Yep, finished the creative writing course this week, and by ignoring all the advice I got from it, and just doing what I do anyway, I wrote this for the final piece, which had a 1000 word limit on it, that I also ignored.
It got very positive reviews from the other poor sods doing the course, I wrote it far too quickly, and thought it was okay. However, all this, and turning 37 have left me with very little time to write anything else this week, so I'm posting this due to extreme laziness taking over, enjoy, it is loosely based on a not anywhere near as interesting true story.
Sorry for the laziness, usual ranting will be resumed next week, when I will have a lot to say about birthdays when you're a grown up.
Just Because You're Paranoid...
'Excuse me,' came a voice from the car that had just reversed 200 metres back up the road, 'I know this sounds weird, but could I take your photograph?' Pete was taken aback, that did sound weird. But sometimes weird is good, and interesting, and if there was one thing Pete wasn't, it was impolite. And it would be tremendously impolite to refuse such a simple request, besides, he was only strolling out to the pub for the evening, he had time, and this did appeal to his vanity.
'Ok, why not.' Pete leaned into the window of the silver saloon car, pushed up his Aviator sunglasses, and grinned manically at its occupant. Inside he could see tripods, lights and all the assorted paraphernalia of the photographer's trade, which put his mind at rest on one count. This chap was a photographer, or at least had made sure his back story held up okay. Pete was cursed with an over-active imagination, and within the time it had taken for the car to reverse back up the road towards him, and his answer to the man inside, he had enacted five separate scenarios in his head, which all ended with him dead, and none of them were nice.
'Sorry to do this, it's just that you look really interesting, and it's a sort of hobby of mine, collecting photographs of interesting looking people. I'm not some kind of weirdo, honest,' the man chuckled nervously as he got out of the car. He was wearing a corporate uniform, blue jacket and matching trousers, with the logo of the energy company he represented emblazoned on the left breast. This reassured Pete a little more, the man would have to answer to his employers, a serial killer wouldn't have an ID badge casually hanging on a lanyard around his neck. Possibly he was just some kind of government spook, looking for subversive elements, and Pete had once been to a greenpeace meeting, that was pretty subversive. But it was true, Pete did look interesting, with his brothel creepers, midnight blue drape jacket, bootlace tie and quiff, you would swear it was still the '50s rather than the twenty first century.
'No, no, you're fine, to tell you the truth it's not the first time this has happened' Pete lied, he didn't know why he felt the need to lie, it was probably to put the man at his ease, though why he needed to put him at his ease evaded Pete completely. This encounter would either be over in less than two minutes, and they would never see each other again, or Pete would be knocking on the boot of his car and screaming at the top of his lungs to be let out. Either way, there was no need for the chap to be at his ease.
'I'm not surprised, you do have an enigmatic look about you, I'm Darren by the way, pleased to meet you,' said the stranger, smiling through a neatly trimmed beard, and he put out his hand in greeting to Pete, who shook it excessively firmly and vigorously, in a meaningless attempt to show his strength, in case Darren still turned out to be some kind of weirdo, also it might prevent Darren from injecting him with any kind of tracer or bugging devices, by increasing his blood pressure enough to spit it right out again.
'Pete, likewise.'
'Now, if you can just stand there, against that wall with the graffiti, I think that would make a really interesting backdrop,' Pete did as he was told, the wall was, he had to concede, a pretty good backdrop. Some street artist had sprayed a 10 foot high image of an electric guitar surrounded by stars on the electricity substation by the road. Pete dutifully stood in front of it, doing his best Elvis sneers, while Darren snapped away from every angle he could find.
'All done, thanks Pete, do you want copies of these shots? I can email them to you later if you want?'
'Yes please mate, that would be excellent,' Pete said, before he'd had time to think it through, and before he knew it he was writing his email address down on a scrap of paper for Darren. Why had he done that? You could use an email address to call up every bit of personal detail you needed on somebody nowadays couldn't you? He might have been following Pete for weeks, and just needed to confirm his email address to make sure he had the right guy. They could link this to PeteyRNR75 from all those Rock and Roll internet forums he hung out on. What had he said? Was he going to be locked up in some Orwellian nightmare for his strong views on period correct equipment for rockabilly bands, or laughing at the guy who's turn-ups had been half an inch too short? He awaited the knock on the back of the head, and resigned himself to being bundled into Darren's boot.
'Well, thanks for that, I'll send you the pictures once I've jiggled them about a bit, speak to you later!' and with that, Darren drove away into the hazy sunshine of an early June evening. Pete took a deep breath, and walked on to the pub. He managed to talk himself down, and realised that Darren was almost certainly just a harmless eccentric with a photography project, just as he had said. He thought no more about it.
Later that night, having returned from an uneventful evening at the Three Pigeons, Pete found an email in his inbox with the photographs attached, they were good. They were really good, Pete looked fantastic, with the sunlight glinting off the sides of his Raybans, and his brylcreemed quiff shining majestically in front of that giant guitar in the background. He sent a quick reply, 'Thanks mate, look really good, I hope they help with your project. - Pete' and then went off to bed.
Outside, just past Pete's garden wall, Darren closed the email he had just received on his blackberry, nodded to himself and took out his little bag of lockpicks.
The endless quest of a not-quite-writer and almost-musician to try and create something of worth in a fight against procrastination, cider and a never-ending merry go round of pets. Follow this to find out how not to finish anything you start.
Tuesday, 17 June 2014
Saturday, 7 June 2014
Some Thoughts about D-Day
I
woke up this morning, and saw yet more coverage of long ago wars. A
whole day of TV dedicated to the D-Day landings of 70 years ago.
