Jul 19

My new book on Richard Thompson, guitar maestro and songwriter extraordinaire

I wrote a short book about for Bloomsbury Music’s 331/3 series on individual artists and albums, but things didn’t work out and it’s now been published by Takahe, the small outfit in Coventry run by Steve Hodder.  It was Takahe which in 2020 published Slouching Towards Big Pink – essays on Bob Dylan and The Band, Woody Guthrie, and Franklin Delano Roosevelt.  The new book is about the great English songwriter and guitarist Richard Thompson, who read it in manuscript and corrected the odd factual error – he’s going to plug the book on his Facebook page. Here’s how to purchase a copy, with the blurb from the back cover replicated below:

Adrian Smith, FLYING SOLO: RICHARD THOMPSON AND THE MAKING OF HENRY THE HUMAN FLY  (Takahe Publishing, 2023)  £10.95

Available from the publisher: Publications (takahepublishing.co.uk)

Available from Amazon: Flying Solo: Richard Thompson and the Making of Henry The Human Fly: Amazon.co.uk: Smith, Adrian: 9781908837295: Books

Richard Thompson’s vision, originality and technical prowess marks him out as a songwriter and guitarist of remarkable endurance, as inventive and relevant today as at the outset of his solo career half a century ago.  In Flying Solo: Richard Thompson and the Making of Henry The Human Fly Adrian Smith explains why a debut album dismissed at the time as eccentric and disappointing came to be seen as strikingly original, its preoccupation with the strange and subversive anticipating contemporary songwriters and naturalists like Jonny Flynn and Robert Macfarlane.  Flying Solo traces Henry The Human Fly’s impressive afterlife back to Richard Thompson’s formative years with Fairport Convention and his determination to echo The Band by making music that transcended time, fusing native myths and folk traditions with modern day arrangements, instrumentation and production.

Henry The Human Fly is seen as a bridge between folk rock’s finest hour – Fairport’s Liege & Lief – and the much acclaimed I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight, the first and the best of Richard and Linda Thompson’s six albums.  The couple’s break up saw Thompson relocate to America and establish himself as an artist in his own right on both sides of the Atlantic.  A succession of outstanding albums meant that for too long Henry The Human Fly was overlooked; rediscovery thanks to streaming means we can now locate it as an important milestone in the long career of a truly great talent.

Jul 04

Hottest June since 1940 – historians can’t ignore that!

According to the Met Office last month’s mean temperature of 14.9 celsius makes it the hottest June since 1940.  A marked feature about weather patterns in the 1940s is the harshness of the winters across Europe, as the German Army found to its cost in Russia from late 1941.  For the British it’s a postwar winter that is etched into the national psyche, with the ice and snow lasting well into the ostensible spring (with extensive flooding once the big melt began).  The morale of the British Expeditionary Force in northern France during the winter of 1939-40 must surely have been affected by the freezing weather – visits from Gracie Fields and George Formby provided a brief distraction from the cold, but by the time spring arrived life in and behind the defensive positions must have been pretty miserable – and then the Germans made it a whole lot worse.  The decade’s best known June is of course 1944, but that was a month marred by bad weather: The 6th marked a brief if fortuitous break in the storms lashing the Channel (Ike: ‘Let’s go!’), while continuous bad weather from the 19th to the 21st June left the Mulberry A Harbour at Omaha Beach so badly damaged that the caissons were beyond repair.  Four years earlier the evacuation of over 338,000 troops from Dunkirk was over by 6th June (it effectively ended two days earlier), but the good weather stretched back into May, ensuring calmness in the Channel for long periods of time.  There was a consistent warmth across 24 hours but without the extremes seen in June 2023, and without long periods of clear blue sky.  The absence of the latter was crucial as low cloud cover went some way to reducing the impact of the Luftwaffe strafing the packed beaches.  Some have argued that the light breeze also ensured a degree of smoke cover from aerial attack, but I suspect the jury is out on that one.  Of course extensive fighting continued post-Dunkirk, and again good weather must have been a key factor in the relative success of subsequent evacuations further south (the loss of the Lancastria and the surrender of the 51st (Highland) Division heavily qualifying any claim that such operations could be seen as successful).  Of course the Germans also benefited from good weather in their offensive preparations, but long days of sunny skies were hugely beneficial to both the Army and the Royal Navy in preparing for an anticipated invasion.  For the RAF pilot and air crew training benefited hugely from an exceptionally fine June, as did operational squadrons in 11 and 12 Groups, already in fierce combat over the Channel ahead of the Battle of Britain (for which the starting date is usually given as 10th July 1940).  Fighter Command further benefited from a warm and sunny spring in that aircraft production continued round the clock – Spitfire production at Supermarine’s Woolston works in Southampton reached its optimum output prior to the catastrophic air raids on 23rd August and 15th September 1940.  American reporters in England that spring and early summer were astonished by the plethora of cricket matches still being played, and many a returned member of the BEF had a few choice words to say about the presence of so many dressed in whites not khaki; but the sun shone and the wickets were dry – it’s hard to imagine Ben Stokes not taking the opportunity to knock off a quick 155.  Thinking of England’s talisman, if you were on the beach at Dunkirk queuing for days to reach the mole who would you want as your company commander, keeping up morale and insistent that he’ll get you home come hell or high water?

