Monthly Archives: October 2020

The road trip north 1978

In the summer of 78 I went on a long summer trip north with Kris, which proved to be our last one together, but it was memorable too.  After my summary sacking from Eureka Valley Grocery Store, I filed for unfair dismissal and was awarded unemployment benefit and so we took off for Northern California and all points north. The first stop was at Calistoga Springs resort, where the water comes from. A dip in a hot spring was very relaxing. We cadged a lift with a couple we knew who were very straight and a bit uptight, the names have gone but the memory lingers on. The lift continued up through Northern California and we gawked at the gothic houses found in Eureka. Up into Oregon, through to Portland where the lift came to an end but we were confident enough to hitch hike to Seattle to meet up with a couple we’d met on a plane to the UK the previous summer, Laura and Mike. 

Gothic house in Eureka

   Unfortunately they were away but they had let us stay in their room in a shared house in a leafy student type house. We had instant housemates, who were great. I loved Seattle and its vibe, even then quite cool. I enjoyed the scenery around, the snow capped peaks, the markets, the sight of whales in Puget Sound and the alternative feel. This was also the place where I finally caught up with the film ‘The Harder They Come’ and was introduced to the Bob Marley album Kaya. I saw that the band Television were playing in the city, so we bought tickets for that show and thoroughly enjoyed the experience of Tom Verlaine’s guitar playing.

Downtown Seattle in the 70s

     After at least 10 days we moved on and were directed towards the San Juan Islands that lie between the USA and Canada. Short ferry rides and some wild camping is what we did. Hitch hiking all the way. One time with an older couple who treated us like their children, almost to the point of alarm, we felt like characters in a strange road movie, but they dropped us off before anything weird happened. This was also the time when for the first and to date only time in my life I started to grow a moustache deliberately. This has significance further on. At another time we camped out somewhere and struck up a conversations with the family camped next to us. They invited us over for a beer or two, but the conversation started to turn strange when the husband, who later reminded me of a young Kevin Bacon, in looks, but not in character,  began to make references to ‘them’, in other words people of a different skin colour to his, which was white, and he assumed we felt the same. It wasn’t long before the racist slurs came out. This was a proto Trump man. The conversation became awkward and it could have turned nasty, if we hadn’t made our excuses and left.

The dreamy San Juan Islands between the USA and Canada.

      The San Juan Islands were really beautiful, no doubt populated by some very rich people these days, but we enjoyed our couple of days floating around. I ask myself why I didn’t take more photographs back then, probably saving on film or perhaps I had a black and white film in the camera.  We eventually arrived in Victoria at the southern tip of British Colombia, it had an old colonial feel about it, unsurprisingly with a name like that. Soon we moved onto Vancouver, the Big City, and celebrated Canada Day in a park with a load of punk bands. The city was too busy for me and so we headed up the west coast of Vancouver Island. The scenery was stunning, snow capped mountains in summer, whales in the sea and eagles flying in the air. The people we met were friendly, but I did notice the toll that alcohol appeared to have taken on the indigenous people of that region. One man gave us a lift to a beach at what was then a remote piece of paradise, Tofino. At the end of the ride he went to his car trunk, which was refrigerated and gave us a whole salmon, that was a kind gesture. The place is now described as Canada’s bohemian backwater. We stared at the Pacific Ocean thinking we had reached the end of the road. We had, we stayed a day or two and sadly turned back towards Vancouver and the USA with a wrench in our hearts. Money was getting scarce.

The coastline at Tofino, British Columbia.

  The journey home involved a few more days in Seattle with Mike and Laura and then we headed back as fast as possible to San Francisco. But before that on the journey home, somewhere in Oregon, we almost encountered a lot of trouble from a ride. Waiting for a lift, I went for a pee in the hinterland, in the meantime a man stopped and was encouraging Kris to get in on her own. She hesitated until I returned and he pulled quite a face when I jumped in too. The man, overweight and sleazy, was definitely up to no good and he had in mind something not very pleasant, but my presence stopped that fortunately. But he refused to stop and let us out for what seemed quite a long scary time. We were getting uncomfortable, this situation felt dangerous, but eventually he had to stop and eat at a fast food joint, probably a Macdonalds.  This was our chance to escape and we hopped it. Eventually we got back to our apartment in 3rd Avenue in the Inner Sunset unaware that things were about to undergo a big change. 

