London

Galaxy Hotel

by Enormous on September 27, 2007

‘Aaaaiiiiiiiiieeeeeeeeee!’

That was the rather alarming sound that was coming from an ugly little boy-child whom Audrey and I passed this morning. He did not want to go to school.

It sounded like someone was killing a pig. Audrey was most dismayed. ‘I’m not surprised he’s ugly,’ I whispered to her. ‘Look at his mother.’

The desperate woman who had lost control of her horrific terrorist infant was no oil painting. There are many women around here who I suspect share full gene sequences, as the longer I stay in this village, the quicker that they are all beginning to resemble one another in their unsightliness. This particular woman’s features were so ghastly that I was surprised she did not fall over. She reminded me somewhat of one of the dwarfs staring out from a Velázquez painting.

I mentioned all of this to Nelson when I rang him a few minutes ago. ‘Kids,’ he said. ‘Horrible things – one bit me once in Piccadilly. Do you remember? You, on the other hand, really like them, don’t you?’

‘Yes, I do,’ I said. ‘I couldn’t eat a whole one though.’ I went on: ‘I was wondering if I might invite myself down to stay with you for a week, Nel. I could really do with a break.’

‘Sure. We’ll hit all the bars in Soho and the West End,’ he said, excitedly.

‘Not every night,’ I told him. ‘Maybe just the Friday.’

‘OK, boss,’ he said. ‘Message understood. No drinking on a school night, but the weekend we go crazy.’

‘I really just need a quiet break,’ I told him.

‘My flat isn’t a bloody hotel, you know,’ he complained. Then: ‘Wait a minute. I know you, Nap. You’re planning something, aren’t you?’

‘I might be,’ I said.

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Spice Rack

by Enormous on August 11, 2007

Nelson rang at 9pm last night. He sounded a little down. ‘What’s wrong?’ I asked him.

‘I’m out on the town again. West End,’ he told me.

‘I detect a certain ambivalence in your voice, Nel,’ I said. He told me that he was celebrating ‘all the possibilities that summer in this city offers in such charming abundance’ with some glamorous friends and was anxious about the hours ahead.

I could sympathise with him only too well as he continued: ‘I’ve reached that acute stage where I’ve had too many beers to stop, but I know that if I carry on, it will be much worse.’

‘Just enjoy yourself, Nelson,’ I told him. ‘You’re only young once. Don’t worry about the consequences – and anyway, you should be used to them by now. And remember: a rolling stone gathers no moths.’ That last bit confused him as I knew it would, I could hear him frowning over the phone. I felt I had put his mind at rest, though. But I also feared that I would be getting a call from a London hospital or a police station later on – a usual occurrence in the early hours of Saturday mornings. Luckily, I didn’t, so I am assuming that no great harm came to him on this occasion.

Before he said goodbye and hung up, he told me that he had just seen Geri Halliwell – aka Ginger Spice – in a bar in Soho. ‘She looked like mutton dressed as pork,’ he happily informed me.

‘Don’t you mean lamb?’ I asked him. ‘Mutton dressed as lamb.’

‘No, pork,’ he insisted, beginning to slur his words.

I’m afraid that it was just further bitchiness and drunken invective that informed our conversation from that point onwards. I promise to one day record one of these strident discussions, transcribe it and post it here in all of its uncensored glory. I know you will be thoroughly enthralled by his colourful views and perceptive observations. I keep telling him to start his own blog. ‘I would do,’ he insists, ‘but I haven’t got enough lawyers.’

On the Fantastic hi-fi today:
Parallel Lines – Blondie
Transatlantic Ping-Pong – Glenn Tilbrook

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Black and Blue

by Enormous on July 17, 2007

I was in a public house on Park Lane in London with Nelson a few years ago when who should stroll in but disgraced former press baron Conrad Black.

I remember he had a very loud voice and was rude to everyone around him, especially the half-dozen or so nervous members of his young entourage, who for some undisclosed reason, were all rather fetchingly dressed in pale-blue corduroy suits.

What struck me most about Mr. Black were his eyes: they were evil. They were cruel and soulless and were constantly darting around the room. They alighted on Nelson more than once – perhaps because of his urbane and debonair appearance.

‘Please try to control your violent urges, Nel. That’s Conrad Black,’ I told him. ‘Maybe he likes the cut of your jib and wants to offer you a job.’

He was annoyed by the attention and was itching to confront the man, whoever he was. And when Black disappeared downstairs to the toilet, Nelson was galvanised into action, quickly darting down after him. On returning to our table, my colourful friend sat down heavily with a smug look on his face and a twinkle in his big blue eyes.

I feared the worst, but I needn’t have. Black returned unruffled a few moments later and continued haranguing and hectoring his restless assistants. Nelson took a huge gulp of his white wine and nudged me conspiratorially. ‘Tiny,’ he said.

(A few minutes later, a pretty young woman with enormous breasts caught our attention. She waltzed up to the barman and asked him for a double entendre. So he gave her one.)

On the Fantastic hi-fi today:
Jimmy Eat World – Jimmy Eat World
Almost Blue – Elvis Costello and The Attractions

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Tour de Trafalgar

by Enormous on July 7, 2007

Nelson was among the thousands of fans who gathered in Trafalgar Square for the opening ceremony of the 2007 Tour de France yesterday.

He says he agrees with me that it was a slightly sardonic choice of venue for the event considering that it is where Nelson’s Column (no relation) resides – a solemn and majestic edifice that was erected in celebration of the famous English naval victory over the French fleet.

