Laurence
Phelan, Independent On Sunday
“Andrew Collins is the other ex-NME writer often
found reminiscing on those "Top Ten" nostalgia
TV shows, the one who isn't Stuart Maconie. In this second
volume of his memoirs - after Where Did It All Go Right?
about his uneventful and fairly happy 1970s childhood
- he covers the art-student years, which he spent in a
funk in a grim hall of residence, listening to the Smiths,
the Cure and Echo and the Bunnymen.
'As he did in Where Did it All Go Right?, Collins bucks
the trend for memoirs of deprivation and acknowledges
that things weren't really all that bad and that, in fact,
looking back it all seems quite amusing now. We need only
feel slightly sorry for him, in that he happened to be
a student during the most depressing recent period of
both British social history and musical history.
'His relentless and chipper self-depreciation renders
his book pretty much critic-proof, but Collins is anyway
a likeable enough writer, with a talent for tapping into
his generation's collective consciousness that goes beyond
merely dredging up the memories of embarrassing haircuts
that we thought we'd suppressed. For all its period trappings,
the best thing about his rites-of-passage story, full
of fumbling romances and the crushing of youthful idealism,
is that sadly, embarrassingly, it all seems so universal.,
Robert
Coleville, The Observer
'" What's happening, blood? Why do you seep from
inside of me?" It takes a special kind of self-pity
to spend your student years writing dodgy poetry about
cutting yourself shaving. It takes a special kind of
courage (or masochism) to reprint that poetry years
later, alongside a synopsis of your groundbreaking rock
opera and the humiliating details of your first sexually
transmitted disease. Collins's second volume of autobiography
recaptures his time at art school with pitiless clarity.
From the hesitant parental inspection of his first flat
to his reinvention as Andy Kollins, all the great student
setpieces are here. Central to the book is Collins's
tempestuous love life, recalled with an honesty that
makes you hope at least some names have been changed.
A surprisingly successful mix of nostalgia and confessional
memoir, this should be familiar and wince-inducing for
anyone who ever adopted Morrissey as their Jesus.
Steven
Poole, The Guardian (and bear in mind he hates me)
“In which the nice TV and radio personality recounts
"My Difficult Student 80s", spent studying
art at Chelsea, staying up drinking beer and making
tea, bedding women, and listening to indie music. It's
the material of many underwhelming novels, and at least
here there is no pretence of fiction. Neither, however,
is there any sign of writerly alchemy by which such
clichéd stuff might be made fresh and funny.
Which is not to say that Collins has written a bad book,
just an unambitious one. His preface explains that he
used his diaries and letters of the time to try to present
the story as much as possible directly from his younger
self, unmediated by hindsight, and so a certain self-congratulatory
callowness has remained intact. Still, it is not hard
to read, and there is the odd sentence which conjures
a whole era: "The DJ follows The Smiths with 'Everything
She Wants' by Wham!"
Some
particularly nice customer reviews from Amazon
Heaven
Knows Review , October 22, 2004
Reviewer: Bruce Timson from Devon
Andrew Collins has an uncanny ability of recall. Heaven
Knows I'm Miserable Now captures the spirit of the '80's,
just as his first instalment Where Did It All Go Right?
captured the '70's. Collins recounts with toe curling
accuracy the self-pitying poetry, binge drinking and
narcissistic shagging of the last generation to enjoy
grant maintained art school education. He also describes
with wit, and at times, sobering clarity, an adolescent
boy's attempts to form adult relationships. Essential
reading for all those of us on the wrong side of thirty
five with rapidly receding Morrissey quiffs.
Warm and Funny , October 5, 2004
Reviewer: Nicki O'Brien from North Yorks United Kingdom
Really enjoyed the first book and wasn't disappointed
with this one - finished it over 2 days ! Very honest
and humourous account of the trails and tribulations
of growing up - good, fun read.
