Category Archives: Uncategorized

Vote for Horovitz

A couple of weeks ago, I met up with the poet Michael Horovitz (who I previously blogged about here). Michael confirmed that he would be nominated for the prestigious Oxford Poetry Professorship, something the Guardian wrote about recently.

It would be wonderful if Michael took this position as he is quite unlike any of the other candidates and really would be a refreshing choice. If you are an Oxford graduate, you can vote for Michael by registering at the Oxford Poetry Election website.

Nostalgia: Bill Hicks, the NME and me

‘Nostalgia – it’s delicate, but potent. Teddy told me that in Greek, “nostalgia” literally means “the pain from an old wound.” It’s a twinge in your heart far more powerful than memory alone.’ Don Draper, ‘Mad Men’

You can experience nostalgia in the most unlikely places. Yesterday it was when Lou Reed’s ‘Satellite of Love’ came on the radio, a song my circle of friends listened to incessantly when we were 18 but I’ve hardly heard since. Like ‘Debris’ by the Faces, it’s a song can instantly take me back in time and space, 16 years and to the kitchen of my best friend Scott, when we all had curtain haircuts, smoked like chimneys and were terrifyingly sincere about everything all the time.

A couple of months ago the potent twinge in my heart came when I went to a screening of the new Bill Hicks documentary ‘American’.

When you go and see a film about Bill Hicks you probably expect to come out laughing or enraged or saddened, but I emerged wistful, contemplative and swamped by memories.

I hadn’t thought about Hicks a great deal since 1992, but suddenly it all came flooding back. Staying in to watch Hicks on ‘Clive Anderson Talks Back’ or being interviewed at the Montreal Comedy Festival as C4 surfed the wave of having the hippest comedy content on the block. Reading about Hicks in the NME on the bus to school, enthralled by this astonishing man who called himself a comedian but was sandwiched between features on the Lemonheads, Sonic Youth and Mudhoney and never looked out of place. You couldn’t do that with Jasper Carrot.

C4 comedy and the NME were the two key cultural influences for me at the time, so it’s little surprise that Hicks and his performances should have seemed so important, and also that they should be so easily forgotten, as what we most value in late adolescence is often the first thing that gets abandoned on the roadside during the long march to maturity.

I wrote an article exploring some of this in the context of British love for Hicks in the Independent on Sunday, but can’t help wondering the extent to which I am projecting my own memories of Hicks onto a wider canvas. 

Are these memories entirely personal and therefore largely irrelevent, or are there other people my age who place Hicks in the same C4/NME  bracket? In a sense, I don’t really want to know, because this is my nostalgia, not yours, but at the same, like everybody else, Hicks included (and why else did he love the UK so much?), I desire vindication, some confirmation that my nostalgia isn’t just a ‘twinge’, but something that has real cultural value beyond that. So come on people, vindicate me.

Top blogging: an essay in futility

A quick post to point you in the direction of the latest from Lucky Jim.

I am hugely envious of Lucky Jim’s writing skill – the ability to write well is something that is easily overlooked when people talk about great blogging – and his latest piece is a minor masterpiece, a perfectly formed short story that also happens to be true.

He probably won’t thank me for saying this, but it also ends in the only possible way it could.

Things I won't miss about work

The mysterious smell of sick in the corner of the office the source of which has never been discerned but which has never gone away

The No 68

First Capital Connect

Pret lunches

Routine

Life-threatening lifts

Not being allowed to work naked

Furry kettles

The last eight months

Things I’ll miss about work

My colleagues

The free travelcard

The free stationery

Cakes on Thursday

Arthur the lawyer, who knows everybody

An email address that gets automatic discounts and rapidly improved customer service without even asking

First dibs on incoming books

Not paying for teabags or toilet paper

A regular income

Welcome to The Great Wen

Stay tuned for a new London website.