Jaco’s Influence: How Norman Watt-Roy Transformed Ian Dury’s Hit Me With Your Rhythm Stick

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“There was bass before Jaco and after​ Jaco; his playing​ turned my whole life around”: How Norman Watt-Roy brought a​ bit of Jaco to Ian Dury’s Hit Me With Your Rhythm Stick

Norman Watt-Roy, Ian Dury and the Blockheads, ⁢performing on stage, Alkmaar Pop Festival, AZ ‌67 Stadion, Alkmaar, Netherlands,‌ 17th June 1978.

(Image credit: Getty Images)

The influential reach of Jaco Pastorius is immeasurable, spanning generations of bassists in all corners of the globe, in a multitude of ‍musical styles. Just ‌a few weeks after seeing Jaco perform with Weather Report ​at ​London’s⁢ Hammersmith Odeon in‍ October 1978, Norman Watt-Roy found himself in the studio with Ian Dury & the Blockheads, suggesting a surging 16th-note bassline for Dury’s⁢ self-proclaimed ‍anti-violence song Hit Me With Your Rhythm Stick.

“In ⁣rehearsal, we had the tempo, the chords, and the eighth-note piano riff, ‌and having just seen Jaco, I⁢ got the ⁢idea to double up the bassline and ⁤play 16ths,” said Watt-Roy, who has been cited ⁣by everyone from Pino Palladino to Jamiroquai’s Paul Turner as a key influence.

“There was bass before Jaco and after Jaco;‍ his playing turned my whole life around by showing me ⁤that I have an orchestra in my hands.⁢ I first heard him⁣ on Weather Report’s Birdland, and then I found my way to his ​1976 solo album, but seeing him‌ live was‍ a whole other experience.”

Born in‌ Bombay, India, in 1951, Watt-Roy moved with his family to ⁣North London at age four. With the sounds of the Beatles and the Stones⁢ in⁣ his ears, he ​followed his older brother Garth, a lead guitarist, and began playing rhythm guitar at ten. ⁤When the bassist in his brother’s ​band “couldn’t take the blisters,” Garth suggested the 14-year-old Norman take over bass guitar duties, which he did, first ⁣on⁤ a Rosetti Hofner ⁣and then on a Fender Jazz Bass.

Inspired by Paul McCartney ‍and the Tamla/Motown rumble of James Jamerson – “because they always had a counter-melody going on ⁣in their basslines” – Watt-Roy got serious tutoring⁤ from Steve Miller’s lefty bassist, ⁢Gerald Johnson, while ​touring the U.S. in 1970. Making his‍ mark on vinyl back home, Watt-Roy formed the soul horn band Greatest Show On ‌Earth⁣ with his brother, joined Glencoe in 1972, and then ​formed Loving Awareness with drummer Charley⁣ Charles. ‍While doing a 1976 session with Charles, they ⁣met⁤ Ian Dury and Chaz Jankel, recorded the 1977 album New Boots and Panties!! and officially became the⁢ Blockheads.

Although the band fell under the new wave/punk ‍banner, the Blockheads incorporated other idioms⁣ into their singular sound, including funk, ‌reggae, jazz, disco, music hall, and Dury’s quasi-rap vocal style – all elements that can be found on Hit Me With Your Rhythm Stick.

Having rehearsed a week prior, where the tune was introduced, co-writers Dury (on scratch vocal) and Jankel on piano, drummer⁤ Charles ‌(playing to a Roland Beat Boxloop)

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