I have seen this tattooed hand through a ship port-hole,
Steaming on the watery main through the waves so cold,
Heard his tinkling banjo and his voice so grand
But you must come to Belgium to shake the tattooed hand
Donovan, "Epistle to Derroll"
On a snowy night in early 1965 my pregnant wife and I crossed the English Channel in search of the legendary banjoman, Derroll Adams. I was writing a story about Jack Elliott and needed his help. Elliott and Adams had combined their voices and stringed instruments together in the late 1950's to spread American folk and country music throughout England and on the continent, leaving a slew of guitar and banjo disciples in their wake. Elliott eventually returned to the U.S. where he consolidated his reputation as a unique performer, but Adams had stayed behind. His memories of their time together were important for my story.
We checked into a hotel and left a message at the Cafe Welkum just off the Grand Place in Brussels and that evening he came to get us. Tall and lanky, with a smooth gravely voice that could melt the coldest heart, Derroll regaled us with stories that went far beyond his adventurers with Jack and his spotty musical career. In the company of a couple of other singers, we traveled around the city that night from bar to bar, where they sang their songs for drinks and tips.
My story about Jack appeared in
Sing Out! in 1966 (reprinted as a blog post
here). Not long after our son was born, Derroll showed up at the door of our London flat. He looked terrible and was suffering from the DTs. He'd been asked to leave Belgium after a series of misadventures resulting from an excess of drink. We offered him our couch while he tried to sort out his next moves. During the several months he stayed with us, I tried to help him get back on his feet. Before long he found a few folk clubs that would give him work so long as he behaved. I told him about Donovan, a young singer I'd met at rehearsals for the TV show "Ready, Steady, Go," and Derroll soon got together with him, giving Don a direct line past the Dylan he'd been imitating to the original for both, Woody Guthrie whom Derroll had known in California. Derroll, Donovan and Dylan can be seen together in a scene from Dylan's film s"Don't Look Back." Derroll, unfortunately, is obviously drunk.
While Derroll was living with us, I took the opportunity to talk with him about his life. Drunk or sober, no one could tell a more fascinating story. Were they all true? Mostly. I put my notes together for
Sing Out! and the article was published in the December/November 1967 issue after we had returned to the United States. I have reprinted it below.
In 1972, after a few disastrous career decisions, I grabbed a fist-full of credit cards and took my family to Europe in an attempt to duplicate the success I'd had as a journalist in the 1960s. When nothing immediately materialized, we crossed the channel to visit Derroll in Antwerp. Since last seeing him, he'd met the amazing Danny Levy who had helped him to turn his life around. There was lots of work and plenty of adoring fans who loved his laid-back banjo style and the songs and stories that connected his own experience with traditional music in the U.S. Derroll had been invited to play a folk festival in Geneva and we decided to tag along, thanks to my ample credit. After a flight to Lyon, we rented a car and drove south to visit Derroll's ex-wife Izzy and their two children who were living on a farm in Ardeche. From there we drove through Van Gough country and along the Riviera, stopping in San Tropez for lunch. Spending the night in Nice, we flew the next day to Switzerland for the festival. I was pleased to see Derroll so happy and productive.
Working in the music business in the mid-1970s, I found myself at a party one night talking with John Stewart. I knew that Stewart while a member of the Kingston Trio had recorded Derroll's song, "Portland Town," and claimed copyright to it. He said he came across the song in
Sing Out! and assumed it was in the public domain, a rather lame excuse I thought. I wondered whether there were any royalties. Stewart told me he had sold the copyright to a Mafia-controlled music publishing company and that getting any money out of them for Derroll would be difficult. (An interesting account of this can be found
here.)
Four years later, Donovan invited Derroll to join him for three dates in the U.S., at clubs in New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco. It was his first visit back to the states and he was looking forward to getting together with his far-flung family in the northwest. Danny looked after their young daughter Rebecca. We joined them in Los Angeles where they played the Rainbow and in San Francisco at the Boarding House where Jack Elliott got together again with his old partner. And they stayed with us for a few days at our cabin in the Santa Cruz Mountains.
I'm sorry to say that this was my last contact with Derroll. It was the 1970s and men and women's liberation was the cultural norm in the left coastal California city where I lived. All his life Derroll had found people to pick up the pieces from the messes he had created who would forgive him because of the unique and talented performer that he was. My new wife and I were trying to live an egalitarian life style and I found myself critical of Derroll because of his dependency on Danny and his seeming helplessness outside of anything but his music.
