Friday, 27 January 2012
Kho Phangan, jungles, buses, Bangkok...
There's beaches. There's sea. There's a beach bar. The sun shines and the water is warm. We lie in hammocks and drink beer. Basically, it's a bit like being in a film, albeit a slightly boring one for anyone watching.
And so, to get some excitement back in our lives before leisure morphs into complacency, we hire motorbikes to go around the town. We're in the north of the island, which is quiet but far away from a lot of the partying action that goes on in the south. I'm on the motorbike for roughly ten minutes before we fall off, me cutting my elbows and shins up, Mr. Furious escaping with a grazed knee.
Unsurprisingly, my companion then insisted on driving us everywhere because, and I think I'm quoting this verbatim, "you'll fucking kill us". At least a nice old Thai man gave me something for my cuts. Bless him. He clearly sees cocky, moronic, no mark twats like me crash mopeds that ten year-olds can ride all the time.
On our motorbike travels, someone tells us of a Jungle Experience Party. I like experiences and parties, and I've never been to a jungle before, so going sounds like a good idea. So, a couple of days later, armed with little or no expectation, we get a taxi into the jungle.
And it's bonkers.
Thumping trance, fire juggling, beautiful dancing people, "happyshakes" (not a sex thing)... the whole night passes in a blur of illegal-in-the-UK Red Bull, intense dancing and yoga (the latter I was doing when my brain actually felt like it was going to fall apart into the darkness of the jungle and chewed up by the jungle sex elves). I don't really wanna bang on about it, as relaying having an awesome time partying isn't that entertaining for the reader, and it would also just come off as a predictable traveller on Kho Phangan partying story, so I won't pretend it's anything special in the big scheme of things. It was pretty fucking awesome though.
Anyways, after much sleeping and recovery on the beach, we head back to Bangkok on the bus. It takes ages and ages, but we get back to The Overstay, our home away from home. Everything's quiet. The owner is asleep on the sofa.
My companion and I sit down to rest, since it's 5am and all.
Then fifteen Thai guys burst in, glasses raised, cheering and shouting. I'm bolted out of my lethargy. The owner leaps out of his sleep, immediately sticks on some reggae, begins pouring drinks, and encouraging Furious and myself to indulge in some MCing over some reggae beats. We oblige.
Welcome back to Bangkok, infuriating, inconvenient and awe-inspiring in equal measure.
Today is our last day in Bangkok (probably... we say this every day). Last night, both myself and Furious performed at a poetry night (which took us two fucking hours to get to). Excellent fun, and a couple of people had some extremely interesting stories/poems over a slide show of illustrations. Live narrated graphic novel is one of the future expansions of spoken word. It can be so engaging and wonderful, adding real texture to the words you're hearing. Some genuinely inventive stuff and a really attentive audience. That said, I'll always have a special place in my heart for screaming at people who are completely ignoring me. One of our company, Dan, got irate with the "liberals" in the audience and shouted at them: "Let's burn down the nearest 7/11". It was a fair effort to turn a relaxed crowd into a rowdy, viscous mob, and you can't have a go at the man for trying.
Personally, I think an ex-pat riot against their own exoticism would've been awesome, a bit like Millennium People.
And yes, I will be referencing Ballard in each blog I do.
I think that's all from me for now.
Over and out.
Cap'n
Friday, 20 January 2012
Flights, scrapes, drinking, and so on....
On the day I landed I had a gig that night, so I hung out for a bit, napped, then scampered across Bangkok. I decided, in all my misguided arrogance, that walking to the station would be a great idea. It wasn't. It was insane. The walk was ninety minutes, and I don't know if you know Bangkok, but everything in it seems unplanned, ridiculously fast and smoggy. Its like a city tripping over its own feet, so finding stuff as an ignorant, foolish cretin like myself is next to impossible. Still, eventually got to the gig, which was at a hotel (two hours late), managed to squeeze one poem out of my brain, talked to some lovely people and then went back to the hostel.
It's taken me a little while to get into full on backpacker mode. Not being the best with big crowds (at least in a sociable sense. I'm fine shouting and screaming pre-planned rants at them), I was standing on the side, being a bit quiet, with nothing of any interest whatsoever popping into my head. Fortunately, at The Overstay there were a few people who cajoled me out of my weird neuroses and made me drink alcohol and be sociable, which turned out to be jolly good fun. The last night I was there had an awesome reggae jam session, and a did a poem or two, plus a Ruby Kid (Dan, if it helps, I totally forgot the words so I don't think you can sue for breaching copyright or anything), which was really good fun.
