Wake up.
These grunting,
mucky bastards are your family, now. It's time for a family outing to
Basel. Love your family, immediately and forever. Family delights.
Family cares.
Shut up.
It's early morning
and everyone's forgotten something. Grandad's forgotten his drum
pads. Mum got too involved in something and left the immersion on.
You aren't wearing any underwear, but you don't tell anyone.
Locked up.
Put a scrunched up
bit of paper in a shoebox and shake it around. Shake it around for
hours in joyless monotony. Shake the travel maraca.
Cheer up.
The hours pass like
a dripping tap filling a swimming pool, but at least you're all here
now. It's the Phoria-Smythington's family outing to Basel, and your
first stop is some French place called Mulhouse, where you stumble
out of the van and into a chrome and neon karaoke bar with a live
performance of “A Whole New World”, inspiring you into wellbeing
again along with a “beer”, which is a device
you attach to your arm with a mechanical tongue that licks a little
patch until it turns raw, which in turn tells your brain to release a
new album of endorphins so your body and stuff can enjoy it all and
the family can have something in common: a raw, bleeding patch on
their arms that makes them feel great.
Roll up.
What's that? It
might be a new day in a new country, but this family hotel has stars
outside.Mum is happy she'll have a clean floor on which to do
her ironing. Dad is happy he can put his slippered feet up and watch
TV and pipe up intermittently about the state of the road. Little
brother James has a soldering iron, two kilograms of semtex, and a
behavioural problem. Grandad needs somewhere to settle in, and your
room isn't ready yet. It's Room 101. This makes you happy and
apprehensive, as you wonder what they're preparing for you in there.
Turns out life in there is the same as life out here. Go figure.
Set up.
Out for a family
meal. A day and a half of travel with sweating, grubby skin. Set-up,
thunderstorms, bad packets of meaty euro-tubes and weirdness. The
enveloping, soapy bubble of family in a totally new place (a whole
new world), now made fine by clean and smiling hosts and a truffle
dinner in one of the twisting gullets of the town. A smiling waiter
who's had ones-just-like-you in all day, and sniffing clientèle who
make haste soon after your arrival. Is that the ricotta, or those
boys? Either way, it's blue. Eat your boeuf and let's get out of
here. They're tickling each other and doing things with the
breadsticks.
Mess up.
Manson had a
family.
Yours barely know
where they are. A square, somewhere. A growing crowd of people.
You're setting up equipment that looks like a telephone exchange and
one link in the chain keeps stuttering. Not now. Even the sound
technicians have a nervous smile on their faces. The heat and the
tiredness. You're not on edge so much as standing on the fronts of
your ankles. This is new. Why do it new, now, Equipment? It can work.
It will work. Do an interview with mum - moments before you get
onstage - in a daze, being asked to comment on the state of
inequality in Switzerland with a fresh mic and a big glass eye in
your face, going out to people in their armchairs who have the option
to change the channel; to change their immediate company.
You say you could
do more about the issues, but right now, in this state, you
don't know if that's true.You look like a hayfever-stricken frog.
You start playing –
the family sings its Christmas songs – and you demand a Red Bull
and chug it onstage. Your vision spins. The crowd gathers. The
cameras are on and running you out of town in thick wires. Everything
works, but instead of tiny keys and skinny strings there are
bell-ropes and pulley systems and old mechanical workings that you
have to heave and push and grind and wade through. Your performance hangs by a single thread string in a knife-throwing practice room.
Pack up.
Take it down and
put it away. You did it and it all ends with a raucous cheer. Now the sun
starts to set and you need that tongue-comforting thing to start
licking your arm again. Head out into the cereal bowl to see what's
happening and who's dancing. Another band finishes. “Thank you so
much, everyone! We'd love to stay and party, but we have to go and
catch our flight.” You recognise them. They're that family from
down the road who puts the cover over their car and has a rotation of
doormats. Their front door is spotless.
Your front door is
a length of tin foil hanging from the ceiling.
Some people in the
crowd suggest you're famous in this place; that Dad has taken you by
the hand and dragged you onto the rollercoaster. You don't know about
that. People are nice, though. Meet people and make them feel
uncomfortable.
Walk across the
city to a club. You don't go underground, but you regret that in the
morning. Stroll back through to the hotel and watch everybody do like
they do everywhere else. It's Friday, and the family takes a break
from one another. The kids are in the crèche; the adults are in the
lounge.
Fuck off.
Fuck off to the
family home in the morning because you've all had enough. Sing a song or two and
whistle up your own arse to enjoy the echo and put a plaster on your
arm and on others' arms with a Nightingale smile. Sit in a chair and
waggle your legs and get a boat.
Do it again.
Get some new
equipment and get ready for Piknik festival in Oslo.
It's a long, long
way away and there'll be other things to do.
How are we getting
there, Dad?