Derroll died in 2000. On a trip to Europe in 2005 I went to Antwerp and spent the night in the two-storey house in shared with Danny, sleeping on the floor in his art studio. His art was amazing. I'd seen nothing of this side of him during our earlier meetings. I was also happy to learn of how fruitful and celebrated his final years in Belgium had been. There is a very good web site about Derroll's life
here, and much of his music is now available on YouTube.
The banjo player from Portland leaves a legacy that will not be forgotten. Here is my story from his early years.
The story of
Derroll Adams could begin with the year he arrived in Los Angeles with his
banjo in the early 1950's and met up with a group of younger, unknown singers
of folk music; among them Odetta, Guy Carawan and Frank Hamilton. His mist important friend for the story would
be Jack Elliott, for Jack and he became "rambling buddies." But
because Derroll has been an expatriate in Europe since 1957, he is little know
in America and his reputation in the U.S. has been made by the singers he met
in California, and by the people who have heard him and played with him in
Brussels and London. This reputation,
for one who has never met him or heard the records he recorded with Jack in
London and Milan, takes the appearance of a legend. He is a banjo player and singer in the
tradition of Bascom Lamar Lunsford, a creative musician who has evolved and
extremely personal style firmly rooted in country music. He is also an eccentric iconoclast, an unusual
character whose life dwarfs the creations in two-dimensional beatnik fiction.
This life,
with its heightened pleasures and tragedy, began long before he made his way to
Los Angeles where he became part of the World Folk Artists group. But because his life has provided the
platform for his music, which concerns us here, his story must begin earlier.
Derroll
Lerwis Thompson was born in Portland, Oregon the day after Thanksgiving in
1925, to Gertrude Tompson, whose ancestors had come to the northwest by covered
wagon from Arkansas, and her husband Tom, an ex-vaudeville juggler from Marine
who carved tombstones when he wasn't drunk.
His mother had been reading an adventure story about a Captain Derroll
just before his birth. She left Tom
because of his drinking and married Jack Glenn, a truck driver. But Jack beat Derroll with his belt buckle
and she left him. George Adams as a
tenant in the house where she went to live with Derroll and her mother. Adams, a salesman and inventor in his spare
time from Takoma, Washington, gave Derroll eight pennies for some candy and the
small boy persuaded his mother that here was a likely father prospect. They were married and Derroll took his
surname.
Much of
Derroll's childhood was spent in the back seat of a car. His step-father, after studying civil
engineering at night school, got a job on the Bonneville Dam power line. He took his family with him and when not
working they hired themselves out as fruit pickers throughout the
northwest. although Derroll's parents were
not musical, the car radio was always turned on and they liked to listen to
"Grand Ole Opry." Derroll fell
in love with the sound of a banjo.
"Although I'd never seen one before," he said, "I figured
out that it must have five strings." In the orchards he listened to the
other pickers sing, and his mother bought him a harmonica so he could make his
own music.
As a child,
Derroll thought he would like to be an airplane pilot or a criminal
lawyer. He also loved cowboys. Film star Buck Jones as his hero, as well as
Lefty Carson, an ex-cowboy who worked in a Portland clothing store in
full-dress. Kids at school called
Derroll "Tex" because he wore cowboy clothes. On a fruit-picking trip he acquired the habit
of chewing tobacco from some retired farmers outside a feed store. Perhaps he had his father's vaudeville blood,
because he loved to tell stories in front of his school class about his
family's travels, making true facts funny rather than inventing tall yarns. He took part in school plays, once as
Lincoln, and he imagined himself to be Maurice Chevalier. "I used to juggle money in my pocket,
just like he did, kiss women's hands, and dance down the street."
|
Jack and Derroll |
when the
Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, Derroll was sixteen and a typical adolescent who
was sick of home and in need of adventure.
Lying about his age, he joined the Army.
But his absence was reported to the police and broadcast over the radio. George Adams was summoned but agreed to let
him stay. Instead of overseas adventure,
Derroll laid mines of the Pacific coast from a converted ferry. Unexpectedly, he was give a minority
discharge after five months and sent home.
within the year, he married a school classmate and joined the Coast
Guard in San Francisco. There he was assigned to naval landing force and trained in judo,
deep-sea diving, bayoneting and knife fighting.
His destroyer was going overseas when its main shaft broke and the shift
headed back for coast duty.
