Going to the cinema during the day still feels naughty, even though I’ve been doing it now for 18 years. The benefits are that it’s sometimes cheaper, often empty and always an enticing refuge when the weather is dull. So, it felt like an imposition when I was obliged to go on Wednesday evening to catch the final showing of Becoming Led Zeppelin.
I’m not a
big fan – I like some but not all of their music – but the appeal of the film
is that it documents their backstory during an era through which I also lived. In
the interviews, the four musicians come across as likeably modest, considering their
international fame and their extrovert musical exploits. Acknowledging their musical
debt to American soul and blues, they made it big in the USA before coming
‘home’ to consolidate their popularity in the UK, an unusual reversal of the
norm in 1970.
Those were
the days! America, flush with the ethos of the summer of love and the hippy
counterculture, was open to progressive rock bands from Britain. At the same
time, however, the National Guard felt free to shoot and kill unarmed
protesting students in Ohio. Two very different Americas asserted themselves. Will
the States ever be truly united?
Well, there
is a concerted effort going on right now, though its methodology owes more to
fascism than consensus. The Washington Post (WP) reports this week on the extent
to which statistical data that provides evidence contrary to the current
administration’s version of actuality is being removed from government websites.
Much has disappeared already and, in its absence, the government is able to
spin whatever story it chooses without the nuisance of contradictory voices. The
WP dubs this ‘digital book-burning’, which is ominously reminiscent of Heinrich
Heine’s observation, “Where they have burned books, they will end in burning
human beings”.
I also
managed a daytime cinema showing. I’m Still Here is another film about
1970, set this time in Brazil, where the military dictatorship was busy ‘disappearing’
those of its citizens who dared question its authority. One day later, I
learned – from what still remains of the free American press – that a Green-Card-holding
permanent resident* of the USA was taken from his home in an unmarked car and
deposited in a migrant detention facility. No charges have been made against
him at the time of writing. His pregnant wife, a citizen of the USA, awaits
news of his fate.
Understandably,
you can get depressed by such bad news – if you’re anti-fascist, that is. But
even fascists might feel a bit down after reading, as I did elsewhere, that if
you measure your life in the number of weekends you likely have left, you might
be surprised by how few there are to look forward to. In my case, there are
very few so, to lighten things up, I chose to go for a long country and coastal
walk on a day when the weather forecast was encouragingly vernal. For a few
hours, my Other Half and I focussed our attention on varieties of daffodil and birdsongs
(the latter, with the aid of a surprisingly efficacious app), while seeking the
perfect bench-with-a-view on which to eat our picnic lunch. It was a classic
two-in-one, relaxation for the mind and exercise for the body.
But back to
the everyday and, with all this going on, I forgot to prepare for last week’s
choir session. Consequently, I was floundering with the melodies, confused by
the four-part harmonies and distracted by the voice of the chap on my left, who
sings strongly and confidently, even when missing the notes.
However, there
is one song in our repertoire that is relatively easy to sing, even though the
lyrics are Italian. Bella Ciao! originally a folk song, was adopted during
WWII as the call-to-arms of Italian partisans fighting fascism. I don’t know
whether our musical director included it for political reasons but, when sung
with gusto, it certainly seems to lift the spirits and offer some hope of
resistance to whatever threat to freedom looms.
*Mahmoud Khalil
I’m so glad you have joined a choir. It’s so good for you on every way and very up lifting when it goes right.
ReplyDeleteYes a good week for the music.. 😊Thanks for sharing your summing up of the various currents rushing us along, and also the reminder of living through our own history of troubled times in the 60s, not all yeah yeah. But here we are. Still here. Delphine
ReplyDeletePs our Amnesty group went on Wednesday teatime to the Brazilian film to encourage some joiners to our once a month (first Monday) Amnesty meeting and letter writing..
And the Plymouth Climate Choir also sings Bella Ciao, with suitably environmentally friendly rewritten words, and you’re absolutely right, it does lift the spirits and spark a new determination to resist. Birdsong helps too.
ReplyDelete