It’s an Old Old Story
October 22nd, 2009
There are days, and then there are days, and the last forty-eight hours would count double in both senses. I’m going to tell you a story, it’s what I do after all. It’s an old old story (quarter of a century in this instance, to be precise, but funnily enough the details are all crystal clear despite the fact I can barely remember my own birthday): boy meets girl, boy falls hopelessly for girl (down a flight of stairs, nothing beats a bit of slapstick humour), and girl hasn’t got a clue. Ahh, is that Hollywood I hear knocking at my door? Did I just hit on the formula for the next RomCom runaway success? Hmm, the story of my life. Not sure I want it on the silver screen. Still, the show must go on... Boy was a little younger, a little less worldly-wise. Girl said, ‘Have you heard this? It’s amazing... my favourite song,’ and put Icicle Works’ Love is a Wonderful Colour on the turntable (oh yes, so so long ago, back when men were men and mp3s were vinyl). And then it was Camel’s Stationary Traveller, and the haunting West Berlin (which became one of boy’s anthems for youth). Remiss in his musical education boy rectifies this the minute he gets home so he can pretend to be less uncool the next time they meet, as boys are wont to do. He’s not quite as dumb as a bag of nails. He’s got the beginnings of a personality as well as the beginnings of a crush to squeeze a planet into a nice Marilyn Monroe hourglass. For a little while, a snatch of time in the river of life, it’s bright and brilliant and fun and all consuming, and then it’s gone. That’s another one of life’s lessons boy learned from girl. Everyone leaves you in the end. Of course it is natural, boy and girl are hopelessly young, they drift, boy moves north, to his roots in Northumberland, girl in a wonderful quirk of fate moves south, and the both end up within thirty minutes of where the other had been, their orbits forever out of sync after that... but as Roddy Frame told us back then ‘We Could Send Letters’ and boy and girl did. Boy had never written letters before that didn’t say ‘thank you so much for the Christmas present.’ Now boy found he could write and write and write for pages, putting the pen down and coming back to the paper hours or even days later, because he wanted to share it all with girl. He’d never done that before. His form of expression had been kicking a football. In one of those letters girl mentioned a ‘poet’ whose music she loved, Martin Stephenson, and his band The Daintees. She’d bought a book of his poetry so he had to be good. Now, and here’s an amusing little side bar, girl - woman - today has no recollection of who Martin Stephenson and the Daintees were (or are, because they’ve yet to go the way of all flesh and are happily in better form than ever), but boy cradles those songs, Wholly Humble Heart, Slaughterman, Little Red Bottle, Crocodile Cryer, Running Waters, Nancy, they all mean something to boy because they are a link back to a different time when life was simple and he had yet to make all those hard choices about who he was going to grow up to be. And don’t believe it if you hear boy ever say they weren’t tough. He’s like that, this boy, he breezes through life and makes like everything is bright and shiny and it all just washes off him like the ‘running water coming down off a thundering cloud’. He’s got secrets, one of them is how much he still connects to that part of his life, back to when Aztec Camera, Love and Money and Martin Stephenson and the Daintees were the be all and end all of his insular little world. They were the fanfares of his strut into adulthood, meaning they are a root (yep, like a tree) back to when they were a connection to girl, or that life around the time of girl, to be more precise, and boy’s itunes selection is still filled with those old songs, but like the singers he’s grown with them and followed them down the river to their new stuff, and instead of Aztec Camera it’s Roddy Frame he listens to, instead of Love and Money it’s James Grant, and of course, right now, writing this, boy is back listening to Crocodile Cryer by Martin Stephenson. Sometimes boy thinks living back in this other place isn’t so wise, but other times boy thinks back there where he’s 16 and the world is just waiting for him to do something brilliant is the best place to be. It’s a hard balance. Sure, he’s let people down by then, but he hasn’t walked away from his first degree to spite his father and lay claim to his own life, he hasn’t walked out on the most ‘important job of his life’ to likewise fence it off and say no, this isn’t what boy wants to do, boy wants to tell stories and the rest of reality can go to hell. He’s still 16. He’s got a full head of hair and an infectious energy that just says ‘I could be somebody’. The last two days have been about man visiting with boy, kicking back and saying ‘hey kid, do I disappoint you?’ That’s a really tough question for man to address, and coming face to face with boy, like some arrogant ghost kicking back on his couch, feet up by the fire, that sneer that says ‘you were going to be somebody cool now look at you’ on his lips, is a shock, and it’s weird but it is a good weird and a pleasant shock. Man isn’t such a bad man, he may not be the same ‘somebody’ the boy thought he’d be, but he’s climbed mountains, physical and metaphorical, to become who he is. Okay, back to the story... bad narrative voice... bad. Tell the story... Six months ago I happened across an advert for Martin Stephenson and the Daintees playing at the Borderline on Friday 18th of September, and I just knew I had to go. I couldn’t tell you why. I just had this ‘feeling’ that it was important I go. I’d seen them once, around 1989 I guess, back when I was at University, doing the accounts degree, not the politics one, so before the ‘big break for independence’. I remember it pretty well. The peculiar thing that stood out in my mind was that this guy who wrote these melancholic songs had such an incredible stage presence and the most barmy sense of humour ever. He’s a talker. He talks during the songs. And he’s funny as fuck. I mean he’s cracking jokes with the audience, going on walkabout and leaving the bass player alone on stage riffing for far too long while the rest of the band hide upstairs, he’s playing spot the look-a-like with the crowd (Ted Nugent, Michelle Shocked, Sting, Bono, the stars were really out) but like boy, he’s changed - and for the better. He’s more accomplished, his playing is tighter, his humour is sharper, but why shouldn’t it be? He’s been doing this a long time, he can entertain. So, tickets bought, flights booked, boy wondered, as boys do (even ones who are trying desperately not to make Batman and Robin references), whether girl would be in the audience? After all how many Martin Stephenson fans can there be left in the world, boy thinks. Maybe that’s why he’s meant to go. You can never know how the world works. I don’t believe in fate. I don’t believe in destiny. Then again I don’t believe in chance. I’m an enigma wrapped up in a conundrum and tied off with a nice ribbon of mystery. I don’t have to make sense. But I know this... boy hoped. Man let boy have his moment in the sun. Boy couldn’t have banked on girl’s absolutely dreadful memory and the fact that girl had lost all recollection of Martin and the Dainty Ones... but, wait, you heckle from the back, how do you know this oh great narrator on the screen? I’m telling you this story, so ‘had yer horses’ as my granddad would have said. You have to imagine the broad Geordie accent transforming the word hold. Last month, just before man goes off to LA for a jolly a name pops up in his in box. Man does double-take for comedic effect. It’s like a voice echoing down (or up) all the way from childhood. It’s girl. Considering over the last quarter of a century boy in the process of growing into man had probably tried a dozen times to track down girl just to catch up and say ‘whether you realised it or not, you had a hand in making boy the man he became,’ ‘you were awesome and I was a kid and couldn’t find the words to say you were awesome’ and all of those things boy would have said to girl back then if boy had been able to put one word in front of another and make a sensible sentence. But she had a knack of making it difficult for boy to frame his thoughts so lots of things went unsaid. See even back when boy knew girl was going to be somebody. She had the ‘it factor’. Turns out she’d been living in eleven countries making it pretty darn difficult for boy to find, when he’d been sending out words into the ether. Forget needle in the proverbial haystack, the damned haystack kept moving a few thousand miles at a time... So, when the name popped up man smiled and boy inside thought ‘holy crap! What a coincidence... a woman with the same name as girl!’ Yeah, man is no smarter than boy sometimes. The story rolls on... via a slight detour. Bear with me. On Thursday Man and Woman connected for the first time in twenty five years, getting a glimpse of the finished article they’d each become. It was like finding that gull-winged silver Delorian, firing up the flux capacitor to 1.21 jiggawatts and punching down on the accelerator and ending up in the mid-80s. But it was more than that. Man doesn’t have the words, so it seems man is no better at this than boy was. More people should have one of these time machines, I reckon. It’s really quite incredible to meet up with lost loves and best friends and just the ephemera of life that we’re so quick to jettison. I think ephemera is underrated. I’ve had a really bad habit during my life of compartmentalising it and burning the bridges between stage one and stage two and three and four... There’s no one in man’s life from more than a decade ago. Five years is a decent demarkation line. Three. Clip clip clip, just move away and on. So this link back to then was frightening. Who had boy become? Had he lived up to what girl imagined for him? It’s really quite peculiar just how easy it is to fall back into conversation patterns of back then while leaping through the nineties and naughties looking for amusing anecdotes to try and raise a smile, dodging the difficult conversations and not wanting silence to ever get a toe-hold in. Boy was very glad to get that few hours to see all of the stuff he imagined for girl worn into the creases of her smile and then realise that girl had changed, grown into woman with all of those experiences and heartbreaks, but girl was still in there the minute she laughed. And she was every bit as awesome as boy had thought girl would become. The voice is an interesting thing, man understands, because the face might change, the hair might fall out, (boy’s not girl’s, silly,) the wrinkles might thicken, but the voice remains. The voice is the key that unlocks the door to all of those memories and moments that boy still heard in the songs (see we haven’t abandoned the music yet). Of course, the fact that scatterbrained woman had forgotten the band he’d come all this way to see made man laugh, but then this was all about boy and connecting with this boy’s life. It wasn’t about girl really. Girl was a part of it. A nice memory to take out of the box under the bed marked childhood. But it was all about this boy’s life... it wasn’t the Hollywood RomCom in which man declared undying stalkerish love and woman swooned with a ‘Why Mister Darcy....I never knew you wanted little old me...’ and they all lived happily ever after in a tent with their two daughters living off beans. Man has got a pretty good life right now and the grass isn’t greener. Woman’s life fits her like a glove. They’ve grown into them. Own them. Are defined by them. It was good. Now was the right time, and the grown man who lives his life thinking all of those old friends are out there living brilliantly has some proof at last that his imagination isn’t wrong. At least one of them is doing just that. So man put girl from twenty five years ago back in the box and went to listen to the music of his youth with a smile on his face. Girl hadn’t wasted his hopes. And the next sidetrack: There are defining moments in our lives. Yesterday was one of those for this man. The morning after the day before... was spent walking down Charing Cross Road browsing the old second hand book stores and the modern behemoths of Foyles, Blackwells and Borders, digging around in the stacks looking for buried treasure, breathing in that wonderful musty smell of old words, and out of the blue coming across a copy of Douglas Coupland’s Generation A. Coupland’s a special writer for me. I was reading Generation X for the first time when I emigrated to Sweden. A lot of the ‘me’ decisions were made during the days I immersed myself in it. Finding a sequel I didn’t know was coming was a treat. The internet might have made it wonderful for boy and girl to connect across time and for a few hours pretend to be 15 or 16 or 17, but it has made the High Street a really dull place. I know everything my favourite authors and musicians are up to. I ‘itunes’ (if that can be applied as a verb) my favourite cds weeks before the physical cd could make it to Stockholm and my stereo. So, yes, very peculiar to stumble across Generation A. I then sashayed (yes a boy can sashay, damn it, swagger even, if a boy wants to,) around the corner to a Costa’s and ordered the biggest latte known to man, and sat reading for the next two hours. The best part of the experience, I confess, was the fact that Coupland cracks me up and at least a dozen times in those two hours saw (heard?) me burst out into full-bellied shoulder-shaking laughter. The cute crusty-student girls beside me started smiling and then eventually laughing as well, because I mean, who wouldn’t laugh at the nutter giggling at a book in the middle of London? I’ve since been told that ‘men reading in public is sexy’. This disturbs me on a bazillion levels because surely men reading in public shouldn’t be that rare, should it? After that little indulgence, it was back to the hotel to relax and write some. One of the two got done. Man sat and wrote a nice ‘thank you for the christmas present’ letter to woman, the present being time, and hoped she had a fantastic weekend. Man also apologised for talking way too much and not listening enough. Twenty five years of stuff needed to