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Word of the week: didgeridoo

September 23, 2019 Peter Kimpton
The true sound of Australia …

The true sound of Australia …

Word of the week: It's that unmistakable indigenous Australian hardwood trumpet "drone pipe" classified as a brass aerophone and among its extraordinary qualities, playing helps reduce snoring and obstructive sleep apne by strengthening the muscles of the upper airways

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In dance, experimental, folk, traditional Tags words, word of the week, songs, instruments, instrumentals, Ryka Ali, Didgeridoo Duet Adèle & Zalem, Ticki Stamasuri, Rolf Harris, Kate Bush, David Hudson, Steve Roach, Sarah Hopkins
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Word of the week: esraj

September 18, 2019 Peter Kimpton
The esraj is a four-string version of the older dilruba

The esraj is a four-string version of the older dilruba

Word of the Week: It has a beautifully eerily, emotional sound that echoes the human voice, that comes not from vocal chords, but from bowed strings in this instrument from southern Asia – mainly music in Sikh, Punjab and eastern Bengal culture

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In classical, experimental, folk, traditional Tags words, word of the week, songs, instrumentals, instruments, esraj, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Arshad Khan, Takashi Kougo, Denovaire, The Beatles, George Harrison, Asian Music Circle, Ravi Shankar
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Word of the week: flugelhorn

September 11, 2019 Peter Kimpton
Like a trumpet, but not a trumpet …

Like a trumpet, but not a trumpet …

Word of the week: It’s similar to a trumpet, but isn’t. What’s the difference, who plays it, and on what songs and pieces. All is revealed here in a blow-by-blow account, featuring artists including Miles Davis, Bruce Springsteen and The Pogues

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In avant-garde, classical, blues, jazz, indie, rock Tags words, word of the week, instruments, flugelhorn, trumpets, Heinrich Stölzel, Dave Allison, Igor Stravinsky, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Gustav Mahler, Sergei Nakariakov, Kirill Soldatov, Jim Bishop, Woody Herman, Clark Terry, Duke Ellington, Miles Davis, Chet Baker, Shorty Rogers, Kenny Baker, Hugh Masekela, Ed Trujillo, Chuck Mangione, Bruce Springsteen, Randy Brecker, Steely Dan, The Pogues, Shane McGowan, Elvis Costello, Steve Lillywhite, Beirut (band), Zach Condon
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Word of the week: güiro

September 2, 2019 Peter Kimpton
Güiro - used in more genres than you might imagine

Güiro - used in more genres than you might imagine

Word of the week: Used in Latin American music, but also by artists from David Bowie to The Rolling Stones, it’s idiophone made of resonant gourd or wood, is held through holes making a rhythmic, ratchet sound by scraping a stick across specially created ridges

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In blues, dance, folk, funk, traditional, soul, rock, psychedelia, pop, jazz, indie, reggae, salsa Tags instruments, percussion, word of the week, words, Alejandro Sol, salsa, Central America, Chico Alvarez, Steely Dan, David Bowie, The Rolling Stones, Max Romeo, The Drifters, R.E.M., Igor Stravinsky
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Word of the week: humpenscrump and hurdy-gurdy

August 27, 2019 Peter Kimpton
Hurdy-gurdy

Hurdy-gurdy

Word of the week: It sounds like a medieval insult, disease or even sexual position, but it's a basic form of the stringed instrument played with keys and by turning a hand-crank wheel that rubs against the strings like a mechanised violin

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In experimental, folk, rock, prog rock, traditional Tags instruments, hurdy-gurdy, medieval, Hieronymus Bosch, Patrick Bouffard, Valentin Clastrier, The Pogues, Jem Finer, Spencer Tracy, film, film soundtracks, Nigel Eaton, Jimmy Page, Robert Plant, Led Zeppelin, Blind Willie Johnson, Ritchie Blackmore, Weezer
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Word of the week: igil

August 20, 2019 Peter Kimpton
Tuvan musician Evgeny Saryglar on the igil

Tuvan musician Evgeny Saryglar on the igil

Word of the week: It's an elegant, bowed, two-stringed Tuvan musical instrument, central to the music of that southern Siberian region, emitting a haunting sound that often accompanies and is played by throat singers

