Since I've moved towns, my
summer road trips have become down right familiar. They take me back to where I
grew up, along a road I've travelled a hundred times before. Each year we
optimistically pile our kids, Christmas presents, pet, beach gear, party
outfits and active wear into the car and set off for our little 3-hour journey
down the Pacific Highway.
This time, we had so much
gear we decided to take two cars, and on the return trip I get the kids while
Tim has the dog. Luckily, I also get the CD stacker.
Since we're constantly
trying to educate our 4.5 year old how to appreciate modern rock music, and
since kids are such good learners, he now complains whenever we play anything
that "doesn't have enough guitar in it". Ergo, the stacker is a
constant rotation of albums which have good "dir-nir" bits in them,
loud bits, riffs that you can strum along to on your air guitar while strapped
in a 5-point harness.
As I start up the car, Seth
predictably requests the first track from Ryan Adam's self-titled album from
2014. "Mum, I want this song: 'I can't talk, my mind is so blank. So I'm
going for a walk, I got nothing left to say.'"
I oblige, and we head off
on the black asphalt, in that pleasant state of anticipation where the rest of
the CD and the rest of the trip stretch out ahead of us.
All my
life, been shakin, wanting something
Holding
everything I had like it was broken
Gimme
something good
The album is melancholy,
but not heavy, and even though the songs are about loss and worry, they are so
tuneful I sing along, not caring about the words I can't make out. The riffs
are plentiful and the melodies roll along like little trains going downhill. My
mind starts to wander, safe in the bubble of space created by my car where
nothing else can get in.
I ponder the people who
live in the houses right beside the highway; who are they and do they like
living there? I wonder if the constant noise bothers them, and whether they
have to turn their TV up extra loud.
When I don't have anything
to think about, I can think about anything. Usually I drift towards career options
or some revelation about how to improve my work-life balance. What shall I do
when I get to where I'm going? I think about all the things I can and want to
do when I get there, but in this moment there's no real commitment so my ideas
can be as large as they like.
Pink as
a rose the sunset's fading
Can you
feel the darkness, it surrounds the house
Plain
as the truth my breath is baited
It
pinches like a trap shut around the mouse
Let
down the rope 'cause we fell in
Let
down the rope
Hanging
round the wishing well
It's a
slippery slope
And I
let go
Let go
Of it
I think about habits I
should form, or old ones I should get rid off. I replay conversations in my
head and think of how I could have been more tactful or less awkward. I invent
the perfect comeback line days too late. I hope my ideas will hang around long
enough for me to grab hold of them.
Maybe
every promise anybody makes
Is
destined for the rocks the longer it takes
Daylight
is so close that I can't almost taste it
Next I put on John Mayer's Born
and Raised. The first song is about going west, seeking new scenery. I sing
along. I'm having so much fun I wonder if I should take singing lessons this
year. My backseat critic complains, but I persist. He'll soon fall asleep.
Goodbye
cold
Goodbye
rain
Goodbye
sorrow
And
goodbye shame
I'm
heading out west with my headphones on
Boarding
a flight with a song in the back of my soul
That no
one knows
There's a song about a
family guy who’s stuck in a rut, and, despite the sheer craziness of his idea, decides
to build a one-man submarine. It gets me every time. The single mindedness, the
need to see something through, I wonder if I'd have that kind of dedication.
And his
wife told his kids he was crazy
And his
friends said he'd fail if he tried
But
with the will to work hard and a library card
He took
a homemade, fan blade, one-man submarine ride
The traffic is getting
heavier and it’s time for a new album. Taylor Made - James Taylor's Greatest
Hits is not something I thought would ever be in my collection, let alone
on high rotation in the car, but here we are. Mister munchkin's awake again, so
we turn up his favourite song, Mexico. It peps us up with it's Caribbean feel, and we savour the key
changes and belt out the chorus each time it comes around.
Oh, Mexico
It sounds so simple I just got to go
The sun’s so hot I forgot to go home
I guess I’ll have to go now
We skip the next track, You've
Got a Friend, because it's too mellow for us, and Seth says, "Mum,
it's coming up to your song". I can't get enough of the killer piano and
the shamelessly sweet lyrics of How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You) that
make me smile from ear to ear. Man, I wish I could play like that.
I close
my eyes at night
Wondering
where would I be without you in my life
Everything
I did was just a bore
Everywhere
I went, it seems I'd been there before
But you
brighten up for me all of my days
With a
love so sweet in so many ways
I want
to stop, and thank you baby
I just
want to stop, and thank you baby
How
sweet it is to be loved by you
Soon after this, the album
descends into a pool of mostly indistinguishable soft rock ballads, all
electric piano and overly sincere messages about love and friendship. I don't
turn it off though, because it reminds me of the intros to the 80s American
sitcoms of my youth. Family Ties, Alf, Full House. I cringe but I'm still
smiling.
He
said, me and Melissa, well we fell out of love
Ran out
of luck, seems like lightning stuck
I've
been thinking of leaving, but I can't raise a buck
James,
I'm wondering could I borrow your truck?
I said
that's why I'm here, got no better reason
That's
why I'm standing before you, that's why I'm here
We've slowed to a crawl now
as we come to a town and I've made it through all 20 of James' greatest hits. I
rummage through the cases and I pull out the Wilson Pickers' Shake It Down. It's
finger-picking, toe-tapping heaven and I remember the first time Tim and I saw
these guys at the Great Northern in Byron Bay years ago, playing support to
another band. We bought their home-pressed CD with the title written in
permanent marker and have loved them ever since. They've got professional
printing now but I still picture the five of them on that little stage.
In the
new year I'll be playing my guitar and you'll be watching'
Watchin'
from afar and I'll be prayin'
Prayin'
I bring some money home soon
In the lane ahead I can see
a car with bikes stacked on the back, the number plate scrawled in crayon on an
A4 piece of paper stuck on the rack. Utes with surfing gear tied to the roof
racks roll on past a middle-aged guy picking the weeds out of his lawn by the
highway. We pass a house that's been for sale for longer than I can remember.
Perhaps its riverside serenity isn't enough to drown out the truck noise day
and night. I feel sorry for it, and then feel guilty that my pity is probably
unwarranted.
There’s not long to go now
and I need to decide whether to pick up some dinner on the way through town. I
resolve to write down all those new habits I’ve thought up. Once I get home.
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