More nostalgia , August 26, 2004
Reviewer: douglas_grant from Fife, United Kingdom
Having read, and loved, Andrew's fantastic first book,
Where Did It All Go Right?, I was delighted to see that
he's followed it up with his memoirs of 80s college
life. I got a job straight from school, so knew that
I wouldn't connect with this book at the same level
as I did with his first, but was very pleased with how
much I enjoyed reading it. There's something about Andrew's
writing style which appeals to me and I certainly think
he's got some bottle to write so openly about his past.
Whether you've read his first book or not, I'd happily
recommend this one as a good, easy read.
And there’s an except
here:
Excerpted
from Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now: My Difficult 80s
by Andrew Collins. Copyright © 2004. Reprinted
by permission. All rights reserved.
ROCKERS
ARE GETTING COOL FEET
If you want to look like a rock star this summer, fellas,
throw your socks away. Most of Duran Duran seem to favour
the sockless look. Even Echo and the Bunnymen's moody
Ian McCulloch has chucked away his socks. I was so impressed
that I tried it over the weekend and all I can say is
that it has to be the most uncomfortable fashion yet
invented! – John Blake's Bizarre column , The
Sun, 28 July 1983
'Dave Griffiths doesn't go out looking like that!' Mum
snipes, slamming the cutlery drawer to underline her
point.
We're having one of our free and frank exchanges of
views, becoming ever more frequent as my need for fumbled
self-expression increases. I'm on my way out to collect
Sally for tonight's big party. Why does she always wait
until I'm on my way out to challenge me? Why do all
mums do that? In the old house at Winsford Way you could
get from the stairs to the front door without passing
the kitchen ('I'm off out, won't be late, bye!' slam
). Not at Kestrel Close. The kitchen's between the stairs
and the door, like a sentry box.
'I don't want to look like Dave Griffiths,' I protest.
Dave Griffiths is my ultra-straight friend who is leaving
sixth form not for university but the RAF. Where's Dad
when you need him to arbitrate? He usually dries as
she washes.
'I sometimes wish you were Dave Griffiths,' she shouts.
Ah good, she's strayed into fantasy. I give her an eye-rolling
look of derision and reach for the door handle. The
argument is over. I have won the battle, and so, in
her mind, has Mum.
'Won't be late, bye!' slam .
I was, to be fair to Mum, beginning to put my head above
the parapet in fashion terms that year. I wore my hair
increasingly blow-dried and lacquered, in deference
to Ian McCulloch and Robert Smith and other pop peacocks
whose aromatic, dark music I'd fallen in love with on
Switch or The Tube . Boots on the Market Square did
brisk business with their gender-unspecific green hair
gel that year. Black pumps were de rigueur , even when
it got too chilly to wear them sensibly sans chausette
. October was the reluctant start of the sock season,
by which time I'd be off.
There is something about me in plentiful Truprint photos
from the time that suggests I am not content merely
to be part of a group that stands out from the crowd.
Either my jeans are rolled higher than everybody else's,
or I am wearing my hair spikier, or the sleeves have
been more roughly hacked from my T-shirt for that Bono
soldier-of-fortune effect. And no one else seems to
be wearing fingerless gloves.
You couldn't play the drums in fingerless gloves, more's
the pity. The local band I drummed for and gigged with
had risen from the ashes of a previous band, Absolute
Heroes. We were called, with no hint of embarrassment,
Sketch For Dawn, after a Durutti Column track that bassist
Craig and I particularly loved. All four of us in the
band backcombed our hair to varying degrees, as did
the knot of kids who came to see us play at the Black
Lion in town. In fact, only Dave Griffiths stayed completely
square, as if he were perhaps in the pay of my mum.
It was a Northampton thing. Provincial, Middle English,
suburban, it was fertile soil for the sombre flowering
of a generation too young to have experienced punk first-hand
and too far away from the nearest city to affect New
Romanticism. A tartan cape and jodhpur ensemble would
have got you kicked in down town, and perhaps rightly
so. It was all right for the actual New Romantics -
they lived in London and got taxis. Their look and lifestyle
was never going to translate to Northampton. But second-hand
overcoats, check shirts and cheap hair gel? Bring them
on.
