I have spent a good part of the day in my loft disinterring old
memories by sorting through carrier bags of paperwork, slightly damp books, and
yellowing photo copies. This was a difficult exercise. A good deal of it I am
putting aside to trash, give away, or in some cases to offer to specialist
scholars with a penchant for copies of UK and US Government documents relating to
Kuwait in the 1960s and early ‘70s. Sad. Aside from the Kuwait documents, this
was a difficult and often emotional exercise.
I am a hoarder. Why else would I have found boxes quite
literally containing nothing but newspapers from the 1990s? However when the
items I find are Christmas cards from long lost friends, a receipt for studio
time in 1985, and heavily annotated 20 year old articles about the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, they stir up memories difficult to simply dispose of in the waste
pile. A box of photos from the 1980s and 1990s mostly brought me cheer, especially
those of my wife and I. Thinking of her does not invoke pain. A copy of a
Sunday supplement magazine with Dylan on the cover, and with “For Neil” in my
mother’s hand-writing, does.
I found an old cigar box with letters and cards. Some were
from a slightly eccentric Edinburgh Quaker who many years ago would send me
clippings apparently affirming unmitigated Israeli evil. He himself would not
set foot in the Holy Land…on principle. However many were from my now deceased
mother and father. I had long forgotten that my father had actually expressed
in writing his “pride” in what he thought I had “achieved”. I don’t recall him ever
clearly saying such a thing mind you. Rereading a note from my mother
expressing similar sentiments was difficult, not because I don’t recall her
ever verbalising such sentiments, but because in the end isolation and the
disappointment she felt with her life made her love of her sons insufficient to
want to keep on living.
Another dimension to the afternoon of half-remembered enthusiasms
and distant echoes of longings once felt, and often discarded, were the piles
and piles of rock magazines and newspaper clippings. Musicians’ obituaries, gig
and album reviews, band profiles. Even a copy of Paul Yates’ execrable “Rock
Stars in Their Underpants”. The Middle East
somehow took over from, but never entirely replaced, my youthful love of pop.
The latter had rendered Tommy Docherty’s Man Utd pretty irrelevant for me when I
was a mere 12 or 13. Pop has been a constant. It is a profession that I vaguely
flirted with once as a would-be manager (briefly) and periodically ever since as
an amateur critic.
The stuff I was going through was overwhelming, partly by virtue of
its sheer quantity as it began
to merge with the piles and piles of old books and magazines that already clutter our
landing. However it also began to make me feel hopeless. Of course your life isn’t defined by old newspaper articles you’ll
never read again and notebooks filled with scrawl. However they can say
something about what your life was about, and, by now being old, what your life has
become. Memories, past enthusiasms, hand-written notes suggesting real concern
for the conflicts of far-away places. My notes from the present will not later be
discoverable in box files or cardboard boxes. They will be on hard drives and
memory sticks. Some will be included here, at least for as long as this blog exists.
Their concerns, aside from what I need to do to earn money, will often be personal,
whether I am writing about myself or an old band I have seen.
Right now I just want to cleanse myself in all senses of the
dust of yesteryear, but the boxes surround me, awaiting collection or council
recycling. I am going out tonight and perhaps the booze will wash away some of the
cloying sense of the past. At least until the morning when I will sit at this
screen again, switching awkwardly between sad musings and professional
assignments.