Category: Media

DAVID WAS THE PURE JOY OF MUSIC, TRIBUTES BEGIN FOR A LEGEND

DAVID WAS THE PURE JOY OF MUSIC, TRIBUTES BEGIN FOR A LEGEND

David Crosby has died at the age of 81, it has been has confirmed.

His wife Jan Dance told Variety:  ‘It is with great sadness after a long illness, that our beloved David (Croz) Crosby has passed away. He was lovingly surrounded by his wife and soulmate Jan and son Django. Although he is no longer here with us, his humanity and kind soul will continue to guide and inspire us.’

Crosby was with The Byrds from 1964-1967 who had a major hit with Dylan’s Mr Tambourine Man. 

Then he formed Crosby, Stills & Nash with Graham Nash and Buffalo Springfield’s Stephen Stills. Neil Young joined them – and left them – regularly over the years.

In 2006, the quartet toured the country on the Freedom of Speech concert tour following the release of Young’s album Living with War.  

Graham Nash said on Facebook: ‘I know people tend to focus on how volatile our relationship has been at times, but what has always mattered to David and me more than anything was the pure joy of the music we created together, the sound we discovered with one another, and the deep friendship we shared over all these many long years.’

The last David Crosby concert was on June 16, 2022 at Four Winds Casino / Silver Creek Event Center in New Buffalo, Michigan.

#crosby #stills #nash #the #byrds

Quick, quick snow … first there was a garden then there is no garden, there’s just snow!

Quick, quick snow … first there was a garden then there is no garden, there’s just snow!

Finally, something nice happened in this mean and unpleasant land called the UK … everything disappeared under snow for the first time this winter. And it all looked good in my back garden…

Yep, for a few front pages – and minutes – we fotgot about pervert policemen, lying politicians, frontline strikers, the supposed resurgeance of Covid and other health issues, the ups and downs of house prices, the outrageous cost of the basics of life, inflation and empty office blocks …

And all because it snowed a bit. Britain became like a picture postcard again, like George Morland had come back from the 1700s and captured those minutes…

Thanks for reading Leigh’s Newsletter!

The Last Room in the House

The Last Room in the House

Haunted memories of the day the ghosts of my family came to take me from this world…

Old writers rarely go in a blaze of glory, we tend to just fizzle out like a firework on a damp night. And that’s exactly what happened to my old friend Gordon Pugh, finally.

He’d always been as noisy as a newsroom filled with ancient typewriters, but when he met his final deadline he fizzled a little then died. Sadly, his demise caused hardly a ripple in the pool of Manchester’s Fleet Street.

But death held no fear for him, he’d died once before you see and, as it was no longer a new experience, he didn’t want to make a fuss. When you are an old writer, once you’ve experienced something it becomes old news and it’s time to move on to pastures new. 

Gordon’s family home was in the hills outside Mold, North Wales, but he lived, four nights a week, in a dingy bed-sit in the toxic back streets of Cheetham Hill. “A pit in Coffin City,” he would say with a woefully Welsh smile: “Cheap you see, twenty five pounds a week, cockroaches thrown in.”

Cockroaches, a shaving mirror, a bedside table, a Westclock alarm with matching bells, a three-bar electric fire and that was it … apart from this photograph he bequeathed   me. There was a handwritten note with it saying that he believed this picture had led him in to his first death and then out again.  It’s actually a picture of his Uncle Harry.

The note finished: “I was going to take my uncle to the grave with me, I thought perhaps he might lead me back to life again, but then I realised I can’t be really bothered… so, I thought maybe my Uncle Harry could actually help you in your quest to find the truth about life after death …actually, by the time you read this note and receive my picture I will have scooped you, just like in the old days,

“Good Luck and all the best,

“Your very good friend Gordon.”

I guess, Gordon’s life had never been complete in the way a writer wants it to be complete. We all want our work to live on after us, but Gordon’s legacy to the world, a short tome on the world’s first test tube baby, is sadly now out of print.

