For Mrs Marriott
Rainbow Valley, 1969 - no, I don't play the Piano very well!
Mime? Me Sir?! How very very dare you!
The Golden Years, circa. 1993ish
Steve Marriott Memorial Concert
Song of a Baker (with The Mods).
All Royal Albert Hall images are copyright protected - visit www.sarahphotogirl.com for further info.
Steve Ellis first began singing in a band at the age of 15. The band were called Soul Survivors, initially gate crashing weddings, youth clubs and barmitzva's in north London on the pretence that they were booked to perform. When the band improved substantially they began to play venues such as The Marquee, The Flamingo, Tiles and Mod clubs in Brighton, Clacton and Soul clubs in Manchester, Stoke etc.
After the bands first release on Decca Records, they moved on to CBS and became one of the most successful British pop acts of the late '60s, under their new name "Love Affair", and had a string of hit records. The music was inaudible due to the Beatle-mania like mayhem that ensued and was never repeated until a decade later when the Bay City Rollers found success.
In autumn 1969, Steve Ellis walked out of Love Affair to re-think his musical direction. CBS retained him as a solo artist and his future looked decidedly rosy. Without him, Love Affair floundered, while Steve seemed to have the world at his feet. But it didn't work out that way.
Despite a succession of different bands and deals, he never again tasted chart success - undeservedly so, judging by the records - and his career was cut painfully short in 1981 when he suffered a horrific accident after retiring from the music business to work as a docker.
But a brave fight to regain his mobility led him back to music in the early '90s, and for the next 10 years, he toured as Steve Ellis' Love Affair, belting out a mixture of the band's old hits and newer material to an audience of nostalgists and younger converts. He's also plugged in to the enduring Mod scene, organising and performing at the Small Faces Convention at the Ruskin, East London as a tribute to the late Steve Marriott and Ronnie Lane. The upshot of this was sell-out concerts at The Astoria and The Royal Albert Hall, with proceeds going to Ronnie Lane's sons after their house in Wales burnt down. Both shows included all star guests paying tribute to Marriott and Lane. "A Mod is for life, not just for Christmas", he laughs.
And he teamed up with Paul Weller to record a single, "Step Inside My Love", issued 1998 to raise funds for the NSPCC. The single's production has echoes of smooth mid-80s soul - indeed, Glen "I Won't Cry" Goldsmith sings backing - and Ellis's voice is still in fine fettle. It's been a long haul...
After deciding to leave the Love Affair, Steve discussed forming a band with Zoot Money, Jimmy McCulloch from Thunderclap Newman and Terry Reid. But nothing came of these plans, so Steve instead went solo. His first project was contributing to the soundtrack of Loot, the screen adaptation of a play by the infamous playwright, Joe Orton.
"Keith Mansfield co-wrote the music and asked me if I'd sing. It was quite jazzy. Brilliant film, though." And he contributed to old friend Pete Bardens' debut LP: "He was recording 'The Answer', and said, come and do some vocals. It was good because he had Peter Green on guitar."
Then came a version of Jimmy Webb's "Evie": "I loved that song. Hookfoot's guitarist, Caleb Quaye (Elton John sidekick, Finlay Quaye's uncle and creator of the freakbeat classic, 'Baby Your Phrasing Is Bad'), lived three roads up from me when we were kids and he was top dog, guitar-wise. We had a big orchestra, with Caleb and Clem Cattini - a brilliant drummer. I did a Poll Winners' Concert at the Empire Pool Wembley, a complete reversal of the Love Affair because I went out with an orchestra, Caleb and Sue & Sunny on backing vocals."
Chas Chandler
In 1971, Steve found a new manager. "I bumped into (ex-Animal and Hendrix/Slade manager) Chas Chandler in a nightclub and we got chatting. He made the right noises. I stayed with Chas for a couple of singles, including 'Take Your Love'. Then I did 'Hold On' with Howie Casey and his big brass section, Johnny Steele from the Animals on drums, little Jimmy McCulloch on guitar, Zoot Money on piano and a Canadian band, Eggs Over Easy, who were touring over here with Loudon Wainwright. That was a bloody good band. We did a few gigs."
The following year, Steve assembled a new band - billed simply as Ellis or, later, the Ellis Group. "That was Zoot and two bass players - Jim Leverton (Fat Mattress), who ended up with Steve Marriott, then Nick South (ex-Vinegar Joe/Alexis Korner). We also had a German guitarist, Andy Gröber, alias Andy Gee (ex-Springfield Park) and Davie Lutton (drums) from Eire Apparent.
