I felt very
disrespectful as I tried to tread Joyce off from the soles of my hiking boots
onto the floor of the Cavern Club. Mind you this is no regular musical shrine.
It's the almost original venue of the Beatles and other assorted beat combos
from the ‘Pool. In fact it's the one over the road from the original, but it
does go back to 1966 when, although the Beatles had long since left town, a
local MP, Harold Wilson, was on hand to mark the opening of the new venue.
There had been quite a lot of Joyce
spillage in the process of disbursing some of her ashes in as discrete a
fashion as possible. We both then tried to cover up the evidence by plonking
our backpacks on top of what stubbornly looked like a very bright, white, pile
of powder. The whole point was to leave Joyce in a place she connected with.
And in this shrine to the greatest pop band of all time, you could connect. I
had been feeling a tad awkward about the total tourist excess of the venue,
but, after some Theakston’s and a local singer offering ‘Norwegian
Wood’ to some Scandinavian tourists, I had begun to feel better. As we
prepared to climb the stairs out of the Cavern we trod heavily on the stone
slabbed floor in the hope of leaving more of Joyce behind on this hallowed
ground. Outside in Mathew Street, a middle aged bloke and his mother were about
to go downstairs; he was telling security that ‘all this lot was her stuff’,
and that he’d only come to Liverpool to remember ‘A Flock of Seagulls’. V and
me laughed as this connected with our last trip to Liverpool with Joyce in
2015, although I’ve been a Beatles’ fan since I was a boy. We inspected the
entrance to the renowned (upstairs at) ‘Eric’s’, a small venue where a good
friend had seen John Martyn in 1979, and admired a new tribute to Submarine-era
Fabs.
Downstairs at Eric's |
Repairing to one of Liverpool’s
oldest and most famous pubs, Thomas Rigby’s, V prepared a Cavern
postcard as a memento of what we had just done; silver gel penning her Mum’s
name to the photographed roster of performers who’d played there, and writing
some words to her niece. Lunchtime drinking is a tricky exercise, though it’s one
made easier when you’re on holiday. A very drunk woman held court at the bar,
engaging with every man who entered, and we mused on the reality of her
relationship to the silent, bearded, ‘guardian’ who kept her company with tall
glasses of lager alongside her tacky-looking cocktails. I started trying to
write some of these words into a newly-purchased diary before switching to
doing it on my phone in the delusion that this would make me seem less of a
middle class tourist desperately trying to be less self-conscious. Her rantings
partly made me envious of her (drunken) honesty, and partly chilled me to the
bone as I was reminded of past acquaintances. Her excess made me question what
we were all doing in a pub at 3 o’clock on a Tuesday afternoon? Getting pissed
in order exorcise some personal demons or to just blot out some fucking
anxieties or other. Walking off my pint of ‘Quagmire’, running-in at a not
immodest 6% and supplied, appropriately enough, by ‘The Big Bog’, a local microbrewery, V and I departed from the street and
headed to the Docks via a car park. A blind man looked in danger of walking
into a lot of traffic so I offered him a slightly awkward helping hand, fearful
of patronising him or compromising his independence. He though was
grateful.
On the waterfront; the revamped Albert Dock on such a winter's day |
We walked to the embarkation point where the legendary Ferry still crosses the
Mersey, where Joyce, V and me had laid out on stone benches in the unexpected
heat of a spring day, waiting for our ship to come in. We had then crossed, in
time-honoured fashion, to the other side of the River to Birkenhead and a
vision of hundreds of new cars from Ellesmere Port ready for export. This time
V and me just walked around Albert Dock and felt the intense, icy Atlantic
blast. Nick and Joyce were to be fused together in the second
ritual disbursal of the day, as V distributed the contents of a tiny jam jar
down the side of the wharf, most of the ash falling in to the Mersey itself. We
walked around some of the waterfront’s iconic buildings, new and old, and
examined some of the newer iconic sculptures: oversized Fabs and a more
impressive Billy Fury whose stone figure had fresh flowers laid under it,
marking perhaps the great man’s birthday or his tragic departure at 43.
Around the city of Liverpool
and on Albert Dock you can enjoy the wacky art installations, the Superlambbananas (see below).
Images from the city’s musical heritage, its natural beauty, the local
community or from a lamb’s world (a wolf) are depicted on their side. Walking around the gentrified warehousing that contains the Tate Liverpool, we mused on how the development of Liverpool seemed to lack the crass social engineering of London even if these riverside apartments were out of most people’s reach.
Billy Fury under a brilliant Mersey skyline |
A Superlambbanana featuring The Real Thing, China Crisis and The Mighty Wah |
A Superlambanana featuring Echo & The Bunnymen (and The Mersey) |
Detouring back to the city centre, The Central pub on Ranelagh Street beckoned as I had hankered after going into it ever since that earlier trip to the ‘Pool’. A glory of mirrors and wooden cubicles; steady drinking but nothing too excessive. At least not until a female customer got into a telephone barnie with her boyfriend. Considerate-like, she conducted it outside the pub. Valerie surmised that she’d been let down just one time too many by some scally and wasn’t prepared to put up with his shite any longer. When the woman came back into the pub, this verbose and somewhat tired and emotional lady was refused another drink. On her way out, the disgruntled customer repaid the compliment with the ‘cunt’ epithet. ‘I don’t think she likes me,’ the barmaid mused afterwards.
The telescreen does nothing to spoil the view in The Central pub |
What now? Other bars seemed
tame after that, while an Irish pub, the one next to.. eh… ‘The Irish House’,
was stuck in its seeming never-ending and pretty anodyne solo acoustic set
mode. We stomped about before deciding to return to Smokie Mo’s when we heard
another performer take the window stage. Though possessed of a powerful and impressive voice, overall Joanne Wenton (see picture below) didn’t quite make the impact of Jo and Jay,
largely because Joanne’s uncanny ability to deploy original backing musicians
came care of her laptop. But, hey, that’s the deal. How else are you going to
hear a version of ‘Let’s Stay Together’ comparable to Tina Turner’s take on Al
Green’s original just for the price of a pint and only minutes from Lime Street
Station Liverpool? We danced to Joanna doing a cover of a song by a local act,
The Real Thing, ‘You to Me are Everything (the Sweetest Song that I can Sing,
oh Baby…oh Baby)’. Joyce would definitely have wanted it that way.
Joanne Wenton, 'The Queen of Soul', performs at 'Smokie Mo's -JR's' |
Don't stop the dance (@'Smokie Mo's - JR's') |
Bob Bowell, an alias of an old friend of mine, commented: "It’s been so long since I’ve been to Liverpool it was almost like reading about a foreign land. I remember when Albert docks were built and everyone thought it was a huge white elephant but it actually marked the turning of the tide (pun intended)." Thanks Mr Bowell.
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