THE BIG ISSUE The Big Issue - 11 January 2016 | Page 11
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LETTER TO MY YOUNGER SELF
’ve spent a lot of time thinking about my
younger self. A few years ago I bought
an Aston Martin convertible, a cherry
red DB6 Volante. And I remembered
that when I was a boy, and we lived in a
tiny house in Greenwich without a bath-
room or any heating, my dad, who’s dead
now, bought me a toy model of the same car. And I
realised that’s why I’d picked that car. So I decided to
drive my car back to my old neighbourhood. It was
a dark, misty autumn evening and I parked outside
my old house. There was no one around. I suddenly
imagined my front door opening and my younger self
coming down the path and me opening the
car door and saying: “Hey, it’s me! Jump in!”
Everyone worries a bit when they’re
16 but generally I was a pretty confident
teenager who thought he knew it all.
I think I inherited a positive outlook from
my mothe r. One evening when she was
about 18 she and her boyfriend went out on
his motorbike and crashed. She went flying
through the air. When she told me the story
I said: “That must have been so frightening
for you.” And she said: “I could
only think, this is good, I’ll get a
day of tomorrow.”
By the time I was 16
I’d met (future Squeeze
colleague) Glenn Tilbrook
and we had a band playing
in pubs two or three times
a week. We were still living at
home but we were getting a bit
of cash. We never made much
money, even when Squeeze were top of the charts.
We always seemed to owe money. But even from that
early stage, I don’t think I considered doing anything
else. I just thought, this is good; I wasn’t up to much
at school – in fact I had to leave – but I think I can
make some money out of music.
I was actually expelled from school. It was a
simple misunderstanding. I wasn’t cut out for school,
I couldn’t really see the point of it. And it got to the
stage when I think we both agreed that we’d done our
best with one another – well, perhaps not our best –
and it was time for us both to move on. But it wasn’t
a complete waste of time. I was the only person in
the school who opted to do music and I had a very
kindly old music teacher who taught me the theory
of music – chords, timing. Which was a great thing to
learn, that international language.
It might be helpful for my teenage self to know
that girls enjoy kissing and sex just as much as
boys do. Nobody explained that to me. An old man in
the pub – Norman the docker – told me one day, when
I was in my 20s, and I was aghast. It was an absolute
revelation to me. I was very excited, I thought it was
great news. I’ve always liked the company of girls,
I like hanging out with women. I went to an all boys’
school and I didn’t have any sisters so I was dying to
meet girls and find out more about them.
If I met the young Jools now I’d generally be
sympathetic towards him. I’d tell him to go a bit
easier on other people. I was never mean to anyone
but I had a certain element of couldn’t care less what
people think. I might advise my younger self to think
more carefully before he opens his gob, only because
Clockwise from top: on
The Tube with Clare Grogan;
as a member of Squeeze in
1980 (Jools is bottom left);
Sir Paul McCartney on
Later… with Jools Holland
I’ve realised now that when you walk into a room,
everyone has their own story to tell and you don’t
know what it is. You don’t want to hurt people. But I
think contrariness is no bad thing in music. You lose
that a bit as you get older, I don’t have it now. Squeeze
always liked to be contrary. When the record company
tried to make us look cool we said, no, not cool.
I might advise my younger self against collect-
ing a family audience to hear my first record.
I was asked to play piano on a Wayne County track.
Wayne told me to play ‘real burlesque’ but there were
no lyrics at that point. I asked Wayne to send me the
finished record and it arrived in the post when my
mum had a load of my aunts and their friends for tea.
I put it on and they all came in, my mum saying, how
clever you are darling, he’s actually very good, this is
his first record… The room fell silent as we all listened
to the sound of a needle on vinyl, then my piano,
which set everyone smiling, then Wayne shouting,
‘If you don’t wanna fuck me, baby baby baby fuck of!’
It ended with a long tirade of Wayne chanting ‘Fuck
of!’ When it finished there was a little pause, then my
mum said, well done darling.
I don’t think the young me would be too
surprised that I became a TV presenter. I was
always a bit of a show of. I always liked to think I
was very amusing. Actually, the me who presented
The Tube in 1982 – he was only 24, so he had more in
common with my teenage self than my 57-year-old
self would now. Yeah, I probably did get a bit carried
away with myself then. I spoke very quickly, part of
my naturalistic approach of being untrained and
unkempt. I didn’t want to be like a professional
broadcaster. If you’d asked me to slow down I’d have
said, if you can’t understand me fuck of and watch
something else. Whereas now I think there may be
people whose English isn’t so good but who really
love the music, so I try to slow down a bit.
I’m quite a keen medievalist. A lot of the
interests I’ve had through my life were sparked when
I was a child. My father used to take me around build-
ings in London. We’d climb to the top of places like the
Post Oice Tower or St Paul’s and we learned about
how they were built on our climb, though our main
reason for climbing was just to be up high. I was also
into Lego, and learned more about building through
that. I understood it as a creative process.
I think the teenage Jools would laugh at me
if I told him how many of the things he’s dream-
ing about actually came true. I’d be able to say,
you know that toy Aston Martin you got? One day
we’ll be able to get a real one. And Paul McCartney
and George Harrison will become your friends.
But I’d also have to tell him that nothing is exactly as
you imagine it. And some things might put him of
– he might think it sounds like a lot of hard work.
But I’d also reassure him it never stops being fun.
Jools & Ruby, a new album from Jools Holland and Ruby
Turner, is out now. Interview: Jane Graham @Janeannie
IN 1974, THE YEAR JOOLS
HOLLAND TURNS 16…
A life-sized, 8,000-strong terracotta army is
discovered underground in China / Richard
Nixon resigns as US president after Watergate
THE BIG ISSUE / p11 / January 11-17 2016
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