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.
I found a blog
hiding on my hard drive that I felt was the most important thing in
the world when I wrote it. I came in drunk one Saturday night, and
decided that the reason everything is wrong is that we have been
conned by the ruling classes into believing it is crass to talk about
money. I decided that I had to write a blog detailing the financial
ins and outs of myself and my family (to the best of my knowledge)
thus setting the snowball rolling so that we can all understand each
other better.
I wrote it, it was
very sweary (and written a few nights before the recent budget, out
of annoyance about inheritance tax cuts) and then decided I should at
least hold off and edit it a bit before publishing. When I read it in
the cold light of day I decided it is crass to talk about money, my
family would be very unhappy with me for broadcasting their finances
to anyone who wants to read it, and left it on the hard drive.
I have changed my
mind about it again now.
There follows a
heavily edited version, in which I wimp out, and miss my own point
entirely.
Dear Messrs Cameron
and Osborne, please take back your tax break, I don't need it, or
even qualify for it, and if I don't need it I suspect nobody really
does.For clarification, I
have been very lucky, along with the rest of my family. My
grandmother died a year ago, and left us a fuck ton of money, hoorah!
I miss my grandmother every day, like all grandsons do, but the
xxxxxx quid she left me makes it a bit easier. Not all of us can say
that right? (I really do miss her by the way, she never meant to get
all that money, and while she was alive she gave everything she could
to anyone she felt needed it, and was the kindest human being I have
ever had the pleasure of knowing, but a house in walking distance of
Guildford Station, is a house in walking distance of Guildford
Station, and this is a different world to the 1950s).I know it isn't very
British to talk about money, but that might be what got us into all
this shit in the first place. To me, xxxxxxquid is genuinely, a fuck
ton of money. I put it into a deposit on a house I really liked. I
live in it now, it is brilliant. I am still the same sad, miserable
son of a bitch I was when I lived in a council house on the other
side of town. But I have a nice house now. I also feel horribly
guilty for all the people still living on the estate we used to who
can't afford their rent, let alone the price of getting out of there.The point is, I
would have been more than happy to pay tax on that money, and have a
smaller deposit. It would not bother me at all, and that is on a mere
xxxxxx pounds. Take 40 percent of that, I am poor(ish) and don't
understand numbers that big anyway.My Dad is an
accountant, he dealt with my grandmothers estate, he might well think
differently, since I only got a certain percentage (which I am still
doing little happy dances about). He might not, because he can do
maths, and knows that under Mr Cameron's new inheritance tax laws, we
might not be paying tax on it. I think that we did at the time, but
we were fine with that, because it is, as I said, a fuck ton of money
that we didn't have before. And unexpected, unearned fuck tons of
money are exactly the sort of things that should be taxed.I bought a house, my
sister did some things, my brother did some things, my mum and dad
did some things. None of the things we did were life-saving, and we
would all be fine without it. (Apologies, a lot of the important
stuff is being edited out for the sake of family harmony, this is
ensuring none of this makes sense anymore, I could have spoken to
everyone individually and asked if they minded me spewing their
intimate details over the internet to make some useless socialist
point, but I thought it might create the very problem I was trying to
avoid, so I didn't). Seriously, this is
what happens to fuck tons of money.And they want to
move the inheritance tax threshold up.Really.I would not benefit
from it,I would happily pay
tax on what I have already inherited.Inherited wealth is
not earned wealth.Fuck you, pay some
tax on your mum's house, you are not entitled to anything.Yes I am a
socialist, and possibly worse (no, I don't know what I meant by that
either) and I know that owning my own home from inherited wealth is
probably against everything I believe in , but I live in a capitalist
society and can't change that, so I decided not to suffer on
principles (Dad taught me that too).Apologies to my
entire family, I hope you don't think too badly of me for actually
using numbers for once(I haven't, I edited it out, I am a total
wimp, sorry to everyone else).Power to the people(not a joke, apparently)
And there you have
it, a genuine drunken rant, edited for Britishness. Maybe one day we
won't find it crass to talk about money, and people will openly
discuss their salaries by the water cooler, and realise that that is
why the 'crass to talk about money' thing came about. So that
employers can pay some people much less than others, safe in the
knowledge that they will never find out. I once worked somewhere
where it was written into my contract that I could not discuss my
salary with any other employee. Nice trick, didn't work, most of us
were on less than the original minimum wage (this was before it came
in) a lot were proper Essex council estate boys, and they just can't
help themselves but tell everyone what they earn (can I still
stereotype Essex council estate boys? Well I'm going to anyway). So
we all knew, and we all used it in wage reviews to make sure we
didn't get skinned any worse than anybody else.
I talk to plenty of
people who say 'oh I'm not really that well off' when I know that
their household income is at least four times larger than ours. I
claim to not be that well off myself, when compared to my former
neighbours, I am pretty damn good thanks. Relativity is everything,
and the more we have, the more expensive our lives become, bringing
the illusion of poverty. It is just an illusion, trust me, I did the
real thing for long enough.
