"Life's like that sometimes, isn't it?" — Stanshall prepares to sing
"The Sound of Music" with the
Bonzo Dog Band on
Do Not Adjust Your Set.
Vivian Stanshall (21 March 1943 – 5 March 1995) was an English
musician, painter, singer, broadcaster, songwriter, poet, writer, wit,
and raconteur, best known for his work with the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band, for
his surreal exploration of the British upper classes in Sir
Henry at Rawlinson End, and for narrating Mike
Oldfield's Tubular Bells.
|
Contents
- 1 The
great eccentric
- 2 Early
life
- 3 The
Bonzo years
- 4 After
the Bonzo Dog Band
- 5 Rawlinson
End
- 6 There's
Always More...
- 7 Death
- 8 Quotes
- 9 Solo
Discography
- 10 Bibliography
- 11 External
links
|
The great eccentric
Stanshall was often called a "great British eccentric", but
this was a label he hated: it suggested that he was putting on an act
and he always insisted that he was merely being himself. However, it is
not difficult to understand why he received the label. Neil
Innes said of their first meeting: "He was quite plump in
those days. He had on Billy Bunter check trousers, a
Victorian frock coat, violet pince-nez glasses, and carried a euphonium.
He also wore large pink rubber ears."
Early life
Stanshall was born on 21 March, 1943 at the Radcliffe
Maternity Home in Shillingford, and christened Victor
Anthony Stanshall.
Originally from Walthamstow — a suburb on the
borders of East London and Essex — his mother Eileen (1911–1999) had moved to Shillingford,
Oxfordshire
during the Second World War to escape the bombing, and lived there
happily with her son while her husband, Victor (1909–1990) (a name he had
adopted in preference to his own christened name of Vivian), served in
the RAF. With the end of war, the little
family moved back to Walthamstow and his father returned.
Stanshall's brother, Mark, was born fairly soon after this
return. They were six years apart, an age difference that apparently
put a certain amount of emotional distance in their relationship.
Although he was of working class origins, Stanshall's father
wanted his sons to go to public school and pressed them to
perform well in sports. Young Vic, however, was uninterested in such
pursuits, preferring — to his father's horror — to devote his energies
to art, music and literature.
Consequently, he grew up living a dual life: at home, he would
have to speak "properly" or face a beating; on the street he spoke with
a broad cockney
accent in order to avoid a beating from his peers.
As a teenager Stanshall secretly joined a gang of teddy boys, attracted both
by the rock'n'roll
and the clothing. Even among such dandies, though, he was a bit of an
oddball. The polished vowels that had been bashed into him kept leaking
out, and his cockney mates looked upon him as something of an amusing
freak.
About this time, the Stanshall family moved to the Essex
coastal resort of Southend-on-Sea. Here, Stanshall
managed to earn some money doing various odd jobs at the Kursaal fun
fair. These included working as a bingo caller and spending the winter
painting the fairground attractions.
To put aside enough money to get himself through art school
(his father having refused to fund such goings-on), Stanshall spent a
year in the merchant navy, where he made a very bad waiter, but a great
teller of tall tales.
He enrolled at the Central
School of Art in London. Here, Stanshall and his fellow students,
including Rodney Slater, Roger Ruskin Spear and Neil
Innes, who was studying music at Goldsmiths
College, came together to form a band.
Stanshall changed his first name to Vivian
— the very name his father had abandoned. Those who knew him from his
student days continued to call him Vic, however.
The Bonzo years
- Main article: Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band
The name of the band came from a word game which Stanshall
played with art school peer and Bonzo member Rodney Slater,
involving cutting up sentences and juxtaposing the fragments to form
new ones. One of the combinations that came out of this exercise was
"Bonzo Dog/Dada". The band initially performed under this name, but
soon grew tired of explaining what Dada meant. Thus they became the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band —
later abbreviated to The Bonzo Dog Band, or just The Bonzos.
The Bonzo Dog Band play The Monster Mash on Do Not Adjust Your Set.
From left: Rodney Slater, Vivian Stanshall and Legs Larry Smith just
visible on drums to the rear.
In these early days they were a very loose assemblage,
consisting of the core members mentioned above, plus just about anyone
else who felt like joining in. At times there were as many as 30 of
them, with gigs often featuring more people on stage than in the
audience. Their act at this time consisted of anarchic re-workings of
old British novelty songs, found on 78rpm records bought from flea
markets, spiced with improvisation and a variety of bizarre machines
assembled from junk, with at least one explosion per gig.
