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Word of the week: xenodocheionology

January 29, 2025 Peter Kimpton

Chateau Marmont Hotel, West Hollywood, California

Word of the week: It’s something in which many of us may indulge during the thick of winter, planning for holidays via booking websites, this noun meaning the study of hotels, extending also to researching their lore and history

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In comedy, avant-garde, classical, experimental, folk, indie, jazz, poetry, pop, traditional Tags words, word of the week, hotels, Hollywood, Marmont Hotel, Chelsea Hotel, New York, Gruff Rhys, Chilly Gonzales, Jarvis Cocker, Leonard Cohen, Jeffrey Lewis
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Word of the week: yepsen

January 16, 2025 Peter Kimpton

Cupped unit

Word of the week: A timeless noun emanating from Middle English ȝespen and first used in around 1325, meaning a unit of measurement being the amount of that can be held in two hands cupped together

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In country, folk, pop, showtime, traditional, rock Tags word of the week, words, yepsen, Middle English, Old Norse, units of measure, Neil Young, Nat King Cole, Linda Loveless, Tommy Steele, Lionel Bart
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Word of the week: aquabob

December 12, 2024 Peter Kimpton

A row of aquabobs

Word of the week: Sounding like some water-based children’s TV superhero, it’s actually a particularly apt and descriptive word for wintertime, being an 18th-century English Kent dialect noun meaning icicle

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In classical, experimental, electronica, folk, indie, pop Tags songs, words, word of the week, Joni Mitchell, Meatloaf, Tori Amos, Fleet Foxes, The Cranberries, Girls In Airports, Samantha Whates, Jasmine Rodgers, Daniel Koestner
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Word of the week: broticolous

November 27, 2024 Peter Kimpton

Broticolous behaviour: raccoons

Word of the week: Mice, rats, spiders, foxes to raccoons, this obscure adjective, connected to the French noun broticole, this relates to any animal and insect species with a tendency to live around and alongside humans and their dwellings perhaps as scavengers, but also showing adaptability

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In blues, disco, dance, avant-garde, country, folk, reggae, rock, pop Tags word of the week, words, animals, animal behaviour, UB40, Modest Mouse, Dog Race, Belle & Sebastian, Jimmy & The Critters, Richard Sorkin
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Word of the week: eel-skins / excruciators

October 4, 2024 Peter Kimpton

Meme of the time: four lads in jeans, Birmingham 2019

Word of the week: Aside from the literal outer layer of the ray-finned slippery fish, this evocative, slightly suggestive 19th-century slang means very tight trousers, while this week’s bonus word, excruciators, points to the experience of wearing very tight shoes

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In blues, avant-garde, comedy, country, dance, disco, electronica, experimental, folk, funk, hip hop, indie, rock, pop Tags word of the week, words, eel-skins, clothing, Four Lads In Jeans, social media, Edward Bulwer-Lytton, books, Tat Vision, Snoop Dogg, Larry 'Legs' Smith, Cower, New Young Pony Club, Conway Twitty, Squeeze (Australian band)
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Word of the week: gnomon

September 5, 2024 Peter Kimpton

A gnomon is the part of a sundial that casts a shadow

Word of the week: From the Ancient Greek, γνώμων (gnṓmōn)this pointed noun literally means one that knows or examines, but it is specifically the part of a sundial that casts a shadow as well as referring to other mathematical terms

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In classical, avant-garde, dance, electronica, experimental, folk, indie, jazz, pop, prog rock, psychedelia, traditional Tags words, word of the week, sundials, time, science, gnomon, mathematics, songs, Elizabeth Skornik, Guy Skornik, Of Norway, Wolfmother, Django Django, Paul Heaton
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Word of the week: hederaceous / hederigerent

August 22, 2024 Peter Kimpton

The Green Man

Word of the week: Two lesser known and very similar adjectives from the Latin word heder – hederaceous meaning resembling ivy, while hederigerent describing that which is dressed with or bedecked in ivy

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In avant-garde, blues, indie, pop, rock, experimental, folk, country, soul, traditional Tags words, word of the week, ivy, plants, DC Comics, Batman, The Mamas & The Papas, The Coasters, Kate Bush, Taylor Swift
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Word of the week: jenticulate / jentacular