I may be sober now,
but I still say you can stick your inheritance tax break. Take the
lot, I don't need my parents stuff, and the illusion of a meritocracy
is a little shakier than it was before the breaks.
I get the feeling
that libraries are obsolete, like public baths and most other great
victorian philanthropic institutions. Don't get me wrong, I love
books, and I loved libraries 30 years ago when I needed them. But now
even the poorest in our society has a device in their pocket capable
of downloading and reading more books than you could ever hope to
finish in a lifetime. And the best of them are free now.
There may be an
element of playing devils advocate here, since I have friends who are
librarians, and I love the concept. However, we keep being told that
cuts must be made, and I would rather we found other ways of
borrowing books than trying to find other ways to stop depressed
people being left all alone to finish themselves off. And in the same
way as live TV broadcasts will probably go the way of the dodo, so
will the printed word, and if not the printed word, then certainly
the big, beautiful cathedrals to it that we have built for the
purposes of never having the thing you wanted to read in at the
moment (but I can order it for you dear, 2 weeks tops).
I have not had
access to a library since I moved out to the sticks 11 years ago. We
have a library bus that comes by on a Friday, but I'm at work then
and can't use it. This doesn't bother me as I have been using the
charity shop/car boot sale merry-go-round book reading method
instead, which does a bit of good at the same time, and generates
money for good causes, while also ensuring I always read the latest
must-read book club type books a year or so after everyone else, and
for only 50p.
When I was a kid
though, I went to the local library every week, grabbed a huge pile
of Doctor Who novelisations, rapaciously read them, and eventually
got a gold book track badge for my troubles. And while I was doing my
A levels I borrowed many piles of weighty textbooks that I couldn't
possibly have afforded to buy in order to plagiarise them for my
extended essays (which I got As for by the way, no internet to check
if I had cheated back then, it works both ways). So I do appreciate
their uses.
But now it is
different, we have e-readers and the internet, I can read anything
that is out of copyright for absolutely nothing (thank you Project
Gutenberg) and while I could not plagiarise it as blatantly anymore,
I could find all the source material I could ever need at the click
of a button. And it wouldn't just be those books on the subject that
my favourite head librarian in Bideford had chosen to put in there
(Hi Rose, your books got me those As, thanks, good choices) I now
have access to everything ever written, which is a little daunting,
but equally brilliant.
So in the same way
as public bathhouses were made obsolete by all of us having plumbing
and soap in our own homes, the availability of information and books
to all and sundry that the internet has set free has probably made
libraries as we know them obsolete. I shall mourn them, as an
integral part of my late twentieth century youth, but like those
stove-pipe hatted philanthropists who set them up, I think their work
is done. Maybe we can re-purpose the buildings as community centres
instead?
Once
a year, without fail (except on Old Farmer Eavis's fallow years) the
headline acts for Glastonbury festival are announced, and the
internet explodes with outrage. Whether it is because somebody has
had the temerity to book a hip-hop act, or somebody your Dad has
never heard of, it is a near certainty that those complaining are
probably not going to Glastonbury anyway. There have been more than
enough words wasted over Kanye West's
booking already, but if you think a festival that encompasses all
musical forms should ignore what is arguably the dominant and most
innovative form of musical expression of the last three decades then
you may not be paying attention. Or you may be paying too much
attention to an idiot with an agenda and an outlet. The
kind of deluded idiot that sends death threats to festival
organisers.
Any
discussion of Rap on any musicians online forum I frequent will end
up with someone making the old 'rap is spelled with a silent C' joke,
which has never been funny. And there are those still claiming that
it is destroying the moral fibre of our youth. If you are one of
them, then this is akin to those old men who said Elvis
and Rock and Roll would bring about the apocalypse,
except that you are saying it in the early 1990s (figuratively
speaking, more of this kind of thing later). The possibility exists
that because it is a predominantly black form of music that was
introduced by black culture without a nice white Elvis, or
jovial old cuddly Bill Haley
to front it, there are racist overtones to those who hate it so
vehemently. Of course it’s just a possibility.
I
find it hard to believe that people can be so outraged by a choice of
headliner at a music festival that they start up a
petition to get it changed,
but it happens. And it is shared all over my social media timelines,
mostly by the ubiquitous old, straight, white males of the world. And
the greatest percentage being those who are not, and probably never
would be, attending anyway. I am also quite tired of hearing how
music needs to be “authentic” and “real” (apparently that
means it has guitars in it) and wondering if that actually
means I have to get rid
of all fakery and
artifice (like my
amplifiers and effect pedals)
and just sing hey-nonny-fucking-no in a field with a mandolin to
be genuine.
