Tag: music

  • jazz, godliness…

    jazz, godliness…

    I’ve cycled past this jazz club in town maybe half a dozen times & never had the nerve to go in. Today in the afternoon sunlight both the doors were standing open and, oddly, two tables with bottles of soft drink stood at the entrance guarded by ribbed plastic cups. A handsome-looking man was pouring. I got off my bike. “Is this – open? I mean,” looking at the people in coats milling around inside, “are you… rehearsing?”

    He flashed me with his blinding Amway grin. “It’s a church. You’re very welcome.” I stepped back. Looked up at the sign. “It’s not a… jazz club?” “It is a jazz club, just not today. But we have lots of music!!”

    Who could put their faith in a church that’s willing to use disopsable cups? Looking back, I could have given him many better responses, the least of which might have been, “My only religion is jazz” (a lie). Instead I had that protective feeling one has around people who seem to look out wistfully from inside their own club and wonder why more don’t join. “Jazz,” I said, “godliness…. they’re related.” And we waved each other off, a pair of heathens, neither one willing to convert.

    H2O HoL eau-de-nil tiles

  • only Kneipes

    Went out to a bar with a new friend who is musical, Tuesday nights is quiet night in Berlin so we walked and walked, trampling snow that had reached that pearly soiled colour that is not grey nor is it brown… so beautiful, it’s my new favourite colour, most of the restaurants were closed and only Kneipes and bars left trading and we walked into bar after bar to be beaten back by the solid wall of smoke. The one we loved I had been past many times, a sign in the window says Street Musicians Welcome and after we had fetched our beers to the bar’s corner couch and made friends with the shy, elderly bar dog who curled up under my friend’s musical hand two fellows walked in, festooned with instruments though – when I focused again – they were carrying only one party apiece. Dude with a beaten-up double bass, dude with a steel-strung guitar. They had a beer then they sat at the corner of the bar on stools and set up this most wonderful racquet, a quiet riot of music like water that runs underground. The bass player was fearless and gentle and had this fuck-it air, I don’t mean he don’t care, I mean he would do whatever it takes to get the sound. Would slap, would percuss, would pluctern, would bowie. The guitar player almost honed himself to one note. We were entranced. The dog fell asleep. The girl who had served the beers came to perch on the end of the couch and lit a cigarette and curled her legs. Walking home the streets were the streets of the quietest sleeping city in all the world.

    When they finally brought their first song to a close, it was wordless and almost twenty minutes long, compelling, the guy playing bass held his hand out and announced clearly, “My friend So-and-So is playing guitar with me this evening.” The guitar player shook dreadlocks off his face and held his hand open, like a limp version of one of those guns that says, >bang<. “My friend Charles is playing bass this evening.” But before that the two of them clasped their curled fingers together for a tight moment and then each picked up his beer and they clinked.

     

  • Neil Young’s baby

    Neil Young’s baby

    This cafe has changed its muserly, miserly, whispery music for Neil Young. He owns the business. His voice is quiet but sure and it penetrates. People gain confidence in such good musical hands, or seem to, and soon the hushed conversation level has risen like water roaring and the blond baby sitting on his mamma’s lap inside the window has piped up too, being part of things. “Ahb!” he says, dancing his feet: “Ah, ahb!”

    H2O HoL breakfast candle

  • his three favourite things

    his three favourite things

    Hired a bike and visited my only friend in Denmark, who runs a beautiful second-hand store that sells his three favourite things: books, and records, and coffee. He has two splendid crimson armchairs and windows onto a cobbled street. How we met was, I was in Berlin over the summer and dropped in on the bookstore that had agreed to trial one of my books in their English-language section. The pile was sitting untouched but I saw this tall man hovering and said to him, unexpectedly, “You should buy this one! I wrote it.” So he did and we have been friends ever since. God love good bookshops, the friendship agency of the civilized world. Today he had on Nick Cave’s new album and was listening to it “over and over.” I said, “He’s Australian! Like, the coolest Australian since… 1975.” In the riverside cafe where I ate dinner afterwards they were playing Olivia Newton-John, who has no use for cool and was singing “Hopelessly Devoted to You” as though her heart would crumble. What a song. I and the elderly waiter were both singing it. Two tough-minded Danish women in their fifties walked in to order beers, wearing what seemed to me very insufficient clothing. Outside, the water darkly rippled and a skin of ice extended itself infinitesimally.

