Afrika! Afrika!

I must just give a plug for the Afrika! Afrika! circus, currently stationed in Amsterdam after successful runs in Germany and Austria. This animal-free, mostly African circus is well worth the price of admission and guarantees you a night out that won’t soon be forgotten.

Everything’s there, from acrobats to unicycling basketballers, from contortionists to jugglers. The live music, too, is excellent and will have you swinging in your seat.

Sarah and I had a great time, while Eloïse fell asleep on the couch at home with Oma and Opa. It was an experience to savour, a night out together as a twosome, essentially our first since Eloïse entered into our life.

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About Bloody Time

After 57 days without a working ADSL connection, Internet access has finally been restored by my ISP, XS4ALL; as of midnight on 3rd November, to be precise.

Our new ADSL modem kit (a Thomson Speedtouch 780WL(i) turned up on Thursday afternoon and was installed by me late Friday evening.

In stark contrast to every other aspect of the Herculean effort exerted to obtain DSL in the new home over the last 57 days, this final hurdle was leapt without incident and the DSL light on the modem illuminated unassumingly within a minute of connecting it to the phone line and powering the device on. Even the fact we have ISDN here, not an analogue phone line, didn’t throw soot over the proceedings.

There should have been rumbling from the skies, quaking of the house and choirs of angels singing hosannas, but the simple anti-climactic fact of the matter is that the system just worked; and that’s all I ever wanted.

So, it was with great gratitude that I moved all of our networked devices over to the new network and said goodbye to the mystery neighbour, through whose open WLAN all of our traffic had been routed over the last couple of months. Mystery neighbour, I salute you for your community spirit!

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Archaeological Dig

An archaeological dig is what it felt like to go to my lock-up yesterday and browse through my old stuff.

All of my Dutch possessions were transferred from my flat to this lock-up when I first went to America in March 2000. In 2001, all of the stuff that had been in my ex-girlfriend’s parents’ loft in London since 1991 arrived in Amsterdam to be added to the contents of the lock-up. I was still in America, of course.

At this point, all of my worldly goods were now in storage in Amsterdam, except for the few boxes I had had sent to America when it had become apparent that I wouldn’t be returning to Europe any time soon.

So, it came as something of a shock when, some months later, word reached me that the storage facility where my belongings were being held, had (been) burned down. As I walked down Market Street in San Francisco, past people pushing all of their material possessions out in front of them in a shopping trolley, it occurred to me that some of these tramps now had more tangible items to their name than did I.

Some time later, it transpired that not all of the storage units had been lost in the fire. Some had survived the fire, only to be severely damaged by the efforts to extinguish the blaze. Perhaps some stuff had even survived the water.

My ex-girlfriend inspected the damage in my absence and reported that a lot of stuff was smoke- and/or water-damaged, but some stuff had also survived relatively or, in some cases, completely intact.

Once we had bought a new house and settled into it last year, there was really no excuse not to go to the lock-up and sort out the stuff there, but I couldn’t bring myself to go and behold the scene of destruction that I knew would be waiting for me.

You see, in the intervening years I had forgotten much of what I owned, so I wasn’t in a position to miss it. I knew, however, that if I were to become reacquainted with it, it would bring memories flooding back, so I was in no hurry to be reminded of things that had once occupied a place in my life, but which were now either destroyed or severely damaged.

With the move to the new house, I’ve decided that I need to finally get my act together and clear out the lock-up. That process started a few weeks ago with a couple of boxes of my old comics, which, thanks to my having religiously bagged every one of them in protective plastic sleeves, had survived their ordeal very well. A few had been ruined by moisture, but most were intact.

Yesterday, I went there again, spurred on by the half-empty state of our recently purchased antique bookcase, which somehow suggested an air of contempt on the part of its owners. The bookcase deserved to be filled; and what better way to fill it than with one’s own books?

