In 1979, following his early career with TIMEBOX, PATTO, TEMPEST and BOXER, guitarist Ollie Halsall produced these remarkable multi-track recordings. Whether they were intended for release or for a future group project is unclear.
Shortly afterwards, following an album and tour with John Otway, Ollie joined Kevin Ayers’ band, with whom he spent most of the next 13 years, until his untimely death in 1992.
This album survives as a unique record of an extraordinary musical talent.
2021
Hey Hey Little Girl
Come On Let's Go
Back Against the Wall
Crazy When I Fall in Love
Door to Door Daughter
Travelling Show
Lovers Leaping
Stepping Out
You Need a Friend
First Day in New York
Airplane Food
Summertime Kids
Multitrack demos from 1979
This collection of 1979 demos remains, Ollie's only totally solo effort and an intensely satisfying album
With Timebox (which begat Patto and later Boxer), Ollie gained a reputation as the most extraordinary guitarist of his time. He was in constant demand as a session musician for the likes of Jon Hiseman, Neil Innes (and The Rutles), Viv Stanshall, John Cale, Kevin Ayers and, of course, John Otway.
1979 found Ollie at a particularly low point following the death of his friend and musical soul-mate Mike Patto. Apparently living in abject poverty with neither electricity nor telephone, he somehow managed to concoct these demos on borrowed equipment.
They are superbly produced multi-track stereo recordings featuring Ollie on vocals, piano, synthesiser, bass, drums and saxophone(!) as well as guitar.
There are no great surprises in the keyboard department which is, perhaps, a shame because I have never heard him repeat the quite incredible piano technique displayed on Patto's 'Roll 'em Smoke 'em . . .' album.
The drums were Ollie's first instrument and he plays in that distinctive 'non-drummer' style reminiscent of Paul McCartney.
This is not a 'guitar album' - although it features many examples of his unique approach. It is more about Ollie the singer/songwriter. The original demos fall in such a perfect sequence it is hard to imagine them not being intended as a complete album, which is how they remain presented here.
Barry Monks
Otway's additional liner notes
Ollie Halsall was full of surprises. We used to swap tapes of our work quite a bit in the late 1970s and this is one of them. I didn't know Ollie as a song-writer so it was a really nice surprise to hear this material. We were working together at the time and I felt I got to know him better musically through them.
These are demos and the sound quality is not brilliant but they reflect Ollie's versatility: he was a melodist and multi-instrumentalist (I knew he could play drums, vibes, keyboards in addition to guitars) and he clearly had a pop sensitivity that did not always get aired when he performed other people's work. Kathy, my girlfriend at the time, was a big fan of Ollie Halsall. She first saw him with Patto, being winched up on the stage of the Rainbow Theatre in London dressed in a bumble bee outfit!
Up to his death in 1992, he was working again with Kevin Ayers. Whoever he played with, Ollie was really professional and a wonderful, intuitive guitarist. When we were looking for a band after I split with Willy, we got Ollie and some other great session players. We did a week's rehearsal and then went in and recorded Where Did I Go Right?
After that we toured a few dates together; Ollie brought former Patto drummer John Halsey in for these, and Neil Innes used more or less the same band later for touring. They were a good, tight unit. I started writing some new songs and went round to Ollie's house in St Albans. I had a Revox and we recorded demos together for material later used for my All Balls And No Willy album.
Ollie and I did some live dates as a duo and then I fancied touring the US so we took Ollie off with us. He later said it was the only US tour that he could remember.
He enjoyed getting away from Britain; it seemed to take his mind off his problems. Ollie took off for Deya in Spain and we lost touch.
I last saw him when I met him and Kevin at my local pub. I was intrigued by Ollie and what he did - what couldn't he do? I didn't know that he was an artist until I heard about the cave drawings used on the cover of this release. A lot of people had respect for Ollie's work and a lot of fans turned out for him when we toured. He was one of those interesting characters that people liked, but he didn't make much noise and his talent didn't receive the recognition due it. It's fitting that this little album is here to shed new light on him.