Jun 16

An unlikely role model for Keir Starmer – a more palatable Campbell Bannerman

David Campbell Bannerman has been in the news a great deal recently as a cheer leader for Boris Johnson.  He is chair of the self-styled Conservative Democratic Organisation, a body loud in its criticism of Rishi Sunak’s premiership and its insistence that Johnson is innocent of all findings of the Commons’ Privileges Committee. Campbell Bannerman’s chequered political career has been built around a deep loathing of Brussels and enthusiastic support for chancers like Farage and Johnson.  In the heady days of UKIP he defected from the Conservative Party, only to rejoin post-Brexit.  As a parliamentary candidate he’s a serial loser from whom Sir Keir Starmer has nothing to learn when it comes to planning and implementing an electoral strategy.  The same, however, can’t be said of an earlier member of the Campbell Bannerman family, as I suggested in a piece which appeared on the New Statesman website last autumn and remains topical:

Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman led the Liberals to stunning success in the 1906 general election and a majority of 125 in the Commons: six years after a catastrophic election result the Liberals gained 216 seats, including that of former prime minister Arthur Balfour.  It would be nine years before the Conservatives and their Liberal Unionist allies returned to government and seventeen years before they again ruled alone. Like Clem Attlee in 1945, ‘C.B.’ was singularly lacking in charisma, and yet he engineered a historic victory for his party.  Keir Starmer points to Attlee, and to a lesser extent Wilson and Blair, as his role models.  Yet he could learn a lot from Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman’s success in reuniting his party, silencing dismissive criticism on both sides of the House, and creating what in due course would prove one of the great reforming administrations.

Starmer’s reputation for competence rests on his tenure as Director of Public Prosecutions, and within Whitehall Campbell-Bannerman was similarly seen as an instinctive reformer and an able administrator.  The four decades preceding the First World War saw the question of Home Rule for Ireland prove every bit as divisive as Brexit.  Prior to the 1906 election Campbell-Bannerman neutralised Irish Home Rule in the same way that Starmer steers clear of detailed debate over the UK and Northern Ireland’s future relationship with the EU.  The Liberals’ political enemies were starved of ammunition, in the same way that hard line Brexiteers are denied tangible evidence of Labour seeking a rapprochement with Brussels over current trading relations.  Although Campbell-Bannerman left Ireland on hold, he recognised the advantage a large parliamentary majority gave him in exploiting a demoralised opposition.  The newly elected Liberal Government swiftly seized the initiative, pushing through a raft of welfare and foreign policy reforms.  At home, trade union and employment rights were extended, building regulations were strengthened, and the penal system reformed to separate young offenders from adult criminals.  While short-sightedly the question of votes for women was still off the agenda, ‘New Liberal’ plans for old age pensions and national insurance were well advanced when terminal illness forced Campbell-Bannerman to resign in April 1908.  Overseas success included formation of the Union of South Africa, détente with Russia and a deepening of the Entente Cordiale.  Admittedly, C.B.’s vision of Britain’s future relations with France and the Tsar was very different from that of his Foreign Secretary, Sir Edward Grey – Campbell-Bannerman was almost certainly kept in the dark about plans for military collaboration, although he more than held his own in talks with Clemenceau, another radical prime minister: a Francophile and a free trader, Sir Henry prioritised Britain’s prominence in European power politics over the extension or consolidation of its already overstretched empire.   A priority for Labour in its honeymoon period – whether ruling alone or supported by the Liberal Democrats – must be to restore membership of the single market, or to secure an equivalent status.

The Liberals’ electoral strategy embraced a progressive alliance with the then Labour Representation Committee.  In January 1906 the pact bore fruit, ensuring the future Labour Party a foothold in the House of Commons.  Few anticipate Labour candidates standing down for Liberal Democrats, and vice versa, but Sir Keir can learn from Campbell-Bannerman the value of talking to your natural allies.