Union Jacks all over my social media feeds, and newspaper front
pages. A wholesale massacre of roughly 12000 people, though the
counts vary depending on the source you use. Like a lot of people
(not all, but a lot) I was mildly upset by the continuing
glorification of war, and given that this is all just before the
proper kick off of the first world war centenary remembrances, I
thought 'this is going to be a very long four years'. I said
something along the lines of “you didn't get stuff like this about
the charge of the light brigade fifty odd years ago” to my wife,
and then wondered how long the Germans were going to have to keep
apologising, and feeling vague guilt over the whole thing, as, if I
were a German over here at the moment, watching all the tributes to
the allied dead (and a lot of the facebook statuses I saw this
morning were explicit that they were only remembering the allied
dead) I would be feeling pretty shitty, despite it being 2
generations ago, and not my fault at all. I posted a facebook status
to that effect, and that was where the trouble started.
Not
as much trouble as I have been running into by other political
posting recently, because every rebuttal I got, I countered with the
terribly diplomatic reply that I was not getting into it, as it is a
very emotive subject, I know people who were directly involved, and
people indirectly involved, and these are people I love and respect,
and do not want to upset. Particularly my friends in the military,
who, while not involved in D-Day itself, are understandably very much
on the “we will remember them no matter what, don't you bring your
pacifist lefty shit into it today please Dave you hippy twat!” side
of things. And I love them for that, and decided to keep quiet. But
then I saw a promotion for a D-Day celebration, and I figured a
celebration of a massacre is really going a bit far and I thought I'd
write a blog on it, and set out my hippy, pacifist, lefty agenda, and
did a load of research. I was not prepared for what I found out, and
I am less angry on others behalf than I started out.
Let
me say at this point that I am not patriotic in anyway, I think
national borders are arbitrary lines drawn on a map, and people are
the same wherever they are, and utterly different despite being from
the same place, all at the same time. Thus the many wars for
territory fought over the last few millennia seem like childish
playground squabbles that the bigger boys have managed to get their
smaller friends to take all the hits for. Yet for some reason, people
persist in this idea of a fixed national identity, no such thing I'm
afraid, we are all individual and very different. This is a good
thing.
I
began thinking from the perspective of the ordinary German citizen
today, including their veterans, and decided that they were no more
guilty of any crimes than the British soldiers. All of them were told
that what they were doing was for King and country (or fuhrer and
country if you like) and nobody needs it thrown in their faces that
they were very much being fed lies and propaganda. Though had they
been on the winning side, would it have been different? Given that it
has since come to light that in 1944 a large faction of the Nazi
party were planning to overthrow Hitler, would the Reich have gone as
far as set out in Mein Kampf? Would they have stopped the systematic
slaughter of Jews, Gypsies, and political dissidents? Or would they
have operated in the same way as the Soviet Union did, and Red China
still does. We will never know. As to whether there was another way
to finish the war other than D-Day, history again suggests not.
Though as mentioned, the Reich may have torn itself apart, but allied
forces had no way of knowing that.
This
however, was not intended to be a what if? History lesson, although
it is a bit. I then decided to have a go with the double standard
argument, since Hitler's dream of a thousand year Reich, and
lebensraum for the German people was possibly based on various
Empires. Particularly the British Empire, on which the Sun never sets
(sorry, it's a commonwealth now, is that a better thing?) The war
that put the coffin nails in the great empires, world war one, had
left Germany with nothing but huge reparations to pay, and their
lands split up amongst the other empires. The German people were not
likely to take it for long, had it not been Hitler, some other leader
would have done something, the second world war was inevitable from
the shambles that was the treaty of Versailles. Which is a shame, as
had things been dealt with better in 1918, the world would be a
better place today, and we wouldn't have had to have the replay. I
would like to think that the end of the second world war marks the
end of aggressive imperialism in the world, but it's too early to say
yet.
After
all my wonderings about Hitler's position on Empire, and Britain's
own colonial past, which is far from pleasant, I posited the
question, do the Zulus mark the anniversary of their brief victory at
Isandlwana? Do the Sioux nation mark theirs at Little Big Horn? Of
course, I scoffingly assumed that they would have more dignity than
that. I was wrong, but they certainly do have dignity, and still mark
these occasions, despite having ultimately lost against the occupying
forces they were opposing, as you can see here.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/southafrica/1452499/Zulus-mark-anniversary-of-victory-over-British-force.html
and
here
That's
how wrong I was, you can remember massacres with dignity.
At
which point I started to think that these anniversary remembrances
are not so crass after all. I looked at the numbers, and there were
at least 9000 (up to 11000) killed from the “winning” side,
against, between 500 and 3000 (depending on your source) on the
losing side. Apparently it is a question of percentages when you're
playing the game of war, check Rourke's Drift for another force that
were hopelessly outnumbered, but pulled through (although they had a
significant advantage). And then at lunchtime, I put the TV on, and
saw some of the guys who were there telling their stories. And there
are none so humble as these chaps, they have tears in their eyes
still as they tell of the hell they had to live through, mostly with
a few gags thrown in, and a couple of chuckles. I have nothing but
respect for those who were sent off to die as cannon fodder in the
political machinations of their leaders. It would be nice to think
this wouldn't happen any more, but sadly we still convince our young
men that they are fighting for the good of all, when they are mostly
fighting for corporate interests. And we send them off to die in
foreign lands, while ironically, increasing the chances of domestic
terrorism with the same decision.
I
suspect it is the twenty four hour news culture that makes it all
that little bit grating for me. Were it a tasteful service on the
beaches for the veterans and their families from all sides, and then
everyone shakes hands, tells a few stories and has a nice day out I
would doubtless have had no problems at all. But a whole day of BBC1
given over to a huge world-wide media circus, with world leaders and
their wives in nice dresses making moving speeches seems horrendously
over blown. Grief porn if you like. Hours and hours of moving
montages with rousing music, and Huw Edwards smiling benignly through
the whole thing, if you want to bury bad news, do it today please.
