Roger McGough - portrait
Photo credit:
Peter Everard Smith
Enlargements see gallery

Roger McGough's CD LivelySaid And Done spring dates

Roger's live album Lively available here.

Interviews / BBC WEST YORKSHIRE interview by Chris Verguson

All 'Said and Done'?

If you fancy partying with poetry then Bradford's the place to be as the legendary Roger McGough brings Said and Done, an evening of stories and poems, to the Alhambra Studio. Ahead of his visit, we've been talking to him about his poetry and more...

the scaffold
The Scaffold in 1970 (Roger is in the middle)

It's now 40 years since Roger McGough achieved real fame as a poet with the publication of the best-selling poetry collection The Mersey Sound. 1967 also saw him with a hit song on his hands, Thank U Very Much, as part of The Scaffold along with John Gorman and Mike McCartney (brother of Paul, no less). In the following year The Scaffold's anthem, Lily the Pink, reached No. 1 in the charts.  Today as the regular presenter of BBC Radio 4's Poetry Please he brings poetry to even wider audience and most recently he's published his autobiography, Said and Done.

Can you tell us a bit about what to expect when you come to Bradford?

Whenever I explain what I do you can feel jaws open and then drop to the ground! What  happens is the lights go down and I walk on the stage and open a book and read [laughs] but it's poetry – it's what I've done for 40 years – and reading stories from my new autobiography, Said and Done, about being a poet. And, of course, this time I've got [guitarist] Andy Roberts with me which adds a spark or two. He's an old friend and he provides a musical element to the show.

You've been collaborating with Andy since the early days?

Andy was at the Edinburgh Festival from the early 1960s and he was a student then. He came to Liverpool University because he was attracted by what was going on there. He studied Law but fortunately he fell in with all the poets, musicians and artists and he actually got his degree but he never practised Law. He played with The Scaffold and he played with the Liverpool Scene with Adrian Henri. His life since then has been as a working musician accompanying bands like Pink Floyd. In fact he was up in Bradford last week playing to a full house at St George's Hall with Dennis Locorierre [former lead singer with Dr Hook]. He's a working musician. I'm just an old friend and it's always nice to be on the road with an old mate and he drives. Normally it's me on my own trekking round.

You talk about Andy coming to Liverpool. You've lived in London for quite a long time now but do you think people still see you as a Liverpool or a Mersey poet?

Roger McGough
Hear Roger McGough live in Bradford!

At one time it became like a cross to bear. 'Liverpool poet,' that's all people said, and what does that mean? Brian and Adrian, when he was alive, and I used to ask that question because it's not a geographical thing as opposed to being called a Sheffield poet or a Bradford poet. [Brian Patten and Adrian Henri whose poems were also included in The Mersey Sound]. It was something to do with time and place, and attitude, but that's sort of faded now, thank heavens, and I think I'm quite happy to be known as a Liverpool poet. It just means I was brought up and lived there and feel very much as though it's home really even though I've been away from there for about 20 years.

It's now 40 years since The Mersey Sound was published but it's still a well-known book of poetry. How would you describe its impact at the time?

This year is the 40th anniversary of the book, and it's being reprinted in June as a Penguin Modern Classic which is quite nice. I was telling Brian we'd have to learn Greek now. The sad thing is Adrian isn't here to see it. You've no idea when you first do these things – we were very thrilled when we were invited by Penguin to be published back in 1967 but we had no idea that 40 years later it would still be being reprinted and finding new audiences.

The cover of the first edition was very 'pop', and it could be argued it's become somthing of an icon, but you've said that it was far from what you, Adrian and Brian wanted.

I think Adrian was quite happy but Brian and I didn't like it being called The Mersey Sound, just grabbing on the coat tails of the Beatles, that sort of thing, but luckily we were talked out of it. Penguin's publicity department did what they thought was best and probably they were right. It did catch on with a lot of people who perhaps normally wouldn't have gone to poetry. Also I was with the Scaffold, and when the book was published in 1967 it was when Thank U Very Much hit the charts and a year later there was Lily the Pink, and my name was synonymous with something that was OK and public, so I think it helped my acceptance as a poet really.

Did you feel that the barriers between music, pop music especially, and poetry were being broken down at that time?

Definitely. At The Scaffold shows we'd have musicians – we played with very good ones in our time – and we also included poetry, sketches, satire and, of course, the comedy. That's pretty much gone out of music now, hasn't it? There's not a lot of irony in music nowadays. People take it very, very seriously. There was the Bonzos [Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band] at the time and there were other groups as well as The Scaffold who enjoyed the business of music but also made fun of it and who didn't take it too seriously. Poetry, music and rock 'n' roll together all quite happily, and painting as well - it was quite exciting!

