When I was twelve, I fell
in love a lot. My first big love, I’m
somewhat now embarrassed to admit, was Kirk Cameron. His dreamy, lash-y eyes, his curly locks of
hair, the impish grin… *swoon*. I bought
all the Tiger Beats I could find and plaster his mug all over my room. I would surely marry him someday.
But months later, I
tossed Kirk aside for a real man. A
grown man. A sexy, take charge man that
could kick the crap out of Mike Seaver.
Patrick Swayze. Oh yeah, he could
teach me a thing or two about the Merengue.
I ripped down every Kirk picture I owned, and replaced them with pinups
of my real love, Patrick. He was my lover that summer of 1988, and I took my
Dirty Dancing soundtrack cassette with me everywhere, even to Girl Scout camp,
where we all wanted to be Baby. I was horror stricken when I found out he was
36 years old AND married. I didn't know
which was worse. But my heartache wouldn't last long.
One day, minding my own
business (doesn't true love always work this way), I heard the most incredible
song on the radio. It was called Need
You Tonight. I had never heard so much
sultry sexiness in a song, before or since.
I found out the band was INXS (inks?) and I knew I must own this
song. Then, something magical
happened. Something that would change my
life forever. I saw the video.
It was like lightning
came and struck me, awakening every dormant feeling in my soul, all at
once. THIS was love. This was Michael.
From then on, I was a one
man woman. My heart belonged to Michael Hutchence. Soon I was saving up my allowance and
babysitting money for every cassette (they had quite a few) and every poster I
could find. I pored over the magazine index
at my middle school library in search of articles and pictures of him and the
band. I became an expert not only in all
things INXS, but also all things Australian. This was, of course before the
internet, so I had to go to great lengths (and many malls) to find my
bounty. I memorized the birth dates of
all the band members, their backgrounds and families, and I felt like I knew them.
I was a hormonal
preteen, the only child of a single mother.
My home life was, at times, rocky. I often escaped into a fantasy world where
Michael was my boyfriend, and the members of the band were the older brothers I
never had. With my Walkman at my side,
music swimming in my brain, and my eyes closed, this world became my
escape. INXS became my savior. Each member of the band had a story, partly
based in fact, but mostly based in my own imagination. Andrew Farriss (keyboard and songwriter) was
the shy one, always needing a bit of a push to have some fun. Jon Farriss (drums) was the youngest member
of the band, and therefor served as my contemporary. I just wanted to set him up with a nice
girl. Tim Farriss (Guitar), the eldest
of the Farriss brothers, was already married (I learned in my research), so he
was obviously the mature one. But he was
the biggest prankster of the lot. Kirk
Pengilly (sax and guitar) was the brainy one, a little awkward, and loved to
stay up late and have deep philosophical conversations. Garry Gary Beers (bass
guitar) was the oldest member of the band, and was practical, and just a bit
fatherly.
I was almost sure,
someday, Michael would come riding down the street in a limousine driven by
Andrew, to rescue me from my hellish angst, and we would be happy for always. I
would take care of the band, making sure they had breakfast every day. We would laugh, tease, comfort and support
each other. I was too young and naïve to
know about the Yoko Ono curse, but even if I wasn't, that would never
happen. Because the band loved me
too. They thought I was good for
Michael. They knew I would take care of
him.
My fantasy world saved
me, and carried me through to a calmer period of my life. As I began high school, INXS was still there,
Michael was still kissing me goodnight, but I was also checking out the boys
closer to my age. As I continued my journey
through adolescence, I took on real boyfriends, had real kisses, and
experienced real, heart pounding love. I
no longer relied on my fantasy, reality was exciting enough.
I graduated high school
in 1994, and began the “adult” experience.
Working, trying out community college, relationships, the whole
bit. I’ll spare you the details of my trials
and tribulations, and instead fast forward (like a cassette) to November
1997. I was 21, and I worked at a call
center. One of my coworkers, another fan
of INXS, had lost his father a few days before, and I was planning on attending
the viewing for support of my friend. I got
a call that day, from another coworker.
She told me she had a message from Tom, our mutual friend who’s father
had just passed. She told me he had
called, and that someone from INXS had died, but she couldn't remember his
name. My heart stopped.
