Instead, a brief - and I hope entertaining - take on musical scales; more precisely, my learning to play the piano and some whimsical riffing thereon.
My mother owned the piano, inherited from a parent, I suppose. It stood in our front room (the one saved for best) and I was allowed to play around on it as a child, initially picking out tunes with one or two fingers. I must have shown some aptitude and a modicum of interest, because from age eight or so I was dispatched on Saturday mornings to take piano lessons from white-haired Miss Holland. She seemed ancient (but was probably younger than I am now), had possibly been a teacher, and she called the instrument by its posh name (pronounced P-R-NO, don't you know).
We started with scales. I was very good at scales apparently. It also turned out I had perfect pitch, for when on one occasion I told Miss Holland a couple of the keys didn't sound precisely right, she was impressed I'd noticed and said the P-R-NO tuner was coming that afternoon to rectify them.
Musical theory wasn't too difficult, simple playing exercises were a breeze, but once we moved on to 'proper' pieces, my tendency to play-by-ear (i.e. from memorising the pieces) rather than by sight-reading became a bone of contention. That and my reluctance to practice as diligently as I should.
I don't know at what point it hit home that I was doing this more to please my parents than to please myself. I think I'd sat and passed my Grade I exam before the real resistance kicked in. By the time I was ten, I was envying my mates who could go and play football at the rec (our nearby park) all day on Saturdays but I only got to join them in the afternoons. Plus there were girls to think about and then the Beatles arrived on the scene and playing a guitar seemed way more exciting a prospect than playing the P-R-NO, except I didn't have a guitar nor the funds to buy one. However, I distinctly remember that on getting my Grade II certificate, I scrumpled it up into a ball and threw it away in an act of defiance.
Those weekly lessons with Miss Holland limped on for a few more half-hearted months as my parents had paid for a term in advance, but even they realised my heart wasn't in the enterprise. When I transitioned to senior school in the summer I turned eleven, the piano lessons never resumed. I don't regret abandoning them. It was the right thing to do. I don't think it was money wasted either because I acquired the rudiments of a musical education that has proved quite useful from time to time. 😎
This evening, Adele and I are off to Manchester - a first live gig for me since 2019 - to see The Coral playing at Albert Hall, my favourite Manchester music venue, and a beautiful Grade II listed building as it happens. They arrived on the scene just shy of my 50th year, instantly becoming my new favourite band, and I incorporated a song ("Dreaming Of You") from their debut LP into our DeadBeats' live set. In terms of scale, they have soundtracked the most recent two decades of my life in much the same way as The Beatles (that other Merseyside phenomenon) soundtracked my teenage years. This is The Coral's 20th Anniversary Tour and I'm very much looking forward to it.
the piano house |
To play us out, so to speak, a new poem-in-progress (this is the first take, but there's bound to be a re-working as I tinker with getting the execution to better support the idea), plus another musical bonus.
Thanks for reading, S ;-)
Grade II Listed
Soft as gypsum, rhythmic fingers
stroke a rolling pattern below stairs,
reverberations in the bedrock both
muted and sinister, an underpinning
often overlooked, stocky like suet,
dependable as clean shoes, perfect
boiled eggs, spotless hearths, almost
ghostlike in metronomic servitude,
powering this house as yesterday
or tomorrow behind grilled windows,
stately through measured passages,
discreet both in entrance and exit,
playing its base part learned well.
On the other hand, atop this structure
a dextrous and carefree fantasy
extemporises, chiming with brio,
sprinkled with silver top notes and
hints of chintz, ringed with diamonds
and dalliance in the salon. Even in
wintertime the living is easy, light
touches everywhere, Rule Britannia
still hanging in the air like a row
of rich pearls, beds turned neatly,
baths pulled ready, clustered chords
echoing behind a neo-classical facade
sounding hollow as any cheap pianola.
Here's a link to another standout cut from The Coral's 2002 debut LP: Calendars and Clocks Enjoy.
Thanks for reading, S ;-)
33 comments:
Thanks for this Steve, enjoyed reading it. I used to love the Coral, good to hear they're still going.
An entertaining read and a clever poem. Where is that piano house?
Interesting poem. 👍
Another enjoyable blog and intriguing poem.
There are some wonderful lines in your poem. I think it's rather good Steve.
We all thought you were soft for having piano lessons on Saturdays (LOL). Still, look at me - I was going to play for the Posh and ended up as a Chartered Surveyor!
Lovely lyrical poetry.
Piano not your forte! 😉
My brothers were the same. They wanted to be playing football but they had to go to bouzouki lessons. Girls didn't get to learn musical instruments!
Always a tricky one, our parents' aspirations for us. That's a clever concept for a poem.
I enjoyed reading this and absolutely love the poem... except for the last line which didn't ring true for me.
Ha ha, but for the commitment you could have been a Contender! 😉
Shame on you (LOL) especially with the advantage of a piano at home to practise on. I like your upstairs/downstairs musical vamp of a poem. 👏
Thanks, an enjoyable read. I never got beyond Grade I recorder!
Ooh yes, Upstairs/Downstairs as someone else said, or bar-room and salon; a neat musical take on social class.
Sorry you didn't like the piano. The fact is, practising and gaining command of it is difficult, demanding and isolating.
It also isn't like other centuries, when most people played it and used it in entertaining house guests and to involve them in singing.
Times change!
It is a waste of time if a person's heart isn't in it.
However, it can be a magical experience if a master composer,'s work you have not seen before takes you to another world.
It's the best time to learn, when you're young, but there are so many competing attractions, now more than ever. I enjoyed the poem, though can understand you want to tighten some of it up a bit.
Thanks for the comments. I actually did like the piano, only not as much as some other things. As for the poem, I took it to the Blackpool Stanza group and have made the changes I thought it needed. By the way, the Piano House is in China.
I love the poem, such a clever idea and wonderful language. ❤️
I wish I'd learned to play an instrument, any instrument. I've always envied those who can make music. I think your poem's great. Well done and thanks for sharing. I hope the Coral lived up to expectations.
Thanks Steve. An entertaining read. I loved the photo of the bizarre piano house and thought your poem was tremendous.
I learned to play the piano (self-taught) in the pub my dad ran. I still can't read music though.
Loved the clever interweaving of piano and architecture stuff in your Grade II Listed poem of wry social commentary. Thanks as ever for sharing.
Thanks, I enjoyed the blog (as someone who kept going, to Grade V) and the witty social commentary of your poem. Very good.
Super poem. 👏
I really like your Grade II Listed poem. So many elements combined, great lyrical language, and a real 'Edwardian' feel to it.
Clever bass and treble parts poem and some wonderful lines. I too started to learn piano as a child, had lessons at an after-school programme and my folks had a piano at home I could practise on but I never kept it up either. Boys and roller-skating were my excuses.
Very good Steve, fascinating reminiscence. At least you got your guitars in the end. It's a great poem too, pointed and clever.
Well vamped, la!
Engaging as ever, Steve, and a witty poem. Hope you enjoyed the Coral. Great little band, though I've not seen them since 2011.
Inspired poetry, very well done!
Bad boy, excellent poem.
Be thankful you were not a prodigy, (I suspect they don't lead happy lives)! I enjoyed your clever poem, thought it worked well. 👍
Post a Comment