Tuesday, April 7

neighbours

A recent post by ion about noise transmission between tenement flats made we wonder why the neighbours never murdered me when I lived in Edinburgh. They never once complained about my off-key late-night saxophone practice. Even when Vinnie and his moll and Mary Hopkin and I spent several hilarious drunken hours after the pubs closed, dragging an abandoned piano up four flights of stone steps to my place, nobody said a word. One guy in his pyjamas did come out on the landing for a look at the commotion, but then went meekly back into his house. Hungover the next morning, we were faced with the reality of a heavily damaged piano in the living room, too heavy to move when sober. Someone suggested breaking it up into smaller pieces, but how do you chop up a cast iron frame?

To his credit, Vinnie came back the next night with a 4-inch junior hacksaw, with which he failed to make even the slightest scratch in the frame. So after a few home brews we started on something easier, the piano strings. Sawing through tensioned steel wires could be art if you're John Cage, but the whiplash is something awful.

I ended up living with that piano taking up half a bedroom, for several years. When I finally moved out I had to pay a team of guys to carry it back down the stairs.

But I was mostly a model neighbour, apart from the piano and the sax, and the night we launched fireworks out the kitchen window. I was too inhibited in those days to make bonking noises, but the guy in the creaky bed next door used to take so long getting off I felt like banging on the wall, but I didn't. I wouldn't have been so considerate if I'd known he would end up burgling me through the skylight one morning, while I was in the house. Surely that's not neighbourly?

6 comments:

  1. Albert? He burglarised you! He did not, did he? I hope he got the jail!Hotboy

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  2. I say!

    "Dragging an abandoned piano up four flights of stone steps." - We've all been there.

    By the way, was Hotters your neighbour?

    MM III

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  3. Albert? Would you like to go to Skye this summer? I need someone to speak to someone from America. You can have my room for free as I will be trying to swim to America almost as soon as I get there. You should come to Skye. Bring some young, nubile women with you as well. That would help! HOtboy

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  4. I say!

    I believe that the Duneditin 09 Call for Papers will be out soon. The location for this year's convention, as I understand it, is the International Conference and Leisure Centre: Ardvasar Hotel, Skye.

    MM III

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  5. Sawing through tensioned steel wires could be art if you're John Cage, but the whiplash is something awful.

    What an appealing sentence. I shall dine out on this.

    Duneditin on Skye? As long as it's not midgie season. In 2004 my dear (and not evil) step-mother was bitten off the island, after my misguided attempt to enamour her with the scenery during the height of the season... we all fled with Hb's of 5.0.

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  6. mingers, I'm not sure what you're insinuating, but I have never shared a toothbrush with that man.

    hotters - if I could get some young, nubile women, would I waste my time reading and writing this tripe? But reading between the lines I think you're inviting Lee Ann to teach you the butterfly position. She was state champ, as you may know.

    ion, I'm saving up for duneditin 2010, but have a talisker for me.

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