Oh yeah, and I was stopped and searched by Thai police in Bangkok. A bit intimidating given all the horror stories of corruption and so forth. They found a leaf in my bag, and the one of the policemen (he looked about ten) showed it to his old, grizzled companion as if to say: YES. WE'VE CRACKED HIM. HE'S DEFINITELY GOT DRUGS AND NOW WE CAN EXTORT MONEY FROM HIM.
Sadly, it was only a leaf. Leaves aren't illegal in Thailand, and I'm not fully sure that having a leaf on you is illegal anywhere. Maybe in Canada its illegal to damage a maple leaf? Do let me know about any leaf-related laws.
The night before old squatmate, friend, fellow poet and now travelling companion met me in Bangkok, and now we've travelled down to Kho Phang Yang, which is home of the dangerous-sounding full moon parties... we've not arrived in time for those, which is probably a blessing, as we'd obviously just get stupidly, hopelessly, pathetically hammered and probably drown ourselves or something equally horrible. Its all relaxed at the moment though, but, as we all know from our Lord of the Flies and J G Ballard, from paradise is born eating and fucking each other in a state of collective psychopathy induced by a tyranny of leisure.
And, God knows, when you get bored, don't you just feel like eating and fucking the nearest person?
Anyway, in a teeny rush, got torces to buy, dinner to eat, I-pods to charge, Thai people to gesticulate wildly at and motorbikes to ride.
Over and out.
Cap'n
Saturday, 3 September 2011
Monday, 9 May 2011
Workers of the World... Fragment...
The harsh alarm beep
destroys dreams,
we force eyes open
splitting crust at the seams.
Rusty, we stand – shaken, brave,
weak, scared,
our subconscious scratching at the stitches
so carefully woven
over a thousand past lifetimes.
We bury pull sickie reflexes
and sprint headlong into
the ubiquitous every day raid,
where time thieves grab
every second they can.
Where we scurry escape to
the solace of toilet cubicles
to lay cables
that electrify fantasies of
wielding cricket bats
contacting brutal with windows,
computer screens
and co-worker's faces,
and sparing, saving the angel colleague
we pierced so many
silent fluttering glances with
and driving off into our
gloriously unknowable futures,
like a Bruce Springsteen song
animated with
pulsing flesh and dignity.
But the flush destroys these meanderings,
and heads hung low in dread
we step into the bullet-riddled warzone
grumbling in marooned harmony:
“I'm only working here
because I need the fucking money”
Let's close our eyes.
We're fifteen.
Precocious sponges absorbing
all immediacy,
our backbones priming
for invisible horizons,
sizing up our forthcoming days
forcing the future to adapt to our prophecies.
But somewhere in the shifting sands
our spines dissolved,
our central security systems collapsed
and the tentacles took over,
camouflaged by aspirational posterlife dreams,
bringing bacon back,
smart/cas dress codes,
20% staff discounts
and pat mottos such as:
“well, I don't take my work home with me” .
The tentacles reached into our craniums
and began to suck out extraneous hopes,
dulling our irises with subjugation
until nothing but repressed sweaty tears
and a fear of rent arrears remained.
Let's open our eyes.
We're in, as Wayne Campbell would say, 'the now'.
We pointlessly flush the toilet,
and lurch back to the shop floor
like zombies on death row.
Our area manager
(a grotesquely fat, burnt marshmallow
of a man named Ivor Pie)
caresses and tickles the oily, purple tentacles
and hisses sweet nothings
into the air-holes.
The tentacles grin, hardening and pulsating,
and suck fierce at our brains in gratitude.
Ivor rubs a greasy, gleeful hand
over his folded and refolded stomach
and shoots us eyes full of silent weapons.
We robotically take off our T-shirts
and bend over,
allowing Ivor to snort a huge road
of three parts baking soda
one part Peruvian cocaine
off our blistered, breaking backs.
The powder fireworks Ivor's temper,
and he ferociously kicks us into a pile of blank anonymous products.
“CLEAN THAT UP YOU WORKSHY CUNT!”
he screams.
“AND IF I HEAR OF ANY COMPLAINING OF 'ABUSE OF STAFF'
YOU'LL FEEL MY FUCKSTICK INFUSED WRATH!
FUCK THE LOT OF YOU, I'M OFF TO GREGGS”
Ivor makes his wobby exit.
We stand, shaken, brave
weak, scared
and face the coagulating, whinging hoards of public,
who moan about antiquated midcore pornography
and demand refunds on lottery tickets
because they didn't win.