And so I brought back a lot of my old books, still packed in the Titan Distributors (a dreadful place and the last one I worked before leaving England) boxes that I placed them in back in, what, 1991? These are books that I hadn’t set eyes on in sixteen years. Amongst their ranks are many obscure titles and limited editions, in many cases signed by the authors. It was cool to see them again after so many years, especially since they had survived the experience of trial by fire and water intact. Indeed, the only damage is slight indentation in the slipcases, due to the weight of the books having been stored horizontally for many years.

I went back today again, as I haven’t yet managed to find all of my books. There’s so much debris to sort through, however, that the full car-load I came back with today was almost entirely rubbish that I just dumped outside for the bin-men. Only one of the boxes in the car contained stuff that was actually salvageable.

Even after emptying this new box, there are still titles that I’m missing. I’m hoping that one or two more boxes are still in the lock-up, hidden behind all of the boxes containing mouldering, soot-coated clothing and other decomposing belongings. That stuff has been festering away for six years. Ugh.

Anyway, the bookcase looks nice now and is almost filled to capacity.

I remember packing this stuff in ’91 and thinking to myself, ‘One day, maybe a long time from now, maybe I’ll be lucky enough to have the time and the environment in which to sit down and read through all of that stuff.’ Perhaps that day has finally arrived or perhaps, with one young daughter and another child on the way, I’m actually further away from my dream than ever before.

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Nijntje Op Vakantie

I keep forgetting to mention that we took Eloïse during autumn half-term to see the children’s musical, Nijntje Op Vakantie at the Meervaart.

I think I enjoyed it only slightly less than Eloïse, for whom I purchased a copy of the CD containing the songs. Unfortunately, every time I try to break the silence in the home by turning on some music via the Sonos, Eloïse demands that I play Nijntje Op Vakantie instead of whatever I was planning to play. And she’s really quite insistent in that convincing way that only a two-year old can be, sending one running straight down the path of least resistance.

Anyway, if you’re in The Netherlands and Nijntje Op Vakantie is coming to a venue near you in the next six months, you could do worse than to take your toddler along. We all had a very good time and it was fun to expose Eloïse to a live performance.

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Lisa’s Back

Yesterday, I made the unpleasant journey by road to Rotterdam to see Lisa Gerrard at the Schouwburg on the opening night of her latest European tour. It’s only about 75km to Rotterdam from here, but the traffic makes it feel like a lot more. Still, having a nice car with TV, music and arse-warming seats goes a long way towards numbing the pain.

We hadn’t managed to come up with someone who could perform the bedtime duties with Eloïse, so I went without Sarah and met up with my ex, Jo, to attend the gig.

Lisa played a good selection of old and new, including some unreleased material that will hopefully find its way onto a future release. The set had been rearranged, with a few new pieces added, since Lisa was last here in the spring (when she played in The Hague).

High points were Host Of The Seraphim, Sacrifice, Sanvean and the Michael Edwards rendered piano version of Dreams Made Flesh. Yes, I do prefer the older material, but I like the new stuff, too. Music is like wine and cheese, you see. It gets better as it gets older, because the listener no longer just hears a piece of music, but attaches memories and feelings to it over time. New music can never evoke the same feelings, but that new music will, of course, also start to age. That’s how it works for me, anyway.

After the concert, we went for a Greek meal just outside the Schouwburg. I was ravenous, as I’d had no dinner prior to she show.

The concert was so good that I risked Sarah’s wrath by purchasing a tour T-shirt. There’s a wife-imposed ban on T-shirt purchases in this household, because I have so many already, but I couldn’t resist having the wearable souvenir of this concert.

Sarah still hasn’t seen Lisa Gerrard perform live, but she’ll get her chance a couple of weeks from now, when we head down to Antwerp for an overnight trip with the in-laws. Sarah’s folks get the questionable honour of babysitting the smallest, most demanding member of the family, while her parents make merry to the dulcet tones of Lisa at the Koningin Elisabethzaal.

Speaking of Sarah’s folks, they turn up here Saturday morning.

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