It was on that particular story though that our paths first crossed, we were both staking out the family from the bar of the George and Dragon near their home in Stockport. Back then Gordon was bright and funny, unbowed by a life of too much booze and too many cigarettes. And I have to hold my hands up, that time he did ‘scoop’ me. He got to the family two minutes before me, claimed an exclusive and wrote his book.

Last time I saw him we were in the murky world of the Crusader Club at the back of the Express building in Ancoats, Manchester. I remember it so well, stairs as black as ink, rubbery swing doors, beer-stained tables, you could hear the first edition park and then watch the mass exodus of van men up the stairs.

Down here in The Crusader it was our world beneath the gutter, a funny world where we’d stay ’til three, four, in the morning, every morning.

And there’s Gordon hilariously retelling the story of his own death and wafting the picture of his Uncle Harry proudly as if it represented proof of his experience.

As I look at the picture today in my study, it goes back to the Thirties and I must admit I get a strange feeling from it, something about the eyes, the way they look into me. It’s an eerie photograph.

Anyway, here’s what Gordon told me that last time in the Crusader Club, only an old journalist has such an eye for detail: “I had no idea why Harry was waiting for me   when I came up for air from the club, he was puffing contentedly on his briar pipe.  It confused me; he’d died from lack of breath nearly 30 years ago.

“I have to admit that his death had no more affect on me than his life had. He never bothered to leave me a penny in his will – and he was rich in his own right, an insurance salesman of all things, first car in Mael Famau and the first divorce too…

 “Now I was 52 and there he was, in front of me larger than life and twice as ugly. A hideous ghoul in fact, if I might be so purple. He was drunk too, a family trait,” he laughed.

“He was wearing a shabby business suit and a dark tie as tight as a noose. A grin stretched across his tombstone teeth, making his paper-thin cheeks look like they were about to split. I could feel the emphasymic rumble of his chest through my boots.

“Harry seemed genuinely pleased to see me, I suppose we were waving about in the same wind, bit of a drunkard’s gig really.

“He didn’t speak. And neither did I. Too much unchartered water under both our bridges.  I smiled at him nervously and in return he faked a very unmilitary two-step and a stumble that became a foppish bow.

“Unfortunately that dislodged his jaw and it was left hanging unnaturally loose – then I noticed his skull was beginning to show through his threadbare flesh.

“I shivered and he shrugged, sighed and blew all the air out of the street.   I was concerned of course when Harry held out his hand to me as if to a child but I took it anyway. His grip felt cold, a part of the bleakness.

“Now, it has to be said that the spectral visitation of a dead uncle is unnerving enough, but the fact that last orders was fast approaching and there wasn’t a pub in sight was enough to strike terror into the dying heart of any lad from the hills …

“But there was something in my Uncle Harry’s grip that made me realise I had nothing to fear. He already had last orders waiting for me as he led me down a long and dark alley.

            “I felt like we had entered the final pub at the end of the world. Inside an old cigarette-chewing journalist tuned in a Roberts radio on the bar, keeping up with the news, needle going back and forth, sounds from across the world,  little snippets, glitches, bleeps.   

            “My granddad inexplicably was there at the end of the bar, in his boots and his baggy black serge pants, vest and braces, belly as big as a maternity ward. He raised his beer to me and smiled.  I smiled back as Harry handed me a beer.

            “I could still hear what was going on outside, the gurgling of the gutters, a  drunkard caterwauling  under a melting streetlight, a fat old policeman whistling as he goes by.      

            “A cloud of smoke belched from Harry’s pipe engulfing me, when it cleared he was looking down at the floor.

             “You’re dead,” he whispered like smoke sliding from a gun.

            And that’s when it happened to me. It was like smoke was drifting across the universe.  I was bouncing amongst the   stars. I managed to retain a sense of my body but it was a vague misty shape, an echo. I turned turtle – swooped – and pulled stunts, I could see ashes of my life leaving a trail.

