Classic Rock

The Stories Behind The Songs

Mungo Jerry

- Words: Rob Hughes

A song that the band didn’t see as having potential as a single, In The Summertime became a worldwide hit that soundtrack­ed the summer of 1970.

The Hollywood Music Festival in May 1970 was packed with talent – a bill that included Traffic, Family, Colosseum, Free, Ginger Baker’s Air Force and Black Sabbath – but became known for two things in particular. Held on Staffordsh­ire farmland and attended by 35,000 people, it marked the UK live debut of the Grateful Dead. The other significan­t event was the appearance of a hitherto unknown band, Mungo Jerry, who would soon define the sound of that summer.

“We played late afternoon on the Saturday, just as the sun came out,” recalls banjo and jug player Paul King. “Ninety per cent of the audience were stoned, just lying around and smoking, all pretty lethargic. We went straight in with the harmonicas and the banjo, making a different noise to everybody else on the bill. The crowd all started getting up and clapping and dancing about. It was like someone had given them an electric shock. We went down an absolute storm. So much so that they asked us back the next day. That was really the start of it.”

Released on the eve of the festival, Mungo Jerry’s debut single In The Summertime raced to the top of the UK chart within a fortnight (ousting Christie’s Yellow River) and stayed there for seven weeks. In the meantime, Mungo Jerry were No.1 in 15 other countries across the globe, as well as going top three in the US. Sales of In The Summertime eventually peaked at 30 million. Only Bing Crosby’s White Christmas and Elton John’s 90s tribute to Diana, Candle In The Wind, have sold more copies.

It’s not difficult to see its appeal. In The Summertime is the ultimate feel-good anthem, a celebratio­n of carefree days and nights, guided by an unstoppabl­e melody and the buoyant tones of the song’s creator, Ray Dorset. It was the perfect summer release. It was also strikingly distinctiv­e. Mungo Jerry were more aligned to an oldtime jug band than any of their contempora­ries, blending elements of ragtime, skiffle and country with a set-up of banjo, guitars, piano and upright bass.

“We’d bring the house down wherever we played,” King asserts. “We were totally different. We didn’t have a drummer, so we were sat down, making our own percussion. Ray and I would be at the front, stamping our feet with great big boots on, Colin [Earl] was on honky-tonk piano, sometimes playing with his elbows, and Mike Cole’s double bass was an unusual sight. And I always took a flagon of cider on stage with me. When I’d finished drinking it I played the jug, so it was all very visual and hypnotic. It worked fantastica­lly live.”

Mungo Jerry still went by their original name, the Good Earth, when Pye Records signed them to Dawn, their newly formed progressiv­e label, in 1969. In-house producer/manager Barry Murray felt they needed something snappier.

“Ray suggested calling ourselves Ray Dorset & The Concordes, and Colin wanted White Lightning,” King remembers. “The management wanted the Incredible Sharks, which none of us liked. So I came up with Mungo Jerry from a poem in TS Eliot’s Old Possum’s Book Of Practical Cats, which mentions Mungojerri­e and Griddlebon­e [Macavity: The Mystery Cat]. I had a load of other names as well – including Duran Duran, would you believe – but everybody decided to go with Mungo Jerry.”

Their breakthrou­gh single was somewhat anomalous. Most of the band’s repertoire drew from rock’n’roll, blues and country. “None of our other songs were remotely akin to In The Summertime,” says King, who admits that the band didn’t see it as a potential hit. “Management wanted to put a single out, and I think we suggested Mighty Man, but Barry Murray disagreed: ‘I think we should go with In The Summertime, it’s quite catchy.’”

At under two minutes, the only problem was that it was too short. To mirror the song’s open-road theme, Dorset suggested adding the roar of a motorbike. When they couldn’t find one, studio engineer Howard Barrow provided the inspiratio­n.

“Howard went outside and revved up his MG sports car,” explains King, “then we recorded it and replayed the beginning of the song after the noise. So In The

Summertime is actually the same section spliced together, to make it last three and a half minutes.”

Radio North Sea Internatio­nal was the first station to pick up on the song, and the rest soon followed. Mungo Jerry’s crowdpleas­ing appearance at the Hollywood Festival helped it along its way, and momentum took care of the rest.

