Birmingham teacher turned international rock star Spencer Davies is about to play Symphony Hall for the first time 鈥 at the age of 75.

Most people remember 1966 as the year that England won the World Cup

But for a former teacher in Yardley, it was also the year his band The Spencer Davis Group knocked The Beatles鈥 single Day Tripper / We Can Work It Out clean off the top of the pop charts.

He might have been born in Swansea, but University of Birmingham languages graduate Spencer Davies and his band of Brummies 鈥 including Great Barr brothers Steve and Muff Winwood 鈥 were a match for the Fab Four that year.

With their own Keep On Running and Somebody Help Me topping the charts before the spring was out, it took The Beatles鈥 Paperback Writer in June and Yellow Submarine / Eleanor Rigby in August to catch up.

The Rolling Stones, meanwhile, spent just one week at No 1 that year with their May release Paint it Black.

For Spencer Davies 鈥 his real name ends with an 鈥榠es鈥, shortened to 鈥榠s鈥 for marketing the band 鈥 they were heady times.

He was mixing with future legends, while on the road to a curious place in pop history for himself 鈥 and a lifetime of steady work sealed with a degree of anonymity which left Ringo Starr envious of his friend.

The line up of The Spencer Davis Band proved to be less stable than either The Beatles or The Stones.

鈥淚 looked at it as a bus where people could get on at one stop and off at another,鈥 says Spencer.

鈥淚 was always the captain of the ship and never let that go.

鈥淥ne of the people I auditioned over the years was Reg Dwight 鈥 the future Elton John.

鈥淚t was 1967, but while I liked his songwriting, I didn鈥檛 think he was right for us.鈥

Other stars he met over the years also included Jimi Hendrix and as well as touring with The Rolling Stones and The Who when they were still working clubs, he鈥檚 jammed with Charlie Watts, Long John Baldry and Jack Bruce, who died last month.

His memories are crystal clear, the stories legion, from telling of one rocker recovering from 鈥榳et brain鈥 thanks to the swollen effects of drinking, to how Baldry couldn鈥檛 be saved despite Rod Stewart covering his hospital bills.

鈥淩eg Presley from The Troggs (Love Is All Around) smoked so many fags he needed a chimney on his head,鈥 says Spencer.

鈥淚 had a drug problem 鈥 I couldn鈥檛 afford them.

鈥淏ut there was a scene (in Birmingham) with hash or pot and I knew some of those having their fair share of it.

鈥淭he Elbow Room was the main source of supply.

鈥淚 remember driving and Brian Jones (from the Rolling Stones) shoved some amyl nitrate under my nose.

鈥淚 said to him: 鈥業 am driving, for God鈥檚 sake Brian!鈥

鈥淏ut he was a talent. Brian founded The Rolling Stones, there鈥檚 no getting away from that.鈥

The Spencer Davis Group
The Spencer Davis Group

Cheltenham-born Jones died in 1969 aged just 27.

Contrary to some rumours, Spencer is still here to tell his own tale more than four decades later.

鈥淚 live between Swansea and California but had a mystery illness for four years,鈥 says Spencer.

鈥淚 told people I鈥檇 gone fishing in The Falkland Islands.

鈥淎ll the tests came back negative. I was like a canary trapped in a cage, unable to fly after clocking up a million miles with American Airlines and two million with United Airlines.

鈥淚 was a semi-colon who became a full stop.

鈥淏ut having also got over a deep vein thrombosis (blood clot), I am enjoying being back out on the road again in The Sixties Gold Tour.

鈥淚ts promoter, Robert Pratt, is one of those guys whose handshake is his word. Every week, I鈥檝e been paid on the dot.

鈥淚鈥檝e still got my own hair and teeth by the way and never had more fun. Everything now is a laugh.