The whinges fuse with the dull pounding
in the back of our brains
which punch out
a shriek of useless marooned harmony:
“I'm only working here
because I need the fucking money”.
Ivor Pie now reeks of pastry
and the death of souls
as he disappears amongst
the Friday night faceless cock rummaging
masses who infest this dingy hovel.
All the men become a creepy, bulging mass
of silent leering and crass cheering
as our tits and arse dance
dispassionately on the stage,
ageless stiletto gyrations on automatic
stiffening twitching pricks.
Banknotes float on the smoke
of rusted power-driven lust
and become fuse perfectly with our G-strings.
The music (some shitty house number)
numbs almost all other sound
to us: the dancers of the neon skin rhythms.
Sometimes we enjoy our job,
sometimes we don't,
and it's unfortunate that Stan,
an estate agent from Hackney,
head thick with cheap champagne
and three parts baking soda,
makes a grope for us
at a moment when, it must be said,
we're not enjoying our job.
As we feels his rankling fingers grasp our ankles
we turn and fix him.
He freeze frames under our glare,
his face everything we fear and hate:
another cunt filled with venal venom
and a twisted sense of entitlement
too much money
and too little respect
pumping through his veins.
Every rubbed raw memory
rushes up inside us
like we've just double dropped
and our senses pop,
exploding,
splitting,
ripping into raging, burning fragments
and everything blanks
and suddenly we're rebel Atlas'
kicking away foundations of heaven and Earth
and letting them crumble into space
and our full forced arm shoots out
and drives a stilhetto heels
deep into his eyeball,
harder and thirstier with every shove,
muscle gives way to more muscle
as his addled brain is punctured
and Stan's soundtrack
to the final shutdown
is our gored screaming
reverberating in marooned harmony:
“I'm only working here
because I need the fucking money”.
It's why we're drinking away sores
and rioting in hammered high street small scale wars,
all for the elemental relief of the beer, the sweat
and sticky floor,
soaking our psychosis,
then wringing it dry
to destroy
– just for a moment -
the flickers of the tie noose
and gallows suit...
The harsh alarm beep
destroys our dreams,
we force our eyes open
splitting crust at the seams.
Rusty we stand – shaken, brave,
weak, scared,
and stagger down to
the jam-packed underground
which swells with sweaty, rage-prickled skin
and bulges with comedown weekend sins.
We're a thousand Orpheuses
hopelessly marching into the underworld
to reclaim damned damsels.
We hold up candles,
we squint eyes,
but find no psychopomps,
just the diminuendo throb
of our former consciousness
as we catch flickering
scrunched up faces against plastic windows
rattle past, and darkly vanish.
We're banished to drag out battle-worn shields
to block out the pulsing pain that reels behind
and belies blank, bloodshot, coffee-slapped eyes.
Eyes that, occasionally,
glance up to try and find a sky
and silently scream
in marooned harmony:
“I'm only working here
because I need the fucking money”.
Tuesday, 1 March 2011
Okay, I'd like to make a bit of a public apology.
Last night, I performed at Word of Mouth at Norwich Arts Centre, supporting the excellent Pete the Temp with the nicely surreal John Simpson Wedge and the gently confident compere Dan Gregory. I think everyone had a grand old time, and Amy ran a fantastic gig all round. Lovely stuff!
As I mentioned during my performance, it was slightly odd for me as I hadn't been back in Norwich for a few years, not since July 2004. And it was fantastic to be welcomed by one of my best friends, Jon, who I met at my first year of uni and we've remained close ever since.
Problems arose, however, at the open mic after the NAC gig. By that time I had had a few drinks, and was with Jon in the pub with a couple of his friends. We were drinking and chatting during the performances at the open mic, and I had put my name down for it. I decided to do one of the poems I had already performed (which, due to the alcohol, was a weaker performance and I shouldn't have done it), and three haikus I just like messing around with.
Again, due to the booze, I was in my own world, and talking to an old friend who I hadn't seen in months. I was then jolted out of my revelry by one of the poets onstage saying “Captain Fuckface – shut up”. In my haze I was a little annoyed, but didn't say anything and carried on chatting, left the pub, ate a veggie burger and chips and crashed out.
I woke up this morning on Jon's sofa with that uneasy combination of hangover and anxiousness as my brain was deciding whether or not I had fucked up. I don't drink that much that often and am well aware that the total gobshite in me can emerge while my inebriated brain goes “Yeah! Go on Paul! You're being a charmer!”, and while everyone is in fact staring at me like I'm throttling a kitten.
