By the time Nick had completed his schooldays at Marlborough and was back at home in Tanworth in the early summer of 1966, The Beatles had released Revolver and Dylan unleashed Blonde On Blonde. Hazy and impenetrable as ‘Tomorrow Never Knows’ and ‘Sad Eyed Lady Of The Lowlands’ might be, they were the writing on the wall. Back at Far Leys again, Nick practised the guitar, sitting for hours in his bedroom or downstairs in the living room, endlessly tuning and retuning his guitar, formulating a style which would become his own, lost in a reverie of sorts.
There was more than a year to fill before he would go up to Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge, in the autumn of 1967. In the limbo between school and university, his friends were still those he had made at Marlborough, and it was to them that Nick looked to occupy the time. With his newly acquired driving licence, a tent and Molly’s quaint little Morris Minor, Nick and three friends set off for France in July 1966.
One of Nick’s companions was Michael Maclaran, who has clear memories of their journey: ‘Driving a heavily laden and underpowered car was a nightmare, and included such dramas as losing both wing mirrors at once in a head-on near-collision and scraping the entire contents of a traffic island in our path as we ploughed on, wheels locked. At least the Morris’s suspension was up to anything. After many weeks the car finally broke down nearing the top of a climb towards Grenoble. Short of mechanical skills, we stared under the bonnet. Someone spotted a broken spring, which was miraculously replaced by an identical one from a nearby piece of farm machinery.’
The hours Nick had devoted to learning the guitar had been well spent, for contemporaries began to notice just how proficient he had become on the instrument. ‘Wherever we went, the evenings were often the same with groups of people gathering around bonfires under the stars, on beaches, in woods or at camp-sites, to hear Nick sing and play his guitar,’ Michael Maclaran remembered. ‘The venues included Remoulins, near the Pont du Gard, where we stayed with some of Nick’s friends … They took us to the bullfight in Nîmes, but only after we had read Hemingway’s vital work on the topic. There we hit a spectacular candlelight “Quatorze juillet” party in the woods, which was a two-day hangover. And at St Tropez, amongst the luxury yachts and private beaches, it was often getting light by the time last night’s party was ending, and Nick would still be strumming away.
‘Nick was a performer and yet despite the many people who would gather, most of them well lubricated, the sessions never became raucous singalongs; he didn’t play to the crowd. Every string of his guitar seemed to be playing a complementary tune and his repeating melodies cast a mesmerizing spell. Very few left early for home.’
It was all quite idyllic – to be young and sleep under the stars in France on Bastille Day. To read Hemingway’s Death In The Afternoon and The Sun Also Rises, and then to witness the bullfights of which the grumpy old master had written. St Tropez, made popular by Brigitte Bardot, was the premier summer vacation spot for the demi-monde. As millionaires’ yachts bobbed in the tiny harbour, and the jet set sought their pleasures in the bars and boutiques, Nick and his three friends chitty-chitty-bang-banged their way along the French coast in Molly Drake’s quintessentially English Morris Minor.
Jeremy Mason was in France that summer too: ‘The year we left Marlborough, in the summer, Nick came down to France with his guitar. My parents had this house near the Pont du Gard, near Nîmes.’ The faded colour photos of Nick during that holiday, taken near Nîmes, show a group of ghostly-white, almost transparent English schoolboys; the jet-blackness of their ubiquitous sunglasses only emphasizing the paleness of their flesh.
Provincial France was lagging a long way behind the perceived coolness of Britain and America, but it was, nevertheless, an awfully big adventure for English visitors only a few weeks out of school uniform. Jeremy Mason: ‘In those days, the tradition was to walk to the main road, which was about a mile away. Very old-fashioned, 1966 Provence, and every evening all the young of the village used to walk to the main road.
‘Nick was a great hit. We used to sit on a wall at a junction of the roads, and Nick would play, and I remember them all singing along – “Michael Row The Boat Ashore”, “House Of The Rising Sun” – all that sort of singalong folk stuff … None of us spoke French terribly well, but there was a bond formed, so much so that we were asked to an enormous village fête. It consisted of long trestle-tables, where Nick and I were persuaded to drink pastis without any water in it, which we duly did. We got so drunk, we ended up running along the tops of the tables and jumping into strange people’s arms.