“We couldn’t believe it when it took off so quickly,” King marvels. “Six months earlier we’d failed an audition for [TV talent show] Opportunit­y Knocks, now we had a Number-One record that was outselling She Loves You by The Beatles. It hit us like an express train. We had no time to think. Our feet didn’t touch the ground after that.”

With his huge afro, ready grin and heroic sideburns, Dorset quickly became the identifiab­le symbol of ‘Mungomania’. The band were regulars on Top Of The Pops, scooped the Best New Band award in Melody Maker’s end-of-year poll, and embarked on a punishing schedule of touring, TV and recording that didn’t let up for the next two years.

In The Summertime’s lyrics may have been permissibl­e in 1970, but they’ve aged terribly. It’s exhortatio­n to ‘Have a drink, have a drive/Go out and see what you can find’ was later used for a TV ad campaign warning against the obvious dangers of drinking and driving. Meanwhile, the song’s roguish pursuit of women – ‘If her daddy’s rich take her out for a meal/If her daddy’s poor just do what you feel’ – is equally dubious.

“They’re not the sort of lyrics I would’ve written, speaking for myself,” offers King. “It’s quite crude: ‘You can make it/Make it good in a lay-by.’ If you think about it, the lyrics are really below the belt.”

On a musical level, however, In The Summertime retains its sparkle even after half a century.

“It’s the song that matters,” King concludes. “If you’re at home and it comes on the radio, it’s the beat and the energy that you hear. Mungo Jerry was a complete energy thing, especially at gigs, where we really went for it from start to finish. We were a good, honest country-blues band who got lucky with In The Summertime. And it just went haywire. It was crazy!”

“We were a good, honest country-blues band who got lucky with In The Summertime.

It just went haywire. It was crazy!”

Paul King’s new album A Baker’s Dozen is out now via Angel Air. Details at www.paulking.info/music

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? MUNGO-GO-GO! The phenomenal success of In The Summertime wasn’t easy for the band to handle. Mungo Jerry were suddenly sent all over the world by their paymasters, eager to maximise sales.
“The management got greedy,” recalls Paul King. “They were sending us everywhere, with no strategy at all. We didn’t even have time to record for about a year, because we were always on the road. In hindsight, we would’ve been much better off if we’d had a minor hit to begin with, so we’d know how to handle it all better. We would also have known where all the money was going. We were on one per cent royalties. But when someone puts a contract in front of you and tells you to sign it, you just do it. You don’t anticipate having a massive hit.”
MUNGO-GO-GO! The phenomenal success of In The Summertime wasn’t easy for the band to handle. Mungo Jerry were suddenly sent all over the world by their paymasters, eager to maximise sales. “The management got greedy,” recalls Paul King. “They were sending us everywhere, with no strategy at all. We didn’t even have time to record for about a year, because we were always on the road. In hindsight, we would’ve been much better off if we’d had a minor hit to begin with, so we’d know how to handle it all better. We would also have known where all the money was going. We were on one per cent royalties. But when someone puts a contract in front of you and tells you to sign it, you just do it. You don’t anticipate having a massive hit.”
 ??  ?? Mungo Jerry: laughing all the way to the top of the charts,
but sadly not to the bank.
THE FACTS RELEASE DATE Release Date: May 22, 1970
HIGHEST CHART POSITION UK No.1 US No.3
PERSONNEL Ray Dorset Vocals, electric and acoustic guitar, cabasa Paul King Banjo, jug Colin Earl Piano Mike Cole Upright bass WRITTEN BY
Ray Dorset
PRODUCED BY
Barry Murray
LABEL
Dawn
Mungo Jerry: laughing all the way to the top of the charts, but sadly not to the bank. THE FACTS RELEASE DATE Release Date: May 22, 1970 HIGHEST CHART POSITION UK No.1 US No.3 PERSONNEL Ray Dorset Vocals, electric and acoustic guitar, cabasa Paul King Banjo, jug Colin Earl Piano Mike Cole Upright bass WRITTEN BY Ray Dorset PRODUCED BY Barry Murray LABEL Dawn

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom