He
was the most charismatic man I’ve ever met. Even before he “made it,” he cut a
figure the length and breadth of Dublin. Phil Lynott was black, beautiful and
sported a gurrier accent that could peel the skin off a turnip.
In
the early days, Hendrix was his role model but I’m now reminded more of Johnny
Depp in Pirates of the Caribbean. Loping down O’Connell Street like some
psychedelic Pied Piper, he was usually trailed by a bunch of kids. His white
teeth gleamed in a perpetual smile and he winked or bade hello to anyone who
caught his eye.
I
knew him by repute before I ever laid eyes on him - his small triumphs on the
Dublin beat scene were trumpeted in Spotlight Magazine. His humiliations were
even more public: Skid Row broke up to get rid of him, then reformed without
him.
But
nothing could stop Philo – within months he’d mastered the bass and formed Thin
Lizzy. Soon thereafter, I met him.
On
good weeks Pierce Turner and I would treat ourselves to a curry in the Luna
Restaurant on O’Connell Street, a popular hangout for showband heads and
rockers. To our delight we were given a table right behind Phil and Eric Bell.
Eric
who? Oh, you know him well enough – you listen to guitarists emulate his lines
on Whiskey in the Jar damn near every time you enter an Irish bar.
I
can still recall Phil in the Luna declaiming, “we’re goin’ nowhere in Ireland,
man!” He was trying to convince a skeptical Eric that they should decamp for
England. They did and the rest is history.
Have
you any idea of what it was like to first hear Whiskey in the Jar explode out
of car radios and cloth covered transistors? Roll over Amhrán na bhFiann, we’d
just found our own national anthem – Eric’s overdriven guitar and Phil’s
cathartic voice took that old tune to places we’d never dreamed of.
Even
now when I play it on SiriusXM I’m struck by its sheer originality. It always
raises my spirits and shoots me back to a time when rock & roll was fresh
and adventurous and unaware of itself.
A couple of years later Eric quit
the band onstage in an orgy of smashed amps and overdriven dreams. I guess he
really hadn’t wanted to go to England.
It
took two guitarists to replace him but Lizzy stormed on. Phil used his
presence, voice and songwriting chops to propel them far beyond his Crumlin
roots. Their concerts were riotous mind-bending affairs, pulsing with life and
dicing with controlled chaos. You could almost touch the adrenaline – and it
wasn’t always natural.
Those
were the days when rockers lived on the jittery edge, forever on the road with
a costly album to promote, and another to write and record before they’d even
unpacked – everything speeded up in a crashing, burning, collapsing cycle. The
highs so high - a pity they couldn’t be bottled. And the lows, well, you don’t
want to go there.
Phil
was so intense onstage it almost hurt to watch him. He was living his dream and
he demanded 120% of those around him – 150% from himself. He knew the
difference between poise and posture, and dare any of his band-mates indulge
themselves. You could catch his curses and exhortations from the side of the
stage – never from the front. Every molecule had to be directed at the audience
– they’d paid good money, they deserved a show! It was the Dub working class
ethic colliding head on with the rock & roll dream.
The
band was not at its best the last time I saw him in NYC. New Wave was all the
rage, Graham Parker opened and, to the critics - if not the fans - Lizzy seemed
a trifle overbaked. Yet, back in the dressing room Phil was as ever polite,
welcoming and delighted to meet someone who “knew him back when.”
It
was like being hit with a hammer that Christmas Day in 1985 when the news of
his collapse spread, but I didn’t shed a tear. By then I’d learned the hard way
that you can’t trade tomorrow’s energy for tonight’s performance.
Still,
whenever I hear Whiskey in the Jar, I sit back, close my eyes and relive the
sheer exhilaration and Paddy pride of those days when Philo’s Dub accent
exploded through car radios and cloth-covered transistors like a tricolor
siren.
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