‘We asked them all back to the house. I’d said: “Come back and have a drink; Nick will play his guitar some more.” But my mother came downstairs to shoo them all away … She said: “I could hear this cacophony of sound approaching, led by you and Nick.” ’
Another conversation with his mother — one that he and Nick had one night towards the end of their holiday in France – stuck in Jeremy’s mind: ‘That’s when drugs came up: I don’t think any of us had anything to do with drugs at that time … But Nick sort of said: “Oh, well, you know, it’s one of those things one tries …” And I remember a conversation we had with my mother, after dinner, doing the washing-up. My mother got quite cross, and it’s always been a source of some irony. Nick was effectively saying it was all right to try drugs … This was the summer of 1966, long before The Beatles admitted to taking LSD or anything. It was obviously discussed, but as far as I know, there were no drugs at school at all. We were just into Disque Bleu cigarettes.’
Dylan may have been advising that ‘everybody must get stoned’, but drugs and rock ’n ’roll weren’t yet the close companions they would soon become. Being busted for drugs still spelt the end of a career, even for a pop star. The Beatles were still cuddly boy-next-door mop-tops with MBEs. Even The Rolling Stones were deemed largely harmless, rebellious perhaps, but not corrupters of youth via the demon drugs. Most teenagers’ knowledge of drugs was limited to the mescaline trips recounted by Aldous Huxley in The Doors Of Perception. LSD was still legal, but the most widely acknowledged drug song was Peter, Paul & Mary’s whimsical ‘Puff The Magic Dragon’.
On his return from France in the autumn of 1966, Nick spent a short time in Tanworth before setting off for London to stay with his sister, Gabrielle. It was the year when Time magazine officially declared London ‘Swinging’, England had just won the World Cup, and we all lived in a yellow submarine. Anything, and everything, suddenly seemed possible.
David Wright, Nick’s close friend from Marlborough, was also in London at this time: ‘I think he came to London at the same time as me, October ’66 … I remember him telling me how the night before he first came down to London, his parents had taken him aside for a pep talk about drugs, and he found it hilariously funny that within twenty-four hours of arriving in Chelsea he was sitting in this flat rolling up a joint.’
Nick’s time in London that year was brief. He was back at Far Leys for Christmas, and shortly afterwards set off on his most important trip to France. In January 1967, accompanied by his Marlborough friends Simon Crocker and Jeremy Mason, Nick travelled across the Channel, nominally to improve his French. Simon Crocker: ‘Nick’s parents had always got on well with my parents, and I was being sent to Aix-en-Provence to university, and when they heard this they were casting around for something for Nick to do, and basically Nick said: “Oh God, they want to do something with me. Shall I come to Aix?” And then, when Nick was going, Jeremy said: “Oh well, I’ll come as well.”
‘We caught the train from Victoria. Nick had come down to London a couple of days before and was staying in a flat near Knightsbridge with a guy called Mike Hacking, who was one of the real cool cats at school. He was about a year ahead of us, and it’s that time when a year is very important, and he wore a big old leather overcoat and he had an older girlfriend. We got on the train and … thought, what the hell are we doing? We had nowhere to live … we were booked into the Faculty of Foreign Students at the University of Aix-Marseilles, and that was it. None of us had ever really been away that much. We were relatively unworldly. It was a really big adventure for us.’
It was the year of flower power and the Summer of Love, and Nick spent the first four months of 1967 deep on the South Coast of France, nestling next to the Mediterranean, with the enticing coast of North Africa just a boat ride away. There were other distractions too, as Jeremy Mason remembers: ‘We were going to the Foreign University at Aix. I was by now deeply in love with a frightfully unsuitable girl, and that probably had something to do with why I didn’t follow Nick down one or two paths. We got to Aix, and our parents, for some extraordinary reason, had not fixed up anywhere for us to stay. They had been told that once we got to the university it would all be arranged. We went to the university, and they were completely uninterested … They fixed us up for three nights with a family. Simon and I were in one room, and Nick had to stay with a granny in a flat down at the end of the road.’
To be young, free and single in 1967 was exhilarating. Nick, Jeremy and Simon, with no great inclination to attend lectures, enjoyed a freewheeling lifestyle in tune with the times. Aix was as good a place as any to spend the first, faltering months of the year which would alter everything. Jeremy remembers going to one lecture: ‘On French colonial life or something. We then got a flat in a part of town that is now very, very chic it was just off the Place Vendôme, which is the centre of Aix. They let us use these flats because the block wasn’t finished, so we were able to rent them cheaply. They were beautiful apartments … Nick and I shared a room. So we went and bought a gramophone, I bought some pictures for the wall, stuck up some postcards and proceeded to try and exist.