John Otway
Ollie Halsall, Trax NYC 1980 Photo: © Ebet Roberts
Abbots Langley [CD]
Ollie Halsall with John Halsey
I had long been aware of Ollie Halsall's brief association with the extraordinary John Otway (1979 UK & US tours & album 'Where Did I Go Right?'). I managed to contact Otway through a mutual acquaintance and asked him if he might have any tapes, photos or whatever. Otway's response was typically bizarre: "Yes" he probably had some photos somewhere and would "try and dig them out" (not yet forthcoming).
As for tapes, he very kindly sent a live set recorded' in a pub, somewhere' featuring Ollie on guitar & piano. John apologised for the sound quality ("I hate live recordings anyway"). On the evidence of this tape, Ollie was clearly enjoying himself and providing the usual unbelievable embellishments to Otway's material.
Not many will be aware, incidentally, that some of John's present repertoire dates back to their collaboration and that Ollie co-wrote, with John, many of the songs that were to end up on the Otway & Barrett album 'Way & Bar'. Otway is still gigging regularly. Go and see him - he is a one off, a total genius. And his current accompanist Richard Holgarth is excellent.
He also sent a collection "of Ollie's demos" .
I have to tell you that I couldn't bring myself to play these for some three or four days for fear of disappointment after all, surely they could only be poor quality acoustic versions of old Patto, Boxer or Tempest songs, or perhaps some sort of avant-garde ramblings, couldn't they? (The track listing revealed them as not being the great lost Robert Fripp collaboration of 1972).
Otway said that Ollie gave him the tape in 1979 as an example of what he had been doing and suggested they might want to use some of the material. It ,vas hardly encouraging that John had not in fact, ever used any of it and, indeed, had not played it since.
There was always the possibility, remote as these things usually are, that this unassuming tatty little black cassette could contain something really good. The impossibility that I had, in fact unwittingly stumbled across the equivalent of the 'Holy Grail' never really occurred to me.
Having summoned up the appropriate mental state, I finally played the tape. These are almost certainly studio recordings - and I say that because we are talking 1979 and earlier, and the home recording revolution had hardly begun. Some may have been at least partly home produced - Pete Townshend was producing remarkable 'sound on sound' (which is not as sophisticated as true multi-track) recordings on a Revox stereo tape deck as far back as 1965.
The sound quality ranges from fair to near-perfect and it is in stereo. Furthermore, it is multi-tracked - with Ollie playing an array of parts (including piano, synthesiser, bass, drums and saxophone!) in addition to the usual 'guitar/vocal'.
There are no great surprises in the keyboard department which is, perhaps. a shame because I have never heard him repeat the quite incredible piano technique displayed on Patto's 'Roll 'em Smoke 'em...' album.
The drums were Ollie's first instrument and he plays in that distinctive' nondrummer' style reminiscent of Paul McCartney.
I'm not 100% sure about the saxophone, although I know he could play it - as indeed he could the violin (not however, featured here). Ollie was an accomplished bassist and, beautiful examples of his distinctive style and tone can be found elsewhere on many of Kevin Ayers' albums including 'Deia Vu' (although uncredited) and 'Sweet Deceiver'.
Perversely, Ollie played bass on John Cale's 1985 European tour with a lesser mortal in the guitar seat Apparently, this was a purely financial arrangement since Ollie couldn't get a gig elsewhere at the time, but I suspect it may have owed something to Cale's surrealism - he once confiscated the drummer's cymbals for one performance, insisting that the musician was paid "to play the DRUMS!"
Sound technician and guitar 'roadie' Roy Wood, who related this tale, insists that Ollie 'recycled' his broken guitar strings by tying knots in them! Whilst there could be an element of 'leg-pulling' here. such practices may not be that unorthodox for someone who learned to play the vibraphone at the age of 14 on a paper cut-out of a piano keyboard or who. reputedly, spent his share of Patto's recording advance on a Persian carpet!
