Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Get unlimited access to 10,000+ magazines, newspapers and Premium stories for just

$149.99
 
$74.99/Year

Try GOLD - Free

Leaving it all on the park

New Zealand Listener

|

June - 1-7 2024

After cancer treatment, Graeme Downes takes stock of a musical life leading The Verlaines and lecturing future generations of songwriters.

- GRAHAM REID

Leaving it all on the park

From his home on the Kapiti Coast, Graeme Downes sounds much as he ever did: astute, casually intellectual, peppering his digressive conversation with droll social and political observations, and noting his current reading has been Shakespearean scholar George Wilson Knight's 1948 essay Christ and Nietzsche.

"I'm also fond of Shostakovich's letters to [critic] Isaac Glickman. They're very polite in the first half of the book because it's the Soviet Union era and you don't trust anybody. Then they get more and more frank," he laughs.

This is familiar Downes and it's as if nothing has changed. But just about everything has.

"Yeah, the body's a bit fucked around but the brain's still pretty good," he says, with masterful understatement.

As Dr Graeme Downes, a respected teacher and musicologist at the University of Otago, he ran a parallel life steering the much-admired rock band The Verlaines, named for the 19th-century French Symbolist poet.

He retired from public life almost four years ago after a diagnosis of oesophageal cancer. He and Jo - his wife of 42 years who managed The Verlaines' career - moved to Ōtaki to be close to their two daughters and grandchildren, who live in Wellington.

"It's been three years since the operation," he says flatly, "although [the cancer] could always come back. I'm very much a reduced human being but I've had three years and am very grateful for that. But there's no point in sugar-coating it.

"I can hardly pick up my Gibson [guitar] these days because it's too heavy so I'm never going to be able to thrash around like I used to."

And in The Verlaines, he certainly did that. In his memoir Positively George Street, musician Matthew Bannister - of The Verlaines' contemporaries Sneaky Feelings - referred to Downes as "smouldering and Byronic" and "he whipped himself into an expressionistic frenzy on stage and dropped literary references by the bucketload".

MORE STORIES FROM New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener

Down to earth diva

One of the great singers of our time, Joyce DiDonato is set to make her New Zealand debut with Berlioz.

time to read

8 mins

29 November-December 5 2025

New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener

Tamahori in his own words

Opening credits

time to read

5 mins

29 November-December 5 2025

New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener

Thought bubbles

Why do chewing gum and doodling help us concentrate?

time to read

3 mins

29 November-December 5 2025

New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener

The Don

Sir Donald McIntyre, 1934-2025

time to read

2 mins

29 November-December 5 2025

New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener

I'm a firestarter

Late spring is bonfire season out here in the sticks. It is the time of year when we rural types - even we half-baked, lily-livered ones who have washed up from the city - set fire to enormous piles of dead wood, felled trees and sundry vegetation that have been building up since last summer, or perhaps even the summer before.

time to read

2 mins

29 November-December 5 2025

New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener

Salary sticks

Most discussions around pay equity involve raising women's wages to the equivalent of men's. But there is an alternative.

time to read

3 mins

29 November-December 5 2025

New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener

THE NOSE KNOWS

A New Zealand innovation is clearing the air for hayfever sufferers and revolutionising the $30 billion global nasal decongestant market.

time to read

2 mins

29 November-December 5 2025

New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener

View from the hilltop

A classy Hawke's Bay syrah hits all the right notes to command a high price.

time to read

2 mins

29 November-December 5 2025

New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener

Speak easy

Much is still unknown about the causes of stuttering but researchers are making progress on its genetic origins.

time to read

3 mins

29 November-December 5 2025

New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener

Recycling the family silver?

As election year looms, National is looking for ways to pay for its inevitable promises.

time to read

4 mins

29 November-December 5 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size