The legend of Jake
Jake Thackray?
Wasn't he that chap who sang saucy songs on That's Life in the Sixties? Yes,
says our poet-in-residence Martin Newell, but this anarchistic Yorkshireman was
also the country's finest chansonnier - and one of the great tragedies of
British popular music
Sunday 08 May
2005
I can't remember
how we got onto the subject of old light entertainment shows on TV. Perhaps
it's just something that chaps of middling age do. But suddenly, a light went
on in my companion's eyes and leaning towards me with the air of a connoisseur
he said: "You remember Jake Thackray, do you? I've got loads of his
recordings. I can make you copies of some if you want - many of them aren't
very available anymore."
A few days
later, when a CD compilation arrived, I was still only mildly curious. I
remembered Thackray from my young teens in the late Sixties, as the musical
relief on popular TV shows such as That's Life and its forerunner, Braden's
Week. He sang witty, sometimes near-the-knuckle songs about randy cockerels,
country buses and libidinous gorillas. A dark, saturnine-looking Yorkshireman,
he played a nylon-string guitar held upright on his knee and blinked into the
camera as he enunciated his lyrics in a gulping velvet baritone. To me and to
most of my Who 'n' Kinks-obsessed mates he was that bloke off the telly that
sang the funny songs - a bit unhip but well worth watching.
Now though,
listening back to this collection of his songs - a few of which I
half-remembered - I was struck by how affecting many of them were, how deft and
unusual his guitar style was and, chiefly, how ingenious were his lyrics. What
I heard when I began to listen to his words... There were rhymes, internal
rhymes, neatly tailored codas and all manner of rule-breaking, scansion-defying
curlicues. This was a master songwriter. How had I missed out on him? Why had I
never heard him on Radio 2 - especially now that other "neglected"
properties such as Nick Drake and Clifford T Ward had all been so carefully
renovated? One or two of my other contacts came out of the closet as Thackray
fans and furnished me with further missing pieces of the jigsaw, until finally,
in one crackly over-recorded form or another, I'd amassed 75 songs. And so
began my tentative attempts to unravel the ball of string that was Jake
Thackray, English chansonnier.
Jake Thackray
died in Monmouth, Wales on Christmas Eve 2002, aged 63. His life had ended in
straitened circumstances, for a man who'd notched up more than 1,000 radio and
TV appearances during his maytime. The singer-songwriter, who'd been declared
bankrupt two years earlier, was reportedly ill with alcoholism. At some point
during the two decades preceding his death, he'd begun to lose all confidence
in his playing, his songwriting and, by the sound of it, himself.
Shortly before
his death, a group of his fans, made the pilgrimage to Monmouth, where Jake
gamely posed for photographs with them. In his youth and well into early middle
age, Jake Thackray had been a moodily handsome man with a strong
bone-structure. Although he was Yorkshire born and bred, anyone might have been
forgiven, having been shown a picture of the dark-eyed young singer, for
guessing that he was southern French or possibly Spanish. The pictures that I
studied now, however, showed a man who might have been a roofer with a drink
problem. His once-strong jaw was blurred by a classic alcohol oedema; his
once-upright posture was stooping and painfully apologetic. Worst of all and
most shocking in close-up, were his eyes, now craters of deep-seated
melancholy. He was almost unrecognisable. I found the pictures unbearably sad.
Born in Leeds,
shortly before the onset of the Second World War, Thackray was brought up a
Catholic and remained so throughout his life. In some ways, he was a typical
beer-drinking, rugby-loving Yorkshireman, holding political views which were
left-wing bordering on the anarchistic. These views later broke surface in the
content of some of his songs - pomposity-pricking tales of cuckolded policemen
and Blimpish old army officers. Where other songwriters might have veered into
ranting stridency, however, Thackray's songs were always lent elegance by his
sharp and sophisticated wit.
In another life,
a bright lad such as he might have remained in Leeds, to become a popular
schoolteacher - which he briefly was - and a better-than-average stalwart of
his local folk club. Yet he didn't do that. He studied modern languages at
Durham, spent two years teaching in Lille, and then later went to Algeria. It
was France, though, that turned his head. It was there that he discovered
chanson, that arcane and definitively French music form which is capable of encompassing
storytelling, poetry and humour, often within the same narrative. More
importantly, he discovered the work of Georges Brassens who became his hero,
musical inspiration, friend and mentor.
Brassens, an
anarchistic southern Frenchman from Sête was 18 years Thackray's senior and
already a well-known star in France. It was said that every French home
possessed at least one Brassens record. The young Frenchman, having left home
in his late teens to seek his fortune in Paris, had spent part of the war in a
German labour camp. After the war, he gradually made the transition from
anti-establishment outsider to household name, without ever compromising his
ideals. The young Yorkshireman was captivated by this chansonnier who had
stayed close to his roots, even after he had achieved the fame of which he
appeared so disdainful. It was said that Brassens once asked a radio station
not to play his songs too frequently, lest they become cheapened by ubiquity.