The Bonzos might have continued in this way, probably
disappearing into obscurity, had it not been for a nasty shock: the
1966 chart success of a winsomely arch number called Winchester
Cathedral by The New Vaudeville Band
— a band comprising session musicians created by songwriter Geoff
Stephens, whose musical style was uncannily like the Bonzos' own. So
soon as the record became a hit, Stephens and his record company needed
a band to present themselves as The New Vaudeville Band. Bob Kerr, a
Bonzo member, tried convincing the others that they should craft a
similar sound to achieve greater commercial success, but the advice was
rejected. Still, the remaining Bonzos realised that if they were to
make a mark for themselves, they would have to forge a new path.
According to the band's manager Gerry Bron, Vivian Stanshall
was given several weeks to produce songs for the new professional Bonzo
Dog Band. When people arrived at his studio they found he had written
nothing and had instead focused on nothing more than building a variety
of rabbit hutches (Originals – Vivian Stanshall: The Canyons
of His Mind, BBC/October Films, BBC4, 2004). From here on,
they started writing their own material and dropping it into the act
alongside the old novelty numbers. With Stanshall now liberated from
his original role as tuba player and firmly established as the front
man, the act became more sophisticated, more daring, satirical, and
original. Aside from the adventurous music and lyrics, it was quite a
performance: Stanshall sang, played a variety of instruments and on a
good night would also perform a prolonged fully-clothed strip mime,
culminating in some spectacular tit-juggling. Stanshall provided one of
the highlights of the show: a vulgar joke about Jesus.

For a while the band existed as a semi-pro outfit playing the
college circuit, but it wasn't long before they acquired a manager,
went full time, and found themselves booked on the working men's club
circuit mainly in the north of England. The band dominated their lives,
traveling to low-paying gigs in an old van crammed with any number of
musical instruments, an assortment of props, and prop robots. In 1967,
they appeared in The Beatles' Magical
Mystery Tour television special playing Death Cab for Cutie
during the strip club scene, and this was followed by a slot as the
house band on Do Not Adjust Your Set,
a weekly TV revue show also notable for early appearances by most of
the Monty
Python troupe.
In 1968 the Bonzos scored a surprise top ten hit with a number
called "I'm the Urban Spaceman" but they never repeated that success
although Stanshall, through his many costumes, became a fore runner of
America's Martin
Mull.
The band toured incessantly and recorded several albums, which
led to a tour of the United States. This was so successful that they
were booked for another US tour soon after. Neil Innes remembers that
the band were reportedly stopped by a local U.S. sheriff and asked if
they were carrying any firearms or drugs. When they denied both, the
officer asked how they were going to defend themselves. Viv Stanshall
piped up from the back of the minibus, "With good manners!" (Originals
– Vivian Stanshall: The Canyons of His Mind, BBC/October
Films, BBC4, 2004)
Between the tours, however, something brought about a
crippling change in Stanshall's personality. None of his fellow Bonzos
claims to know just what caused it, but by the start of the second tour
he was taking very large doses of tranquillisers prescribed by a
private doctor (Originals – Vivian Stanshall: The Canyons of
His Mind, BBC/October Films, BBC4, 2004), ostensibly to treat
stage-fright. Nevertheless, the workload never let up. The band had a
punishing schedule, often playing more than one gig per evening. In
1970, after six years of mounting exhaustion and depression, Stanshall
quit.
After the Bonzo Dog Band
Stanshall went on to form various short-lived groups including
The Sean Head Band, Bonzo Dog Freaks, (featuring the guitar talents of
the rotund Bubs White) and BiG GrunT. At one point, he even went into
teaching art and drama at a boys' secondary modern school in Surrey. By now,
his life was dogged by alcoholism and panic
attacks, which he tried to control with Valium; he would have these
problems for the rest of his life. He had several spells in hospitals
in attempts to stop or control his drinking, but they never worked
(this was before the existence of modern-day notions of drug
rehabilitation). He was also still being prescribed larger and larger
doses of Valium, which, he later reported, made things worse by simply
adding another addiction.
For all his problems, Stanshall never lost his sense of
humour. In particular, his exploits with close friend Keith Moon
are legendary, perhaps the most notorious involving Stanshall going
into an unsuspecting tailor's shop and admiring a pair of trousers;
Moon then came in, posing as another customer, admired the same
trousers and demanded to buy them. When Stanshall protested the two men
fought over them, splitting them in two so they ended up with one leg
each. The tailor was by now beside himself but right then a one-legged
actor, who had been hired by Stanshall and Moon, came in, saw the
trousers and proclaimed "Ah! Just what I was looking for."
Aside from such pranks, the two also worked together. For
instance, when Stanshall took over the John Peel radio show for awhile, Moon
appeared as Lemmy in the saga of
Colonel Knutt, idiot adventurer-detective. Moon also produced
Stanshall's recorded maniacal version of Terry
Stafford's Suspicion.
In early 1974, Stanshall wrote, arranged, and recorded his
first solo album, Men Opening Umbrellas Ahead. A
complex, idiosyncratic affair, its lyrics were acutely personal
insights laced with poetry, as well as overt references to his own
penis. The album has a jazz-rock flavour, rich with African
percussion. Such artists as his friend Steve
Winwood, Innes, Bubs White, Jim
Capaldi, Ric Grech, Doris
Troy, and Madeline Bell made guest appearances.