You needed nothing much to do and nowhere much to go
in order to get a fix on this moody new music's A-level-friendly
ennui. Minor chords and wailing vocals, it was a custom-made
soundtrack for our wannabe disaffected, misunderstood
years. The movement's Beatles and Stones, The Cure and
Echo & the Bunnymen, were in the process of going
awkwardly overground in 1983 - fixtures suddenly of
Top of the Pops and Smash Hits - but their sartorial
influence was, it seems, much more heavily felt outside
London. Macs, multiple T-shirts and heavy fringes were
anything but the uniform of an ostracised cult in Northampton.
They were everywhere, or seemed to be. Though big hair
and outdoor slippers were not welcome at the town's
only notable nightclub, Cinderellas, we successfully
colonised select pubs and newly minted wine bars and
kept our overcoats on, however hot it got.
Cinderellas - or Cinderella Rockefellers, to use its
full, disagreeably aspirational title - remained off-limits.
Until, that is, it opened its doors to the great unsocked
by advertising its first ever Alternative Night. This
meant no door policy, and Northampton's raincoat brigade
jumped at the chance actually to see inside the place.
They were playing 'Mad World' by Tears For Fears - an
approved record - as we pushed through about the third
set of silver-laminated double-doors, but the mythical
Cinderellas was no better than a hotel disco really.
And no bigger either - once you'd taken into account
the ubiquitous mirrored surfaces. It was not a wild
success. The dance floor was too keen and obvious and
needy, with its pulsing floor and flashing lights and
remained forbiddingly empty for much of the night. On
reflection, we preferred the dour ambience of the Masonic
Hall.
Northampton's more conservative soul boys, who were
legion, might have considered us avant garde - actually,
poofy's more accurate - but despite an isolated attack
on Richie Ford at a house party after a Dentist Chair
gig, violence rarely broke out. If you wore a tie you
were, in our parlance, a 'rugby player': you went to
Cinderellas and lived out the unfolding Eighties dream
of chrome and money; if you wore the ripped-off hem
of a T-shirt wrapped round your wrist as a kind of bangle-cum-bandage,
you went to a house party in one of the terraced streets
near the Racecourse and feigned existential doom. Nobody
got hurt.
One member of our big-haired circle, John Lewis, had
made a premature break for it at Weston Favell. Mistaking
the relative laissez faire of sixth form for real freedom,
he turned up to school one morning with his hair intricately
beaded into plaits, like some Vivienne Westwood clone
out of The Face . He looked a bit silly - he looked
bloody stupid - but the rest of us would have defended
to the death his right to do so. He was promptly sent
home by Mr Cole to reconsider his position.
I now realise that what we were doing that summer was
pretending to be students. Which, apart from Squadron
Leader Griffiths, is what most of us were about to be.
If by throwing away our socks we were trying to look
like rock stars, then it was the type of rock star who
looked like a student! Why? Because student life, with
all its imagined freedoms and possibilities and subsidy,
is as aspirational to fifth- and sixth-formers as Cinderellas
is to rugby players. It meant leaving home, wearing
second-hand clothes and attempting to become an interesting
but sensitive individual - another Eighties dream for
some of us.
The Metro is neatly parked outside and Sally and I quietly
decorate the dark shallows of the Masonic Hall. I don't
know if it's the weight of expectation, but tonight
it's just not working. Too many interchangeable sixth-form
parties have been held here, each with the same, almost
Masonic codes and practices, the same cliques and sarcastic
catchphrases, the same dash for the dance floor when
'our' music comes on. The evening seems destined to
be fogged with the same mood of anticlimax as the informal
buffet. Celebration brought down with the anxiety of
major change.
A tyre exploded in Bert Tilsley's face on Coronation
Street tonight. He might die. But nobody's talking about
it - we're too cool for that. The talk is of Ian McCulloch
on Top of the Pops and Richie Ford getting beaten up
for trying to look a bit like Ian McCulloch. I might
have been at that ill-fated house party if me and Sally
hadn't been babysitting my sister. I might have had
my head kicked in. I lean towards Sally as 'Billie Jean'
starts to fade out.
'You OK? Let me know when you want to make a move,'
I ask in the quiet voice reserved for talking to your
girlfriend amid a larger group.
