Pat Campbell’s album, Just a Quiet Conversation, is everything
a bad music enthusiast could hope for. Overwrought narration with folksy,
clip-cloppy Country and a good dose of God-bothering on the side. Just a Quiet
Conversation would spawn the classic single The Deal, which
almost made the UK Top 30 and has the honour of sitting alongside Red Sovine’s Teddy
Bear in the Kenny Everette-curated pantheon of bad records.
it’s Epic: an absolute masterpiece.
Pat Campbell had been a member of the '50s Irish harmony
group The Four Ramblers, together with a young Val Doonican. While Doonican
left for solo stardom, the group continued for a short while, releasing one 10”
album, The Emerald Isle, and a couple of singles before Pat gravitated
to the industry side of the music business, first as a DJ for Radio Luxembourg
(he’s there, presenting his own Late, Late Show in 1959) before becoming
involved in label management.
After
a stint working for Decca, where he oversaw the licensing and release of many
of the post-mortem Jim Reeves albums and singles (Reeves label, RCA, was a
subsidiary of Decca before setting up their stand-alone UK operation), by 1968 Pat was working for Phil Solomon’s Major-Minor
Records, an Irish record label based in north London that licensed a lot of its
material from abroad: we’ve already featured such horrors as the Equipe 84
single Auschwitz and Freddie “Parrotface” Davies’ Cynthia Crisp. While
at Major-Minor, Pat had recorded a couple of vocals for label mate Mike
Mercardo, a keyboard player known as 'The Swinging Monk', for his album The
Power and The Glory.
The Irish have always had a soft spot for Country & Western
music, and one of the artists Major-Minor was interested in was our old friend Red
Sovine. Major-Minor do not appear to have released any of Old Red’s albums here
in the UK (he was licensed to London for much of this period) although they may
have had a hand in promoting some concerts. Pat, it seems, became very
enamoured of Red’s storytelling style… which is where the inspiration for Just
a Quiet Conversation comes from.
Referencing his regular C&W slot on Radio Luxembourg, the
album’s sleeve notes wax lyrically about his credentials: “Pat Campbell was
born in Ireland, but it might just as well have been Nashville. He's been there
many times and he's welcomed as a friend by the biggest names in the world of
country music. On each visit he brings a little piece of Nashville home with
him, but also leaves a little of Pat Campbell there in return.” However, Pat’s
recitations are more Terry Wogan than truck driving man. Still, The Deal,
the first of two singles issued from Just A Quiet Conversation managed to
spend five weeks on the UK singles chart, peaking at a respectable number 31
shortly before Christmas 1969.
After his brief shot at pop chart immortality, Pat returned
to spinning discs for a living, rather than making them himself, eventually
working as a DJ for Radio Two, where he presented a show called Country
Style.
Sadly, Pat passed away in 2006. His family and friends remember
him as a happy man who was always pulling practical jokes. Perhaps Just A
Quiet Conversation was one of those. I’m sure he’d appreciate just how much
fun people are still having, listening to his album half a century after it was
recorded.
Here are a couple of tracks for you: Pat’s cover of Red
Sovine’s Giddy Up Go and his hit single, The Deal. If you like
this you can find the entire album, plus the two Swinging Monk tracks, at WFMU.
Enjoy!
Download Giddy HERE
Download Deal HERE