July 24, 2024 Peter Kimpton

Jenticulate with the jentacular in the morning …

Word of the week: A tasty noun and an adjective all associated with the first meal of the day - one means to take breakfast, the other, with a variant spelling, describes anything related to that meal. Both derive from the Latin noun ientaculum, meaning a breakfast taken immediately on getting up

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In avant-garde, comedy, blues, dance, disco, folk, film soundtrack, funk, indie, jazz, pop, Motown, musicals, postpunk, psychedelia, punk, rock, soul, showtime, traditional Tags words, word of the week, breakfast, food, Henry Mancini, film soundtracks, film, The Associates, Dusty Springfield, Bill Callahan, Boy Azooga, Nouvelle Vague, Fana Hues, Big Special, Supertramp
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Word of the week: kalopsia

July 11, 2024 Peter Kimpton

Titania falls under a kalopsian spell in Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Drawing by Charles Buchel, 1905

Word of the week: A noun describing distorted perception, meaning the delusion of seeing things as being more beautiful than they are, or through rose-tinted glasses

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In blues, comedy, electronica, experimental, folk, funk, Motown, musicals, pop, rock, soul, traditional Tags words, word of the week, kalopsia, William Shakespeare, Shakespeare, Queens of the Stone Age, The Lewers, Eugene Goh, The Overtones
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Word of the week: lacustrine

June 27, 2024 Peter Kimpton

Loweswater in the Cumbrian Lake District

Word of the week: A poetic word taken from the Latin lacus and French or Italan lacustre, this shimmering liquid of an adjective means relating to, formed in, living in, or growing in lakes, lake-like or positioned by a lake

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In avant-garde, classical, country, electronica, experimental, film soundtrack, folk, indie, metal, pop, poetry, psychedelia, rock, traditional Tags words, word of the week, lakes, water, Lake District, Hazel Adams, Taylor Swift, Paul Brady, Gorillaz, John From, Tchaikovsky
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Word of the week: pantagruelian

May 2, 2024 Peter Kimpton

Illustration from Rabelais’s Gargantua and Pantagruel by Gustave Doré

Word of the week: Huge, gigantic, enormous, voracious or insatiable, this colourful adjective derives from the character in the pioneering 16th-century French prose writer François Rabelais’s multiple volume work, Gargantua and Pantagruel

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In avant-garde, classical, comedy, electronica, experimental, folk, prog rock, psychedelia, rock, traditional Tags words, word of the week, Rabelais, books, music
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Word of the week: rucklety-tucklety

April 3, 2024 Peter Kimpton

Rucklety-tucklety cloth

Word of the week: This beautifully strange, rhythmic, rhyming, onomatopoeic English word hails from the 18th century, meaning crumpled or gathered up, often pertaining to cloth or clothing, and deriving from the word for crease – a ruckle

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In blues, comedy, country, experimental, electronica, indie, reggae, folk Tags words, word of the week, rucklety-tucklety, creases, Pete Seeger, Red Snapper, Serengeti, Joyful Noise Recordings, Smithsonian Folkways Recordings, Grimy Styles, Rude Element Records
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Word of the week: umbriphilous

February 29, 2024 Peter Kimpton

Umbriphilous bluebells …

Word of the week: An adjective describing that which loves the shade, whether person, plant or otherwise, from the Latin, umbra, for shade and related to other derivatives, such as umbraphile, one who loves eclipses

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In country, folk, jazz, pop, Motown, rock, soul, traditional Tags mbriphilous, words, word of the week, shade, shadow, astronomy, nature, plants, Four Tops, Little Ann, Joy Division, Sparklehorse, Music Go Music, Wild Nothing
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Word of the week: vorlus-snorlus

February 15, 2024 Peter Kimpton

Vorlus-snorlus numbers

Word of the week: A strangely poetic, archaic Gloucestershire term meaning haphazard, pertaining to a a person who acts at random, possibly a corruption of the Latin term nolens volens, meaning neither willing nor unwilling, related to the word willy-nilly

