Friday, August 23, 2013

Freaky Dancin’ (Bez aka Mark Berry & Deborah Faulkner)

Bez
Freaky Dancing: Me and the Mondays

Freaky Dancin' - Me and the Mondays
Original
Freaky Dancin' - Me and the Mondays
Reissue














Brilliantly written account of Bez’s early years and how he came to be the maraca shaking freaky dancer of the Happy Mondays. Full of hilarious anecdotes and perceptive musings on his upbringing and life. We see how he falls out with authority early on in his life despite or maybe because he’s the son of a dibble and a very straightlaced mother. Bez soon runs with the wrong crowd and gets an early taste of bird but also travels through Europe and Morocco sampling a life of more possibilities than he found in Salford and Manchester city centre. His drug taking must give Keith Richards a run for his money if all is to be believed and it’s this that really gets him in with the nascent Happy Mondays and their drug fuelled new sound. The way he writes really brings you into his life and hopes completely immersing me in the story and the late 80s Manchester scene as it develops. As the Mondays start to break E hits the streets and helps form the Mondays classic rock clubbing dancehall mashup sound (with a little help from Oakenfold) that takes them stratospheric. As they make it big the pranks and drugs follow suite but as the latter get heavier and more addictive the band spiral downwards along with Factory Records to the well documented ending in the Caribbean island that others have said was to get X off the smack but put him smack onto crack island. That Bez survived his story intact seems either unlikely or a miracle and to come out of it with two kids even more so. I’ve read this 15 years after it was written and would like to see the next instalment if there’s one out there. Must search for it. He says he wants to write like he speaks but it doesn’t read like it’s in a Manc dialect which isn’t necessarily bad but he does throw in a bit of street jargon (dibble for copper) and a lot of four letters. The main gripe is insisting on dropping the d for every and and the g for every ing which makes it hard to read and is just plain daft given the eloquence of some of the sentences and even putting the right accents over the e and a in debacle. It looks like they’ve gone through the whole text with a spell checker but cutting the d’s and g’s out. Tres pretentious. Anyways apart from that irritation it’s a great read that draws you into Bez’s world and makes you think about the bits that you’ve been through like pubs, teenage scraps, gigs and clubs. And some of the best descriptions of gigs and dancing at clubs I’ve read including the joys of Freaky Dancin’ and gets me wondering how the hell someone managed to make a career of it.

http://www.cerysmaticfactory.info/freaky_dancin.php

Tuesday, August 06, 2013

Stoner (John Williams)

John Williams
Stoner


Firstly this isn't a novel about weed but a guy called Stoner. A compelling read of someone who had his seemingly futile life mapped out but changed completely and irrevocably by an enlightening moment. The potential of life is boundless but as each goal is met the potential falls away and becomes another bar to the prison cell window. Determined yet picking the wrong battles we can see how his life is failing until he reaches that same conclusion and a contentment or acceptance is reached. Lastly as life ebbs away the regrets of an ultimately loveless life grate and the unrealised youthful potential is fully understood and how it's perpetuated in others around. Ultimately it seems that his life has been futile and you're left wondering whether his first path may have been the better choice albeit impossible for him. And it wouldn't make a good novel, of course. Oddly the books subject matter and ending is very similar to the last I read (The General in His Labyrinth). A great read and, as I said, compelling which is why I'm writing this past midnight. Makes me want to read the couple of other books that William's has written but maybe I need something a little lighter after the last two books. Something easy to read to cheer me up, like The Gooner fanzine. On second thoughts I don't want another treatise on failed potential do I. But I do recommend this book. Good call Debbie.

http://www.vintage-books.co.uk/books/0099561549/john-williams/stoner-a-novel/