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Tuesday. The winter sun has all but melted the early frost and ice. It feels like years since it’s been clear. This will be my last entry.
Today was Josh’s first day at school. These days, they try and minimise the jumps: as my father said, they’re so much better at preparing them. Full time attendance at the feeder nursery has helped, as has a series of weekly visits in the run up to Christmas. He has met his teachers and spent some time in the building. His mother dropped him off this morning and he passed through the gates without complaint. I don’t know how long this enthusiasm will last, but we might as well make the most of it.
Listening to Abba in the car may have been a mistake, but I couldn’t help myself. Cold air pulsed through the broken heater, as Agnetha’s voice drifted through the speakers:
“Schoolbag in hand, she leaves home in the early morning
Waving goodbye with an absent-minded smile
I watch her go with a surge of that well-known sadness
And I have to sit down for a while.”
I drove to work with a montage playing in my head: Joshua, pulled from the womb with a bellowing cry. His first car journey, almost a week later. Those early, ham-fisted nappy changes. The look in the eyes of my grandfather, himself not long for this world, the first and last time that all four generations were together. The time I left Joshua on the sofa and watched him roll off, helpless, unable to reach him in time despite running in from the kitchen as fast as I could. Those first, stumbled attempts at conversation. The day we were due to move house and I had the mother of all arguments with British Telecom, and how he came into the empty study and I just held him. The pirate games and the introductions to Captain Caveman and Scooby Doo. The time he tottered near the edge of a sixty-foot drop at Pevensey Castle, and I had to run like the wind – and against the wind – to pull him away from the edge. I remember tantrums and tears and cuddles and stories and that first trip to the cinema, and the Sunday that we watched The Lion King on the sofa.
There is a large part of me, I will admit, that doubts that I have been a good father. I have given of myself, freely and without complaint, but I wonder to what extent I’ve created a reservoir of knowledge rather than a fountain: I wonder to what extent I’ve tried to imprint my own self upon him. The journey to school is one of letting go for parents: you relinquish your hold and you allow them to grow to some extent by themselves. They still need you, but perhaps they need you a little less. Someone else is responsible for their moral development now, someone as well as you – you still get the lion’s share, and one of the biggest mistakes that some parents make is assuming that their child’s teacher is the only one who needs to be a role model, but you lose some of your clout.
Martyn Joseph says that songs are like children. You create them, you give them life and you nurture them, and then when they’re ready you send them out into the world and hope that they’ll be all right and that no harm will befall them, and with a bit of luck they send you a little money from time to time. But songs are never really finished. Even my best ones could still be polished. There’s no right answer to how to raise your family: you read the books and you browse the websites and you ask your friends and family and workmates and, where possible, you try and avoid Gina Ford. When I was seventeen, my mother told me that as a parent, you never stop learning, and to be honest the prospect of still making mistakes when all my sons are grown up is one that troubles me greatly. I’d rather have got a handle on things by then.
It’s milestones like this that make you stop and think, specifically of your own past. I don’t recall being happy or unhappy at school – like most things in my life, it was a grey area, rather than one colour or the other. We want Josh to be happy, and we don’t have a lot of control over that, at least inside those gates. Perhaps that’s what concerns me. Perhaps it’s the need for him to be loved and supported and the fear that he won’t make friends – even though, as Emily pointed out over lunch, he is a sociable little boy. Perhaps that’s why you take stock; you want to rewrite your own past.
And I remember tumbling things. I remember the record player in the back bedroom, and the mild, almost claustrophobic sound that formed the textures of ‘The Name of the Game’, and which somehow convinced me that Abba were hiding in the wardrobe. I remember hearing The Bee Gees’ ‘You Win Again’ for the first time on vinyl and thinking that the sound quality on my parents’ Sony was much better than it was on Top of the Pops. I remember playing a trick on my family one Christmas when I was six years old: they asked me to put the Band Aid record on my uncle’s record player, but my aunt and I secretly swapped it for ‘Bermuda Triangle’ when no one was looking. Everyone laughed, but when they refused to let me play the whole song, I burst into tears.