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In folk, traditional Tags songs, word of the week, words, instruments, igil, Tuva, Russia, Mongolia, folk, traditional, throat singing, Evgeny Saryglar, Aldar Tamdyn, Kaigal-ool Khovalyg, Huun-Huur-Tu, Batzorig Vaanchig, Ayana Mongush
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Word of the week: jazzophone

August 12, 2019 Peter Kimpton
Two for one: the jazzophone

Two for one: the jazzophone

Word of the week: It is quite rare, has possibly the cheesiest name of any instrument, and is an unholy hybrid of trumpet and alto saxophone, but can produce a remarkably vibrant and unusual sound

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In jazz, avant-garde Tags words, word of the week, jazz, jazzophone, saxophone, trumpets, The Bubbling-Over Five Band, Scott Robinson, Arturo Sandoval
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Word of the week: kulning

August 6, 2019 Peter Kimpton
Have you ‘herd’ this before?

Have you ‘herd’ this before?

Word of the week: It's a beautiful, haunting Scandinavian high-pitched, very musical vocal style, designed to resonantly call in herds of cows or goats from high pastures and long distances, sung out particularly by women

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In folk, classical Tags words, word of the week, kulning, herd calling, Sweden, Norway, Myrkur, Jonna Jinton, Åsa Larsson, Jenna Nash, Maria Misgeld, Gjallarhorn, Christine Hals, Disney, Marvel, Andrei Tarkovsky, Edvard Grieg, film, film soundtracks, television, Julia Zhu
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Word of the week: lagerphone

July 31, 2019 Peter Kimpton
Sticking the boot in …

Sticking the boot in …

Word of the week: The Australian name for the Mendoza, Mendozer, Monkey Stick, Murrumbidgee River Rattler, or Zob Stick, this ultimate pub instrument is a shake-and-bang percussion stick or pole is mostly made from nailed-on beer bottle tops

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In experimental, folk, traditional Tags words, word of the week, songs, percussion, instruments, lagerphone, monkey stick, folk, Australia, Newfoundland, Ukraine, Netherlands, Keef Trouble, Brett Marvin and the Thunderbolts, Terry Dactyl and the Dinosaurs, Jona Lewie, Groanbox, Dr. Busker, Zapoppin'
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Word of the week: molimo

July 24, 2019 Peter Kimpton
Mbuti pygmies listening back to their own music in 1952

Mbuti pygmies listening back to their own music in 1952

Word of the week: It is a horn-like trumpet used by the Mbuti pygmy tribes of Democratic Republic of the Congo, but also the name of a ritual to celebrate the precious life of the forest to these hunter-gatherers

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In traditional Tags songs, word of the week, words, instruments, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Africa, traditional, environment, conservation
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Word of the week: nyckelharpa

July 16, 2019 Peter Kimpton
A 16-string chromatic nyckelharpa

A 16-string chromatic nyckelharpa

Word of the week: It's a traditional Swedish instrument that sounds similar to and is bowed like the violin, but with greater resonance, has 16 strings and as many as 37 wooden keys that fret the strings to make particular note

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In classical, folk, traditional, psychedelia Tags words, word of the week, instruments, traditional, nyckelharpa, Sweden, Finland, Germany, Scotland, Poland, Thomas Roth, Gabi Maas, Emelie Waldken, Hedningarna, Anna Rynefors
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Word of the week: ophicleide

July 8, 2019 Peter Kimpton
Plenty of puff: Monsieur le Curé and his Ophicleide

Plenty of puff: Monsieur le Curé and his Ophicleide

Word of the week: It's an obscure hybrid of tuba and saxophone and evolved from the serpent, this rich-toned keyed brass instrument has a mouthpiece that makes it part of the bugle family

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In classical, folk, jazz, traditional Tags words, word of the week, ophicleide, brass, instruments, instrumentals, saxophone, tuba, Jean Hilaire Asté, orchestra, Gaspare Spontini, Felix Mendelssohn, Berlioz, Michael Balfe, Saint-Saëns, Verdi, Wagner, John Elliot, Tony George, Gabriel Fauré, Arthur Sullivan, Telemann, Nick Byrne, William Perry, Irineu de Almeida
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Word of the week: pungi

July 3, 2019 Peter Kimpton
What’s the scale? Snake songs …

What’s the scale? Snake songs …

Word of the week: Know your scales? It is also known as the murli or the been, this double-reedpipe instrument made from a gourd is primarily associated with snake charmers on the Indian subcontinent

