THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF KEITH MALCOLM HUNT
Part Three
I’m going back over my childhood to my upper teens in my music life.
My Dad had records, the old carbon type, so I was born into parents who loved music. Both my Dad and Mom were good singers. My Dad had super rhythm— he could play the spoons [yes those you have in the kitchen with knives and forks] like terrific. So not really surprising I found at age 8, 9, 10, I had a good singing voice, and loved to sing songs from movie musicals I saw at the movie house. There was this British guy called George Formby, a comic guy. He made lots of movies and would sing these nice silly songs and strum on his uke-banjo. It was like a regular banjo but had a much shorter neck.
I turned 9 in September and requested for Christmas a uke-banjo.
I was not disappointed, my parents did buy we one. It was one of the very best Christmas gifts I was ever given. It came with a nice case and a music book with George Formby songs; the chords above the words. I set about learning all the basic chords.
I payed on that instrument till I was 11 years old.
Then came this man on TV who played the guitar, lead guitar as it is know called. His name was Bert Weedon. He played guitar in this popular Dance Band, and now and again because he was so talented at picking the guitar, they would feature him playing a song now and again. He was
masterful. Then he would show up on the radio backing up singers. Then the early days of Rock’ n Roll came into being. Bert left the Dance Band and formed his own quartet. They played all over the place—— TV, radio, night clubs around England and Wales. He loved playing jazz. So Rock’ n Roll gave him his outlet to just rip-it-up on the guitar. The electric guitar had come into being. Bert was a hit everywhere.
I wanted to learn the guitar Bert Weedon style. He also had a masterful unique sound playing love songs. So I was even more impressed.
I told my Dad I wanted a guitar. He said, “Okay we give you pocket money, save up for one.”
My parents did not spoil me as an only child.
I had seen a guitar in the music store down town. I walked in and asked the guy if he would keep it for me, as it would take about 4 or 5 weeks for me to save up the money, he said, “Sure thing I can do that for you.” And he did. About 5 weeks later the guitar was mine. I got a Bert Weedon guitar instruction book and set about learning. I was also taking music in school, which helped a great deal.
I was about 13 when my “voice broke” as we would say. I could no longer sing, and knew it would be a few years or so before my voice would come back to me as an adult voice.
At the same time in Britain there was this man yodeling cowboy sings, and love songs with a falsetto like from another world as some music critic would say. His name was Slim Whitman from the USA. My Mom brought home some of his big hits, the old carbon 78 records. Well I thought he was the greatest, and immediately became a loyal fan, as I am to this very day. Back then he had this guy in his band playing the Steel Guitar [you play it with a steal bar on the strings like they do for Hawaiian music]. This guy had a sound on the Steel guitar that was unique. Now I wanted to learn to play the Steel Guitar.
There was an ad in the paper from a Music School in London that would teach you to play just about any musical instrument, and yes, they had a course for me on the Steel Guitar. Wow…. That course was fantastic. It taught me how to play from regular piano music, and a whole lot more.
So for my middle teenage years I was busy learning to play both the regular guitar like Bert Weedon, and the Steel guitar, and music to boot.
Those music years were just super, and not knowing then, but they would come handy in my future young adult life.
There was one more great experience for me in my teen years.
I was doing a little song in front of my “church” audience for a fun night—— The Little Lady who swallowed a Fly—- a comic song. I was about 12 or 13 at the time. Unknown to me there was a lady in the audience who was looking to replace her son in her charity “concert party”—— many young ones doing funny skits, singing songs, reading nice poems, and some dancing girls. A few days later she asked me to come and see her. She explained about her concert party, and how they went by coach to different churches around the area, some close by and others further way, to give them entertainment. Mrs Storey was her name. She asked me if I would be interested in joining her group. I said yes I would.
The concert party acting was great, and I loved doing the skits.
Then some months later she told me she was an “Elocution” teacher. That is the skill of pronouncing words correctly, it was the “Queen’s English” as Queen Elizabeth took elocution lessons to speak the way she does; the Queen was not born speaking like that. So when you hear her speak, that is from having elocution lessons.
Mrs. Storey wanted me to take elocution lessons from her. I said okay. It was quite the experience for the next number of years, I think till I was about 16. She taught me to recite long and short poems, and just general acting abilities. I went in for elocution exams and was always in the top 90s. I won some competitions along the way. And still have my diplomas, through the various grades.
