Thursday, 18 October 2018

INCENSE, SWEETS AND INNOCENCE

Back in the 60's when we were kids in Preston I did everything with mates.

Mates were as important as family back then and formed an essential part of daily life. Everything was done with mates, every major event, every small step, every scrape. Like family, mates were there when it counted.

I snogged my first girlfriend with a mate doing the same near me behind the Catholic Church. I played with my Action Man with mates. I went to the Top Rank disco with mates. My mates were there when I discovered the Lake District. My mates were there when my life fell apart as a teenager.

My mates changed over time. As a younger kid my friends were basically kids who lived on the same road as my family and we did everything together, constantly in and out of each others' houses and gardens all year round. We rode our bikes to the local park and tore around the small wooded hillocks there like the Bash Street Kids! These pals were Robin, Nick and Cass, with the occasional visit from guest mates Mike and Gary. I don't know what happened to any of these special guys and like old air, miss those long lost days of my early childhood years in Ashton-on-Ribble immeasurably.

When I discovered Kung Fu in the early 70's, for some reason, I lost these full-time friends and in a strange osmotic process evolved new ones: John, Masey, Nipper and Crooky with part-time re-appearances of Nick and Cass. We were all members of our very own Kung Fu club, the Powis Road Dojo of Bugei. It was a magnificent time. All around 12 - 13 years old, we all went to see the X-rated Enter The Dragon at the ABC in Preston and life would never be the same. Bruce Lee became the centre of our kicking, blocking, ki-aiing universe and everyone was Kung Fu fighting. The peak of this marvellous gang was the Indian summer of 1976, when we all went to the Lake District for a camping trip, jumping and cartwheeling like shaolin monks. We had one more year to go at School, Ecky Thump was everywhere and everything was perfect.

Alas, within a year it would all fall apart. The worst of all personal tragedies happened to me and I retreated into a world of bottomless grief. My mates tried to help but the long hot summer of 1976 became a distant memory and the strong forces that held us together faded and the group dispersed. 

Some friendships did remain strong, particularly Masey and two brand new friends emerged, brothers Pete and Dave.

It was around this time that I discovered heavy rock and the pounding music of Budgie, Rush and Uriah Heep became the focus of this new band of pals. In the vacuum of a motherless home I would cook hot meals for them on Saturday afternoons, whilst we listened to Budgie's Squawk at full blast and stuffed our faces on chicken pie, home-made chips, processed peas and gravy. It was a rite of passage round that front-room stereogram as we stared at each other licking our chops, trying to measure the yards ahead. School was over and the future beckoned. I didn't know it but those musical Saturdays would become the swansong of a life I'd loved in the home I'd grown up in for 17 years. The house I adored was sold by my Dad as he struggled to make sense of the death of his wife.

When I turned 17 I had a flat on my own. It was situated in a different part of town to where I'd grown up. It was here that I met a new group of pals, whilst staying close friends with Pete and Dave: the chief ones being Blue the dancer and George. Between us and a fluid cast of hundreds of other teenagers in Ashton and Fulwood, the crucial experiments of our late teen years were all made together in a fug of hormonal creativity, beer, parties and and hot adolescent desire. 

Dave and Pete were pivotal to this new 'group' and their enormous shed became the de facto centre of teenage operations. We did it all: home brew, girls, parties, massive heavy rock marathons, Joni Mitchell adoration, Neil Young worship and the emergence of our own latent musical talents. The guitars came out and we began to learn how to play. It was 1978.

From this side-burned riff of patchouli and rock George and I began to busk in Blackpool. We wrote a few tunes and settled on the name Alien Cage. We only made a few quid and ate fish 'n' chips on the prom but it was great fun and we felt like we were kings again that summer. We even gigged in a pub.

George introduced me to his pals Boyley and Raff, who were part of Preston's Sixth Form college scene of talented young rock musicians looking for a home. The most talented guitarist of this teenage milieu was a young wispy haired kid called Nick Dias, who played in a band called Israel Hands if I remember rightly. Boyley and Raff's own zest for playing rock was immense and it was a happy coincidence when we all got together to form a band.

