Africa, anyone? I lived in Africa, in fact for a period of two years. My parents made the incredibly wise decision to join the Peace Corps so in November -76 the family of six moved to Botswana. Which is where I evolved into music.
Unlike the other “white” kids who went to a european/american boarding school in the capital city Gaborone, we luckily attended local schools. We lived about 40 km north of Gaborone, in Mochudi, a village with six primary and two secondary schools. I am personally a proud graduate from Isang Primary School 1978. One of the mandatory subjects was apparently choral singing, and all the schools met, twice a year I think, in a singing competition at a local church, a kind of battle of the choirboys (and girls).
We had a fantastic, enthusiastic, vibrant lady as a conductor. My African mom: Mrs. Hersey. I can’t remember exactly the different melodies we performed but the mood they created as well as the indomitable enthusiasm and faith dear Mrs. Hersey diligently and pure at heart spread upon our world will always remain at the base of my character and help me define myself and my surroundings.
We were quite successful my choir, winning prizes and actually moving on to the national finals. You can imagine: School uniforms, girls in green dresses and all the boys in khaki shorts and short-sleeved shirts. And in the middle, first row, a little to the left, Grim, blond hair, blue eyes, red sunburnt skin. Sore thumb?
Not really. It wasn’t until we returned to Norway, December -78, that I got a taste of what it’s like to be different. I mean, in Botswana my appearance gave me away but it didn’t matter to my friends: Black, white, red, blue, yellow, green. It meant fuckall. A boy’s a boy. A man’s a man. Also it didn’t hurt to not suck in tennisfootball. But when we returned to Norway, at school the kids were hateful towards me, dubbing me “nigger” and other supposedly derogatory remarks, behaving in ridiculous ways they’re probably shameful of to this day. But they were apparently, besides being insecure hormonal teens desperately trying to fit in, carrying a message from around the dinner tables at home: Who do you think you are doing something none of us could even conjure up a dream about doing? Well, I was 11years. So… I dunno
Seeing this contrast of behavior is of course also a defining scene for me. Those who had no possessions take you in with love and trust, while those who have all the stash in the catalogue, and then some, chase you away with hate and suspicion.
I know where I belong. Yet in retrospect I wouldn’t be without any of these experiences. To live and learn you have to live at least a little.
I’m glad in any case to have been there and there. And I’m glad I’m here. And wherever I am at anytime really. Man, I hope that’s what I learned from this. That would make a great story.
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THIS IS SOMETHING
I hear stories flying all around
about a place, about a paradise
I see people spinning round and round
I hear them rave, I hear them fantasize
They talk about something else
They talk about somewhere else
They wanna do something else
They wanna go somewhere else
I wonder where I want to know
I wonder where they want to go
I wonder where I want to know
I wonder why they want to go
I wonder where I wonder why
I wonder where they want to go
I hear the grass is greener over there
I hear the snow is whiter. And the air
so fresh and clean it makes it hard to bear
somebody’s better off than we are here
They talk about..
Must be something I’ve never seen
Must be somewhere I’ve never been
This is somewhere I don’t belong
which is why I had to write this song
They talk about..
This is something and it’s something else
You are someone and you’re something else