Sunday, February 25, 2007

Night in Heaven


Well, I've found myself listening to Erasure. Now, this isn't something particularly to be proud of, but there you go, it's happened nonetheless. Of course, it's to do with a feeling, a memory, and in this case it's back in the late 80's, just before we kicked off acid house. A Saturday night down at Heaven in those days was quite the celebration, nevermind that we were in the midst of AIDS, and incidentally just about the worst period in British popular music since 1954. Being 19 and acceptably cute, I managed to stay out and party regardless of being broke. For example, I remember staying with Chris, but his girlfriend was coming over on Saturday night so I had to be out the house. No problem, I just went to Heaven and danced all night. I actually didn't go home with anyone that night, but fell asleep on the Circle Line about 7 AM. I think the most embarrassing moment was when I was fucked up on poppers and speed, amongst other things, and started chatting up this cute guy, only to realise after 10 seconds or so, that it was a reflection from a wall of mirrors. I looked around in semi-petrification, but nobody had noticed - it wasn't exactly what you'd call an observant crowd in many ways.
Heaven then was a world for me alone. I wasn't part of any gay scene, and even when I knew a few other bi's, and a few gay guys, we were in a punk world where there was neither money nor inclination amongst most of them to go to these nightclub decadent parties. It probably wasn't politically correct or something.
That's one of several negative points I can make about our scene - that they're very uptight about music. It has to be from one of the approved bands, or at least an approved genre, to be acceptable for playing in public. This is a very teenage concept, created from peer pressure, so in many ways it's an example of all the petty oppressions that anarchists are supposed to oppose. And one consequence of this peer attitude of course is that the music that's deemed acceptable is relentlessly straight. There'll be no Weather Girls in the Vrankrijk and no Marc Almond in the Binnenpret. You might get Bronski Beat once a year at a push, but only because Jimmy had such a tediously PC image.
I must admit, I thoroughly enjoyed my hedonist days. I remember going down the IT, which was Amsterdam's equivalent of Heaven, being not only in the unusual position of having enough money to buy a few beers, but also totally speeding off my tits direct from Dave's - at the time, the number one speed dealer in Amsterdam. He'd wished me a good evening, and proffered yet another swig from the bottle of Jameson's and off I'd tootled with my ill-gotten gains (and I can't remember where the money had come from. We're not talking alot here, but I probably had a geeltje in my pocket, which was rare back then). So stood in the queue to get in and pay, I noticed a line of boys around my age walking in a line in another door. They were all cute and knew where they were going, so at the spur of a monet, I tagged on the back of the line. I've read that tagging on the back of a line trick in loads of books, from Lord of the Rings on down, and never believed it would work, so wasn't expecting anything but a knockback, but I got let through. Up some stairs and down some corridors we went, and I never got a chance to talk with anyone. I think we ended in some VIP area. Frankly, I didn't hang around, and went to check out the masses., down the stairs on the dancefloor. Of course, I could have missed a night out with some boybands and Hollywood producer. But frankly, it looked more like another cheap pimped night, and that was never my scene.
A pimp once tried to sell me to a News of the World reporter, and to this day I don't know if it was to fuck me or to give an interview about the Poll Tax riots. Frankly, neither was appetising, so muttering some obscenities about Wapping, I got out of the taxi and went back to the squat.

Saturday, February 03, 2007

Two news


Ma Tambo died the day before yesterday. I can't say I knew her, although we met sort of, but she sounds like on of the old school. Apparently she was well known in diplomatic circles, yet at the same time she would work as a nurse, without special recognition and the same slogging hours as the other nurses.The first true post in this blog was to do with a woman very like her.Rosa Parks.
Adelaide 'Ma' Tambo was similar. Her husband Oliver was President of the ANC in exile, and he retained the post even after Mandela was released and they returned to SOuth Africa. She took an early stance against the corruption and tyranny of Winnie after returning, leading a walkout of women from the Women's ANC group. But by all accounts she was herself a very strong, even domineering, figure. I suspect that she had a bigger influence on the anti-apartheid movement than any of us know.
I danced alongside Oliver Tambo and Jesse Jackson, and I guess the woman I vaguely remember being there was probably Ma Tambo.
Obviously my being there was a bit of a mistake, the result of being alone on a demo and being the only white boy in the middle of 3000 ANC & SWAPO comrades toy-toying up Oxford Street. Probably somewhere there is a photo of the fact, because there were lots of camera flashes as I stood there in the front row. Doubtless the journos were snapping in case I turned out to be the son of someone well-known.
The news today has been leading with the IPCC report on Climate Change (or, as they call it in the US 'Global Warming'). The report is being trailed as a harbinger of doom; yet personally I found it rather an inadequate compromise.
In trying to attain credibility, it seems to have sacrificed any theory, perhaps even integrity. Temperature rises are forecast with a range that is essentially meaningless. The sea level rises are equally flakey - deliberately excluding any Greenland or Antarctica glacier melts by all accounts - despite forecasting temperature rises up to 4 degrees.
There are though, some positive signs. That this is finally news, that there finally appears to be some consensus on action, that even the bosses of energy corps and Wal-Mart in the US seem to be getting round to the understanding. Of course they have to some day if they want to survive, let alone old Hubbert's Peak threatening to wipe out their business and their system.
There will only be one story in the coming years. Iraq and the other resource wars have to be recognised as parts of that story. There is only this: how we treat the world we live upon, and how that world treats us.
The last few days, perhaps irrationally, I feel a tad more optimistic, that we may finally act together.