Rawlinson End
Stanshall's next big success was Rawlinson End.
In the 1970s he recorded numerous sessions for BBC
Radio 1's John Peel show which elaborated, with a mixture of eloquence
and irreverence, on the weird and wonderful adventures of the
inebriated and blimpish Sir Henry Rawlinson, his
dotty wife Great Aunt Florrie, his "unusual" brother Hubert (who, for
speed, stature and far-seeing, habitually goes on stilts), old Scrotum
the wrinkled retainer, Mrs E, the rambling and unhygienic cook, and
many other inhabitants of the crumbly Rawlinson End, plus its environs.
The Rawlinson family had been populating Stanshall's
imagination for quite a while, their very first appearance (in name, at
least) being on the Bonzos' 1967 number The Intro &
The Outro: "Great to hear the Rawlinsons on trombone".
An LP, Sir Henry At Rawlinson End,
which reworked some of the material from the Peel sessions, appeared in
1978. A sepia-tinted black and white film version of
Sir Henry at Rawlinson End (recently released on DVD), starring Trevor
Howard as Sir Henry, and Stanshall as Hubert, followed in 1980. It was
also based on the Peel recordings, with many variations from the LP.
Some of the film's music was provided by Stanshall's friend Steve
Winwood. A book of the same name by Stanshall, illustrated
with stills from the film, was published by Eel
Pie Publishing in 1980. Nominally a film novelisation, it was distilled
from all the various versions of the story, including a good deal of
material that was not used in the film.
A projected second book, The Eating at Rawlinson End,
never appeared. It was to have started:
- "In the blue wardrobe of heaven are many unused clothes,
too tight-fitting yet too beautiful to throw away. And in that wardrobe
we hang our likenesses, yellow diaries yellowed with yesterday, thumb
smeared with tomorrow. But the now, the present, like the hollow
screech of ancient flamingos in search of shrimps, is still vibrantly
shocking pink."
A second Rawlinson album, Sir Henry at Ndidi's Kraal
(1983), recounts Sir Henry's disastrous African expedition, but omits
the rest of the Rawlinson clan. According to Stanshall's widow, he
regarded this recording as sub-standard and it was released against his
wishes. Stanshall was often drunk and/or depressed during production,
which took place on The Searchlight, a house boat
he bought from Wings' Denny
Laine and moored between Shepperton and Chertsey on
the River
Thames. He lived on it from 1977 to 1983. Converted from a Second World
War era submarine-chaser, it was forever taking on water and sank with
all his possessions aboard. Almost all of them were retrieved, some the
worse for water damage.
At Christmas 1996, BBC Radio 4 fished some of the Peel show
recordings out of the vault for a late-night repeat, but there seems to
be little chance of a commercial release, though some have appeared on
a bootleg CD together with some of Stanshall's collaborations with
Keith Moon.
Sir Henry's final appearance was in a television commercial
for Ruddles Real Ale (c. 1994), where he
is portrayed by a cross-dressing Dawn
French, presiding over a family banquet at a long table. Stanshall
reprises the role of Hubert, reciting a poem loosely based on Edward
Lear's The Owl and the Pussycat, at the end of
which all the diners produce oars and row the table offscreen.
There's Always More...
He collaborated on numerous projects including Robert
Calvert's Captain
Lockheed and the Starfighters, Mike
Oldfield's Tubular Bells
where he is the Master of Ceremonies, breathily announcing the buildup
of instruments in the finale of the first side of the album, appeared
with Grimms
and The
Rutles, as well as occasionally working with The
Alberts and The Temperance Seven.
While living on the Searchlight, Stanshall
composed and recorded Teddy Boys Don't Knit, and
wrote and recorded Sir Henry at Rawlinson End.
There, he also wrote and filmed the film of the same name for Tony
Stratton-Smith's Charisma Records company. At the
same time, he co-wrote with Steve Winwood the songs for Winwood's Arc
of a Diver and wrote many of the songs he later
used for Stinkfoot, the musical
comedy he wrote with his second wife, Ki
Longfellow-Stanshall.
After the Searchlight, the Stanshall
family lived and worked on the Thekla, a Baltic Trader, which was sailed 732
nautical miles from the east coast of England to be moored in the
Bristol docks. His wife, Ki, had bought the Thekla
in Sunderland,
and converted her into a floating theatre called The Old
Profanity Showboat. The ship saw the debut of Stinkfoot.
Stanshall wrote 27 original songs for Stinkfoot,
sharing some of the lyric writing with his wife. The show involved
bizarre characters that Stanshall imagined living under a seaside pier.