‘It was an odd place, quite a lot of rich people. Somebody who was there with us was a chap called Roddy Llewellyn, who’s become quite well known for having a fling with Princess Margaret. He was the only one with a car. We went to the odd club, but there was always an undercurrent, because Aix has quite an Arab population, and there were always slight problems in the nightclubs with the Arabs at that time – very minor, teenage stuff really, but there had been one or two quite nasty incidents. We appeared to spend a great deal of our time playing pinball at a café called Deux Garçons. We didn’t really do anything. We slept a great deal of the time. I took up drawing, which I still do.’
Simon Crocker: ‘The idea was to go and learn French, which was the last thing we did. Nick spoke better French than us. There was a £50 limit, which was all you could take outside the sterling area. Aix at that time had a really strange, mixed bunch of people … The English gravitated to each other, and this guy’s parents had a house in St Tropez, and we went there and just busked. All we did was play twelve-bar blues. Nick used to play instrumentals.’
To hone his playing and to earn a few extra francs, Nick would busk with his guitar around the cafés in the centre of Aix. Jeremy acted as ‘bag man’: ‘He played, and I collected the money. I don’t remember what he played, and it may only have been a few times … It was a funny time, a mixture of a nightmare time and an interesting time … We spent a lot of time in this smart café eating other people’s bread; we never appeared to have any money …’
Nick persevered with his guitar-playing, and while in Aix took the first serious steps towards writing his own songs. Among his earliest known compositions were ‘Birds Flew By’ – which he never lived to record — ‘Time Of No Reply’ and ‘Strange Meeting II’, both of which appeared posthumously.
‘I certainly don’t remember Nick writing anything at Marlborough,’ says Simon Crocker. ‘We did instrumental stuff, but they were tied on to blues things. I do remember him writing in Aix, because I can clearly remember holding a microphone while he sang into the tape recorder … It was when we went to Jeremy’s parents’ house, which was somewhere near Avignon, that I became really conscious of him writing his own songs. I remember that weekend was certainly the first time we recorded some of his songs — Jeremy did have that tape, but lent it to somebody and it got lost — and they were certainly the basis of two songs on Five Leaves Left. I wouldn’t swear to it, but I’m pretty sure “Time Has Told Me” was one of them.
‘That was the first time one became aware that he was, you know, a songwriter … It wasn’t surprising, but one was surprised at how good they were. Up until then we’d all been doing cover versions, just mucking around, and here was Nick obviously doing something seriously.
‘I don’t remember him ever talking about writing songs. My memory is that it was just something he did … He was there, playing all the time … it was just one of those things: “Oh, Nick’s done a song. It’s rather good. Let’s hope he’s got another one.” I never really thought of asking him about them. I don’t think he had any specific plan about what he was going to do with them. I don’t think he thought that someone from his kind of background would necessarily go on and make it his career.’
Hitching back to Aix from his parents’ house in Avignon, proved a difficult journey for Jeremy: ‘Nick and I stood outside Avignon for about four hours, getting no lifts whatsoever. He said: “The only thing to do is split up — nobody’s going to pick the two of us up. You go first and I’ll sit on the other side of the road.” It was a nightmare. I was picked up twice by homosexuals, one of whom I had to escape by getting out while the car was moving … and as I picked myself up, Nick went by, with a bird in an open-top car, with the guitar stuck in the back.’
Back in Aix in one piece, and desperate for cheap entertainment, Jeremy remembers that a seance was suggested: ‘Childishly, we had a very big session, which Nick did get very involved in. He got carried away by this and discovered something from the table-turning … some uncle he didn’t know existed. He actually rang his parents from a café — which in those days took three hours — to ask, did this uncle exist? Why did I not know about him? He became very involved with that, and went off and did it with other people as well. But they had an incident which frightened him off, and he stopped.’
Simon noticed a gradual change in Nick while they were together in Aix: always shy, he seemed to grow even more contemplative in France during the first months of 1967. ‘I don’t remember him becoming moody or difficult … He became more serious I think, and to a degree lost some of his light-heartedness. But that is partly because, in the English crowd there, there were some guys who burned the candle at both ends, and Nick was quite taken with them, I think. They were the well-cool cats, the Chelsea kids, sons of rich Chelsea people. They were pretty hip … There was a kind of split in Aix … and Nick did get sucked into the slipstream. And certainly, yes, that was the camp where there were more drugs. I don’t think there were any excessive … it was recreational. I don’t know, but it wouldn’t surprise me if there had been acid around.’
