“One good thing about music, when it hits you, you feel no pain.”
Bob Marley
Bob Marley
I follow my cousin Jack around. I
really admire him. He has left school prematurely to be a farmer and he already
knows everything about everything. If he had not been a farmer’s son he
could have been a great something else. There is a piano in the other parlour
at the farm, but he never had to practise. He calls Mama Auntie. If he had to
call her Mama he would probably have to practise the piano.
I am still very young when I realise
that my musical talent belongs to my Welsh bit. Nobody asks me if there is
someone inside my (quarter Welsh) head making the music, because it is quite
natural for Welsh people to be ‘kissed by the muse’.
The best thing about Mama is that she
has been kissed by the muse, too, despite her non-Welsh origins, which she
studiously denies. She plays the piano and I have been sitting at her feet
moving the pedals up and down, up and down, ever since time began. She sings
beautifully. Her voice is dark and melodious and awakens in me the desire to
sing. I know all the popular songs from the radio. Mama can pick up a tune on
one airing and play it over and over again. She has perfect pitch, and whatever
shortcomings there are in her emotional make-up, you forget them all when she
sits down and forgets herself in her music.
I bash around on the piano while she
is doing the housework. At an age when some little girls are still drawing
princesses in crinolines, I discover cadences and play them up and down the piano,
not understanding why the second chord is a relief after the first one. Sitting
on the wobbly piano stool, I play what to me are symphonies, until one day,
probably having at long last recognised the symphonic elements in my musical
utterances, Mama and Dada decide it is time for me to have proper lessons.
And who better than Mama’s old
teacher?
Mr Huxley is old, ancient, prehistoric,
Methuselish. He is oldest person in the world. He has snowy-white, bushy,
unkempt hair and eyebrows He looks just like Albert Schweitzer in Mama’s
encyclopaedia. Mr Huxley smells of shag, sweat and senility. He lives in a big
house with his sister. She doesn’t like music, so she has banned him to a
wooden shack in the garden. There he can make as much noise as he likes on his
church organ with its shiny pipes and three registers, or on the old upright
piano standing against the opposite wall, looking for all the world as if it is
trying to escape the ministrations of the countless pupils he still taunts in
his waning years.
At sub-topical room temperature
generated by a crackling stove spitting and exploding in a sort of
witch’s oven, I am introduced to the vagaries of harmony and counterpoint. I am
put through my scales and arpeggios under threat of a long, round, shiny, brown
wooden ruler that could crush my knuckles if brought down with moderate force
onto my childish hands. He shouts in scorn when I make even the most trivial
errors and he sends me off home every week with a flea in my ear for not
practising long or hard enough.
Mama only nods and expresses pleasure
that her money is being so well spent. She has forgotten how much she hated him
in her day. I very quickly realise that I can fool him in my lessons if I read
off the music at sight. In order to perfect this art, I start playing my way
through the heaps of music belonging to Mama and her mother, who was the
soprano part of a family quartet in her youth. That skill is to stand me in
very good stead. I now look forward to fooling Mr
Huxley. But hardly have I mastered the art of keeping his wrath at bay, when
everything changes.
Today I am a bit late getting to the ornamental
wrought iron gate which leads into the long drive past the house to Mr Huxley’s
woodshed because I always have leaded feet when I set out and the blackberries
in the hedge have held me up a bit. Now, with fingers and mouth stained purple
and panting from the drag up the hill, I stop short. To my surprise, Mr Huxley's sister
is standing behind the twirly iron bars with a grim face and bleary, reddened eyes. Her iron grey hair is scraped back into a tight
little bun and she is even more sombrely dressed than usual. Her carpet
slippers reveal that she is not planning to leave the premises. So why is she
standing at the gate?
"Your lesson is cancelled,"
she announces in brittle tones.
My heart leaps. Cancelled!
“Does that mean I can go home?"
I ask.
"And don’t come back!" she
commands.
I’m not sure how to take that. Surely
she doesn’t decide who comes to play in Mr Huxley’s wooden shack.
"Well, I..." I stutter.
"Tell your mother she’ll have to
find you another teacher," Mr Huxley’s sister continues.
Though I am rejoicing inside, I feel
bound to ask what I’ve done. Does he know that I didn’t practise on Tuesday or
Wednesday?
"He’s dead. That’s why,"
she replies with a sniff. Turning away, she drags her slippers zigzag back
up the drive. She didn’t smell of shag. She smelt of the whisky Dada keeps
in the dresser for medicinal purposes.
I watch her for a moment before
making off.
Dead.
She doesn’t see my grinning face or
hear my scampering feet. She doesn’t hear my happy
song as I make my way home, either.
This old man, he played dead,
Stiff and chilly in his bed,
With a nick-knack paddy-whack, give a dog a bone,
Mr Huxley’s dead and gone.
I think of what I’m going to tell Mama and practise the
tears I will shed when doing so.
Mama doesn’t believe me. She dons hat and coat and makes for
the front door.
“Practise till I get back,” she commands. “No tea until you’ve
practised.”
What sort of punishment is that? I ask myself. Starvation. Headlines
rush through my head: “Mother starves daughter because she won’t practise the
piano.”
I go to the fridge and help myself to a couple of cold,
fried sausages, eat them and practise without washing my sticky fingers.
“There were 8 sausages on the plate and now there are only
6,” says Mama when she gets back from Mr Huxley’s.
She is a bit repentant because
she didn’t believe me and has probably had the insufferable, inebriated sister
to cope with.
“If you washed your hands before playing the piano, I’ll
forget about the punishment,” she says. “And anyway, you’ve had your share of
the sausages.”
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