My teenage years with sports, athletics, learning music, learning the guitar, and steel guitar, lessons in speech, and acting, was far from boring, far indeed. My teen years were a huge learning curve. And I enjoyed every minute of it.
And remember through all of this I was a dedicated Church and Sunday school attender. I loved the word of God, and the teachings of Jesus in the four Gospels.
More to say on all of that and another large regular part of my teenage life, next time.
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THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF KEITH MALCOLM HUNT
Part Four
There was another important influence on my life as a youngster and into my teens—— the Boy Cubs and especially the Boy Scouts.
I do not remember anything from my few years in the Boy Cubs, I guess nothing happened of any importance to stay lodged in my mind.
The Boy Scouts was a different matter entirely; also the length of time in that organization was much longer than the Cubs.
First I loved the Boy Scout uniform, kinda fancy I thought it was, and so reminded me continually of the fancy cowboy clothes Roy Rogers would dress in. The Scouts had this neck piece that was to me a kind of cowboy neckerchief. I guess some of all this was the romantic mind-set of a fine uniform your could wear.
I was as faithful in attending Boy Scouts night in my local church, as I was in attending Sunday school. Back then most Boy Scout clubs were part of a church’s outreach to young kids and to teens.
I well remember all the practical things I learnt while in the Boy Scouts. Basic first aid; different rope knots; nature things we would study and draw. There was the regular camping trips in the summer time to far away places over the Yorkshire county. How we cooked on wood fires; dug holes in the ground for when nature called; dug small trenches around our tents so if it rained the water would not come inside the tents. There was the hiking we would do, actually that was the only part of the Boy Scouts I did not like. I was never into hiking. May see odd considering my activities in sports and athletics; but I just did not like the miles of hiking we would do at times. Once we had a week in the “Lake District” of North-west England, a lovely scenic area, where the mountains not of great hight, but they are rugged, and people come from Europe to practice their skills with ropes etc. to get to their summit. We did a day hike to the top of one mountain; it was rocky and rugged at the top and not very wide, I remember being somewhat scared and was glad to get down to the valley again.
Our Scout hall was the bottom half of our church, where we also had a stage for entertainment times. We would play energetic games, one was having a broom and a ball; it was one on one, you were to get the ball into your opponent’s goal, a couple of chairs spaced about 4 feet apart. I can remember having many a context with the Scout master, my speed made me a strong opponent, and I sometime won.
We learnt to use a compass, and many other things over the years. There was this one competition our Scout master put me and some other lads into. I was made head of our little group, think it was 5 of us. Well just about all the Scout groups in our town were entered; that must have been about 40 groups. So we started through the course they had laid out for us, to do certain things as we moved along, I know one was using a compass, forget what all the others were. When finished I thought to myself, “Don’t think we did very well.”
It was about a week later, and I was at some function of our church with the other lads who were at this competition with me. An adult came in and said, “Are the Scout kids here who were in the recent competition?” I answered, “Yes we are here.”
“Well get yourself up to….. [forgot the name of the building up the road from us] …. You WON the competition!”
I was astonished, I thought we’d not come anywhere near winning.
We did not have on our Scout uniforms. What an embarrassment it was going up and on to the stage to receive our first place certificates.
I remember very well one Scout night. I was walking to our Scout hall, when the 2nd in command Scout leader came alongside me on his motor bike.
“Come on jump on behind me, I’ll give you a ride the rest of the way” he said to me.
I did just that…..but wow…..I was sorry I did. I was only about 12 and never been on a motor bike—— the speed he went [nothing over the speed limit] just about scared the pants off me.
There were many “badges” you could get in the Boy Scouts. You did certain things of some skill and time, and you got a badge to put on your Scout shirt. One badge I went for, can’t remember what it was called. You and another Scout friend were to go for two days camp in some farmer’s field, no one there only the two of you. The Scout master arranged with the farmer to have you. It always included a bus trip and instruction how to get the this farmer and his field. You never met the farmer; you were both on your own. The lad I went with was a buddy of mine for many years, so we thought it would be fun to get this badge. It all went well; got to the farmer’s field okay; set up our tent at the bottom of a slight hill; dug trenches around it in case of rain. Good job we did, for no sooner had we done this and down came the rain—— for the whole 2 days. We were like drowned rats as they say, after two days. And we somehow had to build a fireplace to cook our meals on. We got through it and received our badge but it put me off trying to get other badges.
