Alvin Lee is coming back home.

The former Ten Years After guitarist and frontman is embarking
on a UK tour with keyboardist and sax player Edgar Winter. Rahul Shrivastava managed
to catch a quick chat inbetween rehearsals.
How did you get involved with the tour with Edgar Winter? And what sort of set will
you be playing?
Well, they just asked me really. I said no at first though, as the dates are very close
together, but they adapted it to make it possible for me to play!
I'm using the bass player, Pete Pritchard, who is on the new album . He's playing double
bass as well as bass guitar. It will be the first time I've played live with a double
bass.
And we'll also do an acoustic set in the middle of the show which will also be a first
for me. It's gonna be a bit different.
Now going back to your early years, Ten Years After secured
a residency at the legendary Marquee Club. What kind of reaction did you get from the
crowd back then?
It was the time of the blues. John Mayall was beginning to get noticed as a blues player
and brought the music to a lot of people's attention.
So many bands were into blues, but there were not that many blues venues around. And
John Mayall kind of started that off. I went to see John Mayall at the Marquee, with
Peter Green on guitar, and that was a particularly good gig.
We did an audition for the Marquee, and we happened to know that the manager, John
Gee, was a bit of a jazz fan. So we performed an old Woodie Herman number called Woodchopper's
Ball, which had him come dashing out the office and got us a residency. The
crowd reaction when we were up there playing was great. I loved those days. It was
blues but it was also underground, and I really like that kind of atmosphere. It was
very arty!
We used to play the underground clubs like the UFO, and Middle
Earth, and they were great because they would have on things like a poet, string quartets,
and then a rock band! It was kinda cool!
And then it was the time for Woodstock, and your performance
of Going Home is considered to be one of the festival's highlights. What was it like
to play in that festival?
Woodstock was an amazing experience. It was declared a national disaster. We couldn't
get in by road and had to get a helicoptor to air-lift us through the crowds.
Strangely enough though, it was one of many festivals we played that year. We also
did something called the Texas Peace Festival, which was actually a better gig both
musically, and in the way it was organised. Back in those
days we thought we could change the world. In fact, we did change the world, but when
we weren't looking, the world changed back again!
Alvin Lee on the early years After we played Woodstock, nothing
changed for about a year. We were still playing the underground circuit, of 2000-3000
seaters. It wasn't until the movie came out that it all changed
for us. Some people say it was the start of Ten Years After, but in another way, it
was the beginning of the end. We started playing ice hockey
arenas and baseball stadiums which was not as good as the underground circuit. I didn't
enjoy it as much. Suddenly we were popstars, and I didn't see myself as that. I saw
myself as a blues musician with jazz leanings!
But don't get me wrong. I still had a great time. Back in those
days we thought we could change the world...(pauses)...In fact, we did change the world,
but when we weren't looking, the world changed back again!
What was it like to play in front of hundreds of thousands of people? Did you suffer
from nerves?
I never really got them that bad. I just play to the people I can see. So it's almost
like you are playing to the first few rows of the crowd. You can see the faces of the
first hundred people, but then it becomes a blur as the crowds disappear over the hill.
I'm just as nervous playing to 50 people as I am to 500 or 5000.
You're on show. You have to prove something, no matter how many people are watching.
What were your influences when you were growing up?
I was brought up on blues. My dad used to collect old blues 78s. He had loads of stuff
by Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker, Lonnie Johnson and people like that. I
started off playing the clarinet, after I was inspired by listening to my dad's Benny
Goodman records.
It was by listening to Goodman's band, that I began to notice the guitarist Charlie
Christian, who was one of the first musicians to play solos in a big band set-up. I
then began to take guitar lessons by a guy who was a Django Reinhardt fan. Django was
like the Jimi Hendrix of the 1940s. An incredible musician.
I began to learn a lot of his chords and rhythms. It was a bit boring at the time,
but came in very handy later on. I think a lot of modern day guitarists start off playing
like Eddie van Halen, and they don't take the time to learn the basics.
You've played with some big name musicians over the years.
Who for you stood out?
Well, I jammed with Jimi Hendrix a few times. The first time was at The Scene Club
in New York. Jimi was in the audience and just asked if he could get up and play with
us. He took our bass, and because he was left-handed, he had to turn it upside down.
He then proceeded to play an amazing, far-out solo on the bass.
He saw us play a few times in fact. I did this song called I Can't Keep From Crying
Sometimes, and Jimi loved it. He paid me a huge compliment when he told me that he
was thinking of doing something similar himself! (Laughs jokingly) Haha, beat you to
it! But seriously, he was great. A phenomenal guitarist and
a phenomenal person too.
George Harrison was also a pleasure to work with. He was one
of the most famous people I've ever known, but in spite of that fame, he was such a
nice and friendly guy.
I was a jamming musician while George really sat down and wrote the solo. He put a
lot of thought in them and he made me lean that way too. It was a great experience
because it helped me to become a more tuneful musician.
So do you keep in touch with the other members of Ten Years After? Any plans for a
reunion?
I'm afraid we've falling out. They have decided to tour under the name of Ten Years
After which I don't think is very cool. To be honest, they have had to do that as it's
the only way they can get any work. It's a bit sad really
as Ten Years After is a very special name, and now it has turned into a kind of pub
band I think.
The chances of a reunion now are less likely. I was thinking of having a 40th anniversary
of the band, but now they are really another band, so it's all a bit weird. I think
I'll continue to work as a solo artist.
So if you see Ten Years After, it's not me anymore. I'm very happy with what I am doing
now. The new album was recorded in Nashville, with Scotty Moore and DJ Fontana who
are the original Elvis backing band. I'm going back to my roots, so to speak, and really
looking forward to playing the UK again. |