I texted Amy saying thanks for the gig. Having as yet received no reply, my presumption was that I'd fucked up. This blog (http://carminamasoliver.wordpress.com/2011/03/01/carmina-of-the-rant/) written by Carmina Masoliver, who attended both the NAC gig and the open mic, confirmed it.
Carmina says some very kind words about my performance which is always lovely to hear, but extremely gracious under the circumstances. Those circumstances being that she is understandably disappointed in me that I talked throughout the open mic session. She writes:
“...the main thing for me was that Captain of the Rant and his friends ruined it for me. A guy I know from UEA’s CWS ranted about the Captain himself, calling him ‘Captain of the Fuckface’ or something… anyway, I was glad, he deserved it and I’d hoped he felt bad, but him and his mates kept on chatting. As I was impressed with his act both times I’d seen him, I was disappointed in him and I was just gutted to be honest, absolutely gutted... It’s just rude to talk over spoken word, open mic or not...”
I can only presume that others feel the same, and this makes me feel genuinely terrible. I hate seeing unprofessional attitudes in anyone, regardless of their perceived 'level' in their field. And to become that, even just for one time, makes me very angry with myself. A lot of acts attended the NAC gig, and listened attentively and gave a great response. I did not return that respect and can only apologise. A mixture of booze-driven ignorance, having an excessively loud voice and the excitement of seeing an old friend are literally my only defences, which basically equal to saying I have no defence. The poet who called me “Captain Fuckface” did exactly the right thing and, as Carmina writes, I did deserve it, and I deserve Carmina's criticisms too.
A lot of my poetry is about respect, about brushing away socially-enforced rules and respecting people as equals. I failed to live up to the ideas I talk about constantly in my spoken word, so I've not only disappointed other artists I should have been more respectful toward, I've also disappointed myself and have fallen well below my own aims as an artist.
I can fully understand Carmina's presumptions that because I perform a lot that I find it a chore and other acts are a bus man's holiday. I assure you, this is not the case. I have nothing but love for the spoken word scene and I deeply regret I did not show it fully that night.
So, to summarise: I am deeply sorry if I aggravated, annoyed or disappointed anyone. I'm sorry that my behaviour at the open mic prevented the audience and performers being able to enjoy the night fully. And I'm sorry for not showing due respect to all performers.
I can assure you that anyone who knows me professionally will attest that I am not usually drunken, boorish and obnoxious throughout gigs or in any other aspect of my professional (or social) life. This was an unfortunate, rare incident and will not be repeated.
I've learned a valuable lesson tonight, and think it's amazing that there is such a solid spoken word scene that will openly criticise artists and allow them to build on their mistakes. I think it's great that other artists have the medium, inclination and strength of character to call other artists out when their blatantly being twats.
I'm humbled.
Thanks.
Captain
Tuesday, 1 February 2011
Poem: Hollow Hymns
This is our final destination:
No Man's Land terminal,
terminating at the end of the lane Cain paved.
An airport slowly murdering us with boredom
with nothing but dim, echoed muzak
and our haggard,
baggy-eyed reflection in shop windows for company.
This is where we roam:
for anything to hunt and gather
on the barren litter-beaten streets,
for any semblance of what came before
we were choked by our own futures.
Futures bought and sold
without our permission.
And no, we don't have the time
because it's all run out.
This place was skinned
leaving nothing but smooth bone.
No tombstones to gather moss.
No 'We wuz ere' scrawled hopelessly on the wall.
Just gaudy, bright, buy-one-get-one-free signposts
directing the way to the rest of our lives.
A psychogeographer's nightmare:
nothing to feel out,
no energies to imbibe,
no tide of memories,
nothing blooms,
nothing dies,
and everything's too fucking clean
to glean any feeling.
Bloodless brains switch off their beams
because there's nothing to search for anymore,
no flecks of meta-historical compost
to breathe thick into your lungs,
just glimpsed postcards funnelled through
a sheeny amnesiac vacuum.
This place is a scattered, billion piece jigsaw
and occasionally there's a little reflection of
joy or remorse
but these never last long,
feeling them most
in the brief warm haze of shower masturbation
and when the fuzzy shudder gives in
with a self loathing edge
the blank tanoy intones in our heads:
Thankyou, please come again
as we step out into the smokey cold.
We're all stillborn tabla rasas,
meandering identikit pubs where
hermaphroditic bar staff
robotically offer the mantra:
Foster's, Kronenberg or Stella?
The jukeboxes only play songs
that're part of the furniture.
Foster's, Kronenberg or Stella?
And the only furniture there is
part of the wallpaper.
Foster's, Kronenberg or Stella?
And the wallpaper is peeled and cracked.
