Danger Music

Eddie Ayres

Danger Music
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Allen & Unwin
Country
Australia
Published
27 September 2017
Pages
304
ISBN
9781760290696

Danger Music

Eddie Ayres

Eddie Ayres has a lifetime of musical experience - from learning the viola as a child in England and playing with the Hong Kong Philharmonic for many years, to learning the cello in his thirties and landing in Australia to present an extremely successful ABC Classic FM morning radio show. But all of this time Eddie was Emma Ayres.

In 2014 Emma was spiralling into a deep depression, driven by anguish about her gender. She quit the radio, travelled, and decided on a surprising path to salvation - teaching music in a war zone. Emma applied for a position at Dr Sarmast’s renowned Afghanistan National Institute of Music in Kabul, teaching cello to orphans and street kids.

In Danger Music, Eddie takes us through the bombs and chaos of Kabul, into the lives of the Afghan children who are transported by Bach, Abba, Beethoven and their own exhilarating Afghan music. Alongside these epic experiences, Emma determines to take the final steps to secure her own peace; she becomes the man always there inside - Eddie.

Review

Eddie Ayres was 12 when he saw Afghanistan for the first time. It was on television. The Soviets had just invaded. He was 49 when he last left Afghanistan after teaching at the Afghanistan National Institute of Music. In between those times, Eddie, born Emma, grew up and became a musician and biked across a large part of the world and hosted a radio program in Australia and became deeply depressed. Afghanistan in this time saw the collapse and exit of the Soviets and a civil war that left space for the takeover by the Taliban. The Taliban in turn was ousted by coalition forces who in turn settled into a protracted conflict that, despite officially being resolved, continues into the time that Eddie moves to Kabul to teach at the resurrected Afghanistan National Institute of Music.

Eddie first visited and taught at the school in Kabul in 2013. At the time everything was hopeful, the orchestra was touring, boys and girls playing together, Western and Afghan music, the upward trajectory seemed clear. Eddie felt it was clear for him as well. When he fell into a despairing depression, teaching at the school seemed to be a possibility that might save him, and so he went to Afghanistan, to teach and to make a difference and to save his own life.

Danger Music moves in whirlwind snippets through Eddie’s days teaching in Kabul. Students appear and disappear with startling irregularity. You start to know a student as Eddie does and then they drop away, disappear. Sometimes they return, but only sometimes. The stress, uncertainty and trauma of everyday life in Kabul are felt keenly in this whirlwind narrative. In one moment, Eddie is describing the beauty of the young cello players playing together; in another, he’s wondering how to get everyone out if suicide bombers and the Taliban storm the school. I loved this book.


Marie Matteson is a book buyer at Readings Carlton.

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