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In experimental, pop, postpunk, punk, country, folk, indie, Motown, jazz Tags words, word of the week, Ella Fitzgerald, Rufus Thomas, Silver Jews, Lene Lovich
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Word of the Week: zenzizenzizenzic

January 3, 2024 Peter Kimpton

Pages 150-151 of Robert Recorde’s 1557 work The Whetstone of Witte describes the cubic term of zenzizenzizenzic

Word of the week: We return to the alphabet’s end with a word that’s as wonderfully weird, yet buzzily beautifully in sound as it is obscure and obsolete – an antiquated mathematical term meaning the eighth power of a number x, where x is multiplied by itself 8 times

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In avant-garde, electronica, experimental, folk, pop, rock, indie Tags word of the week, words, zenzizenzizenzic, mathematics, Robert Recorde, Samuel Jeake, Myk Eff, The Paris Buns, Colorfeels
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Word of the week: callithumpian

October 25, 2023 Peter Kimpton

Callithumpian band

Word of the week: An evocative adjectival form of callithump, commonly used from 1836 in the American mid-West, describing a parade or band of noisemakers, but also originally an 18th-century British dialect noun for a group who made a rumpus on election days in southern England

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In avant-garde, experimental, country, folk, jazz, traditional Tags words, word of the week, callithumpian, music, politics
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Word of the week: nai

June 7, 2023 Peter Kimpton

Romanian nai virtuoso Gheorghe Zamfir

Word of the week: This Romanian 17th-century panpipe is a mainstay of traditional folk and classical music, wide in range and resonant, it is made up of at least 20 pipes made of bamboo or reed in the diatonic scale of C or G, and emits a clean, distinctive sound

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In classical, folk, traditional, pop Tags nai, instruments, pan pipes, Romania, words, word of the week, Gheorghe Zamfir, Damian Draghici, Dana Dragomir, film soundtracks
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Word of the week: plock

May 10, 2023 Peter Kimpton

The płock, płocka or fidel płocka

Word of the week: Also called płock, płocka or fidel płocka, a box-shaped six-string traditional Polish folk violin, without fingerboard or tailpiece, played vertically resting on the knee, and pairs of strings doubling pitch to bring a rich, resonant sound

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In folk, traditional Tags word of the week, words, instruments, plock, violin, nail violin, Kapela ze Wsi Warszawa, Maria Pomianowska, Poland
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Word of the week: ronroco

April 11, 2023 Peter Kimpton

A variety of ronroco models

Word of the week: An Andean 10-string (5 doubles) form of mandolin, baritone or bass charango, this beautiful instrument was invented in the 1980s by Gonzalo Hermosa González, of the group Los Kjarkas from Cochabamba, Bolivia and has been used in many acclaimed film scores

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In experimental, film soundtrack, folk, traditional Tags words, word of the week, instruments, Bolivia, Argentina, ronroco, stringed instruments, Chile, Los Kjarkas, Gustavo Santaolalla, HBO, The Last of Us, film soundtracks, Alejandro González Iñárritu
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Word of the week: wheeple

February 21, 2023 Peter Kimpton

The curlew emits a wheeple

Word of the week: A Scottish dialect term dating back to at least the 19th century, meaning to utter a shrill, prolonged whistle or cry, often used to describe the high-pitched call of the curlew or plover

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In traditional, folk Tags words, word of the week, wheeple, birds, bird call, Scotland, Australia, plover, curlew, sea, Rachel Newton, Jumbotown, Quercus Records
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CONDEMN RACISM, EMBRACE EQUALITY

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DRINK OF THE WEEK

1990s alcopops


SNACK OF THE WEEK

doritos, skittles snack mashup


New Albums …

Featured
Bingo! by La Sécurité.jpeg
June 15, 2026
La Sécurité: Bingo!
June 15, 2026

New album: Fabulously fun, vibrant, feisty, catchy, wittily droll post-punk, new wave and art-punk in this pacy, vivacious sophomore LP by the Montréal collective with themes from mental health, dysfunctional relationships, food to enjoyable elderly activities, with styles reminiscent of The B-52s and Devo

