Remembering Mega
Mega isn’t his real name, but a nickname given to him for his love of the band Megadeth.
This all begins in the Australian summer of 1985, when I first heard Stay Hungry from Twisted Sister. It was on a cassette tape and it was my cousin Mega that introduced me to it. He also had a video tape of rock and metal music clips that he taped from the music programs that used to play on Friday night and Saturday night.
That is how we did it back then. There was no Spotify or an iTunes store to sample songs. We religiously used to stay up late, so that we could tape the new video clip from our favourite bands or bands of similar style. Hell by staying up late, that is how I was introduced to Motley Crue(the Smokin In The Boys Room clip and then Home Sweet Home clip), Ratt (the Round and Round clip), Quiet Riot (Cum on Feel The Noize clip), Vah Halen (the Jump and Panama clips) and many others. But one band stood tall over all the others for me back then. And that was Twisted Sister. We’re Not Gonna Take It and I Wanna Rock where doing the rounds back to back.
We’re Not Gonna Take It, No
We Ain’t Gonna Take It
We’re Not Gonna Take It Anymore
Three opening lines that summed up the youth of 1985. The ones that didn’t want to follow what their fathers did and leave school early to work the factory floor. This was our war cry. Mega and I listened to this song over and over again, by watching the video clip over and over again. We even rented Animal Farm because we saw the psychotic parent from the video clip on the cover.
We’ve got the right to choose it and there ain’t no way we’ll lose it, this is our life, this is our song
We’ll fight the powers that be, just don’t pick our destiny cause you don’t know us, you don’t belong
Mega’s dad was one of those people that never should have been a father. He was all about money, money and more money. Mega came a very distant last. He always kept on comparing Mega to other kids. Poor Mega could never measure up to his father’s expectations. That is why this song was special to him and he made it special to me. Mega’s life was exactly that of the kids in the video clip; however his life didn’t end up getting back at his father, with the power of music. He just used the music to get away from it all.
You’re so condescending, your gall is never ending, we don’t want nothin’, not a thing from you
Your life is trite and jaded, boring And confiscated, if that’s your best, your best won’t do
Those words could have come from any adolescent child in the eighties. Mega’s room was a cultural haven. The walls where covered in posters from Hard Rock, Glam Rock and Metal bands at that time. He had a record collection that left me envious. He cherished his records. He wouldn’t lend them out to anyone and only he could touch them for fear that they will get scratched. I remember one day, when Mega and I went to the Utopia Record Store, which at that time was in a little shop at Martin Place train station in Sydney. Mega had the money so he picked up a few more albums and I just stared at the covers of albums that I wanted to buy. We return back to Mega’s place and it was chaos. His parents trashed his room, the records where all over the floor, pulled out of the covers. The reason, his mum smelled cigarette smoke on his clothes when she was throwing them into the wash and wanted to find where the cigarettes where hidden, so they trashed his record collection. Seriously, who hides a packet of Winnie Blues inside a record cover?
I remember him saying to his parents, IF THAT IS YOUR BEST, YOUR BEST WONT DO. That is how important music was to him, he even quoted the song. Hell, he even tattooed the TS logo onto his shoulder.
We’re right/yeah, we’re Free/yeah, we’ll Fight/yeah, you’ll See/yeah
We’re Not Gonna Take It summed up how we felt at the establishments, our parents and all the rules of what we should be. Songs like I Wanna Rock, Smokin In The Boys Room, We Rock, Cum On Feel The Noize and Shake Your Foundations summed up what we wanted to do.
I WANNA ROCK! (ROCK)
The war cry.
Turn it down you say
Well all I got to say to you is time and time again I say No
NO! NO, NO, NO, NO, NO!
I can’t even mention how many times Mega’s parents would walk in and turn down his stereo and then walk out. As soon as the door shut, Mega would crank it again.
Turn the power up
I’ve waited for so long so I could hear my favourite song so let’s go
GO! GO, GO, GO, GO, GO!
