Phil writes: I heard this lovely song on the radio yesterday and was instantly enchanted:
Sunday, 12 July 2015
Tuesday, 7 July 2015
Romans - Overthinking Part 1
Joe writes: This EP by Naughty Boy collaborator Sam Romans is really great.
Monday, 6 July 2015
Jason Downs feat. Milk - White Boy With A Feather
Joe writes: I've started making a Spotify playlist called The Tip Sheet CD, and in doing so, I've realised there are a lot of good tracks from the last decade or two that aren't on iTunes or Spotify. Some of them are obscure, but this reached no. 19 in the UK chart, with Jason and Milk appearing on Top of the Pops. It is rather a strange hybrid track, both musically and lyrically - I'm not sure there has been anything like it before or since.
Wednesday, 24 June 2015
Lionel Richie - Stuck On You
Joe writes: If I was going to Glastonbury, I'd be excited about hearing this:
Also love Mark Oh's cover, which was a hit in Germany but sadly not the UK:
Also love Mark Oh's cover, which was a hit in Germany but sadly not the UK:
Tuesday, 23 June 2015
Everything Everything - No Reptiles
Joe writes: New Everything Everything, produced by Stuart Price, with shades of Barenaked Ladies and 10cc. Brave and interesting from a band I hadn't really liked until now.
Wednesday, 3 June 2015
Jamie Lawson - Wasn't Expecting That
Joe writes: Supporting Ed Sheeran played a big part in Passenger's breakthrough. Now Ed is doing his best to break another British singer songwriter who has been around for a while. He has not only taken Jamie Lawson on tour but has signed him to his amusingly named Gingerbread label.
Wasn't Expecting That is a different kind of song to Passenger's Let Her Go but maybe equally good in its way, especially lyrically. Any Nashville songwriter would be proud of this song, and it also has pleasant echoes of Squeeze's Up The Junction.
Wasn't Expecting That is a different kind of song to Passenger's Let Her Go but maybe equally good in its way, especially lyrically. Any Nashville songwriter would be proud of this song, and it also has pleasant echoes of Squeeze's Up The Junction.
Monday, 1 June 2015
Little Big Town - Girl Crush
Joe writes: This is a big hit in the US despite being pulled from country radio stations after complaints from their listeners who (wrongly) felt it was endorsing lesbianism.
The lyric is clever and I love the production - classic soul from a country band.
The lyric is clever and I love the production - classic soul from a country band.
Sunday, 24 May 2015
more Graceland - Paul Simon
Joe writes: My last post was about a song inspired by a visit to Graceland. Here's Paul Simon talking about the role Graceland played in inspiring his song of the same name:
Hot Chip guested and chose some records on Jo Whiley's Radio 2 recently including Paul Simon's Late In The Evening, chosen by Alexis from the band. I've written before about Late In The Evening and the One Trick Pony album and film from whence it came, but hearing it again made me realise that the template for the Graceland album was right there, lyrically and musically, six years earlier.
Hot Chip guested and chose some records on Jo Whiley's Radio 2 recently including Paul Simon's Late In The Evening, chosen by Alexis from the band. I've written before about Late In The Evening and the One Trick Pony album and film from whence it came, but hearing it again made me realise that the template for the Graceland album was right there, lyrically and musically, six years earlier.
Thursday, 21 May 2015
Eternal Flame, Graceland and songs without choruses
Joe writes: I learnt recently that Eternal Flame, the classic Bangles hit, was inspired by a visit to Elvis Presley's former home Graceland, which has a supposedly eternal but actually intermittent flame. More info here from Billy Steinberg who wrote the song with Tom Kelly and Susanna Hoffs. Interesting to learn that the demo of the song was acoustic guitar-based in a bid to make it more "Bangles-y".
Here's a very evocative Top of the Pops performance:
Billy says Eternal Flame doesn't have a chorus. It's an interesting one - when you're listening to "Close your eyes, give me your hand darling", you're clearly listening to the verse, but by the end of the verse and especially by the end of the song, the verse has effectively become a chorus, as Billy says. Anyway, I've added it to my "Songs without choruses" playlist on Spotify. Other suggestions welcome:
Here's a very evocative Top of the Pops performance:
Billy says Eternal Flame doesn't have a chorus. It's an interesting one - when you're listening to "Close your eyes, give me your hand darling", you're clearly listening to the verse, but by the end of the verse and especially by the end of the song, the verse has effectively become a chorus, as Billy says. Anyway, I've added it to my "Songs without choruses" playlist on Spotify. Other suggestions welcome:
Thursday, 30 April 2015
Ricky Nelson - Lonesome Town
Phil writes: The new Blur single 'Lonesome Road' reminded me of this great Ricky Nelson track. The Blur song even has what must surely be a reference to the earlier song with the words 'going down to....' repeated several times in the outro.
