We saw it in black & white. In 1972, a colour TV was a rare and wondrous thing. Clip shows may depict the 1970s as a world of multi-coloured tank tops and bright yellow Choppers, but the reality was a lot less colourful. Britain was a like grim annexe of the Soviet Union. The buses, railways, coal mines, the telecommunications and steel industries, most of the motor industry, every energy company, two-thirds of TV stations and all radio stations were controlled by the state. Unimaginable now but this record still makes me strangely nostalgic for that monochrome misery. Maybe because, with its brass accompaniment by the Grimethorpe Colliery Band, it sounded old-fashioned even then. Peter Skellern died this week, aged 69. Which means he was only 25 when this was a hit. I’d assumed he was much older and had probably, like the era his famous song evokes, died a long time ago.
This is not how we saw it at the time.

- The man who m...19th May 2014
- The reason I'...18th May 2014
- Highbury and ...17th May 2014
- Cruising.16th May 2014
- It's not that...15th May 2014
- Beautiful day...14th May 2014
- The Radio Aca...13th May 2014
- I watched Son...12th May 2014
- A song about ...11th May 2014
- If Nigel Fara...10th May 2014
- To Soho House...9th May 2014
- Ever wondered...8th May 2014
- The session s...7th May 2014
- From Chav Gra...6th May 2014
- It's sunny.5th May 2014 prev next