After three months the holiday was coming to a close, and Jeremy feels sure that towards the end of this period a sea change took place in Nick: ‘While I waited for this girl to come down from England, which was the disaster of my life, Nick decided to go to Morocco. I’m not quite sure who he went with, but I think it was a Swedish chap who I met in London … And Nick disappeared for two, three, maybe four weeks … Then he came back, and I think he was much more drug-orientated … We had an old guitar he smashed up and set light to, and he hung it from the ceiling and looked it at it like “Wow, man!” ’
Marrakesh was an oasis of liberation for European visitors. Joe Orton was infamously attracted to the city by the Arabs’ relaxed attitude to homosexuality, while the easy availability of kif drew busloads of hippies keen to score some dope. Jeremy is convinced that in Marrakesh Nick fell in with The Rolling Stones and their party. Mick Jagger, Keith Richards and Brian Jones were certainly in Morocco in March 1967, which fits in with Jeremy’s timescale. In Tangiers, The Stones stayed at the El Minzah Hotel, where the pale, gaunt forms of Jagger and Richards were lovingly photographed by Cecil Beaton. The Stones’ party on that turbulent trip also included Anita Pallenberg – who arrived with Brian Jones and left with Keith Richards, Marianne Faithfull and art dealers Robert Fraser and Christopher Gibbs, who had been busted along with Mick and Keith at Redlands, Keith’s Sussex home, on 12 February.
‘I’m pretty sure Nick did take LSD,’ Jeremy told me nearly thirty years afterwards. ‘I came in one evening, and we had a balcony with a sliding glass door, and my bed had been moved to block it. Presumably he’d heard, or somebody had said, that one has the temptation to throw oneself off balconies … I myself never took drugs, but there was a lot of talk of it around. I didn’t, though not because I thought it was bad – I didn’t give it any thought whatsoever. But this, I think, is where we parted company in the end, over this. Not in any sense with animosity … as far as I was concerned we were friends until the end.’
However, Richard Charkin, who was with Nick in Morocco and has very clear memories of much of that trip, doesn’t remember LSD being on the agenda: ‘I don’t think Nick took acid in Morocco. I would say not. I certainly didn’t, and I’m sure if he’d had some we’d have shared it. That was March, April 1967.’ While Nick was in Aix filling in time between school and university, Richard Charkin was in Paris doing pretty much the same: ‘Paris was pretty cool then, particularly if you were English – Donovan and all that. Coffee and dope were cheap.’ A friend of his called Mike Hill came up from Aix to Paris with Nick in tow, and introduced him to Richard, who recalls: ‘We drove down to Aix and decided to go to Morocco together, in this Cortina GT. There were four of us: me, Mike, Nick and some other guy … We drove all the way, from Aix, through Spain down to Gibraltar and across to Tangiers …
‘Nick was very nice, a nice, quiet guy who played guitar a bit. In Tangiers there was an amazing crowd in the street, and the rumour was that The Stones were there, and indeed we saw Keith and Brian, who were with Cecil Beaton, the photographer. We worked our way round, went to Meknes, Casablanca, Rabat, Marrakesh, and while we were in Marrakesh, Jagger was there with Cecil Beaton; they were recording these guys. So that was very exciting. Then one evening we were in some restaurant in Marrakesh and Jagger was there with a couple of the girls, and we persuaded Nick, who was very shy, to go and play for them, which he did. I can’t remember what – the usual Dylan and Donovan probably. And they were more than polite …
‘After Marrakesh we decided to go to Chad, which wasn’t a very bright idea for four young lads who knew not what they were doing, and shortly after leaving Marrakesh we left the road unintentionally … We then had to get towed to a place called Meknes, the car was a bit of a right-off, we didn’t have much money, and the guy at the garage was, surprisingly, perfectly happy to repair it without asking for too much money upfront. All he wanted was to have a photo of us with the car, for a before-and-after photo …
‘We went back after a couple of days to pick up the car, and all he wanted was another photo, and would we play a song for him? So Nick played a song, and he was quite ecstatic … We paid a small amount of money and drove off. We got to Tangiers to go back, and were surrounded by police … we had appeared in the local Meknes newspaper as The Rolling Stones. They knew there were a bunch of English rock stars around – and there weren’t many Europeans there – and the fact Nick played the guitar just convinced them. So they tried to bust us for dope.’
Back in Aix after Morocco, Nick tied up the loose ends and prepared to return home to Tanworth. He was no longer the shy teenager, fresh out of public school, who had set off only four months before. The observations of friends who had known him since school and saw him daily in Aix certainly suggest that something had changed. Perhaps it was during those early months of 1967 that Nick Drake first experimented with drugs. David Wright recalls him rolling a joint in London during October 1966, but it seems probable that in France four or five months later he began to dabble more deeply in drugs. It was in Aix that Jeremy first felt that Nick was becoming immersed in a drug lifestyle. And it was toward the end of his stay there that Simon noticed him beginning to run with a different crowd: ‘the camp where there were more drugs’. But balancing all this is the verdict of Richard Charkin, who went to Morocco with Nick and is convinced that he wasn’t taking LSD at that time.