When it’s like this I feel the music shootin through me
There’s nothing else that I would rather do
Music when done right is like that. You lay back with the album, the lyric sheet in front of you and listen to each song and read the lyrics. It was a therapeutic feeling, without going to therapy. This is something kids these days will never feel as their lives are always on the go and they are connected to each other 24/7. Back then, no one was texting you or phoning you, there was no Facebook to kill time on and there was no Computer in the house that you could use. Music, Books, Magazines and TV was all we had, with the occasional Cinema outing for a new release.
Cum on feel the noize
Girls rock your boys
We’ll get wild, wild, wild
Wild, wild, wild
That’s all we wanted to do. Get to the Rock N Roll show, to hear the music, to feel the noise so that we could get wild. Mega just wanted to be a drummer. He saved up his social security money to purchase a drum kit and then saved up again to purchase another bass drum so that he could do double kick. His father frowned at him and they both kept on yelling at him every time he played. His father wouldn’t let Mega borrow the car, so we used to catch the train with his drum kit and my guitar and amp to the rehearsal room. That is full blown commitment.
We always talked about our band and the songs we would write. We never got there. He more or less gave up drumming due to all the stress pushed on him from his parents. He failed at school so his father wasn’t pleased, especially since Mega’s sister was all A’s. He went to Art School as his other talent was drawing, and that led nowhere as Australia post-recession in the early 90’s wasn’t employing young up starts. And this was the pre Internet era.
By 1997 Mega was diagnosed with schizophrenia due to a chemical imbalance in his brain. His parent’s won. His parents finally had control of him. From all the medication that was prescribed, Mega ballooned into a 140kg slob. I abandoned Mega after 2006. It was too painful to see him. He hadn’t showered for weeks and he looked like Crusty the Clown from The Simpsons. He never could remember the last time we spoke due to the medication even though it was 24 hours ago over the phone. It got to a stage when I called and his parents wouldn’t even give him the phone. I used to send him CD’s of the EP’s I was doing with my band, and his parents wouldn’t give the CD’s to him.
I heard he broke the fridge door because aliens where inside it. Prior to his diagnosis, I remember I was at his place and he goes to me ‘She is there.”
“Who is there”, I answer back. Mega’s face got all spooky and weird.
“Her. She is there next to you, laughing”, he answers back. I am at this stage thinking WTF. The hairs on the back of my neck are hard as a rock. I turn to where he is pointing and as I expected, no one is there.
“WTF, Mega. What’s this shit?’ I fire back, both worried and angry with him. What came next freaked me out. He started laughing hysterically, like those weird horror movies where kids have these evil imaginary friends. Typing this and recounting the events is just freaking me out.
Mega was such a mega influence on my life and the music I listen too. He was my first cousin. Mega’s mum and my mum are sisters, but they are so different. Maybe because my dad was a muso it was easier for me, but Mega he didn’t get that. That is why he loved coming down to our place and staying for a week or a month. He was liberated at my place. We would go down to the Pub, drink beers, shoot Pool and just crank the Jukebox until the morning hours. On the other hand his home life was hell.
It wasn’t healthy anymore for me to be around him. I didn’t want to be dragged in to all of that shit that was going on. By 2006 I had my second child. I didn’t want my kids growing up around an uncle that was mentally ill. Selfish and cruel maybe, but these are the choices we make in life. You can say I took the easy way out by abandoning him, and a lot of people condemn me for it, but those people haven’t dealt with a person that has a mental illness. Then others, who have experienced mental illness with loved ones, tell me that they only wish they had the courage to walk away. Instead they got sucked down with their loved one and are now suffering depression as to why they couldn’t help them.
Mega is still alive. He will probably even outlive me. But to me Mega died in 1997. After that it wasn’t Mega anymore. The jokes and the laughs went out the window, his fascination with Horror movies became greater and his paranoia was getting the better of him. I still think he will knock on my door and say, what’s up, have you heard the new ….