I remember playing a bunch of original tunes to them in one of their parent's homes and them saying pleasant things afterwards like 'great lyrics' and 'like poetry man!'. And so, thanks to George's introduction, Sirius was born.

We practised in the space above my Dad's sofa workshop were he was book-keeper. Being 18 I was one or two years older than the rest of the band - and the only one working - so I bought the amps for the band. We had everything else and with Dave having passed his test and having access to his Mum's mini he became roadie, sound technician and sound recordist.

Being part of Sirius was the most creative period of my life. I wrote songs like they were going out of fashion and along with tunes from the rest of the band we had a great repertoire. A mixture of Free, Sad Cafe and Genesis, sort of, we had a distinct sound of our own with songs immersed in teenage angst, Arthurian legend, space, CND and young love.

Sirius's finest hour came when we gigged at one of local pubs, the Unicorn, in the summer of 1980. We'd invited all our friends and their friends too so the place was rammed. It was a superb night of rock and beer and Dave recorded it all. We felt like the Pink Faeries and I thought we would go all the way. My friends went to Uni instead.

Within six months the glory of the Unicorn was but a run-out groove. My band mates had left for University and Dave and I sat there twiddling our thumbs. It was the end of an era and we knew. I had already met the young lady who would become my future wife and Dave had discovered motor bikes. The writing was on the wall for the final friendship and when I eventually left Preston as well that Winter we said our goodbyes. 

Along with Pete, Dave and I would resume our friendship briefly in 1983 when I returned from the Continent, but the road beckoned and I left for Wales with my girlfriend shortly after and the two brothers emigrated to Australia. We were all around 20 years old. I saw them once again. That was 35 years ago.

From all those deep and important ashes of teenage incense long ago I have at least managed to keep in touch with George, easily my oldest friend now as I begin to stare down the cold loaded barrels of Sixty years of age. Its a strange feeling looking back isn't it.

And so I'll draw this nostalgic postcard to a close. Rather than Wish You Were Here, for some reason a line from a Neil Young song is running round my head as a sign-off. 

'I have a friend I've never seen. He hides his head inside a dream'.

Have your friendships changed over the years readers?

12 comments:

  1. That's a heck of a piece of reflective thought, Woodsy... and so beautifully written!
    The one friend who has been here throughout the chapters of my life is my wife. I've known her since childhood. In fact we both appear in an old group Polaroid taken at the 11th birthday party of her older brother, who at the time was a childhood pal in the 70s. I was 11 and she was 6. Marriage wasn't on the cards at that point though. Some years passed and I eventually reconnected with her at her brother's 21st birthday party. After a short engagement, I was fortunate enough to marry the girl who was to become my best friend, sensible other-half and soul mate. I've never looked back :)

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    1. Made it to the end of the working week again Tine so I can think straight again. Thanks for your kind words. Its wonderful that you married your childhood sweetheart and found your best pal at the same time. A rare thing and one I hope for my own children and grandkids. Finding a soulmate.

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  2. Hi Paul, what a great piece you've written - extremely moving! This last month has been a particularly sad time for me too, especially the last time I locked the front door on my family home and then took the keys to the estate agent.

    I'm not ashamed to say that I was in tears, and the experience bent me in half!

    Until I was a teenager I was an only child, and I had a very large extended family of relatives, so I grew up with the 'large family experience'. But over the years they have all passed away and very few had children. So our numbers decreased until now there is only myself who lives in that local area. Most of my family then lived just around the corner from us on the same council estate, so I would see them often. And at the usual holiday times of the year, our home would be full of people, all laughing and happy. The beautiful 1960's had it all.

    They are the most wonderful of memories and I was privileged to have experienced it.

    However, I am someone who always looks forward, and is always planning for the great things I'll do tomorrow. I am lucky, that I have some great friends in the here and now, including my oldest friend Wayne, who I have known since I was four years old.

