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Tom Cox - Educating Peter

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Tom Cox Educating Peter

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Peters mum and dad are worried. Over the last twelve months theyve noticed ferocious changes taking place in their son. Its not just the mumbling and the cloud of melancholy that seems to hover permanently over his ever-more-militant mop of curly hair. Its not even the oversized trousers or the numerous metal chains that hang off them. The problem is that Peter, who is fourteen, wants to be a musician - a rock star preferably, but anything else that involves a guitar, gets him bags of money and free CDs, and gives him access to unlimited scantily clad groupies will suffice (as long as its not classical). Uncoincidentally, ever since the advent of this new ambition, Peters grades at school have plummeted from very good to somewhere below mediocre. What is to be done? In the spirit of intellectual enquiry, Peter and music-critic, Tom Cox, set off in a Ford Focus on a journey to the dark heart of Britains musical heritage, to get the inside track on whether being a musician really is a sensible career choice for a teenager. They hunt the streets of Cambridge for former Pink Floyd frontman Syd Barrett and have numerous encounters with folkies in tights. They explore the wilder shores of prog rock and get up close and personal in a lift with Brian Wilson. Tom gives a masterclass in second-hand-record-shop etiquette and finds that Peter is something of a child prodigy. Most of all, they drive around, talk about stuff and Peter eats crisps. Part coming-of-age story and part urban travelogue, this brilliantly funny book is a must for anyone who has ever been baffled by a teenage boy.

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About the Book

A bit like Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, but with crisps...

Peters mum and dad are worried. Its not just the mumbling and the melancholic moods, coupled with Peters ever-more-militant mop of curly hair. Forget the oversized trousers complete with dangling metal chains. The problem is that Peter is fourteen and he wants to be a rock star. OK, he wants to be a musician, as long as it involves a guitar, bags of money, free CDs, and unlimited scantily clad groupies (and its not classical music).

Peters parents convince their music-critic friend Tom Cox to guide Peter to the dark heart of Britains musical heritage and expand his horizons. Their journey takes them to Cambridge seeking former Pink Floyd frontman Syd Barrett where they encounter numerous folkies in tights. After exploring the wilder shores of prog rock, they get up close and personal with Brian Wilson in a lift. Tom imparts second-hand-record-shop etiquette, and discovers Peter is something of a child prodigy. Most importantly, they drive around, they talk about stuff and Peter eats crisps.

Part coming-of-age story and part urban travelogue, this brilliantly funny book is a must for anyone who has ever been, or been baffled by, a teenage boy.

Contents
Educating Peter
Tom Cox

To Brewer

MAMA TOLD ME NOT TO STRUM

THE WAY I remember it is something like this.

He drags himself into the room, eyes to the floor, hands buried in the arms of his long-sleeve t-shirt. Jenny says, Pete, meet Tom; he mumbles hello. He roots around in the cupboard for a packet of crisps. I ask him what CDs hes bought recently; he mumbles something about the second AC/DC album. He shuffles away, back to his bedroom.

I say, So. Ill pick him up a week on Tuesday, then?

Jenny says, If you could, that would be wonderful. Hes got fencing class from ten till eleven, then hes all yours.

I say, Right, er, cool. I guess Ill be off.

Jenny says, Mind out for those roadworks on the North Circular.

And thats how it all started.

Did I miss a bit out? Possibly. Theres a chance he picked up one of his bass guitars and plucked disconsolately at it for thirty seconds before he rooted around for the crisps. Perhaps we even shook hands. Whats pretty certain, however, is that our first meeting couldnt have been described as unforgettable. Nothing screeched, sparked or went Kapow! Nobody called the police or drove a 1969 Aston Martin.

Like many men whod grown up playing with too many model cars and watching too many films starring Warren Oates, Id often fantasised about this moment: the beginning of my Great Road Trip. Id pictured Jeff Bridges haring out of nowhere in a Dodge Charger to save Clint Eastwood from a shower of bullets during the opening scene of Thunderbolt And Lightfoot. Id pictured a big sky, a fast car, a hopelessly romantic meeting of inseparable outlaws, perhaps with the added bonus of a couple of loose women looking for a ride to nowhere in particular. But now this was it: I was here, finally embarking on my adventure, and all I could see was a North London kitchen, the first flowering of acne, some rather fetching Ikea units and a Slipknot t-shirt.