Of late, it's increasingly me who wants to make a move,
and Sally who wants to stay.
The sixth form marked the start of what we view as 'serious
relationships' - Craig went out with Jo, I went out
with Jo, Neil went out with Liz, Mick went out with
Lynsey, Craig went out with Lynsey, Craig went out with
Jo's sister, I went out with Jo's sister, Pete always
looked like he'd go out with Het but never actually
did. We've grown used to couples becoming the prime
unit within our gang. That's cool, as long as they don't
interfere with our catchphrases. We drink cider or Fosters
or Britvic for the drivers and dance to whatever approved
records the DJ has.
Tonight's bash is called the Hello Goodbye Party, in
that it sees off one year of maroon blazers and welcomes
another. I'm ready to say goodbye. Sally wants to say
hello for a bit longer.
Our conversation is curtailed when we hear the frenetic
opening guitar on 'The Back of Love'. Our siren call,
we all rise reflexively and head to the floor for the
allotted three minutes of elbows-out raincoat dancing.
It ends with that sustained chord. We repair to the
edges of the hall. It's back to Shalamar.
I return to pretending I'm having a good time and manage
to sustain it for another half-hour before subtly renewing
my theme.
'Ready to go?'
My Great Escape mood is hardly alleviated by the fact
that it seems I'm the only one who's spotted a couple
of blokes from the gang who reportedly jumped Richie.
They're not in the sixth form, nor are they about to
be (it is, after all, for poofs), but they got in to
the party somehow, skulking in their white shirts and
Sta-Prest trousers. My desire to go is heightened.
'Why do you want to go so early?' Sally looks at me
slightly pityingly. 'It's your party.'
I return to my previous tactic, made a little more nervous
by the scent of imminent violence.
Eventually Sally will give in and I'll drive us both
home 'the long way' in Mum's Metro - putting the clock
back to nought to conceal the extra miles. A detour
for snatched, self-educating sex, seats reclined on
an unlit lane near Billing Aquadrome in sniffing distance
of the sewage farm. Meanwhile, until then, the party
grinds informally on, unapproved records booming out
in the main hall as we suck our drinks to make them
last.
'Shall we go?'
'OK.'
While today is supposed to be the first day of the rest
of my life, tomorrow is the first day of the rest of
Sally's. She turns sixteen. Which means that after seven
months of going out - four of those taking 'the long
way' - she'll be legal. She's been a tender but mature
fifteen, so mature in fact that we never really considered
what we were doing on a fairly regular basis as illegal.
I was simply her biggest thrill, and she was mine.
We first got off with each other at the fag end of a
house party at the end of 1982. I had no reason to believe
that the girl underneath me on the floor of Alan's flat
would turn out to be my first proper girlfriend. Sally
seemed, on the face of it, to be like the others: a
doll-eyed, big-skirted schoolgirl with whom I could
wetly snog and fitfully grope until we tired of writing
each other's initials on our exercise books. And our
relationship was textbook term-time training-bra love,
the kind I'd grown to know. Barely thought through,
it was in truth more that we had the right look and
listened to the same music than any real kismet. But
the weeks went by. And the months. Sally and I started
marking anniversaries. It was a sweet-natured, well-meant,
mutually rewarding, highly decorative relationship,
the first for both of us with any staying power, and
certainly our first with anything even approaching sex.
Trading Young Ones catchphrases and Bauhaus lyrics like
a couple of boys and sharing a penchant for big hair
and espadrilles and latterly, each other's bones, Sally
and I were working out fine; 1983 had our name on it.
We were a foundation course in young love.
Then comfort set in. Comfort and conformity. I hadn't
expected staying in to become so attractive so soon
in my life, having spent most of puberty trying to get
out, but romantic security - and a warm body on tap
- tend to keep you indoors. This is the great irony
of teenage love: when you're single you go out in order
to find somebody to go out with and then, when you have,
you stay in with them.
So take away the homework, the curfew and the fact that
sex could only last as long as we dared and it was like
a marriage.
