Drum Magazine Issue 2 | Page 5

Editor’s Thoughts the over-representation of black students in the low ability ‘C’ and ‘D’ band classes. Of the approximately 160 black first year students at our school (40%), there were only three in ‘A’ band classes (0.75%). At the start of term there had been just two. My primary school teacher had developed a notion that I was ‘educationally subnormal’ and in need of remedial classes (Special Ed.) The term ‘ESN’ was then a popular label given to black children, particularly boys and those who were new to British schools. As low expectations lead to low achievements, this ‘self-fulfilling prophecy’ may well have become fact had it not been for my mother’s tenacity, regular elocution lessons, and private one-to-one tuition from a band of strict catholic nuns. Three weeks into school, and I am moved from the ‘C’ to the ‘B’ to the ‘A’ band. One year later and a black girl joins our ranks. We are now four black pupils out of 90 ‘A’ band students in our age group (4.4%). We saw Hyacinth only in classes, but Marsid, Steven, and I, hung out both during and after school. Since Steven’s mum would not let him roam too far from ‘Snobs Ville’ where they lived, more often than not, we traded him for Andrew – the school’s champion sportsman and a ‘B’ band student. Times had changed. It was 1979 and Margaret Thatcher had just become Britain’s first woman prime minister. We were now turning sixteen, gaining in confidence, and approaching manhood. Like the new prime minister, we too wanted to explore new territory, to experience things our parents had never dared consider. We were black but we were born here. There was nothing we felt we could not do in our own country. Then as the pulse of black ‘disco’ and ‘dance’ music began to permeate the club scene of Britain’s major cities, we found in its rhythm our raison d’être. Zoom-Zooms nightclub was nowhere near where we lived. We had each travelled our various miles to get there, but since they played the best jazzfunk in a ten-mile radius of Lewisham town centre on a Monday night, all the ‘dance freaks’ came out this way to party. We three knew that if we were lucky, we would get the last night-bus outside the club straight to the safety of multiracial Lewisham where we could bus, taxi or walk it home. We kissed our white girls goodnight, but ‘lady-luck’ it seemed was not on our side. We had to wait for a bus on a dark street in Eltham. If you were black, sixteen, and travelling across London in 1979, you quickly learnt to sense where your face was not wanted. Eltham was such a place. It is today one of the few parts » 3