In the spirit of the modern Entente Cordiale, Nelson took an acoustic guitar with him to the event. He serenaded onlookers who were watching the riders as they paraded from the square down Whitehall and back with his renditions of classic Jacques Brel and Edith Piaf chansons. After he had finished singing, he handed out photocopied, black and white images of his naked derriere.

As usual, his actions caused something of a commotion and at one point, a big policeman from the Met tried to arrest the glamorous, cross-dressing troubadour after he refused to move on. ‘I thought that he was asking me to dance,’ he told me later over the phone.

There was something of a minor hullabaloo but it all ended happily when Nelson decided to cut short his ad hoc performance and retired to a nearby hostelry to wet his lipsticked whistle. Surprisingly, for him, he then went on to enjoy a rather quiet and restrained evening in the West End and managed to get home to his flat in Stepney intact and uninjured. I am getting slightly worried about him: he seems to be going uphill steadily.

(I once tried, during some ill-advised sixth-form high jinx, to photocopy my own arse but the machine malfunctioned. I was told later that it had gone into shock.)

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Galaxy's Ring Opening

by Enormous on June 21, 2007

Nelson was in attendance at the opening night of the Lord of the Rings musical in London’s West End on Tuesday.

Like many of the other critics who were there to witness the results of the £12.5 million that had so far been invested into the production, he was left largely unimpressed.

‘It wasn’t the wonderful experience I was hoping for,’ he yawned down the telephone.

Knowing him as I do, I think that my erudite and glamorous friend was severely disappointed. He is not usually to be found acting as a pithy and well-informed theatre critic, but he is a fully paid-up Tolkien aficionado and has an expansive knowledge of the books and of the Peter Jackson movies.

‘It was an extravagant and spectacular festival of boredom,’ he reported. ‘It was so dreary and tedious, it made one of my fillings fall out.’

I was hoping that he would be offering some keen insights into the subtleties of the performance or commenting on the cunning ingenuity of the staging, but in concluding our conversation, all he said was this: ‘It was crap.’

Not subtle I know, but snappy and succinct none the less.

On the Fantastic hi-fi today:
Because of the Times – Kings of Leon
Stand – Sly and the Family Stone

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L’Etoile Mystérieuse

by Enormous on May 16, 2007

Nelson is back home in London now and he rang today to tell me of a stimulating evening he spent in the company of a famous French movie-star.

‘I can’t tell you who it is, Nap, but suffice it to say, he is very, very well-known and respected,’ he told me over the phone.

Apparently, they spent an intense and exceptionally drunken night out together exploring Nelson’s favourite Soho bars and clubs. The ‘movie-star’ eventually managed to jump into a black cab and return to his hotel, whilst Nelson ended up wandering half-naked around Soho with a portable TV under his arm, talking to a planet.

God knows what happened to him after that, but from what I can gather, he managed to affect an eventual return to his flat after first visiting the casualty department of The Royal London Hospital in Whitechapel – a favourite of his.

I sometimes feel that Nelson is the focus of some terrible energy as he constantly seems to be in the middle of some acute and absurd adventure that only he can conjure up.
‘No, I really can’t tell you who it was, Napoleon. But get this: the guy wears a nappy! Yep, that’s right – a diaper, a man-nappy – under his boxers!’ he insisted. I am sure that Nelson – knowing him as I do – will now be seriously considering the adoption of this bracing Gallic system of emergency bowel management.

He went on to explain to me that this mysterious Parisian star sometimes ventures out of an evening knowing that so many drugs and alcohol will be consumed that he has resorted to wearing such a device for fear of soiling himself in public.

I shall try to find out who this person is that has decided to utilise such finely tuned methods of enterprising preparation, and I promise to report back should I discover his identity.

I do, however, consider the whole thing to be less of an amusing revelation, and more of a sober and prudent warning for us all.

On the Fantastic hi-fi today:
40 Greatest hits – Hank Williams
A Weekend in the City – Bloc Party

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. . . And All That Jazz

by Enormous on March 24, 2007

Aren’t guitars great? I’ve just bought a new one: a gold seventies Fender Jazz Bass. It’s gorgeous.

I don’t play bass much but I needed one for various recording duties and this beauty winked at me in the dusty shop and whispered: ‘We should be together.’

I have several guitars: an 80s black and white Fender Telecaster (maple neck); a much-underrated Yamaha SG 3000s; a tobacco sunburst E/Gibson Seraton VSB; and a very versatile Yamaha APX-10D acoustic. But it is my trusty Telecaster that I use more than any other. (I actually have a collection of revealing and fruity photographs with me and my beloved Tele together on satin sheets; I am quite naked in each one. Mail me if you would like to see them – serious guitar-lovers only, please.)

On stage, I’d love to use my Yamaha SG 3000 more – it sounds amazing: warm and sustained but with plenty of top-end bite especially played through my old Fender Twin combo – but it’s just so heavy. Enormous bounce around on stage in front of the spangly backdrops quite a bit when we’re in full flow, and the weight of the Yamaha is just too much for my tender young shoulder bones to bear night after night when we’re on a long tour. It once caused my guitar strap to snap dramatically on the first chord of the first song when Slaughterhouse 5 were playing at the Marquee in London. That really got the show off to a flying stop! Happy days…

On the Fantastic hi-fi today:
Motown – The Hits Collection Volume 1
Orange Juice – The Very Best Of
Billie Holliday – A Flag for Lady Day

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