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In folk, traditional Tags word of the week, words, instruments, instrumentals, India, pungi, snake charmers, traditional, Shri Bhanwarnath
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Word of the week: quena

June 24, 2019 Peter Kimpton
A selection of quena flutes

A selection of quena flutes

Word of the week: It's an instrument that brings to mind the soaring condor and mountainous  Andes – a haunting, beautiful sound emanating from this simple, traditional wooden flute

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In folk, rock, traditional Tags music, word of the week, words, quena, flutes, wind instruments, instruments, Andes, Facio Santillan, South America, Illapu, Vladimir Khrobystov, Los Koyas, Los Enanitos Verdes
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Word of the week: rebec

June 17, 2019 Peter Kimpton
Rebecs

Rebecs

Word of the week: Most popular in the 13th-16th centuries, then largely replaced by the viol and violin, yet this beautiful wooden gut- and nylon-stringed instrument has a distinctive sound and still appears in some music today

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In classical, dance, folk, experimental, traditional Tags songs, word of the week, words, rebec, instruments, medieval, folk, instrumentals, Ernst Stolz, Susanne Ansorf, Rosen Genkov, Shirley Collins, Dolly Collins, Hesperus, Tina Chancey, Mestre Ambrósio, Sergio Veloso (Siba), Antônio Nóbrega, Joanna Newsom
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Word of the week: sourdine

June 11, 2019 Peter Kimpton
Miles Davis regularly used a Harmon mute, or sourdine, since the late 1950s

Miles Davis regularly used a Harmon mute, or sourdine, since the late 1950s

Word of the week: It’s the name for defunct reed instrument, but primarily from the French meaning to mute, pertaining to devices that not only reduce volume, but also create new tones, especially for brass instruments

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In jazz, traditional Tags word of the week, words, mutes, sourdine, instruments, trumpets, jazz, Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie, Brian Shook, Cullen Knight, Tommy Dorsey, Tricky Sam Nanton, Duke Ellington
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Word of the week: trautonium

June 3, 2019 Peter Kimpton
Resistance and metal: the Trautonium

Resistance and metal: the Trautonium

Word of the week: Long before Kraftwerk and other electronic music pioneers, this beautiful, eerie-sounding instrument was invented in 1929 by Friedrich Trautwein in Berlin at the Musikhochschule's music and radio lab, the Rundfunkversuchstelle

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In electronica, experimental Tags words, word of the week, trautonium, instruments, electronic music, Friedrich Trautwein, Germany, Berlin, Oskar Sala, Léon Theremin, Alfred Hitchcock, film, film soundtracks, Peter Pichler, LudoWic
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Word of the week: ukeke

May 27, 2019 Peter Kimpton
Ukeke maker and player Mahi La Pierre

Ukeke maker and player Mahi La Pierre

Word of the week: Unlike the ukelele, which was introduced by European sailors, this is the only true indigenous Hawaiian stringed instrument, evolving from hunting bow into one with plucked strings that becomes a mouth harp

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In classical, experimental, folk, traditional Tags words, word of the week, ukeke, Hawaii, traditional, Kimo Huybrechts, Palani Vaughn, Ranga Pae
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Word of the week: vibraslap

May 20, 2019 Peter Kimpton
The vibraslap is a replacement for the jawbone

The vibraslap is a replacement for the jawbone

Word of the week: It's one of the most modern of all analogue percussion instruments, a combination of stiff wire, wooden ball and box with metal teeth, a replacement for animal bones, but where does it appear in songs?

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In country, dance, electronica, funk, hip hop, indie, pop, rock Tags songs, word of the week, words, rhythm, vibraslap, Martin B Cohen, Jimi Hendrix, David Bowie, Brian Jones, R.E.M., Dr Dre, Cake, Kasabian
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Word of the week: whamola

May 14, 2019 Peter Kimpton
Whamola

Whamola

Word of the week: This week’s funky instrument is a strange cousin of the washtub bass, a fusion fo whammy bar and viola, comprising the neck form a double bass with a string and with note changed by a lever-and-pulley system

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In blues, funk, psychedelia, experimental Tags word of the week, words, instruments, whamola, Les Claypool, Primus
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DRINK OF THE WEEK

