SONGS AND SCRIPTS AND DUNKING BISCUITS

Every day tales of a winging-it creative

I have just finished reading the enlightening and entertaining autobiography ‘Lightening Seeds, Football and Cosmic Post-Punk’ by Ian Broadie, the songwriter, lead singer, producer and beating heart behind Liverpool based band The Lightening Seeds.

The Lightening Seeds had several excellent and memorable hits, mainly in the 1990’s, such as ‘Life of Riley’ and ‘Pure’. Broadies path to success has been far from linear, and being short of stature or having any desire to be out front he is far from the average rock poseur.

Ian Broadie

Much of his progress has been hampered by side steps, some backward, but from his early days as a teenage guitarist in the 1970’s he was always in the thick of things. Seemingly dead-end pursuits with cash strapped mad-cap characters also searching for direction forged relationships with people who went on to achieve success out of anonymity, such as Frankie Goes To Hollywood, Echo and The Bunnymen, Teardrop Explodes and Oasis.    

Reading Broadies autobiography made me realise I’ve never belonged to a gang who hung out with their obsessions. I’ve not been in a band, toured and slept in the back of vans and felt part of a movement. I’m not a muso, debating for hours the benefits of one amp over another, or coming to verbal blows over different chord progressions.

I wasn’t a punk, a new-wave romantic or even a heavy-metal air guitarist (well not beyond the confines of my own bedroom mirror, but that’s between you and me, right?). In my twenties I looked towards the west coast of America to Jackson Browne, The Eagles and Linda Ronstadt, and this didn’t register as cool in my particular part of north-west England.

In doing so I feel a bit of a musical imposter, despite writing and releasing my own songs. Like I’ve not earned ‘my chops’ as they say in the US. I don’t have kudos or credibility because I don’t have an array of battle-hardened guitars lined up against a rehearsal room wall.

THE ALTER-EGO I’M STILL SEARCHING TO INHABIT

But then I thought about it more, and realised that is being somewhat disrespectful to my younger self, then a lyricist in a song-writing partnership. If I didn’t have the musicians badge of honour, I certainly had something equally valuable: a unrelenting passion for what I wanted to do.

From my late teens to mid-twenties, despite being the rather introverted and introspective type with limited social scope, I would regularly take trips to London and quite literally knock on publishers doors. Some big publishers in the bargain, with very big doors!

I spent my Saturday nights happily at home watching TV but I was also someone who had established contacts at Polygram Music and EMI, had meetings in plush rooms while next door a songwriter such as Gerard Kenny, who had recently written the hugely successful ‘Made It Through The Rain’ for Barry Manilow, practised on a white grand piano.

Labi Siffre, an artist with great respect who received an Ivor Novello Award for his anti-apartheid song ‘(Something Inside) So Strong’ and had a number two hit record just months before with ‘It Must Be Love’ (covered by Madness) was once told off for interrupting a meeting I was having at Polydor. And Siffre apologised!

I stood for hours on trains when all the seats were taken. I walked across London for hours because I didn’t feel confident on the tube. And the only force that drove me to do these things was passion. We’ve all had times when passion compelled us to do things that sat in stark contrast to the way we live the other parts of our lives.

Passion is still driving me now in my solo song-writing but also in my script work. Long hours sat in front of a laptop, scripts dissected in workshops, a rejection here and a thumbs up there, the agonising whether a line will take off or sink when played in front of a live, paying audience.

I have memories of being invited to meetings in the West End of London but also of a script being pulled apart by a BBC executive in the pouring rain of Manchester. That one nearly finished me, but here I still am, driven by the one vital ingredient above all others – passion.

I envy someone like Ian Broadie for the skills he possesses that go beyond my abilities. But sometimes it’s good to look at our own apparent shortcomings and not make too harsh a judgement.

    

Films I’ve seen lately: Lee, It Ends With Us, The Critic

TV shows I’m watching: A Gentleman in Moscow (Paramount Plus), We Are Lady Parts (Series 2, Channel 4)


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7 responses to “WHO NEEDS CREDIBILITY AND COOL WHEN YOU HAVE PASSION?”

  1. Janice Reid Avatar

    Keep the passion alive Paul!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Paul Ariss Avatar
      Paul Ariss

      I certainly will Jan!

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  2. petespringerauthor Avatar
    petespringerauthor

    Passion is an awfully powerful ingredient to most successful people. We’ve probably already discussed this Paul, but success to me if more about being happy than having a lot of money. On the other hand, I’ve lived dirt cheap and middle class, and it’s no contest about which one I prefer. As we flew back and forth to see our grandson recently, I cfelt such gratitude to have the means to do that when so many others don’t.

    I have to admit that this naive American isn’t familiar with Lightening Seeds. I just YouTubed a couple of their songs to get a taste of their sound. What was their biggest hit?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Paul Ariss Avatar
      Paul Ariss

      Probably ‘Life of Riley’ Pete, though he got his biggest initial interest from the states and this was on ‘Pure’. His actual biggest hit, though not really representative of him overall, was ‘Three Lions’, a song written to support the England football team in 1996. The song actually went to number 1 over here 4 times, in various reincarnations. To say I’m not a fan of the song is an understatement. The other songs I mentioned are far preferable.

      You’re spot on about passion. I’m proud, though sometimes surprised, that the things I was passionate about when I was 16, song-writing, music, football, photography, I haven’t lost my passion for at all. It’s more measured now through experience, but the passion still burns brightly, when I know so many people who just settle into apathy, which is a shame.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Hugh W. Roberts Avatar

    What a great read about the subject of passion, Paul.

    I’ve always found that passion for anything keeps you going regardless of what happens in life and what other people say about what you’re doing or have done. It’s passion, if nothing, will stop you from carrying on doing what you’re doing. Rain or shine, the magic spell of passion, keeps it alive.

    Being dyslexic, many have told me in my lifetime that writing is not a subject for me. They ask, ‘How can it be when you’re dyslexic?’ I answer with one word – ‘Passion.’

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Paul Ariss Avatar
      Paul Ariss

      Well put Hugh.

      I would also imagine; if you’re anything like me, that it’s also a desire to prove people wrong. I am not by nature a competitive person, but as soon as someone writes me off – or shows disregard for something I’m trying to do – it fires something up in me to prove them wrong. And more often than not, it proves to be a positive reaction. And I have to admit, I enjoy doing it. I suppose that’s another form of passion.

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      1. Hugh W. Roberts Avatar

        It certainly is, Paul. Although I have been told I have a stubborn streak. But I’m very much on the side of passion.

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