There’s only so much you can learn in one place
This line from Madonna’s ‘Jump’ seems so appropriate… and rather strangely, it came on my iTunes Shuffle as I was packing yesterday. I say ‘rather strangely’ because it was exactly the tune I was listening to as I packed to come over here - and because, clearly, it resonated both times:
<Andrea grudgingly gives Madge more credit than she really wants to>
A crescent moon has just appeared above the KL skyline, and it’s just too beautiful.
I’m planning for this to be my last post on Lost In Transposition. Thank you for reading this blog. It’s been an amazing thing, to keep it up (although I think some people who have spammed me could have helped with that issue); and I’ve been so touched by the fact that people are reading it, and by your comments, and even by your lurking. Thank you, lurkers. And thank you B, for the inspiration to do something every day.
I hope you’ll forgive me if I round the whole thing off by talking about what this whole crazy Malaysian shebang has meant to me.
<The world forgives Andrea>
So…
Musically: I have learned for the first time how to truly articulate what I do. How to articulate about jazz. How to teach jazz. How to teach. How to teach men. How to teach men who are older than me. I was only half-kidding when I compared myself to the hero of Footloose: if you thought jazz was a niche market in the West, you should try it out here. Maybe there really are six degrees of Kevin Bacon after all. And I am degree one.
It’s been great to be appreciated by a venue. For the management to love what you’re doing, and to support you to the hilt. It’s so uncommon, and to have the rein and the support to do what you feel is right to do, has felt… well, wonderful. And I will desperately miss the opportunity to make music six nights a week. Because of this, I am, without a shadow of a doubt, a better singer now than when I came. My chops are better, my confidence sky-high. And I realise why yesterday’s experience at the street market, and the previous night’s on the bandstand - especially when we just jammed - meant so much to me. It’s because, feeling that way, I felt like anyone for whom music is a full-time occupation. Like all the people who I’ve seen performing who studied music and so take it for granted that it’s OK to make music like this, who stand up there with fellow musicians like it’s the most natural thing in the world. For the first time truly in my life, I feel that way about making music. And that feels incredibly liberating. It feels amazing. Thank you, thank you, T, for giving me the opportunity to feel this. It’s been a privilege. And a blast
.
Culturally, I have come to a place where many values differ from mine. Where it’s taken as read that someone is religious unless you find out otherwise; where the ruling party controls the media; where dissent and protest and real analysis is lurking, and as the recent election proved, becoming ever-more powerful, but is not acknowledged nor encouraged as some sort of right. It has at once opened my eyes and made me realise how sheltered my experience has been up to now; yet also made me appreciate how lucky I am - we are - in so much of what we take for granted in the West.
I have come from a developed nation to a developing nation, and seen some of the differences which that entails. T and I talked just yesterday, for example, about how he just doesn’t have time to think about ‘big things’. He literally spends all his time thinking about his own situation, his own survival - and told me that that is very common here. People are literally trying to survive. Compare and contrast with the West - where the Roman Empire, for example, gave us infrastructure; and was later followed the Renaissance and the Enlightenment, so that Europe went on to produce Michaelangelo and Leonardo Da Vinci and Voltaire and Mozart and Beethoven and so on and so on… While South-East Asia was simply trying to survive, let alone go to concerts and eat grapes. It’s really no wonder that even major capitals like Kuala Lumpur and Singapore are relative cultural deserts (and by that I mean lacking in music and arts venues, museums, galleries and such) - or why as a result, why I couldn’t live here permanently. Unlike most ex-pats, it seems, I couldn’t just choose somewhere because of the weather and the shopping.
And a brief note about music and culture: I’ve realised that the high import taxes on CDs here utterly affects the musical tastes of the nation. Malaysians buy their albums in pirated form, where stall-holders on the street sell the latest CDs for 4 Ringgit (60p); whereas in record stores like Tower Records they cost the same as in the West (ie £8). The result? Everyone listens to the pirated music. Which means that they listen to the music people think it’s worth pirating. The big sellers: Kelly Clarkson. Britney. The Eagles. Michael Sodding Buble. No-one’s going to pirate a copy of Coltrane’s Giant Steps. So nobody in Malaysia is going to get to hear it unless they have money. Result? It’s difficult to get jazz gigs and clubs going. The audience just isn’t there. Because the audience isn’t listening to the music to the first place.
And finally, on the music and culture tip
: this experience and this blog has led me to write for the first time about jazz, about the music I make, and as a result write for www.jazz.com. It’s led a heavyweight jazz critic and writer to praise my writing to the skies, and thats’wonderful. As some dead guy once said.
And finally, finally… The personal stuff.
Well. Erm….
I’m glad I came here alone. I think it’s led to all kinds of meetings and experiences that might not have happened otherwise. I’ve said ‘yes’ to just about everything and met all kinds of people I would never meet in London. And I will miss them terribly.
As I’ve explained recently to several people here: my life here isn’t just my life back home but with nice weather. It’s utterly, utterly different. I don’t meet CEOs. I don’t walk downstairs to a swimming pool. I don’t leave my towels on the bathroom floor, only to find them replaced by new ones on my towel rail (not unless some miraculous deal has been struck between my letting agent and my landlady).
