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Eric idol
 |
| Mike Hall |
In the 21st Century,
when even
lookalikes become
celebrities, how
does it feel still performing
another man's music after 23
years? Owen Amos
speaks to Mike Hall, of
tribute band Classic Clapton
GLASTONBURY acoustic tent, 2002. On
stage, a band play to six fans. That's
right: six fans. Mike Hall and his band
are up next. It doesn't bode well. "They
closed the curtains and we set up," says
Mike, from Durham. "We were ready to play and
they pulled back the curtains. There were 3,000
people there. It was a massive success. People knew
what they were going to get."
What they got was Eric Clapton. Well, his music
at least: Layla, Wonderful Tonight, Tears in
Heaven, and the rest. Mike and his band, After
Midnight, also known as Classic Clapton, are one
of Britain's longest-running tribute bands. In fact,
when they formed in 1985, the term 'tribute band'
didn't exist.
Celebrity is 21st Century currency. It is worth
millions. Imitation, done well, can be valuable too;
anything to catch crumbs from the celebrities'
table. Accordingly, tribute bands and lookalike
agencies are a modern boom industry. Fake Bands,
a tribute band agency, has clients like Coldplace (a
Coldplay tribute), Blackest Sabbath (have a guess)
and Oasist (no, not sure). Splitting Images, a
lookalikes agency, has doubles for everyone from
The Queen to Omid Djalili (give him a tenner and
he'll come himself).
But . back in 1985 . celebrity was less valuable
and less widespread.
"It started after Live Aid. Eric Clapton played
and was as good as ever," says Mike. "People
always came up to me and said 'Are you Eric
Clapton', because I looked like him. Unlike now,
there were no tribute bands then, except for the
Bootleg Beatles. We started partly because I was a
big fan of his music,
and partly because I
looked like him,
and it was extra
publicity for
the band.
"It mushroomed pretty quickly. At the time, the
fashion in North-East clubs was Motown and dance.
We came along and it was a breath of fresh air.
There were all these old hippies like myself who
hadn't heard this since the 60s and wanted to
again."
Mike is not a modern lookalike, he doesn't
desperately scour papers to see if Clapton has cut
his hair, or shaved his beard, or had a tattoo. "It's a
tribute to his music," says Mike. "Our fans like his
music . they don't think I'm Eric Clapton and I don't
think I'm Eric Clapton. Back then, people said I
looked like him, but it doesn't happen now. He has
changed his image, but I haven't changed mine to
match."
Mike, 56 . seven years younger than Clapton . was
a chartered surveyor until he retired in 1998. The
band pays well, he says, but not enough to live on.
Organising gigs and travelling mean they play only
30 a year, usually to a few
hundred fans. This
month, they've played in
Ebbw Vale, South Wales,
and are due in Masham,
North Yorkshire, tomorrow.
But it does get more glamorous
than Masham. Madrid, for example.
"We played in Madrid in January, we're
playing in Ukraine in July," says Mike.
"We've been to Estonia twice, toured
Ireland seven times, been to Wales,
Scotland, countless times."
As Mike candidly accepts, it
wouldn't have happened without
covering Clapton. "I have no talent
whatsoever when it comes to writing
original music," he says, bluntly. "I have
had a couple of attempts at it over the years. One,
I was no good at it. Two, I didn't enjoy it. Most local
musicians cover music . maybe 25 per cent write
their own. It's much more difficult. I admire
people who can do it, but it's not a talent I have."
He can't write like Clapton, but he can play
like him. The band . Vince Mason on drums,
John Forster on bass guitar and Paul Warren on
keyboards . have the sound spot on. Even that
opening riff in Layla. "The band knocked out
some tough numbers with aplomb," one review
declared. "Wonderful tonight," said another,
more predictably.
So has the County Durham Clapton ever met
his inspiration? "Twice," says Mike. "The first time,
in 1987, I went to the NEC with three mates to see
Clapton play solo. I'd had a good drink and my
friend said 'Bet you couldn't get in the VIP'. We
wound down the window at the entrance and they
guy said 'Come in'. From there, we went to the stage
door and the guy again invited us in. I said 'Sorry,
I'm not Eric Clapton', but security took me to see
him anyway. When I met him, his jaw dropped and
he stared at me. I was pretty drunk, so I left pretty
quickly."
A mutual friend . former Dire Straits keyboard
player Alan Clark, from Great Lumley, Durham .
introduced Mike to Eric a second time at the Albert
Hall. Alan, who toured with Clapton after leaving
Dire Straits, also provided Mike his favourite
Clapton momento, a signed Concorde menu, which
reads: "To Mike Hall. I've heard all about you man!
Best wishes, Eric Clapton." The menu is now
framed in Mike's house.
The band's set lasts two hours and promises all
Clapton's big hits, including a 20-minute unplugged
section. But does Mike ever get bored? Does, after
playing Layla for the thousandth time, he ever
think 'B***** this, I'm going to play Lucy In The Sky
With Diamonds'?
"You can get fed up and get fed up with the
travelling, but then five minutes in you get the same
buzz," says Mike. "You hear the crowd and you
realise it's all worthwhile. It's fantastic playing the
songs, because you're playing your favourite music
with great musicians.
"There have been a couple of times where I've
thought 'I can only do this for a couple more years'.
But I've known people who have tried to give up in
the past and a few months later they're back with
another band. There are guys who have given up,
you see them down the supermarket on a weekend
and they say 'I wish I was still playing'. It's like a
drug."
* Classic Clapton plays Masham Town Hall
tomorrow, 8pm . not Monday, as stated in this
week's 7Days. Tickets are available from
Masham Community Office on 01765-680200
(10am-3pm) or the Freemasons Arms,
Nosterfield, near Bedale. Or phone promoter
Shaun Whelan on 07850-000042. For more
information, see www.classic-clapton.com, or see
the band play at www.youtube.com/
classicclapton.
12:10pm Friday 9th May 2008
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