            “I soon realised there was no oxygen up here, no thermals, no wind, not like we know it anyway. This was the wind between galaxies, this was the gas that kept the universe alive but we can’t breath it and yet you don’t choke, you simply can’t breath anymore.

            “Then I landed and I found myself at the bottom of a set of stairs … all nine hundred of them in a tight spiral, a deep red corset of a stairwell, like the stairway to the womb.

            “I began to climb step by step. By the third floor I was going up those stairs like each one was a mountain. Strange though, I didn’t feel tired … just weary. I plodded on.  Nothing happening. Nothing to report. Step by step. Stair by stair.

            “But I kept on going up, pushing down on my knees with my hands.  I could hear a dog panting in my ears, maybe it was a door-dog chomping at my heels. I knew I couldn’t look behind me. No point, there’d be nothing there.  Nothing. A big black zilch.

            “I looked up and the stairs had become stone, each one a thousand miles high. I looked up at the first thousand miles and started fumbling around for a handhold. Then a foothold. I knew I was heading for the highest room in the house, the last room you reach in your mind, the attic, the room of memories and dust and decay. I’d got to keep climbing.

            “The building began to collapse around me, room after room fell past me – the closing down of the mind I suppose – rubble and bricks, icons and stairways, trials and noises, fell away below me.  But I kept on climbing. Then I reached out, like an amoeba, into the sky, and hung there, waving into the universe. The stairs were falling away but from where I was waving, I could see the  lights of my grandfather’s house, a safe haven as it had always been, and there he was, my Uncle Harry, he was walking away.

            “It was a strange thing, but I came back to life when I heard the twin bells of the Westclock in my dingy little flat in Cheetham Hill, this picture of Harry was leaning up against it, as if he was looking at me.”

***

As I sit at my desk in my haunted house at the heart of the Village of the Damned my attention keeps being called back to this photograph on my desk. It’s the eyes isn’t it, they seem to know something. I wonder what it is?

Old writers rarely go in a blaze of glory, we tend to just fizzle out like a firework on a damp night. And that’s exactly what happened to my old friend Gordon Pugh, finally.

He’d always been as noisy as a newsroom filled with ancient typewriters, but when he met his final deadline he fizzled a little then died. Sadly, his demise caused hardly a ripple in the pool of Manchester’s Fleet Street.

But death held no fear for him, he’d died once before you see and, as it was no longer a new experience, he didn’t want to make a fuss. When you are an old writer, once you’ve experienced something it becomes old news and it’s time to move on to pastures new. 

Gordon’s family home was in the hills outside Mold, North Wales, but he lived, four nights a week, in a dingy bed-sit in the toxic back streets of Cheetham Hill. “A pit in Coffin City,” he would say with a woefully Welsh smile: “Cheap you see, twenty five pounds a week, cockroaches thrown in.”

Cockroaches, a shaving mirror, a bedside table, a Westclock alarm with matching bells, a three-bar electric fire and that was it … apart from this photograph he bequeathed   me. There was a handwritten note with it saying that he believed this picture had led him in to his first death and then out again.  It’s actually a picture of his Uncle Harry.

The note finished: “I was going to take my uncle to the grave with me, I thought perhaps he might lead me back to life again, but then I realised I can’t be really bothered… so, I thought maybe my Uncle Harry could actually help you in your quest to find the truth about life after death …actually, by the time you read this note and receive my picture I will have scooped you, just like in the old days,

“Good Luck and all the best,

“Your very good friend Gordon.”

I guess, Gordon’s life had never been complete in the way a writer wants it to be complete. We all want our work to live on after us, but Gordon’s legacy to the world, a short tome on the world’s first test tube baby, is sadly now out of print.

It was on that particular story though that our paths first crossed, we were both staking out the family from the bar of the George and Dragon near their home in Stockport. Back then Gordon was bright and funny, unbowed by a life of too much booze and too many cigarettes. And I have to hold my hands up, that time he did ‘scoop’ me. He got to the family two minutes before me, claimed an exclusive and wrote his book.

