One Friday night, in late summer I was walking the old canal; cars passed open windows blaring hits by Madonna Buddleias overhung the road
I left the towpath as the light began to fail and found myself in a pub car park From its battered sign, I recognised the Fox and Hounds I'd last visited two decades ago before I'd left the town for good a 16-year-old slumped over an illegal rum and coke A policeman had been striding towards the door and the landlady bundled me and my friends out of a window in the gents toilets from which we nimbly landed on the canal towpath and melted into the night, laughing
(Through the gate and past the bourn Meadowsweet and thick blackthorn There were birds high on the trail When I saw your face)
Inside, nothing had changed The jukebox still boasted a 45 by Twinkle thirty years after it had dropped out of the charts Mock Tudor windows still faced the road and oak beams above blackened in a fug of smoke No one was drinking there
A crowd didn't begin to gather until 9. Kids not cool exactly, but somehow... leonine I guessed from the posters on the walls they'd come to see a band and soon they were ling past me paying an entrance fee to a man in stonewashed denim and disappearing into a back room The idea of a night drinking alone was unpleasant to me The pub was now empty. I had nothing to lose and I picked up my beer, paid my money and followed them in
(Very early once in May Voices outside called my name There were green leaves in your hair When I kissed your lips)
The room was cramped and dark, and during a momentary hush a singer on the stage was introduced as The Phantom He was wearing the kind of plastic mask sold in art shops and a superhero's cape. To a round of applause several other musicians formed a circle amps turned in on each other like wagons on a prairie I looked around me: the crowd was bathed in the red glow of the stage lights For a moment, the buzz of amps filled the expectant quiet Then, without a count-in, the band began to play
(The bell, the cup, the gown The falling tower falls down)
Almost immediately, I froze The sound their instruments made was almost-human: my beer glass slithered through my fingers as I recognised it as my own 16-year-old laughter escaping through a toilet window retreating from a policeman dragged back through the long track of years which had passed and re-presented, re-lived in front of the audience In its disembodied state it was one of the most purely beautiful things I have ever heardâ it brie y brought the past back to life old hopes and innocence burst into sudden power. I was sweating shaking in the dark room, tears welling in my eyes. But within seconds the laughter died and the hair on my arms stood upâ I had the physical sensation of shapes evaporating away into the night outside
Slowly, the music took on a harsher more abstract tenor, and in it I heard the faint seashore noises of the motorway, building into a long drone which slowly became overwhelming roaring like a jet engine. To me, at that moment it seemed to express our years of living with that motorway sound, years of it underscoring every day and night, every experience we'd lived through, cleansing it from our bodies and minds in a deafening catharsis (Hollow boned, you'll waste away Searching through the forest glades For the green leaves in the hair And the lips that kiss)
I was shaking as the band rounded their set out with a wash of bells or wind chimes As they left the stage to scattered applause it occurred to me that the Phantom had not sung a note
He was pushing through the crowd towards the exit hemmed in by acolytes. I tried to get near him but I couldn't. Dazzled by the sudden bright light in the room my certainty drifted away; had the sounds I'd heard been exactly what I'd thought they were? I was in a dif cult, neurotic state and perhaps there were memories welling up that I couldn't control I felt suddenly depressed and tired disgusted with my own numbness
(Hollow boned, you'll waste away Searching through the forest glades For the green leaves in the hair And the lips that kiss)
Kids were leaving, ignitions starting up outside the Phantom had joined a carload, rolling on up the road towards the town and its only nightclub The pub was closing down. I stood in the night and I wondered what had been taken from me