Anger is an Energy: My Life Uncensored (8 page)

BOOK: Anger is an Energy: My Life Uncensored
11.93Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

The sexual curiosity that glam rock kicked up – Bowie standing up for something, saying, ‘Who are you to tell me what to do?’ – it was a great breeding ground for punk to
begin. Punk didn’t just begin overnight; it came from all of these things. It was a gradual gravitation towards the bloody bleedin’ obvious.

2
FIRST INDOOR TOILET

H
ackney & Stoke Newington College was full of girls! Problem girls – yummy! There were girls at Eden Grove, but in primary school girls
were always bullies. They seemed to be more adult than boys. But William of York was all boys, so Hackney & Stoke Newington seemed great to me.

I was an arsehole, and I’d fall in love with anything that walked past me. Very romantic! An absolute penchant for romance, imagining all kinds of situations, and of course all ruined the
second I’d open my mouth.

After meningitis, here came another nightmare and a half around the corner – adolescence! A lot of kids go into that with some form of artillery. All my defences were down and beaten to a
pulp, so everything became doubly antagonizing to me. An awful lot to consider, and consider it I did, because I’ll tell you, I had such a fixation on girls’ summer dresses. I would
turn into such an oogly voyeur. In them days, I don’t think they called it ‘voyeur’, there were far harsher terms. But I wasn’t aware that I was staring so intently.
I’d become completely enveloped in the beauty of that visual – schoolgirls in summer dresses. Fantastic.

At the time, though, I didn’t have the words to deal with those scenarios. I was very backward in social groupings of girls, very, very shy about it. I didn’t
know what to say or do, and there was no one you could ask really, because your relationships with girls aren’t a subject open for discussion with other fellas. They just aren’t, unless
you join those cliques that go, ‘Yeah, I shagged her, then I shagged her,’ and you know they’re
fucking
liars.

So I became Chinese there for a while. Johnny Wan-King. I didn’t get up to much else. There were girls around the flats, and you’d do things behind the bicycle sheds, that you look
back on now, and you go, ‘Oh, I don’t want to remember it.’ I hope
they
don’t!

In terms of specific crushes, absolutely any girl would do! I was like a complete parasitic leech – I’d hook on and follow them around, and drive them crazy. There were several
– their names I can’t remember now. There was a girl who lived above us, she went to a convent school in Highgate, and she just thrilled me. She’d come over in that uniform
– just, wow! You look back at it, and she was just a bespectacled, spotty tomboy of a girl with knobbly knees – but good enough for me! But apparently I’m not good enough for her,
so there. Rejection is such a terrible thing, isn’t it? But it’s the making of the man. You need to be told to sod off every now and again. It’s useful.

At Hackney, it became more like actual dating – meet, go to the cinema and things like that. Or sit in a cafe, which was kind of good. It was different and I liked it. But I’ve never
been what you’d call Fanny Hunter Number One. I’m just not much good at it. I tend to form deep relationships, me. Flippancy doesn’t really work with me, and it takes a lot for me
to open up to anybody, anyway. I have to really trust them.

Everyone at Hackney had a social problem in one way or another – that’s the reason it was there. It wasn’t a violent place. You would think that all manner of bad would come
out of that. No, everybody there wanted to achieve, but couldn’t achieve under the
duress of the system, or the ‘shitstem’. It was basically just school by
any stretch, so I wore my William of York uniform still, because I didn’t want to wear out anything that I liked. But it was a bit of a fashion parade. Sidney certainly used it as a
catwalk.

The fella I rechristened Sid Vicious was an amazingly funny character. It would be midwinter, absolutely bitterly freezing – a typical November winter’s day, and you know how
to-the-bone ice-cold those winds can be in London – and he’d turn up in a short-sleeved shirt made of cheesecloth, which was the fashion at the time, and no coat, and thin pants –
feeling very fashionable but freezing to death, but it didn’t matter because he thought he looked good.

I met him around the college, and just thought he was hilarious. He was always brushing his hair, trying to look like Bowie, and it wasn’t working. What an oddball. Very funny bloke, great
company, but dumb as a fucking brush, and absolutely convinced he was gorgeous, and he’d say so. I loved that outwardness. ‘Gurls luv me!’ he always said. When that ended up in
the Pistols documentary,
The Filth And The Fury
, there was a double stroke of joy in it for me because it was something he said right from the very first minute I met him. I know he knew
I’d get it. It cracks me up to this day. That’s so typical him, he was so
not
gorgeous – brilliant, hahaha!

