Friday 7 November 2008

Bienvenue à Bruxelles!

The day I arrived in Brussels it was dimanche sans voitures (Sunday without cars). I had been told about this before arriving but had forgotten about it, so when I was walking from Brussels Midi station to the city itself, everything seemed a little sedated. A few kids sailed by on bikes, the occasional bell tinkled and I saw a police car cruise down a quiet street: lights on, sirens off.

I started to get the feeling that maybe visiting Paris first was a mistake – that it was like eating the tastiest thing on my dinner plate first and then realising that all I had left now was broccoli (or Brussels-sprouts, even. Ha. I’m sure you couldn’t see that one coming!). But I hadn’t even reached the city centre yet, so I decided to withhold my broccoli pronouncements until later on. I decided that maybe once I’d cracked Brussels’ crème brulée lid with my teaspoon, I would see warm melting raspberries and smooth chocolate cake batter.

I was walking down Avenue de Stalingrad, heading for the Grand Place, when in the distance I heard the unmistakable promise of a melting raspberry: a rumbling of drums, a far-off trumpet. It was in the opposite direction to where I was headed, but there’s something about faraway drums that makes you feel you’re missing out on something big, so I turned down a side-street towards them, getting my teaspoon ready.

I was not disappointed. The crème brulée lid shattered into thousands of delicious lego pieces and the chocolate cake batter was thick and flowing. A band of 12 young people dressed in a mixture of black Cossack hats, fluoro yellow shorts, funky indie suits and black suspenders were dancing down the street, playing the liveliest, most enthusiastic and unabashedly happy music I have ever heard. There were drums, trumpets, accordions, saxophones, clarinets, trombones and one big, moody tuba. A trail of grinning people were following along behind them, and they lured us all into a big auditorium where they clambered their way up onto the stage.

The music was fantastic – it was fast-paced and. They took turns having solos and the rest of the band would creep up around them, staring at them in ‘mock’ curiousity and awe. The accordion player kept doing jumping splits like a rock star, the lead trumpet player looked like the kind of guy who would make embarrassing but witty speeches at wedding receptions, and the notes bounced comically along like a multicoloured beachball at a football match.

The best photo I could manage, unfortunately


They played for about an hour, and Brussels went from a broccoli side-dish to a place where people were ecstatic to be alive.

Later on in the same day, after discovering where all the tourists were hiding (they’re all around the Mannekin-Pis, which, truth be told, is not all that exciting. They dress him up in little outfits and it smacks sharply of people who put clothes on their pets…) and that a day without cars results in a day swarming with bikes (to the extent that crossing the road requires the skill and dexterity of the 2006 ‘Frogger’ champion), I heard a different kind of music.



Dimanche sans voitures = get your Frogger joystick ready


Near Bourse/Beurs station, there was a DJ playing emotional, intense and incredibly loud piano recordings from the top of an abandoned building. I stopped to have a sandwich at a little Dutch café and watched the hodge-podge of Brussels folk float by. There were people on rollerskates, a guy on a penny-farthing, and at one point a man in a medieval peasant outfit trotted by on a horse. As I was sitting there a group of what looked like African American rappers flounced by – wearing oversized white jerseys, straight-rimmed caps, silver sunglasses and straight faces, but they were speaking in French and had the soundtrack of Chopin’s ADHD cousin behind them.


The DJ near Bourse/Beurs

Here’s to discovering that, even though places aren’t Paris, that doesn’t necessarily make them broccoli.

P.S. Obviously I’ve been having trouble with the speed of my updates lately. I hope you’ll bear with me if I intersperse everyday junk with actual travel stories. Instead of writing about Amsterdam, which I was meant to be doing, I wrote about a rebellious piece of pavement near my flat. It isn’t because I don’t want to write about Amsterdam – it’s just that pieces of pavement keep getting in the way…

6 comments:

Some Cadillac of Men said...

How very 28 Days Later on arrival.
Luckily instead of sprinting Zombies you got fluoro yellow shorts, Cossack hats, trumpets, clarinets and jumping accordian players.
Good work on linking coloured beach balls and floating musical notes to.

Sarah said...

Why thankyou Mr. Cadillac of Men. I do enjoy linking musical notes with random inflatable goods. I also like linking things to Hungry Hungry Hippos as often as possible, as you know, but we'll leave that for another post...

Rebecca said...

Sometimes i wish that i was filthy, stinking rich. Not all the time, but sometimes. Then i could go traveling without having to work in Norway for months before i have enough money.. Yes, you heard me, she is moving back to Norway, but only for a short while. Only for a short while.

You blog like Bill Brysons imaginary friend, which means that you are better then him, but the public can't really see you because you are invisible(as in 'not famous'). Too many excellent writers are out here, doing their thing, being brilliant, and nobody ever gets to see it. That makes me...angry? Nah, just a bit frustrated.

Oh, and i might move to Tallin next year, and i don't even know why.

Jean-Marc Knoll said...

Those pesky pavers, always getting in the way...

Sarah said...

Look at you, Rebecca: hopping into different lands like Mary Poppins hopped into multicoloured paintings. Do you not like Norway or something?

And, at least if we're all invisible now, we'll look back at these days and say, 'remember when I was invisible?' Or, if we never make it, we can say, 'I've always been underappreciated. You don't need to be seen to know your work is good. Oh, who am I kidding? I want to be seen! I want to be known! But now I'm old and no one cares and my words are just quacking into a void and I'm getting melodramatic again so maybe I should make myself a cup of tea and go swing in the hammock for a while...'

Sarah said...

Online dictionaries agree with me, Marc! And as we all know, online dictionaries would never lead anyone astray...