  • I’ve been playing this music for many years

    I’ve been playing this music for many years

    Today I was walking by the river when a man accosted me for directions. His tone was accusing and he didn’t say excuse me or thank you. He was carrying a crumpled green flyer, and pointed. “Do you know This Street?”

    I turned to show him the sign. “That’s this street right here.” He frowned. “But I need the church on the corner of That Street.” I pointed. “Could it be…. this church right here?” We were standing right next to it. A leafless, skeletal tree waved its shadow over us, helpfully: or would have, had there been any sun.

    “You don’t understand,” he said, “this is very important to me. I’ve been playing this music for many years.” That’s right, he had a guitar over his shoulder. “Well,” I said, beginning to suppress a smile, “I’m pretty sure this is the place. What other church is there, on the corner of This Street and That Street, by the river?”

    Why does one pity selfish people? I guess it’s because they are innocent, and seem helpless. He pushed the flyer at me. “You should come to the concert. On Saturday.” I said, “Sorry, I can’t on Saturday. But good luck!” But my last words, possibly all my words, were wasted. He had turned away, sighing, “Yeah… well…” and was blundering into the churchyard, trailing his self-absorption like a long, dragging skirt made from stockings filled with bunched-up wet newspapers.

    H2O HoL I've been playing this music

  • we were dancing

    we were dancing

    On the Weihnachtsmarkt before it closed I had this most marvellous adventure. Rounding the corner my friend & I following the thread of sound came on these two solemn, courtly black American musicians, not young, setting forth the Gospel According to Lionel Richie. I have never been a convert but somehow the lissom groove of All Night Long got underneath my skin. I started to wiggle, stepping tentatively, dancing. My friend went rigid with embarrassment: Cathoel don’t! My arms were full of parcels and my boots were caked in snow but I danced. The dudes onstage picked up their feet, the groove came issuing from them, I love it when music is hired but you feel the mastery and its freedom. You can’t buy me!

    Now, I was shy! this took some effort! but I had to, the sinew of the tune was irresistible: the thread. Within a few bars this strange miracle had started to happen. A lady near me raised her beaker of Glühwein and danced a little shimmy for her stolid male partner, jokingly. Our eyes met and she kept dancing. Within moments it seemed all the crowd was moving. We were dancing! We were dancing. At the end of the song another came and we all danced to that too. Then I shimmied away up the alleyway between the lighted stalls, night was coming on and it was so cold, women and men were laughing and showing one another their moves and applauding in little local circles and the sense of a shared joy gave everything this golden warmth; everything but the sky, the snow, the cobblestones. As the strains of sound fell back behind us we came round another corner and there people were skating, silent and as if motionless, around and around in a spellbound circle. Because I constantly battle my shyness I have started groups of people dancing before, but never with such universality. And this seemed a middle-aged, cold-stamping crowd. Maybe that’s why, in fact. Nothing to lose.

    deutsch iii

     

     

  • pink for the body, blue for the sky

    chapter xi: the window does not trap what it views

    At the wilderness fundraiser we are third from the top, through no merit of our own. We are a last-minute substitution, they’ve bought tickets expecting to see a rockabilly quintet from Melbourne. It’s two months since we last played. From backstage we can hear the crowd talking in a dull roar between sets. I am perched on a stool with Sid’s drumsticks, riffing along the back of the rank green room couch trying to dispel a sudden onset of nerves.

    Pommie Dave the bass player leans like a bouncer against the green room door, trapping the five of us in. His bulging arms are folded, he is retelling an interminable story. His marriage – that doghouse, that hobble, that curse – has finally come to an end, and inexplicably he’s decided to fight his wife for custody of the three kids whose birthdays he forgets year after year. The repetition of his bewilderment, the gloomy force of his aggrieved pursuit, have driven both the name bands out of the room towards the bar. He is used to holding court with endless tales of his wife’s cupidity. Now he is reduced to an audience of one: the borrowed fiddle player, a wiry folkie seconded from our guitarist’s Celtic project, who is too much of a guest, presumably, to tell Dave where to get off.

    The fiddler lays out his borrowed chord sheets and frowns over them. I hope he’s had time to learn the songs. I wish Dave would leave him to concentrate. I have met the wife a couple of times, and liked her: a leathery, crop-haired woman who does not in any way resemble the sailor girl tattooed on Dave’s left bicep.

    Secretly I applaud her feist in quashing his outrageous bid. Through her lawyers she has made allegations of drug use (true) and mental incompetence (debatable). As a result Dave has had to undergo ‘a state test’ of his sanity, and he is spluttering from sheer insult. “I mean, a test of your sanity?” he half-shouts, for the dozenth time. “What does that even mean?”