His real name was Simon, but he never liked it, so he was using his other one, John. The story he told me was that his father was a Grenadier Guard. He’d proudly say, ‘Yeah, just
like Bob Marley!’ His mother was an Ibiza hippie, and it was an unwanted pregnancy. The father didn’t want to know, so she brought him up. She was a well-educated person, was
Sid’s mother, but she didn’t seem to have an occupation. She’d be one for the long flowing hippie dresses, and the black fingernails. But sometimes I’d see her in what
I’d call a nurse’s outfit, but in khaki. Very odd. I don’t know what she ever did. She probably bagged nails. Somebody had to put all those nails in boxes.

Ritchie was his father’s surname, Beverley was his mother’s, so how he was registered on his birth certificate I don’t know. He couldn’t get to
grips with it, so he was more than pleased when I started calling him Sid, because that was a new name to add to the repertoire. It was after my pet hamster, a stupid thing, but very friendly,
hence it was appropriate. At the time Sid was such a downer name, because, with the direct correlation to Sid James, it meant everything awful, a very bad working-class name, so he loved it all the
more, he revelled in it. That was Sidney.

He used to live with his mother in Fellows Court, a grim high-rise in Hackney. At first I thought, what a great place to live. NO!! Its elevator never worked, and it was always up eleven flights
of stairs when you went to see him, so I wasn’t too eager about visiting initially.

Sid was very witty, and again that was his survival technique – humour. To pronounce
Vogue
magazine ‘Vogg-you-ee’ was very funny. I would’ve been none the wiser
but for the fact that we had French taught at William of York. In fact I, along with Sid, preferred ‘Vogg-you-ee’. It seemed to sum it up much better. But he used to treat it like it
was the Bible. Of course, he never bought a copy. He’d just go to the news-stand and read it. Or view the pictures, actually, no reading involved. He liked his fashions to hilarious degrees,
and for Sidney, David Bowie was his fashion icon of all time. If Sidney ever wanted to be anyone, it was Dave.

The Sid speciality was getting his hair to stick up like Bowie’s. He would get two chairs from the living room and put them in front of the oven, open it and lie upside down with his head
inside with the gas on, and the heat would make his hair stiff. He once caught fire that way too. Sometimes it would frizzle at the end, but it was a good look. You know, ‘How does Dave Bowie
get that happening?’ ‘Well, just like you, Sid!’

It was hilarious to bring Sid into Finsbury Park. There were top Gunners left right and centre, going, ‘
What the fuck is that?
’ I went, ‘That’s a brave fella,
you’ve got to admit. It’s mid-winter and
he’s wearing a sleeveless shirt because fashion comes first!’ ‘Yeah, fair point!’

One time I took him to the back of the North Bank at Arsenal. As it turned out, he had good mates there – serious mates; I was surprised. There was one chap that years later became a
really serious problem – a real battler. He weren’t no weak heart, Sid, and there he was with his Dave Bowie quiff that he’d spent two days with his head backwards in the oven
perfecting – because the idea of hairspray or a hairdryer never occurred to him!

He turned up at my family’s house one day, and he’s in a thin T-shirt, but he’s wearing this Afghan coat that he said his mate had nicked off a Manchester City supporter, and
there was still M.C. etched on the back. And he went, ‘Have you got any spray paint?’ You know, ‘Come on, Sid, have Man City really come to town wearing that? Hmmm, I don’t
know, I think that stands for Maria Cachuba – a girl’s name or something.’ ‘No, no,’ Sid goes, ‘I won it in a battle!’ He didn’t. It turned out it
was stolen off a hippie.

But Sid wasn’t a threat to anybody. His thing was: I look better than Bowie, and I’m a virgin. That was his selling point. At that age, that was incredibly brave. Everyone our age,
between fourteen and fifteen, was like, ‘Oh no, I’m not a virgin.’ You know when you’ve got your three weeks’ summer holiday, then you come back, and everyone tells
you how many women they shagged. I doubt it’s any different to this day, except maybe the age has dropped to thirteen or fourteen. But that was the basic principle, and Sid ran it the other
way: No, I’m a complete virgin. I loved that very much about him.

I may’ve taken the piss out of him for the Bowie thing, but then trying to be like anybody else leaves you open for ribbing. At that time, I had really long hair, and I had Hawkwind
emblazoned on the back of the jean jacket that I wore over my school uniform – with no sleeves – very biker-y, I suppose. The very thing I was accused of at William of York, I’d
adopted as an image.

