I'm thinking I
should listen to that concerto again, and then a big chunk of it comes
flooding into my mind. It's in there! Like a record or a tape,
it's actually imprinted on my brain. I can hear the part where the lyrical
second theme of the first movement soars up an octave, gathering perfect
little embellishments around it. Every time I hear that part, I
feel tears pricking my eyelids. There's no other way the music could possibly
go at that point, not one note you could add or subtract or change; and
I start to wonder whether the composer really wrote it at all, or read
it in the mind of God.
And here
I am worrying about a gig in Basingstoke at something called the Pen and
Parchment Club. How it got a name like that I can't imagine. But, who
knows, it could be the best gig we've ever done. There's a musical equivalent
of the Hair of the Dog. You can be less than excited about performing--dreading
it, even--but once you get up there, with real live people in front of
you, something happens. Suddenly it's for real, you have to deliver,
and all your senses are sharpened. And sometimes the worst places can
turn out to be the most fun, if you can get the audience on your side.
Someone is tapping on the van window. I sit up with a start. A face with
bushy black eyebrows is peering in.
"You the band?" asks the face.
"Are you the minion?"
"Wot?"
"Yeah, we're the band, of course we're the band, open up, will you?"
Keys rattle, and the rest of the band are sauntering across the car
park.
Once inside,
the Pen and Parchment Club looks like a pretty typical 'Social Club':
a place where, for an annual membership fee, working men and their wives
and girlfriends can go and drink cheaper than they could in a pub. And,
on certain nights, be entertained by a raffle, or a comedian, or a struggling
pop group. In this case, a struggling pop group on the way to becoming
a struggling rock band.
Either
way, tonight we're going to have to struggle without the aid of a stage.
What passes for a stage at the Pen and Parchment is a nine-inch high platform
about 5 feet square.
We never
know what we're going to find when we walk into a gig. The stage might
consist of six rickety tables held together with electrical tape, or there
might be no stage at all. So we have some staging of our own in the van:
a pile of wooden boards with slots in them, which fit together ingeniously
to form either one large or two smaller platforms. We stole them piece
by piece from the Drama department of Fareham Technical College, where
Dave, our drummer, works as a 'groundsman'--in other words, as gardener
and general dogsbody. At first, we took just enough to make a drum riser.
But the slotted-wooden-board habit got into our blood. We had to have
more! Now we can make small stages bigger. Provided, that is, that the
height differential between 'our' stage and 'theirs' isn't too great:
on some nights people trip up in the middle of guitar solos and go crashing
into my keyboards or knocking over cymbal stands. Where the platforms
really pay off, though, is on those rare occasions when we get a big stage,
a real, honest-to-God theatre stage, and we can create two tiers: the
drums and keyboards towering over the front line. Like a real concert!
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