Home for the time being 3rd Ave SF

Six jobs in one year – 1978

Living in San Francisco in the late 70s was an experience and a half, I seem to have packed an awful lot into that time. I was 23 that year and had to get by on whatever jobs I could find, previously I had already been a housepainter, a walking courier, an office temp and a lackey for the phone company. Living almost hand to mouth, there were no handouts to fall back on. 1978 proved to be an interesting year for me job wise, and many other things too, and I can remember five very different jobs that stand out from that year, none of which lasted very long. 

CB & S

Sometime in early 1978 I was tipped off by a friend of mine called Ann, who told me that she wanted to leave her job so suggested I apply for her part time job – ostensibly as a telephone receptionist for the auspicious sounding firm of Colton, Bernard and Seitchik. It involved a bus journey from the Inner Sunset across Golden Gate Park to the leafy Richmond district, where the offices were based in a smart detached house. The company operated as a recruitment agency for textile industry executives from all over the USA. 

    The main partners were a close couple, the diminutive, smartly dressed Roy Colton and the very tall Harry Bernard, a former hairdresser with a Peter Wyngarde (Jason King) moustache, both were absolutely meticulous about their appearance. They had moved to San Francisco from Philadelphia a couple of years before to live in the liberal freedom of a gay friendly city.  The third partner was the straight man called Bill Seitchik. The job involved answering the phone in my English accent, what other could it have been? My fake American accent was appalling, and the job involved putting calls through when wanted, and being obsequious at all times. I didn’t enjoy that bit. My daily task in my four hour shift was to read Women’s Wear Daily (WWD) and one other fashion daily cover to cover looking for particular articles to bring to the attention of the partners. I became very knowledgable in the trends and whims of the US fashion industry at the time. The partners were kind and generous, but I soon found out that if I wasn’t wearing clothes up to scratch or was wearing enough deodorant, aftershave or cologne, I certainly heard about it.  It paid the bills for a while and I left after three or so months, tired of answering the phone. 

My daily reading material for a few months.

   *A sobering and sad footnote to my time at CBS.  In doing some online research I found an article from Women’s Wear Daily from 2009 which told the story of Roy and Harry’s apparent double suicide in their plush home in Pacific Heights from a deadly concoction of pills, the recipe for which was drawn from the book “Final Exit,” a DIY suicide manual. It was a sad thing to find out, but apparently the business had dwindled away with the rise of the internet but they kept on living the high life, flat in Manhattan, holidays abroad, flash cars etc, until the debts piled up and became overbearing.  By the end they had plush offices on the eighth floor of the circa 1904 Flood Building, one of the few downtown structures to survive San Francisco’s historic 1906 earthquake, which was also where novelist Dashiell Hammett wrote the “The Maltese Falcon” while working for the Pinkerton Detective Agency in the Twenties.

Roy Colton and Harry Bernard – a press photo from much later on, which was featured in their sad story from 2009.

American Graffiti

The next stop was Hollywood, well, the Hollywood film industry, when my friend John said that he had been asked to find someone who could do some extra work with him at a drag racing circuit some 50 miles south for a few days. It turned out to be the sequel to American Graffiti, the story having drifted into the 60s, and was tentatively entitled Purple Haze, although it seems to have later adopted the original name of ‘More American Graffiti’. George Lucas didn’t have a lot to do with it, but Ron Howard and Cindy Clarke were in it. My role was as a crowd member and as a pit worker at the race meeting. I went for three or four days with my friend John, but at $50 a day it wasn’t great pay, but it was a break from the norm. There was I given an early 60s flat top haircut and put into the right clothes of the era. The film bombed and went straight to video later, I have never seen it. 

Poster for the film I worked on briefly but never saw.

Selling The Wild West

This was a short lived two and a half weeks ‘locked’ in a room on Market Street downtown with several others, a telephone on each desk and a list of numbers to call. These were four hour shifts and the job was to cold call people in Nevada and parts of California to hard sell them copies of Time Life’s hard bound book ‘The Wild West’ for about ten dollars. After a day’s training how to sell on the phone I was thrown to the wolves and was expected to read off a whole spiel before whoever answered the phone had a chance to say much and cajole people into buying a copy of a book they probably didn’t want or need. I have to say that this was a fairly dispiriting experience and I was getting nowhere until one kind person put me out of my misery and said yes, probably out of pity. Several people did question why an English voice was trying to sell them an American book. What could I say? It was a desperate job.