1967 was also the so-called 'Summer of Love'. Did it seem like that at the time?

Well, you saw it happening. You were aware of it but at the time it seemed to be a PR thing for London. There was a time when long-haired girls would come around with flowers. It was all a bit tongue-in-cheek, certainly in the North, I think. I mean people enjoyed it and maybe it's me being cynical and I was cynical then. I've talked to people of my own age who thought it was wonderful and well-meant and innocent, and probably to those people it was, but I saw people making money out of it and also what was happening in Liverpool. We talk about the Beatles, what a great time it was in Liverpool, but it was the time when the docks were closing...and economically it was very depressing. But it was almost like there was a party going on but with a very spectral dark background.

So was Liverpool a good place to be in the 1960s?

Oh, yes. It was good to be young then but we didn't think we were at the centre of the universe. We were part of that post-war generation who didn't do national service, who went to art college and universities and had education and a bit of money in their pockets and a lot of high hopes!

Since then you've become one of the best known poets in the country and you've done a lot of poetry for children.

Poet Roger McGough
The role of poetry is both to console and surprise

I enjoy it. The book I'm finishing now, and which is coming out next year, is a book of poetry for young ones and I enjoy it when I can do both. If I'm writing about adult stuff there's a lot of poems about people dying, very serious things, and then it's nice just to be very playful and use the language. You write for yourself really. This month I don't say I'm writing for children. You just know once you start writing a memorial for somebody it's going to be an adult poem and if you are writing about a giraffe it's going to be a child's poem but it's the same impetus that started it and it's the same care you take over it. You might spend the same amount of time writing a poem about cockroaches as you do about your best friend dying.

It's interesting what you say about poetry being playful because, looking at the poems you wrote back in the 60s, you seem to have used a very playful technique to tackle very serious things about like nuclear bombs going off.

I suppose that's always been a sort of strength in a way. It began as a weakness and became a strength.

Were you very disappointed not to be named Poet Laureate?

No. I didn't really expect it for lots of reasons but it's nice to get the CBE and it's nice to be a Freeman of the City [of Liverpool]. I think I would have been a good Poet Laureate.

You mentioned in one of your recent programmes that Poetry Please will always surprise somewhere along the line. Is that something you've always wanted to and do you think that's the role of poetry today?

I think the role of poetry is to console future generations in a way AND to surprise. I think it's both. I do think so much now we live in a culture of blame, never of praise. You never hear the police did a good job on that or the government did well on this. It's always about how they failed and who do you blame for the failure. This must affect young people's lives so it's nice to write things that are cheering and you feel you can change things as well. And you can be surprising, but try and be positive about life. I always want people to feel better for having been to a reading of mine or to have read a book.

If there's one thing you want people to take away from your evening in Bradford what will be?

Beside the large cheque you mean?

 It's always nice to do the book signing afterwards. It's an important part of what I do. It's not to do with selling books, it's all to do with meeting an audience. It does remind me of why I do things because most of what I do means being alone with my thoughts and it's very lonely, it's isolated and there no impact on what you're doing, it's just in your head, and it's really good to go out to an audience and share the fruits of your labour with them. Usually they respond positively and it reminds me why I do it and I feel part of them so it's a good feeling.

Roger McGough's Said and Done is at The Alhambra Studio on Wednesday May 9th 2007.


PAY-BACK TIME

O Lord, let me be a burden on my children
For long they've been a burden upon me.
May they fetch and carry, clean and scrub
And do so cheerfully.

Let them take it in turns at putting me up
Nice sunny rooms at the top of the stairs
With a walk-in bath and lift installed
At great expense.....Theirs.

Insurance against the body-blows of time
Isn't that what having children's all about?
To bring them up knowing that they owe you
And can't contract out?

What is money for but to spend on their schooling?
Designer clothes, mindless hobbies, usual stuff.
Then as soon as they're earning, off they go
Well, enough's enough.

It's been a blessing watching them develop
The parental pride we felt as each one grew.
But Lord, let me be a burden on my children
And on my children's children too.

© Roger McGough Selected Poems Penguin, Feb'06

Permission to reproduce in any format must be secured from PFD. http://www.pfd.co.uk/books/permissions_requests.shtml 

  
Bookings / info. contact: Adrian Mealing tel/fax:  +44 (0) 1684 540366  web: www.uktouring.org.uk

Press contact: Jim Howden tel: +44 (0)1568 620515   e-mail: jim@uktouring.org.uk

  
  
Page last updated: 07 December 2007   Hit Counter

  Website design: Jonathan Penley