Kanye
West is a dick yes, but so was John Lennon (sorry to attack your
sacred cow, but if you really want to imagine no possessions, maybe
offload the Rolls Royce John) and nobody would pipe up about the
Beatles playing would they? Jimmy Page is also a crazed fantasist
living in the past with a very dodgy record (I am referring more to
things like the infamous mudshark
incident
rather than outrider,
though it applies equally to both) but a Zeppelin reunion would not
attract a petition to change it would it? The signees, I suspect,
would be more than happy to see corporate whores like Dire Straits or
Fleetwood Mac headlining, claiming
that they had earned their place by virtue of being straight, white
and middle of the road. They would be wrong, festivals should be new
and exciting, not old, stayed and frankly dull.
I
think the outrage may be a result of the fact that you buy your
tickets (which you can't then sell on easily anymore) without a clue
as to who is going to be playing there at all. Now, if you are going
to festivals for the music, then you are going for the wrong reasons
anyway, they may be music festivals, but they are about meeting crazy
people, doing crazy things, and forgetting that there is a shitty
real world out there waiting for you when you get out (and buying
hats, obviously). The music is just background to the rest of it.
Glastonbury know this, and don't need a line-up to sell tickets. Not
everyone buying them has cottoned on to this yet though.
It
is the new breed of festival goer that fuel the outrage, the rush for
tickets, and the extortionate prices. The wealthy city types, who
crave shower blocks, and constantly take selfies in front of the
stage without listening to a note, desperate to make sure everybody
knows that they were there. The middle-aged men, desperately trying
to seem cool still in their flowerpot hats and tartan shorts while
refusing to relinquish their grip on everything, so you get to listen
to Oasis, and pasty interchangeable indie bands forever and ever and
ever (they did say they would live that long remember). And then
there are those baby boomers again, they priced you out of the
housing market, and now they've got your Glastonbury tickets, and
they want to see the Rolling Stones and Kenny Rogers, so you can take
your Hip Hop music, and your Electro-Gypsy-Dixieland-Funk and fuck
off back to playschool kids.
My
own generation may be to blame, we took festivals over in the 90s, we
decided there should be a different one every weekend with the same
line-up, we added a ton of corporate sponsors, accepted that food and
drink should cost roughly four times more than in the real world and
ensured that the line-up remains the same to this day. I am sorry
kids, we broke it for you, maybe you should fix it again.
I
was more upset by the booking of the Rolling Stones in anything other
than the Sunday afternoon nostalgia spot than I was at the Kanye
booking, at least he is vaguely relevant. Don't get me wrong, I love
the Rolling Stones, but having them headline a festival in 2013 was
equal to Irving Berlin headlining at Woodstock, wrong time, wrong
place. Still the target audience seemed to enjoy it. Music festivals
are now the preserve of the wealthy and well heeled, not the
turned-on, tuned-in and dropped-out youth that dreamed them up in the
first place. They can't afford Glastonbury, or get their heads
together enough to go through the ticket application process.
On
a more current note, a lot of people got really upset at Florence and
the Machine taking over the Foo Fighters headline spot. Those people
were also wrong, to continue my Woodstock analogy, the Foo Fighters
are Frankie
Laine,
Florence is Jimi
Hendrix.
The first Foos album is twenty years old now, while Florence has only
just released her third hugely acclaimed album, on top of two
innovative, interesting, and frankly brilliant number one albums. I
can’t help feeling that if it were someone less female and
interesting, like Jake Bugg or Mumford and sons perhaps, there would
be less outrage, can I scream guardianista-like about inherent
misogyny while I’m here? And again, to complain about one band
playing at an event on the scale of Glastonbury festival is entirely
myopic, there is so much to see, and such variety, that complaining
about one band, on one stage is like moaning about what is on Sky
Living at 9 o’clock this evening (apparently it’s a new show
called Chicago Fire, no, me neither).
Music
festivals should be about, new, current interesting music, not the
same old shit your Dad used to listen to. If you are moaning about
Florence's style, then remember your Dad
moaning about Boy George looking like a girl,
that's you that is. Glastonbury is for your Dad now (and you might
well have become him) at least Babylon is anyhow, and remember that
in our Woodstock analogy, even Muse are now Bill Haley and the
Comets. If you're actually there, go in to the deep dark weird places
and go find new interesting stuff, there’s loads of it, everywhere,
music is brilliant, new music is better, you can hear things you know
on your iPod/Walkman/gramophone any time you like. If you're not
there, shut your mouth and stop worrying about it.
Disclaimer
– A lot of my views are not my own, and are merely voiced for
comedic effect. I
honestly do believe that Glastonbury, and all music festivals should
be inclusive of all ages, all classes and all music tastes, we are
never more all the same than when we are naked and covered in shit.
When I moved into my
first flat twenty years ago, a very nice lady who lived upstairs (I
think she may have been the one playing all those hawaiian guitar
albums really loudly, but I'm not sure) asked me what I did. I told
her, 'I work up at Heathcote and Ivory, you know, the pot pourri
factory on Alverdiscott Road?' And then she said something that has
stuck with me ever since. She said, 'I don't mean where do you work
dear, I mean what do you do? What do you get up for in the morning?'
or something similar, I am paraphrasing, it was a long time ago. I
was quite taken aback, and told her that I was a musician, I may even
have claimed to be a writer, I was a pretentious twat at eighteen,
but then who isn't? I have since realised she may have just been
trying to find out who the noisy git with the electric guitar was,
but she seemed genuinely delighted to know that I was not just a
factory worker.
