As a thirteen year old at school, I feared most to be called in front of the class and give an explanation on the advantages of the Treaty of Utrecht. I wasn’t the only boy to fear those impromptu frontages. They were the times when swollen acorns featured prominently and not just in class rooms. Those ‘impromptu swellings’ seemed to have a life of its own at that time. Thoughts about those pubescent and glowing roseate girls’ thighs in their school shorts were the bane of any school boy’s attempt at Treaties of all countries, especially in front of the class.
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They were the times of my first fag. It was so simple and so desirable, to be like dad and older friends, to smoke tobacco and be seen as growing up, even if not yet grown-up. The oak’s acorn was the smoking implement par excellence at those post war times in The Hague. The mature acorn was hollowed out and pierced about 5 ml from the bottom allowing a grass straw to be inserted. This was my first smoking tool and even though those first draws made me reel and almost sick, I loved the sick. What a heaven had opened up.
I had a few mates in cahoots with those acorn pipes and somehow cents were put together and tobacco was bought. We used to hide in ‘portieks’, they were a kind of alcove or vestibule that most city streets had before entering individual apartments or flats. The joy of those first illicit smokes, hidden from view, carried me for years and even now I have no regrets.

Sure, the acorn smokes and those roseate coloured thighs turned into a hiatus in my education, but so did my parents’ decision to leave my city and country. I suppose at that time, smoking and thinking, dreaming about girls had priority over anything else, especially that dreary circa 1700 Treaty with those fucking Spaniards.
I gave up smoking in my early fifties only on the promise of starting again when turning sixty. I am (wait for it, on the cusp, ha, ha, of seventy) and haven’t done so yet.
Ah, those acorn pipes. Those first sickening tobacco draw backs. Those swollen impromptu boners in classroom frontages with Mr Kohler.
And then there is Charlie McMahon. The one handed with the steel clamp white didgeridoo player who used to play at the William Wallace in Balmain. He could play and make the place rock like no one I ever knew.
Hey Warrigal, I wish I knew where you played or if you played.
I have to remember and hear music more in my head now than before.
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I remember buying a pack of red label Peter Styvesant in Den Haag and smoking one in the posh new toilets on the main street in Rotterdam. Well posh many moons ago and very unlike English public toilets.
I was only fifteen and had to hide from grown ups. I only took it up because of peer pressure at school.
Haven’t had one for one score and fifteen.
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That’s boring Jules. Tell us about your erections in Den Haag????
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Oh, OK then AJ.
I stayed with a family that we had met on The Willum Ruys, the liner that we travelled to Indonesia on.
We stayed friends in DJakarta and subsequently the families stayed with each other on occasion.
They had a daughter the same age as me.
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I think that you meant to change your name in the name box Jules!!!
Any way, no matter. What happened??
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Well we became firm friends. And I’ve had a penchant for yoghurt and apple sauce ever since.
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What do you mean by that? Are you being suggestive?
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No, not at all.
The Dutch are simply mad for apple sauce and plain yoghurt. We used to have it morning noon and night. Even apple sauce and chips.
I loved Holland, we visited several times after that. I remember buying a whole edam cheese and taking it back to boarding school in England. I shared it out after lights out.
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So apart from the girls Jules, how did you like the Naydoorlaandce?
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We used to go to Scheveningen, where there was a beach and a pier.
I remember loving Chocomel, a milky flavoured drink served cold. Usually with……..Chips and fucking apple sauce!!
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Now now Jules, enogh of that naughty un-Christmas-like language.
You know that you should be out in the garden loading your trailer that you have borrowed back.
Take your bad language off to the tip. Bugger orff!
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Is there going to be a sequel to this story, Gerard, along the lines, ‘My STRUGGLE with giving up Fags’ ?
Maybe : ‘How replacing Fags with Shiraz helped ME’ ?!
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Gee, I am trying to give up smoking, it’s very hard though but shiraz, don’t think so.
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Now you talking, almost twenty words there…
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Yes most unlike me
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Uhm, I’m a fool for a cigarette
Lord, I’m fool for a cigarette
When you’ve finished choke it ’cause I wanna smoke it
Lord, I’m fool for a cigarette
Mind when you throw your cigarette
Mind when you throw your cigarette
When you’ve finished choke it ’cause I wanna smoke it
Lord, I’m fool for a cigarette
Lord, I’m fool for a cigarette
Uhm, I’m fool for a cigarette
When you’ve finished choke it ’cause I wanna smoke it
Lord, I’m fool for a cigarette
Feelin’ good, feelin’ good
[ Find more Lyrics on http://mp3lyrics.org/Hfxh ]
All the money in the world spent onl feelin’ good
Well, the wino met me on the streets
Said, “Help me on to some Sneakin’ Pete
Please, help me brother, I wish you would
‘Cause I feel so bad and I wanna feel good”
Feelin’ good, feelin’ good
All the money in the world is spent on feelin’ good
Well, you see them folks all dressed so fine
Dancing, drinking champagne and wine
They’d pinch your pockets now if they could
‘Cause they ain’t doing nothing but feelin’ good
Feelin’ good, feelin’ good
All the money in the world is spent on feelin’ good
Red, yellow, black or tan
Makes no difference: a man’s a man
They oughta live together now if they could
Then the whole wide world would be feelin’ good
Feelin’ good, feelin’ good
All the money in the world spent on feelin’ good
Feelin’ good, feelin’ good
All the money in the world spent on feelin’ good
Lyrics: Medley: Fool for a Cigarette/Feelin’ Good, Ry
Cooder
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Ry Cooder’s playing and music was in that film with those old master Cuban musicians some years ago. Was it called ‘Buona Vista Social Club?