鈥淩ingo had heard about my leg and when he saw me recently said: 鈥楬obble over here and give me a hug鈥.鈥

The tour features fellow chart toppers like Chip Hawkes (from The Tremeloes now minus the sick Brian Poole who was taken ill in Basingstoke), The Fortunes, The Pacemakers, PJ Proby and The Searchers.

鈥淚 got a call after Gerry Marsden fell ill with an eye problem and I said I didn鈥檛 play his songs.

鈥淏ut they wanted me for mine and The Pacemakers are playing without him.

鈥淚t enables me to say 鈥業鈥檓 playing with The Pacemakers... but I don鈥檛 need to wear one.鈥

The Symphony Hall date on December 2 is when the 40-date tour ends 鈥 and Spencer is looking forward to playing in one of the world鈥檚 great concert halls, even if he鈥檚 second on the bill from 8pm with what is likely to be no more than a half-hour slot.

鈥淲e helped to put Birmingham on the musical map with rhythm and blues,鈥 says the former teacher at Yardley鈥檚 Whittington Oval Junior School.

In the evenings he would play his 12 string guitar and sing traditional blues songs at various venues in the city and for a short time formed a duo with future Fleetwood Mac member Christine Perfect (McVie).

Just like the long demolished Golden Lion of old, he is disappointed that The Crown in Station Street 鈥 where Black Sabbath played their first gig for then manager Jim Simpson 鈥 has recently been closed as a pub ready for residential redevelopment.

鈥淲hen Liverpool demolished The Cavern at least they built a replacement,鈥 says Spencer.

鈥淏ut can you imagine San Francisco wanting to get rid of its street cars? Or Blackpool its trams? There would be a revolution.鈥

A divorced father of three with five grandchildren, Spencer lives on the 22-mile island of Catalina off the coast of California.

His partner鈥檚 daughter Ashlee Morgan Murray鈥檚 father is a well known TV editor called Bill Murray.

鈥淎shlee was four when I met her mum and I鈥檝e pretty much brought her up,鈥 he says.

鈥淣ow she鈥檚 24 and doing very well in the voice over industry.

鈥淪he tells big artists to do more takes.鈥

Despite enjoying the West Coast lifestyle, Spencer is proud of fellow Welsh stars like Anthony Hopkins, Christian Bale, Catherine Zeta Jones, Dylan Thomas and Richard Burton, adding: 鈥淲e used to call him Richard Bourbon.鈥

As such, he鈥檚 never happier than being at home in Swansea.

鈥淚 love going to the market and walking out with cockles sprinkled with pepper and vinegar.鈥

If there鈥檚 a regret, it鈥檚 about not taking charge of his own affairs earlier.

The Spencer Davis Group was originally managed by Island Records founder Chris Blackwell whom Spencer says sold their songs off for $180,000 to United Artists without him knowing.

The Beatles in 1966.
The Beatles in 1966.

鈥淚t was a classic case of the horse having bolted because I didn鈥檛 know how to lock the stable door at the time,鈥 he explains.

鈥淪o many bands in the 60s were just delighted to see their songs on a recording but when you have one person as a agent, publisher and producer that was a conflict, big time.

鈥淚f you have written something... trust me, the red flag goes up every time someone says 鈥業 can help you鈥.

鈥淚 then formed my own management and publishing company and joined the Performing Rights Society.

鈥淥ne of our singles Time Seller wasn鈥檛 a big seller despite its name, but when the Allman Bros covered the B-side Don鈥檛 Want You No More it sold six million copies.

鈥淭here鈥檚 no harm in being an eternal optimist who keeps trying.

鈥淚鈥檓 still writing and recording today and will never stop, so the current tour isn鈥檛 about nostalgia, just a lot of camaraderie.

鈥淲hen I鈥檓 in a studio, the only time I鈥檓 interested in the new bells and whistles is for editing, not recording.鈥

Spencer鈥檚 journey into music began with a harmonica at the age of five.

When he later asked for a guitar, his parents bought him a piano accordion.

鈥淚 can only think they must have got a deal,鈥 he says.