I had to indicate that I had a potential sale and a bell was rung and my score finally moved from 0 to 1. The very next shift I suddenly snapped and stood up and like Peter Finch in the film Network, (out the previous year) said loudly to the room “I’m not going to take this any more” and stormed off into the manager’s office. He looked at me pitifully and said that they had wasted money on me. I didn’t care, all I wanted to do was get out of there and get on the MUNI bus back towards the Inner Sunset and have a lie down. My short lived career as a telphone book seller had come to an abrupt end. I was left with a copy of the wretched book too.

Eureka Valley

I moved on to working in a small natural grocery store in the Eureka Valley, not far from the Castro, owned by a hippie couple, who for all their hippie ethos and Hawaiian weed, were not very generous when it came to wages. They told me to look out for miners coming in, it took me a while to realise that they meant minors buying booze. I ended my shift and passed onto a man who was a Californian equivalent of John Cooper Clarke, obsessed with words and music – we talked endlessly. The job ended with my asking for a wage rise, I was sacked immediately by phone call the next day. I claimed for unfair dismissal and won my case and received unemployment benefit for a month or two and disappeared up the coastline to Oregon and Washington and Canada for a while, but that’s in another story. 

At the end of the summer my relationship with Kris came to an end after almost four years, from London to New York to SF.  More on that later perhaps. 

Pier 39

My next job was as a worker at a place called Pier 39, near Fisherman’s Wharf which was just opening up.  The job was fairly menial, from bussing tables to taking money for arcade type games to running the dodgem cars. I lasted about three weeks before being sacked by the boss, Warren Simmons, for giving him lip, but not before meeting two wonderful co-workers for that brief time, Jeannie and Angie, who have played a part in my life ever since,  mostly at a distance,, although we have seen each other from time to time over the years. It was great to get know Jeannie, she was/is full of fire and has a great acerbic sense of humour. We connected and had quite a few laughs. Well, as I said I was marched off the premises and it was back to job hunting. The Pier 39 is still there 42 years later, now famous for its sea lions and Angie still has a responsible job there too.

Pier 39 a little later on

Haight Street Deli

The final job that year was at a delicatessen on Haight Street, not far from my new home on Masonic, imaginatively called Haight Street Deli, and run by a sharp large lady called Gail, who ruled with an iron rod when in the room. I was part of a team who served up huge sandwiches all day. It got very busy and people asked for all kinds of complicated sandwiches. The evening shift would end with us piling into someone’s car and racing off to Ocean Beach for a little light up entertainment…I think I was there for four months or so, nothing lasted that long and I drifted into other things…like 1979. 

1978 a very musical year

1978 was without doubt the most turbulent and exciting year I’ve lived through to date. What follows is part one with some of my musical highlights that year. (Thanks to setlist.fm for giving me some pointers to dates and places.) 

New Year’s Eve 1977 into 78 started with a long bus journey to a community centre in Hunter’s Point to see and dance to Queen Ida and her Bon Temps Zydeco Band, a wonderful and joyful way to see in 1978. This was my real introduction to zydeco music, I bought the album that night and still have it. 

    This was a year of many gigs and live music for me, starting close to my birthday in January at what proved to be the final Sex Pistols gig with Sid Vicious at Winterland, ending with Lydon telling us we had all been cheated. It was a short seething set, which ended with Anarchy in the Uk and No Fun. Typical. On another planet there was David Bowie in April on his Heroes tour at Oakland Coliseum, mesmerising and hypnotic, followed by Patti Smith at Winterland in May, who was so strong and poetic. This was the ‘Easter’ tour.  Better with words than the guitar if I remember. In the summer on a detour to Seattle I thoroughly enjoyed a gig by Television of Marquee Moon fame and by chance I happened to catch the late John Prine too. 

      On the local music scene I was getting into both the punk and avant garde music scene and got into the off the wall sounds of Tuxedo Moon, more than once, definitely art house, the punky reggae sounds of The Offs, who did a suitably furious version of Johnny Too Bad. There were The Avengers, The Mutants and Crime, one of whose members I was occasionally mistaken for, a trip to the fairly short lived The Deaf Club where I was surprised to find Johnny Walker in the corner playing the tunes between the bands and to cap it all later in the year a visit to the famous Mabuhay Gardens on Broadway, the Fab Mab, with my friend Jeannie to get dived on by Jello Biafra and the rest of the Dead Kennedys. A raucous, seething mass of sweat and noise. Wonderfully exhilarating. 

