Thursday 30th May 74 was the Electric Gardens gig in Glasgow. See above (Page 2) for some of my recollections. Gig was in Sauchiehaul Street just around the corner from the recently badly damaged Glasgow School of Art Mackintosh Building. I remember in those days Glasgow was pretty run down, and the people were pretty unfriendly to English people . A night in a hotel in Glasgow was pretty unforgettable, noise of fighting in street going on all night. Gig was OK, fairly well attended but Arthur not in a very good mood. I think he had been warned that if he short setted there would be real trouble.
Harvey the Roadie
harvey Posted - 29/05/2014 : 19:43:23
Wednesday 29th May 74 was the Gig at Manchester Free Trade Hall. In our rush to get out from Biba's last night we left the P.A. Multicore cables behind. So we had to plug the microphones straight into the desk which we put near the stage. The cables did turn up in the end having been sent up from London on the train but it was too late to use them. Everything seemed to work ok. Not an easy gig to do as the stage had all sorts of steps and platforms on for use by orchestras so stage was a bit narrow. All seemed to go ok .
Harvey the Roadie
harvey Posted - 28/05/2014 : 16:36:14
Tuesday 28th was the Biba Gig, Upstairs in the Rainbow Room. Lots of record company people there supporting Casablanca. Arthur not in a very good mood and short setted which made crowd angry. Refused to go back on again and would not talk to members of the band or crew so we gave up. Casablanca went back on and did some more. Crowd still pretty annoyed so we got equipment out as quickly as possible. There was a lighting rig and a disco there and the lighting rig was making a slight noise on the P.A. so that may have upset Arthur. After we had loaded van the sound engineer noticed that the DJ had left a pair of record decks so he decided to put them in the truck. That may have been the reason we left the P.A. Multicore cables behind by mistake in the hurry to get out. Could also have been the reason why the foam armchair we took from the gig the other night got left on the roof of the truck and fell off in Knightsbridge somewhere.
Harvey the Roadie

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