June 15, 2026
So Help Me God by Kelsey Lu.jpeg
June 13, 2026
Kelsey Lu: So Help Me God
June 13, 2026

New album: Luxuriant, ethereal, dramatic and passionate experimental and chamber dream pop by the American singer-songwriter and cellist, with their second LP, seven years since 2019 debut Blood, with guests including Sampha, Kamasi Washington, Kim Gordon, and co-producer Jack Antonoff

June 13, 2026
Cry Baby by Vince Staples.jpeg
June 10, 2026
Vince Staples: Cry Baby
June 10, 2026

New album: The Compton/ Long Beach, Californian rapper returns with a potent, punchy, overtly political rock-hip hop seventh LP that heavily critiques American society and power, racism, police violence, gun culture, media and the music industry, largely accompanied by a tight, riff-heavy electric guitars, bass and drums

June 10, 2026
Liz Lawrence - Vespers.jpeg
June 9, 2026
Liz Lawrence: Vespers
June 9, 2026

New album: More acoustic, stripped back and lo-fi than her previous four albums, yet with deeply powerful and moving songwriting and performance, the British artist’s latest is suffused with grief, reflection and devotion for the premature loss of her sister Jessie, capturing life and death, poetically expressing devotion and reflection

June 9, 2026
Neon Summer Skin by Bedouine.jpeg
June 9, 2026
Bedouine: Neon Summer Skin
June 9, 2026

New album: A serenely beautiful, but also nostalgically sorrowful fourth LP by American singer-songwriter Azniv Korkejian who has Armenian-Syrian heritage, with songs about displacement and identity, very mindful of Middle Eastern conflicts, atrocities and her family history, while broadening her sound into the lush mould of 1970s Carole King and Laurel Canyon

June 9, 2026
Spatial, No Problem. by Lee %22Scratch%22 Perry & Mouse on Mars.jpeg
June 8, 2026
Lee "Scratch" Perry and Mouse on Mars: Spatial, No Problem
June 8, 2026

New album: This wondrously eclectic and entertaining final official album project by the legendary Jamaican producer and artist, made before his passing in 2021, is a collaboration with the German electronic duo Jan St. Werner and Andi Toma, mixing reggae, krautrock, ambient, dub, jazz, New Orleans brass and more, alongside Perry’s distinctive voice

June 8, 2026
Doctrine of Love by Jalen Ngonda.jpeg
June 7, 2026
Jalen Ngonda: Doctrine of Love
June 7, 2026

New album: Following his acclaimed 2023 debut Come Around And Love Me, the American UK-based impressive soul singer’s second LP is another classy collection of beautifully uplifting, sublime Northern soul and Motown-era love songs

June 7, 2026
Death Cab For Cutie - I Built You A Tower.jpeg
June 7, 2026
Death Cab For Cutie: I Built You A Tower
June 7, 2026

New album: Elegantly expressed emotional turmoil unfolds across 11 cleverly crafted songs in this 11th album by the Seattle indie rock band fronted by Ben Gibbard and produced by the brilliant John Congleton around a metaphor for post-marriage grief

June 7, 2026
Zoh Amba - Eyes Full 2.jpeg
June 6, 2026
Zoh Amba: Eyes Full
June 6, 2026

New album: The NY-scene free jazz saxophonist forms an indie-folk-country-rock-muddy-blues trio with fabulously strong results in this passionate, raw, free-flowing debut as guitarist-singer-songwriter, lyrics themed around their original hometown of Kingsport, Tennessee, and coloured by Appalachian roots

June 6, 2026
Rumspringa by ear.jpeg
June 5, 2026
ear: Rumspringa
June 5, 2026

New album: Minimalistic, introverted, nuanced quirky laptop experimental electronica by the New York duo Jonah Paz and Yaelle Avtan, following last year’s debut The Most Dear and the Future, this one named after a a rite of passage for Amish adolescents translated as "running around" in Pennsylvania German

June 5, 2026
Beauty Land by Greg Mendez.jpeg
June 3, 2026
Greg Mendez: Beauty Land
June 3, 2026