There was the yearly “Bob a job week”—— You dressed in your Scout clothes and went from door to door, asking if they had a job to give you for a bob— shilling— back then maybe 50 cents. This was done in the summer time when out of school, for a few weeks. One summer I was determined to really go at it and bring in the most money anyone had ever done in our Scout group. I had great weather that year, and a great response from people—— got all kinds of job offered to me, and I did indeed reach my goal; largest amount of money brought in; it all went to charity; that was the idea behind it all—— money for charities.
The Boy Scouts was terrific overall, really enjoyed all the years I was with them. I was 16 when I left the Boy Scouts.
It was during the 3rd year of High school, and my Dad knowing I liked fitness, said to me about 3 times, “You should send away for the Charles Atlas Health and Strength course. Atlas had ads all the time in British papers about fitness. He was the first Mr. World way way back. And a famous “strong man”—— pulled a huge iron steam train ex number of feet once, and did other strong man stuff. He was 5’ 10” but had a 47 inch normal chest, big powerful arms and shoulders.
I finally did send for the Atlas course and it was super good, and made me a pretty good body over a years time. He was also strict on eating good wholesome foods, one point he really emphasized—- stay away from white flour products like the plague, there is no norishment in white flour. And sure enough then and today you have millions upon million eating white flour products—— white bread, white buns, white cakes, white donuts, white flour spaghetti, white flour this and white flour that—— it’s all over the place and we wonder why we in the Western world are overweight and obese, and sick. I have stayed away from white flour products since I was given the light through the Charles Atlas. His 12 lesson course is still available—— look him up on the Internet.
The 4th year of High school we had a new teacher lady, maybe near 30 years old, and very attractive. She discovered my ability in speaking and acting and music. She wanted me to join the local actors gild. She asked me three or four times. I kept saying no. Yes I could have joined and could have gone on to maybe London Arts and Acting. Maybe a Welsh-English new kid of fame on the British acting circle. But what I did not tell her was, “Thanks and I know you mean well for me, but I’m really a cowboy and the next Roy Rogers.”
So I have covered all the physical stuff I did from a kid to finishing High school. Just one thing to cover in the context of High school.
The last year— the 4th year would normally have been it, finished. But during that last year, the headmaster came to our class of 44 kids [boys and girls - class of 1958 - a small High school], and said to us, “Well students the educational system is going to introduce a certificate called ‘College of Preceptors’—— now if your interested you will need to come back for another school year after summer. I’ll give you a day or so to think about it.”
We thought, he came back a few days later, “Well who would like to go for this certificate and another year of high school?”
We ALL put our hands up, not one student said no.
I think back now and see that education in that Church of England school was fun. The teachers were great. The sports stuff was great. Well not one student said no. We all came back for one more year in High school. And we all got the knowledge from the teachers to get that certificate.
The exams were at the end of the school year and we’d get our certificate in the mail. Any subjects where we got honors would be marked in red next to the subject. I received mine some few weeks into the summer—— I did honors in English and Music.
The English one was a real surprise to me, never thought I’d get honors.
But when I stopped to think about it, the English stuff we did in that extra year was nothing to do with spelling, and technical stuff on verbs and adjectives and nouns, some yes, but more on composition, writing, sentencing, getting things across to others like being an author, and I had for most of my High schools years enjoyed all of that part of “English.”
The last day of school was kinda sad but kinda good; one section of my life was now over. I would be 17 in a few months, and only one year away from heading West to work with western horses and western songs and be the next Roy Rogers. Back then there was no “graduation party” —- it was, well this is the day to say goodbye to High school. Walk home and look for a job for a year, before going to the Canada Immigration Office.
O yes I had started horse back riding lessons during my 4th year of High school. Yes never been on a horse’s back till then, but no worries I knew it would come easy to me. Like when I was 6 and knew I could run fast. I knew I could be super good on horse back; one ambition was when I got out West, was to learn to trick-ride.
There is yet the most important part of my young life to explain in some detail—— next time.
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THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF
KEITH MALCOLM HUNT
Part five
I told you early on that at age 7, I moved up to the middle school of the Church of England educational system, and it was on that first day of school, that we were given a Bible. The teacher read to us Genesis chapter one and two. I told you when she read “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth…..” A light bulb went off in my head—— it was the answer to all the wonderful creation I could see around me. It was all made, created by a being the mind could not really grasp, a being called “God.”
From that very day I believed there was a God being. And if He could create this whole universe and our earth with all its beauty and massive array of creatures in the sky, earth, and sea, then He could inspire people to write down His words in the Holy Bible— His word then would be fully inspired, without contradiction, and it would not only tell us about Himself, but also how we should live.
