This blog is named after Ian Dury's song 'Reasons to be Cheerful.'
Each week I will write about something that has lifted my spirits, stirred my soul and kissed my heart. It might be a person, a song, a book, a film, an incident. Anything. Think of this blog as being a conduit for the good, the great, the bold, the brilliant.
School's out for summer
School's out forever
School's been blown to pieces
(Alice Cooper, School's Out)
Alice Cooper’s School’s Out is an invocation to freedom. In writing the
song Cooper said he wanted to capture the anticipation of the final school
bell: that period where time’s remorseless beat reduces to such a point to render six weeks eternal. For a child, there is no greater pleasure in knowing
that soon those shutters of conformity will be lifted to reveal a glittering collage of tomorrows.
Well, as someone who works in a school, let
me be the first to say that whatever joy a children may experience in breaking
up: triple it, add a billion, times to infinitum – that’s what staff experience.
I’m aware that unlike children we have volunteered to be there; therefore it stands
to reason that the captives would feel more relieved than the captors when the
abduction finally ends. However the pressure of holding children
against their will, in cramped conditions, without regular access to the toilet
is sometimes so great that it’s in fact of great relief when a SWAT team of
calendars finally arrive to kick down the door, shine in a torch and shout: “It’s
over. We’ve got you surrounded.’ Trust me, the handover of children from teachers to parents is done with no resistance.
So here I am today on the first day of my
holiday. I won’t lie: I’m bloody excited. I’ve got plans. I’ve got big plans.
Plans to read my way into enlightenment. Plans to write my way into
Waterstones. I appreciate I should relax after what has been a long year in a
new school. The joy of any new job means you start afresh, your copybook isn’t
blotted by past mistakes; the paper is clean, pristine, allowing you the
opportunity to write a new success story. The challenge of starting a new job
means your achievements are unknown; the paper is clean, pristine, allowing you
the opportunity to blot your copybook. A reputation isn’t built in a day. It
takes time, energy and effort. This year I’ve begun the backbreaking labour of
building something that I can be proud of. And I won’t lie, I’m now grateful
for the extended tea break. But for all that, I don’t want to rest – not in the
conventional sense anyway. I don’t want to lay back stupefied, consuming
culture; I want to have a go at creating it. Short stories, poems, travelogues,
funny incidences: I want to write everything down. Because I think I enjoy
teaching, but I know I love writing.
At the moment, writing for a living is the
stuff of fantasy, not autobiography. Simply, I do not commit enough time to it.
I do not read enough to inform a style. I do not write enough to fashion my
own. I need to do more. And here on Day One of my summer holiday I begin. I
hope that these dreams and ambitions are not the stuff of every English teacher’s
favourite Of Mice and Men and
destined to go awry. I hope I don’t get seduced by the red dress of Netflix or
the sausage curls of Facebook. I hope I don't put a bullet in the back of my productivity. I hope to one day get my own acre of land.
Now, I'm off to holiday in the South of France for a week. But when I get back I'll begin. I promise.
It’s
difficult to feel proud to be British at the moment. Our democracy lies in
ruins: not so Mother Theresa has been elected as Prime Minister without winning
any kind of election; meanwhile, the opposition continue to tear down their own house, throwing the ensuing bricks at one another. As for May’s cabinet re-shuffle, she’s put
Cameron’s Kings at the bottom and replaced them with a right Joker on top. Yes,
No lie: Boris Johnson, a man who the rest of the world believes has a Pinocchio
complex, is Foreign Minister. In the words of that classic British sitcom Dads Army, we’re doomed.
Also
in the sporting arena we’ve shown ourselves up yet again. In our national game
our players rather aptly froze against Iceland. Yes, Wales reached
the semi-final, but isn’t the euphoria of Robson-Kanu’s Cruyff turn diminished
when you remember they conceded two goals against England? Imagine conceding
two goals in a major championship against England. Those Wales boys shouldn’t
have been celebrated on their return home; they should have been bundled into
the back of waiting cars, their bowed faces covered like offenders en-route to jail.
National embarrassments, Wales, return home.
For
all the sporting and political shame, there is one thing we can feel proud of
as a nation: our quiz shows. It is a golden era for quiz shows in Britain. Some
of you may point to the age of Weakest
Link and Who Wants To Be a
Millionaire as the zenith, arguing that these were peak-time programmes
that commanded huge viewing figures. In truth though, the former was a cold,
hollow exercise in masochism, and the latter's thirteen year history is now remembered for a host’s annoying laugh and a contestant’s tickly cough. Essentially, neither were warm nor friendly, putting too much emphasis on tension and drama, and not enough on
good old-fashioned quizzing.
