Calgary Herald

TALES OUT OF SCHOOL

Tegan and Sara release memoir

- ERIC VOLMERS

Tegan and Sara

Two shows at the Bella Concert Hall on Oct. 10. Both are sold out. Late in Tegan and Sara Quin’s new book about their formative years in Calgary, the twins go to a New Year’s Eve party that somehow leads to a harrowing car chase.

It’s one of the more surreal passages from High School, the Quin sisters’ often funny and occasional­ly dark memoir. For reasons that aren’t completely clear, the car Tegan, Sara and a handful of their Grade 12 friends are in is being chased through the streets of Calgary. At a stop sign, three men brandishin­g baseball bats and pipes emerge from the pursuing car. The scene is unnerving and strangely over the top, more Mad Max movie than coming-of-age tale.

“I think with the New Year’s chapter, it was important to capture some of that fear,” Sara says in an interview with Postmedia. “That was always existing. We were always aware when we were out running around at night and hanging out at parks and sneaking out of the house that there was a menacing kind of feeling that at any point something bad could happen.”

This is not to say High School is a story about a hardscrabb­le life on the streets. For the most part, the twins lived a normal lower-middle-class life with caring and often strict parents. But it does show how the Quin sisters, who alternate writing chapters, manage to capture the elevated fears and hopes of their younger selves while also offering a detailed snapshot of their life in the 1990s.

It’s also evidence that the book is no ordinary music bio. As the title suggests, it covers only their high school years and ends just as their remarkable career is about to begin. It ends before they were famously signed by Neil Young’s record label. It ends long before the gold records, the Junos and Grammy Awards, and the performanc­e at the Oscars.

“I never felt very compelled by the idea of writing about our career,” Sara says. “That might be because we don’t have enough distance from it yet. I have nothing against music memoirs, but for whatever reason they don’t interest me. It’s not what gets me going.”

Instead, High School is an origin story. For much of the book, the twins seem like normal teenagers. They experiment with drugs, try to avoid being grounded, engage in epic fights with each other and have their hearts broken.

There are some coming-of-age wrinkles later on that are specific to their earliest career moments as precocious folkies, including how they weathered their first scathing review after winning first place in Calgary’s Garage Warz band competitio­n or raced home from school the Monday after an early Vancouver showcase to find numerous voicemail messages from major record labels. Tegan and Sara have also released Hey, I’m Just Like You, an album that finds them applying their modern muscular dance-pop sound to the folk and punk songs they wrote as teenagers.

But most of the book takes place before all this. And much of it deals with identity and, specifical­ly, the Quins coming to terms with their sexuality. There is a touching moment early on when their stepfather tries to make amends to a tearful Tegan after using a homophobic slur to describe Kurt Cobain. In another chapter, Sara becomes so enraged by a classmate’s homophobia that she throws a chair at him.

But the sisters, who wrote their chapters separately, had very different paths when it came to realizing and accepting their sexuality, something Sara was shocked to discover after reading her sister’s contributi­ons for the first time.

“I immediatel­y thought to myself, ‘She’s lying,’” Sara says. “There’s no way she didn’t feel the way that I did. There’s no way she wasn’t freaking out and stressed out about being queer. There’s no way that she just happened upon this person later in high school and then decided ‘Oh, I guess I do like girls.’ It just seemed so different from my experience. I was doing the thing that I hate when other people do with us: I just assumed Tegan was having the exact same experience­s as me.”

Now 38, the Quins are considered LGBTQ icons, a term that makes Sara uncomforta­ble but is actually used as a descriptio­n of the duo on the back jacket of High School. Sara says she hopes the book shows younger people going through similar experience­s that they are not alone.

“It’s better and it’s so ubiquitous now and everybody treats Pride like it’s St. Patrick’s Day or something,” she says. “But the realities of queer lives is that that’s not always the case. So that is a huge part of telling the story. First of all, it’s just reminding people that we didn’t come out of the womb with a rainbow flag wrapped around us going ‘We’re gay and we’re here and we’re excited!’ It wasn’t that easy.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Musical sister duo Tegan and Sara reflect on their high school days in an aptly titled new memoir. Sara, left, admits music memoirs don’t interest her.
Musical sister duo Tegan and Sara reflect on their high school days in an aptly titled new memoir. Sara, left, admits music memoirs don’t interest her.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada