For about a decade from the early 1970s, I was very powerfully engaged with music: both classical music - baroque, classical and opera; and also folk music - mainly English and especially Northumbrian, but also Scots and Irish, and especially "electric folk".
I was almost constantly listening to, thinking about, learning about, performing, discussing or practising music of some sort or another.
When I look back on those years, I am struck by the fact that I regarded music almost as a kind of salvation. Firstly for myself, where I though that music might be an answer to problems of purpose and meaning in life.
And also, when it came to for folk music, that it would be part of a better future for England...
I strongly felt that folk music could - and if given the chance would - deepen the national spirit, and become part of a re-engagement with the land and with each other.
I was also - and more generally - looking for a more active creative life. I was singing and acting, playing the accordion (but not particularly well) and a few other instruments in folk clubs and the like; and was involved in comedy performances including writing/ plagiarizing material.
But I wanted something more originative than performance and adaptations; and was always experimenting with "creative writing" such a poems, plays and short-stories.
As it turned-out, I had no talent for creative writing; but took quite rapidly (when I tried it) to "non-fiction" essayistic and journalistic writing; yet this avenue did not get-going until I was in my late twenties.
What I now regard as a "road not taken" during those "lost creative years" was writing about music at that time when music was most important to me in the 1973-83 period*.
Of course, I might not have been able to do it well - or even (more importantly) to my own creative satisfaction; but this can't now be known.
It might be supposed that my lack of advanced ability at any instrument, my deficiencies in musical training, would have been a fatal deficit. But I didn't think so, and several serious musicians I knew well, regarded me as naturally insightful on the subject.
But I did not even try; although there were opportunities, if I had asked for them - which I never did.
Mostly this was not diffidence, but a kind of superstitious sense that if it was meant to happen, then it would happen - but if I tried to make it happen, then it wouldn't.
This sounds a bit lame - but on the whole this has been the case through my life. Whenever I pushed myself towards some-thing by a conscious exercise of will-power: that invariably turned out to be wrong for me.
Quite probably; me writing about music would have been, in some way a bad idea - which is why it did not happen.
*[Actually, my very first published article was about music (a review of Rameau transcribed for synthesizers, done for a small specialist magazine) - but this was rather too late, didn't lead to anything else, and I had no chance to learn from it and develop.]
When I was at school many years ago we sang English folk songs, I think part of a BBC education program. Wouldn't do any harm to bring up back.
ReplyDelete@Mark - Fair enough - but back then I was thinking (mistakenly, I now believe) of a great deal more than not doing any harm with folk songs.
ReplyDeleteBruce, do you like 'progressive rock'? specifically what came to be known as 'the canterbury scene'?
ReplyDeleteI liked it for something around a year when I was about 13-14 - not "Canterbury Scene" (which I'd never heard of) but bands like Tyrannosaurus Rex, Jethro Tull, Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, King Crimson, Roxy Music, Hawkwind. Then when I encountered Steeleye Span (initially Below the Salt, Parcel of Rogues) - all that rapidly changed.
ReplyDeletethe reason I asked is that the Canterbury Scene, and especially the band Caravan, seems to me to have that quintessential Englishness you alluded to - perhaps not enough to save anything, as is now too clear, but still valuable despite this. it also has a clear touch of folk which most prog bands lack - it might even be described as electric folk. if you want to give it a try, I would suggest Caravan's album 'In the Land of Grey and Pink', which is their masterpiece.
ReplyDeleteI liked Caravan back in the day, especially that album and the one before. I remember going to see them in possibly 1972 two nights running and being very impressed that they wore exactly the same clothes the second night as they had the first! This was the beginning of that style over substance, commercially manufactured phenomenon known as glam rock which I had no interest in, and they clearly were having nothing to do with it. In the Land of Grey and Pink was pseudo-Tolkienesque in its lyrics and imagery and I don't mean that in a disparaging way.
ReplyDeleteTo those searching out roots, Shirley Collins is still worth looking up, especially for younger ears who may not (yet) have encountered her. Did she show up on your radar at all back then, Bruce? What a unique voice, plaintive yet resolute, as if knowing she was delivering up something quite special that would endure. (And— she even made a comeback of sorts...)
ReplyDeleteAs good a place as any to begin: https://tinyurl.com/2zuw26zn
or this one: https://tinyurl.com/5t4u6kfw
Enjoy…
I may well have heard Caravan at the time (on late night radio shows like John Peel, Bob Harris, Annie Nightingale) but apparently they didn't make an impression. Shirley Collins I knew very well - especially from her work with Hutchings and various Albion Band incarnations.
ReplyDelete