Last time I saw him we were in the murky world of the Crusader Club at the back of the Express building in Ancoats, Manchester. I remember it so well, stairs as black as ink, rubbery swing doors, beer-stained tables, you could hear the first edition park and then watch the mass exodus of van men up the stairs.

Down here in The Crusader it was our world beneath the gutter, a funny world where we’d stay ’til three, four, in the morning, every morning.

And there’s Gordon hilariously retelling the story of his own death and wafting the picture of his Uncle Harry proudly as if it represented proof of his experience.

As I look at the picture today in my study, it goes back to the Thirties and I must admit I get a strange feeling from it, something about the eyes, the way they look into me. It’s an eerie photograph.

Anyway, here’s what Gordon told me that last time in the Crusader Club, only an old journalist has such an eye for detail: “I had no idea why Harry was waiting for me   when I came up for air from the club, he was puffing contentedly on his briar pipe.  It confused me; he’d died from lack of breath nearly 30 years ago.

“I have to admit that his death had no more affect on me than his life had. He never bothered to leave me a penny in his will – and he was rich in his own right, an insurance salesman of all things, first car in Mael Famau and the first divorce too…

 “Now I was 52 and there he was, in front of me larger than life and twice as ugly. A hideous ghoul in fact, if I might be so purple. He was drunk too, a family trait,” he laughed.

“He was wearing a shabby business suit and a dark tie as tight as a noose. A grin stretched across his tombstone teeth, making his paper-thin cheeks look like they were about to split. I could feel the emphasymic rumble of his chest through my boots.

“Harry seemed genuinely pleased to see me, I suppose we were waving about in the same wind, bit of a drunkard’s gig really.

“He didn’t speak. And neither did I. Too much unchartered water under both our bridges.  I smiled at him nervously and in return he faked a very unmilitary two-step and a stumble that became a foppish bow.

“Unfortunately that dislodged his jaw and it was left hanging unnaturally loose – then I noticed his skull was beginning to show through his threadbare flesh.

“I shivered and he shrugged, sighed and blew all the air out of the street.   I was concerned of course when Harry held out his hand to me as if to a child but I took it anyway. His grip felt cold, a part of the bleakness.

“Now, it has to be said that the spectral visitation of a dead uncle is unnerving enough, but the fact that last orders was fast approaching and there wasn’t a pub in sight was enough to strike terror into the dying heart of any lad from the hills …

“But there was something in my Uncle Harry’s grip that made me realise I had nothing to fear. He already had last orders waiting for me as he led me down a long and dark alley.

            “I felt like we had entered the final pub at the end of the world. Inside an old cigarette-chewing journalist tuned in a Roberts radio on the bar, keeping up with the news, needle going back and forth, sounds from across the world,  little snippets, glitches, bleeps.   

            “My granddad inexplicably was there at the end of the bar, in his boots and his baggy black serge pants, vest and braces, belly as big as a maternity ward. He raised his beer to me and smiled.  I smiled back as Harry handed me a beer.

            “I could still hear what was going on outside, the gurgling of the gutters, a  drunkard caterwauling  under a melting streetlight, a fat old policeman whistling as he goes by.      

            “A cloud of smoke belched from Harry’s pipe engulfing me, when it cleared he was looking down at the floor.

             “You’re dead,” he whispered like smoke sliding from a gun.

            And that’s when it happened to me. It was like smoke was drifting across the universe.  I was bouncing amongst the   stars. I managed to retain a sense of my body but it was a vague misty shape, an echo. I turned turtle – swooped – and pulled stunts, I could see ashes of my life leaving a trail.

            “I soon realised there was no oxygen up here, no thermals, no wind, not like we know it anyway. This was the wind between galaxies, this was the gas that kept the universe alive but we can’t breath it and yet you don’t choke, you simply can’t breath anymore.

            “Then I landed and I found myself at the bottom of a set of stairs … all nine hundred of them in a tight spiral, a deep red corset of a stairwell, like the stairway to the womb.

