Like Hank and Bruce and Brian and Jet and Tony and Licorice, Mike played at the 2i's coffee bar. Arriving on a lorry from Warrington in Lancashire in 1957 (he originally came from Leigh), he was dropped off in London's Holloway Road (the A1).
With 10/- in his pocket he found his way to Soho Square and somehow met a musician who told him he could show him where the 2i's was, "but I haven't been paid yet so can you buy me a cup of tea?". Mike paid, which cleaned him out, but the guy did take him to Old Compton Street.
Mike hung about outside (he had no money left) until a couple of guys with guitars turned up, with others behind them. "Are you a group?" asked Mike, "'cause I'm a piano player". "We need a piano player" they said, so Mike played that night. Afterwards he told them he had nowhere to stay. "We've got a big flat in Gloucester Place" they said (the band was Clay Nicholls and The Blue Flames) so he stayed there.
That story was part of the interview that Mike gave me for the Pipeline 1995 DVD re-issue, along with why he came to be called Nero and tales of life on the road. A really nice guy. Here he is at the time of the interview in 2005.
Ray