Saturday 9 February 2013

 To a certain extent I was that kid who came from an information poor home whose parents were not into education at all ,not least because they had one disabled child, me, and another with learning difficulties due to epilepsy. In the 1970s the library in Richmond in Yorkshire was very useful to me. In my early 20s the library in York was absolutely brilliant and I read an awful lot of history, religion, economics, psychology and so on. I can honestly say that without York library and the encouragement of friends at the time like Joe James, Tom Owen and Ian Fletcher I would not have gone to York University. Every time I walk past the Central library in York I have great feelings of affection for it.

But today things are different. If the Internet existed in 1976 when I started to depend on books I would have barely used the library. Not only that: I was working over that period and if there had been an Amazon around I would have bought books instead of getting them from the library. As much as I have a high regard for any place which supplies information to people I do not think people on low incomes in particular are best served by others telling them to get their information from the library.  Internet access to the home for all has to be the way as well as enough money to purchase books if they haven't been digitised . Because if you think about it a public library would never be able to meet the amount of demand I hope to see coming from all people young and old : only the Internet and fine companies like Amazon which are conduits for all those great authors and publishing houses to get information out to us. As I said before more political imagination is needed in this.

I can honestly see libraries being redefined in the future as community spaces for people to do e.g. Open University degrees in a decentralised education system. I see libraries now possibly developing into community spaces where people can get together to talk and study. Once all books are digitised library's as we know it will vanish but there will be places of learning where the only physical repository of learning will be the computers and people. Sorry folks but is the way I see it: that is my community outlook and the one that I hope for which will be best for all people not just the few. There will be plenty of jobs for everybody as community enablers in this. After all, I have just got a job as a community enabler for Learning Disabled people.
Last night, Fiona and I had a really good time at the Basement in York. There were four bands on and I enjoyed them all but we had particularly gone to listen to Sarah Horn and James Cudworth and they were really good. I loved how raw and fresh it sounded  a real sitting on the edge of your seat feeling which are the is the best musical  experience of all for me. Great stuff!

 A nice surprise were the Buffalo Skinners a country pop band I think, but with excellent vocal harmonies, a stunningly on time and on it drummer some really good instrumental performances as well. If they start to do their own material and are as good as writing songs as they are playing them they will go a long way.

Before the Basement we had a nice romantic time in the Cross Keys pub just enjoying the ambience. York is a lot busier at night than it used to be and when I walked around for 20 min to stretch my legs I was amazed how many  scantily clad young men and women were walking from from club to club. It's different from what I expected but they seemed happy and were enjoying themselves which was nice. A good night out.