Nostalgia, royal navel-gazing and angst: modern Britain is in danger of repeating the mistakes of 40 years ago

Midway through last week, I spent a couple of hours in Redditch, 15 or so miles south of Birmingham. My daughter plays the drums, and she wanted to see the new statue of the late John Bonham, who grew up in Redditch, joined the hugely successful hard rock group Led Zeppelin, and died a tragic death in 1980. We found the impressive memorial in the local market square – an obviously popular meeting place, sullied by a conspicuous line of vacant shops.

Redditch has had a rough time of late. Even now, its Covid infection rate is among the highest in the country. Like so many places, the town has said goodbye to its branch of Marks & Spencer, and is about to lose its Debenhams department store too. In the spring sunshine, it felt pinched and forlorn. This was thrown into sharper relief by what we then listened to on the car radio: endless chatter about the death of the Duke of Edinburgh, the supposed magic and wonder of the royal family, and the arrangements for his funeral.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

Night tube service to resume on two lines next month

TfL says resumption on Central and Victoria lines will make journeys safer,…

This Tory conference was the wildest yet – fuelled by caffeine, adrenaline and warm wine | Katy Balls

U-turns, blue-on-blue attacks, Liz Truss on the rack … one aide described…

The power of music in John Hughes films: ‘When you hear those songs you see those moments’

The director’s movies provided an intense emotive soundtrack to teenagers’ lives. A…

A bellwether seat? Labour candidate sees beating Boris Johnson as key to power

Danny Beales, who hopes to oust former PM, says Uxbridge and South…