The Stranglers and The Finchley Boys

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'The weekend's here
 The Finchley Boys
 Are gonna make
 A lot of noise!
 Its burning up time.
 Its burning up time.'

'Burning Up Time'
The Stranglers 1977


From L To R. Leigh Bull, Tommy McGonnal, Peter Enter, Melvin Heslam, Graham Hayhoe, Dennis Marks and two stragglers. 

Memoirs Of A Fan's Fan 
by Al Hillier

"We came across them at a gig in the Torrington pub in Finchley..I saw 20 guys with very short hair trooping into the gig, looking very fierce...I thought, "Here we go again. Look out, hospital." but they all started dancing and going crazy." Hugh Cornwell reminiscences about the Finchley Boys in 'The Stranglers: Song By Song'

And so they became the Stranglers hardcore following. What follows is just one memory and may even seem a little shocking with the violence but punk wasn't all posing down the Kings Road. This was the real thing and as Al points out The Stranglers were punk as fuck and had real bottle !

 

Big Al Hillier is on the right in background with white T-shirt

SWANSEA
October 24th 1977

Cold..Freezing..Fucking..Cold..

Just want to curl up and die, kind of cold
Shut your eyes and let the clouds of icy breath billow upwards and take your frozen soul with it, kind of cold.

SWANSEA.
I won't forget it.

It still makes me shiver.

We knew, well, I always knew, when there was going be trouble. I 'always' knew. Like some frickin Doris Stokes, I always had a gut feeling when things were going to go bad. So I used to shut these feelings away inside and just get the fuck on with it. It was my way of dealing with it and doing it had become second nature to me.

I envied all those who were blissfully unaware of impending doom. Me, I just hid it really well. Maybe they did too, who knows. But no one displayed any emotion when we discussed the Swansea gig.

By now the Finchley Boys were well known. Most of the early Strangler interviews mentioned our 'role' in the 'psyche' of the band. The way the press had decided to portray us as a "proletarian street army," spearheading the assault on the rest of a sleepy society who were only just emerging from the lethargy of the 'swinging sixties,' had created an aura and a reputation that had already spread far and wide.

Articles with references to our antics (often exaggerated) appeared weekly. Our notoriety was no longer confined to London. Our reputation preceded us and we were now considered 'legitimate targets for any group of nutters who fancied having a go.' The whole country knew who we were. The Stranglers were gigging like men possessed, up and down the country, night after night, town after town. We tried to get to as many as possible, which is why some are no more than a blur. One gig becoming a bit like the one before.

Not this one..........

The band had 'Finchley Boy' T shirts produced and distributed (still got one, the other was, lets just say, swapped, with a hells angel. But that's another story).

THE STRANGLERS
Finchley Boys
ORIGINALS

We were 'issued' two each. We wore them with pride, the band was a class live act, hurtling along on a roller coaster ride and well on their way to the top of the tree and we were the Fucking Finchley Boys, and we were there. We were always there. Now, we were there dressed in our 'official' Finchley Boys T Shirts.

We might just as well have painted the roundels of targets on our backs.

I heard a voice

"Finchley Boy"! Stay in tight formation my son, or just like that stray Dornier flying lost and low over war torn London or that reckless animal who wanders too far from the safety of the herd, there will always be a chance of a lucky kill."


Our usual form of transport was a van owned by Dennis Marks. The van was called ROD. ROD was a dirty old grey Ford Transit van, a troop carrier par excellence. Trouble was, Rod's engine was knackered and we were waiting for a brand new one to arrive direct from Fords. Dennis's two brothers Mick and Billy were both foreman mechanics so the installation was a formality.

My brother Steve was working for a fruit firm at the time and managed to borrow a blue Bedford van as a last resort. I remember him driving it down our road parking it outside our house with the engine running, jumping out through the sliding front drivers door and asking:
"Well... what do you think of that"
I couldn't believe the sound of the engine, blowing like fuck, missing at least one cylinder possibly two; add to that the rattle of a knackered old exhaust and it sounded just like a like a fucking printing press clattering out the morning edition.

I laughed my bollocks off. I took a good look at it and realised that apart from the state of the mechanics, this shit heap had no front grill and to make matters worse had a whacking great hole right through into the drivers cab where some prat had probably smashed a well aimed Doc Martin.

"Your not serious" I said
"Fuckin am, got any better ideas," said Steve
I opened the back doors and got the whiff of rotting fruit. Bits of every conceivable vegetable were either stuck hard to the sides or clung limpet like, frozen to the battered, buckled, rusted, freezing steel floor.
"Fuck that Steve, can't you give it a wash out?" I asked.
Steve turned and smiled
"It's all we got Al, you want it washed out, you fuckin do it"
Slamming the sliding front door of the van he smiled and quietly remarked "Cheeky cunt"

So there it was. This riddled, stinking, frozen pile of shite was going to take us all to Swansea the next day. God help us.