New album: A gently ironic title, but no doubting beauty of the sound, reminiscent of the late, great Elliott Smith, this new gem of a lo-fi LP is full of mildly tragic, sensitive, thoughtful 14 short numbers by the Philadelphia high falsetto singer-songwriter

June 3, 2026
For Love of Grace & the Hereafter by Iceage.jpeg
June 3, 2026
Iceage: For Love of Grace & The Hereafter
June 3, 2026

New album: A stylishly ramshackle, brilliantly brash’n’breezy punk-shoegaze feral sixth studio LP, streamlining sounds from 50s rock’n’roll through to early 00s indie by the Copenhagen band fronted by Elias Rønnenfelt, successfully fulfilling their aim on this to be “immediate, urgent, raw and fast” across themes of romantic devotion with violent chaos and nihilism

June 3, 2026
Boards of Canada - Inferno.jpeg
June 2, 2026
Boards of Canada: Inferno
June 2, 2026

New album: Scotland’s hugely influential electronic experimental sibling duo Mike Sandison and Marcus Eoin return 13 years after their last LP, Tomorrow’s Harvest, with an epic 18-track collection that dissects the psychology of religion with distorted vocal samples and cut-ups across landscapes of dystopian synth textures and beats

June 2, 2026
Philadelphia's been good to me by Kurt Vile.jpeg
June 2, 2026
Kurt Vile: Philadelphia's Been Good To Me
June 2, 2026

New album: A selection of fond love-letter songs to the city where he was raised and has remained by the 46-year-ld American singer-songwriter, in this deliciously laid back 10th LP of songs of interweaving guitars, folk, rock, country and psychedelia, all with his inimitably relaxed vocal delivery

June 2, 2026

new songs …

Featured
L'Rain 3.jpeg
June 15, 2026
Song of the Day: L'Rain - Soulless Cycle
June 15, 2026

Song of the Day: A whoosh of thunderous, mesmeric alternative rock marks this striking new single by the Brooklyn experimental composer, musician, artist and singer Taja Cheek, heralding her upcoming fourth album Fata Morgana, out on 14 August via Mexican Summer

June 15, 2026
Fenne Lily.jpeg
June 14, 2026
Song of the Day: Fenne Lily - Uh Huh
June 14, 2026

Song of the Day: Beautiful, banjo accompanied, reflective wistful indie folk-pop by the the Brooklyn-based British singer-songwriter with this first single heralding her upcoming fourth album, Win Win, out on 23 October via Nettwerk Music

June 14, 2026
Interpol.jpeg
June 13, 2026
Song of the Day: Interpol - See Out Loud
June 13, 2026

Song of the Day: Pulsating indie rock by the seasoned New York band fronted by singer Paul Banks and guitarist Daniel Kessler, heralding their upcoming eighth album This Mirror Weighs a Ton, out on 28 August, and newly signed to Partisan Records

June 13, 2026
Jack White - Frozen Charlotte.jpeg
June 12, 2026
Song of the Day: Jack White - Dollar Bill
June 12, 2026

Song of the Day: The White Stripes man returns with a blistering, bluesy rock guitar, Led Zeppelin-ish single, heralding his upcoming seventh solo album, Frozen Charlotte, out on 10 July via Third Man Records

June 12, 2026
Hot Slob by Sylvan Esso.jpeg
June 11, 2026
Song of the Day: Sylvan Esso - Hot Slob
June 11, 2026

Song of the Day: A proudly messy, rowdy, pointed and punchy new indie rock single embracing the spirit and chaos of living in the glitch by the North Carolina duo of Amelia Meath and Nick Sanborn, here featuring Jenn Wasner and TJ Maiani and out on Psychic Hotline

June 11, 2026
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June 10, 2026
Song of the Day: Rodrigo y Gabriela - Monster
June 10, 2026

Song of the Day: The hugely popular and Grammy-winning Mexico City-raised guitar duo return with a dextrously brilliant new single mixing acoustic and rock styles, heralding their new upcoming new album OurHome out 18 September via ATO Records

June 10, 2026
JJerome87 - The Canyon.jpeg
June 9, 2026
Song of the Day: JJerome87 - Mr. Alligator
June 9, 2026