Now,
I love a quiz. I especially love a pub quiz. The pub quiz is apparently quite a
British tradition – it doesn’t really happen abroad. We Brits don’t just use
alcohol as a social lubricant; we use questions too. We’re simply too unevolved to ignite the fires of discourse and debate by rubbing our heads together, instead
we depend on short-cuts, social firelighters, to inflame our talk.
"Just what should we call our team."
Me
and the girl are also quiz machine addicts. One Saturday we came out The
Dickens Museum early (I seem to have inherited my mum's desire to push interests onto a partner: just as she has my dad traipsing round pencil museums
and slate museums, I force my girlfriend to go around the homes of dead
authors) and had hours to kill before we met out friends for dinner. Knowing
that The Rocket on Euston Road has a pub quiz machine, we went in there and fed
its belly with 50p pieces. Despite being over-sated with lovely silver, the
machine did not regurgitate its excess, meaning we left penniless two hours later, our dreams of future home ownership lying in the balance.
Anyway,
the show I wanted to talk to you about today is BBC 2’s Only Connect. Such is Connect’s
success that last season it gained an internal promotion and moved offices from
BBC4 to BBC2. This was its 11th season and the first one I saw; I’m
now a lifelong convert and will visit its altar until the day some senseless heathen decommissions it.
For
those of you who haven’t seen Only
Connect, essentially it is the smarts of University Challenge without the smugness. Whereas Challenge is combative- Mensa cards at
dawn- Connect is kind, cosy and prone
to good-natured joshing. It helps I think that the contestants are older and
therefore more self-aware; consequently they wear their intelligence lightly, knowing that in the grand scheme of things it doesn’t really matter.
Victoria Coren-Mitchell is also a European Tour poker champion. Fact.
Connect is hosted by the lovely Victoria
Coren-Mitchell, daughter to a famous wit, sister to a food critic and wife to a
famous comedian. And in her fiendish quiz, she will have her vengeance. The
questions are hard in Only Connect,
there’s no getting past it. There are some episodes where I struggle to get a
question right. But like Challenge the
joy lies in that hope you might get one. Now in fact would be a good time to
start because at the beginning of the series the questions are easier, you have
a fighting chance, by the end of the series even an omniscient deity couldn’t help you.
The
show is divided into four rounds. The first asks you to understand what links
the four answers. For example, ‘Monday: met,’ ‘Tuesday: drink,’ ‘Wednesday:
made love,’ ‘Thursday: made love,’ the answer would be ‘Craig David’s week.’
The earlier you get the sequence the more points you get. The next round asks
you to name the final answer in the sequence; this week’s one was
Charlotte
I, George VII, William V and … Can you guess what it is? After that is the Word
Wall, perhaps even harder than the Berlin one to penetrate. This one plots 16
words that you have to group into 4 categories of four, naming the links at the
end. Have a go at doing the one below.
"Bring on the wall."
The
last round is the missing vowels round and is the one ‘the girl’ most excels
at. In this round, you’re given a category, e.g. House of Commons positions,
then have to name the words, e.g. blckrd; ldr f th cmmns; chf whp – did you get
any of them?
So if
you fancy giving your brain a half hour workout, why not sit in front of the gymnasium and be put through your paces with a kind instructor. Better that than Boot Camp with Paxman.
Once upon a time in a little primary school
some children set out on an extraordinary journey. Millions of children go on
this journey, but then they become grown ups and they forget it ever
happened.Since we were born we’ve
looked at these strange squiggles – they’re everywhere – but we can’t
understand them. This is the story of how we learned to break the code. It’s a
mad, bad tale epic in scale. And we’ll be ready – I mean reading. We’ll
discover for ourselves a wonderful, magical universe called books.
B is
for Book is a beautiful BBC 4 documentary on how
children learn to read. It opens with the above narration of Taijah,
a precocious 6 year-old child that describes love as 'when you like someone and don’t
know what’s going on.’ She then introduces us to her school, which we're informed encapsulates the whole world, playing host to 47 different languages – and two resident chickens. A later shot shows her in a school council jumper –
her natural warmth and smiling articulacy a reminder of what we are missing in our
own grown-up government.
Taijah: anthropologist and poet.
Over the programme she introduces us to her
friends. There’s Sienna who wants to be a teacher, failing that a butterfly.