THE ROUND UP
This October was the coldest I can ever remember. Arctic winds and snow from the East had already hit town. It was snowing in London and cold enough to settle on the ground. But it was the freezing wind that cut you in half. The roundup involved the collection of the boys that were going to make the gig. Steve and I dived into the van. Then we shot straight down the East End Rd, hung a right into Elmshurst Cres, where we were to collect, Graham Hayhoe, Leigh Bull, and last but certainly not least Philip Rawlings. Phil had a quiet spirituality that unnerved some, scared others and a smile as engaging as it was menacing. Jack Nicholson meets Pinocchio. Dennis Marks, who lived on the Elmshurst Estate and the owner and driver of ROD, was already down in Swansea, having been at the Cardiff gig the night before. We had arranged to meet up when we got there

We pulled up outside the flats and Steve hit the horn.

Then, there they were..... Piling down the stairs of the flats, out into the road, Graham first, literally covered in clothes, combat trousers, and flying jacket, anything to try and beat out the cold. Then the rest of them, in various bits of camouflage gear hats, scarves, mufflers, anything, just standing there smiling, like a platoon of fucking scruffy GI's

Easy company eat your heart out.
Then, Phil emerged from his block. Walking slowly towards me in this darkening, freezing, grey, desolate afternoon. He was a vision. A short muscley little gargoyle of a man wearing nothing but a cap sleeve T-shirt jeans, boots and of course, his normal wicked grin.
"Your fuckin mad Phil, where's your gear man" I asked
" I don't need a coat today, It's not cold" He replied in his soft quiet, smiley voice
"Fuckin crazy"said a voice from somewhere else
"Lets go, lets go," screamed the ever-impatient Steve.

So we all piled in. After a bit of a scrap for the remaining front seat, we screeched up East End Rd took a left at the lights with the junction of High Rd and Fortis Green Rd (The Stag Pub) and pulled up outside the Wimpy Bar. We picked up Leigh Brown and steamed back down the high rd to pick up the North Circ. Already, the temperature inside the van had dropped to below zero. Most of us were visibly shaking. As we made our way around Chiswick Roundabout and up the entry slip rd to the M4, I was already frozen.

We had begun our journey to Swansea, proper.

Spluttering and blustering down the M4.
No heaters, no blankets, and to make matters much, much worse, a freezing arctic icy wind was funnelled through that gaping hole and was acting like a refrigeration unit. Nice for keeping your frozen food or even chilling down your beer, but not for sitting motionless for hours on end

The frozen wind ripping through the van was relentless, blowing through that frozen steel panelled shit heap, reducing the temperature ever more, mile, after miserable mile. We were a sorry looking bunch. That is....all except Phil

While those in the back shuffled and tried to get some blood moving about their bodies, Phil, now laying on the uncovered steel floor of the van in just his T-shirt, produced two of the biggest knives I have ever seen. They looked a bit like the kind of weapons that the Ghurkhas use, big blades big handles, fucking dangerous looking.
"What the fuck you doing with them Phil" I asked
Phil laid back on that frozen floor in his fucking crazy little capped sleeved T-Shirt and holding one of those awesome knives in each hand proceeded to cross his arms, like an Egyptian mummy, left hand, arm, and knife resting on right shoulder and then the same with the other side.
"When we get to Swansea, don't forget to wake me....will you" he said He then shut his eyes.

We all stared at Phil for hours. Trying to catch him out. Trying to catch a glimpse of the tiniest of movements. Waiting for this stupid game to come to an end. Waiting for him to crack, give up, jump up and grab a coat or anything to cover that frozen body. Watching, relentlessly for a twitch or the faintest sign of a shudder, or a blink, anything to show that this was a game that had gone too far.

But he didn't crack.

To our amazement Phil appeared to have put himself into a state of suspended animation. The temperature in the van was well below zero and we were all still shaking and moaning, but there he was, hour after frozen hour silently asleep in a T-Shirt with crossed knives, not moving an inch, not a twitch, not a flicker.

"He's fucking dead," said Leigh
"Check his breathing Arth," (Leigh's nickname was Arthur) I asked
So Leigh bent down and put his ear to Phils mouth
"Yea, he's alive, but he's fucking cold and he aint moving"
"Leave him," I said
"Lets just wake him when we get there"

The hours rolled by, the van was a dog and even on the slightest gradient it almost ground to a halt. Up those inclines I think I suffered most. This journey had sapped my very soul as it went on and on. I can't remember how many hours it took; I just remember that when I saw the sign for Swansea Town centre, I wished that I were dead. All talking had long since ceased; movement was non-existent. The van felt like it was driving itself, on it's own mission to deliver its frozen cargo, dead or alive.

 

Firstly I must say thanks to the Perfect Sound Forever Site who originally posted this. Please visit them at  http://www.furious.com/perfect.  And secondly Big Al Hillier for writing this. I hope he decides to write some more memoirs  of the Finchley Boys.