Above all, Starmer should embrace Campbell-Bannerman’s systematic exploitation of a demoralised government’s bitter infighting.  By 1905 Balfour’s administration was riven by factionalism, his Tory-dominated coalition split over Joseph Chamberlain’s Empire-based vision of protectionism, Tariff Reform.  For eighteen months prior to polling day the Liberals ruthlessly publicised their opponents’ divisions, portraying Tariff Reform as a direct threat to the material well-being of families already hard hit by rising prices and deepening inequality.  Party strategists identified a select number of salient issues, all seen as illustrative of government incompetence and inertia, and all portrayed as evidence of the need for fundamental change.

In the 1906 campaign Liberal propaganda was simple, easy to comprehend and devastatingly effective.  By then Campbell-Bannerman had one big advantage over Starmer, in that he was already in office.  When Balfour’s cabinet imploded in late 1905 the Liberal leader had ignored the reservations of his party’s big beasts and accepted the King’s invitation to form a minority government.  Come the new year he went to the country.  Campbell-Bannerman had a keen sense of timing, shrewdly managing risk and sensing exactly when to seize an opportunity.  Keir Starmer needs to hone these qualities and be ready to run with fresh ideas as they become available.  The release of Gordon Brown’s constitutional review will be one such moment.  As a keen advocate of parliamentary reform Sir Henry would be the first to embrace an ambitious blueprint for reshaping a malfunctioning British state.

Campbell-Bannerman secured an astonishing reversal of fortune for his party within a single parliament.  An Edwardian politician may not be Sir Keir’s default choice for inspiration, and yet Sir Henry’s credentials as a role model remain unexpectedly relevant in an era no less turbulent and polarised than his own.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jun 07

‘Nicko’ Henderson, ‘Dickie’ Mountbatten and Europe – it was forty-four years today…

Mountbatten, Cold War and Empire, 1945-79 and the paperback edition of its prequel, Mountbatten Apprentice War Lord were both published at the tail end of last year.  There was so much that I couldn’t include in the second volume, including the following:

On the first weekend in June 1979 Earl Mountbatten of Burma had no idea his life would end with sudden and brutal ferocity only two months later.  A headline in that week’s issue of the Economist surely caught his eye: ‘Britain’s decline; its causes and consequences.’  It was a leaked valedictory despatch, drafted at the start of the year by the retiring Ambassador in Paris, Sir Nicholas Henderson.  Labour’s Foreign Secretary, David Owen, chose not to circulate Henderson’s highly unorthodox farewell letter.  However, the election of a new government saw the document enthusiastically embraced by Tory free-marketeers intent on radical change, most notably the Industry Secretary Sir Keith Joseph.  Whitehall officials fretted over Fleet Street rumours of a decidedly undiplomatic commentary on Britain’s place in the world as seen from the perspective of 35 Rue de Faubourg Saint-Honoré.  Once it was known the Economist had a copy of Henderson’s despatch the editor Andrew Knight rejected a Foreign Office request to withhold publication.  Yet the absence of ministerial protest was striking, nowhere more so than in Downing Street.  This surely was the moment when Mrs Thatcher first conceived the idea of inviting Sir Nicholas to succeed Peter Jay as the British Ambassador in Washington.  It proved a brilliant appointment, confirming a distinguished and eventful career to be anything but over.  Mountbatten always maintained he was more of a New Statesman man, but the aperçus of Amis, Barnes and Hitchens could scarcely compete with Henderson’s incendiary prose.  Here, the Economist declared, was a document ‘so unusually forthright and timely, particularly in its middle and concluding passages on British policy in Europe, under governments of every stripe,’ that full disclosure was a public duty.

Nicko Henderson and Dickie Mountbatten, despite a twenty-year age difference, had more in common than a debonair swagger, a purposeful step in the corridors of power, a disarming presence in the salon and the gun room, an abundance of charm and a good tailor.  By 1979 they would have been well acquainted, having probably met for the first time at the Potsdam conference where Henderson was acting as Anthony Eden’s assistant private secretary and Mountbatten was learning that the war with Japan would soon be over: unanticipated electoral defeat saw the Foreign Secretary and his staff head for home, while the Supreme Commander South-East Asia planned for imminent surrender and a new world order.  Mountbatten easily adjusted to his new political masters, as did Henderson, who soon found himself working for Eden’s successor, Ernie Bevin.  A year later Mountbatten resumed his naval career, while Henderson regularised his position by belatedly joining the Diplomatic Service.  By the early ’sixties Mountbatten was Chief of the Defence Staff, while Henderson, on the cusp of ambassadorial appointments in Warsaw, Bonn and Paris, was riding high inside the Foreign Office.  The two men shared the same working environment, and – as confirmed in June 1979 – they shared similar views on Britain’s global standing at the height of the Cold War: the qualified success of an Atlanticist foreign policy and an accelerated withdrawal from empire, but a demonstrable failure to acknowledge and accommodate an all too obvious dilution of power.

