Royal Albert Hall 1973
At Roy Harper’s Royal Albert Hall concert I was lucky enough to get a seat near the action. Roy was at the peak of his powers and had packed the place out. It was an incredibly strong set with Roy having just brought out ‘Lifemask’. Who would have thought that the best moment of the show would come from an unexpected source?
Nick, looking nervous and wide-eyed, shuffled on to the stage. Roy beckoned him over and sat him on his lap. Nick looked round at the vast crowd and Roy was grinning and laughing with delight at showing him off. Together they sang a duet of Crosby, Stills and Nash’s ‘Our House’. It was so touchingly delightful it was a show-stealer and set the crowd roaring.
‘Royal Albert Hall 73 – I remember being very nervous. I suppose Roy kind of pushed me to do it. Although I was very nervous I thought I should and I did.’
‘It was me shouting Mr Nixon and Mr Heath when he plays Kangaroo Blues but that might have been at the Rainbow. The concerts get all mixed up.’
‘I walked on and sat on my dad’s lap and singing ‘Our House’ probably just a verse. I don’t remember leaving the stage or anything about it because I was really scared. There were all these hundreds of people looking at me. It was such a massive thing to have done that I’ve kept the moment in my memory. By then I’d been living in Wiltshire for three or four years so I guess I’d been developing that worship from afar. It was a good excuse for me to be with him. It was an iconic stage and a brilliant thing to have done. I’m grateful for him letting me do it.
‘I sang there with my daughter Lily 35 years later which was a nice moment. There were tears in the front row and we sang the same song that me and Dad had sung and she sang it beautifully. We stood on the very same spot. It is one of the highlights of my life.’
‘That song ‘Our House’ is an affirmation of a relationship.’
‘It’s each to his own, but I think that for me a solid foundation is a position of strength to go out in the world. Not everybody needs that, not everybody wants that, but I certainly do. All the joy in the world is twice as good when you share it with someone else. I don’t like doing things on my own as much. Everyone likes space and privacy with time to reflect. But sharing a view, sharing a journey is always better.’
‘I knew I was looking for someone at the age of ten. I was ready. I was looking for someone then. I could have taken that alternative and almost did for a year. Then realised that it wasn’t really me and snuffed out the rock ‘n’ roll gad-about and tried to live up to the ideals I sing about.’
Nick Harper: The Wilderness Years: Amazon.co.uk: Goodwin, Opher: 9781678850661: Books