Friday, 24 April 2015
Ainsie Wills - Hawaii
Joe writes: This is my favourite Ainsie Wills track and it's her new single. The vocal really reminds me of Tracey Thorn. Beautiful.
Thursday, 16 April 2015
Carly Simon and Warren Beatty
Joe writes: Carly Simon had had breast cancer when she
recorded The Bedroom Tapes album, so called because a studio had to be built in
her daughter's old bedroom to enable her to make the album. She thought it
might be the last album she was able to make, and she used it to settle some old
scores. There are some wonderful and vitriolic tracks on there, my favourite of
which is Scar. You're So Vain is famously rumoured to be about Warren Beatty
and I have it on good authority that Warren may also be the old flame who makes
an unsavoury appearance in Scar.
[this is an update of a post originally from October 2007]
The Bedroom Tapes album has just been reissued on Carly's own label, having initially been released on Arista.
Here's a live version of You're So Vain:
[this is an update of a post originally from October 2007]
Wednesday, 15 April 2015
R.I.P. Percy Sledge
Phil writes: I remember being blown away when I first heard 'When a Man Loves a Woman'. An archetypal soul number, it has that rare ability to get to you every time:
Monday, 6 April 2015
Sandy Denny
Joe writes: I've been listening to Sandy Denny again after reading a review of her biography. Of the songs mentioned in the review, my favourite is No End - predictably, as it's a bitter break-up song with echoes of The Last Time I Saw Richard and Diamonds & Rust.
I've just added it to my Spotify playlist of break-up songs, .
But I'd still say Sandy's greatest hit is Fairport Convention's Who Knows Where The Time Goes:
I've just added it to my Spotify playlist of break-up songs, .
But I'd still say Sandy's greatest hit is Fairport Convention's Who Knows Where The Time Goes:
Tuesday, 31 March 2015
Ciara - I Bet
Joe writes: I very much enjoyed this throwback to the She'kspere/Rodney Jerkins era of R&B. In fact I had to double check I wasn't listening to an old Ciara track by accident.
Here's She'kspere's greatest hit, No Scrubs by TLC. I heard this played as a feminist anthem recently. I'm not sure it is, but it is a classic pop record.
Here's She'kspere's greatest hit, No Scrubs by TLC. I heard this played as a feminist anthem recently. I'm not sure it is, but it is a classic pop record.
Tuesday, 24 March 2015
Chumbawamba - Ugh! Your Ugly Houses
Joe writes: This is the Chumbawamba track that should have been re-released as the follow-up to Tubthumping. It would have been huge. Chumbawamba instead elected to go with a track called Amnesia and were soon forgotten.
Ugh! Your Ugly Houses is a political song in the best kind of way and has shades of both Clean Bandit (in the string breakdown) and Blur's new anthem of overpopulation (in the lyrics, all seven of them).
Ugh! Your Ugly Houses is a political song in the best kind of way and has shades of both Clean Bandit (in the string breakdown) and Blur's new anthem of overpopulation (in the lyrics, all seven of them).
Monday, 23 March 2015
Ainslie Wills - Drive
Joe writes: I've been listening to a lot of Ainslie Wills, who is from Melbourne. I really love her voice which (on other tracks, not so much this one) has shades of Tracey Thorn, and this song is infectious.
Wednesday, 18 March 2015
Courtney Barnett - Pedestrian At Best
Joe writes: My brother sent me a Pitchfork link to this in February and now it's everywhere (or it might seem that way if you listen to a lot of Radio 1 in the evenings, and 6 Music, which I do).
Sunday, 15 March 2015
Deacon Blue - Win
Phil writes: This new Deacon Blue single is up there is almost on a par with their best work I think. It reminds me a bit of the Tom Baxter song 'Better' which deserves to be much better-known:
Friday, 13 March 2015
These are the greatest Todd Terje edits of all-time
good list from Thump
but they forgot this one, the Diamonds Dub (Tangoterje Edit) of Paul Simon's Diamonds In The Soles Of Her Shoes:
but they forgot this one, the Diamonds Dub (Tangoterje Edit) of Paul Simon's Diamonds In The Soles Of Her Shoes:
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)