Marc Bolan
| Marc Bolan<tr style="text-align: center;"><td colspan="3"> </td></tr> | ||
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| Background information <tr><td>Birth name</td><td colspan="2">Mark Feld</td></tr><tr><td>Born</td><td colspan="2">September 30 1947, |
Mark Feld (September 30 1947 – September 16 1977), better known as Marc Bolan, was a singer and songwriter for Tyrannosaurus Rex (later called T. Rex), from 1967 until his death in a car crash in Barnes, London, 1977. One of the original bands of the ‘underground’ scene, and mentored by John Peel, Tyrannosaurus Rex began as an acoustic duo performing simple melodic songs using surreal lyrics, rich with references to fantasy and mythology, but also history and modern society. By 1970 Marc increasingly experimented with electronic elements in his music, giving it a much 'rockier' feel. By the time he purchased a vintage Gibson Les Paul guitar the musical direction was set.
He along with producer Tony Visconti largely invented the style that would become glam rock. They restored a brash and exciting feeling to rock music, when bands had grown increasingly self-important. Known for his dynamic guitar style, catlike wail, and dark corkscrew hair, he was a major figure on the English rock music scene in the 1970s.
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Early life and career
The son of a Jewish van driver/caretaker, Bolan grew up in post-war Hackney in East London, and later lived in Wimbledon, south-west London. He fell in love with the rock and roll of Gene Vincent and Chuck Berry at an early age and became a Mod, hanging around coffee bars such as the 2 I's in Soho, which was featured in an early 1960s BBC documentary about Mods. He appeared in an episode of the television show Orlando as a Mod extra.
At the age of 9, Bolan received his first guitar, and began a skiffle band shortly after. From an early age, Marc was a rebel. He developed his famous love for Chuck Berry very early on, and was expelled from school at the age of 14. His rebellious streak came out in the wild hair and the often sexual lyrics of the early 1970s superstar.
He briefly became a model, then in early 1967 he joined the protopunk band John's Children, which achieved some success as a live band but sold few records. A John's Children single written by Marc Bolan called "Desdemona" might have had some chart success but was banned by the BBC for its line "lift up your skirt and fly". When the band dissolved, Bolan claimed to have spent time with a wizard in Paris who allegedly gave him secret knowledge and could levitate. The time spent with him was often alluded to but remained "mythical"; in reality the "Wizard" was probably US actor Riggs O'Hara, with whom Bolan made a trip to Paris in 1965. His songwriting took off, and he began writing many of the neo-romantic songs that would appear on his first albums with Tyrannosaurus Rex.
Tyrannosaurus Rex
Bolan used to busk his songs on the streets of London, earning enough money for the fare home. Eventually, he formed Tyrannosaurus Rex with percussionist Steve Peregrine Took and released three albums and four singles. Although commercial acclaim eluded them, the duo's early work received airplay and support from Radio 1 DJ John Peel. One of the highlights of this period was playing at the first free Hyde Park concert in 1968.
Musical and ethical differences led to Bolan sacking Took during their first US tour. Took, however, was contractually obliged to go through with the tour. Bolan replaced him with bongos player Mickey Finn, releasing two albums before shortening the band's name to T. Rex and replacing his acoustic guitar with an electric model in the process. Bolan married girlfriend June Child (former secretary to the manager of one of Bolan's idols, one-time Pink Floyd guitarist Syd Barrett) and was writing songs at home, hoping to find that first hit.
T. Rex and glam rock
This he did when, in 1970, he played for his wife a simple high-pitched four-verse tune called "Ride A White Swan". He then rang producer Tony Visconti to sort out a studio session. The single was recorded on 1 July 1970 and released that autumn, making slow progress in the UK Top 40 and finally peaking in early 1971 at Number 2. Bolan became a star for real.
With his corkscrew hair, boyish good looks, and cheekbones daubed with glitter, Bolan's emergence heralded the start of the glam rock era of British music, which also saw the rise of Bolan's longtime friend David Bowie.
Bolan's next single was a five-minute song called "Hot Love", complete with singalong chorus very much in the "Hey Jude" mould. It was Number 1 for six weeks and was quickly followed by "Get It On", a grittier, more adult tune that spent four weeks in the top spot. The song was renamed "Bang A Gong" when released in the U.S., to avoid confusion with another song of the same name by the American band Chase. The song was a smash in America, hitting the top ten.
By now, T. Rex had bassist Steve Currie and drummer Bill Legend completing the band. In November 1971, the band's record label, Fly, released the album track "Jeepster" without Bolan's prior permission. Outraged, Bolan took advantage of the timely lapsing of his Fly Records contact and left to EMI, who gave him his own record label, the T. Rex Wax Co. Its bag and label featured an iconic head-and-shoulders image of Marc.
In 1972, Bolan achieved two more Number 1s ("Telegram Sam" and "Metal Guru") and two more Number 2s, "Children Of The Revolution" and "Solid Gold Easy Action". The total of four Number 2 singles particularly galled his fans as three were held off the top spot by 'novelty' singles recorded by Clive Dunn, Benny Hill, and little Jimmy Osmond. In the same year he appeared in Ringo Starr's film Born to Boogie, a documentary showing T. Rex at the height of T. Rextasy during a concert at Wembley on 18 March 1972. Mixed in were surreal scenes shot at John Lennon's mansion in Ascot and a super-session with T. Rex joined by Ringo Starr on second drum kit, and Elton John on piano. At this time Marc was at height of his career and T. Rex record sales accounted for about 6% of total domestic record sales.
Decline
By 1973, his star gradually began to wane, even though he achieved a Number 3 hit with arguably his most famous tune to the next generation, "20th Century Boy."
The band disintegrated, and Bolan's marriage ended. He began an affair with singer Gloria Jones and disappeared for much of the next three years, continuing to release underwhelming singles and albums. However, he managed to score one more UK Top 20 hit per year until 1977. Around this time, the always sickly Bolan's health began to fail seriously as he put on weight and became addicted to cocaine.
Resurgence
Gloria gave birth to a baby boy in 1975, whom they called Rolan Bolan (although his birth certificate lists him as 'Rolan Seymour Feld'; compare David Bowie's son Zowie Bowie). Bolan then re-appeared in the public eye with a TV show called Marc, where he introduced new and established bands as well as performing his own songs. This was broadcast during the post-school hour on ITV earmarked for children and teenagers, becoming a big success. The last episode featured a Bolan duet with David Bowie.
Bolan got a new band together and set out on a comeback tour, taking along punk band The Damned as support, cleverly guaranteeing that a young audience who did not remember his heyday would come to the gigs.
Death
Bolan died on September 16th 1977, two weeks before his 30th birthday. He was a passenger in a purple Mini 1275 GT (number plate FOX 661L) driven by Gloria as they headed home from a drinking club and a restaurant. The car collided with a tree after spinning out of control in Queens Ride, Barnes Common, London. Bizarrely, Bolan's 1972 hit "Solid Gold Easy Action" contained the lyrics "Life is the same and it always will be, easy as picking foxes from a tree", almost a premonition of the number plate of the car he died in. For some of his fans, the tree now acts as a shrine to his memory and receives frequent visits from fans to this day. The site now forms the Bolan's Rock Shrine memorial, which is cared for on a charity basis by "T A G" (T. Rex Action Group). A bronze bust of Marc Bolan at the site commemorates the twenty-fifth anniversary of his death in 2002. The bust was unveiled by his son Rolan Bolan, and the event was attended by fans, friends, and colleagues, including Mickey Finn.
At Bolan's funeral, his coffin was covered in a swan-shaped floral tribute in recognition of his breakthrough hit single.
Paradoxically, Bolan neither drove a car nor possessed a driver's licence, a fact made even more astonishing because cars or automotive components are at least mentioned in, if not the subject of, many of his songs.