Anyway, the music was mind blowing.
Plenty of words here Hung One On!
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Thanks Gez. Really want to stop smoking. Might have to go to patches.
Ry Cooder is very talented. I like the way he keeps it simple but still holds you in. That song comes from an album called Paradise and Lunch and typifies his style.
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“Paradise and Lunch” is an American classic. That collection of songs is on the list of “must save” artifacts critical to the future expression of uniquely American musical idioms. It’s a masterclass in guitar, uke, banjo and mando picking, (just think if you will of the guitar figure that opens “Fool for a Cigarette/Feeelin’ Good”. A short, simple sounding and attention grabbing little four bar intro. Easy huh? Now try and play it so it feels like Cooder’s playing.)
The performances are anchored in virtuoso picking and Ry Cooder’s unmistakable laconic vocal style. Every selection prodigally displays his touchstone sensitivity to the real stories behind the words and music of American folk forms. All this and it sounds like friends pickin’ on a porch.
It’s just sublime.
Ry Cooder is that very rare thing, the genuine musical genius. Its just that his passion is for musical Americana, though in recent decades he’s stretched out to Latin America and Africa.
I went to see him and Nick Lowe before Christmas. Highlights included a fantastic version of “Crazy ’bout An Automobile” which these days has slipped back to it’s original tempo from the frenetic concert versions of a few years ago. The gospel chorus with its beautiful rich bass part gives me goosebumps.
Nick Lowe’s “I Knew The Bride” is simply a heart gladdening favourite. I can’t stay still when I hear it. The urge to feel good and dance is overwhelming. I also “Love The Sound Of Breaking Glass”.
Look them up, download them or get the discs and play them often! In the case of “I Knew The Bride” play it loud!!!
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Did Nick do All Men are Liars? One of my favourites.
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Yeah that’s one of his.
I’m laughing my head off at the moment. I’ve just come across a live version of the “Bride” on YouTube with Nick, Dave Edmonds and Rockpile. The tempo is so fast that the drummer gets a bit behind at the beginning of the song and ends up dropping beats to catch up. It’s an appalliing recording and it must be getting along at about 170 beats a minute. It’s hilarious.
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I’ve just thought. It’s the tension in his playing between the downbeat and the note attack, sometimes early, sometimes late but always swinging. It’s an aspect of guitar technique that characterises all my favourite players including the Two Ronnies, Lane and Wood, and of course “Keef” but is perhaps nowhere better displayed than on “Layla And Other Assorted Love Songs” by “Derek and The Dominoes” where Ekker shows us all how its done, to perfection
The discipline required to become a virtuoso guitar player or even just a very good player is beyond many aspirant rock stars these days. You can’t be continuously saying”look at me” when you’re struggling with scales and arpeggios. Most never even get that far and struggle to learn a third or fourth chord. If its not in E or A they’re buggered. Melody, Harmony and the music of the thing are not as valued as say they were 35 years ago. These days its novelty for novelty’s sake and the pose is all important.
I’m currently listening to “Orleans” doing “Dance With Me”; remember that one? There’s some beautiful picking on this too. “The Game of Love” Michelle Branch and Santana now. I know it’s AOR schmaltz but his playing is superb, little figures and fills that brighten the whole arrangement; and the horn parts are cool too.
Which of course has led to Stevie Ray Vaughn doing the Hendrix classic “Little Wing”. (Don’t ask me. It’s an iTunes thing…?)
Thats enough for now. Back to the pictures.
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Yo
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Hung, can’t you something more interesting then yo?
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nuh
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Not going to be boring about smoking, Gez. Preferring instead to contemplate the roseate thighs.
For some reason I’m mindful of dogs chasing cars (our thanks to Warrigal) – where my analogy suggests that like dogs chasing cars, at that age, I would not have had a clue about what to do with one if I caught it.
I’m still not sure, but I currently enjoy the prac work trying to figure it out – otherwise referred to as perfecting my technique.
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Reminds me of a music lesson I had in second form rather embarrassing, and the smoking tree near the fence behind the admin block.
Liked it, liked it a lot.
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Ah, memories… Nothing looks quite so good as when it is observed through the thick lens of the passage of much time.
Nice story Gez; brought back memories for me too…
🙂
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