STRAY – SPEAKS –
2004 Interview by Kate Moore:
Del Bromham
guitarist with the legendary British rock band
called “Stray”. Stray once was on tour with Ten
Years After as supporting act. That was a long time
ago, about 1971 if my memory serves me correctly
says Del, but I remember it as being great fun. I
was much younger back then and Ten Years After were
a hugely popular band at that time. I had seen them
at the Woodstock Festival in 1969 and I was at the
Hyde Park free concert series when they played there
in 1968. The icing on the cake though, was the day
we played at the Vienna Opera House, we had just
finished our sound-check and Alvin Lee came up and
started jamming with us. I was a very different
person then, young and insecure and decided to play
piano and let Alvin play guitar. Now-a-days, I
wouldn’t think twice about picking up my guitar and
jamming with someone like him. Alvin and his wife
invited me over to their house, that was really a
mansion, after the tour, but unfortunately I was out
on another tour and never did get back in contact
with them. That was one of the biggest regrets of my
life, because Alvin was recording in his home
studio, called “Space Studios” with my heroes George
Harrison and Ringo star, with a host of others too.
The other thing I remember about the tour with Ten
Years After, was that Alvin seemed pretty much on
his own. Shall we say, that there didn’t seem to be
much dialogue going on between him, drummer Ric Lee
and keyboardist Chick Churchill. They still played
great though!
How do you
feel about Ten Years After carrying on without a key
member?
This is a
tricky one, because I’m split down the middle
between being a musician and being a fan. What I
mean is, if you have supported a band, particularly
if it’s been for some time, and you have all those
good memories and an association with their music,
then if a band should continue, it’s great if it’s
the same original line-up. But, unfortunately life
is not that simple, there are so many factors to
take into consideration. I have found people don’t
like change, but what are the remaining band members
supposed to do?
I had a
similar problem a few years back when I was going
back on the road under the name “STRAY”. The
original line up had played some shows. Nostalgia is
a great place, but I wouldn’t want to live there! It
was apparent for various reasons that it was not
going to work out in the long term. I was being
offered more shows, but was feeling a little
uncomfortable about using the name STRAY, until my
publisher, David Howellis said to me, that in any
other job, what I had done was like an
apprenticeship and there were people out there who
wanted to see me play and hear the old songs. That
really convinced me it was the right thing to do.
So, yes I do think these bands should reform if they
feel the desire. They must be self-critical because
on the other side of the coin, I have seen a couple
of reformations that come over more like tribute
bands. As far as Ten Years After are concerned, if
Leo Lyons had asked me if I was interested in
standing in Alvin’s shoes, I would have given it a
go. I’m sure their new guitarist has given Ten Years
After a new lease of life. Good luck to them.
As I
mentioned earlier, that I had jammed with Alvin Lee
during the sound check at the Opera House in Vienna.
After this I was talking to him and his wife. He
asked what I was doing now and that they were
thinking of going to the cinema to catch a film
before show time. So, Ivan Mant, one half of our
management partnership, was with me at this time and
all four of us went off to find a cinema. We found a
little cinema, but when we got to the box office,
Alvin realised that he had very little Austrian
money with him. I believe they had just been to
Japan so he offered the lady at the box office
Japanese Yen. Anyway, we got in like any civilized
human beings going to the cinema, and Alvin’s lady
bought the boiled sweets to have a suck of. Now,
this is where you have to take a step back and
picture the scene.
No
disrespect to him now, but back in 1971 Alvin Lee
was right up there with the guitar heroes, like Jimi
Hendrix, Eric Clapton and Jimmy Page. So, here is me
(Del) 19 years old, sitting in the back row of a
little cinema in Austria with Alvin Lee, but here is
where the scene gets really surreal, what was the
film we were watching? It was a Charlie Chaplin
film, in subtitles, “The Great Dictator”. His film
about a little Austrian gentleman better known to
the world as Adolf Hitler! Priceless!
Interview by Battttty – February 2004 |