Nowhere had that failure been more evident than during the Suez crisis in 1956, when Mountbatten as First Sea Lord had offered Eden his resignation while at the same time ensuring the Royal Navy was fully prepared for a military operation to reclaim the Canal Zone.  Similarly, Mountbatten had been the driving force behind Polaris, the United Kingdom’s submarine-based second-generation deterrence force; while at the same time bemoaning nuclear proliferation and questioning the fundamental principles that underpinned NATO’s nuclear strategy.

Henderson summarised how the United Kingdom was seen by its continental partners and trading rivals three decades on from western Europe’s first hesitant steps towards reconstruction and revival.  His evidence-based indictment of strategic misthinking and economic mismanagement was rooted in comparative data, and an insider’s knowledge of how successive governments had reacted to the speed of recovery in West Germany and the transformation in French manufacturing industry.  A failure to recognise the speed and significance of European integration until far too late, and a reluctance or inability to emulate the Fourth Republic in its promotion of macro-economic planning, constituted a serious underestimation of French ambition and strategic vision.  France’s colonial travails and political instability masked a process of modernisation, urbanisation and accelerated growth: for all the drama of de Gaulle’s return to power and the consequent creation of a Fifth Republic, his insistence that France be able to stand alone built upon a prevailing post-Suez determination to end any dependence on American goodwill.

Fluent in the language and well connected within the French political and military elite, Mountbatten had observed a stark contrast across the Channel from the Macmillan Government’s urgent endeavour to rebuild the ‘special relationship’ and to tap into American nuclear technology.  He of course was at the heart of those efforts to re-establish and exploit longstanding trans-Atlantic personal and institutional relationships.  A scion of the German aristocracy, Mountbatten maintained close family ties inside the Federal Republic, consolidated from the mid-fifties by high-level NATO connections.  Henderson’s Rhine posting gave him a birds-eye view of the Christian Democrats’ wirtschaftswunder at its height, but Mountbatten enjoyed an insider’s perspective on Adenauer’s insistence that West Germany’s geopolitical rehabilitation demanded a firm industrial and commercial foundation.

A communications specialist and a wartime patron of operational research, Mountbatten’s honorary fellowship of the Royal Society recognised an active engagement with applied science and engineering.  He bemoaned an erosion of global influence, blaming government, the City and manufacturers for a failure to prioritise capital investment and innovation other than in the defence sector.  Fostering high-tech enterprise was a passion before, and most especially after, Mountbatten’s retirement as CDS in July 1965.  As founder of the National Electronics Research Council and a pioneer of subscription TV, he energetically lobbied the fledgling Ministry of Technology, his abrasive and vainglorious efforts singularly failing to impress Tony Benn.  Like Henderson, Mountbatten saw the United Kingdom lagging ever further behind France and West Germany, with a major reshaping of the domestic economy long overdue.  Critically, both men saw poor productivity and a flagging growth rate as a spur for embracing European competition, emulating continental working practices and radically reshaping industrial relations.  Unlike Mrs Thatcher and her closest acolytes, Henderson saw no cause to humble and humiliate the trade union movement, arguing for a corporatist model of industrial co-determination and an end to outmoded restrictive practices: with corporate governance enshrined in law, British trade unionists should look back to the late ’forties and ask why they believed the Deutscher Gewerkschaftsbund to be an ideal model for West Germany but not the UK.  After decades of dealing with dockyard workers and civil service unions Mountbatten could only agree.  Unsurprisingly, he had a paternalistic view of trade unions, with a healthy respect born out of wartime experience.  As the much-mythologised captain of the much-mythologised Kelly, Mountbatten never stinted in his praise of Tyneside shipbuilders and of lower deck conscripts fresh from the shopfloor.