"Zoot's great. He's a complete character, a great keyboard player and a good singer, too. Working with him was brilliant. That was one seriously good band, if a bit way out - Zoot with his jazzy influence. It was a meeting of everything, really."
"Riding On The Crest Of A Slump", Ellis's first album, was produced by the Who's Roger Daltrey: "He's a good lad. I lived next door to him near Heathfield, Sussex in a spare cottage of his for three years to get out of London. I got people like Maggie Bell from Stone The Crows, Mike Patto and Roger Chapman and we'd rehearse there. I think Roger regretted it, because we made a lot of bloody noise. He was moaning. He done a good job, though. We had Glyn Johns come in, the Stones' producer. Say what you like, mate! The whole album had a good feel."
Daltrey's role was taken by Mike Vernon for Ellis's second LP, "Why Not?" (1973). "That's got three/four good tracks but the rest didn't work out. We did a blues, which is unbelievable - about eight minutes long. Mike's very business-like. I knew him in the early days and thought he'd be good to work with. But he was matter-of-fact, very formal - 'right, time to go'. Bad chemistry. We didn't seem to get the backing from CBS we thought we deserved. I wrote this single, 'El Doomo', and the head of CBS was going to sue the charts because it got to No. 50 in 1974 and didn't budge for three weeks."
Ellis felt they'd been ignored in favour of Epic's more established stars like Jeff Beck, Argent and Donovan. "Zoot was getting itchy feet and the band was like a cooperative, run very fairly, and we were beating our head against the door because we were touring non-stop but we weren't promoting anything. Then Epic said, 'we wanna keep you but can you lose the band'. I was not well pleased but the band said, 'get on with a solo career if you want. The choice is yours'."
Instead, Steve joined a hard rock outfit, Widowmaker - alongside guitarists Luther 'Ariel Bender' Grosvenor (ex-Mott The Hoople, Spooky Tooth), and Huw Lloyd Langton (ex-Hawkwind) and drummer Paul Nichols (ex-Lindisfarne). The band signed to Jet, owned by the notorious Don Arden.
"He was like a caricature of Edward G. Robinson", laughs Ellis. "Roger Chapman put me up for it - he'd been a mate for years. We rehearsed at ELP's Manticore Studios in Fulham Road and invited record companies down. Don Arden sent an A&R man down and we went up his house for a meeting. And he did exactly what he said: promoted us out on tours as a functioning band with product.
"Initially, it was fine. We played with the Who, all the best bands. We went to America. The initial batch of the LP went out in the U.S. but then people couldn't buy it for three months - we went round the shops looking for it - so we missed the boat completely. But you couldn't judge Widowmaker on their records because we were a live band, although the first album had its moments. Live, we used to do stuff you wouldn't associate with a heavy metal band - Motown, 'Road Runner', but rocked up, Humble Pie-ish. I've always had this affinity with Marriott and really liked Paul Rodgers - Free were excellent.
"But friends warned me, you've done a wrong move. The band onstage was brilliant, very powerful; the band offstage was awful. It was like the Gunfight At The O.K. Corral! You wouldn't believe the fights - some were X-certificate! I put Luther away one night after a tedious spell on tour. Hospital? Oh yeah. We'd argue and he'd say he was gonna kill me. He did that three/four times and I said, you do it once more and that's it. But he kicked off and we had a tear-up, as you do. It was either him or me. He stopped doing it after that.
"In the cold light of day, he's a lovely guy. But the chemistry was bad. It wasn't enjoyable - except on stage. We were living out of suitcases, you wanna be home - we all had kids - but we were stuck in America on a ball-busting tour, punching the living daylights out of each other. It was all wrong. That was never addressed and put right. I was wild, drinking a lot - but everybody was. I didn't want to be a caricature of a rock singer.
"I didn't want the chaos, the fighting, the arguments. I'll be me own man. So I came back from America and walked. I wasn't on Widowmaker's second album, 'Too Late To Cry' - though I wrote half the tracks. They got another guy and he did exactly the same as I did - he laid Luther out and walked!
"When punk kicked off, I thought, I'm out of this. The old guard, the generation before me, who were living in mansions and had swimming pools, were shitting themselves when punk came along. They were quivering in their boots. They thought the day had come when the life they were leading was gonna curl up and die. I couldn't stand punk musically. But I liked the idea - it kicked everybody up the arse, all this complacency, sitting around vegging out. Rock in the '70s became so boring, mundane, idle. But punk was gonna last two/three years, so there was no way I was gonna form a punk band because I couldn't relate to it - that would have been really sad! So I sat back for a while to let things roll."