I remember thinking Vanilla Ice was the most talented rapper on the planet until I learned he’d ripped off Queen and not even obtained copyright permission. I remember Ewan lending me a copied C90 that contained Greatest Hitsand his disappointment that I didn’t like it. I remember hearing ‘America: What Time Is Love’ for the first time on a warm June evening en route to an orchestra rehearsal, walking up Knowsley Road, the screaming wails of Cressida Cauty testing the battered old transistor to its limit. I remember buying De La Soul is Dead and my younger brother threatening to tell my parents about the bad language in ‘Afro Connections at a Hi-5’.
I remember ‘Lust For Life’ and how it punctuated 1996 like Tony Christie would some nine years later. I remember discovering the revival of Jesus Christ Superstar and how I’d crank it up to full volume and throw open the windows in my university quarters, and how it was a miracle the neighbours never complained. I remember Eleanor, and how we bonded – albeit briefly – over Gershwin in the music room. I remember listening to ‘Manchild’ by Eels at three in the morning, after too many cups of coffee. I remember standing in the quadrangle in my hall of residence, the night before I left Leeds for the last time, suddenly regretful and sorry, Brightman and Bocelli’s ‘Time To Say Goodbye’ running through my head.
I remember the upheaval that followed the millennium change, and listening to Peter Gabriel and Kate Bush singing ‘Don’t Give Up’ on a Bristol-bound National Express, when I was at perhaps my lowest ebb. I remember hearing ‘Comfortably Numb’ for the first time on a Sunday evening and bursting into tears. I remember learning the words to ‘Joseph’s Coat’ by sticking them on the wall above my office desk. I remember dancing with Sandy to Nnenna Freelon’s version of ‘Prelude to a Kiss’ – an awkward, superficial moment. I remember giving a lift home one afternoon to two colleagues, and the torrential rain that cascaded down as we drove out of the business park, as the MP3 player’s shuffle function took us into ‘I Can See Clearly Now’, and how we roared with laughter at this juxtaposition.
Most of all, I remember Emily. I remember our wedding: a day of kisses and photos and playground swings and Teletubbies and ceilidh dances, all of which seemed to have a soundtrack of some sort, and the P.A.’s background music that the hotel staff failed to turn down, with the result that our church minister had to say grace while John Paul Young was crooning ‘Love Is In The Air’ in the background. I remember driving through the Peak district, with lakes and more lakes and slow-moving people-carriers that roll down enormous, high-gradient hills, and a vast display of green and brown, without a soul in sight – not a farmhouse or cottage or even an animal, this mildly oppressive canvas of strange and beautiful things, all scored to the sound of Kate Bush. I remember driving back from Blackpool, singing ‘God Only Knows’ to Emily, and then singing it again a few weeks later when Aqualung performed it at Greenbelt, and then again the following year during a trip to Southsea. I remember The Proclaimers, and how I thought ‘Sunshine on Leith’ had been written for me.
Music, you see, has punctuated my life, in the same way that it’s punctuated the lives of so many others. Recorded music may or may not have run its course, but these songs have acted as milestones and waypoints along the road to salvation or damnation or somewhere in the middle. They become audio snapshots of times past, for good or ill. There are songs – perfectly good ones – that I can’t listen to now, because I associate them with bad times in my life. I would love to look at music in a purely detached and thoroughly academic manner, because it would enable me to be objective and educated and critically informed, but the sum total of my analysis – however well-intentioned – is always going to amount to little more than “X is better than Y but not as good as Z”. And over the past year I’ve learned to live with that, because I don’t think objectivity is the path I’m supposed to be treading.
And I think of the boys, and their budding musical tastes and talents, and I wonder if they’ll grow up with music as a source of lifeblood to them, as it has been to their father, or as a disposable commodity. In making everything free, are we raising a generation of children who will place no value over music? Have we shunned the here and now in favour of the always available? I was saying just the other week that I did not believe that music today was any worse than music of decades past, and I hold to that, but have we nonetheless fostered a culture where nothing holds any real value simply because it’s so easy to get hold of? Has recorded music become the equivalent of Zimbabwe currency – cheap, transitory, worthless?