Constantly being told we must be grateful for the world we live in
because so many died for it is slightly patronising, particularly
coming from the ruling classes who are systematically trying to
dismantle everything that generation achieved for us. By all means
have small tasteful remembrance services, but these TV spectaculars
are tasteless, crass and frankly insulting to the dead, who were more
likely fighting in the hopes that they wouldn't get killed rather
than for any future generations.
This
TV coverage showed wide-eyed children being shown the landing
beaches, and eager to learn about the great sacrifices made that day
to keep us all free. I sincerely hope that this is true, and kids
today have learned from the past. I remember myself and my brother on
beaches in France with war time fortifications on them, and rather
than being eager to learn of great sacrifices, we made machine gun
noises at each other and shouted “Die you Nazi bastard!” while
playing our merry war games. But it was the 80s, and we had been
raised on a steady diet of Victor, Eagle, and Commando comics, with a
sprinkling of war movies like a Bridge too Far, the Longest Day, the
Great Escape, the Dam-busters, and Bridge over the River Kwai. All
fine pieces of art, but not unpartisan, and faintly jingoistic. I
hope that the current generation of kids are brought up in a more
tolerant way, but I suspect they play at terrorists and still pretend
to die while one of them shouts “ack-ack-ack-ack-ack” and “Die
you Muslim bastard” at them. And with the world cup fast
approaching, I would like the playground to be devoid of the chant
“Two world wars and one world cup, doo da, doo da” but I will
probably be disappointed. After all, the England supporters band
still play the theme from the Great Escape at matches, I'd like to
think it's because it's a jolly rousing tune, but I suspect I am
wrong there as well.
A
chap posted this on a Billy Bragg thread earlier, which kind of sums
up how many of us feel when we see the many and various union jack
and poppy tinged posts about the massacres on social media,
particularly when linked to odious groups like Britain First, and I
repeat it here for you, as it helped me to get through it all,
“While
we commemorate the brave soldiers from all the allied countries,
including the commonwealth, who fought on D-Day, let’s also take a
moment to remember what they were fighting for. It was not for
‘patriotism’, Britain or anti-Europeanism. It was a fight against
Fascism and all it entails.
When ‘Britain First’, the EDL, the BNP, UKIP or any of the racist and bigoted factions try and hijack that fight for their own political agenda it makes me sick. The sacrifice that those courageous men made was in response to an evil man who exploited antipathy towards Jews, Gypsies, Ethnic minorities, Gays, Unions and the Unemployed to control the population and who offered hatred as a solution to his country’s problems. These groups wish to peddle the same ultra-right ideology and the fact that they choose to do so by exploiting the very men who fought against such prejudice and intolerance is shameful. WW2 was described as the war to end all wars. Sadly humans still continue to destroy each other in armed conflicts the world over but Europe, at least, has lived without war since. If we return to days of obsessive and subjective patriotism, hatred of other races and colours, intolerance of religious or sexual persuasion and the demonization of the unemployed, the poor and the needy then we truly do dishonour every man that lost his life on those beaches on that day 70 years ago. Say NO to Fascism – that’s how I will commemorate them.”
When ‘Britain First’, the EDL, the BNP, UKIP or any of the racist and bigoted factions try and hijack that fight for their own political agenda it makes me sick. The sacrifice that those courageous men made was in response to an evil man who exploited antipathy towards Jews, Gypsies, Ethnic minorities, Gays, Unions and the Unemployed to control the population and who offered hatred as a solution to his country’s problems. These groups wish to peddle the same ultra-right ideology and the fact that they choose to do so by exploiting the very men who fought against such prejudice and intolerance is shameful. WW2 was described as the war to end all wars. Sadly humans still continue to destroy each other in armed conflicts the world over but Europe, at least, has lived without war since. If we return to days of obsessive and subjective patriotism, hatred of other races and colours, intolerance of religious or sexual persuasion and the demonization of the unemployed, the poor and the needy then we truly do dishonour every man that lost his life on those beaches on that day 70 years ago. Say NO to Fascism – that’s how I will commemorate them.”
Now
I heartily endorse this (although I think he means western Europe,
the eastern half has not been so lucky) but with all the propaganda
being thrown around by both sides back in the war, I don't think any
of us can truly second guess the motives behind each and every
soldier fighting. Every man there fought for his own personal
reasons, most were probably just trying to make sure their homes and
families were safe. Some of them may have just been doing it because
that was what they felt they should do, after all, they weren't
cowards. A lot of them may have had no idea why they were there, and
suddenly found themselves in a world of bullets, shells, blood and
death with no idea how to cope with it, and were fighting just to
stay alive. Had I been alive then, I would almost certainly have been
a conscientious objector, and ostracised for my dangerous strain of
pacifism. I worry today that those right wing groups who are just
“saying what we're all thinking” are employing the very same hate
tactics that the National Socialist Party of Germany did 80 years
ago. After all, I doubt all their supporters thought they were
racists either, but those Jews eh? Can't trust them, you know what
they're like. Trying to infiltrate our schools with their Sharia
laws....
Anyhow,
I wanted to remember the people involved in the D-Day landings, who
shouldn't have had to be there in the first place. Moved around like
puppets by a ruling class (on both sides) desperately clinging to
empires that no longer existed. If only Hitler had written back to
Gandhi.
I
leave you with a story from my friend Devlin Butler about his father
who was on the beaches of Normandy 70 years ago, it brought a tear to
my eye.
On
this day in history;
The
Normandy beach invasion began and a certain SGT Arthur William Butler
(My Dad) and his friends and squad members took to the beach in the
first wave of the Normandy invasion. My dad never really spoke about
the war or that day much the only thing he really said was "it
was hell".
We
all know roughly what happened we know of the heavy machine gun fire
the countless losses etc. but on this day while most focus on the
loss and devastation, I can not help but smile as I remember one of
the only things my father ever told me about that day, it is not the
graphic detail or the sheer horror knowing about four thousand allied
troops died this day that makes me smile, only a completely deranged
head case would find that even remotely amusing, but I will explain
what does.
