Monday, November 18, 2024

Reggie 'Rocket' Sparkes

 

Reggie 'Rocket' Sparkes

By Pete Clemons



Given that he was once a well known local musician in and around Coventry, entertaining me several times, I felt it was appropriate to write down a few words about Reggie 'Rocket' Sparkes.

This is not meant as a definitive list of bands he played in. In fact I hope it isn't as I would love to see it added too. But it is a starter.

Born 1938 the earliest I see Reggie mentioned in a band was in 1965 and a group called The Soul Sect. The Soul Sect had a comparatively posh Bedford Van, a very good PA and plenty of gigs lined up, albeit in working mens' clubs. By all accounts they gave a valuable lesson in how to get enjoyment by revamping music that was initially not to the bands taste but demanded by the audience such as Dave Dee Dozy Beaky Mick and Tich numbers.

The Soul Sect featured Reg Sparkes on bass, his brother Rick Sparkes on drums, a rhythm guitar, player, Tony Warner who played a Hohner Cembalet Electric Piano and Colin Williams on on stereo Gibson guitar. Which I believe he acquired during the back end of 1966. They were later joined by Tim James on vocals and blues harp.

The Soul Sect, who also played a mix of Tamla Motown and Soul music, went on to gain a residency at the Chesford Grange Hotel. However the HP company eventually repossessed the gear and that was the end of The Soul Sect.

Towards the end of 1966 The Soul Sect lost Tim James and had a change of name, They carried on with a cosmic psychedelic name From the Sun.

From the Sun initially carried on from where The Soul Sect finished and found themselves plying their talents in clubs and pubs all over the north of England. British blues was in its infancy and the band found themselves becoming influenced by the likes of Eric Clapton and John MayalL's Bluesbreakers who at that time included Peter Green and Ainsley Dunbar and who they saw play at Coventry’s all night gig at The Locarno during Oct 1966.

From The Sun were Mick O'Rourke (vocals), Colin Williams (guitar), Tony Warner (organ), Reg Sparkes (bass), Rick Sparkes (drums). (The original singer Pete ?, who joined during the bands Chesford Grange days, was replaced by Mick O'Rourke from The Gazelles.)

It seems that after the 1960s passed and Reggie's flirtations with the underground music scene diminished he reverted to the rock and roll circuit where the 'Rocket' part of the name came in.

Vince Holliday is not 100% sure but thinks it did have something to do with his love for rock and roll. The audience would shout an encouraging 'Rock It' to Reggie. And the Reggie Rocket moniker stuck with him throughout his life.

It is sad when we lose another one of the local musicians who has made life so much more bearable. Reggie was very well known around the Coventry Music scene and will be greatly missed, especially by the likes of drummer Nigel Lomas who jammed, with Reggie, in a lot of those rock and rolling sessions.

Thanks to Robert Weston-Bartholomew and Vince Holliday for, unwittingly, providing some valuable thoughts and insights.

 

 



The VIPs

 

The VIPs

by Pete Clemons


Andrew Price – bass, Guy Morley – guitar, Jed Dmochowski – guitar, Paul Shurey - drums

Classed as a local band, possibly because they were formed at Warwick University in Coventry, The VIP's were based in South London. They were closely associated with the mod revival scene towards the end of the 1970s. As a band the VIP's were short lived but certainly left their mark. In part because band members were a part of the resident campus society 'Now Society' – previously known as Rabid Rat - who were hell bent on bringing, the unfashionable, new wave/punk/mod music to the university.

Rabid Rat, formed around 1977, were a university based club that catered for new wave enthusiasts. From the beginning they were formally told of the imposition to ban them following incidents at two new wave concerts they had organised.

The first concert had been by the band School Meals. It was a private booking held in the Disco Room and arranged through normal Arts Federation channels. According to an Arts Federation Rabid Rat had made a mess of the stewarding with only one person at the door.

After the concert abusive slogans were daubed in prominent areas of the union building. At least half of the audience had come from outside the university and it was them, rather than the students at the concert, who were believed to have done the daubing.

Also during 1977, and a week after a gig by School Meals, Rabid Rat organised a concert featuring the VIPs. On this occasion, after events the previous week, the Arts Federation installed its own stewards in the Disco Room, but again ugly incidents occurred.

'It was like the inside of a powder keg in there', an Arts Federation source said. 'The only way to handle gigs like that is with professional bouncers'. Again half the audience was non-student. There were plenty on the campus who were in favour of a ban on new wave concerts but, at the same time, there was an opposition group seeking to retain them.

By 1978 The VIP's had gained significant support. They had become known as the 'top campus pop group'. Unfortunately however it also brought notoriety. A gig at the campus was almost drowned out by hecklers rumoured to be the university rugby team who had just returned from an away game.

With a changing music scene 1979 saw The VIP's move into the Mod Revival arena. A gig at the campus began with a film shot on site. Sadly it fell flat. One of the band members said ' It was supposed to impress you, out obviously it didn't'.

Technical problems plagued them throughout. The set seemed sloppy and disorganised and never really seemed to get started, until the end. They also seemed to concentrate far too much on other people's songs. Chris Montez' 'Let's Dance'. They covered some old Beatles songs too.

To be fair, the set did pick up towards the end and the audience began to join in demanding, perhaps somewhat excessively, two encores. The drumming was excellent and The VIP's were obviously all competent musicians. If the VIP's were going to succeed they were going to have to do a lot more work and think again about what direction they were aiming to go.

And that appears to be exactly what happened. Between 1979 and 1981, away from the university, The VIP's cut several singles. These included: Just Cant let you go, The Quarter Moon, Need Somebody to Love, Causing Complications, Things Aren't What They Used to be. The band did record an early single in Coventry with John Rivers during 1978 but, arguably, their best work can be found when they signed to GEM records.