A tune that this country is humming under its breath
When you travel slower, the country gets larger.
Stopping off at so many places along the way, Exeter is a really long way from Newton Abbot, Bristol is a really long way from Exeter. You realise that each of these places is a world, the world of the people who live here and do their best to make life work in the conditions in which they find themselves.
Seeing news clips of the party leaders climbing out of helicopters or stepping off intercity trains, it feels like they are whizzing up and down a different country, a smaller country, a country where most of the places we are visiting don’t matter very much.
Travelling up through Somerset yesterday, we got off the train at Highbridge & Burnham-on-Sea and went looking for a spot to play. At the Boathouse Cafe, we asked where we could find the centre. “Well, this is the centre!” said Denville. And the way he said it, it felt obvious: at this moment, this cafe, this table at which he was sitting, this was the centre, so this was where we were going to play.
A few times over the first two days, we’ve found ourselves playing at cafes like this, and they do feel like centres, places where people come to be human together, to eat breakfast, drink a cup of tea, hang out, talk about what’s going on, acknowledge each other’s existence. It’s like they are centres of power, but a different kind of power to the one that the politicians are fighting for.
Every conversation we have is different. But there are echoes that keep coming back, that keep coming back.
People start off curious and cautious. They see us coming a mile off, the technicolor outfits, the huge #dontjustvote stickers on our instrument cases. Sometimes they recognise us off The Voice.
They want to know what we’re doing, why we’re doing it, and that means we have to keep asking ourselves those questions, figuring out the answers as we go along.
They want to know what we’re selling, what we’re trying to persuade them of, and we tell them really we just want to start conversations, to meet people, to find out what’s going on in this country now, what this election actually means.
When they start talking to us, they usually start with a flat statement, something definitive. “I never vote.” “They’re all the same.” “There’s no point, is there?” But as they realise we’re actually interested, the way they talk changes, something else comes out. You can hear how much they care.
Everyone we meet feels disillusioned, disengaged, disenfranchised. They all feel like they’re not being heard. A lot of them aren’t voting. Yet they also believe that we as people do have power, they just can’t see a route to change that goes through the ballot box.
We’re not pretending we’ve got any answers. We’re definitely not pretending that wearing fluourescent tights and playing a song in the street is a way to change things. But it’s a way in, a way to start meeting people, catching little snatches of a tune that this country is humming under its breath, that nobody’s quite remembered the words to yet.
Yesterday afternoon, we found ourselves in the Refresh cafe in Bedminster, so deep in conversation, we had to run off at the end to catch our train. As we left, we could hear Simon calling after us. “Without small cogs, the big cogs ain’t gonna work!”