            “I began to climb step by step. By the third floor I was going up those stairs like each one was a mountain. Strange though, I didn’t feel tired … just weary. I plodded on.  Nothing happening. Nothing to report. Step by step. Stair by stair.

            “But I kept on going up, pushing down on my knees with my hands.  I could hear a dog panting in my ears, maybe it was a door-dog chomping at my heels. I knew I couldn’t look behind me. No point, there’d be nothing there.  Nothing. A big black zilch.

            “I looked up and the stairs had become stone, each one a thousand miles high. I looked up at the first thousand miles and started fumbling around for a handhold. Then a foothold. I knew I was heading for the highest room in the house, the last room you reach in your mind, the attic, the room of memories and dust and decay. I’d got to keep climbing.

            “The building began to collapse around me, room after room fell past me – the closing down of the mind I suppose – rubble and bricks, icons and stairways, trials and noises, fell away below me.  But I kept on climbing. Then I reached out, like an amoeba, into the sky, and hung there, waving into the universe. The stairs were falling away but from where I was waving, I could see the  lights of my grandfather’s house, a safe haven as it had always been, and there he was, my Uncle Harry, he was walking away.

            “It was a strange thing, but I came back to life when I heard the twin bells of the Westclock in my dingy little flat in Cheetham Hill, this picture of Harry was leaning up against it, as if he was looking at me.”

***

As I sit at my desk in my haunted house at the heart of the Village of the Damned my attention keeps being called back to this photograph on my desk. It’s the eyes isn’t it, they seem to know something. I wonder what it is?

#ghosts #haunted #manchester #georgeanddragon #styockport #supernatural #myuncle

WAS LISA MARIE DESTINED TO DIE YOUNG, LIKE ELVIS?

WAS LISA MARIE DESTINED TO DIE YOUNG, LIKE ELVIS?

The death of Elvis’s daughter Lisa Marie from heart problems at 54 has saddened so many of us.

She was ultimately controversial beautiful, rich and famous. Daughter of The King and wife of Michael Jackson, one of the most disturbing pop music stars ever.

She also ran the grand mausoleum to her Dad, Gracelands.

In fact she told crowds there only a few days ago that they were the ‘only people who can bring me out of the house’ and many saw it as a confirmation of her failing health.

She  was marking Elvis’s 88th birthday recently. Fans said she  looked ‘incredibly sad’ and ‘really hurting’. It is two years since the death of her son Benjamin Keough who is buried alongside Elvis at Graceland.

Lisa suffered a fatal cardiac arrest on Thursday.

And she is far from the first member of the world-famous family to die from heart troubles.

Elvis died from cardiac arrest when he was 42 years old, and his mother Gladys died from heart failure at 46. She had three brothers, who also died in their forties from heart failure or lung complications.

In the recently published biography, Elvis: Destined to Die Young, author Sally Hoedel argued the deaths of Elvis, his mother, and his uncles were likely caused by a genetic defect.

Hoedel suggested the deaths in Elvis’s family were caused by an Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency, a genetic disorder that damages the lung and liver and leads to other.

Whatever the cause, it is sad that a family is blighted like this.

#daddy #elvis #marie #lisamarie #graceland #presley #jackson #statins

HOW PROBY SEX CLAIM LED ME FULL-TILT INTO SCOTT’S WORLD OF GOTHIC GENIUS

HOW PROBY SEX CLAIM LED ME FULL-TILT INTO SCOTT’S WORLD OF GOTHIC GENIUS

About 35 years ago, I’d just finished an interview for a morning newspaper with pop crock PJ Proby.

Jim was making yet another comeback, this time by claiming that Madonna was singing on the notorious Savoy Sessions, his latest recording.

Of course she wasn’t and she was apparently threatening to sue him. What did she expect to get? Some ring-pulls and a few bottle tops?

So I’d called him.

I’d met Jim many times and this was just another stop along the way to the bottom of a Jack Daniels bottle.

