Bob Piper has been a Labour Councillor for the Abbey
Ward in Sandwell, West Midlands, for 10 years. He is a lifelong supporter of Aston Villa Football Club and a follower of Yorkshire County Cricket Club.
The views expressed here are mine in a personal capacity, not those of the Labour Party, Sandwell MBC, Aston Villa or Yorkshire County Cricket Club. Get it! Mine... just mine!
Promoted by Bob Piper of 115 Barclay Rd, B67 5JZ on behalf of the Labour Party, care of 39 Victoria Street London, SW1H 0HA . Hosted (printed) by Swaithe Internet Solutions who are not responsible for any of the contents of these posts.
Please note however, that The Labour Party is not responsible for the content of this website or individual posts as, unless specifically stated, I am writing solely in a personal and individual capacity.
Promoted by Bob Piper of 115 Barclay Rd, B67 5JZ on behalf of the Labour Party, care of 39 Victoria Street London, SW1H 0HA . Hosted (printed) by Swaithe Internet Solutions who are not responsible for any of the contents of these posts.
Please note however, that The Labour Party is not responsible for the content of this website or individual posts as, unless specifically stated, I am writing solely in a personal and individual capacity.
The following was left as a comment on the Adrian Mitchell R.I.P. post by the legendary Attila the Stockbroker, but it deserves its own piece:
On Sun 21st December around 1am, I got back from a 600 mile round trip to Prenton Park, Tranmere, where I'd just seen Brighton lose 1-0 to a goal scored in the second minute of injury time, having seconds before been denied a penalty so mind-numbingly self-evident a lobotomised, blindfolded, myopic terrapin could have given it with its eyes NAILED shut. As a result, we'd just sunk into the relegation zone for the first time this season. I was knackered, rather pissed, and even more rather pissed off.
Much to my surprise, when I got upstairs my wife Robina was still awake. "'I'm afraid I've got some sad news" she said. "Adrian Mitchell died last night".
It was one of those moments when everything else fell away, including - especially - the temporal inadequacies of my football team. Three days short of the sixth anniversary of Joe Strummer's death, another lifelong inspiration gone.
Immediately I thought of the last time we'd seen Adrian, his eyes glistening with emotion as he received a standing ovation from a packed tent at last summer's Latitude Festival. It was a fitting memory, a moment we will never forget. What a life, and what a hero of poetry.
When I was in my teens, Adrian Mitchell showed a rather cynical John Baine that a contemporary poet could be relevant - could talk about the things that mattered and inspire those who listened. When, in 1980, I took up the gauntlet as Attila the Stockbroker, his immortal slogan. 'Most people ignore most poetry because most poetry ignores most people' became my universal rallying call, and is to this day. It's in the front of my new book, on my myspace site, and was recently turned into a T shirt by the Philosophy Football people. Mark told me that made Adrian very happy.
Poems like 'Victor Jara of Chile' 'On the Beach at Cambridge' and 'Tell me lies about Vietnam' - to name three of many - roared (in Adrian�s modest, quiet, understated way) against unspeakable evil. Other poems, like 'Human Beings' and 'Song in Space' celebrated our common humanity in a simple, moving way. And that, really, was what he was about: celebrating humanity, and raging about the unspeakable things human beings do to each other. Adrian reached out to people. He cared about people. He was a pacifist, and a really good bloke. I was privileged to do quite a few gigs with him over the years, and when I started the poetry/music series I ran for ten years here in my home village of Southwick, he was the first person I booked.
At the end of the Latitude gig I shook his hand as, surrounded by well wishers and overcome by the moment, he disappeared towards the book signing tent. Afterwards I emailed to congratulate him and promised him a spot at our Glastonwick Festival next year. He emailed back to say thanks, and that Latitude had been one of his best gigs for years.
A fitting goodbye. I shall read some of his poems at our festival, and shall be organising a memorial gig in his honour here in Sussex.