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    1. So sorry you had to give up the family home Bill. It must have been terrible. My Sisters and I often say we would buy ours back if we could but I'm unsure we would. Its a nice dream, a desire to have what we once had. Its that so bad? I often wonder if I 'live in the past' as the expression goes but much of my early past was so damn fine. Like you I had a large extended family and my parents home was always full of people. You summed it up. The beautiful 1960's.

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    2. This was not the first time I've walked away from an old home. In 1975, my family moved to the house I've just mentioned. I was born in that first house, and spent all of the 60's there.

      We moved on a school day, so I literally went to school from one home and came back to another. That original council estate was quite a rough area too; and by the 70's it was infested with a number of deranged bullies who delighted in beating up innocent kids like me. Consequently, I spent a lot of time at home, but it was what I wanted to do anyway. So I didn't miss out.

      I can still remember like yesterday the last look of my Grandmothers home, and then the walk to the new home at the end of the school day.

      Something that was very important at the time was getting the TV up and running, and as I was the 'techie' of the family, that was down to me. I remember that evening too, with Space 1999 on the telly and the episode which was "Mission of the Darians."

      This was a much older house than my Grandmothers, so had to be re-wired before we moved in. At something like 9PM on the moving day, my Gran put the kettle on and all the fuses blew! Fortunately the electrician who was a friend of the family was there that evening. So after something like half an hour fumbling around with candles, he located the fault. [Which was a lower Amp fuse than what was required.] - As he had his company van outside we were back up and running for news at ten!

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    3. Great clear memories Bill. You ought to write a book! I found that quite amusing that you were a techie even then! What a day, one house in the morning and then a new house and a new life in the evening. Like book ends!

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  3. That was an extremely sad, but powerfully emotional piece of writing. I often look back on my childhood and teenage years, and sometimes have a hard time wondering where the years went. It's as if I went upstairs to my bed one night as a teenager, and the very next morning came downstairs the age I am now. Friends? I still see a few people I've know from primary or secondary school, but it's more of a nodding, passing, or few minutes of small talk type of friendship than anything else. Talking of houses, the one I'm in now I first moved into when I was 13. My family moved to another house in a different neighbourhood 11 years later, but after just over 4 years, most of us moved back to the same house, where I've now been for 31 years. And yet I miss every house I've ever lived in and wish I could win the Lottery and buy them all. A foolish notion perhaps, because I wouldn't be able to buy back my youth along with them. Ah, to be a boy eternal, eh? You may enjoy this poem about childhood on my blog. http://kidr77.blogspot.com/2012/07/if-you-had-one-wish.html

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    1. Thanks Kid. It was difficult to write in parts. A coupla years off 60 and I still find it hard to talk about losing my Mum back then without filling up. I only ever lived in one house as a kid and would dearly like to at least walk round it inside once more. I've even got stuff hidden under the floorboards of my room - a diary I seem to recall! I'm sure the mice will have digested every thrilling page! Like you I would like to buy it but it could never be the same and I might get terribly sad. I expect its full of ghosts from my past as well, shadows of a childhood long ago. I read that poem on your blog. I enjoyed it very much and it caught my own sense of time flying by uncontrollably now and regret creeping in. It must be a universal anguish we have as humans but its difficult to explain and even talk about. As Larkin says we are left with ourselves 'And age, and then the only end of age'.

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    2. Here are a couple of posts on my blog that relate exactly to what you're talking about. Let me know what you think.

      http://kidr77.blogspot.com/2012/05/wolfe-in-old-clothing.html

      http://kidr77.blogspot.com/2012/08/a-true-account-of-time-travel.html

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    3. Lovely posts Kid. I read them both. Already from 6 years ago too! Our childhood houses are special places, perhaps the MOST special places in our lives. I can't imagine going back to mine even though I think about it often like my siblings do too. I could draw a detailed map of all the rooms and their contents even now, 40 years later though. So imprinted it is on my mind. The rooms of my youth.

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    4. Glad you enjoyed them. It's nice to get feedback and know that others relate to what I write.

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