Deeply disappointed, Spencer learned how to play it sufficiently well to be able to earn some money busking, buying his first guitar at the age of 16.

Fluent in German, French and Spanish, he lived at 39 Gladstone Road, Sparkhill during his University of Birmingham student days.

Not only did he already know how to put a band together, but he re-rented a room to a fellow student who was effectively paying for his digs.

鈥淚 learned things like that from my mother who was as sharp as a whip,鈥 he says.

鈥淢y middle daughter, Lisa, is the same, she was the office manager for Neversoft, the (former) company which created Guitar Hero.鈥

Spencer鈥檚 teaching career was short and not always sweet.

鈥淚 found I was earning more money playing blues and moved to Sutton Coldfield,鈥 he says.

鈥淥ne day at Whittington Oval School I had a small milk bottle thrown at my head.

鈥淚 grabbed two kids by the hair and banged their heads together.

鈥淭he headteacher, whose name Entick Mapp was, I think, Scandinavian, said: 鈥榃e鈥檒l call it unorthodox this time鈥, but I knew my days as a teacher were numbered.鈥

Spencer had been driving himself on the Sixties Gold tour, but has given up after a nightmare journey from Leeds to Swansea.

鈥淚 thought I鈥檇 be clever and go this way and that to try get round the roadworks, but I paid for not using the M6 toll,鈥 he says.

鈥淚 was falling asleep at the wheel where you can see endless trucks being driven on autopilot with their own drivers in danger of falling asleep.

鈥淚鈥檒l be on the train in future letting others do the driving.

鈥淚n my whole career, though, I鈥檝e only ever missed one gig and that was in Germany when I took a route I鈥檇 been told not to.鈥

After buying out his brother鈥檚 share (he bought an SUV and went on holiday to Jamaica with his friends 鈥榠nstead of thinking about the future鈥), Spencer lives in his mother鈥檚 former house in Swansea, with a stunning view from the loft of The Mumbles.

He had to fight the local council to stay there after not returning from the US because of his illness, just like he had to battle the owners of his Californian apartment to make it possible to leave again once he had driven in through the gates.

鈥淚鈥檓 Mr Activist,鈥 he smiles.

The Rolling Stones in 1966.
The Rolling Stones in 1966.

Having enjoyed more good fortune in the music industry than many of his contemporaries, Spencer reveals that he has had plenty of other financial luck, too.

鈥淲e鈥檝e had songs in various films and commercials which helps,鈥 he says.

鈥淚 once bought a Gibson Les Paul Sunburst guitar off The Hollies鈥 Tony Hicks for 拢250 and thought I鈥檇 done well to sell it for 拢500 鈥 but it鈥檚 now worth 75 grand!鈥

Any disappointment that he didn鈥檛 maximise profits there is offset by his dog, Dexter.

鈥淗e鈥檚 more famous than I am in the US,鈥 says Spencer.

鈥淗e chose a $5 lottery ticket for me in 2012 and it won $250,000 鈥 or $187,000 after Uncle Sam had taken his cut.

鈥淚 tried to claim that the dog wasn鈥檛 a taxpayer.

鈥淎nother time I was in Germany, I put a 200 euro note into a machine and won 5,000 euros.

鈥淚 put another 200 in and won 6,000.

鈥淓veryone else in the band then put in 100 and nothing came out.

鈥淚 then put in another 200 and won 6,000, making 17,000 euros in total which I used to buy a Mini Cooper S.鈥

Some people say you shouldn鈥檛 wear jeans after you鈥檝e turned 50.

But Spencer is having none of it.

鈥淚 hear these days they are selling jeans that are pre-ripped.

鈥淚 noticed my jeans had ripped at the knee only this morning so look at this... I鈥檝e stitched it up myself.鈥

Now that鈥檚 rock and roll. And he still likes it.

* Sixties Gold is at Symphony Hall from 7.30pm on Tuesday, December 2, 2014. Tickets 拢29.50. Details