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Dr Feelgood and Canvey Island

Legendary R and B band Dr Feelgood were born and bred on Canvey island. Feelgood fans make an annual pilgrimage to celebrate singer Lee Brilleaux and the music of the band - Lee died in 1994 from cancer. The memorial weekend starts with a tour round the places on this strange and enigmatic island that influenced the band. And then of course there's an evening of music, a time to enjoy what followers call 'Feelgoodness'.

What did Canvey Island give to the music world?

Canvey island is 7 square miles of land in the Thames Estuary near Southend.

It was reclaimed by the Dutch in the early 17th century but most of it is still below sea level. That’s part of what gives Canvey its character.

The western end of the island is dominated by oil refineries and industrial sites and the combination of gritty landscape and neighbouring swamps inspired the country’s biggest pub rock bands.

Wilko Johnson, Lee Brilleaux, John B Sparkes, John Martin and Chris Fenwick all grew up on Canvey Island. In the early 1970s they formed Dr Feelgood with Chris Fenwick as manager. They were proud of their Essex identity and even though they made their reputation playing in London, they wanted to be known as a band from Canvey. With Wilko Johnson’s guitar style and the intensity of Lee Brilleaux’s vocals Dr Feelgood are regarded as a big influence of Punk Music.

The band had their own name for the island – Oil City; they played rhythm and blues and their heroes were blues musicians from the Mississippi Delta. It takes some imagination to see that same atmosphere in Canvey island, but Dr Feelgood have that gift.

Their first album was called Down By The Jetty, referring to a jetty that was built for oil tankers to unload for a new refinery. But the refinery was never built and the jetty remains a part of the strange landscape that influenced Wilko Johnson’s song writing, as he explains: “I certainly love the Thames Estuary, any opportunity to look out across the estuary I take it because there’s something about it, some spirit or something that tugs at me, and there right plonked in it is Canvey Island, like a precious stone set in a muddy sea”.

Canvey attracts visitors from all over the world – Feelgood fans who come every year to celebrate singer Lee Brilleaux and the music of the band. Lee died in 1994 from cancer, every May a memorial weekend is held to remember him, starting with a pilgrimage round the places that influenced the band. Together, the fans speak of a feeling of ‘Feelgoodness’.

Chris Fenwick believes Canvey gave the band the stability to cope with stardom.

Dr Feelgood are still going, though not with the original line-up, they tour around the world. But for one night a year, the three remaining original members get together and play the same stage as the new Dr Feelgood members. The money raised goes to the nursing team from the hospice that looked after Lee when he died.

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