Constant comment tea


SNACK OF THE WEEK

black-eyed peas


New Albums …

Featured
Geologist - Camel Lights.jpeg
Feb 4, 2026
Geologist: Can I Get A Pack Of Camel Lights?
Feb 4, 2026

New album: The hurdy-gurdy never quite sounded like this before. Animal Collective multi-instrumentalist Brian Weitz is the final member of that experimental collective to release a solo album, and it’s a bizarre journey of oddball sounds and instruments looped through guitar pedal effects krautrock repetitive, meditational exploratory spirit, inhaled through the titular reference to his past as a smoker

Feb 4, 2026
Delaney Bailey - Concave.jpeg
Feb 4, 2026
Delaney Bailey: Concave
Feb 4, 2026

New album: A highly absorbing, potent, intense yet understated, ethereally sound-sculptured debut by the Indiana-raised Chicago artist who crafts intimate noir-goth dream pop across themes of vulnerability and mental health

Feb 4, 2026
Cast - Yeah Yeah Yeah.jpeg
Feb 3, 2026
Cast: Yeah Yeah Yeah
Feb 3, 2026

New album: Liverpool’s John Power and co returns after 2024’s Love Is The Call with an eighth LP, packed with anthemic, catchy, voluminous indie rock bangers with P.P. Arnold adding classy backing vocals

Feb 3, 2026
Toni Geitani - Wahj.jpeg
Feb 3, 2026
Toni Geitani: Wahj
Feb 3, 2026

New album: A truly magical, highly original, otherworldly landscape of experimental Arabic, electronica, avant-pop, dark ambient and industrial forms by the Beirut-born, Amsterdam-based musician, sound designer, producer, film-maker singer and composer

Feb 3, 2026
Ye Vadabonds - All Tied Together.jpeg
Feb 3, 2026
Ye Vagabonds: All Tied Together
Feb 3, 2026

New album: Beautiful, evocative, poetic and profound original folk numbers with a traditional style by Irish brothers Brían and Diarmuid Mac Gloinn in their fourth LP, recorded live in a Galway house with acclaimed producer Philip Weinrobe (Big Thief, Adrianne Lenker), and vivid lyrical themes of home and memory

Feb 3, 2026
Plantoid - FLARE.jpeg
Feb 2, 2026
Plantoid: FLARE
Feb 2, 2026

New album: The nimbly inventive, experimental prog trio from Brighton return following their debut LP Terrapath, with an evolved, often catchier style of oddball riffs, licks, clever tempo changes, unusual rhythms, and unconventional chord progressions with a stirring of jazz inflections, dream pop, psych rock and shoegaze

Feb 2, 2026
No Love Lost to Kindness by Yumi Zouma.jpeg
Feb 1, 2026
Yumi Zouma: No Love Lost To Kindness
Feb 1, 2026

New album: A bolder, more strident, indie-rock urgency of style by the New Zealand quartet previously known more for dream pop, particularly front-loading this fifth LP with a pacier, spikier material in their decade-long career

Feb 1, 2026
Tyler Ballgame - For The First Time Again.jpeg
Jan 30, 2026
Tyler Ballgame: For The First Time, Again
Jan 30, 2026

New album: With that sublime, soaring, soulful voice, and echoes of Roy Orbison, the Rhode Island-raised singer-songwriter’s truly gorgeous debut LP captures all the range of of the love – warmth, longing, tenderness and heartbreak through classy and crafted retro sound of 60s and 70s rock

Jan 30, 2026
Tessa Rose Jackson - The Lighthouse.jpeg
Jan 29, 2026
Tessa Rose Jackson: The Lighthouse
Jan 29, 2026

New album: Beautiful, intricate, understated, poetic and intelligent, this warm, inviting experimental folk by the Dutch-British singer-songwriter is the first LP under her own name, having previously released three as the artist Someone

Jan 29, 2026
Lucinda Williams - World's Gone Wrong.jpeg
Jan 28, 2026
Lucinda Williams: World's Gone Wrong
Jan 28, 2026

New album: The acclaimed veteran country, rock and Americana singer-songwriter and multi-Grammy winner’s latest LP has a title that speaks for itself, but is powerful, angry, defiant and uplifting, and, recorded in Nashville, features guest vocals from Norah Jones, Mavis Staples and Brittney Spencer