The creation around us should tell us someone, some being, brought it all into existence, just having it evolve even over billions of years, as I found out some believed when I was about 10 years old; that idea made no sense to me, I actually laughed at it when first presented to me. I thought how on earth do you have an apple seed evolving and different from an orange seed; how do you have a seed that grows into an oak tree, evolving differently from a seed that grows into a thorn bush; how do you have a banana seed tree growing differently from a coconut tree; how do you have a seed that grows into a blueberry bush evolving differently from a seed that grows into a raspberry bush; and how do you have a caterpillar telling itself to devise a cocoon and melt itself into a butterfly????
On and on my mind would reason, and even more so as I grew in age, to laugh at evolution.
I was shocked at age 9 when a teacher in this Church of England school in one class, started to tell us about how modern mankind came about by a gradual slow transition from a monkey to an ape to mankind. I could not believe what I was hearing from this guy who was a teacher in a “Church” school trying to tell us we evolved from apes. I just about went to him after the class to confront him on his teaching compared to Genesis chapter one. I was a kid who never backed down….I was disgusted at his teaching, and I had no respect for him from then on out. Fortunately I did not have to sit in his class very often, and eventually not at all, as they moved us around to separate the “gifted” ones from the not gifted; I was in the latter group, which thinking back now, God had it all planned for me that it was to be this way. Certainly at age 9, I could see my only gift was running fast, and getting to be good writing and at artwork.
As the years moved along in that middle school, we were taught by our main teacher we had, to move through the book of Genesis; some great stories in that book. Then we moved into Exodus when I was 8 years old. O indeed the story of Moses and the children of Israel coming out of Egypt. We arrived at chapter 20 of Exodus. We read the 10 Commandment—— I do remember how I thought they were terrific; my mind could imagine how wonderful the world would be if all nations obeyed the Ten Commandments.
Our lady teacher said, “Okay boys [this middle school was only for boys; guess the girls had their own middle school], I want you to memorize the Ten Commandment, every word as it is here in the King Jame Bible.”
I set out to do so and only in a day or two I had every commandment memorized word for word, and that of course included the 4th one [see it in Exodus 20]. Will come later to the incident in Sunday school about the weekly Sabbath commandment.
Through ages 9 to 11 we covered Exodus, Joshua, some of Judges, the stories of Gideon, and Samson, first and second Kings; the story of Samuel, Saul, David and Goliath….well of a David’s life. We covered all of those interesting lives of men and women. All the things that a young child up to age 11 would really get into with their imagination.
From ages 7 to 11 the first half hour of school was in the Bible—— I loved it!
Then at the same time, over those same years, I was attending a local Sunday school in a “Congregational” church [that was its official name].
We naturally were learning about Jesus Christ, and reading parts of the Gospels. We had cut-outs of Jesus and his disciples.
As we got older—— 10, 11, 12; our Sunday school man would get us talking about things in life; asking us what about this situation and that situation, what would we do. I well remember by age 12, 13, 14, we were into some really great deep conversations about Christian life. O yes must back up a little—— by about age 11 I had accepted Jesus as my Savior. I indeed had a deep relationship with the Father and His Son Jesus. I loved the Bible.
I well remember Billy Graham the evangelist coming to Britain. Now remember Britain at the time was quote “religious”—— towns closed down on Sunday. Billy Graham came on TV and preached Jesus as Savior. I thought to myself, well you ain’t telling me anything I do not already know. He would speak about Jesus becoming very personal to you. I thought to myself, you ain’t telling me anything I do not already know.
I already had a personal relationship to God the Father and to Jesus Christ.
I thought well okay it is good someone like you is teaching that, in a huge stadium with thousands in attendance, and all this on TV all around the British Isles. But it ain’t news to me, I’ve believed this for years. So Billy Graham was no big happening to me. Kinda put him out of my mind and got on with my Christian life and school and sports.
It was I think at about age 12 that what I’m going to relate to you happened.
Sunday school was staring; we were all in our various classrooms. The teacher was marking the attendance sheet. This kid next to me said, “Sunday is not the 7th day; my dad told me Sunday was the first day of the week.” I could not believe what he said. I replied, “O that is crazy, just not so.”
“Yes, my dad told me Sunday was the first day of the week; and Jews keep Saturday.”
I thought who on earth are Jews to observe the 6th day of the week.
Then I said to him, “Your dad is wrong, can not be correct, for the 4th commandment says we are to observe the 7th day of the week, clear and simple.”