I have, I think, managed the depression I’ve been going through. I have come here. I have jumped. I have made friends, made music, met wonderful people, had the utter privilege of doing something I love, night after night. I have realised how much I love my friends and family (and the musicians I work with!). And I have been myself throughout. And in the words of the song: That’s all.











April 1st, 2008 at 4.28pm
What an experience you’ve had. Can’t wait to see you again(and hear you sing !) Hope your return will be the start of something big.
In between the Romans and the Renaissance came the Dark Ages, of course. But not for you !
Love you lots, see you soon.
April 1st, 2008 at 8.43pm
Congrats for embracing it and loving it. Look forward to hearing all about it. Oh, we know all that. You need to go out for drinks with your friends who’ve not been reading this otherwise it will be “I know, I know, I know…”
April 1st, 2008 at 10.03pm
thank you both :-). and you’re right, Nick. anytime while I’ve been out here that I’ve had a phonecall or an email exchange with someone back home, they go: “So how are you? Wait: I know how you are…”
April 1st, 2008 at 10.21pm
thanks for the bon voyage wishes, everyone. the more cunning among you may have noticed that I’m commenting exactly when I should be in the air. this is because I am, indeed, an April Fool, and got my flight time wrong. I leave at around midnight, not 6pm - meaning I could have had more than four hours sleep, and more than five minutes in the swimming pool. but at least I got it the right way round, and guessed a flight six hours earlier than my actual one. I once completely misread the departure time of B’s return flight to New York, and thus kept the poor boy in the country for another night.
I really should have learned my lesson…
and just because I wrote that the above post was my last one: a final comment (as opposed to another final post). thank you everyone for reading my blog, and for all the care and love you’ve shown me through through your comments and emails. I’m looking forward to coming home mainly because I know I’m coming home to you :-).
April 1st, 2008 at 10.27pm
And there I was, returning to ask, “Aren’t you supposed to be on a plane?” and imagining you sitting there getting emails through the handset phone in the seat or by urgent courier from the pilot. Or something. x
April 1st, 2008 at 10.37pm
yes, while I shout “Don’t you know who I am?! I’m a singer/writer/blogger, dammit!!” at the airline stewards.
April 2nd, 2008 at 2.57am
Looking forward to seeing you, my friend. Thank you for the blog. I’ll miss it. And how proud of you I’ve been. Inspiring all the way through. And of course you met Bill Murray in the lift. The planets must be in alignment. See you soon! xxx
April 2nd, 2008 at 4.08am
Yo Andrea, you did it! (to paraphrase Rocky)
Look forward to seeing you for a cocktail or two back in London. Perhaps we can disguise it on a working day in Dennis.
See you soon…
Mat
April 2nd, 2008 at 3.18pm
thanks guys. I will miss writing it!
I forgot to say in my final post: I will go back to keeping a blog (of sorts) over at http://www.andreamann.com. I won’t be posting daily as here - probably weekly - and unfortunately you can’t leave comments, but if you want to know what I’m up to, etc., go check there from time to time.
and if/when I come back to do another stint in Asia - which seems very likely - I’ll just pick this blog up again. With a big ‘2′ written across the ‘Lost In Transposition’ heading. quite possibly on top of my arse.
xx
April 3rd, 2008 at 3.00pm
Andrea, its been an absolute pleasure reading your blog from Sydney… a very pleasent distraction from the everyday grind. Congratulations for daring to take that step into the unknown and going solo in a different countries… I did a similar thing (several times actually) and loved every minute of it.
Going to miss the daily machinations of the only Jazz diva in Penang I know. You’ve actually inspired me to go out and buy a Coltrane album…
But most of all I’m going to miss hiding the picture of your bum in the header on my laptop in the office… people do give me the funniest looks.
April 3rd, 2008 at 3.34pm
aww.. thanks, Nathan. hope all is good with you and yours in Sydney.
I too had to scroll down veeeery quickly when I was writing this blog from the hotel restaurant/bar/lobby. no such worries with my website.
re. your first Coltrane album: I’m not hugely au fait with his work, but I can definitely recommend ‘John Coltrane And Johnny Hartman’ as an introduction. it’s just beautiful work from both men, and very accessible - http://www.amazon.com/John-Coltrane-Johnny-Hartman/dp/B000003N7K/ref=pd_sim_m_img_2
of course, he also played on Miles Davis’s ‘Kind Of Blue’ - and if you don’t have that, I recommend you go buy it. immediately. and play it every single day, just like Quincy Jones (apparently).
Andrea x
March 13th, 2010 at 10.00pm
I’m having a problem viewing your site in my browser. Could you please check this. My browser is Opera 7 btw.
May 27th, 2010 at 3.41am
thanks for the bon voyage wishes, everyone. the more cunning among you may have noticed that I’m commenting exactly when I should be in the air. this is because I am, indeed, an April Fool, and got my flight time wrong. I leave at around midnight, not 6pm - meaning I could have had more than four hours sleep, and more than five minutes in the swimming pool. but at least I got it the right way round, and guessed a flight six hours earlier than my actual one. I once completely misread the departure time of B’s return flight to New York, and thus kept the poor boy in the country for another night. I really should have learned my lesson…
+1
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