There are twelve songs, fairly obviously in chronological order (in terms of both composition and performance). Remarkably, they fall in such a perfect sequence it is hard to imagine them not being intended as a complete album.
If this had seen the light of day at the time, it could easily have been a chart album. (If memory serves me correctly, there was still some semblance of a music scene in those days!)
Most significantly, we are not talking 'jazz-rock' or the more obscure side of Mr. Halsall's extraordinary talents. What we have here is Ollie Halsall - the , singer-songwriter'!
We shouldn't, of course, be too surprised by that in itself since Halsall wrote or co-wrote most of the Timebox, Patto & Boxer material and half the Tempest 'Living in Fear' album - and often sang the lead. (Jon Hiseman cited Ollie's vocal ambitions as the reason for his departure from Tempest in 1974 - which is a little odd since he immediately took a supporting role with the Soporifics).
And, of course, W A WS recent and invaluable 'trainspotter' epic lists Halsall as co-writer of much 'of Ayers later material.
Indeed, such is the extent of Ollie's involvement in the album' As Close As You Think' (including lead vocal on his own composition 'Never My Baby') that the credit 'Kevin Ayers featuring Ollie Halsall' might almost be reversed!
Something different tends to happen, however, when writers perform their own material as a solo effort, and the results here are deeply revealing. These are '3-minute pop' masterpieces which owe far more to Lennon & McCartney than to John Cale and the rest of Ollie's more indulgent associations - but more of that later.
So, here is a track-by track review of what I can now perceive only as the long lost solo album 'Lovers Leaping' (the most obvious title track) - I hope that, like those foretastes of Beatles albums in Melody Maker we used to eagerly devour weeks before we actually heard the music, that this piece conjures similar anticipation.
'Side one' kicks off with 'Hey, Hey, Little Girl' - an up tempo rocker (as they used to say!). This is wonderfully primitive two-chord tune over the riff from' Judy in Disguise with Glasses' (remember that?) among others. It could well date from that period (1968) as Ollie complains that "You don't like my little brown books - you say they make you think!".
There is a brilliant saxophone solo which could be the work either of a virtuoso or an absolute beginner - both of which could apply equally to Halsall.
'Come on, Let's Go' - Tinkly piano intro and plenty of 'shoobedoos' and 'ooh, aahh' backing vocals here, with a chord change I've only previously heard attempted by Felix Mendelssohn!
The first guitar solo is featured and you won't be disappointed. The style and sound give it away as a 1976 recording, but it could well have been conceived much earlier.
Back Against the Wall' - This- is the first one that really grabs your attention. Electric piano, drums and' scat' guitar/vocal introduce a very solid piece of seventies rock.
It's 'Patto meets Lennon' in a powerful vocal performance. "Got my back against the wall, that's all, that's all".
Some lovely saxophone lines feature in this incredible arrangement and, just when you thought it couldn't get any better, there's a pure Patto vintage guitar solo. Absolutely wonderful - a hit!
'Crazy When I Fall in Love' - Probably the least successful of the bunch, but a wonderfully enthusiastic performance all the same. Ollie swaps saxophone and Chuck Berry guitar solos with himself over some fairly rudimentary drums and the whole thing just about hangs together.
'Door to Door Daughter' - Ollie relates a rather unhealthy interest in the paper delivery girl, to a Bo Diddley rhythm! Somewhat unsettling to say the least. but a superb production with lovely twiddley guitar bits. Halsall's incredible sense of time is demonstrated by the remarkable way he scans the line "I love your door to door daughter" at the end.
'Travelling Show' - A beautiful slow piano ballad, worthy of Macca himself, as Ollie reminisces of 'New York, Paris & Rome'. It may not have been immediately obvious, but McCartney was in fact Ollie's greatest influence. Remember he came from the immediate post-Merseybeat, art school scene and has nodded in the direction of the' fabs' on more than one occasion - notably Timebox's 'Gone is the Sad .Man' and covers of 'Paperback Writer (Tempest) & 'Hey Bulldog' (Boxer).