At the time I was
constantly saying that I had to do something worthwhile with my life.
I'm not sure I even know what that means now, and a girl I was seeing
at the time asked me one very important question. Why? She had a
point, define worthwhile, to my pets, wife and stepkids I am very
much worthwhile whatever else I am doing (I am a God to Rizla and the
Cats, the big hand with the food). To people I hold doors open for,
and smile and say good morning too I surely make a difference. Even
to those who say they can set their watch by me walking past their
house every morning I have worth. But when you're eighteen worthwhile
has more weight, expectations are set much too high, at least mine
were, probably to justify some of the decisions I made. If you are
happy, and enjoying what you are doing, even if it is just watching
funny cat videos every spare minute you have, then that is
worthwhile.
Ever since then I
have steadfastly refused to define myself by my job. Or even bother
asking other people what they do for a living. If they want you to
know, they will tell you (and how). Full disclosure, I run a print
department for a living, this sounds more impressive than it is.
There's just me, and a room full of printers and computers that
occasionally work. If I need a holiday, the company's technical
director comes in and runs it for me, and when it is busy, he comes
in to help out and is my bitch. He's also my boss, which makes for
some wonderful tension, but after two months of me swearing at him
over the Christmas rush, he gives me a bonus, and usually buys me
something nice as well, so he must enjoy it really.
Like a lot of
people, I do not really love my job, I do it so that I can afford to
live, and I kind of fell into it by accident. Occasionally I get
caught up in it, as when it does get busy and I am trying to make
sure that every one of the 12 printers in my print room is doing
something it is a little like conducting an orchestra, and I very
nearly enjoy the sensation of doing something well. I have been known
to wave my arms at them like a conductor, which alongside my constant
muttering to myself and occasional sweary outbursts at inanimate
objects makes me look completely insane. This may explain why I am
mostly left alone in my little domain.
The company produces
novelty jigsaws, coasters, placemats and suchlike, which is exactly
the sort of thing I have always set myself against, we are producing
tat for the overpaid to buy and give to people who will probably
never even look at them (if my boss is reading this, I am sorry, but
you knew all this when you hired me, the anti-capitalism never
bothered you before). It is easy to get caught up in it, and believe
that it is important. Without it I would not be able to keep my home,
so in that sense it is (ethics are ethics, but you do need to eat)
though when someone is screaming across the office that there is an
urgent jigsaw, I still find it hard to stifle a laugh at the very
concept of a jigsaw being urgent. It is certainly not a calling, but
it is the job I have hated least of all the jobs I have ever had.
Far too many people
are guilty of calling themselves musicians or writers these days, and
very few of those who claim those titles in their twitter bios make
any kind of living from it. This only came to my attention while
reading Dan Brown's Inferno (you won't tell anyone I read Dan Brown
books will you? Thanks) when Robert Langdon is surprised all the
hands that go up when he asks if there are any writers in the room,
and blames amazon kindle direct publishing. If you don't get paid for
it, it is a hobby, not a job. By the way, in case you haven't seen it
before, my twitter bio quite specifically describes me as a
not-quite-writer and almost-musician. An important disclaimer I hope.
But then I started
this by saying that you are not your job didn't I? So if you play
music and you write stuff, and that is what you do, whether it pays
or not, you can certainly call yourself what you like. No matter how
elitist Dan Brown wants to be about it, it is not a closed world
anymore, and anyone can write and publish a book if they want.
Doesn't mean that it will be any good though, at least traditional
publishing filters out all the crap, saving the consumer a great deal
of time.
I am writing this on
the eve of my 38th birthday, which has put me in the mood
to reflect that if I had done things differently, I could maybe be
one of those people who have a career, rather than a series of jobs
that they fell into. I always assumed my Dad had been the career
type, as he has had a very successful career. But in a recent
conversation with him I discovered that he only fell into accountancy
because he didn't get into University to do History like he wanted
to. This may explain why my parents got so annoyed with me for not
taking up my offered University place back in the 90s when it was all
still free, sorry Dad.
I hadn't realised
how much my conviction that your job does not define you had taken
hold until my very favourite editor pointed out to me that very few
of my characters mentioned their jobs. Didn't occur to me that
anybody would be interested in what fictional people did for a
living, as I felt their character would be defined enough by their
actions and words. I think I was probably naïve and wrong in hoping
for this, as my favourite editor is generally right, and knows an
awful lot more about what makes a decent story than I do.
