by Dave B » 23 Aug 2012, 17:57
I can confirm that Pete lived in Folkestone as for many years he was a customer at my video store there. I had been playing a Cliff cd one day, Please Don`t Tease, Pete came in and said do you like that song. I said yes and he replied, good cos I wrote it! He was one of the nicest blokes you could wish to meet. Yes, he ran a stall at a local indoor market and once a week he would drive his Dad up to BBC Pebble Mill for his radio show. Charlie died in 1997 and I lost touch with Pete soon after, maybe he moved out of the town. He did sign a cd for me which included a couple of the Pete Chester group instrumentals. He never lost his love for music and helped the local band Maroondogs (best group in Kent until the unexpected death of guitarist Bob Coltart at the age of 35) They would play a charity gig at the Bandstand each year and Pete would go along and speak about his time with Bruce and Hank between numbers. I came across this article in a Melody Maker dated 12 July 1958 - CHESTER, JNR.- DISC STAR Columbia are today (Friday) issuing a record by five schoolboy jazzmen who call themselves The Chesternuts. Leading the group is Peter Chester, 16-year-old son of comedian Charlie Chester. He wrote both the tunes -`Teenage Love` and `Jean Dorothy`. The disc will be played in the deejay programme `Home Spun` on Monday and the boys will televise in `Six Five Special` tomorrow (Saturday) The disc is being flown to America. Other members of the quintet are Gerry First (amplified harmonica) Neil Johnson (Piano) Bruce Welsh and Brian Rankin (guitars and vocal harmony) "Knowing the hazards of show-business, we tried to discourage Peter" said Mrs Chester "But he wouldn`t be put off and did the whole thing alone".
Mums, don`t ya just love `em!