    The fiddler’s name, I suddenly remember, is William. He calls himself Sweet William, but I can’t bring myself to. Behind him Sid hunches over his mess of rolling papers, dropping splinters of wiry tobacco. I feel for my own packet, deep in my bag. Like a wounded boxer Dave lurches his head, looking for a response. None of us is game to meet his eye.

    “Seriously,” he says again. His voice rises. “What’s sanity, anyway. How can you test it. How can any of us prove our sanity?”

    Rashly, I snort. He swings on me, points his trembling finger. Terror nibbles at me, vague and tiny and far away. “You, for example,” he says bitterly. “You crazy hippie chick. What could you possibly offer to prove your sanity to a court?”

    Could I? What could I? I look from one face to the other. The others stare blearily back, too lazy for hostility. Is this my life then? I ask myself. That I should be shouted at by angry guys, be penned in the back of a beer-stinking hall, be pleased to be playing for free in someone else’s stead?

    My mediocre guitar, my vague ambitions. The ill-formed songs I labour over in the middle of the night, with their lyrical subtleties no audience ever hears. Outside the crowd begins to roar and I catch a blur of movement in the long bank of mirrors. It is me, lissom and wiry in a tank top and sequinned shorts.

    “Come on then,” accuses Dave doggedly. He levers himself upright at last. “Just name one thing you could prove in court – to prove your so-called sanity.”

    This malice is new in him. Performance adrenalin kicks in. Something in my gut turns, a key in the lock of me, and I say quietly, “Any aspect of my fucking life, mate.”

    “What’s that? Speak up!”

    I stand up, knocking over the stool. I throw down the sticks. “I said,” I say, through clenched teeth, “any – aspect – of my – fucking – life.” I suck in a deep breath and all of a sudden I am shouting. “Go through my private papers, I don’t care! It’s all me! It’s all proceeding from the same intersection!”

    Dave retreats, muttering. “Well that’s all very well,” he mutters. Behind me I hear a strangely unexpected sound. William the fiddle player is humming, actually humming. He has taken up the drumsticks where they fell and is plying them like a pair of chopsticks, pretending to be picking up letters off the chord charts and gleefully eating them. Our eyes meet, his are smiling, he offers me a secretive encouragement. From his couch at the far side of the room Sid stands up. “They’re done,” he says, and it’s true: the MC is back onstage, this is it, we’re on. “Ok!” says Dave. “Ok!” He touches my arm lightly as we pass through the narrow door.

    We start hard. We play a tight set, angry, gradually unfolding, becoming joyful. Up the front people are holding out their hands across the lights. Dave shoots me a glinting glance of apology or challenge. We are in it for the music, and the music is in us. The low ceiling glints with lights. Men up the back leaning against the bar are bobbing their heads over their beers. We have set up a good pulsing dirty old blues with plenty of forwards but plenty of side-to-side. By the fourth number the whole place has that groove on, it has grown into a massive solid swaying, back and forth as though all of us were growing out of the sand on some shallow, shared seabed.

    “Integrity means integrated,” Trix likes to say. I can hardly hear the fiddle over the din of the drums. But on the last song William steps forward into the light. He raises his bow and lets it descend, his long arms taut with an unexpected muscle. I step back, humming a backing vocal to give him the room. With a half nod he turns to stare at me hard, over the red-shining body of his old violin. He is mouthing something and I almost start forward, catching myself, gaining the chorus. The song crashes to an end and we are stumbling off in the dark, jostling one another at the door.

    In the long narrow hallway William slows infinitesimally, letting me come alongside. He leans in and says, “You looked like the queen out there.” I take a breath, feeling the coils of my blood pulsing hard under his words. “Well,” he says, the other blokes pushing from behind – “not The Queen. But queen of some other, nicer world.”

    Somehow it happens that after the bump-out and shoulder-slapping William offers me a lift in his old postal van. I climb in, sweating under my sequins, and we hurry home, screeching through the streets perhaps not fast but with the feel of speed, from his ill-tended brakes and the gleam in his eye, his flying scruff of hair and reckless cornering.

    The city is sultry under low cloud. I follow him up the dark staircase to his flat. We crawl under the covers like two sleepy animals. Then he turns, and takes hold of me, and our animals are not in fact sleepy at all. We are racing, singing, climbing, falling, finding eachother and falling away, grimacing with a certainty that is fleeting and false but compelling. Compelling. Compelling.