Outside the window, a wicked wind took a running jump down Alexander Palace hill, whipping along Crouch End Broadway, making a couple of local underfed aesthetes unsteady on their feet. Double-parked, my slightly-lower-than-middle-of-the-range Ford Fiesta waited for some action beyond the hot wax it had been lavished with earlier that day. Upstairs, in his room, the Thunderbolt to my Lightfoot attempted to master the riff to Metallicas Enter Sandman. North London slept. Nothing continued to not happen. I decided, on balance, Id settle for it.

Then again, by this point I would have settled for just about anything.

My whole life, Id been planning some kind of four-wheeled journey into the unknown, but as the years piled up that is, the years when it is still dignified to drive around for the hell of it while dressed in a loud shirt, listening to even louder music my Great Rock And Roll Road Trip had become in danger of turning into My Great Bag Of Hot Air. The original idea had been something fairly vague that Id dreamt up on receiving my first plastic pedal car as a seven-year-old: I would drive, anywhere, mindlessly, just for the thrill of driving. In my late teens, this was modified to the clich of all Great Road Trip clichs: I would fly to New York, buy an ineffably cool second-hand car and drive cross-country to San Francisco, picking up hobos, buskers and itinerant jazz musicians on the way. However, in 1997, as I was travelling back from an Italian holiday, the plane had been struck by lightning, plummeting 1,000 terrifying feet before righting itself. As a result, Id vowed not to take to the air for the foreseeable future, thus making America a less viable option. Additionally, Id finally got around to reading Jack Kerouacs On The Road, rather than just talking about it, and discovered it was a vacuous pile of antelope droppings.

More recently, my thoughts had turned towards the winding B-roads and endless Little Chefs of my homeland. Everyone talked about the American Dream, but what about the British equivalent? Did it exist and, if so, what did it look like? How come you never saw rootless outlaw types cruising through the Lake District just for the existential hell of it? Was drifting banned in Britain, and had someone forgotten to tell me?

I wanted to discover the real Britain. Whatever this was, I felt certain it was out there: a rock and roll place every bit as weird as the backwoods America that writers like Hunter S. Thompson and Tom Wolfe had discovered. But more than anything I wanted an excuse to drive around aimlessly, getting lost in places with names like Snafbury and Little Piddling. All I needed was someone willing to ride shotgun: a relentlessly up-for-it soulmate the kind of partner whod be willing to help me out of a gambling debt, come to my aid in a tussle with Hells Angels, or, more importantly, navigate me out of a council estate on the outskirts of Hull. But circumstances had changed since Id begun to lay down the plans for my Great Rock And Roll Road Trip. Many of the friends whod shared with me in the nihilists vision of films like Vanishing Point and Two-Lane Blacktop as twenty-year-olds now held down steady jobs in insurance and the civil service. Most of them simply couldnt afford to up sticks and abandon their jobs and girlfriends for six months. The ones who could, meanwhile, just couldnt see the same romance in driving up the M4 listening to Fairport Convention as theyd once seen in cruising along Route 66 listening to The Byrds. There were still the isolated loose cannons I knew I could count on, of course: Colin and Surreal Ed, a couple of relentlessly cheerful womanisers with a penchant for jumping out of cars at red traffic lights and running into nearby woodland for no apparent reason. These, though, were the kind of insatiable single and free party animals for whom a good book and an early night meant the latest issue of Mayfair and only two nightclubs instead of the normal four. In other words, great company in moderation but a veritable health hazard if you were talking about six months on the road, and not one I could afford as a married man with a mortgage and five pet cats to support.

In short, I was beginning to lose hope.

The call from Jenny couldnt have come at a more desperate moment. Jenny, I could be fairly certain, wasnt the type of woman who would jump out of your car at a red light and hide in adjacent shrubbery. She was fifty-three, for a start the same age as my parents and in full-time employment as a college lecturer. Id known her since my third birthday party, when, seated in her lap, Id smeared an ice cream sundae in her hair for reasons I can only remember as to see what it felt like. Since then, Id enjoyed the kind of respectfully distant relationship with her that one enjoys with surprisingly cool friends of ones family whom one has disgraced oneself in front of. I tended to see her, when it came right down to it, at fiftieth birthday parties and weddings. Jenny liked a lot of good blues music and, unlike many of my parents other friends, still occasionally found time to go out to the cinema, but it had never occurred to me to call her up to arrange a friendly drink. You just didnt do that kind of thing with your parents mates. Besides, she and her ex-husband, Ian, had their hands full with Peter, a teenage son whom Id never met but who relatives assured me was just making the transition into the melancholy stage of adolescence. For a couple of weeks now, my parents had been hinting that she might get in touch with me with a mysterious proposal, but I couldnt guess what it could possibly be.

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