I peel back and hand over another fiver,
drinking only to lose
all the reasons why I'm drinking
with half-remembered friends
and half-forgotten fucks.
By chucking out time
we either end up in fights,
pointlessly thudding knuckles on chipped teeth,
or stagger into alleyways with strings of vomit
hanging out of our burning mouths
or drive home,
blearily watching the endless cinema road,
the repetitive, dimly illuminated black and white strobe
praying for a crash through the screen.
Unfortunately, we all arrive home safely,
drunken, undamaged, undead.
And then we don't even sleep -
our heads just go black,
and it's only in the black
where swirling shadow eyes
of Londoninium overspillers
with bomb blasts and a collective funerals
still ringing in their ears
mingle with tattered punks
and shards of basement gigs
and familiar faces
and just when these dreams
begin to gestate and co-ordinate
they're crushed by the
waking the cutting pains
of underhydration.
On star starven nights
(lit only by floating orbish streetlights
and soundtracked solely by distant glass tinkling)
I climb through a broken window
of my old school,
and wander across old horizons.
Blurs on neverending energy legs
shoot past me,
distant lost virginities glimmer.
Sober scuffles like flickering 8mm film
are screened on the edges of recollection.
Everything looks so fragile,
like an empty spider's web,
and I tread - a delicate tyrant -
scared that if I breathe too hard
everything I control will decay into
floating, windtaken ashes.
But there's no control here,
just the illusion of choice,
and slowly the crumpling begins,
and ashes fill my eyes and throat.
Helpless, I leave,
heading to what I think is still home,
or at least shelter.
I look for a way out of this town,
but the train and bus timetables have become
faded cryptic essays,
The orbital noose tightens
and I stand at the border of everything,
screaming hysterics at electric fences.
This place is a never exploding bomb threat,
a burnt out church
with scorched parchment floating in the breeze.
I strain for hollow hymns
but hear nothing,
nothing except
the slick automatic sliding doors click
and the ghosts whimpering
as they barely hang on by their fingertips.
Friday, 14 January 2011
Clips of Extreme Strangers: #1 THE MARINE
There's ruckus below. From the top deck, I hear blurred rumblings. A drunk man downstairs: American (I think), pleading faintly with the blankly authoritative, none-shall-pass tones of the driver. Usually, these altercations revolve around the bus driver battling with aggressive, alcohol-imbibed circle talk. But the antagonist here sounds meek, unable to muster an attack on the bus driver's clipped bluntness.
- Not today mate, fuck off.
This brute finality is followed by a grumbled apology, the doors hissing shut, and the drunk man's words muting against the scratched, protective plastic of the window.
I peer outside. In the artificial white light of the bus stop, the drunk man slumps on the bright red seat, deflated, hopelessly waiting. He slides out of view and mind as the bus shudders and shifts away towards increasingly unfamiliar streets. I space out, mind blanking until I'm on the well-worn ground of punk gigs, booze and failed attempts at acquiring drugs.
A few hours later, half cut, ears ringing, I wait for the night bus at New Cross, straining my hopefully at each one that approaches, and then lighting another cigarette with inevitable disappointment.
- Excuse me, sir?
A polite, deferential, slurred American accent prickles my neck. I turn. Seeing him up close for the first time: his skin so battle cracked that it's impossible pin an age to him. Despite his drunkenness, he isn't tottering or swaying – his composure is perfect. His dull, colourless eyes look straight into mine with broken confidence. His voice sounds like a staring abyss.
- Can you spare me a pound to get a beer?
- No mate, sorry.
He breaks eye contact for a moment as if to walk off or cry, then makes another attempt at connection.
- I'm a marine.
- Okay.
Silence hangs between us. He breaks it with a soft, definite, direct statement.
- I want to die.
The four words are so bluntly immediate I barely have time to register them. The stumbled, awkward question leaves my mouth before my brain can stop it.
- Why?
- Because I've killed too many men.
For a moment, I want to help him. For his disarming honesty. For his genuine wish to end his life. For all the cold pain that lies beyond his bones. I simply can't begin to comprehend the horrors he has bore witness to. The moment passes, and I fall back on a catch-all phrase, as useless and redundant as it is tactless.
- I'm sorry.
With a single resigned nod, he turns and drifts away, his future weighed down by unnumbered dead men. His hunched silhouette merges slowly with the night until there's nothing left.
My bus arrives and I go straight to the top deck. I peer out at nothing as the bus shudders and shifts away, returning me to a bright, comfortable, careless world where the dead don't exist and ghosts can only be found in stories.