Douglas Steel - Nov 72 - August 22
I had some of the best times of my life with Doug
Steel.
We made a lot of sweet music together in his big
boxy spare room. That sounds sexier than it was. Doug claimed he wasn't a
musician, but he was the most fluid and remarkable "non-musician"
I've ever worked with. He could summon the perfect sound from nowhere, and his
chord progressions were melodic, peculiar, and exactly right. There was
probably some sort of equation at play, as I always felt that Doug was
attempting to sneak maths and science into my pop songs, which was the last
thing I would've been able to do. The songs we wrote together were the best,
the silliest, and cleverest ones I've been involved with, because they were so
much fun to do. That was the primary ingredient: fun. You can hear it. It was
sublime. Moments of sunshine.
The vocals were always a tricky - sound bounced off the hollow woodenness of the room, making recording a problem. Doug's solution was to have me warbling under a duvet draped over the door. I spent hours under there heroically singing into the fart-smelling eiderdown, while Doug smoked and sipped and laughed his head off at the sounds emanating from the trick-or-treat ghost haunting the doorway. It was like I'd jumped from a plane and landed feet first on the landing, the parachute draped over me.
Doug had very specific ideas about what he wanted
from a vocalist. "Don't sing," he would say, "That's too much
singing. Stop singing." Unique vocal coaching. Less is more was his credo,
though only when it came to my singing voice.
Simon Moran was over with his guitar and we wrote a couple of rockers:
"Space Birds" and "Don't Touch My Cigarette" in an
afternoon. "Space Birds" was recorded in less time than it took to
play back, as the second verse is just the first one repeated. As usual I wrote
down some nonsense lyrics. I sang it in a Paul Williams voice with a lot of
reverb over Simon's Syd Barrett riff. On the chorus Simon suddenly bellowed
"Wolves! Wolves hate space birds", as though channeling some cosmic
truth, and we dissolved into tears of laughter. And that's the image of Doug I
still hold in my mind's eye: sat at his console, bent double, stubbly and
usually sockless in his loafers, his cheeks wet with tears. We laughed a lot in
those days. All the time. We had fun.
I was once on holiday with him and Simon in
Greece, staying with Simon's mother-in-law in the hills of Andros. She invited
a few of her friends over for nibbles: ex-pat English ladies of a certain age,
in chunky jewelry and gleaming dentures. Simon was explaining how we all knew
each other and, in passing, mentioned that I had "turned a few heads back
in the day."
"John?" said one of the clamorous
grannies, "Surely you mean Douglas." And the conversation turned to
Douglas' good looks and charm while I sat there, his plain friend, vowing to
work on my personality. Doug took this post-menopausal pawing in his stride, by
the way. He was probably used to it.
He was always well put together, always semi-sharp
in his dress, lots of Aryan pretty boy energy: Doug would’ve have been a boon
to any touring production of "Cabaret" or "The Sound of
Music", though he'd have to have played the baddy. He’d have made a rubbish
nun.
He was a man of parts, but the image of Doug I hold
in my head is the smart, kind, funny one, or the man casually puncturing a
foolish opinion with cold, hard logic, something he often did, but lightly and
without malice. He was a brilliant man and a better friend, and if I thought he
squandered his talents they were his to squander. Not everyone needs to
monetise their hobbies. He never thirsted for fame. I don’t think he thought
about the music we made as anything other than as a means for us to be friends
in a slightly different way. It was just fun. And it was. It really was.
Not even fifty. Bloody hell. I'll miss you forever, mate.
Comments
Post a Comment