Ollie desperately wanted to portray 'Paul' in the Rutles, alongside Admiral' John Halsey's 'Ringo'. The US backers needed a 'star' however, and the part of 'Dirk McQuickly' was taken by Rutles creator Eric Idle himself Ollie had to settle for the 'walk-on' part of Leppo (original bassist 'Stuart Sutcliffe'). But Halsey recalls that, when it came to recording the soundtrack, Idle couldn't quite handle the vocals parts so, Ollie, as well as creating the amazing BeatIe guitar pastiches, also sang 'Paul's' part, speeded up slightly. In this and other respects, Halsall's contribution the Rutles project has never been fully recognised.
'Side two' - 'Lovers Leaping' [the original 'title track' I had begun to assign to these recordings] begins with a heavy echoed drums. Then in comes the most gorgeous guitar riff. Brilliant vocals throughout and some extraordinary George Harrison guitar, straight off the Beatles white album. Stereo guitars join in a duet rather than a solo. All in all, probably the best of the crop.
'Stepping Out' - This is a real revelation. You will probably be familiar with Kevin's live and recorded versions of this song ('Diamond Jack . . . ' & 'As Close as You Think') but this original predates them by at least 4 years. Intriguingly, whilst leaving the chorus virtually intact, Kevin chose to rewrite the verses entirely. The original lyrics here stand as an extraordinarily, poignant and deeply personal statement:
Everyone in this pond (Deia?) thinks that they know me.
All they know is that I'm weird and I drink too much.
And I climb up stone crosses and bare my ass and stay out all night.
But you know I'm . . . I'm really down now and you were heaven sent
And I still do what I want to do - 'cos it feels RIGHT!"
Heavy stuff alright, and we are privy to a remarkable insight into the character of someone I have increasingly come to regard very much as a latter-day musical Pierrot. (It's infuriating why, in the second line of Ollie's chorus, he insists om rhyming 'four' with 'you' instead of something more obvious like' door' or, for that matter, why he doesn't simply repeat the first line, like Kevin does!)
'You Need a Friend' - Another Deia song [?] with tales of the' After Lunch Bunch'! I wonder who they are? perhaps they also comprise the 'Fools after midnight'. This is the suspended chord sequence that everyone who has ever presumed to compose on a guitar with any serious intent must have 'discovered'. Nonetheless, I've never heard it put to better use. Great song.
'First Day in New York' - Things are really hotting up with the following trilogy. First, a brilliant rock piece which you could easily imagine in the context of live band. Absolutely corking fiery guitar solo with more than a touch of Richard Thompson about it.
'Airplane Food' - Logically, this might have preceded the "first day in New York". It starts with quite the best airplane take off noises - courtesy of Fender Stratocaster tremolo arm - that I've ever come across, as Ollie takes us on a quite terrifying journey. I was sure this was going to be 'Sausages' (which deals with the same subject) from the unreleased Patto album but, no, it's an almost punk-like tour-de-force in which Ollie "could do with some airplane food" and, furthermore, would like to "see tile stewardess in the nude" - Nothing wrong with the rhyming dictionary here!
Halsall flies "ten miles high" (presumably aviation had advanced somewhat since the Byrds came to London in 1965) and in the middle of it all he finds time for not just a guitar solo but actually a Halsall 'guitar primer'! A simple 5-note phrase repeated over and over again and getting progressively faster and faster until it becomes one of the sort of lunatic figures he first became famous for. It's almost like Ollie is saying 'look, this is how you do it!' (and it does work, try it).
At an imperceivable join, a bottleneck guitar takes over and screeches to staggering climax. If you have ever presumed to take any of the current crop of guitar virtuosi seriously, then listen to this.
