From the video interview "Radical Elders" (2019). |
Multi-instrumentalist, lyricist, writer and poet, David John Tomlin (1934-2024) was a seminal figure of the British underground. A founder of Giant Sun Trolley with Glen Sweeney in 1967, a collaborator with the Third Ear Band on “Alchemy” (1969), he was a cultural and political agitator since the second half of the 1960s, after a militancy in trad jazz from the late 1950s with Bob Wallis' band. From 1976 to 1991 he directed a commune experience in the occupied Cambodian Embassy in London, rejuvenating the countercultural model of the legendary London Free University of the 60s (from where Syd Barrett's Pink Floyd, for example, became known).
Dave Tomlin (right) with Joe Gannon (left) announcing the Notting Hill Carnival, 1966. |
From the early 1990s he began a prolific writing activity, mainly in the online pages of the reborn International Times (read here), publishing several books of an autobiographical nature (e.g., on his experiences in India or chronicling his years at the occupied embassy), poetic, non-fiction with strong political and social characterization (such as the essay "Power Lines").
He acquainted me with the dramatic story of Mike Taylor, helping me with research (with his brother Tony) and the writing of his biography, with suggestions and revision of the text. In 2020 he collaborated on the book I wrote about Glen and the Third Ear Band by sending his memories and giving me this unpublished poem of his from 1967, I decided to use as the epigraph of the book:
"The Giant Sun Trolley is coming
League transversing it globally encircuits
Beneath the eversun
Where lances of pain
Become rays of warmth
Emanating mindwards and on
Till, reaching the epiphany
Of space and time
Flash in ozonic splendour
For Cosmic Man."
A true giant of the British counterculture and underground. Intelligent, sharp, witty, always on the right side of those who claim, especially today, the right to a better world.
From the video interview "Radical Elders" (2019). |
Since very little can be found about him on the internet, I repost here, updated, Dave's bibliography and discography already posted on this archive, willing to supplement or modify it if suggestions are received from you readers.
DISCOGRAPHY
. Third Ear Band – “Alchemy” (LP/CD – Harvest Records, UK 1969) Recorded at EMI Studios in 1969. Dave plays violin in one track composed by him, “Lark Rise”.
. High Tide –
“Ancient Gates” (CD - World Wide Records SPM-WWR-CD-0007, Germany 1990) Dave plays violin and keyboard on all the six album tracks.
. Hazchem – “Star Map Excursion” (CD - World Wide Records, Germany 1991) Dave composed two tracks for the album.
. Third Ear Band – “The Magus” (CD – Angel Air Records SJPCD173, UK 2004) Recorded in 1972. Dave plays bass guitar. He writes also the liner notes. A limited edition of 500 copies of 180 gr. vinyl was published in 2019 by Tiger Bay.
. The Bob Wallis & His New Storyville Jazzmen - "Vintage" (CD – Lake Records LACD280, 2010) Dave plays clarinet on some tracks recorded in London, in the Fifties.
. Various Artists – “Trad Dads, Dirty Boppers and Free Fusioneers: British Jazz 1960-1975” (CD – Reel Recordings RR026, UK 2012) Dave plays tenor saxophone on one track, “Phrygie”, recorded at Herne Bay Jazz Club in 1961 by the Mike Taylor Quintet.
. Mike Taylor Quartet – “Preparation” (CD/LP – Sunbeam Records, UK 2021) Recorded at 19 The Common, Ealing (Mike Taylor’s home) in September 1965. Dave plays soprano saxophone.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
"Tales from the Embassy" vol. 1 (Iconoclast Press, London 2002)
"Bluebirds" (Iconoclast Press, London 2004)
"Howling at the Moon" (Iconoclast Press, London 2004)
"India Song" (Iconoclast Press, London 2005)
"Tales from the Embassy" vol. 2 (Iconoclast Press, London 2006)
"The Collected Mister" (Iconoclast Press, London 2006)
"Into the Holy Land" (Iconoclast Press, London 2007) with Tony Jackson
"Tales from the Embassy" vol. 3 (Iconoclast Press, London 2008)
"A Hole in the Wind" (Iconoclast Press, London 2008)
"Harry Fainlight. From the notebooks. Posthumous pieces" (Iconoclast Press, London 2008)
"Harry Fainlight. Fragments of a lost voice" (Iconoclast Press, London 2008)
"Power Lines" (Iconoclast Press, UK 2012)
Dave in 1967. |