| If ever a Wizz there was... It has to be said
that Wizz Jones looks bloody good for 68, still gigging as often as he
can, often
with his son Simeon, who plays sax, flute and harmonica. He’s happy
to admit that having his bus
pass has its uses when you have a booking in the West End and you fancy
a drink. I met him at the
guitar shop in Battersea where he is the residential guitar tutor. He
sat on a stool surrounded by
classic Gibsons, Martins and Fenders cradling the Epiphone Texan guitar
he has used almost
exclusively since 1967.
“I nearly lost it recently. It was on a jet going to Milan, coming
from Scotland, supposed to be
changing planes to go to Germany, they cancelled the flight and my baggage
went missing. I lost it
for ten days, so I borrowed a guitar from the shop. Whenever I borrow
a guitar I realise just how
good this one is. As far as the teaching goes, some people just see the
advert in the shop and have
no idea who I am, but I get other people who have been playing for years
and know my material,
they just want to learn some of my tricks. They come for two or three
lessons and go away quite
happy. “
While he’s not run off his feet, he is playing regularly in the
UK, and sometimes in Europe.
“I don’t have an agent, so any work I get I promote myself
or chase up myself; I’ve had a lot of
work this year, but next year, nothing much yet, just the odd sprinkle!
I did the guitar week at a nice
summer school in Scotland with Eddie Walker and Steve Tilston. It was
all very relaxed, with song
workshops and a concert each evening. I’m enjoying playing, and
it always goes down OK. This
club I’ve set up (The Selkirk SW17, every Monday see www.wizzjones.com)
means I get to play
every week just down the road from my house, I’d always bemoaned
the fact I didn’t have
anywhere to play, locally, regularly.”

I was surprised to see that Wizz had not played in the USA
more often.
“The only way you could go to the states in the sixties and
seventies was to pay for yourself, and hang out, but I could
never afford to do that. It came about through some of my fans
who ran Scenescoff records, who arranged for me to go over.
I discovered all these people who knew my music and there
were fans coming up with piles of my first album on UA for me
to sign. They only pressed about a thousand, so that’s where
they all went! The second time was when Rambling Jack
Elliot’s daughter invited me to be interviewed for a film about
him. They rang me up to ask for an interview, and I said, great, shall
we do it at my house or the
guitar shop? No, they said, in New York! I arranged a couple of gigs there
with Thurston Moore,
from Sonic Youth. The third time I was supposed to be supporting Sonic
Youth in Boston and New
York. But I flew out on 9/11...We got halfway across the Atlantic and
had to turn back.”
Wizz is pleased with the current resurgence of interest in acoustic music.
“It’s good at the moment with all the young traditional people
coming in along and the singer
songwriter boom as well. Thanks to Bert Jansch hanging around with pop
stars a whole generation
of young people get to hear people like Bert and it takes them back to
the roots, there’s a whole
new audience out there, especially at festivals like The Green Man. With
the advent of YouTube
and MySpace I’m picking up contacts from all over the world from
people who have discovered
my music, and really like it, which wouldn't’t happen otherwise.
It’s very healthy. YouTube is an
absolute treasure trove, I’ve got a load of stuff I’ve put
on myself, and lots of other people have put
stuff on as well. Good for the ego. The other good thing is all the back
catalogue is coming out on
CD, with Sunbeam putting out the Village Thing albums (The Legendary Me
and When I Leave
Berlin) and the Lazy Farmer album, and Hux putting out the American Lucky
the Man with extra
tracks. And I did a DVD.”
One of the most famous pieces of film featuring Wizz was recorded in
1960, when he was
interviewed by Alan Whicker as part of a programme about the Newquay councillors
clamping
down on the beatniks invading their town. Wizz, with what must have been
jaw-droppingly long hair
by 1960s standards, talked about his life style and sang two songs, including
an obviously censored
version of ‘Babe It Ain’t No Lie.’
“When I had my 64th Birthday tour in 2004, we played Newquay and
in the interval we showed
lots of film clips including that one, the audience were in hysterics,
it was like a Monty Python
sketch. Actually Alan Whicker was very sympathetic; the councillors took
us aside and tried to
bribe us into not saying too much, which we turned down. I was a stupid
kid, well I was 21, but I
wasn't very mature, and I thought I was the bee’s knees. I was talking
to Alan Whicker about:
‘Yeah man, Jack Kerouac, On the Road’, which I’d read.....
And Alan said: ‘Yes, On the Road,
and there are some wonderful passages in Dharma Bums.’ I hadn't
read that, but he had! Recently
there was the TV series about his wartime experiences, and I thought,
after what he went through,
what must he have thought about some stupid kid complaining about not
being able to get a cup of
tea or served in a pub? It was very hard in the beginning, and I wasn't
particularly gifted, I just
learned by ear in an imitative way. I did a lot of busking and tried to
survive, there weren't’t any
benefits. That gave you the power to surmount any situation. When I started
I was very timid, but
you learn, and when you play that gives you power and confidence. My style
is very limited, but
I’ve spent the rest of my life doing it, and possibly getting a
little better. People like Davy Graham
and Bert Jansch took it way beyond the stars. Bert was in Edinburgh listening
to Davy and Big Bill
Broonzy and I was in London listening to Davy and Big Bill Broonzy. When
Bert and I met I could
see we had the same roots, but he had added this extra thing... he was
a genius. Davy was way
ahead, I used to follow him around, and to this day the handful of clichéd
licks I do are from
watching and listening to him, coupled with the Alan Tunbridge (Wizz’s
long time song-writing
collaborator) stuff, which has been a wonderful source of material, and
which is one of the reasons I
haven’t written many songs myself. I always get joy out of interpreting
other people’s material. The
few songs I have written are pop songs in a way, they’ve got a nice
melody and they’re usually very personal. I did actually get to
see Big Bill Broonzy at Alexis Korner’s club and he was a great
influence with that bass/Times New Romantonic swinging style. But it was limiting.
It took Ralph McTell to help me with my fingerpicking. I learnt some basic
‘Freight Train’ kind of fingerpicking stuff but I couldn’t
get that alternating thumb going properly. Ralph used to show me ragtime
feel, but I couldn’t get away from the solid thump of the thumb.
But it served me well, because it’s such a full style, you fill
up all the holes. When I play with Simeon now I’ve learnt to leave
more holes. He understands where I’m at; we’ve been playing
together for more than twenty years, though we never rehearse.”
Being in at the very start of the folk scene Wizz has often been cited
as an influence and an inspiration to the likes of Rod Stewart, Keith
Richards and Eric Clapton. Sometimes the stories get a little distorted...

“I found out Eric used to come to a little club in
Croydon and watch me play, but I didn’t know him. In
a recent book about the Rolling Stones Keith Richards
said I used to teach him guitar in the toilets at Art
College! Complete fabrication. In a way it does me a
bit of harm sometimes because, in other countries
particularly, I’m billed as the guy who taught Eric
Clapton! It was Alexis Korner that turned me on to it
all, but he was the first guy I saw doing the Broonzy
stuff. He’d say: ‘This is a Blind Boy Fuller song.’
I’d
think, Blind Boy Fuller, who’s he? That sounds so
exotic! And at the same time Ewan McColl was
turning me on to traditional music. I love traditional
music, and I always thought I’d like to do it, but I never considered
I had the right kind of voice for
it. But at that time, to us teenagers in Croydon, anything American was
still desirable. When Rock
and Roll, skiffle and traditional jazz burst on the scene it shook the
older generation up. I feel quite
sorry for them now in retrospect! I’m just waffling now; let’s
go to the pub...”
Grahame Hood
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