Jan 28, 2026
Clotheline From Hell.jpeg
Jan 27, 2026
Clothesline From Hell: Slather On The Honey
Jan 27, 2026

New album: His moniker mischievously named after a wrestling move, a highly impressive, independently-created experimental, psychedelic rock debut the the Toronto-based multi-instrumentalist and singer-songwriter Adam LaFramboise

Jan 27, 2026
Dead Dads Club.jpeg
Jan 27, 2026
Dead Dads Club: Dead Dads Club
Jan 27, 2026

New album: Dynamic, passionate, heart-stirring indie rock in this project fronted by Chilli Jesson (formerly bassist of Palma Violets) with songs spurred by the trauma of losing his father 20 years ago, retelling a defiant and difficult aftermath, with sound boosted by producer Carlos O’Connell of Fontaines D.C.

Jan 27, 2026
The Paper Kites - IF YOU GO THERE, I HOPE YOU FIND IT.png
Jan 25, 2026
The Paper Kites: If You Go There, I Hope You Find It
Jan 25, 2026

New album: Warm, tender, gently-paced, calmly reflective, beautifully soothing, poetic, melancholic alternative folk and Americana by the band from Melbourne in their seventh LP in 15 years

Jan 25, 2026
PVA - No More Like This.jpeg
Jan 24, 2026
PVA: No More Like This
Jan 24, 2026

New album: Inventive, alluring, sensual, mysterious, minimalistic electronica, trip-hop and experimental pop by the London trio of Ella Harris, Joshua Baxter and Louis Satchell, in this second album following 2022’s Blush, boosted by the creativity of producer and instrumentalist Kwake Bass

Jan 24, 2026

new songs …

Featured
Broken Social Scene.jpg
Feb 4, 2026
Song of the Day: Broken Social Scene - Not Around Anymore
Feb 4, 2026

Song of the Day: A sparkling return by Toronto indie collective fronted by Kevin Drew with cleverly, catchy, upbeat rhythmic brass and sax-infused wistful track about disappearing possibilities, and heralding their first album in nearly a decade, Remember The Humans out 8 May via City Slang / Arts & Crafts

Feb 4, 2026
Modern Woman - Johnny's Dream.jpeg
Feb 3, 2026
Song of the Day: Modern Woman - Dashboard Mary
Feb 3, 2026

Song of the Day: An intriguingly experimental, eclectic, slowing unfolding number with a gently spooky video by the London art-rock band fronted by singer-songwriter Sophie Harris, heralding their debut album Johnny’s Dreamworld on 1 May via One Little Independent Records

Feb 3, 2026
Sego - Buy It Break It.jpeg
Feb 2, 2026
Song of the Day: Sego - Buy It Break It
Feb 2, 2026

Song of the Day: Punchy, sharp, witty super-catchy art-punk indie by the Los Angeles-based band from Utah, consisting of Spence (guitar/ lead vocals), Tom (drums), Derv (bass), and Kathleen (keyboards and guitar)

Feb 2, 2026
Chris Brain.png
Feb 1, 2026
Song of the Day: Chris Brain - Red Sun Rising
Feb 1, 2026

Song of the Day: A beautiful Nick Drake-reminiscent new folk number with intricate finger-picking by the Yorkshire-based singer-songwriter, and the title track heralding his new album Red Sun Rising, out 1 May via Big Sun Records

Feb 1, 2026
Streets of Minneapolis - Bruce Springsteen.jpeg
Jan 31, 2026
Song of the Day: Bruce Springsteen - Streets of Minneapolis
Jan 31, 2026

Song of the Day: A powerful brand new protest song by the Boss, tackling America’s controversial influx of ICE agents into Minneapolis and their recent murders of innocent bystanders Alex Pretti and Renée Good, released on Columbia

Jan 31, 2026
Robber Robber band.jpeg
Jan 30, 2026
Song of the Day: Robber Robber - The Sound It Made
Jan 30, 2026

Song of the Day: Striking, dynamic, noisy stop-and-start, stylish experimental post-rock and post-rock by the band from Burlington, Vermont, fronted by Nina Cates, heralding their new album, Two Wheels Move the Soul, out on 3 April via on Fire Talk

Jan 30, 2026
Holly Humberstone - To Love Somebody.jpeg
Jan 29, 2026
Song of the Day: Holly Humberstone - To Love Somebody
Jan 29, 2026

Song of the Day: Shimmeringly catchy and singalong, effervescent Abba-esque and Fleetwood Mac-ish piano and synth pop with an eye-catching, vampiric-themed video by the British singer-songwriter from Grantham, heralding her second album Cruel World out on 10 April via Polydor/Universal.