The older you get, the more you realise that you do not have the answers, and I don’t think I can spend another year trying to work this out. I have no idea, and so I choose to voluntarily bow out of the argument, conceding victory to whichever side would like to think they’ve won. I choose instead to think of my children, and their own legacy, whatever that may be. I want them to love music as their parents did, but I can’t make that choice for them. I want them to get emotional responses from songs they love – to treat good music with reverence and respect and reserve, and to keep those favourite songs for special occasions rather than Friday night pub sessions on the jukebox, and to actively listen to them, rather than just having them on in the background, and to turn up the car stereo to the extent that the music is all you can hear. That would be wonderful.
But that’s my own destiny, and it may not be theirs. I’ve spent years trying to make fountains, and not reservoirs. Sometimes, although it kills you, you have to step back and let the stream flow of its own accord and carve its own path, even if that path takes you into unfamiliar and perhaps even unwanted territory. To do anything else is an insult to the people you claim to love unconditionally. Ultimately, your biggest gift to them – after your time – must be your approval of whatever road they choose to travel, within reason. I’d love my children to inherit their old man’s fascination with music, but you do what you can with the hand you’re dealt, and you can do no more.
And it’s corny, and trite, and sentimental, but I’m reminded of an early scene in Superman – a film I think you appreciate on another level once you become a father – where Marlon Brando addresses the infant Kal El just before rocketing him away from a dying Krypton:
“You will travel far, my little Kal-El. But we will never leave you, even in the face of our deaths. The richness of our lives shall be yours. All that I have, all that I’ve learned, everything I feel…all this, and more, I bequeath you, my son. You will carry me inside you all the days of your life. You will make my strength your own, and see my life through your own eyes, as your life will be seen through mine. The son becomes the father, and the father, the son. This is all I…all I can send you, Kal-El.”
And as I entered Joshua’s bedroom last night, and stood over his sleeping form, whispering these words with the same quiet intensity that Brandon Routh has at the end of Superman Returns, I felt a sense of loss – that a part of our lives is over – but at the same time a sense of anticipation. Because it’s the end of the beginning, and that’s a cliché, but like many clichés it’s rooted in the truth. “I’ve just looked at his first-day-at-school photos,” says my father, who has just emailed, “and my eyes are moist. But Josh looks so eager and happy and smart; you are rightly very proud of him.”
We all have our own playlists, whether music is an obsession or a passing fancy or even of no interest whatsoever. There is no template for how these lists are constructed or what they are supposed to contain – the compilation of a mix tape, as Nick Hornby says, has a lot of rules, but that’s not how it works for human beings. This last year has been a chance to look back, to take stock, to take less control over what I’ve been playing but far more control over how I choose to respond to it. I’ve discovered songs I never knew existed and re-examined the ones I’d forgotten, as well as distanced myself from some of the more familiar standards that now bore me. I’ve looked at the how and the why as well as the when, and while I don’t think I’m any more familiar with my CD collection than I was this time last year, I think it’s being appreciated a little more.
I’ve discovered that I need music in the same way that Julian Barnes needs love: our only hope even if it fails us, although it fails us, because it fails us. I don’t want to become one of those people who shun events like No Music Day because “music is my life, and I can’t live without it even for one day”, because these people hopelessly miss the point. Those who claim that they can’t live without music even for one day do not truly value it, because you cannot truly value something until you have faced the prospect of a life that does not contain it. But perhaps the secret towards truly appreciating music, whatever its academic qualities, is context. This, above all, was the point of The 17, in which music became an event and an occasion, rather than something to be catalogued and filed. Perhaps it’s best this way: perhaps we can view music as a collection of moments, of accompaniments, but savoured and remembered correctly and made precious, rather than ephemeral. It sounds like more obsession with nostalgia, but it needn’t be, because the records needn’t be old. We have access to everything that there is and everything that’s ever been, but this needn’t be a bad thing. We just have to cherry pick, and savour, and appreciate the songs that we love, and actually listen, rather than simply hear. Perhaps that’s the best way. Perhaps, ultimately, that’s the only way.
I wonder what I’ll listen to tomorrow.
Posted by reverend61 