Anticipating the EEC’s transition into the European Union, Henderson interpreted closer economic integration as the means of improving productivity and of increasing domestic R and D.  Unlike Germany or the United States, the United Kingdom had too often failed to exploit new technology and key advances in applied science: a systemic focus on short-term returns meant inadequate investment in accelerating progress from the lab or the test bed through to final production.  British banking had much to learn from its German counterpart, not least in the interface between finance and industry.  Medium-size businesses required the same level of financial support enjoyed by their mittelstand counterparts both sides of the Rhine.  At the other end of the spectrum, large enterprises facing disproportionate investment costs should look to cross-border collaboration, as was now the norm inside the aerospace industry.  An unrepentant ambassador bemoaned what now we would label British exceptionalism, dismissing the emotional crutch of wartime victory and signalling the low esteem in which the United Kingdom was now viewed by its European neighbours.  Plus ça change.

Henderson highlighted obvious lessons from the Federal Republic, and from Germany prior to 1933, but he was equally insistent that much could be learnt from France; not least the immediate and longer-term impact of Monnet’s Commissariat Général du Plan.  While endorsing Henderson’s narrative of relative decline, Conservative admirers of Hayek like Sir Keith Joseph dismissed France’s postwar planning initiative as dirigiste and a distortion of the free market.  Yet the departing diplomat was addressing the Foreign Secretary of a party which under both Attlee and Wilson had tried and failed to establish a counterweight to the Treasury.  By 1979 that failure to create a department of state powerful enough to reshape the economy was a fading memory for ministers haunted by wage-driven inflation, high energy costs, global recession and morale-sapping industrial unrest.  Sir Nicholas acknowledged all of this, but he saw salvation in the embrace of a communauté mentality from which leading left-wingers inside the Cabinet, notably Michael Foot and Tony Benn, instinctively recoiled.

Not so David Owen, whose departure from the Foreign Office in May 1979 would lead in less than two years to the unequivocally pro-Europe Limehouse Declaration and a fledgling SDP.  Nor Lord Louis, digesting the Economist scoop in his Broadlands breakfast room.  If always a realist when dealing with NATO colleagues, by instinct Mountbatten was a European – unsurprisingly so given his family background.  Henderson contrasted his principled insistence on pointing out the unpalatable with the Berlin Embassy’s ‘tailored reporting’ at the height of Appeasement.  Such sentiments doubtless resonated with Mountbatten, fiercely proud of his credentials as an anti-appeaser.  Concluding on a positive note, Henderson maintained that it was not too late to fire the British people, ‘with a sense of national will such as others have found these past years.  For the benefit of ourselves and of Europe…’   Here for Mountbatten was a familiar call to arms.

Never a nuclear fetishist, Mountbatten shared Henderson’s belief that an independent deterrence was a comfort blanket, disguising harsh geopolitical reality and a myriad of national ills.  Nor, as India’s last Viceroy and a supporter of decolonisation across south-east Asia, was Mountbatten an imperial nostalgist.  Like Henderson, he saw the accelerated withdrawal from empire initiated by Macmillan as signalling a fundamental reappraisal of the UK’s status within the Commonwealth, its role and standing within the Western Alliance, and its relationship with continental Europe.  Macmillan commissioned just such a reappraisal, in the process trying and failing to join the Common Market.  For Henderson and for Mountbatten a belated entry into the EEC had signally failed to facilitate the UK redefining its place in the non-Soviet world, repairing its frayed social fabric, and rebooting its economy in a manner comparable to France and Germany after 1945.  Yet in his valedictory despatch Henderson was emphatic that it was by no means too late: the nation could still have its Year Zero, and doubtless this is what appealed to the driest of Mrs Thatcher’s cabinet colleagues.

Nicko Henderson lived thirty years longer than Dickie Mountbatten – long enough to witness a transformation in the British economy he neither envisaged nor desired, most evidently the prioritising of the service sector over manufacturing.  He noted, doubtless with disdain, a mounting Euroscepticism inside the Conservative Party.  Yet never, even in his darkest moments, could he have envisaged his country out of the EU and strategically bankrupt.  Similarly, were Mountbatten still alive he would question the concept of ‘Global Britain’ and the notion of an ‘Anglosphere’, while at the same time lamenting the toxic legacy of Brexit.  Both Henderson and Mountbatten shared a keen sense of crisis, but four decades on the vision revealed in the Economist contrasts starkly with harsh reality.  Neither man could ever have anticipated England’s lingering ambivalence towards Europe providing ambitious, sometimes unscrupulous, politicians with the means of transcending deep division and securing an exceptional degree of power and influence.