Jan 29, 2026
Nathan Fake.jpeg
Jan 28, 2026
Song of the Day: Nathan Fake - Slow Yamaha
Jan 28, 2026

Song of the Day: Hypnotic electronica with woozy layers of smooth resonance and a lattice of shifting analogue patterns by the British artist from Norfolk, taken from his forthcoming album, Evaporator, out on InFiné Music

Jan 28, 2026
Charlotte Day Wilson - Lean.jpeg
Jan 27, 2026
Song of the Day: Charlotte Day Wilson - Lean (featuring Saya Gray)
Jan 27, 2026

Song of the Day: Stylish, striking, sensual experimental electro-pop and R&B in this fabulous collaboration between the two Canadian singer/ multi-instrumentalist from Toronto, out on Stone Woman Music/ XL Recordings

Jan 27, 2026
Lime Garden - 23.jpeg
Jan 26, 2026
Song of the Day: Lime Garden - 23
Jan 26, 2026

Song of the Day: Wonderfully catchy, witty, quirky indie pop about age and adjustment by the Brighton-formed quartet fronted by Chloe Howard, heralding their upcoming album Maybe Not Tonight, out on So Young Records on 10 April

Jan 26, 2026
Madra Salach - It's A Hell Of An Age - EP.jpeg
Jan 25, 2026
Song of the Day: Madra Salach - The Man Who Seeks Pleasure
Jan 25, 2026

Song of the Day: A powerful, slow-simmering and gradually intensifying, drone-based original folk number about the the flipsides of love and hedonism by the young Irish traditional and alternative folk band, with comparisons to Lankum, from the recently released EP It's a Hell of an Age, out on Canvas Music

Jan 25, 2026
Adult DVD band.jpeg
Jan 24, 2026
Song of the Day: Adult DVD - Real Tree Lee
Jan 24, 2026

Song of the Day: Catchy, witty, energised acid-dance-punk with echoes of Underworld and Snapped Ankles by the dynamic, innovative band from Leeds in a new number about a dodgy character of toxic masculinity and online ignorance, and their first release on signing to Fat Possum

Jan 24, 2026

Word of the week

Featured
Zumbador dorado - mango bumblebee Puerto Rico.jpeg
Jan 22, 2026
Word of the week: zumbador
Jan 22, 2026

Word of the week: A wonderfully evocative noun from the Spanish for word buzz, and meaning both a South American hummingbird, a door buzzer, and symbolic of resurrection of the soul in ancient Mexican culture, while also serving as the logo for a tequila brand

Jan 22, 2026
Hamlet ad - Gregor Fisher.jpg
Jan 8, 2026
Word of the week: aspectabund
Jan 8, 2026

Word of the week: This rare adjective describes a highly expressive face or countenance, where emotions and reactions are readily shown through the eyes or mouth

Jan 8, 2026
Kaufmann Trumpeter 1950.jpeg
Dec 24, 2025
Word of the week: bellonion (or belloneon)
Dec 24, 2025

Word of the week: It sounds like a bulbous, multi-layered peeling vegetable, but this obscure mechanical musical instrument invented in 1812 in Dresden consisted of 24 trumpets and two kettle drums and, designed to mimic the sound of a marching band, might also make your eyes water

Dec 24, 2025
Hangover.jpeg
Dec 4, 2025
Word of the week: crapulence
Dec 4, 2025

Word of the week: A term that may apply regularly during Xmas party season, from the from the Latin crapula, in turn from the Greek kraipálē meaning "drunkenness" or "headache" pertains to sickness symptoms caused by excess in eating or drinking, or general intemperance and overindulgence

Dec 4, 2025
Running shoes and barefoot.jpeg
Nov 20, 2025
Word of the week: discalceate
Nov 20, 2025

Word of the week: A rarely used, but often practised verb, especially when arriving home, it means to take off your shoes, but is also a slightly more common adjective meaning barefoot or unshod, particularly for certain religious orders that wear sandals instead of shoes. But in what context does this come up in song?

Nov 20, 2025

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