It proved a success, with people coming from all over Europe and even
America to see it. It was revived in London some years later, but
flopped.
Stanshall's instantly recognisable voice won him several
commercial voice-overs, including a campaign for Cadbury's
Mini Eggs which involved a reworking of the Bonzos' song Mister
Slater's Parrot, under the title of Mister
Cadbury's Parrot.
He was married twice: in 1968 to fellow art student Monica
Peiser (they had a son, Rupert, that year, and were divorced in 1975);
and on 9 September 1980, to novelist Pamela "Ki" Longfellow. They had a
daughter, Silky, born on 16 August 1979, named after a racehorse called
Silky
Sullivan, her mother's childhood favourite. (Stanshall was seriously
considering Dorothy. "Just think," he said, "We could call her Dot!")
His marriage was celebrated in the song, Bewildebeeste,
as was Silky's birth in The Tube, on his
second solo album Teddy Boys Don't Knit (1981).
In 1989, his short interview with John Wesley Harding
was released on Harding's God
Made Me Do It: the Christmas EP.
In 1991, Stanshall made a 15-minute autobiographical piece
called Vivian Stanshall: The Early Years, aka Crank,
for BBC2's
The Late Show, in which he confessed to having been
terrified of his father, who had always disapproved of him.
A later programme for BBC Radio 4, Vivian Stanshall:
Essex Teenager to Renaissance Man (1994) included an interview with his mother in
which she insisted that his father had loved him, but Stanshall was
mortified that his father had never shown it, not even on his deathbed.
Death
Stanshall was found dead on 6 March 1995, after a fire at his Muswell
Hill (north London) flat; coincidentally, this was one hundred years to
the day after the death of (the original) Sir
Henry Rawlinson. Though Stanshall often smoked and drank in bed and
even set fire to his long ginger beard, to the frequent concern of his
friends, the coroner found that the fire was caused by faulty wiring
near his bed.
A one-hour television documentary, Vivian Stanshall:
The Canyons of his Mind, was broadcast on BBC Four in
June 2004.
Quotes
- "I don't know what I want, but I want it NOW!" (Sir Henry
at Rawlinson End)
- "If you are normal, I intend to be a freak
for the rest of my life" (My Pink Half of the Drainpipe)
- "Do have an unusual day, won't you?" (Essex Teenager to
Renaissance man)
- "Do you know what a palmist once said to me? She said: WILL
YOU LET GO!" (Sir Henry at Rawlinson End.)
- "Gentlemen, I am a bulldog, and you will find my bark is
worse!" (Sir Henry at Rawlinson End)
- "If I had all the money I've spent on drink — I'd spend it
on drink." (Sir Henry at Rawlinson End)
- "You got a light, mac? No...but I've got a dark brown
overcoat." (Big Shot)
- "That was inedible muck, and there wasn't enough of it."
(Sir Henry at Rawlinson End)
- "Why can't I be different and unusual...like everybody
else?" (Men Opening Umbrellas Ahead)
- "Mercifully, he hit him with the soft end of the pistol."
(Sir Henry)
- "Frankly, once I've eaten a thing, I don't expect to see it
again." (Sir Henry)
- "I've never met a man I didn't mutilate." (Sir Henry)
- "It was a great party until someone found the hammer."
(Bonzo days)
- "And, looking very relaxed, Adolf
Hitler on vibes. Nice!" (Intro and the outro)
- "If you're going to say anything filthy, please speak
clearly." (message on his answering machine)
- "I've been looking for that particular son of a bitch for
seven years. I could have been a doctor, or an architect." (Bad Blood)
- "Five years ago I was a four-stone apology — today I am two
separate gorillas." (Mr. Apollo)
- "Viv Stanshall? I didn't know that." (Icy Gull on NSC)
- "Vivian Stanshall, about three O'clock in the morning,
Oxfordshire, 1973, goodnight..." (Tubular Bells: The original version
of the Sailor's Hornpipe)
Solo Discography
- Men Opening Umbrellas Ahead (1974) (This
is currently unavailable and there is an on-line petition circulating
to get Warner Brothers to re-release it.)
- Sir Henry At Rawlinson End (1978)
- Teddy Boys Don't Knit (1981)
- Sir Henry at Ndidi's Kraal (1984)
Bibliography
- Sir Henry at Rawlinson End: And Other Spots.
London: Eel Pie, 1980. ISBN
0-906008-21-2
- Ginger Geezer: The Life of Vivian Stanshall
by Lucian Randall and Chris Welch. London: Fourth Estate, 2001. ISBN 1-84115-678-7 (hardback); 2002. ISBN 1-84115-679-5 (paperback)
- Stinkfoot: An English Comic Opera.
Rotterdam: Sea Urchin, 2003. ISBN
90-75342-13-6, a celebration of Vivian and Ki's comic opera (publisher's page)
External links