Legacy
"20th Century Boy" introduced a new generation of devotees to Bolan's work in 1991 when it was featured on a jeans TV commercial and was re-released, reaching the UK Top 20. In every decade since his death, Bolan has placed a greatest hits compilation in the top 20 UK albums, and periodic boosts in sales have come via cover versions from artists inspired by Bolan including Morrissey and Guns 'n Roses. His music is still widely used in films, a recent notable case being "Billy Elliot". Bolan is still cited by many guitar-centric bands as a huge influence. However, he always maintained he was a poet who put lyrics to music. The tunes were never as important as the words.
- "Bolan used to hang around in our office and sit on the floor, strumming his guitar, flirting with our secretary, June, who, of course, he later married. He was a great Syd fan. I was quite fond of him. He was a big pain in the arse, of course, very full of himself. I always liked that thing where he called himself the Bolan child, this magical, mythical name. It was really from his doorbell in Ladbroke Grove. It had his name, and our secretary's surname, Child, so it read Bolan Child and fans used to think, wow, he is the Bolan Child!" - Pink Floyd guitarist David Gilmour.
An altogether less welcome legacy for his friends and family is the on-going row about his fortune. Bolan had cleverly arranged a discretionary trust to safeguard his money. His death left the fortune beyond the reach of those closest to him, and both his family and journalists have taken an active interest in investigating the situation, so far with little result other than bringing the story to wider attention. Copyright in older recordings has allowed his son to begin to generate some income. However, the bulk of Bolan's fortune, variously estimated at between £20 and £30 million pounds (approx $38 - $57 million), remains in trust.
Bolan returned to the top of the UK charts in 2005 when the remastered, expanded Born to Boogie DVD hit number 1 in the Music DVD charts.
Influence
Bolan's music was a massive influence on punk rock and the 1990s Britpop movement. In fact, many acts claim, or are known, to have (allegedly) taken portions of T. Rex songs for use in "original" compositions. Notable examples include "Panic" by the Smiths (credited to Morrissey/Marr; core of the song is lifted from "Metal Guru"), "Me I Funk" by KMFDM takes the lyrics from "Ballrooms Of Mars", and "Cigarettes & Alcohol" by Oasis (credited to Noel Gallagher; allegedly plagiarizing "Get It On").
American acts of the late 1970s punk/New Wave genres, such as the Ramones ('The KKK Took My Baby Away' has a stolen guitar riff from 'Laser Love'), have also cited Bolan's music as a heavy influence.
Bands and performers that influenced Bolan
Bolan said in many interviews that he was persuaded to become a rock musician because of his love for Chuck Berry. However, he also cited Cliff Richard and Elvis Presley as major influences. He was also enamoured by later groups such as the Rolling Stones and Rod Stewart, as well as a love-hate fixation with Led Zeppelin, partially because of their overtly sexual images. Syd Barrett era Pink Floyd was also a significant influence on the eccentric Bolan's music and especially the lyrics.
However, debatably Bolan's biggest influence was Bob Dylan, whom he referenced in songs such as "Telegram Sam" and attributed the advent of modern pop songwriting to; "Melodies without words are very 'moon in June', they're very old fashion. Whereas a song with really good words and no melody is boring. So if you put the two together you get what Bob Dylan started with something like 'I Want You'" (Marc Bolan). The early "Mark Bowland" acoustic material and the image Bolan hawked around at the time (cloth cap, thrift store jacket etc) have Dylanesque overtones. Likewise, Bolan's airy electric-era voice is very akin to Bob Dylan's, and the narrative/literary qualities to Bolan's lyrics are also very reminicent of Dylan's. While Bolan was wearing feminine clothes in the Ladbroke Grove scene as early as Tyrannosaurus Rex, he started the "glam" craze when he decided on a whim to put some glitter around his eyes before performing on "Top of the Pops." Bolan drew certain parallels with Jim Morrison, but it is unknown whether Morrison was actually a significant influence.