So,
picture the scene, before even getting to the beach under heavy
mortar fire, then hitting the beach still under mortar fire but now
within range of the heavy machine guns, friends, comrades gunned down
or blown to bits right next to you, everyone trying to get through
the water which is now pretty much nothing but blood and bodies to
find a defensible spot to take cover behind and get their bearings,
somehow my father managed to do that.
So
there he is pinned down behind a rock by machine gun fire in his
words "The army makes a man of you and puts things into
perspective, I thought this was the day I was going to die". So
with this in mind, my father who was always very down to earth a
complete realist decided in his wisdom that if this was the day he
was going to die he was not going to die hungry, and in his webbing
he had secured two (I forget if they were pork or lamb off hand)
chops and a hard boiled egg, when he told me this I said "but
dad? isn't webbing for ammunition etc.?" he said "yes, but
there is always room for food" (my dad liked his food lol) and
so he proceeded to eat them right there behind that rock being shot
at by the German army.
And
so, he finished his little picnic (as I call it) and continued to
fight on, he survived that day and counted himself fortunate for the
rest of his life, he died a few years ago of a brain tumour, pretty
much the last thing my mom, myself or anyone who knew him even
considered would be the end of him, his final words to me were "Do
not cry, I have no regrets"
When
people think about war (those who have never experienced it and
hopefully never will) the first thoughts are usually the loss of
lives, the bravery and heroism etc., and while these are things that
are worth thinking about, also remember, all those who fought died
were normal people the same as you or I. If you were in that
situation, thinking this was your last day on earth surviving all
that had come before and knowing you had to charge into the mouth of
hell would you have had enough foresight to have packed something to
eat? again in my fathers words "To die is one thing, to die in
the service of your country is expected, but to die hungry is
something else completely".
R.I.P.
All of those who gave their lives that day and throughout the whole
of WW2
R.I.P. SGT Arthur William Butler (my hero in so many ways, my father)
R.I.P. SGT Arthur William Butler (my hero in so many ways, my father)
Monday, 2 June 2014
The ghost of John Peel hates 6music as much as I do
In all the furore this week over the
Radio one playlist meeting that was documented in the Guardian (you
may not realise there was a furore about it, I didn't until somebody
linked me to an article about the furore in an unrelated place, and then another one after that, I
then had a look, and discovered that there in my cup of tea, was a
raging storm of obvious. I was more surprised that nobody at Radio
one was taking massive bribes to play such dreary, antiseptic drones
all day). I realised that my long standing hatred of playlists could
do with being written about. Interestingly (or not, depending on your
viewpoint) I was going to write about the radio making me hate bands
very quickly after really liking them anyway.
Here's a little background, I spend a
disproportionately large amount of time listening to the radio.
Really, all day from 8:30am until 5pm, sat at work, I have the radio
on. Have done for a very large proportion of my adult life, as it is
the only way to get through the painfully dull working day. And the
thing I have noticed most is that the playlisted songs (those that
are played on every single one of the daytime shows) go very quickly
from being my very favourites, to being utterly hated. Familiarity
really does breed contempt in many cases.
Normal people, who listen to the radio
in the car in the mornings and evenings on their way to work, will
tell me how much they are enjoying a new playlisted record. Because
they hear it at most, twice a day, and generally, not even that much.
I hear these damn things at least four times a day, five days a week,
and if they stay on the playlist, then this can go on for months. The
most recent casualty being the new Royal Blood single, which is sad,
as I really liked them. And now I don't.
This can all go back to the summer of
1993, when two bands became utterly hated due to over exposure. Those
bands were the Levellers and Rage against the machine, both of whom I
really liked at the beginning of the year, when I first heard them.
By the end of the summer, where every party I had been to, and every
place I had been hanging out as one can only do when you're 16, had
been endlessly playing those two albums, I hated them. With a
passion. Twenty years later I can happily listen to them again,
without flinching. The same thing happened with Nirvana, Guns and
Roses, and any other band that were overly popular at any point. I am
often accused of musical snobbery for my dislike of the current
trends, and there may be a grain of truth in that, but it's more
often than not that I get bored of hearing the same thing over and
over again really quickly.
When I got a proper job, we had Radio
one on in the factory all day long, and to begin with, I was being
happily brainwashed into buying albums by the bands they endlessly
played. I even bought the Ocean Colour Scene album on the back of
“The Day We Caught The Train”. I bought a lot of god-awful
brit-pop, and I can only claim that I was 18, and therefore stupid,
and without taste. Shortly afterwards, however, the self-same
endless radio play led me to sell most of these albums, as I was sick
of them. Especially Ocean bloody Colour Scene, and their utterly
insipid tedious dirges. There's probably a chance that if I'd only
heard these tracks a couple of times a day, I'd have been joining in
with all the recent brit-pop nostalgia, hell, I might even enjoy the
music of Blur and Oasis, but that's stretching things a bit.
I was brought up to speed on how
important technology is now by a seventeen year old of my
acquaintance (no names, privacy is respected here still) who when
told that somebody's parents didn't have any internet access, said
“But how do they listen to music?” Which obviously got a few
laughs, and was then changed to “But how do they discover new
music?” which made me think a bit more. Now obviously, these are
people in their 60s, and as we know, people of that age don't want to
discover new music thank you very much. Not all of them, but a fair
proportion I suspect, if my own parents are anything to go by. But if
you are so inclined, there is now an absolute avalanche of new music
available in just a click. I think if that had been around when I was
a kid, I would have never got anything useful done, just sat around
listening to new tunes. Not necessarily a bad thing. I was surprised
that the afore-mentioned seventeen year old couldn't think of any
alternative though, stuff does change quickly these days.