     There was also my first of several experiences of The Talking Heads, at the Boarding House in November, ‘More Songs About Buildings And Food’ just hit that right note for me and to cap it off just before Christmas a stupendous show by The Boss, again at Winterland for a four hour show of extraordinary power and energy. Clarence Clemons, the Big Man, was on fire that night. 

There were other gigs too, but these are the ones that stand out for me, it’s only 42 years ago after all. 

Patti Smith at Winterland
The Sex Pistols at Winterland
David Bowie at Oakland Coliseum
Tuxedo Moon
Bruce Springsteen at Winterland
The Dead Kennedys

1978 – the centre is missing

1978 was a critical year for many reasons and in the corner of the world where I lived at the time, San Francisco, two events stood out, both of which I was affected by as both a by-stander and an active participant. They both had repercussions on the international stage and sparked huge interest for many years after.
Let me start the year before in 1977 when after several years of trying Harvey Milk was finally elected as a supervisor (city councillor) representing the district of the Castro. He broke new ground by being the first out gay person elected to public office in the USA. This was a monumental achievement. There was such a huge street party to celebrate this. He represented a district that I also lived in, although because of my registered alien status I was unable to vote for him, as I certainly would have. I first came across him personally when I used to buy film and get it developed at a store in the heart of the Castro called Castro Camera, which was run by this friendly, cheerful, gay man called Harvey Milk, who was also a keen photographer. He was a larger than life character with a warm smile and a great sense of humour and was very community minded, who I heard speak at rallies and demonstrations several times, including a very colourful and celebratory Gay Freedom Day in the summer of 1978, the forerunner of today’s Pride. Sylvester’s high energy disco tune ‘You Make Me Feel Mighty Real’ was the hit of that summer which he performed at the Castro Street Fair that year.

Castro Camera and Harvey Milk’s campaign HQ


To put events into chronological order the other noteworthy event that year came from The People’s Temple which was run by a charismatic preacher and political power broker called the Reverend Jim Jones. He was influential in San Francisco politics in the Democratic Party and was appointed by Mayor George Moscone to head the housing authority. I heard him speak once at a political rally, he was certainly charismatic and had a strong oratory, preachy manner, sprinkled with socialism, that drew people to him. The temple had been based in the city for a long while, but had suddenly moved to Guyana in South America in 1977 when the Temple was being exposed in the media for being not quite what it seemed and things had started to unravel. Hundreds of people from the Temple joined Jones in a settlement carved out of the bush called Jonestown in Guyana, many of these people, most of whom were black, were from San Francisco, so when the fateful news came out of the mass murder by poisoning all of them it hit the city like a tidal wave. It was as if a pall of death hung over the city, such was the feeling in the air. This happened on November 18th. As if this wasn’t enough just 10 short days later another event occurred that had even bigger local repercussions, if that was possible. I remember seeing a poster flyposted on a wall which simply said “The centre is missing”, it hit home.

The not so Rev Jim Jones


In November 1978 a right wing city councillor and former firefighter called Dan White resigned his post, then changed his mind and asked for his position back from the mayor, the progressive George Moscone. The mayor refused to have him back and with that White produced a handgun he had smuggled into City Hall and shot him dead in his office. He then deliberately sought out Harvey Milk alone in his office and shot him dead too. White, a former police officer, who held a grudge and didn’t like the fact that Harvey Milk was both gay and popular and regarded him and all gay people as deviants. I was standing in my local post office that day when someone came in and spread the news, there was disbelief and silence. The double killing in cold blood more than shocked the city and thousands of us took part in a huge candlelit procession and vigil that snaked its way from the Castro to the downtown city hall where the two men were killed. It was silent and peaceful, the outpouring of grief was enormous and heartfelt.

Harvey Milk and George Moscone at City Hall.