There’s William who lives with his mum and two-year old brother. There’s Maria,
a monolingual English speaker to Portuguese speaking parents. There’s Stephan
and Nicholas, twins who are similar in appearance but different in manner. The children all live on the Kingsmead Estate, a notorious backdrop for a 1980’s
paedophile killing, and a supposed symbol of urban decay. For all of this, the children are
thriving in the neighbouring school, enjoying results way beyond the national
average. This is down to the hard work of teachers and the supportive atmosphere
at home. The investment in these capital children is bearing fruit, and it’s
wonderful to see.
The odyssey into literary consciousness
begins at the start of term where the Year One teacher explains the challenges
facing young readers: ‘Some of the children come in not knowing the alphabet.
Not knowing how to hold a book. Not knowing which way to turn it. They’re on a
massive journey.’ Initially in the autumn term the children appear overwhelmed
by the squiggles that thwart them at every turn. Sienna would rather play with
her portable M&M fan than read a book; Stephan’s fear is so great that he
ensconces himself under the table to avoid the lurking book monster –
and intimidated Maria plays ventriloquist, waiting for other children to say
the letters so she can repeat them back as if they were her own. For a short
time, it appears that the children will not crack the code, that words for them
will lack definition and form, like an eye drop world of hazy
distinguishability.
What do these shapes mean?
Fear not though because these are
super-children led by heroic masterminds. They will overcome the villain of
Limited Recognition and win the day. In the winter term, these children achieve what King
Canute couldn’t, turning the tides in their favour. Through the cape of
practise, the children grow into being wonderful, expressive readers. It isn’t
long before the code is cracked, broken and defeated forever. They now have the means for their imaginations to soar higher than the whole Marvel universe.
As a teacher, I loved B is for Books as it reminded me about the power of reading.
William’s mum uses books to teach her child about why his dad doesn’t live with
them anymore, and the twins’ parents use them to explain a grandparent's death. Now the
children I teach are older, but books still reveal things about their world
that they were previously unaware of. For example in teaching Inspector Calls this year, my class has
been introduced to trade unionism, socialism and capitalism. Often books can
promote issues that the mainstream media chooses to ignore. Creativity isn’t
under the same market pressures as fact, which means books can often be more
illuminating on the world than newspapers. In a world of quick-hit Smartphone
literacy, books need promoting and preserving. Just because we’ve cracked the
code of what the squiggles mean, doesn’t mean we shouldn’t now reflect on what
those words mean. The journey of reading shouldn’t end with literacy but continue in hot,
nebulous pursuit of enlightenment.
Given I’ve been banging on about books, I
should probably talk about one I’ve been reading this week. Provided You Don’t Kiss Me is Duncan
Hamilton’s memoir of Brian Clough’s managerial career. Hamilton was a
journalist for the Nottingham Evening
Post and enjoyed unrivalled access to Clough during his heyday. The reason
why Hamilton had the confidence of the manager is typically Cloughie: in their
first meeting Clough asks Hamilton about what job his father does; Hamilton
replies that he was a miner. Clough, one of nine children born to working-class
Middleborough, appreciates his story so allows Hamilton to write his. Over the course of twenty years, Hamilton is there by Clough’s side to
witness Nottingham Forest’s ascent from Division 2 to Division 1, and winning
back-to-back European Cups. Imagine the Nottingham Forest of today winning the
Champions League in three years time – that is what Clough
achieved.
Hamilton and his subject.
Clough didn’t achieve this alone though. His assistant
Peter Taylor was his right-hand man, and left-brain man. Clough was a
man-manager phenomenon: he could look at a player walking down for training and
know from their body language whether they needed a kick or a kiss. He was a
visionary thinker: he could walk into an underachieving club and see the
achievement he would bring. He was creative: he wanted his players and staff to
be kept on his toes, so would introduce chaos where others sought structure. On the other hand, Taylor was methodical in tracking players, a
scout who lived by the mantra, ‘Be prepared.’ They met as players in
Middlesbrough where Taylor argued successfully for the young Clough to be
captain. Away from the training ground, Taylor and Clough would talk politics
with the former educating the latter. Their story reminded me of The Smith’s Morrissey and Marr where two
working-class lads came together to form beautiful music – only this time the
music was three points.
Taylor and Clough.
What I loved about the book is how
seriously it treats its subject. Football is often dismissed as being something
insignificant. But how can it be when it is significant to so many people? How
can you dismiss something that occupies the thoughts of billions of people? It
can be challenged but it can’t be ignored. Hamilton, an avowed bibliophile,
writes about football with a poetry that is often denied this great sport; one
choice bit I want to share is his reaction to Peter Taylor’s promise that retaining the European Cup was just the beginning, that the best was still
to come:
I can
still hear Taylor speaking those words, and the moment makes me think,
incongruously, of the final passage of Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, of the
dream so close that Gatsby could hardly fail to grasp. Like Gatsby, what Taylor
didn’t know was that dream was already behind him: the pinnacle of his career
had been reached at that very hour.