In the Navy
Derroll shaved his head (they called him "moon") and began wearing an
ear ring. Although he spent much of his
time with sailors from the south, playing his harmonica with them and learning
their songs, he hated the Navy. Constant calls to battle stations made him
nervous and the teasing by his shipmates because of his religious beliefs
brought him to the edge of a nervous breakdown and finally pushed him
over. "My mother believed in Unity
and faith healing," he explained, "and I used to keep pin-up pictures
of Jesus in our car. Once I healed an
old woman by praying with her. I told
people I thought that God was love and everywhere, and that there wasn't any
heaven or hell, and they laughed at me." One night, Derroll took a knife
and went after a lieutenant who was particularly cruel. He was stopped in time but was sent to the
hospital on Treasure Island in San Francisco.
Once there he found he couldn't remember what bothered him and his
illness was diagnosed as "psychoneurosis anxiety."
"The
war reduced me," Derroll said. "I realized that I had to go out and kill
people, and that I might die. We didn't
do any fighting, but we always had to be prepared, and the tension was
terrible. I became afraid of everything. Before the war I'd lived in a cozy niche,
believing everything anybody told me.
But he war made me feel that the world was full of lies."
Derroll told
the doctors that he wanted to do nothing else but grow flowers and paint
pictures, so they released him with instructions to take it easy for a year and
"learn to laugh." He returned to Portland, became a father for the
first time, and enrolled at Museum Art School, an extension of Reed College.
"I'd decided to be an art teacher and teach the eskimos," he said.
|
Derroll and Pete Seeger |
Derroll
studied other things as well as art. He
joined the Vedanta Society, tried various drugs, kept his ear ring and grew a
beard, joined the Progressive Party to campaign for Henry Wallace, and held
Marxist classes at his studio. Most of
his time was taken up with the banjo, an ancient instrument which his mother
had bought from a blind lady to cheer him up on his return home. the first professional singer he heard was
Josh White, at a college concert, and he listened to records by bluegrass
groups and the Carter Family, as well as by Burl Ives, Roy Acuff, Pete Seeger,
Cousin Emmy, Woody Guthrie, Bascom Lunsford, Cisco Houston, Doc Boggs and Buell
Kazee. "I guess I was the first
banjo-playing folk singer in Oregon," Derroll said. "I didn't know
how to tune the thing and had to invent my own way. At first I sang the country songs I'd heard
when I was younger, but later I learned labor songs like Jim Garland's 'I Don't
Want your Millions, Mister,' and a parady of 'Little Brown Jung.' I went around
the state and sang in the grange halls for Wallace."
Pete
Seeger's was Derroll's first live influence on the banjo. At a party after a concert (where Seeger
"wowed" Derroll with his music), Seeger borrowed Derroll's banjo to
play. "There was a crowd of
wonderful people there," Seeger said, "and I remember having to
retune Derroll's banjo." Seeger told
Derroll that Garland, the ex-miner from Kentucky and singer of labor songs, had
a broom factory in Washington.
"I went
up to see Jim a couple of days later," Derroll said. "We became good
friends and sang around the area for Wallace together. He was a political hero for me because he'd
been at the Coal Creek strike. I
remember him telling about his sister, Aunt Molly Jackson, who 'sure was a
marryin' woman,' he said. He didn't like
my favorite singer, cousin Emmy. He
said: 'Just because she's got a bad voice, that doesn't mean she's any good.'
One summer I was hurt in a logging accident and stayed with Jim until I got
better. He gave me a job at his factory,
which made brooms to be sold by eh blind, and told everybody I was a disabled
veteran."
Derroll had
separated from his first wife, married again, became a father for the second
and third time, and parted from her. He
was jailed on a false charge of non-support but released on probation because
of his illness in the service. He found
that most of his friends, particularly his political comrades, had turned
against him, with a "serves him right" cold- shoulder. So with his
third wife he left Oregon for Mexico to study art at the university. when they arrived in San Diego they
discovered she was pregnant and there they remained.
"We
were on a health food kick then," said Derroll, "and decided to live
on the beach, close to the soil so the baby could absorb the good rays from the
earth. We found a strip of vacant sand
just north of Del Mar and set up our tent.
Pretty soon some of the race track crew settled there and we had a regular
little village." Derroll first worked as a spray painter for Lockheed,
after that as a dish washer, and later on a construction crew.
One night,
after seeing "The Thing" at a local theater, they stopped at a
spiritualist church on the way home, were told some startingly accurate facts,
and became interested in the subject.
"Just for fun, we decided to hold a seance on the beach to see if
we could fool some people. I was the
medium and tried to think like a medium would think. To my surprise and horror, I found out that
most of the things I said were right.
One man said to me: 'What kind of a monster are you?'" Derroll's
occult powers continued for several years until he tried to prove himself to
his skeptic mother-in-law and they vanished.