At White’s trial a few months later his lawyer’s defence was that he had eaten too much junk food and that he was under a lot of stress, but when the news broke that he had he got off with manslaughter and a sentence of just five years in prison the whole city erupted. This was in January 1979 and when the news from the tv and radio was broadcast people spontaneously piled on the Market Street buses downtown, and surrounded City Hall. I joined forces with my Dutch friend Hans and we were swept along on a tide of rising anger and outrage. The huge crowd of angry men and women that filled the area were determined to make a statement. This was seen as a homophobic hate crime which hadn’t been in any way handled fairly or justly by the legal system. I saw several police cars in a line all on fire, an image I will never forget, I thought that the City Hall would end up being burnt down, it nearly was. I witnessed the breaking of shop windows as people vented their fury. Anything could have happened, such was the fury. Police reinforcements arrived with clubs and began to chase people back. I had to run away fast to avoid being caught and beaten. I experienced that extraordinary power of people when they are angry and trying to make sense of a senseless situation. This night has been called the White Night Riot ever since. Harvey Milk was only in office for one year, but he made an extraordinary contribution in the fight for equality. His legacy remains in that city to this day. He had a premonition that his life would be cut short, but that didn’t stop him speaking out for equality. One piece of local law he enabled to be passed was the country’s first gay rights ordinance, protecting the rights of workers in the city. It was one of those life changing situations and I can’t ever forget it. For me it’s all about equal rights, tolerance and understanding. I came to the city thinking that it was a peaceful and progressive place to live but these two events shook me to the core. If you haven’t seen it there’s a documentary that came out in 1984 called The Times of Harvey Milk that contains very dramatic footage and then there was the 2008 film Milk with Sean Penn in the title role. Both recommended. The People’s Temple story was recently featured in a documentary on BBC.

A scene from the White Riot Night January 1979

Psychokiller (nearly)

Watching an episode of a Mexican TV thriller last night (Oscuro Deseo, Dark Desire) triggered a dark memory that I had buried deep inside and it made me shudder. The scene was of a man coming up behind another man and wrapping an arm around the victim’s neck so that he couldn’t move.
I was at the Electric Ballroom in Camden, London on Saturday December 8, 1979, (I had to look up the date). This was the first night of two at the venue at the end of the Talking Heads’ ‘Fear of Music’ UK tour, the support act were Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark. I went to the gig with my sister Jane and Chris, her boyfriend at the time. I was excited to see the band perform what for me was one of the most interesting albums of the year. I had seen them perform twice previously in the USA.
Following the support act, which I thoroughly enjoyed, but I was really waiting for the main event when the Talking Heads, then still a four piece, came on and without any introduction from David Byrne launched into Artists Only, followed by Stay Hungry from earlier albums and then into several from Fear of Music beginning with Cities. The place was rammed, standing room only, there was an excited atmosphere and it was very, very loud. I became separated from Jane and Chris, they were somewhere in front of me and I was maybe 10 yards from the stage. I was getting into the music – “Heaven, a place where nothing ever happens,” when all of a sudden out of nowhere an arm came round my neck from behind and I was caught in a tight stranglehold by a man whose face I never saw. Very disturbing, he shouted something in my ear, but I couldn’t make out what he was on about. I kept trying to say “Who are you?” But forming words was difficult and the noise of the band deafened everything. He kept shouting in my ear. I was freaking out, constrained by the density of bodies all around me and unable to do anything with this strong arm lock around my throat. The more I struggled the tighter the grip became. Mind racing, was it a case of mistaken identity? Did I have a doppleganger who had done something awful to this man. Was it because I happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time? How was this going to end? Minutes went by, I have no idea how many, possibly two or three songs worth. Nobody noticed my situation or if they did perhaps they just thought it was normal behaviour, I felt helpless and frightened and totally at the mercy of a violent unseen stranger.
Eventually the grip around my throat slightly loosened and I managed to wriggle free, I shot away at speed through the crowd away from this unknown person, didn’t even look back and located my sister and Chris and said I need to go right now. Got out of there with adrenalin racing, relieved and explained what had happened to me. Missed the rest of the set, which I later found out ended with Psycho Killer and as an encore Life During Wartime.
Two years or so later I returned to see the Talking Heads once more on their Remain in Light tour at the Hammersmith Odeon, a more pleasurable experience. Just today I found a live sound recording of the very same Electric Ballroom gig, strange to hear it after all this time and I can hear the songs that I missed that night. At the end of the encore Byrne says, “Don’t bother clapping that’s all we’re going to do.” But I am still a huge fan.

Greetings from San Francisco 1977

continuing on from previous post

After six months of living on a noisy Haight Street Kris and I decided that living in one room was not a long term plan so we began to seek a new place to live. I was now working as a filing clerk for what was then Pacific Telephone in an obscure office block downtown as a temp. The job was to go through sections of the unabridged LA phone book and pick out every 10th or 15th name, I forget which, and write out the name and address and number on a piece of paper. There were some famous names listed. I didn’t sell them to the National Enquirer. This was tedious, but saved only by my meeting of co-worker Mel Detesta, this was an assumed name, I can’t remember his real one, but he was a budding stand up comedy writer and a very funny man. We got talking and had some amusing times together at work. He said that there was an apartment available in his house, I think there were four all together. So Kris and I ended up in renting this top floor apartment in a house on 3rd Avenue in the Inner Sunset, this would be the last place we lived together. 

