Twilight Ranger wrote: I also appreciate the fact that Brian Bennett has no accent, which makes it easy for me to understand his English.
Interesting comment. Brian certainly speaks clearly, but there many traces of the North London where he grew up. A North London accent is not cockney - cockney is a much stronger accent that originated from the East End of London but, for example, listen to Brian leave the 'g' off the word 'something' so that it becomes
somethin' . Brian's son Warren, however (educated at Mill Hill, a school in North-West London, but an independent paid-for school) would say
something and sound the '
ing' at the end of the word. For any of you who have the Pipeline DVD for 2003 (when The Vibratos played at the Pipeline Convention), you can see and hear my interview with Warren.
In the same way that Bruce and Hank refined their playing in a very short time (from skiffle in The Railroaders to the gem that is
Apache) so both of them chose to virtually lose their Newcastle accents when they came to London and stayed. There are always, of course, a few vowel sounds that don't go away like the short 'a' in words like 'bath or 'castle'. By contrast, Brian (from the South of England), will say the same words as '
barth' and '
carstle'. Interestingly, despite living in Australia for many years, Brian Rankin has stayed true to his 'Hank Marvin' voice.
If I came to FInland and learned your language, would I find that there are many different accents for different parts of the country>
Ray