 

 

May 18

Early sixties music outside the charts; and, er, rugby league in Qatar

Nothing now surprises me given the events of the past seven years, but as mind boggling as Coventry City’s progress to the Championship play off final for promotion to the Premier League is surely the news that Qatar is giving serious thought to staging the 2025 Rugby League World Cup now that France have pulled out – that must be a strong contender for the most surreal story so far this year.  Perhaps not quite so surprising was how bad the Rolling Stones were when they started, notwithstanding the presence on drums of Charlie Watt.  This becomes evident from archival film footage included in Nick Broomfield’s latest documentary, The Stones and Brian Jones, screened on BBC2 this week.  Here was surely a triumph of style over substance, with timing everything (The Yardbirds followed in the wake of the Stones but as is evident from their debut album, recorded live at The Marquee,  they were the more accomplished R and B band).  Looking beyond the Light Programme and the Top Twenty, early sixties music in Britain – from folk clubs to post-skiffle rhythm and blues bands – has yet to attract a comprehensive, well researched and genuinely insightful history.  David Kynaston in The Cusp signals just how much was going on by 1962, as does Juliet Nicolson in Frostquake, but in both cases it’s largely through a Beatles-focused prism.  Billy Bragg’s Roots, Radicals and Rockers rewrites teenage Britain in the fifties, but doesn’t take the story forward.  Colin Harper does in the early chapters of his Bert Jansch biography, Dazzling Strangers – he makes the important point that young musicians soon to enjoy fame and recognition refused to be labelled, and by way of example places uber-mod Pete Townshend in south London folk clubs.  It’s not surprising therefore that a powerful folk-jazz axis was established early in the decade, with Pentangle in due course the most high profile example of cross-genre collaboration.  Rob Young highlights this in Electric Eden, not hiding his preference for the compositional and performative complexities of Pentangle over the folk-rock theatricality of Fairport Convention.  Ironically, by 1971-2 Richard Thompson probably felt the same way, witness his decision to quit Fairport at arguably the peak of their fame.  All will be revealed when my short book on the making of Thompson’s debut album, Henry The Human Fly, is published this July.  Would I want to write a synthesis volume on the musical underground in Britain at the start not the end of the sixties?  Almost certainly no, not least as having written books on my two musical heroes, Dylan and Thompson, I’ve no desire to write another music volume.  My focus for the moment is back on sport, and rugby union; and in particular a paper for the conference Going Professional and Continental: Club Rugby in the 1990s and beyond at De Montfort’s International Centre for Sports History and Culture on 22 November: ‘Following the French? big money clubs in the English Championship’.  There are some interesting parallels – and contrasts – between Coventry, Jersey Reds and Ealing Trailfinders and Pro D2 clubs heavily dependent on ambitious benefactors with deep pockets like RC Vannes.  That’s my focus at present, but if a direct line is established from the M62 corridor to the Gulf states then that surely deserves close scrutiny!

May 08

New Statesman’s 110th anniversary – going back forty-odd years

Last month the New Statesman published a special edition to mark the magazine’s 110th anniversary.  It was a more modest affair than the centenary issue, to which I contributed as the author of The New Statesman, 1913-1932 Portrait of a Political Weekly (and good luck if you can find let alone afford a copy of that!).  The most recent anniversary edition focused on the past decade, and looked to the future rather than once more focusing upon on what Sidney and Beatrice Webb were up to back in 1913.  I thought this approach worked really well, but it did get me thinking about my involvement with the paper over the past four decades or more.  I sent the following to Jason Cowley, the NS‘s editor, for publication, probably on the website.  Jason didn’t want to publish the piece, which is fine, and he asked me to submit a letter instead.  I duly did so, but here is the unpublished article:

The late 1970s enjoys near mythical status in the history of the New Statesman, as evident from the 110th anniversary issue.  Julian Barnes’s reminiscences took me back forty years.  In those days I was a PhD student, my thesis a history of the magazine’s original incarnation.  I spent weeks mining the archives at Great Turnstile but not once swapped aperçus with Martin Amis or hung out with Christopher Hitchens.  While they were down the pub sorting out the world or lauding Saul Bellow, I was eating my sandwiches in Lincoln’s Inn Fields.  The only member of staff I ever met was the editor, Bruce Page.  Non-acquaintance with the hip cool tyros of the London literati scarcely mattered because pillars of the paper from an earlier era were still alive, all of them highly opinionated and all but one eager to be interviewed.

The exception was Rebecca West who sent me an excoriating letter damning everyone who had ever worked at the New Statesman.  With her history of intensive, immersive journalism Dame Rebecca might have made an exception of Bruce Page had she met him.  My occasional conversations with Bruce left me unconvinced by his ambitions for the New Statesman as a successor to the Insight investigative team he had created at the Sunday Times – how would all this be paid for?  When I found files at Kew identifying former editor Clifford Sharp as a spy Bruce relished the irony – almost every week the paper carried a piece on espionage, so now it would expose one of its own.  I was astonished to find my account of Sharp’s anti-Bolshevik activities run as a cover story.  When I saw newspaper hoardings in central London announcing ‘NEW STATESMAN EDITOR WAS A SPY’ it took me a while to realise that this was my scoop.