Punk group Radio Stars (ironically featuring John's Children vocalist Andy Ellison) recorded a cover of "Desdemona" on the B-side to their 1978 top 40 song "Nervous Wreck".
Thanks to top-selling greatest hits compilations and single reissues, new fans (often the children of original fans) are discovering Bolan every day. Many first and second generation fans (plus even non-fans and music journalists etc) are calling for T. Rex's induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
There are many tribute bands and artists influenced by Marc's music: Danielz and T.Rextasy, Mickey Finn's T. Rex, and Lady Stardust and Veloci Raptor.
Trivia
- At the height of Bolan's popularity, he was reportedly selling 100,000 records a day. Oddly enough, none of his singles ever became million-sellers in the UK, despite many gold discs.
- Bolan's stage name possibly originated as a contraction of Bob Dylan's name or from an error on a Decca record label Mark Bowland. It is as likely to have been taken from James Bolam, the British actor with whom Marc shared a flat in the early 1960s.
- His son Rolan is also a musician, although he is yet to achieve a hit record in the US or UK.
- Apparently, speaking about the death of Elvis, Bolan said "I hope I don't die in the next month or so, because if I do, nobody will remember me". He died exactly one month after one of his childhood heroes. However, this could all be an urban legend concocted out of Bolan's Nostradamus-like predictions of his death.
- Also, Simon Napier-Bell, Bolan's first manager, claims in his book You Don't Have to Say You Love Me that he persuaded Bolan to join John's Children and then heard his star say "If I was to die in a car crash, it would have to be a Mini. I think I'd like that. It'd be nice". Napier-Bell claims that Marc was bisexual and slept with him himself [1]
Solo discography
- Singles
- "The Wizard" / "Beyond the Rising Sun" (November 1965)
- "The Third Degree" / "San Francisco Poet" (June 1966)
- "Hippy Gumbo" / "Misfit" (December 1966)
See also
- Blackhill Enterprises (Peter Jenner and Andrew King)
- David Bowie
- John's Children
- Simon Napier-Bell
- T. Rex
External links
- Website concerning the Marc Bolan/Ringo Starr Apple films 1972 movie, Born to Boogie.
- MarcBolan.net Marc Bolan and T-Rex chat room, lyrics, pictures, forum and more.
- website concerning Marc Bolan's TV and film appearances.
- Metal Guru.de, A Marc Bolan & T. Rex Tribute with News, History, Discography and much more...
- Marc-bolan.com, The official Marc Bolan fan club
- The ULTIMATE Bolan VideoDRAMA #II,Lyrics rare combination of six various Bolan sites into one
- Marc-bolan.org, an extensive fan page
- The Marc Bolan webring
- Marc Bolan at Internet Movie database
- T-Rex on Top of The Pops
- Website for the Official Tribute Band for Marc Bolan & T.Rex
| T. Rex |
| Marc Bolan • Mickey Finn • Steve Currie • Bill Legend |
| Steve Peregrin Took • Miller Anderson • Herbie Flowers • Jack Green • Gloria Jones • Davy Lutton • Tony Newman • Dino Dines |
| Discography |
| As Tyrannosaurus Rex: My People Were Fair and Had Sky in Their Hair... But Now They're Content to Wear Stars on Their Brows | Prophets, Seers & Sages – The Angels of the Ages | Unicorn | A Beard of Stars |
| As T. Rex: T. Rex | Electric Warrior | Bolan Boogie | The Slider | Tanx | Zinc Alloy and the Hidden Riders of Tomorrow | Light of Love | Bolan's Zip Gun | Futuristic Dragon | Dandy in the Underworld |
| Related articles |
| Born to Boogie • Blackhill Enterprises • Bolan's Rock Shrine • Marc (TV series) • Mickey Finn's T. Rex • Rolan Bolan |
| This box: view • • edit</span> |
Categories
1947 births | 1977 deaths | English rock singers | English male singers | English songwriters | Entertainers who died in a road accident | English Jews | People from Hackney | Peel Sessions artists | Road accident victims | English buskers