The teacher at my words, looked up with a shock on his face and immediately got us all changing the subject.
I walked away from that class, still believing Sunday was the 7th day of the week, and the lad’s dad was very wrong—— I put it out of my mind and never thought about it till I was 19 years old—— come to that later.
I think it was about age 14 that I started to attend the regular church service, after Sunday school. So I became a regular 11 am church attender.
In the Church of England school we would at certain times of the year, like Easter time, well a day or two before, all of the school go to the Anglican church for a service. We would all walk because it was only about half a mile away. From the beginning of that, well maybe it started when I was about 8 or 9. Anyway whenever, I was somewhat amazed at all the fancy dress the priests were in, all the rituals, and all the mumbo-jumbo [found out in time] of the Latin being spoken. It all just did not sit well with me. I could not see anywhere in the Bible, well New Testament [the Old had its Temple and priests] for sure, that such rites and dress and mumbo-jumbo taking was part of original apostolic Christianity. But I was there as was the whole school, so I would really enjoy the hymn singing, and put my heart and soul into it, so much so that after one service [where adults were there also] this lady came up to me after the service and said, “You really liked singing those hymns, I could see you just putting your all into singing them.”
I thanked the lady and told her, “Yes I do enjoy singing the hymns.”
She walked away with a smile on her face.
So I was now attending regularly the local church’s 11 am service.
It was about a year later, so I’d be 15, that a lady member, who knew me from way back attending Sunday school, came to me after one Sunday service and said, “Keith I’ve watch you for years attending so regular, so I have a littler gift for you. Here is the New Testament, with red letters for the words of Jesus.”
Wow O wow!! Was I thankful to her. I had never seen a Bible with the words of Jesus in red. It was a treasure to me for the rest of my teenage years. It was now so simple to read the words of Christ—— they were in red—— WOW GREAT!
That New Testament was my close companion; I would read some of the words of Christ at bedtime, reading it and then lights out and sleep time.
I must have read the four Gospels dozens of times over my years to age 18, when I left to come to Canada.
I never heard from the Church of England or the local church, that Jesus was going to return to earth one day. Not any person, priest or teacher, ever talked about the return of Christ.
I was now reading over and over the words of Christ in red, and reading into the book of Acts. I could see that Jesus and the angels in the first chapter of Acts, said He would return in power and glory— Matthew 24 I read many times.
I was standing in the local church congregation one Sunday, a friend of mine next to me, and adults all around. I told my friend the New Testament tells us Jesus is coming back to earth one day—— this man looks around at me with a shocked look on his face—— I knew he did not believe it would be so. The man never came to talk to me about what I had said, but I hope he went away to think about it and maybe look for himself.
The God in heaven showed me a number of things during my teen years that the Church of England and the local church never talked about. For instance, here I was going to the “Holy Trinity” Church of England school, but never had anyone tell me what the Trinity was. I was reading the New Testament red latter edition, and never, just never ever, saw the Holy Spirit as an individual person up in heaven, next to the Father and Son. O I saw where Jesus ascended back to heaven after His resurrection, and was sitting on the Father’s RIGHT HAND! But I never saw where a third individual called the Holy Spirit was sitting on the Father’s LEFT HAND, or sitting ANYWHERE in heaven!
It was not till I was in Canada and going to a Baptist church, and the minister came to visit me and somehow we got talking about the Holy Spirit and he said it was the third person of the Trinity in heaven. I literally LAUGH AT HIM! He got a little embarrassed and never continued that part of our conversation. He seemed happy to drop the subject.
I was 17 and had to work for a year or so before setting off for western Canada.
I worked for a short time in a leather factory; interesting work it was, and I learned some shoe-repairing from a man there who was skilled in that work.
Then I worked in an office with two young ladies my age. They were very nice and one was engaged to be marries in the not too distant future. Maybe into 6 months working with them [just us 3 in that office] I told them I played the guitar and song cowboy songs, and I loved the singing of Slim Whitman. It was only a few weeks before leaving for Canada I told them the news. They said “Please bring your guitar and sing us a song.”
I did do that, and sang them a Slim Whitman song called “WHY.”
The first part goes like this:
“Why am I lonely when I’m without you; why am I blue when we’re apart; Why does my heart feel a fool about you; why did I love you from the start”
Weeellll I sure had two huge fans for two weeks.
Six months before singing to the two girls I had
gone to the Canada Immigration Office, to put into action what I had planned from age 7.
To be continued
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