PAGE 13.
Friday 13th May
Arrived in Birmingham to a beautiful sunny day and
as our truck with all the lights, sound and equipment was on the
ferry from the Hook of Holland we had a day off.
Birmingham had changed a great deal from the old
touring days of the fifties and sixties. Every time I’m here I visit
the Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery which houses the finest
collection of pre-Raphaelite paintings in the world. You can spend
hours here and discover something new every year.
Last year part of our final UK tour included two
nights at Symphony Hall which was a sell out and our final London
gig sold out so fast that we had to extend it to another show at the
Palladium. Even then it sold out in hours and so this year although
we had said our final farewells to the UK we decided to do an encore
at the large NIA centre as it was central for most people to get to.
The hotel was very comfortable and within walking distance of the
venue.
We booked JJs Indian restaurant, where on last
year's tour we had taken Tim Rice and his first band, 'The
Aardvarks'. So here we all were for our last supper with the whole
crew, their families and friends. In fact, by now we were all
family.
The day of the show was spent relaxing and
wandering round part of the Gand Union Canal system of waterways.
They have been restored magnificently and Bruce and I spent a quiet
time reflecting on what a great tour it had been.
My son Jonathan flew in from Portugal with my wife
Margaret. Two of my best friends Ed Bicknell and Steve Jenkins came
up to see the old boys strut the boulevard for this, the last one.
Phil and Susan Jarvis came backstage as did John Humphrey who has
taken some great photos of the band over the years.
I spent some time trying to find out how far to
take the solo and, still leading with the left for most of the time,
worked out my sticking for the final evening.
“Half an hour gentlemen...” came the call from the
master of making every thing run smoothly, the great Roger Searle. A
few friends came back stage to wish us well for this very last one.
It was good to see Jim Carne and his wife Carole. Jim you may
remember was my driver and looked after me on last year's tour and
had become a good friend.
I was on auto pilot for most of the show. This was
it then, a combination of emotions, enjoying playing with the boys
for the last time, the end of a happy tour and the end of a large
part of my life, in and out of The Shadows.
|