It had the biggest fishing fleet in the country, the largest gasworks in the world – and wastelands full of things to smash. The singer revisits the landscape his childhood

It was a strange feeling to lie abed on foggy nights in my childhood and hear ships’ horns echoing through the empty streets, the mournful sound carrying through the cold, still air. Living in an east London suburb, I was used to falling asleep to the sound of traffic and trains, but boats? Their voices in the mist were a ghostly reminder of a time when our town was home to the biggest fishing fleet in England.

I recently cast my mind back to those formative years while writing an Ode to Essex for a series of essays to be broadcast on Radio 3, exploring the nature of this much-maligned county.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

FBI informant charged with lying about Bidens’ role in Ukraine business

Alexander Smirnov falsely said executives linked to energy firm Burisma paid Joe…

Biggest art sale in history as Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen’s collection fetches $1.5bn

Works by Georges Seurat, Paul Cézanne, Vincent van Gogh and Gustav Klimt…

Study: ‘gamechanger’ diabetes drugs cost up to 400 times more than needed

Drug companies urged to ‘release stranglehold’ on medicines such as Ozempic and…