Sid did a hilarious drawing of me: it was this tiny little head with
one string of long hair, and huge wide shoulders, looking very much like a brick with a pea on top,
and one thread dangling. That was his image of me, so how on earth we ever got to hang out with each other is anyone’s guess. Other than, I think, humour, and his preference at the time for
being called John when it was really Simon. That was, ‘Oh, another John – after me, John Gray, John Stevens, etc. How many of them do I need!’

There was another John at that school; he had extremely long hair, but he had a tendency to be psycho-violent. He was a brilliant artist and a great footballer, but very antisocial and he ended
up in some criminal alcove somewhere. He was adopted and not liked by his adoptive parents, so he was having real problems, mentally and socially. I learned a lot from him, and nothing at all from
the art teacher. So, another John – after the war everyone ran out of ideas. ‘Call him John, he probably won’t live long.’ And if they did, they could pick their own.
‘It’s up to you now. Call yourself what you want, just get out of the house!’

Friday nights at Hackney & Stoke Newington would be the college dance nights. I ended up running them, and that would be a brilliant juxtaposition of events – lots of Kool & the
Gang-type stuff, and then hardcore reggae, and the occasional Hawkwind thrown in, and it absolutely went down a treat. A great mixture of different belief systems in music coming together because
it was a chance to sneak in drinks and be naughty, and watch the girls and see how they were when they were ‘off duty’, when the guard is let down. That’s what social events are
all about: it’s being able to drop your guard and be rewarded for it, rewarded with friendliness and openness from others. Music’s a great leveller in that.

We started going out clubbing in Hackney, because there were loads of places to go. I’d go down to Sid’s first, and there’d be trouble – ter-wubble! – no matter
where we went, just because of the way we were wearing our clobber. Many a time we’d have to run back to Sid’s place because we’d missed the last bus, and I weren’t going to
walk through that particular area at night. I’d always stay
at his, because there were no buses running, and it was way too long a walk back to Finsbury Park, and very
dangerous at night too. You’d go through Hackney, then Stroud Green, and all manner of things could go wrong.

Sid’s mother, Anne Beverley, never really spoke to me. She never really understood or liked me. I suppose I might have come across as a very silent character. They didn’t know what
my potential was, and neither did I at the time. She’d always have a dinner ready for Sid – just Sid, whom she would oddly call Michael, even though we knew him as John, and Sid by
nickname. Not even Simon. It was so strange, so dissipated from reality in a weird way. So there I was, the man who’d just saved her son from a kicking, and I wasn’t allowed to eat.
I’d have to just sit there and watch Sid scoff it all.

The teachers at Hackney & Stoke Newington were really good, some of them, really inspiring; they’d get my mind to open up to all manner of things. For instance, there
was one who made us write an essay on the word ‘encounters’, and what that meant. There was no answer to it, and that was the joy of it. It really annoyed me at the time: ‘I want
to know what you mean. What is an encounter? Tell me!’ ‘Nope, find it out for yourself, and put it in an essay.’ Of course, I was nowhere near it. It was an eye-opener, but also
infuriating, and I wanted more of that challenge.

From what I remember, I came away with about seven ‘O’-levels. I wanted these things. I’d started those courses when I was young, and I wanted to finish them, as a sense of
personal achievement, but also of course out of the foolish belief that by getting all these exams I’d become amazingly clever and everyone would want to employ me. Funnily enough, it
didn’t work out that way.

I felt like I’d committed to school, though, and I wanted to better myself. I decided to go on to do ‘A’-levels elsewhere, but I had to pay for my education at that point, so
my dad got me jobs on building sites to earn the money to be able to go to Kingsway
College. There was no grant for me. I just didn’t qualify. Bad school reports from
the previous places didn’t help. No student loan. Nothing. I paid for it with the money I earned working on the building sites, and the money was so good that I could do that, and also live
off it rather comfortably while also contributing to Mum and Dad’s rent at Honeyfield. I thought Kingsway was a very good investment for my future. And it paid off, because no matter what I
did or didn’t learn there, I learned social skills, how to get on with other people, and how to listen to teachers. When they’re saying interesting things, I’m all ears.

Other books

To Tempt A Viking by Michelle Willingham
Cravings (Fierce Hearts) by Crandall, Lynn
Steampunk Fairy Tales by Angela Castillo
The Falconer's Knot by Mary Hoffman
Damaged and the Dragon by Bijou Hunter
Leonardo's Swans by Karen Essex
Troy's Surrender by K.M. Mahoney
The Year We Fell Apart by Emily Martin
Dire Wants by Stephanie Tyler