Calypso to Collapso

Nonfiction

eAudiobook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Independently Published, 2025
Made available through hoopla
EDITION
Unabridged
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource (1 audio file (7hr., 46 min.)) : digital

ISBN/ISSN
9781834070292 MWT17810224, 1834070295 17810224
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Read by Geoffrey Giuliano, Steve Galbraith

Vivian Stanshall the quintessential pop hero first shot to fame in 1968 in the Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band. Viv was well known too for his ribald tales of the upper-class Rawlinsons and Maynards who were the bees' knees for anyone with a warped sense of humor. Born in 1943 in Oxfordshire, his family settled in the coastal town of Leigh-on-Sea. After being a bingo-caller to painting fairground attractions (with a spell in the merchant navy), Stanshall enrolled at London's Central School of Art and Design. It was there in 1962, he met Roger Ruskin Spear, Rodney Slater, Larry Smith, and Neil Innes and formed the Bonzo Dog Band. They appeared in the Beatles ' Magical Mystery Tour' movie in 1967, and enjoyed an off-kilter Top 10 hit with ̀I'm The Urban Spaceman' a year later, After the Bonzo's split in early 1970 (LPs: ̀Gorilla', ̀The Doughnut In Granny's Greenhouse', ̀Tadpoles' and ̀Keynsham'), Viv explored his unique musical madness on several smashing LPs' and 45s. As contractual duties led Viv back to the Bonzos to 1972's 'Let's Make Up And Be Friendly' - showcasing the sophisticated, spoken-wordsmith's introduction to Sir Henry, via ̀Rawlinson End'. Thinking Mike Oldfield's titanic ̀Tubular Bells' would never be the success it became, Stanshall's MC-sonic word-play was an essential ingredient. He never got paid. Having divorced his first wife in 1975, he settled down with American Pamela ̀Ki' Longfellow in their houseboat (the Searchlight). There on the towpath, Stanshall became almost hopelessly addicted to drink, and especially valium though he continued to work. Vivian tragically passed away on March 5, 1995, in a London flat fire at the age of 51. The fire was believed to have been started by a discarded cigarette, and Stanshall, living alone at the time, died from smoke inhalation. His death was a shocking loss to the world of music and the avant-garde

Mode of access: World Wide Web

Additional Credits