In 1982 the Commodore 64 computer was introduced, Ronald
Reagan survived being shot, the Falkland War started and ended,
Michael Jackson released, Thriller, Canada repatriated its
Constitution, and the first compact disc was sold in Germany. And
that's not all. In 1982 I blossomed from a naive fourteen-year-old
trying to fit in with the cool kids to something much more: a naive
eyeliner-wearing, fifteen-year-old trying to fit in with the cool
kids.
So writes Jian Ghomeshi in this, his first book, 1982.
It is a memoir told across intertwined stories of the songs
and musical moments that changed his life. Obsessed with David
Bowie ("I wanted to be Bowie," he recalls), the adolescent
Ghomeshi embarks on a Nick Hornbyesque journey to make music the
centre of his life. Acceptance meant being cool, and being cool
meant being Bowie. And being Bowie meant pointy black boots,
eyeliner, and hair gel. Add to that the essential all-black
wardrobe and you have two very confused Iranian parents, busy
themselves with gaining acceptance in Canada against the backdrop
of the revolution in Iran.
It is a bittersweet, heartfelt book that recalls awkward moments
such as Ghomeshi's performance as the "Ivory" in a school
production of Michael Jackson and Paul McCartney's Ebony and
Ivory; a stakeout where Rush was rehearsing for its world
tour; and a memorable day at the Police picnic of 1982. Music is
the jumping-off place for Ghomeshi to discuss young love, young
heartache, conformity, and the nature of cool. At the same time,
1982 is an entertaining cultural history of a crazy era of
glam, glitter, and gender-bending fads and fashions. And it is
definitely the first rock memoir by a Persian-Canadian new
waver.