'Summertime Kids' -A gently rocking Summer anthem with a lovely bass pattern underpinning some wonderfully arranged guitars. Ollie sings of the Summertime Kids who have to "paint your eyelids" - just an old hippy at heart! Towards the end he throws in a final short but exquisite Patto-esque solo and I can almost hear him laughing. A perfect end to a very near perfect set.
Even being as objective as I possibly can, I have to rate this as one of the finest 'albums' I have ever heard. It is, of course, full of the usual enigmas surrounding Ollie's life and poses more questions than it solves: How could material of this standard be totally overlooked by the industry; why didn't Ollie - or someone on his behalf - seek to exploit his talent to anything approaching its potential: and, if he wasn't interested in commercial success, then why go to the trouble to make such superb demos: and where are all the other examples he must. surely, have left behind?
This is an important musical document, not simply because it is a damn good album, but because at last we have a totally accessible vehicle for Ollie's unique skills - a fitting epitaph for tile greatest rock instrumentalist this country has ever produced.
Barry Monks, March 1994
First published in Why Are We Sleeping magazine No.6, August 1994
Travelling Show
Travelling show. I just go
New York, Paris and Rome
You see I'm gone
I fall in love. I don't know why
With many a girl and many a guy
And girls if you don't kiss me goodby
Johnny with a problem well, I'll try
Suzie with an interest, kiss me goodby
But a woman with a vengeance
Look out, oh em oh my
You could be a rainbow
you could be a fool
You could be beautiful
you could be cruel
But you're mine, baby, you're mine
Maybe for the only time, but your mine
Born to loon, silvery moon
LA, London and Maine
Goodbye, hello again
I fall in love, I don't know why
With many a girl, with many a guy
Sir, if you're alone, telephone
Girl if you're dead, I'll put you to bed
Girl if you're alive, dive, dive, dive
But a man with a shotgun
Forget about love and all that jive
You could be a cloudless sky
You could be an assembly line
You could be a problem
You could work out fine
But you're mine, baby you're mine
Maybe for the first time, but your mine
Baby you're mine
Well I waited so long just to hold you
Now that you're in my arms
Now that you're lying next to me
I'm tired as a sailboat in a nine-day calm
- Ollie Halsall 1980
Stepping Out
Hey, you know I love to step alongside of you,
Oh, come on now, leave the car, it's had it too,
Hold my hand oh, alright then , don't hold my hand,
Put your arm in mine. Mmm, that's fine,
It's cold tonight and the feeling's great.
Stepping out one, stepping out two,
Stepping out of my mind, I'm stepping out with you,
Stepping out three, stepping out four,
Stepping out of my mind, I'm stepping out with you.
Honey I can't help the way that I'm feeling, oh no,
I'm aware that everybody's watching me but I don't car, no,
I see a yellow pavement with spring-loaded flagstonesYour laughter is wicked and beautiful,and it's cold with rain and feel no pain.
Everyone in this pond thinks that they know me,
All they know is that I'm weird and I drink too much,
And I climb up stone crosses and bare my ass and stay out all night,
But you know I'm really down now and you were heaven sent,
And I still do what I want to do - 'cos it feels right.
Ollie Halsall 1979
'Stepping Out' - CHORDS
Lovers Leaping was originally issued by Market Square Records under the title Caves, 2000
Executive Producer: Peter Muir
Remastering: Martin Mitchell
Moor End Studios
Album concept and design: Barry Monks
The packaging included Mallorcan cave drawings by Ollie Halsall and cave-dwellers photo by Oli Lynton reproduced by courtesy of Lady June
©1981 Bum Productions
Ollie's pen and ink illustrations for one of the worlds shortest books!
Caves
an exploration by
Ollie Halsall
Oli Lynton
& Lady June
© Bum Productions 1981
"The rock was back in place before the entrance of the cave and he would never enter it again"
Trinity
by Leon Uris
The text comprises just the following discovery:
CAVES ARE VERY . . . DARK!