All this is not to
disparage the many people happy to be defined by their job, I know
teachers, doctors, lawyers, postmen, lorry drivers, mechanics and
waitresses who fall on either side of my fence. There will always be
some who work to live, and others who genuinely live to work. There
will be those who enthuse and say that you must have a thing, a
raison d'etre, some force that drives you to do stuff, but they are
wrong too. If all you are driven to do is sit in front of the telly
drinking tea, then good for you, do what makes you happy as life is
fleeting. Most days I am only really driven to sit in the garden with
a good book and a bottle of cider. If you keep working yourself into
the ground for a better tomorrow that never comes then you did
something wrong.
I suppose it's all
over then. As I plough my way into the final revisions of my novel, I
realise that this blog no longer has any purpose. Dave does write
stuff, he has written stuff, and now he has nothing to procrastinate
over. Farewell to Dave Doesn't Write Anything Ever, and possibly good
riddance, right kids?
Well, probably not,
but I may run out of things to rant about eventually. I may have
already, this is more of a space filler than actually something worth
reading. It is in fact, an actual, genuine, bona fide, last ditch bit
of procrastination, no word of a lie.
It has become
painfully apparent that the book is going to need working on again
soon. I realised this because despite having spent the last month
(while it's been with my small select group of trusted proof readers)
going over the plot in my head, thinking of ways to work in a couple
of gags that only just occurred to me, and working out how to attack
the next round of revisions with the least amount of distractions.
This week, I have mostly been fiddling around with my guitar effects
pedal board, trying to find the best sounds for songs I will probably
never play, and restringing guitars I do not need for anything I am
currently doing. I've also written a bunch of new Dave
Not The Cat songs, always a sure sign I should be doing something
else.
All this was
prompted by the return of my manuscript from my favourite proof
reader, it has some very useful notes scrawled on it. Along with a
conversation last week with another of my trusted readers, this means
it is definitely time for me to get on with it, and do the last
couple of sweeps of this book before I have to actually decide where
it is going to end up.
That's where the
real problem suddenly reared its head. I have been so busy
concentrating on getting the thing written, and as good as it
possibly could be, and a thing I could be proud of, etc. etc. I had
not really given serious thought as to what to do with the bloody
thing once it was finished (probably because of the surfeit of
unfinished novels I've got lying around the house already, I never
thought it would get finished). It should have occurred to me at some
point that just as many people are trying to get to be novelists as
are wanting to be rock stars, and I didn't manage that one either.
Once again I feel irony's bitter sting as I abandon one impossible
pipe dream for another. There is a small (okay, quite big really)
chance that an unread novel will sit on amazon's self publishing
service alongside all the albums I have littered the internet with
that nobody ever listens to (if
this has filled you with sympathy there are some for download here).
I have also had to
cope with a few truths about my writing style, and its unnecessary
wordiness (which has been utterly deliberate so far in this blog, and
shall remain so). There is a great deal of crap to scythe away from
my tale of derring do, (not actual crap apparently, just excessive
sesquipedalianism
really)and with every stroke of the
editor's pencil that I see, I realise how much needs to go. I
apologise for the amount of extravagant verbosity that I am vomiting
all over this piece, I need to get it out of my system.
It's not just that
though. I have been alerted to some colloquialisms that I assume
everybody uses (apparently not everybody is 'made up' when they are
happy, and I should keep such things to the dialogue, and out of the
narration really) my grammar is occasionally shocking (expensive
education utterly wasted, sorry Dad) and certain things when seen
from a completely different viewpoint look terribly wrong, or right,
depending on which side you're on. I have however been very pleased
to have the note 'unlikely' put to the side of an incident that
actually happened in Barnstaple in 1997. I shall not recount the
tale, but if you had ever been in Sherry's Tavern back then, it would
not have seemed so unlikely that a bouncer would behave in such a
fashion.
Equally, my own
personality defects are affecting my characterisation somewhat. The
fact that I do not ever remember what people look like, or ask them
anything important about their lives has led to me sometimes
forgetting to describe characters visually, or bother with what some
would call their vital life details. It is genuinely just due to my
own world view and priorities, you can ask my wife. If I come home
and tell her that I have met somebody interesting in the pub, she
will immediately ask me their name (which I usually have not bothered
to ask) followed by what they do for a living (which I have never
found important enough to ask anybody about) and whether they are
married or not (similarly not interested). I can then go on to tell
her their favourite episode of Star Trek, what they like to drink,
what they think about the current government, and their top five
track one side ones of all time. I think these things are more
important, I am realising that not everybody does, and rewriting
accordingly. Sadly, just like the rest of the country, many of my
characters need jobs.
Anyhow, I am clearly
just thinking out loud here again, sorry. I must get on and finish
the revisions before deciding what to do with it all. Goodbye
forever, I shall procrastinate here no longer, Dave really doesn't
write anything ever.
Except he does, and
he almost certainly will again.
