611 Main North Road (with debbizo)
uploaded: Sat, Jun 20, 2015 @ 10:55 AM
A quick & dirty mix
611 Main North Road When we arrived in ’69, the house was standard Housing Trust dark, double brick sash windows, striped awnings and a long porch. On summer mornings, sunrise, it was my job to hook the heavy canvas and haul it down, wielding the metal hook on a wooden pole. ٭ That first summer was sticky and sweet. Fat plums half-pecked, like road kill baking on the concrete path where, later, beneath the plum tree, my mother planted strawberries along its shaded edge. ٭ Our back yard a labyrinth of trees and vines. The verandah hung thick with ripening grapes. A dozen trees – almond, lemon, apricot orange, apple, peach. ٭ An orchard of shady nooks for hide and seek, ghost of a cockatoo the previous owners had hung in a round metal cage near the back step. I swear I could hear its grey tongue click through long hot nights strange metronome, making me miss the odd beat as I mastered the nylon strings of my first guitar. ٭ and what did I sing to the thick heat, the crickets, the clicking tongue as I tuned my new Australian voice? ٭ My father, who liked to cut things back, tore down the vines and orange trees to make more space for suburban dreams. ٭ In place of oranges, a blue plastic pool liner stretched over a metal frame; the hose ran all summer mosquitoes came, like skin bombers peppering us with itchy bites. ٭ We missed the oranges we used to twist onto rusty nails in the wooden struts of our galv iron fence to make holes for sucking juice but the pool was cool relief to English skin though it smelt weird under water and slimed faintly green. Winter days, the apple tree was wreathed in smoke. Tiny charred scraps of paper played butterfly to bare branches then crumbled to the ash dust of its own flight while my father fed and poked the besser block incinerator barbequed a few snails – grey innards hissed, foaming rims in slimy explosions shattering shell; the hiss and bubble of burning goo, shivered me through in the glow of its gaping mouth. ٭ and what did I sing to the light moths that heckled my window on winter nights? as I sat on my bed, in the room I shared with my self, colouring inside the outlines of shapes. ٭ It wasn’t long before they added a room, eclipsed the porch and covered the dark brick with paint – white, orange and brown – I thought it a freak ugliest house in town. ٭ The extension was a favourite place, with its radiogram and lava lamp. I’d sit for hours with headphones on mesmerised by live wax forming and reforming primal shapes mouthing lyrics to Can the Can. There were odd weekends when the whole family congregated in my room with a second-hand tape recorder I’d been given for a birthday me on guitar, one of us humming through wax paper (or was it cellophane?) stretched over a wide-toothed comb – yes, cellophane has the right vibrations – the others with saucepan lids, bells and spoons or anything slightly musical we could find. We’d tape those crazy tracks, and it was real fun when imaginations were unscathed by TV. ٭ When I was almost thirteen, and on the brink of change, they sold the house. So angry, I wrote all over the wallpaper in my room. and what did I sing to the unfeeling night on the back steps with my new guitar in the thick heat, the crickets; clicking tongue of the cockatoo ghost – past in my present becoming past? Then, I struggled to hold back my breaking voice the thought of new owners plotting to paint our house green and white as I sang for the loss of an innocent life those were the days, my friend those were the days (c) Deb Matthews-Zott
media, remix, bpm_080_085, non_commercial, audio, mp3, 44k, stereo, CBR, female_vocals, loops, spoken_word
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"611 Main North Road (with debbizo)"
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