The suggestion that Sharp was a spy came from Norman MacKenzie whose colourful CV included twenty years as Kingsley Martin’s assistant editor.  One of Asa Briggs’s maverick appointments at Sussex University, Norman divided his time between advising education secretary of state Shirley Williams and editing the letters of Beatrice and Sidney Webb.  Although Professor of Education he was rarely on campus, delegating duties to the departmental secretary, whose main attribute was her ability to decipher Beatrice Webb’s handwriting.  Norman gave me a key to his office and open access to the Webbs’ correspondence.  He was extraordinarily generous with his time.  Most documents related to the New Statesman can be found at the LSE, or in the voluminous archive that Bloomsbury grandees like Leonard Woolf and Quentin Bell established at Sussex in the 1960s.  Nevertheless, for full access to the letters and diaries of Virginia Woolf, Arnold Bennett and other NS luminaries I needed to visit New York and the University of Texas at Austin.  At the end of my first year Professor MacKenzie had a quiet word with a pal he knew at the then Social Science Research Council, and within weeks I was landing at JFK.

Norman MacKenzie was like a second supervisor, only distancing himself from my research when appointed as an external examiner – a scenario inconceivable today.  The night before my viva Norman phoned me up to announce, ‘We’ll go through the formalities in the morning, but my main concern is where we’re going for lunch…’.

For survivors from the New Statesman’s pioneering days socialism seemed the secret of a long life.  A lifelong pacifist, Lord Brockway was a nonagenarian member of the Labour front bench; the division bell interrupted a lengthy anecdote on meeting Eamon de Valera in Lincoln Gaol after the Easter Rising (‘He didn’t stay long!’).  It was of course the New Statesman which first published Yeats’s ‘1916’.  Fenner Brockway’s contemporaries were still alive – just – and all of them keen to talk.

The beautifully bound, prohibitively expensive monograph by the eminent American academic sailed across the Highgate studio flat landing neatly in the wastepaper basket.  An imperious voice announced, ‘And that is what I think of my husband’s biography!’.  Notebook in hand, I sat facing Dame Margaret Cole beneath a Salford landscape surprisingly large for an Athena poster: ‘Of course it’s a Lowry!’.  GDH Cole, socialist thinker and Oxford don, had helped keep the New Statesman alive when Sharp became a chronic alcoholic in the late 1920s.  Cole retained a keen interest in editorial affairs long after Kingsley Martin and John Maynard Keynes arrived as editor and chairman in 1931.  His widow made clear to me who had really initiated thirty years of stratospheric sales and a powerful presence on the Labour landscape.

‘No, no, no, it was always Kingsley’s baby!’ insisted Martin’s biographer and favourite feature writer, C.H. Rolph.  Here was someone who spent twenty years on the beat before becoming a journalist.  He caught me staring at the multicoloured canvas above his mantelpiece: ‘And yes, it’s a Dufy!’.

One-time literary editor Raymond Mortimer maintained the interwar New Statesman and Nation was always a creation of Bloomsbury.  Never mind Kingsley Martin – what about Leonard Woolf and Desmond MacCarthy, ‘and of course, dear Maynard’?  Mortimer saw his art collection as confirmation of a magazine that had warmly embraced modernism: ‘This of course is a Picasso.  No, the other one – that’s a Braque.’

Competing claims for fame plus my chronic failure to recognise masterpieces picked up in Paris for a song are lasting memories of three years immersed in the making of a weekly still alive and flourishing 110 years later.  Clifford Sharp’s creation was a magazine largely forgotten once the New Statesman became synonymous with Kingsley Martin and his immediate successors, John Freeman and Paul Johnson.  The celebratory lunch with Norman MacKenzie saw no speedy translation of the thesis into a book.  That came much later, in the mid-nineties.  By then my interviewees had all died.  This was a blessing in disguise as each one of them would have insisted that my portrait of the fledgling New Statesman bore absolutely no relation to reality: ‘Who on earth were you talking to, dear boy?!’.

 

May 03

Resurrection of an old blog, but with a new purpose

The blog accompanying the research and writing of my life of aviation pioneer and industrialist Sir Richard Fairey ended with publication of the book five years ago.  As then I remain Emeritus Professor of Modern History at the University of Southampton.  So why resurrect the blog under a new name – shameless self-promotion?  Well yes, to a degree.

