Friday 19th July

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ALL THAT GLITTERS:
 
When I was ten, Dad decided it was time for me to 
get serious about playing guitar & enrolled me with 
a tutor just up the road from the guru’s house. 
This was in pre-guru times, before he turned up as 
the travelling salesman & before the boys in the year 
above got wind of my ability to hold down a few 
chords. This was the thing that created that wind 
& it was all down to Dad. 
Mr. Wilson was an elderly gentleman who taught 
classical guitar from a smart & suburban semi in 
the posher part of Kidderminster. He greeted me 
every week with increasing weariness, knowing 
full well I hadn’t practised the work he set me 
& that my excuse would always be that I’d been writing 
songs instead, which I’d play him before stumbling 
through another hour of painfully slow sight reading.
I tried to learn, but was too impatient,I had too much 
music in my head that had to come out & the last thing 
I wanted to do was bury it under tired renditions of 
‘Oh Susana’ & ‘She’ll be coming round the Mountain’. 
At one point he tried to spark my enthusiasm, waving the 
manuscript for The Rolling Stones ‘Honky Tonk Woman’ – 
not a cool move. We spent an uncomfortable hour in the 
unspoken certainty that our two generations should never 
look for a common ground in the celebration of a night of 
sleazy bar-room debauchery – bless him, he really tried. 
Finally, on the day he announced that I clearly wasn’t suited 
for his style of teaching & that he could no longer take my 
Dad’s money, Mr. Wilson concluded his last lesson by saying, 
“I have something for you”
From a back room, deep with the house he returned holding 
two amazing things. In the one hand he held the most beautiful 
ebony banjo, inlayed with intricate patterns in Mother of Pearl
& in the other hand, a cheap red & white electric guitar.
“Both of these are for sale & they’re both they’re £8 10s, but 
you can only buy one of them, which would you like?”
Even today, as I remember that kind, gentle man standing in the 
doorway of his front room, I recall how beautiful that banjo was 
& what a sensible investment for the future, offering considerable 
financial return in years to come. Without hesitating I said,
“I’d like the electric guitar please”
 
(K)

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