The only place to hear really
interesting, new and exciting music when I was a kid, was John Peel
in the evenings. Now, I suspect, Zane Lowe is filling that void
(don't shoot me, I know he'll never be Peel, but he does play some
good tunes at times). When we were young, you either heard it on
Peel, or you had a mate who somehow had all kinds of weird,
interesting records that they would tape off for you. I had quite a
lot of mates like that, and I thank each and every one of them for
the many strange and exciting records they got me into. I also spent
a huge amount of time sitting in a local second hand record shop,
listening to the stock with the friendly owner, and went through a
phase of buying records based on whatever had the most interesting
cover, and was super cheap. That really was the only way to get into
different music back then kids, you could read the music press, but
unless there was a tape or a flexi disc free with it, you had to
imagine what they sounded like, and when you finally got to hear them
(after saving up your pennies, and picking one of the many albums you
wanted to buy, and buying it, major investments back then) you would
be disappointed (except for the Dogs D'Amour, they sounded as
awesomely cool as they looked).
Now, a few years ago, I invested in a
DAB for work, as the years of Radio 2 (no Steve Wright, it is not ok
to talk over the guitar solo at the end of Rainbow's Since You Been
Gone, and you need to tell the audience what the record they just
heard was called, and who it was, I hate you with a passion you can
only dream of) and Radio 1 had left me hollowed out and hating all
new music. I now had 6music, which was like a whole day of John Peel,
briefly. And then I noticed the playlisting was taking over, and for
the most part, every daytime show was playing the same songs over and
over again at me, and it made me sad again.
It is the best of a bad bunch though,
and you can easily tell the records that the DJ has picked
themselves. Because Lamacq will never ever stop playing bland mid-90s
indie music whenever he gets the chance, Laverne cannot resist
Riot-Grrrrl, and Keaveny still has a Who obsession that cannot be
quelled. It is a little like my first discovery of Radio 2, around
the turn of the millennium, they played the Who, they played
Zeppelin, and not the bland insufferable white noise that was being
called new music, and being blasted across radio 1 at the time. But
that got old, as Radio 2 are still playing the same songs now that
they pulled me in with back then.
Why must those of us who listen all
day be force fed the same thing over and over again? Why are evening
listeners so special that they get the interesting stuff? I've been
listening all day, I don't want to listen all evening as well, I want
the good stuff in the daytime. And yes, I know, iPlayer, but I like
the real time aspect of radio, we are all listening together, and the
DJ is talking to me, and we are all in the same gang. I can
tweet/text/email the DJ, and he/she might read out what I have said,
and maybe reply. I like all that. I want more music that they have
picked especially for me, and not stuff that they have been told to
play because some crazy statistician has said that is what the target
demographic would enjoy. I know I could make my own playlists, and
listen to music I want, and have listened to before, and I could use
the spotify algorithms for music I might enjoy, based on music I have
already heard. But I pay my license fee so somebody else can do that
for me. Make the daytimes like the evening and weekend shows 6music,
we listen because we like new interesting stuff, if we wanted the
same playlisted shite over and over again, we would still be
listening to Radio 1.
Sunday, 25 May 2014
Short Apology and explanation, may not be relevant to many people, move along, nothing to see here....
To all those who I have possibly let
down in the last week or so, I am sorry, but I had to. I have been trying
desperately to get enough free time to be able to write, and do my
own happy little musical thing, and every time I manage to find the
time, I am gripped by stress and worry and anxiety about all the
other things I have promised other people I am going to do, which leaves me unable to do it anyway. The only
way for me to be able to get on and do the work I want to do, is to
let go of all the other stuff that I was mostly doing for other
people. So sorry to those who no longer have a stand in bass player
for far away gigs. And sorry to those who no longer have a decent
little guitarist in their nice little earner projects. Also sorry to
those who have proposed really excellent little bands to me in the
last week, other guys are available.
I realise that having been the musician
who can't say no, is in fact ruining me as a functioning human being.
I spend far too much time worrying about when I will have a free
weekend, or decent amount of weeknights, in which I might be able to
relax, and hang out with my wife and my dog. OR just worrying that I
don't have time to fit in all the things I am supposed to be doing at
all. And being of a certain age now, I really do value a nice bit of
time at home in a way I never used to when I was young and proper
rock and roll. The afore mentioned wife and dog both look at me and
shake their heads every time I load the car up and go out to play
another gig I don't really want to and they are right to. I had very
nearly got to the point where I was going to just stop playing with
anybody else at all, and was going to retire to my studio and just do
my own stuff again (which I have very much done before). But then I
figured I could just say no to some things, so I did. And I feel a
whole lot better, and the summer schedule looks nicer than it did,
and I look forward to going out to band practices again. Particularly
when there's now no more than one a week.
So, again, I am very sorry to you chaps
I have let down, but let it be known, that had I not, I would have
been cursing your names all summer long as I dragged myself out to
play music I don't really like as much as I thought, in places I
don't want to be. I hope you all find people who are better suited to
the job than I am. Do please keep sending me your offers, as once I
am cured of this current bout of misery, I'll probably want to get
out there with everyone I can again.
The problem is, as always, that when it
starts to feel like work, like a job that I have to go out and do,
then I really don't want to do it, and the day I don't want to play
music anymore will be a very very dark day in my life, and I don't
want it to happen. So I'd rather upset a few people, than bugger up
my favourite thing forever.
So sorry again chaps, I hope this
explains it all a little better for you.
By the way, I am still not entirely
sure how many bands I am in, and how many I have left this week. Can
anyone who thinks I am still in a band with them please let me know,
and I'll tell you if you're right or not.
Wednesday, 21 May 2014
I'm Not Racist, I'm Just Deaf
After last weeks report of an argument
on the internet going slightly awry over a misunderstanding, I had
another similar problem this morning. Rather than going over it like
I did last week, here's a link to the twitter thread, where an
American takes a very long time to realise he is arguing in the wrong
thread, and like many others, fails to apologise when he realises his
mistake. He also has the sheer audacity to claim that I'm the one
that isn't bright, says I'm a joke (I assume he means I'm incredibly
witty, and that I make terribly good jokes) and that I might have
commented on the wrong thread. He's a clever chap, and I am not going
to suggest that anybody takes him on in a battle of wits, or even
sends him a tweet suggesting he might like to admit he was wrong.