  This was an introduction to a new crowd of people, Mick the friendly, but cynical cartoonist pool player in the basement who worked for Rolling Stone magazine, Ernie a creative film maker who had made a 15 minute spoof short called Hardware Wars, Mel himself and through them a link to Rolling Stone people from The Tubes to writers Buck Henry and Ben Fong Torres. 

     The Inner Sunset was sleepy compared to the Haight, calmer, more boring, less counter culture, so we went out of the area to discover and soak things up. There was the wonderful Pharaoh Sanders “Our Roots Began in Africa”, who played at The Shady Grove on Haight Street, the obligatory Jefferson Starship free gig in Golden Gate Park and I’m certain I saw Santana play on their home turf in the Mission, if a little hazy.  I turned down the chance to see The Dead, they were too old hat for me and the Stones for the same reason. But strangely I did see ELO and Steve Hillage at the wonderfully named Cow Palace. There were warehouse parties in the South of Market area, I wasn’t drinking a lot at the time and turned down a communal bottle of red wine being passed around at one, it turned out to be laced with acid, something that did not end well for my friend Paula, who literally freaked out. She did recover, however, but it was a warning.    

     Work involved several temp jobs, more for the phone company, boring filing work. Then I came across a free newspaper advertising something called Communiversity, this was a left over hippy venture from the 60s and celebrated the fact that we all had things to teach and learn – a free exchange. I took a wonderful evening class in self healing and nutrition, which as a fledgling vegetarian was incredibly helpful to me. I learnt things there I still use today. It was all given out freely by a man from Columbia called Carlos. The other activity that I joined in after hours through the same Communiversity was my joining of The Suicide Club, named after the Robert Louis Stevenson short story, it was a place to challenge yourself. I would describe them as situationalists. Founded by the late Gary Warne, a  nearby bookshop owner it was a loose collection of freedom loving individuals who wanted adventure, and sometimes did dangerous things, but not to anyone else.  Amongst them a game of Star Wars with toy Han Solo blasters between two rival armies in Oakland Cemetery at night, police came and we hid behind gravestones, 30 of us. Amazingly they did not spot us.  A beautiful evening pot luck meal on Golden Gate Bridge, with chairs, tables and candles. The cops turned up and were fairly amused to see 60 or so people sit down to a candle dinner on the footpath and drove on. These days we might have been hauled off. A night time break into the empty Hamm’s brewery to make strange sounds in the vast beer vats and other strange and sometimes bizarre activities. 

I found a job painting apartments all in the same colour for a shady lawyer called Stan Arden, who owned several apartments across the city and hooked up with a pair of brothers from Colorado, named Jeff and Art, who smoked Picayune’s. I liked them very much and we often shared a cheeky beer in the afternoon. Arden noticed me and offered me a job in his office keeping track of his various apartment rents. He was a mean character, nobody liked him, or got a day’s respite from paying rent, the heavies were at the door in minutes demanding rent money. He once asked me to serve an eviction notice on somebody, I refused to do this and told him I wasn’t going to do his dirty work. That was the end of that job. 

  The summer of 1977 and I had the opportunity to go back to the UK for a month to see my folks, family and friends. I hadn’t even realised that it was Silver Jubilee year and all the bunting was out. More interesting to me was my witness to the punk movement in the midst of all this. I bought the Pistols ‘God Save the Queen’ single in the week that it reached No.1, someone stole it from me later, and the Buzzcocks’ Spiral Scratch EP.  I saw my first Derek Jarman films which I found weirdly fascinating. I spent a week in Bristol visiting my sister and saw The Jam on their ‘In the City’ tour, a great burst of energy. I returned to California feeling like I was a changed person, my hair was shorn, clothes and musical taste were changing. 

My neighbour Mick, who I had given the task of keeping an eye on the Chevy, managed to total it in a messy accident. I suspect he had been drinking. It was no more when I returned and there was an insurance claim to deal with.

    I started running regularly and my favourite run was the three miles through to the Pacific Ocean through Golden Gate Park and back again past the fields of bison.

to be continued…