In the early
Sixties, while other young musicians of his age became intoxicated by music
from across the Atlantic, Thackray fell head over heels for French chanson.
When he returned to England, so fluent in French that he could successfully
translate Brassens songs into English - Thackray had become to all intents and
purposes, a chansonnier. When Brassens finally came to the UK for a single
concert in 1973 - not to London but to Cardiff - Thackray described supporting
Brassens there as the pinnacle of his career.
However
fervently he flew the flag for the genius of his hero, Jake Thackray almost
certainly didn't realise that during the process of his apprenticeship to the
master chansonnier, he had actually developed a style of his own. In the
mid-Sixties, his songs began to attract attention - at first in the folk clubs
and then, with a regular slot on local regional TV - though Thackray, being
Thackray, continued to teach. By the end of the decade, however, he was
appearing on Saturday nights on national TV, and filling venues the size of the
Queen Elizabeth Hall, where his audiences would cheer him to the rafters.
Typically recalcitrant, he refused to play the encore game: "That was my
last song - now here's another one." And on being bathed in overhead stage
lights: "These lights... D'you know, I feel like a Lancaster bomber."
Thackray was a
funny man. Which made it all the more moving when he waxed serious - for
instance, singing a wrenching song about a young shepherdess who froze to
death, counting in Cumbrian dialect while she did so. It was the sucker punch.
You were laughing along with him and suddenly he might deliver a touching song
about married love, or about a widow whose malicious neighbours had cut off her
hair. Jake could do serious. Jake could tell a story. And therein may have lain
one of his main problems.
A chansonnier
can sing a funny song, sing a serious song, declaim a poem or tell a story -
all of them at once if needs be. It's what a chansonnier does. But the job
description doesn't exist in our country. Comedy over here is a cul-de-sac out
of which it is almost impossible to reverse. Take Billy Connolly, for instance,
an excellent musician and a good actor. Could he fill the Albert Hall, seven
nights on-the-trot for a music concert? Or Jasper Carrott, a good guitarist,
songwriter and former mainstay of folkclubs in his younger days? Or Victoria
Wood, a fabulous musician and great songwriter? Could they do it? So it was
that Jake Thackray for a wider TV-viewing public who had never seen him live,
remained that bloke off the telly who did the funny songs - or even worse, a
novelty artist.
In the
platinum-shifting musical age of the late Sixties and early Seventies,
Thackray's albums sold steadily, if not hugely. It was easier to say what his
music wasn't, than what it was. He was a Yorkshire chansonnier with a
folk/flamenco guitar style who utilised jazz-chords. But he wasn't jazz. Nor
was he, in the strictest terms, folk. And he certainly wasn't rock. Veteran
producer Norman Newell (no relation) did his valiant best with much of
Thackray's recorded output. Some of the studio recordings, to modern ears at
least, might now sound slightly dated, straying tweedily close to easy
listening in places. And yet, by virtue of his lyrics alone, easy listening was
the one thing that many of Jake Thackray's songs could never be.
Fortunately, a
reasonable amount of live recordings exists and it's with these that the
essence of his wayward genius can be appreciated. The closer in the listener
gets, the sharper the details of his songs become. There's a very good case, on
some inspired future day, for someone, somewhere, to put together a definitive,
celebratory Jake Thackray compilation, à la Heaven In A Wild Flower, the album
which posthumously brought Nick Drake closer to the mass appeal he missed out
on in his lifetime.
In the meantime,
a musical based round his work, Sister Josephine Kicks The Habit, which
Thackray was working on at the time of his death, will open at Helmsley in
Yorkshire on 24 May and then go on to the Swaledale Festival before touring
nationally. His hardcore fans run yearly "Jake-fests" in various
parts of the country and Thackray's songs continue to be played in folk clubs
by anyone brave enough to take on the fiendish challenge of learning the guitar
parts.
"The
strange thing is," says David Harris, from the main Thackray-dedicated
website and archive, "Jake didn't think he was any good at all. He'd tell
people he was rubbish. And he really believed it."
In his last
years, Thackray led a solitary life in Monmouth, semi-estranged from his
family, his despairing fans and the people who wanted to help him. Whatever
shadows closed in around him, they remained private ones. Occasionally, rock
musicians working in nearby Rockfield Studios would relate poignant tales of
sighting him coming out of a shop with a carrier bag full of the alcohol with
which he buttressed himself during his long "retirement".
Jake Thackray
was a man of piercing intelligence and wit who was possessed, in commercial
terms, of a huge but difficult-to-market talent. Georges Brassens his French
mentor and counterpart, died nationally cherished, conferred with the Légion
d'Honneur. That Jake Thackray died in relative ignominy by comparison is a
peculiarly British tragedy. In "The Poor Sod", a short and ineffably
sad song about an impoverished old farm labourer, Thackray sings:
"The
bramble bush catches his sleeve, the blackthorn catches his cheek. When will
the north country leave the poor sod alone?"
In a way,
perhaps it never did.
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