Keith Moon
Ellis had been living the rock'n'roll lifestyle for a decade - not least because of his friendship with that legendary lover of excess, Keith Moon. Steve raises his eyebrows: "Christ, the nights I had out with Keith Moon - just madness, loads of booze. I'd stay at Keith's house in Chertsey for three days with Viv Stanshall and you'd be surrendering. Two days with Moon was like a month on tour. It wasn't you were wimping out, your body would just be saying enough is enough. Your kidneys would be banging and you'd say, Keith, I've gotta go!
"One night, Moon was in his room, all quiet. We kept banging on the door. Keith, we're going down the pub. Hang on, boys. Eventually, he came out in full drag - gloves, the rings, the wig, the make-up. We fell about laughing. C'mon, let's go, he says. Keith, you can't go out like that. He said, yeah, I'm DJ'ing for the Beach Boys at Alexandra Palace tomorrow - so he was having a dress rehearsal. We walk in the pub and there's two old boys. We were a bit wary but one of them turns and says 'it's alright, it's only Keith'!
"Anything went. He was like a naughty schoolboy. He'd do anything to make you laugh. Your sides would split with laughter. There's a side to Keith that was like Peter Sellers to me - quite sad, tragic. He'd do anything for you as a mate. He'd give you anything. He was a real character.
"Roger Daltrey told me stories. On Keith's 21st birthday, he jumped out of a second story window in America and bounced, knocked all his teeth out, ran around a car park with a can of spray and sprayed all these Cadillacs, paint-stripped the lot of 'em, chucked everything out of windows. He got a bill for his birthday for something like $250,000. And he just paid it. His accountant said, 'Keith, you've got some money, you need to spend it'. He'd go, 'I'll have a Dino Ferrari, one of those, one of those...', and rang back and said, 'I've spent it'. The accountant's like, 'I didn't mean in one day!'
"But his capacity for alcohol wasn't normal, whatever else he was having", admits Steve. And it isn't funny to me because Moon's dead. It really upset me bigtime. When Moon died, that was it for me; I knocked the drink out. Moon was indestructible. I thought, if it could kill Moon, it'll kill me. Anyway, drinking don't agree with me. I turn into a nine-foot Glaswegian! Well, that's the last time I had a drink, which was about 15 years ago. That drug is not for me. Frankie Miller's a mate. He's got a great voice and the poor sod had a stroke because he didn't look after himself. Rory Gallagher - God almighty, he died!
"After the chaos of living, breathing and sleeping music, I had to take stock of the situation. So I packed it in. After Widowmaker, it was a watershed. I thought, what am I gonna do? I've got a family. I moved down south to Brighton and thought, I wanna get fit. A fella next door said, why don't you work on the docks? So I became a docker. And it was brilliant. I got paid every week, which was a bonus. I went to the doctor, who said I was A1 athlete fit. I was chuffed because, in the rock business, you're prone to abuse and late nights."
Then tragedy struck. Steve pauses: "In 1981, two days before I planned to leave the docks, I had my feet smashed to a pulp in an altercation with some two-tonne forklift blades. They chopped my feet in half. That led to eight years in and out of hospital - operations, bone grafts. They'll never be right but they're all right. It was horrendous, walking round on crutches. Any chance of continuing my musical career went straight out the window. I had to concentrate on sorting myself out. I was in a right mess. I couldn't even walk for years. But I clawed my way back in. I got fit, took up karate for eight years, got back to some semblance of mobility.
"Around 1991, I thought, sod it, let's get back into music again. If I do it myself and come unstuck, I've only got myself to blame. A friend said, get back on tour. I thought, yeah, that's what I love doing. There's stuff I recorded when I couldn't walk, sitting down singing. It was the nucleus of that outfit I took out on the road. There was a band calling themselves the Love Affair that had nothing to do with us so I prefixed it - 'Steve Ellis' Love Affair'. And we gigged all the time.
An agent said, get a live album out, about two hours before we went onstage one night in Scotland. So we put out a CD, cut live, straight onto DAT, no frills, no graces, on condition it cost no more than £2.99. I added some studio demos. It's got mine and the band's name on it. And it negates all these phoney re-recordings which shouldn't be on the shelves. People are going out buying Love Affair tracks and they're not the Love Affair. There are even CDs out there with my picture on the cover - the original line-up - without me on."
All of which brings us to Steve's charity single - for the NSPCC - "Step Inside My Love", aided on guitar and piano by Paul Weller - the first fruits of a friendship dating back to the '80s. "I sent Paul a tape when he was in the Style Council. I met him and Mick Talbot up at Solid Bond about '83/'84. Over the years, we exchanged tapes.