I started naming
names. Kirk. No.
Garry. No. Tim.
No. Andrew. No.
Jon. No. Michael Hutchence. Yes.
I told her I had to
go. I turned on MTV. And it was there. Coverage of his death. I sat in stunned silence and stared at the
screen. It wasn't real. He couldn't be dead. But he was.
This was the year of death, I had decided, as just months before I
stayed up all night to watch with the world Princess Diana’s funeral on
TV.
I wore all black to work
that day, and had to break often as tears overtook me. Thankfully I had a compassionate supervisor
who didn't laugh at me when I told him the reason for my grief.
But, boys and girls, life
goes on. Life went on. I went on.
A few years later, I won tickets and backstage passes to the “Just for
Kicks” tour that INXS was doing with guest singer, Jon Stevens. I took my then boyfriend (and eventual ex-husband)
as my plus one. I was beyond excited. I
was going to meet Andrew, Jon, Tim, Kirk and Garry. These men who were my brothers, who
wallpapered my teenage room, who played the music that lulled me to sleep many
nights.
Let me tell you though,
it was odd. It was wonderful, don’t get
me wrong, but the solid fantasy I had built didn't exactly mesh with the
reality of these men. My imagination was
so strong that it was nearly fact, and when they didn't know me on sight, I was almost surprised.
Despite that, I was still
an avid fan and supporter of
INXS. And it’s true, I supported
them. When I would tell someone INXS was
my favorite band, often I would get, “didn't they die?”
No, they didn't die, their lead singer did. INXS is five other guys too. I defended their right to exist in a band
without Michael, in a world without Michael.
And after I had married my plus one, and our daughter was just a
toddler, INXS announced they would be partnering with a new reality show to find
the new lead singer of INXS. What?! I couldn't wait to watch, and neither could my plus one. I had made an INXS fan out of him, too. Just the thought that our votes matter in
such a huge decision…
We watched, and mostly
agreed. My plus one was for JD Fortune
from the start, but I favored the blond haired Marty. Eventually I was won over, as was INXS, and
JD became the new lead singer for INXS.
They came out with a new
album, and a new tour. Naturally we
went. I don’t recall being impressed. This was my third INXS show, my first was in
1993, complete with the immortal Michael.
JD fizzled out, and so
did INXS, it seemed. I didn't hear much
about them until last year, when an INXS mini-series was premiering on
Australian TV. I wanted to watch this so
bad. And I am telling you the gods
honest truth, I have never illegally downloaded anything (including music),
until the day that I downloaded the INXS mini series. I watched it twice. I read a few interviews with the band. I follow Jon on Facebook. I've read articles
written by the daughter of Garry Beers and was enlightened to learn the reality
she, her sister and mother faced as a real family of the band.
I wanted for so long to
believe in my version of them, the good-natured band of brothers, the saviors
of my preteen torment. But they were
not. They were once the Biggest Band In
The World. 25 years ago. But no more.
Michael became a
celebrity in his own right, a legend, like Jim Morrison. He was close with Bono. Was the rest of the band close with Bono, I
asked myself tonight? No. Why Michael,
because he was pretty? I don’t think
Bono is that shallow. The reason why is
because Michael, like Morrison, was a poet.
A thinker. A philosopher. Michael knew the band was losing it’s fan
base, that they could only go down.
Andrew knew this too (if the movie’s story line is true), but he seemed
the only one that was OK with that.
Whether Michael died accidentally or not doesn't matter. What
matters is that he left the game. He
will always be young. He put up a good
fight, and he was a star. But he didn't go down with the ship. And the rest of
the band, (besides Andrew it seems) are desperately
grasping at the last bits of the spoils of fame they can. It’s sad.
It’s depressing. It makes me hate INXS.
Wow, I've been close to tears while reading this. I met Michael many years ago. He gave me an unpublished cassette of their songs and wanted my opinion. I loved the name - INXS - I thought it was quirky and very clever. He was a nice man and a great friend in the short time before I left town and we unfortunately, lost contact. :(
ReplyDeleteYour writing is terrific :)