Taylor and Clough would never relive that
dream again. After Taylor published an autobiography without the approval of
Clough, the two would fall out, split and irrevocably divorce. The two would
never individually achieve the success they enjoyed together. It was a painful
divorce that the two would come to regret.
The book that destroyed the story.
Given Clough was the consummate self-publicist,
I’ll leave you with one of his quotes that shows his twin gifts: God-like
genius and human volatility.
‘I only ever wanted to be manager of
England. I’d have made the difference as well, you know. I’d have won the World
Cup. Mind you, I’d probably have started a world war in the process…’
B is for Book is available on iPlayer. Provided You Don't Kiss Me won the 2007 Sports Book of The Year.
Even though this blog is about Glastonbury,
I should make it clear that I didn't actually go to the festival this year.
Being a secondary school teacher entitles me to thirteen weeks of holiday a
year, but it doesn’t entitle me to take time off whenever I want; as a result I
have never been to the world’s greatest music festival. I once worked in a
school where a colleague did go to Glastonbury, saying he had a ‘wedding’ to go
to on the Friday. On returning to work on the Monday, he bore more resemblance
to a funeral: his deathly pallor and sunken eyes acting as an open coffin warning, fuck with the Gods of the term-time calendar and they'll come for you. Heeding this, I've never been on a Glasto' weekender.
So each year I set up camp in my living
room and watch the highlights. Upset that I could never go to Somerset, I used to try and imitate the world of Worthy
Farm by bringing mud into the house and pissing into a bottle, but since
courting I’ve been told that this behaviour is both selfish and bizarre. My
girlfriend tells me that instead of re-creating the physical terrain of the festival,
I should replicate the financial burden of going; thence she now charges me
£200 to watch the highlights, alongside £6 for a pint of beer. Next week, she
is taking her friends away on holiday.
Mud.
Anyway, the best bands I saw on the old
telebox were LCD Soundsystem and Coldplay. Fans of mainstream music will
politely say they are unaware of the first, but love the second. Fans of
alternative music will love the first, but impolitely say the second are a
Chilcot inquiry against music. That 2.6 million words is not enough to cover
all the auditory crimes the band have committed. That sending Chris Martin and
his cronies to The Hague would not be a suitable enough punishment for all the
harm they have committed. That Coldplay should
have a tow rope pulled taut to their ear and be then dragged kicking and
screaming down the street in a symbolic reenactment of the pain they bring to us all. Then when their lobes are ripped raw from their heads, a Greek
chorus will assemble round them to sing, ‘Fix that you fuckers.’
I guess what I’m saying is people hate Coldplay.
I’ve always really liked them. They were
the first band I got into in a big way. Their first album Parachutes was a massive hit that earned them critical and popular
acclaim. A lot of Coldplay detractors
would cite this as the band’s best work, offering as it does a quasi-covering
of Jeff Buckley and Radiohead’s best acoustic moves. Alan McGee, manager of Oasis, described it as ‘music for
bedwetters,’ so it wasn’t for everyone. I loved it because it had a
commercial sound, which was easy for my young teenage ear, alongside a
vulnerability that meant it wasn’t for the ‘lads.’ Over the years their sound would
grow more anthemic, encompassing the muscular Rush of Blood To The Head, the mess that was X and Y, the transitionary Viva
La Viva, and the colourful outpourings of Mylo Xyloto and A Head Full of Dreams. It is true that Coldplay don’t re-invent the wheel when it comes to music, that their
have been missteps, times when their sound has been over-earnest, too heavy on
platitudes, too light on attitude; but the ubiquity of their music proves the
wheels show no signs of coming off.
Alan McGee: a grown man that still does this.
So to their Glastonbury performance. The
band have headlined the festival before and know how to do it. This isn’t an
easy thing to do. Many big bands have tried and failed to conquer the Pyramid
Stage. Whereas Coldplay wet the bed, other bands shit themselves when it comes to playing in front of 100,000, along with the millions watching at home. For example, Alan McGee's Oasis were so bad at their headline spots that years on those in attendance are still unable to wash the stink from them. Even people that hate Coldplay appreciate
they know how to put on a show.Their
set begins with Chaplin’s speech from The
Great Dictator calling on men and women to unite – an important message given we're just a few days after Brexit. Then, we’re into the tunes. Arms are held aloft whilst mouths mouth to the words. Both stage and fans are awash with
colour (the wristbands of attendees glow with colours to fit the mood). Chris Martin jumps and jives around the stage like Michael McIntyre put
to music, whilst the other nondescripts chime out the melodies to their hit
sounds. It’s all very easy listening, but it’s joyous and communal – which surely is no bad thing.