Anyway it would be foolish to attribute the problems which later dogged Nick, simply to teenage forays into drugs. Back in the late sixties and early seventies, youthful flirtation with drugs was the rule rather than the exception. The real question is whether putative experiments — particularly with LSD — might have affected the chemistry of a mind that was waiting to be tripped off-balance. Whatever the reasons, it seems clear in retrospect that towards the end of those rootless months in Aix an already shy and introspective boy turned even further in on himself.
‘There was certainly dope around in Aix – we are talking about the late sixties. Dope was everywhere. Christ, we were only just across the border from North Africa!’ Simon acknowledged. But he went on to suggest that rather than the obvious, chemical causes, a number of subtle and more complex shifts in Nick’s life may have caused the dislocation: ‘The change in Aix was … when he’d been at school, like all of us, we had relatively sheltered lives, and suddenly we were out in an unstructured life, and of course it was the time when everything was opening up anyway … All the barriers were coming down … about what was acceptable: the sex, the drugs, the rock and roll… And I think all of us found that difficult to handle ourselves. Our generation had to learn to cope with these new circumstances, which were wonderful on one hand, but also threw up new problems.’
On his return from France Nick spent some time with his parents in Tanworth, and then, still with five months in hand before he was due to start his studies at Cambridge, he once again gravitated toward London. Tanworth seemed very quiet and parochial after his adventures in Aix and Morocco, and the lure of London, swinging and psychedelic, was irresistible.
Nick already knew London fairly well, and his elder sister was living there, in a flat where he could stay. Determined from the age of six to pursue an acting career, Gabrielle Drake had trained at RADA and was now busy paying her dues. Film work came early in her career, but was largely forgettable: she was a bridesmaid seduced by Peter Sellers in There’s A Girl In My Soup (1970) and went topless in 1972’s prurient Au Pair Girls, described by one film encyclopaedia as a ‘feeble and dated attempt at a sex comedy’. But it was in the theatre that Gabrielle established her reputation, appearing in West End productions of Jeeves and Noises Off.
It was some years before she attracted wider attention in BBC TV’s The Brothers, a Sunday-night soap opera which ran between 1971 and 1976. She played Jill Hammond, a popular character who was killed off in a car crash, provoking calls from outraged viewers. Gabrielle also appeared in the popular TV drama The Champions and an acclaimed adaptation of Oscar Wilde’s The Importance Of Being Earnest. Cult-TV aficionados have fond memories of her as Gay Ellis in UFO, Gerry Anderson’s first live-action drama. Gabrielle’s profile peaked between 1985 and 1987, when she appeared in the long-running, four-times-weekly soap opera Crossroads, as Nicola Freeman, ‘the expensively dressed, sophisticated managing director of the Crossroads Motel’. Such was her success that on 9 April 1987 she was the subject of This Is Your Life.
While staying with Gabrielle in London during the early summer of 1967, Nick fell in with a rich crowd of hip young aristocrats centred around the Astors and Ormsby-Gores – children of the landed gentry who were drawn by the colourful opportunities on offer in London. The mutual fascination of the aristocracy and the rock establishment is an enduring one, but late-sixties London is where it first took root: the late Alice Ormsby-Gore was Eric Clapton’s fiancée and Guinness heir Tara Browne was friendly with The Beatles, while other scions of the Guinness dynasty were close to The Rolling Stones.
The real exoticism of that period was concentrated in certain select London enclaves, where butterflies like Mick and Paul and Jimi fluttered. For teenagers like Nick Drake’s Marlborough contemporaries, exposure to drugs was frequently second-hand, or at best tentative, attempts to score often resulting in a couple of pound notes exchanged for a knob of Oxo. But in London, with sufficient funds and the right contacts, almost anything was possible.
Julian Lloyd, whose photograph of Nick wrapped in a blanket appeared on 1994’s Way To Blue compilation, knew Nick in London in 1967, and thirty years later talked about the period to Mick Brown in a Daily Telegraph Magazine piece. It was ‘a life centred on scoring black hash at eight quid an ounce, buying twenty Embassy and a packet of Rizla papers, then getting terribly stoned and laughing a lot, followed by a companionable silence’.