Here's the link, enjoy.
Now, given that tomorrow (or probably
today now, since I'll most likely sit on this until then, in case a
good idea comes to me in the night) is the day of the EU elections, I
should probably do some political ranting and posturing and tell you
all why you should vote for my favourite party. I'm not going to
though. I'm not even going to tell you which way I am voting, the
democratic process requires that you make up your own mind my reading
about your local candidates. I am however going to shake my head at
you all and tell you that you let yourselves down.
Yep, by continually attacking the
kippers (as the Ukip supporters have now become known) we're playing
to their strengths. Their whole shtick is that they are now the
underdogs, oppressed by the hordes of immigrants coming over here and
making the place all colourful and tasty. Oppressed by the EU,
forcing us to not cut our hands off with power tools or be forced to
work endlessly long hours by unscrupulous employers (oh no, we can
sign a bit of paper to get out of that one, or be fired, it's a
legitimate choice). Oppressed by the mythical liberal lefty elite,
forcing them not to say n*g-n*g, p*ki, or ch*nky. And those of us who
are screaming “Racists!” “Fascists!” “Nazis!” etc. etc.
are not helping. Xenophobic, backward looking, profiteering,elitist,
underhanded hypocrites they may be, but to accuse them of the other
is just helping them out.
In fact, the unfortunate shouting of
“Racist!” at the smallest infractions of social protocol, or
misunderstanding is always unhelpful. I live in Devon, I pretty much
grew up here, during the 80s and 90s. The lack of racial diversity
has always been stunning down here, which has made it a haven for the
genuinely racist and hateful. I've met many pleasant people in the
pubs, who when I ask why they moved down here will happily say “to
get away from all the darkies what moved in where I used to live”
charming, really. But, and this is more to the point, I know
relatively little of other cultures, and will ask fairly
inappropriate questions of people of different ethnicity when I've
had a few. Sometimes I get called Racist for this, I'm not Racist,
I'm just interested. I have trouble remembering faces, and sometimes
think I have met friends of friends who are of the same ethnic origin
as other friends of friends before. Again, I'm not racist, just crap
with faces (and names sadly).
Whenever I go to my local Indian
takeaway and have trouble hearing what the staff say, I am worried
that if I say “pardon?” or “can you repeat that please?” I
will get the racist card thrown at me, but as I have said, I grew up
in Devon, and there weren't a lot of Indian accents around then.
Also, I am profoundly deaf on one side, and a lot of them mumble (I
don't mean Indians in general, just most of the staff in there) there
are 2 who don't mumble, and I am always relieved to see them. I
always feel the need to apologise for not understanding their every
word. Which I don't feel the need to do with my Father-in-law, who is
very, very devonshire, and also mumbles, and I also cannot understand
him. But again, I'm not a racist, I'm just deaf.
Much like the Clarkson debacle, and the
firing of the Radio DJ for playing an old song with an unfortunate
lyric, this is just distracting us all from actual racism and
discrimination that goes on every day all over the world. And hip hop
music's reclamation of the legendary N word has not helped at all.
Many white/indian/chinese kids listen to this, and all kids like to
sing along to their favourite songs. It is not helpful to have to
look around to check that there is nobody listening who might be
offended before you can do so. I used to like NWA, still do, but the
hyper-divisive nature of that word is tellingly worrying. When the
gay community reclaimed queer for themselves, were they similarly
protective of its use? I certainly don't feel as bad saying queer in
front of my gay friends as I would saying n*gg*r in front of my black
friends. However, they're all just words, and not inherently racist,
because they are just sounds we make, not entrenched attitudes of
superiority.
If I were to assume that all members of
a particular ethnic group were inferior to my own ethnic group, then
that would make me a racist. Luckily, I assume all members of every
ethnic group, including my own are infinitely inferior to me. Which
makes me an arsehole, certainly, but not a racist. And I would
suggest that your average kipper is most likely an arsehole (or even
more likely, a perfectly decent sort who is easily persuaded by
propaganda and likes having a scapegoat to blame for the inherent
unfairness of our society, but for some reason doesn't want to blame
the corporations at the top) but probably not a racist, a fascist, or
a nazi, and to suggest that they are is kind of insulting to the
thousands who died to stop the genuine racists, fascists and nazis
back in the big wars with numbers. Just like Ukip are insulting them
with their rather tasteless use of this poster.
Which, it turns out, is showing mostly
French war graves, rather appropriately.
Wednesday, 14 May 2014
Distracted from the Real Arguments
Well, after two nights of wondering
what on earth I could possibly write about this week, I was gifted a
marvellous online argument this afternoon, in which I showed
remarkable restraint in the face of boundless abuse. Unfounded I
might add, and still not apologised for. It was a little like going
back to school again for a bit with some of the insults chucked my
way. However, we settled our differences, and he became a perfectly
reasonable chap after he realised his mistake, and I shall not name
names, or my connection to him, those of you who saw it will know,
and those of you who didn't don't need to. I don't personally know
the chap, or wish him any ill-will, but it once again got me thinking
about people's very different styles of argument.
Now, if you have spent any time on the
world wide web at all recently, or even in the company of real
people, talking about stuff (you know, in the pub, like we used to do
in the olden days) you will be aware of UKIP, and how they divide
opinion. Although, in my personal circle, it is more about why
you think they're wrong, rather than whether you like them or not,
however, I am not getting into that here. There are plenty of other
ranty political blogs out there, suffice it to say that the
borderline racism is not their worst quality. A friend of mine had
posted on facebook that he was thinking of voting for them as a
protest vote, and being helpful, I posted some alternatives, and this
infamous Stewart Lee picture quote.