Happy weekend
people! Well done on exercising your democratic rights and voting, or
indeed not voting which you are also perfectly entitled to do, the
other day. It would seem that the majority of the UK do not agree
with me, and are rather more right wing, still hey ho. Most people
don't listen to the Residents or wear pirate hats in public either
but I am not crying about that all over facebook. That's the thing
with democracy, you get what the majority of people want, not what
you want, it's actually a pretty good system really, and for all the
proportional representation whiners out there, even if the coalition
had spent millions and millions completely reforming our voting
system for that to happen we would have woken up to a right wing
government on friday morning, but it would have had 85 UKIP MPs as
well. People like UKIP, I don't, but some people do, and there's not
a thing I can do about it except try and change their mind with
reasoned discussion. I can't even persuade my wife to listen to Trout
Mask Replica though, so I can't see how I'm going to persuade someone
who believes wholeheartedly in British sovereignty and small
government to change their mind. Won't stop me trying though, on both
counts.
I woke up yesterday
morning after about an hour and a half's sleep with what felt like a
massive hangover, and discovered I had scrawled a whole load of notes
down about the election night coverage, thus I now feel duty bound to
try and put them into some sort of coherent bloggage, as clearly that
was what I was going to do. Couldn't face it yesterday, due to being
so tired I couldn't feel my eyeballs anymore, I may be too old to
stay up watching political punditry all night and still make it to
work the next day now, that's quite sad really.
The coverage itself
is worthy of some comment, for the sheer amount of wasted money on
the BBC and for the so-close-but-still-so-far channel 4 coverage. In
the case of the BBC, where they used to have just Peter Snow throwing
statistics around with a bunch of odd graphics, now Jeremy Vine is
job sharing with Emily Maitlis and her Giant iPhone, I don't think we
needed both of them working all night, is it so they can have more
tea breaks? In which case surely they could both use Jeremy's
holodeck and take it in turns. As to why they made poor Sophie
Raiworth stand outside doing a giant jigsaw puzzle in the freezing
cold all night, I am still none the wiser. Or why all the poor girls
are jammed into figure hugging dresses and high heels, including the
politicians (I've spent a day dressed as such, it is very
uncomfortable). I am also still baffled (and always have been) as to
why we need a helicopter filming Mr Cameron and chums driving to the
counts, is it so we can comment on how frivolous the route they have
taken is and complain about their mileage claims? For that seems
marvellously ironic to me. I also enjoyed them cutting off the
Northern Irish interview about the breakup of the UK from the SNP
threat to go to a result from the mainland, while not bothering to
show, or even really mention much, the Northern Irish results.
After feeling
utterly let down by Channel 4's show of pointlessness and shit lefty
jokes 5 years ago, I was quite pleased to see they had Paxman and
some proper Channel 4 news people on this year. It was an
improvement, but all the gogglebox bits were getting in the way of
results and once again re-affirmed my lack of faith in the british
electorate to know what they are talking about. Also, Paxman is not
so good at reading jokes off of an autocue, and his trademark stare
and condescending 'Idiot' catchphrase began to wear thin. However, I
am sure their coverage was not really aimed at me, and were I still
19 I would probably have loved it and become more politically engaged
as a result, so hopefully it is doing that. I could have watched
David Mitchell and chums doing a carbon copy of the BBC style
coverage all night though, without all the sketches and bollocks
thrown in, maybe they can all swap around in 5 years, and we can see
Andrew Neill and David Dimbleby reading crap jokes from autocues
instead?
If you're expecting
one of my usual lefty rants then I am afraid you will be
disappointed, I already did one of those, and I am quietly resigned
to another five years of tory government. Being from the generation
dubbed Thatcher's Children, I am used to it. I had my free milk taken
away, and now my teeth are falling out, but that's beside the point.
We survived, Cameron is not going to eat your baby, stamp on your
puppy and poke you in the eye. He genuinely believes that he is doing
the right thing, so did Hitler mind you, but again that's not the
point (although I have now lost the argument by bringing up the
Nazis. Hell, in for a penny and all that, those banging on about
proportional representation should remember that it was just one of
many weak facets of the Weimar Republic that allowed Hitler to rise
to power, but one shouldn't blame a voting system for genocide. My
3rd year history teacher did, but I'm pretty sure he was
wrong). So calm down, we lost, get over it, if I can't get to play my
White Noise album at a party I will not shout loudly about it all
night, I will sit calmly in the corner trying to ignore the fact that
some bastard is making me listen to Fleetwood Mac, and look forward
to getting home where I can listen to the White Noise in peace. If
this metaphor is lost on you then there may be no hope at all.
(there is no power
in this earth that can make me link you to a Fleetwood Mac album)
It seems to me that
the biggest problem we have is that all politicians are just trying
to get into power, which obviously makes sense as it's the only way
to get paid for it, same as all writers are trying to get published.
But it would be nice to have a real choice in the two main parties,
for as my father told me, any thing other than a vote for labour or
conservative is a wasted vote. He was wrong, where we lived anything
other than a vote for Lib Dem or Conservative was a wasted vote, well
played Dad, well played. He had a point though, for all the recent
multi party politics rhetoric, Thursday night has taught us that
first past the post is the clear winner in this election. Nobody
liked the coalition, so they voted a majority government in, and we
still don't trust labour.