But what surprised me more was his claim that the enigmatic Scott Walker was having an affair with Jacques Brel, the French doyen of songs of poetry and pomp.

Scott had sung many of them including Mathilde, Amsterdam and the heartbreaking If You Go Away.

Yes, over the years there had been hints of Brel being gay or bisexual in the French media. But that simply made him seem more exotic and charming.

But Scott?

There had never been any suggestion that he was gay.

I remember feeling a bit angry at Proby, who had rapidly become an inglorious singer most famous for repeatedly losing his career and falling off the stage drunk.

Anyway, I had met Scott years ago and despite his waif-like wasted elegance and the androgynous of the 60s and 70s there was nothing to suggest Proby wasn’t making this up as well.

Besides, Scott was married.

Yep, I was angry with Proby…

Anyway, round about then – it would have been 3pm – the office tea trolley squeaked and creaked across the editorial floor followed by another trolley which brought the latest review copies of CDs and tapes of the likes of Mariah Carey, Boyz II Men, TLC and Hootie & the Blowfish.

And there it was, Tilt… the new Scott Walker album – 11 years late as far as his die-hard fans were concerned.

I studied the paper artwork inside the slightly scratched plastic box it had arrived in. The original ‘rare’ jewel case had been ‘nicked’ of course.

But the cover imagery itself was darker than even Climate of the Hunter, a decade earlier, had managed to be… a mangle of eyes and fingers and the sensuality of high heels and stockings… the eyes were dark and brooding, yet lights pocked them like tears and pearls. There was also what could have easily been a distorted cartoon of Marilyn Monroe, dress drawn out into a flying saucer as it billowed around her waist …

But the gnarled-looking hand had me from the start. It turned out it was Scott’s. Hard, gnarled and dead. Scott was in his early 40s but that hand held its own story.

I left the office early claiming that I was going to drive to Prestwich where Proby was holed up in a grubby house rolling in discarded cans of super lager. It stood next to the Halfway House pub where by now he would be holding his addled court and telling tales and half-truths about Elvis.

I poured out of the big glass Art Deco office on Gt Ancoats Street, found my car and thought ‘stuff Proby’. I would be far more interesting to know what Walker had been doing.

So I turned left towards the dark Stockport garret I called home.

I was recently divorced and lived in two rooms on the top floor of on old dolorous Victorian house, heavy in dampness and ghosts. As I closed the big oak door I flicked the switch on my electric fire, pulled the curtains shut and switched on my midi-cd player. It hummed as it waited for my new cd.

And so it began. Something abandoned … other worldly, disembodied. Scott had created a burnt-out landscape, not smouldering, not smokey but stark, a place where only the dead could walk.

“… who’ll give me 21, 21…”

Scott Walker, that handsomeness of a smile had created the loneliest place in the universe.

Remembering Mr Invisible…

And he was comfortable there. His voice was a clear sonorous bell – just like the opening of Farmer in the City… but it was now a clarion cry of surrealism over elements of industrial rock, Zappa. opera and aria.

And of course there is his dark Gothic poetry.

 Tilt threw out everything that we recognised of the Walker Brothers and even Brel. Now we had a new classical music. Tilt is a masterpiece. It isn’t easy listening like My Ship is Coming In or Like Walking in the Rain but it is astonishing when put up against them.

Which is better? The pop or the Art?

I think we just thank our gods for allowing this man to walk and create among us for more than half a century.