Look at all the pretty colours.
A lovely touch in the show is the band’s
decision on what to cover. It being the year of Prince and Bowie, you’d
think the choice would be made for them. Instead they chose Viola Beach’s ‘Boys that Sing.’ If you
recall, the band were killed in Sweden when their car plunged into the water at
the start of the year. Martin and the boys respectfully coalesce their own
version with the band’s video to give the young band a chance to headline
Glastonbury. There will be some of you making the joke: if it isn’t bad enough
they died young, they’ve got Coldplay playing
a musical tribute to them. I think that’s unfair. The 'play are decent lads with
decent tunes. They may not be the best band in the world but to my mind it's no bad thing they’re the biggest.
And
now for something completely different. LCD
Soundsytem are the epitome of cool. Fronted by James Murphy, they are a
glorious cut and paste of every hip 45 in High Fidelity’s record store. Formed in 2001 the band came to
prominence with their hipster-baiting Losing
My Edge (I hear everybody you know is more relevant than everybody that I know.
But have you seen my records? This Heat, Pere Ubu, Outsiders, Nation of
Ulysses, Mars, The Trojans, The Black Dice, Todd Terry …) It is at once a
piss-take of people who collect music to name-check and an acknowledgement
that all musos do this to some degree. From there the band produced
their eponymous album, boasting the hysterical thrash of ‘Daft Punk is Playing
in My House’ and the sexual yelp of ‘Disco Infiltrator.’ Their greatest success though was
reserved for their second album, ‘Sound of Silver.’ 'Sound' is one of
my favourite records as it trades in the first album's archness for romanticism. Itretains the groove of the first and adds an emotional honesty, meaning it connects with your heart as well as
your feet.
I missed out on the opportunity to see LCD Soundsystem first time round. They
were playing at my university in my first year, but I wasn’t in to them yet. By
the time I had become an ardent follower, they had disbanded vowing never to
return. Well, like all bands other than The Smiths and The Jam they
have re-united; although for Soundsystem, still relatively young, you feel that this is as much musically motivated as it
is money related.
Live LCD
are everything I hoped. Starting with Us
V Them, my girlfriend walks into the living room and says, “they’re a bit
repetitive aren’t they.” And she’s right, they are. But this isn’t repetition
without purpose, filler to cover the cracks of no discernible ideas; this is
repetition with motivation, the rubbing of sticks that brings about glorious, incendiary choruses. If Chris Martin is the Michael McIntyre of music, then
James Murphy is the Stewart Lee, because by the time you get to the end of the
song all the preceding layering makes perfect sense.
Their set also boasts three of my favourite
songs from the last decade. ‘Someone Great’ is a twitchy meditation to lost
love, a beautiful lamentation that doesn’t understand why it isn’t raining when
someone great is gone. It is Auden’s Funeral
Blues put to electronica and is mesmerisingly beautiful. Another
favourite that they play towards the end is ‘New York I Love You. But You’re
Bringing Me Down.’ Just like his heroes The
Velvet Underground, Murphy can do a piano ballad as well as Lou Reed. The
song meshes the archness and romanticism I talked about earlier to be utterly
scathing about a city that has sold its soul to billionaires yet utterly enthral to it too. They of course end on ‘All My Friends.’ I get why
some people don’t like LCD Soundsystem,
but I cannot countenance a human being that doesn’t like this tune. It begins
with a propulsive, compulsive rhythm akin to The Who’s ‘Pinball Wizard;’ then comes the hit and run drum kicks
of New Order; next we’re into Murphy’s vocals, a defiant rasp against
the dying light. The closing triumvirate of driving guitar, pulsating keyboard and
plaintive refrain, ‘If I could see all my friends tonight,’ makes it the song of the millennium. I just
wish I were there in person to witness it.
LCD close the night, pulling the bed covers on Glastonbury.
So Coldplay
and LCD Soundsystem, the
uncoolest and coolest bands on the planet. Liking both: what does it make me?
The uncoolest cool person or the coolest uncool person? Out of all the
literary techniques, I’ll take being an oxymoron. Rather that than being irony.
Imagine how insufferable they would be. “Hey, can you just give me a straight answer.” Weird way to end a blog by doing a riff on literary techniques, isn't? Ah well, it’ll
do.