Souly
"We did a track written by our original guitarist, Rex Brayley, "Step Inside My Love", at Rollover Studios in Beethoven Street (laughs) up at Hyde Park. I sent Paul a tape and he said, yeah, I really like the tune - a souly number. He said, I wouldn't mind putting some guitar on it. I said, great, so I booked the studio and he came down, did a great job. The backing vocals was Glenn Goldsmith - brilliant. Paul put the guitar on and a bit more keyboards."
There have been a multitude of Love Affair (Sony/Evangeline/Repertoire) / Ellis (Evangeline) / Widowmaker (Sanctuary) and a Steve Ellis anthology (also Sanctuary). In addition, several issues on Angel Air Records (including the previously mentioned, Last Angry Man), re-issues and Steve Ellis tracks featured on various compilations including Loot the soundtrack for the film of the same name. There have been several recent DVDs released - "Last Tango in Bradford" on Angel Air and "Steve Marriott Memorial concert" on Sanctuary.
Steve has been inactive for two years due to his son being taken unexpectedly ill.
Steve's latest project is finding a record deal for his new, mostly self-produced album. "It features lots of different people, like Iain Dunnet, the keyboard player from Climax Blues Band", says Steve. "An Irish fella, Sam Smith, has written two tracks with me and played acoustic on them. Also I have Danny from my band on bass, Steve Fairhead on guitar and slide guitar, Rory Cameron playing some blues harp, Nigel Glockler from Saxon on drums and drum programming and Roger Daltrey guesting. Also included is a bonus track (Everlasting Love Live) from Fairfield Hall, Croydon with Paul Weller and Steve Cradock. Just loads of talented mates really, all pitching in to help. The album is now finally completed and a suitable record deal is currently being sought. Downloads available shortly!"
"Step Inside" will be joined by new songs like "As The Crow Flies", "Requiem", "A Little Modesty" and about 10 others.
Current projects also include a book/biography with the assistance of well known journalist/author Chris Welch (MM Journalist Legend) and a charity CD in aid of Checkem Lads - a testicular cancer charity - which will feature new songs by signed and unsigned acts (watch this space!). Also, writing some new songs with a view to getting back to live work again.
Steve has recently been approached by several bands wishing to work with him, which he is currently considering, and is always pleased to hear from other musicians with a view to working together.
Steve Ellis may be past his half-century but, judging by recent performances, his voice sounds as majestic as it did 30 years ago on "Everlasting Love". It seems that he is, truly, a soul survivor.
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Thanks to Jesse Hector and Shindig magazine for the following...
"Shindig!'s very own man on-the-spot tells us of his memories of seeing the Love Affair back in the '60s...
THE Love Affair were a shit-hot, kicking live band. When I think of them now it's sad - because they were such a good band, coming from the roots of mod/soul and very important within the movement - that they never achieved the kind of success they should have done. They had the hits with the big pop songs, good songs, but I think, like The Small Faces, they fell in the bag of being a pop band and weren't taken seriously by the 'heads' as we called them.
The most blinding thing about Love Affair was that Steve Ellis was such a killer mod. He looked so good. A dedicated mod even though they came a little bit later than The Small Faces and The Who. They were the saddest 'miss' in the whole mod scene. When you see pictures of Steve in '68 it could've been two or three years earlier. He was still totally into the mod thing.
I saw The Action, The Beatles, The Stones, The Who, Hendrix, I saw 'em all but Steve Marriott, for me, was the best vocalist I'd ever seen in my life. He had so much soul and he got it so right. But the thing that's always stayed with me is that Steve Ellis levelled with Steve Marriott as a vocalist and nobody else in f**king history has ever done that! Stevie Winwood knew the soul thing but he didn't have that rough, street sound which you needed to relate to.
Out of all those bands that were trying to fill the gap left by The Small Faces in '68, Steve's Love Affair got the break. They were a beautiful, young mod band who got signed to a major label and Steve went in and sang over these orchestrated backing tracks. So what?! We know The Kinks and The Who didn't play on their early records and we don't worry about it!
After "One Road" (1969 single) they realised they needed to change direction and so they wrote this song called "Baby I Know". They said, "We're now gonna do our own thing and we're gonna make a record that we wanna make." It was the best f**king record they'd ever made - and it flopped! The first time I heard it I got shivers up me spine. I thought, yes, they've done it now. Love Affair were a continuation of bands like The Who and Small Faces and were closer to the mod thing than The Move or The Kinks ever were. But they were just a bit too late. By then it was all Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath... They tried doing a Led Zep thing but that wasn't what they were about."