SCENES FROM A PRETEND MARRIAGE (1)
The Beginning
We're in the living room, Winsford Way. January. My
parents are having a noisy, grown-up house party to
celebrate Mum's fortieth and the fact that they've put
the house up for sale. Sally and I are invited: the
token young people. I'm not sure it's such a great idea
but we have to 'come out' as a couple at some stage.
The living room is full of friends, neighbours, uncles,
aunties and people from Dad's work getting merry on
snowballs, eating cocktail sausages and jiving to old
rock 'n'roll records. Me and Sally sit in the corner
of the extension, draped over each other just enough
to provide comfort without raising eyebrows. Sally is
shy by nature and barely even knows me, let alone my
parents or their hot-faced friends and, as such, her
opportunity to shine in public as My Girlfriend is limited
to looking pretty. She does look pretty though in voluminous
skirt and vest top and her doll's face suits demure.
Chris from up the road staggers past and, nodding to
me, indicates the buffet.
'That's your fucking breakfast!' he slurs.
We laugh. I've never heard any of Mum and Dad's friends
say the f-word before.
Gesturing to her half-empty glass of Bacardi and Coke,
I ask Sally if she wants a top-up.
'Yes please. Don't be too long though.'
I undrape myself and take our empty glasses into the
kitchen, avoiding Dad and Chris's wife Carol giving
it the full rock around the clock.
The kitchen is rammed with party guests. I squeeze through
to get to the table, laden with drinks. As I pour out
two more Bacardis, I am accosted by a group of women.
Auntie Pat says, 'Your girlfriend's very pretty.'
'So pretty,' concurs Auntie Sue.
Neither of these women is actually my auntie, just old
friends of Mum.
'Thanks,' I say, not sure how else to react.
'Where does she go?' asks Denise from next door.
'The girls' school.'
'Well, she's really pretty,' says Auntie Pat, adding,
with a twinkle in her eye, 'well done.'
They laugh, not unkindly.
I feel oddly buoyed, simply by the fact that drunk adults,
who know next to nothing about me, think it's a good
idea. It's official then.
SCENES FROM A PRETEND MARRIAGE (2)
The Middle
March. Sally and I are listening to a tape of Echo &
the Bunnymen that I've recorded off the telly - a live
gig at Sefton Park in Liverpool. We're in my room. She's
wearing my lumberjack shirt. We long-haul snog and gently
paw at each other with the anglepoise lamp aimed at
the wall for mood lighting. It is all very innocent.
Mum and Dad are downstairs watching Auf Wiedersehen,
Pet . I discover through the miracle of touch that Sally,
though fully dressed, is not wearing a bra. She always
wears a bra. I stop and pull back to look at her. The
other person is often strangely absent during full-on
teen snogging.
'I thought you'd like it,' she says.
She has been waiting all evening for me to find out
and enjoys her moment of triumph.
'I do.'
'It's a late birthday present.'
We stare at each other.
'I love you.'
'I love you too.'
This is the first time we have said it. It makes us
feel all warm and special. It suddenly feels like we've
made a pact. No going back. Andy and Sally against the
world. AC4SP 4EVER. It makes us feel like we always
thought it would feel when the moment came. Perhaps
we were encouraged by Russell Grant's horoscope page
in the Chronicle & Echo . Love, he told us, was
in store for both Pisces (Andy) and Leo (Sally). Hers
read, 'A lion in love is a happy one.' It's ten weeks
and three days.
SCENES FROM A PRETEND MARRIAGE (3)
The End
We're in Sally's living room. It's August. The beginning
of the end of summer with the start of college breathing
down our necks. Sally's back from her holiday in the
Isle of Wight with her friend Charlotte today. I've
been away too, with my family to Jersey, where I picked
up a deep tan and some cockney catchphrases from a taxi
driver called Dave who we met at the hotel. Sally's
freckles have spread in the south coast sun - she looks
more bohemian. We're exchanging presents. Love tokens.
Removing a bottle wrapped in crepe paper from the plastic
bag, she says, 'I know what this is ...'
It's a bottle of Malibu. Safe bet. She gives me a kiss.