After which, I came across this blog
entry by somebody else, and rather than just posting the link, I also
quoted a hefty chunk of text in the thread, inside quotation marks.
Because people never click on links, but they will pick up on bits of
quotes.
http://anotherangryvoice.blogspot.co.uk/2014/05/reasons-to-vote-alternative-2014.html.
If you are similarly unlikely to read the link, the gist of the bit I
quoted was that UKIP policies are a wee bit tory-like and
establishment, and thus as a protest vote, it's a bit daft. There
were these two key parts that got me in a bit of trouble however
"backed by a tide of political illiterates who consider them some kind of "alternative" to the establishment orthodoxy",
and “UKIP is the party to represent the kind of person who loved Margaret Thatcher, but thought her biggest fault was that she was too left-wing. If you are not as right-wing as Margaret Thatcher was, yet you actually vote for this unmistakably Thatcherite party, you are clearly an idiot, and should be ashamed of yourself.”
"backed by a tide of political illiterates who consider them some kind of "alternative" to the establishment orthodoxy",
and “UKIP is the party to represent the kind of person who loved Margaret Thatcher, but thought her biggest fault was that she was too left-wing. If you are not as right-wing as Margaret Thatcher was, yet you actually vote for this unmistakably Thatcherite party, you are clearly an idiot, and should be ashamed of yourself.”
Now, having just read it, quoted a big
chunk and wandered off to do something else, I was slightly surprised
later on to find some comments below my quotes.
“Another twat that can do nothing but
slab off ukip yawn”
“Get your hair cut get a job and jog
on I'm not the 1 looks like a idiot”
Which
surprised me a bit, as it is not the cut and thrust political debate
I am used to. Particularly since I have a relatively well-paid and
responsible job. And my employer has no problem with my beautiful
locks at all. I'm not one to generalise over the “average bloke in
the street” voter, but cripes DM, this is an odd refutation. At
this point, I assumed he was on a serious offensive, and pointed out
that personal insults are no way to conduct a serious debate, and it
seemed a bit childish. I got this in return
“You
started it calling all people that vote ukip idiots and what's
Thatcher got to do with it no proper argument just blame her”
Yep,
I got told that I “started it.” At any point I expected to be
told that I was just jealous, or that he knew I was but what was he.
I had a quick look up the thread to discover that earlier on he had
referred to somebody else as a “chink” which is lovely. Then
googled him, and found him expressing solidarity with the lovely
Jeremy Clarkson (who I do find funny, and have no problem with) by
telling him to use the dambusters dog as defence (we all know what
Guy Gibson's dog in dambusters was called right?) so I had a measure
of his “speak as I find” type personality, and tried to tread
carefully. In my next few attempts to get the reasons for the UKIP
support I also got these little gems thrown at me
“what
you done apart from slag a party off and slate a dead woman your a
hero mate”
“*name
of my friend removed* some of your friends are 1st class single
minded bell ends”
“maybe
you just a green sheep and can't make your own decisions Barr.”
At
which point I realised, after much explaining that I had only linked
to the article, and had not called anybody anything derogatory, he
hadn't seen the quote marks around the bit I quoted, and thus assumed
that the fairly combative language used in the original had been
mine, and he felt I had aimed it at him. So I did what I always do in
these situations, explained it more fully, apologised for any offence
caused and tried to move on.
To
this guys credit, we did. He did not however apologise for the
schoolboy insults. Which unfortunately makes him a grade A
cuntknuckle who can go fuck himself with his mum's fat sweaty leg.
(joke).
He
is also lucky that I do consider pulling people up on their spelling
and grammar to be the lowest form of arguing. Pedantry is hugely
distracting, and the last refuge of a fuckwit on the ropes. It was
tempting, though there would be no winners in that situation, only
unending twattery of the worst order.
I
learned very quickly on the web that as soon as you bring personal
insults into an argument, you have essentially lost. As I've been
arguing about politics, religion, music and comic books all over the
web since back on the usenet forums in the 90s, I've got a lot of
experience at online arguing. Much the same as I learned very quickly
in real life arguing in the pub that he who starts swearing first,
gets punched in the head by a psycho (learned that the hard way
thanks). So I have always conducted myself in as obsessively polite a
manner as I can when arguing, particularly on the internet, as I
don't like it when people can back-quote me, and prove that I was
disrespectful and impolite in my arguments when I pull them up for
it. If we all did this, internet arguments would be a lot more fun
for all involved.
I
will still say things I do not believe in as inflammatory a way as I
can just for shits and giggles though. Trolling in its purest form is
still a great deal of fun.
On
the same note, when I read this in the guardian a few weeks ago
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/apr/28/inequality-hurts-everyone-taxation-growth
the below the line comments made me surprisingly cross. I know all
below the line commenters are certifiably insane, trolls, or
advertising robots, but some of them undermine the whole
argumentative process. In the article, Chris Huhne makes the point
that inequality is bad, and it hurts every level of society. Hoorah!
Rapturous applause, Lib Dem MP makes thoroughly obvious point that we
should all agree with. Although some definitely won't agree, that's
where the argument in the comments section will go surely?
No,
the argument was that Mr Huhne makes too much money to be able to
talk about this issue.
As
if only the very poor can talk about inequality. If we want any
change to happen, it has to come from those at the top, who are in
power, unless we go for a full on blood and ashes revolution. And
those seldom end well in the short term. It got worse, somebody else
dragged Lib Dem policy into it, and then he was pulled apart because
he was promoting a book at the same time.
And
thus the arguments over the actual issues were brilliantly sidelined
into trivialities of party politics that do not matter one jot. Which
makes me suspect that the internet trolls, crazies, and swivel-eyed
loons are actually hired by the Illuminati/Government/Your Conspiracy
Theory of Choice to distract us from ever reaching any kind of truth.
