Jill Bird

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Jill Bird with Matt, Dom and Chris - July 2004

She's a music teacher, formerly of Teignmouth community college, Devon.

According to Chris, She was one of the two people (the other being Dennis Smith) who were very important in the early development of the band[1]

She started at Teignmouth in the summer of 1990, Matt and Dom had been there six months. According to her, the other kids would be having a laugh with their guitars, but Muse were so committed.

Taken from an Interview: We had no money in the school, either. It was awful, really: one bass guitar working if we were lucky, a shoebox cassette player, a crappy drumkit, no decent rooms. But they didn't care. They'd just say: "Miss, can we rehearse, can we rehearse?" Luckily, the music department was in an old building 200 metres from the main school, so they could make as much noise as they wanted. That was one of those strange quirks of fate that changed things for them.

I often think how different things could have been if they'd come along in a different year. The fact they had to go all the way to Exeter to see gigs was important, too: there was nothing on locally, so they had to make their own entertainment.

The boys were never satisfied with their compositions, though. Most kids at 14 or 15 get them in and think: "Thank God for that." Not with them; they always wanted to keep improving them, Chris particularly. What he was doing with his bass 16 years ago was genuinely pushing boundaries. I'd give him top marks and say: "Chris, this is already brilliant. I can't give you a better mark." He'd be: "But it's not right." To have such drive at that age was extraordinary.

I saved up for a multitrack tape recorder. It was for the school – but really it was for them, because I knew the equipment we had was limiting. I know I shouldn't have, but I let them take it home at weekends, too. I didn't know how it worked either, so we were learning together. That encouragement is so important for young people, and I still see that now at the Saturday Music School in Totnes where I work. It gives them such joy, something to strive for.

To see the boys become a huge band was really moving, especially when they came back for their homecoming gig in Teignmouth last autumn. I was one of the first people to buy tickets, but the boys got in touch, and said they had put some aside for me. In the town that night, I saw loads of kids I'd taught but hadn't seen for 10 years. They were saying: "Isn't it great, Miss, isn't it great?" It was and it still is."[2]

References

  1. The Teign spirit which took Muse to global superstardom (2011-07-11). Exeter Express & Echo. Retrieved 2015-08-06 from exeterexpressandecho.co.uk.
  2. Inspirational Music Teachers (2010-04-25). Guardian. Retrieved 2015-08-06 from guardian.co.uk.