Scotland however,
raised a very important point by voting SNP. Having resoundingly said
no to independence earlier in the year, it was clearly not a vote for
another referendum, whatever Alec Salmond says. The SNP were the only
credible party (whatever you think of them they have been running the
Scottish parliament fairly well for the last four years) offering a
left-wing anti austerity agenda, and you could only vote for them in
Scotland, so maybe that's what happened there? The labour party were
no longer offering them the traditional labour party policies, so
they jumped ship to the SNP. Makes sense to me, I know the Greens
offer an alternative here, but even I can't take their manifesto
seriously and I am their target audience of weirdo hippy tree huggers
(worth pointing out to locals that even Totnes has a Tory MP, with a
massive majority no less).
As to the polls,
well, I think they underestimated the blandness of the seemingly
endless campaign. I only made my mind up who to vote for as I looked
at the ballot paper and stuck the pencil in my ear in an attempt to
gross out the next poor hapless voter. Where's the choice? You may as
well flip a coin most of the time, which is why so many people don't
vote, and fair play to them, there is no point in most
constituencies, they are mostly made up of safe seats.
I did think Cameron
might have lost it by inadvertently describing 0ver 30% of the
country as a joke. By calling Russell Brand a joke (he's not, he's a
comedian, but I can understand the confusion Dave) for not voting, he
could maybe have angered the non voters into going out and voting
against him. Luckily they both made sure it all happened after the
deadline to register, so well done both of you, democracy be damned.
A lot of people listen to Russell's bizarre rantings, and dismissing
them all out of hand in the way Cameron did just shows that the only
people he cares about in our country (and if I hear the UK or the NHS
described as 'ours' again any time soon I may scream, punch someone,
or both) are those who vote, the rest of you can fuck off.
Incidentally, the most insightful thing I ever heard from Mr Brand
was when he pointed out than when he was poor and banging on about
inequality he was accused of 'Politics of Envy' and now he is rich he
is called a hypocrite, having suffered a hugely scaled down version
of the same thing, I understand this completely.
I very nearly didn't
bother this year, as again, the sheer length of the campaign had
knocked most of the political engagement out of me. Had the polls
opened the morning after Ed said, albeit rather unconvincingly, 'Hell
Yes' to Paxman, I would have skipped out of the door, voted for this
new and strangely charismatic Milliband and been happy with my
choice. Despite having voted (albeit tactically) for a labour
government three times in a row and got Tory-lite instead. As it was,
having spent 6 weeks listening to ever more desperate and whiny
politicians begging for my vote, I had lost focus, and was
considering not bothering, since I live in the safest of all safe
tory seats anyway. Just because people choose not to vote (and a lot
of those who don't vote that I have spoken to probably shouldn't
anyway, occasionally I think my mum was right, and you should have to
pass a test before you're allowed to vote) doesn't mean that your
government should ignore you, and treat you as a joke.
I'm also always
saddened by those who treat it as a game to be won or lost, rather
like football, and pick their team and blindly vote for them again
and again because that's what they do (and equally, the crowing over
victory or crying and shouting like the worst kind of bad loser).
Back to my parents again, my Mother once admitted to having voted
green (back when it really was a wasted vote) to scoffing laughs from
my Father, because she liked their policies. I firmly believe that
she was right, and you should vote for who you agree with, and not
just 'your team'. Which also means that we need Parties who set out
their policies along ethical lines as to what they actually believe,
rather than letting the press set their agenda as to what they think
will make them most electable. I would rather have everyone publish a
manifesto a month before polling day, let everyone read it and make
their minds up and then vote. Instead of nearly two months of
name-calling, pointless debates and polls and punditry that are able
to turn even an educated, politically engaged chap like myself off of
the whole idea of voting. Policies not personalities please, if your
campaign hinges on someone having a funny face when he eats, or
looking like a blown up condom with a face drawn on it, then you
have lost me completely.
The most interesting
thing I noticed about election night, came from a German, Henning
Wehn, who appears on 8 out of 10 cats a lot. He pointed out that
there is no reason for anybody in this country to want to stand for
parliament, as we treat them all like crap, and they are not
(compared to what they could make in the private sector) that well
paid. If we could change just one thing about politics, it would be
to try and get the people who try to work for us, and represent us, a
little respect for what they are trying to do, rather than calling
them all self-serving scum and wanting them all dead. Slamming the
Lib Dems in the way we did for having put the needs of the country
over the needs of the party is the perfect metaphor for what is wrong
with the voting public in Britain, we can't cope with the fact that
their Manifesto was written with the happy knowledge that they would
never need to actually implement it, and the hard facts were that the
tuition fees policy was unworkable in the environment they were
thrown into. We can't always get what we want, but if we try
sometimes, we make damn sure we can't get what we need either, to
paraphrase Mick Jagger.
The most important
thing I learned was not to underestimate the young. I laughed at our
local Lib Dem candidate because he was only 22 and had never even
voted before. My reasoning being that he is the same age as my
stepkids, and I certainly wouldn't trust them in any position of
responsibility (no offence kids, you know I love you, but you know
what I mean) so why would I vote for someone who can only be spotted
in his campaign photo with some school kids because he has a suit on?
And then Mhairi Black goes and gets herself elected at only 20 years
old and gives a wildly impressive speech about Trident. She still
hasn't finished her dissertation. Don't tell me the next generation
aren't politically engaged, go and talk to some different kids,
you'll be surprised.
So while I am by no
means happy that we have five years of Tory government ahead of us, I
try to look at the bright side, at least Billy Bragg will get his
career back, and maybe Ben Elton will start doing funny stand up
again.
There is a very good
reason why I haven't posted anything in ages, and it's not just the
electiony stuff going on. I have invalidated the title, and indeed
very raison-d'etre of this blog and finished the bloody book. And
when I say finished, I mean, got to the end, done some re-writing and
given it to some people to read so they can tell me it's all a bit
shit and make me rework it all in a month or two. But more finished
than all those other ones I've got lying about the place.
On the back seat of
my car is a one of only two fully printed out manuscripts of it (just
for myself, because ever since I sat as a nerdy eighteen year old at
my sister's old typewriter, frantically typing out my unreadably
scrawled chapters I have wanted a bundle of papers that make up a
novel that I have written myself. I am aware that they are
essentially redundant in the digital age.) there would have been
none, but one of my readers (and frankly, the one who's opinion on
the whole endeavour I trust more than anyone's) asked me if they
could have a hard copy, and since, due to my job, I have access to
all the printers I can eat, I could think of no reason not to. I am
feeling rather smug about the whole thing to be honest, and am
anticipating a crashing come-down when all my readers inform me that
they have no idea what it is meant to be about, and the whole concept
is flawed.
I am also writing
today to try and explain my reasoning behind the breakup of me and
the Plastic Squirrel
(for those not in the know, that has been the name of my solo musical
endeavours since the mid nineties). While it seems utterly
schizophrenic to break up a solo act, and wildly pretentious to have
several solo projects under different names, neither of these are
true. I did an EP for a bet of mildly amusing folkish songs called
political correctness gone trad. It sounded nothing like Plastic
Squirrel material ever should, and I liked it. Rather than
spending weeks crafting elegant, intertwining synths and guitars and
agonising over every single hi-hat sound I sang stupid words over
cowboy chords and realised I could actually play it live. And as a
bonus, I could just roll up to gigs with one guitar and nothing else,
hell, I could cycle to gigs if I do this.
Now, I did three
Plastic Squirrel shows in 20 years of Plastic
Squirrel's existence, and every time I felt embarrassed that I
was not a band. So when deciding to do this new material live I
figured it was best to abandon the name as well. This brought up
another problem, I don't want to go out as just Dave Holwill, there
are a million people out there performing just under their own name,
and names are not memorable. No offence to all those who do that, but
for every Nick Drake and Bob Dylan there is a Nick Smith and a Bob
Jones who's names you forgot a day after you heard them. So I adopted
the amusing name conferred upon me by the landlady of a pub I used to
play in, Dave Not
The Cat. I did a few shows about ten years ago under that name,
playing dodgy covers on an acoustic guitar. The name came from an
actual Cat who roamed the streets of Hatherleigh at the time, who was
called Dave. Although he wasn't really, and it was my wife who called
him that, although before we were together, so it wasn't as weird as
it sounds.
Anyway, I digress,
basically I am toying with the idea of playing my own songs in public
again, for the first time in a long time, and needed a name I didn't
want to apologise for every time I said it. I think it's worked.
Apologies for this
blog, it is thoroughly self-indulgent and serves no purpose
whatsoever. I know I expected to be ranting about politics for the
entire election campaign, but it has turned out to be so anodyne and
dull that there is nothing to rant about. Maybe the fact that if you
don't believe in borders, think that nuclear weapons are a bad thing
and that equality is a good thing then people will think you some
kind of lunatic, and laugh if you suggest that anarchy is not the
same thing as chaos. I could rant about that, but frankly the lack of
political engagement from those seeking election has knocked the
political engagement out of me as well, bring on the rematch in July.
I have always argued
that if you don't vote, then you have no right to complain, but I
have spent the last twenty odd years voting and complaining, and I am
tired of complaining, so I might give up voting as well. At least
that was what I was thinking, since there is no real socialist
alternative to the two main rhetorics, and everybody prays to the
economic gods of perpetual growth, maybe I should give up. And then I
saw this video
And while it still
isn't what I want, I admire what he is doing, and will probably vote
for him tomorrow rather than writing wankers on the voting slip, or
throw myself at the greens again. At least this way I might help
somebody not lose his £500 deposit.