Do i hear
21
21
21

i’ll give you
21
21
21

Do i hear
21
21
21

i’ll give you
21
21
21

This night you
are mistaken

i’m a farmer
in the city

Dark farm
houses
against the
sky

Every night
i must wonder why

Harness on the
left nail keeps
wrinkling wrinkling

Then higher above
me – e e so o
e e e so o o

Can’t go by
a man from
Rio

Can’t go by
a man from
Vigo

Can’t go by
a man from
Ostia

Hey Ninetto

Remember that
dream

we talked about
it
so many times

Do i hear
21
21
21

i’ll give you
21
21
21

Do i hear
21
21
21

i’ll give you
21
21
21

And if i’m not
mistaken
We can search
from farm to
farm

Dark farm houses
against our eyes

Every night i
must realize

Harness on the
left nail

keeps withering withering

Then higher above
me e e so o
e e e so o o

Can’t go by
a man in
this shirt

Can’t go by
a man in
that shirt

Can’t go by
a man with brain
grass

go by his long
long eye
gas

And i used
to be a
citizen

i never felt
the pressure

i knew nothing
of the horses

Nothing of the
thresher

Paulo
take me with
you

it was the
journey of
life

Do i hear
21
21
21

i’ll give you
21
21
21

Do i hear
21
21
21

i’ll give you
21
21
21

##SCOTTWALKER #walkerbrothers #engel #pjproby #jacquesbrel #brel #tilt #myshipiscomingin #walkingintherain #climateofthehunter #manchester #stockport #gtancoatsstreet

LIKE A ROLLING MOAN…

LIKE A ROLLING MOAN…

Whether you are the Prince of Snark-ness or just a work-a-day scribe, the writes and wrongs of selling your granny …

Does a writer have the right to write about their own world gone wrong?

A few days ago I wrote a short piece looking back at Like a Rolling Stone by the never-ending Bob Dylan. LRS is a song that changed the world … six minutes of angst, anger, vitriol and viciousness.

Bob was a wild skinny foppish wisp of will-and-determination who brought a tortured voice of poetry and accusation to a world slopping its way through the mud and the blood of war, violence and hatred.

That was back in 1965 – the era of short melodic a-doo-ron-ron two minute love songs to your girl, your mum, your car and your dog.

But LRS launched itself out of the mono-speaker in dad’s valve radio like a banshee in shades, howled, melted the wallpaper, came on at your girl, boiled your car, licked your mother and kicked your dog in the b*llocks.

And it shocked, mystified, appalled and frightened your parents, particularly those who extolled the virtues of their working-class background yet aspired to the middling mordancy of the middle-classes who are bit squiffy in Torremolinos and down the Tory club.

The six minute song was based on a blues standard, glistened like a Christmas tree of Phil Spector’s wall of sound, had the hip-ness of The Beats, the arrogance of rock ‘n’ roll and was searingly honest – telling things just how they were.

And that’s the point … writers are told to write about what they know.

So, does that include members of your family or friends, warts and all?

I say yes.

I am first and foremost a writer, but my mainstay has always been journalism and I have always told the truth. That’s my job. And like 95 per cent of my colleagues I have never knowingly published anything untrue.

That’s what writing is about … publish and be damned.

Well, I was damned – by somebody who should be close to me – and they have never spoken to me since.

My literary crime?

I used a figure from their lives to creative the tension of juxtaposition between a Bob Dylan figure and the regular bloke on the street back then.

My memory is clear. I was brought up in a noisy laughter-ridden sometimes brutal big beer drinking back street town of pubs butchers and scruffy terraced houses. Big men, beery men, dripping Park Drive from their bottom lips, proud of their beer bellies that turned the belts of their work-pants into wobbly slings.

Real men liked to look pregnant way back in the 60s.

Real men in the 60s drank and smoked too much, admired celebrity drunks like John Wayne and Robert Mitchum, saw women as things to be shouted at and ridiculed regularly… treat’m mean, keep’m keen.

Real men gauged each other’s worth by how much beer they could drink, how many cigarettes they smoked and how many husbands they claimed to have cuckolded behind their own wife’s back.

I wrote about a real man just like this … a man I watched go apoplectic when out-of-the-blue Dylan’s anthem burst from the airwaves. His re-action was madness. And terribly frightening for any child already flying head-long into the exotic horrors of puberty.

This man was the juxtaposition … Bob, spooky, androgynous, mysterious, artistic. Skinny as a rake … on the other hand, our 60s artisan was a big general construction worker, bluff, inarticulate, angry, uncomprehending, humourless and dark, dark, dark.

