Hi Mark , it's certainly a small world !
Hi Giovanni,
"it's a small world" is understating it. I didn't know you knew John! John was the most influential person in my whole music career. If it wasn't for my chance meeting with him, I never would have gotten anywhere with music and would probably have ended up being a street-cleaner somewhere in Merry Olde England!
John encouraged me on the accordion, gave me my first job (in Richmond), my first British girl friend, my first musette accordion, etc. And the sad part was that he never knew he did so much for me......he was very busy with his own stuff. I telephoned him about 10 years ago to thank him for "changing my life around for the better," and......he didn't even remember me.
I'm guessing I know Andy. I DO remember Arthur Young, George Barton, Valentino and a host of others you probably know also.
You reminded me of WHO introduced me to French Musette music. It was John. He would play it effortlessly on this customized Sonola he had Arthur Young modify. I would sit there and listen to him for hours. One day he asked me if I wanted to buy that accordion for 200 Pounds. I jumped on it.....no second thoughts. I was the happiest man in the world at that point. The best French sounding accordion I ever had. I went everywhere with it. I still have it to this day sitting in my bedroom.
Funny event here.......John was dating (?) a dolly bird at the time who I thought was a knockout. Again...one day he says to me "would you like to take her off my hands?" Yes, was my answer. I did so for the next three months. You didn't have to ask me twice!
Then he was doing a German job in Richmond and he asked me to fill in for him. My first British gig and the start of my British music career.
I wonder today where I'd really be had I not met John. Trust me, wherever John is now (in the afterlife) he's kicking up a storm about something. He was a really colorful guy. We spent a lot of time together, but, in retrospect, not ENOUGH time!
I considered him my best friend (and mentor) for the longest time. I'm really sorry to hear about his passing. Didn't know much about his family as John was either very private or he just never had the time to talk about them.
Above all, Giovanni, I want to thank you for opening this topic up. It's been a wonderful trip for me down Memory Lane thinking about those days. And......they were darned GOOD days!
Oh yes, the method I'm always talking about. It was taught to me at 18 years of age by a world-renowned accordion player/composer that I was studying with. When I asked him WHY it worked, his answer was simple. He didn't know....it was taught to HIM. But he said the important thing is that it DID work, if done correctly. I since found out that it's the simplest thing in the world to do physically, but the hardest thing ever to understand it mentally. Once you do (and it took me YEARS) it's a cakewalk from there.
Your friend,
Mark