get said. Then freshen up. When I’m overseas I forget to eat. Or, no, that’s not right, I suffer potential entree envy. It’s an opportunity cost thing. I know if I have X, I won’t be able to have Y, and Z and A and R are really tempting as well, so I wind up having nothing. Yesterday was no exception. Crossed the city to The Borderline, which is this brilliant little subterranean venue like something out of the 20s Prohibition Era transported over continents just for obscure bands to come and do their thing. Ordered my bottle of Dog and leaned against the bar listening to Helen and the Horns kick off the evening’s entertainment. Then before things crowded up I moved across to lean against the sound booth and get myself a good view of the stage. Being all hip and modern I Facebooked a few updates because pics of the Silver arcs came through right then, and I really wanted to share them (it looks purdee). Zipped off a few texts back home. Then Martin Stephenson came on stage cracking jokes about his ‘size 28 trousers from TK Maxx’ and how he couldn’t get into a pair of bloody 38’s now, letting us all into the secret that we’re older than dirt. That was an odd thing about the crowd. Normally concerts these days are these alien landscapes where the entire place has a collective age of about 17. The crowd was filled with Mitchell Brothers look-a-likes. I suspect, like me, most if not all of the crowd had found Martin back when they were at college or uni and the evening was all about connecting with their inner boys and girls. The rest of them were drag alongs. Then the first song strummed off and I was 17 again. That’s the only way to describe it. It was as simple as that. Martin’s guitar was my very own Delorian. In the RomCom girl would have been there, transported back on the same chord, but sometimes real life just isn’t about the perfection of detail it’s about the imagined detail. In boy’s head she was there and dancing with every fibre of her being, full of life and saying again ‘You have to listen to this guy, he’s a poet.’ It was pretty easy to tell who the drag alongs were because they were the who looked like rabbits caught in the headlights when Martin decided to do the last 30 mins of the concert with the house lights up, seeing us in all of our middle aged pimply glory. Beside me this vivacious brilliant bright shiny thirty-something and her drag along were the perfect example. She hit every note and made my concert experience twice what it might have been simply because in her white and black top and librarian glasses she was rocking out and having a blast. I was back at uni... actually I could have been. I realised my clothing taste has pretty much gone full circle and I’m right back wearing jeans, tee shirts and shirts hanging loose and open like I was then. So cute librarian rocked out, dancing with her whole body. That kind of stuff is infectious. I think we were the only two at the back (at the Borderline the back means touching distance of the stage) who knew every word. Much smiling, some laughing and a lot of singing went on and for two hours we were Martin Stephenson mates, bonded by something stronger than life. That’s why I like gigs. Proper gigs in dark dingy halls where the musicians just cut loose and have fun. After two hours he’s apologising they’ve got to finish because there’s a disco starting upstairs but invites us all to hang out with the band, so I took a wander down to the front and had a little chat with a guy who’d been one of my constant companions for quarter of a century. And it was great. I have this inbuilt dread of meeting my heroes because what if they’re not cool? What if they’re arseholes and it changes the way I think of them forever? I was invited onto the tour bus with Mike Peters of the Alarm about 15 years ago and didn’t go because I was terrified he’d be a drunken idiot and I wouldn’t be able to listen to Walk Forever By My Side and We Are the Light and Sixty Guns and and and all of those again without seeing that. Kevin J Anderson called me an idiot a couple of weeks ago when I told the story, so with his chastisement in my ear, I swallowed my fear and decided I had to go and say thank you for quarter of a century of musical accompaniment. In the end I stuck out my hand and thanked Martin for helping boy remember being 17. And he turned around and said something to me that now, older, wiser, and wrestling my own demons, I ‘get’ in ways I could not have at any other time (that’s what it is all about sometimes, about it just not being the right time, but this weekend was the right time). ‘This is what it’s all about, Big Man. Back then it was all music industry and crap, but now it is just about playing music and having a good time. Coming out here and connecting with the people out in the crowd who love this music, and none of the rest of it matters.’ And I get it, I can apply it to my own life and realise that I’ve done a lot of stuff I had to do (in my head at least) to get into the ‘industry’ and only now am I just beginning to do the stuff inside that matters, the stuff that feeds the soul... it’s the reason I struggle when people say ‘what book would you recommend we start with...?’ And here’s a hard admission, but maybe boy would be disappointed because man might be writing books, but those books haven’t all been the books boy would have approved of. Boy was a brilliant dreamer. He wouldn’t think much of telling other people’s stories. But that’s changing, because boy is kicking and punching inside man, and man’s wise enough to listen (in between wincing) because boy’s not had that determination sapped out of him yet and still dreams big. Over the next year some important books (for me, for boy and man) are coming out. There’s Silver, of course, which is the first real novel that’s all me (and the very sexy arcs are in Variance Towers and I am a little bit in love with them, I admit) but there’s The Odalisque and Other Strange Stories which could well be the first thing I’ve done ‘as a whole’ that I am entirely proud of, love stories, peculiar fantasies and little pieces of me laid bare. So, like I said right up there three and a half thousand words ago, there are days and there are days. These two days were important for so many reasons, not just about the boy, as well, other reasons, too. I got the contract for Gold, the follow up to Silver, so I know that will be happening now, set for January 2011 release, which sounds so long away but is just around the corner really, and out of the blue I got an offer to co-write a book with a new friend who worked on one of the most successful tv shows of all time, whose tell all will hit the heights, and I signed contracts on a new series of novellas I’m co-writing with a friend, Aaron Rosenberg, who was born on the same day as me, in New York, about three hours after I came out kicking and screaming in the Princess Mary’s in Jesmond, 4,000 miles away, and a new Monster Town story, the Blues Singer, for Halloween next year, with my mate Brian M. Logan... work work work. This, of course, will worry my friend Barry, because whenever I sign a new deal three celebrities die. So if you are famous... I’m really sorry. Actually I’m a little worried about Leonard Cohen, looking at the news. Right, where were we? Oh yes, girl. You knew her part of the story wasn’t over didn’t you? Back in that other time and other place, she gave boy a keepsake, a sea bean that boy took in to his exams and on planes and places because it was ‘lucky’. Woman had told man about her dream to write kids books, and how she wanted to ask all these questions and had this stuff bursting out inside. In between all the talking and catching up on life they talked about what it took to write. She had a lot of the familiar comments about time and fear and what if it wasn’t meant to be? Man confessed to some hard and possibly wrong decisions he’d believed necessary along the way, but tried to say how the only way it happened was if the words were given a chance to live. Inside they’re not telling anyone any stories. Woman got it. Of course she did. But it was always about more than the words. It was about determination, faith, strength, about not being ordinary. Man tried to find one word to sum it up, to say this is what you have to do.... And he’d had a while to think about it, because she’d warned him she wanted to pick his brains, so he’d found an answer. There was one big thing man had going for him, he’d never forgotten the one thing boy was really good at: dreaming. So man had a little keepsake of his own for woman, mirroring girl’s gift for boy, something to put on her desk when she sits down to write the first words of her book, something she can hold and remember boy with, and something she can draw from like he did the sea bean of all those years ago, a stone with the simplest message: dream. Sometimes boy can be a genius. Man’s not too shabby either. You want to live, you need to dream. You want to live brilliantly, you need to dream brilliantly. You want to reach people, to connect, you need to remember what it is all about: an old old story about a boy and a girl. You know the one, you’ve heard it before. Just don’t make the mistake of forgetting your own boy or girl. Don’t keep them in a box under the bed, let them talk to you, listen to them and remember the things they were filled with and the dreams they had before life came along and knocked the sharp edges off them and offered an alternative called ‘settling’. And then, take it one step further, don’t just dream it... do it. If man can, you can. -Steven Savile