And he drank cider on the privacy of his own couch.

I mentioned this in the LRS piece … I mentioned it because men – and women – drank to excess back in the 60s, it was just a way of life. Men got drunk. Women got migraines.

And this is where the conundrum raised its hyenic head. And screamed at me.

I had apparently betrayed this man by telling the truth about him.

I hadn’t said he was a sober, even-tempered, witty, caring, loving, intelligent, articulate, gentle, thoughtful, generous, spiritual or even demonstrably loving person, because he wasn’t.

No. I’d taken the essence he showed to the world and depicted him on his couch with a glass of cider in his hand objecting in words of no more than four letters about a song on the radio.

That’s the way so many working class, drinking class, bad tempered class men were in the 60s. I never suggested he was a drunk or a bully. But so many men were way back then.

So, as a writer, a man who delves invited or uninvited in to other peoples’ live for a living – a man whose job has always been to challenge liars, cheats, thieves, conmen, politicians, businessmen, princes and kings – I was being ‘spiked’, edited by a member of my own family for telling the truth.

A truth they didn’t want to come out, despite the fact that this man who drank at home and had a vile temper was a secret all over the place. Also, let’s face it, he chose to be a drinking man and never bothered to address his vile temper.

A member of my family was asking me to tell lies about a man I hadn’t even insulted as far as I was concerned. Yet, he had insulted me all his life.

So, should writers write about the rights and wrongs in their own families?

I say yes.

It is honest.

And why should family not be looked at through the arrow of light in a prism?

Your life is made up of good and bad, angst and fear, love and loss, unfairness and luck … but it is also made up of the influences of those around you, the good, the bad and the ugly, the cousins, the uncles and the aunties, the vicar at the local church, the teachers and the lawyers.

Write about those who have done you good and those who did you wrong.

Tell the truth as a writer, always.

And never ever be afraid of showing the world about the truth of your life and of those who influenced you … these people are the teachers.

Those who need to know the truth about how their lives affected the lives of others.

And that’s the truth.

#bobdylan #princeharry #meghan #kingcharles #thequeen #buckinghampalace #royals #royalrows

HARRY PLOTTER AND HIS GOBBY LOT OF IRE

HARRY PLOTTER AND HIS GOBBY LOT OF IRE

We all had sympathy for poor little Prince Harry … he was a ruddy-looking child with lost horizons in his eyes. He was the product of a broken marriage, bereavement and speculation about his mum and dad’s morals. And it went on and on.

And on.

Not only this but he was a key member of what is one of the world’s most publicly dysfunctional families who live in a tumbled-down council house in the better part of town.

There was a vulnerability too that made his blue eyes sad.

Yet can any of his traumatic – but ultimately priveliged – life really ever justify the vengeance and coldness of throwing his own family under the golden coach for hundreds of millions of pounds.

Harry is no longer that child from 1997 consumed by loss and betrayal.

He is a Big Boy now – a dad of two, on the cusp of middle age and, like so many family members we’ve all despaired over, refuses to accept he could be to blame for anything that’s ever gone wrong.

Harry only sees himself as the victim.

Even the shameful wearing of a Nazi outfit in 2005 was actually his brother and Kate’s fault. He would never have worn it to a party if they hadn’t found it so hilarious!

And then of course there is the time his brother put the Willies up Harry by assaulting him as he insulted his wife.

Then horror of horrors a pet food bowl became involved and little Willy broke Harry’s necklace!

This of course followed the revelation that lovely Harry had no real negative feelings about the 25 people he claims to have killed in his army career.

From hero to villain in a ruthless fell-swoop to make his glitter-kissed life into a royal fortune.

Yep, he was once potentially our most popular Royal, But now he is being seen for what he is, a whingeing, moaning manipulative, accusing finger that refuses to move on no matter what his ghost writers and editors push to the upper echelons of his truth.

Personally, I believe, like any family member who tortures others, he has crossed that bridge too far…

#harry meghan #kingcharles #war #family