YMMV
:)
Tuesday, 6 May 2014
Can you really teach Creativity?
Congratulations, you have made it to a blog about creative
writing in which our main protagonist has finally written something about
creative writing, rather than garbled bollocks about cider, social media, and
the intricacies of one man's relationship with the animals he is forced to live
with on a daily basis. It may come as something of a surprise, but I have been
procrastinating over creative writing this week, by indulging in creative
writing, sort of.
Yes, as promised, way back in the first instalment of this
blog (or maybe second, or third, I have no inclination whatsoever to check) I
made mention of signing up to an online “begin creative writing” course. I then
made some thoroughly witty jokes about a course on finishing creative writing
perhaps being of more use to me, and oh how we all laughed. Anyhow, this week,
the course began, and I attempted to go through the first week’s tasks without
judging, and without releasing the ego-monster (I think I may have mentioned
before that I believe myself cleverer and superior to everybody else in every
conceivable way, and thus allowed to ridicule anything I don’t agree with, or
consider beneath me, a habit I am trying to change).
A little background, I have spent my entire life telling
people that creative writing courses are an exercise in making money out of the
talentless, and that you are taught the basics of constructing sentences,
paragraphs and general writingness at school. Combine this ability with looking
at stuff and having ideas, and there you go, creative writing, for free, if you
need telling, you’re in the wrong gig (and inventing words like “writingness”
is as creative as it gets kids). It has always been up there with Klingon and
Surfing Studies as a joke subject for a degree course in my mind. In the
interests of fairness, and being able to back up my arguments, I signed up for
one from futurelearn,
as it is free, shortly after I read
this article in the grauniad, because I agreed with what was said in it.
One should never condemn something one hasn’t tried oneself, so I had to have a
punt, and see if it does indeed help my efforts. Last time I indulged myself in
a spot of “know your enemy” indulgence, I read the first four Harry Potter
books in a couple of days so that I could ridicule them and tell everyone they
were rubbish. I spent the next 2 years impatiently waiting for Order of the
Phoenix to come out, and became utterly bewitched by them, still am a bit. But
I don't expect similar results here. We'll see. (Did you see what I did with
the bewitched joke there? Genius eh?)
So far, the course has told me one should keep a writers
journal (I assume this is a more organised equivalent of all the bits of paper
I have strewn about my pockets with ludicrous ideas scrawled on them in ever
more illegible handwriting) and to notice stuff that happens around you (well
duh). There was also a couple of bits of other people's books to read, as
examples of how writers can create characters (I have read books before thanks,
and literary criticism is, I believe still a mandatory part of any school's English lessons. Surely if you don’t read a lot, you probably shouldn’t take up
writing). There were some bits where one was encouraged to write things, and
put them in the comments thread for other people on the course to read. Here is
an example of the exercises that are set, we were asked to write a paragraph
with one fact, and three false things, and another paragraph with three facts,
and one false thing, here is my effort, see what you think.
1 fact, 3 fiction
Rizla sat by the fire drying out, she had been soaked by the
water cannons that they were firing from the top of the moors, she knew she
shouldn't have jumped from the window and taken herself for a walk, and was
ashamed that Dave had had to drag her out of the ever increasing swamp that was
being created before she went the same way as all those drowned sheep.
3 Facts 1 fiction
Dave read the paragraph he had written about his dog. He
found it hard to believe that this exercise could make any difference at all in
his ability to write creatively, the bit about the drowning sheep made him
laugh though, as it was very funny. Rizla made him a cup of tea to celebrate.
I don't think I'm taking this course very seriously. Nobody
commented on my efforts (or anybody else’s really, that’s the joy of an online
free course, your self-obsession and narcissism can be fully realised).
So my mind is not yet changed, I am still firmly of the
opinion that if you need to be told to notice things, write down the things you
have noticed, jiggle them about into an intriguing and interesting paragraph,
and embellish the truth with more exciting fictional things, then perhaps
creative writing is not going to be your thing.
I think this sarcastic bear says it as well as I ever could
really.
On the upside though, my collection of tatty notebooks that I
have been scribbling ideas in for years and years has been retired. The course
notes did inspire me to download an app for my phone instead, I am hoping that
this will lead to me having less crap in my pockets (which could mean less
pockets, and then PIRATE TROUSERS!) and easier access to all my notes, as it syncs them to the cloud, and
I can pull them down from any computer I like. Admittedly, they were always in
my pocket, next to my pen before this, sometimes even in an actual notebook,
and as mentioned earlier, more often on ripped off bits of envelope, old
receipts, and beer mats, still easily accessible at any time, due to being in
my pocket. I now have boxes full of them around my house (carefully filed, as
one tends to call throwing things in a shoebox and chucking it in the loft). I
am hoping they will confuse the bejesus out of future generations of historians
(or my step-kids, when they clear out all my shit after I’ve died and left them
all the crap I own as revenge for all the stuff they keep in my house now) as
sadly my notes have a tendency towards the cryptic, and if not acted upon
within a few months of scrawling them, there is a real danger that a) I won't
be able to read my handwriting anymore, and b) hedgehog- howitzer – pigeon war
will not mean anything to me anymore (it doesn't, you can have that one for
free if you want it).
The other good thing that happened was while we had to listen
to other successful writers tell us why they started writing, and other useful
insights (feel the sarcasm in those last three words) and while this had no
bearing on my work at all, and I struggled to understand why I should give a
toss about them, Louis de Bernieres cheered me up. He said that he wrote
depressing poetry as a teenager (check), then wasted his twenties trying to be
a rock star (check), and didn't write anything other than lyrics really until
he was thirty-five, when he had a punt at novel writing (check and mate). So
there's definitely hope for me. Will keep you all posted on the course as it
proceeds, not holding out much hope, as I have seen this week’s course contains
an article entitled “How to be original” I don't know where to start with that
one, it's mere existence makes me angry.
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