Autobiography
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Another sneak
preview of Emo's Autobiography"Pictures Of An Exhibitionist"that he is still
writing. Hasn't he finished that damn book yet?
This extract involves the importance of insuring one's equipment.Willie
Robertson of the London firm Robertson-Taylor had that task... Read on.
There are too many
anecdotes involving myself and Willie Robertson but I've singled out one. Around
the early '80's I had seen the picture of a fox in a suburban London newspaper.
It had apparently been found lonely and forlorn on a patch of land, shrinking
away from the bustling London traffic. As the animal was normally associated
with habiting rural areas it was considered, by the person that had found it, to
be a tame fox. That person had taken the poor animal back to his flat in
Wimbledon and phoned his local paper that promptly put out a plea. "Could anyone
offer this poor tame animal a good home?"
Being an animal lover who at the time owned a seven acre estate in the Sussex
countryside I respond, phoning the paper.
"We've already had 6 calls. Can you give us details about who you are, where you
live?", they asked."Yes my name is Keith Emerson, I have a 7 acre estate in
Chiddingly, East Sussex.I'd love to care for the fox and give it a good home."
"Thank You. We'll get back to you". Five minutes later the editor of the paper
phoned me. "Are you "The Emerson" of Emerson, Lake & Palmer? "The very one."
"Great! We'd love to do a story on this. Here's the address....... can you pick
the fox up tomorrow?'
"Yeah! No Problem". As I hung up the phone I suddenly remembered that I had a
lunch appointment with Willie the next day,in the very exclusive, "Mortons" of
Berkeley Square. The next morning I drove up to London in my Morgan Plus 8, 2
seater sports car and finding the address the newspaper had given me, made my
way up through the graffiti scrawled staircase of a block of flats. I was shown
into a small living room and there, chained to a sofa was the fox.
"Why is he chained up? I thought he was tame!" "He's just a bit nervous." But as
he encouraged the animal into a large grocery box for shipment I noticed a set
of very large incisors. I appreciated the impressive array and hoped that the
exhibition was just another sign of nervousness. "I call him Roger. 'Roger the
Fox', but now you've got him, you can call him anything you want!" I looked
again at the large canine teeth that were trying to gnaw away at the cardboard.
"No, Roger's a very nice name." I said lamely. And with that I carried the box
down and into my two-seater sports car to continue my journey into London. I
parked the Morgan, gingerly lifted the grocery box out and carried it into
Willie's Bruton Street office. "My Dear Old Cigar! What have we got here?" "It's
a fox". I said proudly revealing the contents. Willie's expression changed,
giving the contents the look a fish gets that's way past it's sell date. The
contents of the box was not too impressed with Willie either and flashed its set
of ivory gnashers to prove several points all at once. "His name's Roger, don't
worry, he's had a bit of a rough journey in my sports car. If we leave him alone
for a bit he'll be right as rain". And with that I upturned the box, dumping
Roger on the luxurious carpet of Willie's office. Willie gave the situation the
required distance called for; somewhere outside his office door and the quickest
exit into Bruton Street as I tethered Roger to his office table. As we left for
'serious beakers and num nums' at nearby Mortons I assured the secretary that as
long as Roger had a bowl of water and the occasional live chicken there should
not be too much of a problem. It was a long lunch-hour, during which we
discussed all the things that could go wrong in the awful, traumatic world of
rock and roll and how to insure against them, whilst downing vast quantities of
Pinot Grigio. Making our merry way back into the office 2 hours later Willie's
secretary swept by us muttering something about 'having had it'. It may have
been the unfamiliar smell of wild animal feces that struck a home run up our
nostrils first. It didn't exactly have the play-off aroma of a domestic animal,
more the bitter-sweet twang of wild life played out in the theatre of defiant
captivity while two humans had gotten shit-faced. Roger looked a lot happier now
that he'd relieved himself of everything he'd eaten over the last few days.
Rather like an M.C. Escher drawing, Willie's office table seemed to defy gravity
by remaining standing on only three legs. Roger had the fourth one in his mouth.
I thought it best to let him keep it. "Oh My!" exclaimed Willie. surveying a sea
of destruction normally reserved for the likes of Led Zeppelin. "Sorry 'bout
this." I said trying to load Roger into what was left of the grocery box.
"Oh My!" exclaimed Willie again, having noticed the telephone wires had been
chewed up, "I need a serious beaker."
"Mind if I join you?" "Oh My! Silly not too. One for the stairs my dear boy!"
The journey back to Sussex was further complicated by Rogers insistence to keep
poking his head up to see where he was. Rather than risk getting my hand bitten
off I let him enjoy the passing scenery. It wasn't everyday you could see a long
haired rock-person driving a two-seater sports car with a fox as a passenger. I
was normally the first away from the traffic light; the other drivers on the
road too stunned to drive. I finally made it home and tried to make Roger as
comfortable as possible in my barn studio. The next morning Roger had trashed it
in much the same fashion as Willie's office and I began having serious doubts as
to the creatures domesticity. He finally ran away after biting me clean through
my finger, audibly popping the finger nail. It was probably best, but I did
worry whenever there was a fox-hunt in the area and I hoped Roger gave the
red-coated brigade a good run for their money.
Courtesy of The Official Keith Emerson Website