'Thanks. This is for you.'
I unwrap something worryingly small and saucer-shaped.
It's a small craft-shop ceramic saucer with a fish design.
'Wow,' I say, just able to mask my underwhelmed indifference.
'It's Pisces.'
'Thanks, it's really sweet.'
I'm not sure what to do with it.
'You could put your change in it.'
'Brilliant.'
We cuddle up on the sofa, aware that Sally's mum is
hovering in the background, folding clothes. We haven't
seen each other for a grand total of seventeen days,
the longest we've been apart in eight months of going
out.
She says, 'You smell different.'
'Do I? Well you sound different.'
I sound like Dave. Sally sounds a bit like Charlotte.
She smells like the world outside.
By October it was over. At a new seat of learning, enjoying
new friends and new ways, Sally suddenly felt more of
a schoolgirl. But we'd truly lost our shine while she
was in Ryde and I was in St Helier. The magic faded
as fast as a British summer. When hanging out at the
right places, looking a certain way and dancing to appropriate
records is the beating heart of your very existence,
distraction is likely. When life is essentially shallow
and cosmetic and responsibility-free, changing partners
is like changing hair colour. That Sally and I lasted
so long is the amazing thing. Perhaps because we had
exchanged the prized property of our mutual virginity
we felt a nagging guilt about going our separate ways.
While we both knew it was over, it takes one person
to act - to unilaterally push the detonator - and if
I'm honest with myself, Sally wanted out more than me.
At the beginning of our relationship I had been quite
the catch - an older, wiser, spiky-haired drummer with
a Mini Metro. What more could a Northampton girl want?
While I was initially more wary, expecting the usual,
I soon took the relationship to heart. Now I wanted
to stay at home and play at couples in a safe domestic
vacuum, unthreatened by the maelstrom of hormones 'out
there' - particularly if 'in here' involved sex education.
But as I've since learnt, what women want is not as
simple as that. Sally, having achieved her initial goal,
increasingly wanted to go out. First to show us off,
and then, once we'd shown ourselves off, to tear off
with her friend Rachel dressed like twins in search
of ... in search of, I'm not sure what: the joy and
freedom of being sixteen, I suppose. She wanted to have
her cake and eat it and I became, even if only in my
own eyes, that loathed object: the proprietorial husband.
* * *
'Sometimes I think you should be out at hipfreakntrendy
parties with Rachel, not sitting in watching telly with
me,' I explain, tugging at the tail of her checked shirt
- my checked shirt actually - hoping for a denial. She
says nothing.
Our latest Little Talk is not going well. Hipfreakntrendy
is our catch-all term for the life Sally isn't leading,
by the way. The life 'out there'. A life less ordinary.
For all our crazy hair and exposed rock-star ankles,
we spend an awful lot of time sitting in and watching
telly. And when we do go out, we're driving to parties
in Mum's Metro, not drinking and leaving early while
other people roll in the coat room. I'm ashamed to admit
it suits me, but not her.
'I know you feel you're missing out on a lot of ...
stuff.'
'I didn't say that,' she says, after an age.
'It's true though,' I counter, because it is.
More silence. Her perfect face as still as a doll's.
'If you want to finish it just tell me.' Urgency in
my voice now - a rare visitor.
'I don't.'
She does, but then there would be no more lifts and
even girls in the prime of their life can get used to
stuff after ten months.
The Little Talks, which are talks for me and don't-talks
for Sally, are becoming more frequent. In the early
stages of our relationship, Rachel coveted Sally's prize
- not me specifically, but a boyfriend in a band. Now
she covets Rachel's freedom. The freedom to eye people
up from under your fringe. The freedom to get falling-over
drunk and not even know whose house it is. The freedom
to get off with other people - taller boys, boys with
jobs.
I honourably put us out of our misery.
'I think it would be better for you if we finished it.'
Silence. Doll face.
After a brief honeymoon period of singledom, Sally went
out with a tall bloke who had a job. Whether he was
her biggest sixteen-year-old thrill I neither knew nor
cared by Christmas.
Sally and I went out for 287 days. The long way.
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