The Secret Life of Love Songs
By Tim Lucas
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About this ebook
IN THE THEATER OF YOUR MIND, The Lecturer takes the stage to remark on the history and variety of the Love Song, pausing now and again to perform examples of his own. Each song is then overturned and interpreted like a Tarot card, the eventual spread telling the story of a fateful meeting and the metaphysical journey that overtook his emptiness after completing an album some ten years in the making.
Originally written for a cancelled anthology of stories inspired by the work of Nick Cave, The Secret Life of Love Songs is the first new fiction by Tim Lucas (Throat Sprockets, The Book of Renfield) to appear in sixteen years.
"A meditation on modern love and its antecedents that is also a poignant evocation, a compassionate portrait of an obsessive, a tribute to popular music in all its forms, a redemptive fantasy, and even more than this in less than 80 pages of fine prose—I can only marvel. Give me some of your talent, Tim!"
—Ramsey Campbell
"An enthralling reflection on the process of creativity, the mechanics of a love song, and the workings of the human heart. It's achingly beautiful. I was pulled in and completely carried away."
—Pierre Fournier, artist and screenwriter, co-creator of Red Ketchup
"It is the goal of any writer to successfully describe the indescribable. A taste, a touch, a fear, a heartache. Usually, it takes dozens of pages of character-building and scene-setting before a reader can attune to the author's wavelength, but in this particular instance, Tim Lucas has described, defined and portrayed love with masterful tiny details amid brilliant broad strokes. He brings to life the majesty, the humility, the mystification of love in a sensual, yet chaste and poetic way. A delicious read."
—Elizabeth Engstrom, author of Lizzie Borden and When Darkness Loves Us
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The Secret Life of Love Songs - Tim Lucas
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
THIS NOVELLA WAS originally written between 2008 and 2012 for a projected anthology of fiction inspired by the music of Nick Cave that never materialized. Asked to pick something of his for the basis of my story, I chose his lecture The Secret Life of the Love Song, a spoken-word recording encompassing five songs which was issued on CD by King Mob in 2000.
Should any clarification be necessary, this is not that.
This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance of characters to actual persons, living or dead, is a blend of the tributary and the purely coincidental.
‘A Broken Appointment’ by Thomas Hardy quoted from Collected Poetry (London: MacMillan and Company, 1919).
Five of the songs included within this work—‘Desert Mariner’, ‘Under the Nine’, ‘Ambidextrous Heart’, ‘The Smell of Cedar (A Walk Through the Woods)’ and ‘Trust In Love’—were originally written for this novella as poetry. They were later set to music by Dorothy Moskowitz and the author from 2017-2020. A sixth song, ‘Broken’ was also co-written by Dorothy and I, this time in adaptation of the aforementioned Thomas Hardy poem. All of our songs are published and copyrighted 2020 by Oh You Kid Publishing, BMI.
PROLOGUE
THE HOUSE LIGHTS DIM, severing innumerous whispered conversations had amounted collectively to a low yet excited roar. Emerging from the wings at stage right is the Lecturer, his eagerly awaited entrance warmly received by his audience. As he hastens into public view, he clutches to his breast a manila folder containing the typewritten substance of this evening’s talk. The first thing his audience notices about him, seen in person this way, is his peculiar way of walking. Bent over almost by half, with his forehead leading the way, he appears to be urged forward by the divining rod of his own stubborn will.
He nods a shy and mildly flustered acknowledgement of the warm reception as his inclining gait leads him to the illuminated lectern at centre stage. Once there, he taps the microphone, opens his manuscript, then does the improper thing in this temple of academia by lighting a Consolations cigarette. With this insolent gesture, the Lecturer owns the room.
Familiar from the covers of myriad recorded works, the Lecturer’s face is pallid and angular, his brooding eyes a blue bright enough to be seen without binoculars from as many as twenty rows away, conveying the soul of a poet below a hawkish, hooded brow. His long hair, as black as his suit of clothes, is worn straight and swept back, overhanging his white collar like sharpened teeth. His outfit is not quite tailored to his frame and suggests the hand-me-down property of an evangelical father or perhaps an older brother in the funeral business. He has the cultivated look of a refugee from a lost manuscript of Flannery O’Connor, a harbinger unhinged by the calamitous force of his own prophecies.
When he finally speaks, it is with a stentorian solemnity that borders on the penitent.
Good evening, he begins, shielding his eyes with one hand while squinting past the stage lights for any glimpse of friendly faces that might be tucked deep into the attending shadows. As you know, the subject of my lecture tonight is the Love Song. Though the songs I’ve written and recorded over the past thirty years might easily be mistaken for something else, as the growing body of criticism about them tends to support, I have always considered the great bulk of them to be love songs. The stories they tell may be dark and weird, sometimes no one emerges from the lyric alive or even sane, but underlying all of them is a common germ I consider central to all my best writing: that galvanic moment when two strangers meet and are forever changed—or, to use the Biblical term, smited (or should that be ‘smitten’?)—by the experience.
To paraphrase a well-worn but eternally apt lyric, the Love Song is a many splendoured thing. There are love songs that declare love, define, describe, declaim and even deny love. Others lament the loss of love, the bungling of love, the messy untimeliness of love.
The most popular ones tend to celebrate the miracle of reciprocated love, while a great many more wallow in the morass of unrequited affections, twisting the knives left to rot in hearts that might otherwise cease to feel anything more whatsoever. There are love songs for Muses, for valentines and mistresses, for mothers and fathers, for brothers and sisters; there are songs that soar with the love of God and fellow veterans. There is an interesting paucity of love songs addressed to husbands and wives.
All love songs have a purpose, but these purposes are not always the same. Some render honour, while others aspire to seduce. Some entice us to slip away, while others suggest we do it in the road. Some look away from the rhythmic animal rutting that those eighteen-minute Isaac Hayes tracks have been known to induce, compiling instead the sentimental lists of love’s ephemera—the cigarettes that bear the lipstick traces, the airline tickets to romantic places. Some love songs strain all the cords in their necks to confirm for us, in our romantic desolation, that love still exists.
There is no love in this world anymore,
sings Pete Shelley of the Buzzcocks, knowing full well this can’t be true in a world where such a despairing sentiment can still be sung with such feeling. The singer stands as proof of the contrary. Some love songs serve to sweeten the tears that contented love causes to well in our eyes, while others offer skeleton keys for those locks buried deep within us that hold back the most stubborn tears. There are love songs that aren’t even love songs; that, when their first familiar notes are transmitted by our car radio, makes us roll down our window, no matter how cold the evening, and hang our heads outside