While living
in a trailer camp at Carlsbad one Christmas during the Korean War, Derroll was
hired by a taxi company to drive seven Marines back east for the holiday. "One night in Texas, going 120 miles an
hour, the car's light went out. But we
survived the crash with only a few bruises," he said. "The end of the trip was in Tampa,
Florida, where the hotel I stayed at turned out to be a whore house. On the way back, we were almost arrested in
Alabama because it was illegal to ferry people across the country without a
special license. But I told the police I
was driving wounded Marines and they let me go.
I made five hundred dollars for that trip and it allowed us to move to
Los Angeles.
Derroll,
then a father for the fourth time, worked at a succession of jobs, finally as
head truck driver for Max Factor. But he
wasn't much of a testiment for cosmetics, with his sandals, long hair and ear
ring. His face looked remarkably like Van
Heflin's. Derroll's partner on the truck
was Sid Berman and one day Berman was surprised to hear him whistling
"Pretty Polly." "He asked me if I knew anymore," Derroll
said, "and I told him, hell yah, and I play banjo to boot."
"Berman
brought Derroll up to meet us," said singer Weston Gavin. "We were a group of teenagers and people
in their middle 20s who were interested in folk music and had organized World
Folk Artists, a booking agency and guild.
Herbie Cohen helped run it with me and our entertainers included Frank
Hamilton, Odetta, Jo Mapes and Guy Caraway.
Derroll was different from the rest.
He was older, a painter, and didn't seem to be involved in politics,
like we were. He had a growling voice
like Lunsford and played his banjo very simply, like an old man looking back
over a spent existence with a mild eye.
He was like a gentle man who's hatting with you and at the same time
wondering how he'd pay his rent. And at that time Derroll was reading The
Journal of Albion Moonlight by Kenneth Patchen while we were stuck on Grapes
of Wrath."
|
Derroll & Jack in London |
Derroll
moved his family to Topanga Canyon not far from Will Geer, who as "the
Santa Clause of the L.A. folk scene," according to Gavin. He became a father for the fifth and sixth
time. Lord and Lady Buckley, and Bess
and Butch Hawes were a part of the Topanga Canyon group, and it was at Geer's
house that Derroll first met Jack Elliott, borrowing Bess' banjo to play a duet
on "Muleskinner Blues." Woody Guthrie showed up for a short while and
everyone helped him clear land in "Pretty Polly" canyon to build a
cabin that was never finished. There
Derroll also met James Dean and Cisco Houston.
|
Jack and Derroll in Paris |
Those were
productive years for Derroll. He sang at
concerts with the WFA; painted pornographic miniatures; studied Zen and Yoga;
composed stories for children about "Pony Bill Derroll," a
Bunyanesque character with huge six-shooters he could have draw out of their
holsters; and recoded his banjo for the Elmer Bernstein soundtrack of
"Durango," a western film starring the late Jeff Chandler. It was at
this time that he wrote "Portland Town," his most famous song. "I got the idea when I was living on the
beach. There was an old couple whose
only son had been killed in Korea and I sympathized with them because I had
left three children in Oregon I would never see again. Finally the music came to me and I sang the
song for Herbie Cohen and Frank Hamilton." Jack Elliott and Derroll had
become good friends, singing together and taking trips up and down the west
coast together. But Jack met June,
married (Derroll was best man and sang "Rich and ambling Boys" at the
wedding), and left for Europe. Derroll
got a job as a preacher. "I met someone who owned several faith-healing
churches. there was supposed to be a
master church but it didn't exist. I was hired as 'Dr. Adams' from the master
church, and I spoke on Sundays, usually for five minutes at ten dollars a
minute. But I always spoke the
truth. I never talked about God. I think I helped the people and they always
used to come up afterwards and shake my hand."
One
afternoon, Derroll went to see "An American in Paris" and, "I
knew I would see Paris soon," he said. Several days later he received a
letter from June Elliott asking him to join her and Jack in England, all expenses
paid. Derroll, who was separated from
his wife and children, arrived in New York just before the ship. left.
"I was
on the same ship with Big Bill Broonzy, but he was in first class and I never
saw him" Derroll said. "I met
up with a Gaelic-speaking sailor from the Outer Hebrides and a cockney chap
from London and we terrorized the ship.
I had holes in my pants and no underwear. The people thought I was a movie star because
nobody else could look that odd. I sang
hillbilly songs with a girl from Texas who played the guitar and one man
seriously said he was surprised that I didn't recite Shakespeare."
Shortly
after he arrived, Derroll and Jack were booked for a long engagement at the
posh Blue Angel night club in London.