Song of the Day: A bluesy, smooth, luxuriantly produced Americana number about a dubious authority figure by the British songwriter and musician Joe Newman, frontman of the Mercury winning band alt-J, in this latest single from his debut solo album, The Canyon, out on 26 June via Mushroom Music/ Virgin

June 9, 2026
Balti and Lapgan.jpeg
June 8, 2026
Song of the Day: Baalti & Lapgan - Romance / Ipa Ma
June 8, 2026

Song of the Day: Vibrant, rhythmic, experimental electronica and dance music sampling Bollywood, Bengali disco, Hindustani classical and Gujarati folk by the NY-based pair Jaiveer Singh, Mihir Chauhan, joined by producer Gaurav Nagpa, from their recent album, Threads, out on Azal/FADER

June 8, 2026
Margaret Glaspy 2.jpg
June 7, 2026
Song of the Day: Margaret Glaspy - Michigan
June 7, 2026

Song of the Day: A beautiful finger-picked acoustic single by New York-based Californian singer-songwriter about escaping the big city post breakup, heralding her upcoming album I Am Both out on 7 August via ATO

June 7, 2026
LA Priest - Into The Sky video .png
June 6, 2026
Song of the Day: LA Priest - Into The Sky
June 6, 2026

Song of the Day: High-octane electronica and euphoric, dance music by the eccentric, eclectic US artist Sam Eastgate with his first music for two years, and a highly entertaining video, out on Domino Records

June 6, 2026
Ibeyi .jpeg
June 5, 2026
Song of the Day: Ibeyi - Aset / Offerings
June 5, 2026

Song of the Day: A pair of sensual, soulfully vivid new singles partly sung in Spanish, and the first new music for four years from the French-Cuban twin sisters Lisa-Kaindé Diaz and Naomi Diaz, heralding their upcoming fourth album, Offering, out on 26 June via AWAL Recordings

June 5, 2026
Seasick Steve - The Last Season of America.jpeg
June 4, 2026
Song of the Day: Seasick Steve - The Last Season of America
June 4, 2026

Song of the Day: A poignant, powerfully gentle folk-blues-Americana protest number by the veteran Calfornian singer-songwriter with an extended metaphor about the state of his country in this title track heralding his upcoming album out on 18 September via Steve’s new label Eastcote Recordings

June 4, 2026

Word of the week

Featured
Flying saucer.jpeg
June 11, 2026
Word of the week: phialiform
June 11, 2026

Word of the week: This rare but oddly beautiful rare adjective means "saucer-shaped" or having the form of a small, shallow cup or vessel, from the Latin root phiala (a shallow bowl or phial) and the suffix -iform, meaning shape

June 11, 2026
Cypress vine.jpg
June 4, 2026
Word of the week: quamoclit
June 4, 2026

Word of the week: Also known as cypress vine, cardinal creeper, cardinal vine, star glory, star of Bethlehem or hummingbird vine, this striking climbing flower, Ipomoea quamoclit, is native tropical regions of the Americas and has a distinctive trumpet with five-point star-shaped petals

June 4, 2026
Riqq 1.jpeg
May 21, 2026
Word of the week: riqq
May 21, 2026

Word of the week: An appropriately onomatopoeic noun for name for Middle Eastern tambourine, able to produce a range of percussive sounds, and commonly heard in traditional Egyptian, Arab, Greek and Turkish music

May 21, 2026
Man-blowing-a-salpinx.jpg
May 7, 2026
Word of the week: salpinx
May 7, 2026

Word of the week: This very imposing, loud, resonant noun is an ancient Greek, trumpet-like instrument used as a tactical signal on the battle field, as well as to signal the beginnings of gatherings, or of races in sport

May 7, 2026
Song thrush 2.jpeg
April 23, 2026
Word of the week: throstle
April 23, 2026

Word of the week: An archaic, evocative noun with two connected meanings, originally for the song thrush, then later a textiles industrial frame for spinning, twisting and winding machine for cotton, wool, and other fibres simultaneously

April 23, 2026

Song Bar spinning.gif

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