Firstly, I’m acutely conscious of how difficult it is to get books reviewed.  Last December saw Bloomsbury Academic publish the paperback edition of Mountbatten Apprentice War Lord and the hardback edition of Mountbatten, Cold War and Empire, 1945-79, but minimal promotion and the absence of review copies means nobody knows of their existence.  Even when I took the initiative there was no response (thank you TLS and History Today).  So, outside of social media – with which my involvement is minimal – this blog can serve to publicise my books.  Come July the small independent publisher Takeha (who in 2020 published Slouching Towards Big Pink Essays on Bob Dylan and The Band, Woody Guthrie, and Franklin Delano Roosevelt) publishes Flying Solo Richard Thompson and the Making of Henry The Human Fly – more on this closer the time.  Next time I’ll say more about the podcast that accompanies Slouching Towards Big Pink.

Secondly, I’m equally aware of how much harder it is these days to get material published, even online (the New Statesman website was a welcome home for material that didn’t match the print magazine’s present priorities, but that no longer seems the case, so see the next blog posting for my response to the NS‘s 110th anniversary issue).  I’ll use this blog to publish articles which previously I wouldn’t have had too much trouble getting into print.

Naturally, I’ll also write specifically for the blog.  As the title signals, the focus will be on the history of the British archipelago across the past 150 years or so, and nothing is off the agenda, from contemporary politics to contemporary sport (re the latter, both codes of rugby, football and cricket – appropriately for a diehard Coventry fan I’m gearing up for research into high spending clubs in the second tier of English rugby union – the Championship – and that of their French equivalents; for a paper at a conference being organised by De Montfort’s International Centre of Sport History and Culture to coincide with the Rugby World Cup).

No doubt this blog will be used for multiple other purposes, but for the moment the above will suffice as a statement of intent.  Enjoy!

Mar 29

The Man Who Built The Swordfish publication by the end of April

The Man Who Built The Swordfish – The Life of Sir Richard Fairey, 1887-1956 (I.B. Tauris, 2018, 455pp) will be available from the end of April 2018, priced £25.

Cover:

Swordfish-05-revised_design-alt

May 31

Signing off…

It totals 175,890 words, and it took four years to write, off and on (and a considerable part of those four years was ‘off’), but The Man Who Built The Swordfish: the Life of Sir Richard Fairey, 1887-1956 is finally written.  The next stage is compiling the bibliography and selecting the photographs, after which I must wrestle with the technological challenge that is preparing camera-ready copy.  As regular readers of this blog will have long since ascertained, researching and writing Fairey’s biography has been a challenging and not always happy experience (unhappy largely because of factors unrelated to the task in hand).  Working with his daughter and grand-daughter, Jane Tennant and Esther Bellamy, was always a pleasurable and rewarding experience – getting to know Jane, Esther, and their extended family has been a privilege and a real pleasure for Mary and myself.  Unless there is a dramatic change of plan the book will be published by I.B. Tauris early in 2018.  I anticipate the launch party, hosted by the Fairey family, will be a grand affair (the RAF Club would be an ideal venue), but all that is in the future.  For the present it’s time to thank the modest readership of this blog, and to sign off.  It’s not the first time in this blog that I’ve quoted the Grateful Dead – what a long strange trip it’s been…

Apr 21

Almost there…and the news from Hayes and Harlington

With the tenth chapter written, and despatched to Jane Tennant and Charles Fairey for comments and colour, the end is nigh.  In terms of writing what remains is for me to reread chapters 1-10 and then write the conclusion.  What a long strange trip it’s been…  In writing the chapter on the final decade of Sir Richard Fairey’s life I noted that, like Evelyn Waugh, he felt that he lived in an occupied country so long as Labour remained in power.  His most hair-raising views re ‘the socialists’ he wisely kept to himself, censoring first drafts of speeches in the interest of discretion and good business.  CRF encouraged Vinson, his deputy chairman, to contest Hayes and Harlington as the Conservative candidate in the 1950 general election.  This was the company constituency, so one can imagine the sense of disappointment in the boardroom when, contrary to the swing against the party elsewhere in the country, Labour took the seat.  Since 1950 the Labour Party has held Hayes and Harlington except for a brief period in the 198os following the 1983 election.  That contest was catastrophic for Michael Foot’s party, just as the coming general election looks equally ominous for Jeremy Corbyn and his closest acolyte, the shadow Chancellor John McDonnell.  Mention of the latter signals a delicious irony in that a man who Sir Richard were he alive would consider the devil incarnate is member of parliament for…   Hayes and Harlington.

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