They lived in a broken-down tenament called the "Yellow Door"
with Lionel Bart, who later wrote "Oliver," and Scots singer Alex
Campbell, who became Derroll's protege on the banjo. They recorded for Topic in London, and Jack,
June and Derroll toured Europe, street singing, and spent the summer in
Portofino. After recorded in Milan, they
separated. Derroll ended up on his knees
in a Catholic church in Pompeii, "my banjo broke, sick and hungry."
Somehow he got to Rome where a prostitute bought him food and got him a hotel
room. A magazine wrote a story about the
"cowboy" and he appeared on television. Back in Paris, he met and married the
daughter of an aristocrat who was also a baron and mayor of his village. Derroll and his new wife, Isabelle, were
forced to leave France by her family and went to Brussels. Because Isabelle had
decorated windows for Dior, they set up a decorating business for high
couturier fashion shops and within a few years were considered to be one of the
best in all Europe in their field.
|
Outside the Cafe Welkum |
Their business
thriving, Derroll gave up playing the banjo professionally, except at the
World's I
was tired of bumming and scrounging around on the road. The banjo hadn't given me any peace. It was always the banjo, never Derroll.
Several times in the past I'd smashed my banjo for that reason. When I was a kid I wanted to be in show
business, but after the war I was too afraid of people, of failure. In Los Angeles, I used to throw up before a
performance because I was so scared. But
whenever I'm scared of something, I have to keep trying. when we were successful in Brussels, though,
I didn't need to try any more." For six years, Derroll was a "back
porch musician," only playing the banjo at home or occasionally at the
Cafe Welkom on a tiny street in the old quarter of the city. "After all, all of us do our best
picking at home." Once he consented to play on television, in a review of
the events of the past year. He became a
father for the seventh and eighth time.
"I love Brussels," he said, "and really think of myself
as a Belgian."
Fair briefly when Jack came to town. "I'd gotten fed up with
playing in clubs to drunk audiences.
|
Tattooed hands |
But his
business failed and his marriage broke up.
Derroll bought a new banjo last year and came to London where he was
welcomed as a prodigal son. During the
years in Brussels, many folk singers had passed through to meet Derroll. One couple, Colin Wilke and Shirley Hart,
carried Derroll's stories and "Portland Street" throughout England
and Europe, creating a legend for him.
Derroll toured the British clubs and played in concerts, and he recorded
a record for a London company. But the
LP has never been released. Executives
at the company refused to beieve that lDerroll, with his cowboy hat, hip talk,
beard and ear ring, was for real.
"He must be a phoney," they reasoned.
|
Donovan and Derroll |
There is no end to this story. After the long
retirement, Derroll is playing his banjo again in top form. Although he would prefer to live on the farm
he and Isabelle bought in the south of France, "sitting and thinking,"
he realizes at the age of forty that playing the banjo is the only way he can
make a liing. "And I know now that
I do have something to say. It boils
down to just 'love one another,' and I think people are listening. Last year he
met Donovan, the British heir to Dylan's throne, and the two struck up a close
friendship. Frequently seen in the
neighborthood of Denmark Street, London's Tin Pan Alley, in his boots and
cowboy hat, Derroll knows all the pop entertainers and they think highly of
him. "People who argue about the
purity of folk music sicken me," he said. "I don't believe you should
sing a five-hundred-year-old song the way it was first sung. I've always liked all kinds of music;
country, even world war one songs, and pop music. Most of the folk kiddies today have pop
records at home. I believe it's
inevitable that pop and folk music will come together.
Pete Singer
believes "Derroll is the modern urban equivalent of the old-fashioned
mountain man who lived off in his cabin the way he wanted to, making the kind
of music he liked and saying, the heck with the rest of the world. There's a kind of stubborn honesty here which
people admire and it's no wonder that Derroll Adams has become something of a
legend while he's still a young man."
|
Derroll and Danny |
Not all
people admire Derroll's stubborn honesty.
Several clubs in the north of england have banned him beause he swore on
stage at a performance. And the legend
illuminates only the glamorous features of Derroll's life, ignoring the
unpleasant products of hard living, his trafic marriages, fatherless children,
and his long fight with alcoholism.
"One of these days I think I'll write a song about drinking,"
he said. "People put alcoholics
down and they shouldn't because it will only make them worse. I think alcoholics should be helped not to
worry about their problem. They should
only be encouraged to keep on fighting."
Derroll's
music career seems long, hard and complicated.
But to Derroll, only one thing need be said. "I've always loved the
banjo, loved the sound of it, loved to play it.
and when I play, whether to myself or before an audience, I always play
with my heart, soul and body."
Derroll sings "Portland Town" in 1973