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Lost tracks, wild releases, rarely herd: songs about endangered animal species

July 31, 2025 Peter Kimpton

Heavy metal to heavy mammal. One Ozzy departs, another arrives: A namesake southern white rhino, here with mother, was born the day Ozzy Osbourne died on 22 July

It’s a musical menagerie: land, sea or air, mammals, birds, amphibians, marsupials, tragic tales of destruction to near extinction, but also heroic conservation, it’s time to highlight creatures under threat but featuring in song

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In African, avant-garde, blues, bossa nova, calypso, classical, country, comedy, dance, disco, drone, dub, easy listening, electronica, exotica, experimental, folk, funk, gospel, hip hop, indie, instrumentals, jazz, krautrock, lounge, metal, music, musical hall, musicals, playlists, pop, postpunk, psychedelia, prog, punk, reggae, RnB, rock, rocksteady, samba, ska, showtime, songs, soul, soundtracks, traditional, trip hop Tags animals, conservation, extinction, endangered species, ecology, Sir David Attenborough, Jane Goodall, Jay Inslee, Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson, Steve Irwin, Edward O. Wilson, Carl Sagan, Douglas Adams, PD James, Charles Darwin, World Wildlife Fund, International Union for Conservation of Nature, RSPB, Carl Jones, birds, birds of prey, mammals, apes
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The whirring mind: songs featuring humming

August 22, 2024 Peter Kimpton

An Anna’s hummingbird at work

A hum-dinger, or at least a hum-singer of a topic, one in which we're seeking songs that feature that sound, perhaps mostly by the vocalist when not singing lyrics, but perhaps other effect and forms of vibrating hum, from rock and pop, famous classical operatic passages, jazz, R&B, reggae and much more

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In African, avant-garde, blues, calypso, classical, comedy, country, dance, disco, drone, dub, easy listening, electronica, exotica, experimental, folk, funk, gospel, hip hop, indie, instrumentals, jazz, krautrock, lounge, metal, music, musical hall, playlists, pop, postpunk, prog, psychedelia, punk, reggae, rock, rocksteady, showtime, ska, songs, soul, soundtracks, traditional, trip hop Tags songs, playlists, DH Lawrence, Laurence Sterne, Pythagoras, Kurt Vonnegut, James Oppenheim, Jean-Paul Sartre, Douglas Adams, Neil Diamond, Albert Ayler, Virginia Woolf, Elvis Costello, Vladimir Mayakovsky, animals, birds, machines, computers, aircraft, Charles Darwin, Joseph Jordania, languages, evolution, Jeffrey Eugenides, Herman Melville, Alfred Lord Tennyson, HG Wells, Billy Collins, Barbara Kingsolver, William Burroughs, Englebert Humperdinck, Nikki Sixx, The Beatles, Paul McCartney, Kina Grannis, Nadia Ali, Jack Johnson, Kiesza, Lemony Snicket, Daniel Handler
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Groundbreaking: songs about pioneers and pioneering

October 12, 2023 Peter Kimpton

Red Cormorant Woman, Olive Oatman and Biddy Mason from the history – Brave Hearted: The Women of the American West, by Katie Hickman (2022)

It’s a word that summons up a rich history of tough trails across the American west, but also of key figures in many other fields, from science and medicine to space, politics and civil rights to music and art. To it’s time to capture all sides of breaking new ground …

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In African, avant-garde, blues, calypso, classical, comedy, country, dance, disco, drone, dub, electronica, experimental, folk, funk, gospel, hip hop, indie, instrumentals, jazz, krautrock, metal, music, musical hall, musicals, playlists, pop, postpunk, prog, psychedelia, punk, reggae, rock, rocksteady, showtime, ska, songs, soul, soundtracks, traditional Tags songs, playlists, pioneering, Katie Hickman, James Fenimore Cooper, Daniel Boone, Walt Whitman, William H Calvin, Henry Ford, Albert Einstein, Timothy Leary, Anna Olson, Sister Rosetta Tharpe, history, Oregon Trail, Joni Mitchell, Ameen Rihani, Buzz Aldrin, Wilhelm Reich, Indira Gandhi, politics, India, suffragettes, Nancy Astor, Emmeline Pankhurst, Lewis Latimer, Alfred Wallace, Charles Darwin, Rosalind Franklin, DNA, science, Elizabeth Freeman, Jane Bolin, Rosa Parks, Claudette Colvin, Amelia Earhart, Bessie Coleman, Shirley Chisholm, Martin Luther King, Bayard Rustin, Moms Mabley, Phillis Wheatley, Rose Marie McCoy
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Scandalous! It's songs about shame

July 20, 2023 Peter Kimpton

“Actually, I think you’ll find these are not stocks, it’s a pillory …”

Far bigger than embarrassment, shame can be private, deep-seated and complex, covering all sides of society, psychology, religious, private or public life, a many-sided identity that can be corrosive but also controlling, useful but also harmful. How does it show in song?

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In African, avant-garde, blues, calypso, classical, comedy, country, dance, disco, drone, dub, electronica, experimental, folk, funk, gospel, hip hop, indie, instrumentals, jazz, krautrock, metal, music, musical hall, musicals, playlists, pop, postpunk, prog, psychedelia, punk, reggae, rock, rocksteady, showtime, ska, songs, soul, soundtracks, traditional Tags songs, playlists, shame, guilt, confessions, Carl Jung, Benjamin Franklin, Jonathan Swift, Mencius, Blaise Pascal, politics, pollution, George RR Martin, Game of Thrones, television, Film, Charles Darwin, animal behaviour, animals, Gulliver's Travels, books, George Eliot, James Hollis, Immanuel Kant, Bernard Williams, Charles Dickens, Bishop Demond Tutu, Brené Brown, Margaret Atwood, religion, Dolly Parton, Fiona Apple, John Grisham, Aimee Mann, Twitter, Fesshole, Ed Sheeran
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Chills and thrills: songs that give you goosebumps

January 5, 2023 Peter Kimpton

Not a curtain-raiser for 2023, but a hair-raiser …

Not a curtain raiser, but a hair-raiser for 2023. It’s a sign that music is at its optimum effect, but when and why does it happen? From Darwin’s explanation to more recent studies, and some musical examples, it’s time to share your goosebump inducting songs and explain why …

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In African, avant-garde, blues, calypso, classical, comedy, country, dance, disco, drone, dub, electronica, experimental, folk, funk, gospel, hip hop, indie, instrumentals, jazz, metal, music, musical hall, musicals, playlists, pop, postpunk, prog, psychedelia, punk, reggae, rock, rocksteady, showtime, ska, songs, soul, soundtracks, traditional Tags songs, playlists, goosebumps, Charles Darwin, David Bowie, Janis Joplin, Al Green, fado, animal behaviour, animals, evolution, Randolph Blake, psychology, Joy Division, Ian Curtis, Jaak Panksepp
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Great exhibitions: songs about 19th century life and culture

August 4, 2022 Peter Kimpton

Early music recording attempts at the end of the 19th century

This global history topic takes in many events, inventions, people and social trends, but beyond dates and facts, it is particularly about life of the times, habits, attitudes and values, and can also include fictional and other artistic styles

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In African, avant-garde, blues, calypso, classical, comedy, country, dance, disco, drone, dub, electronica, experimental, folk, funk, gospel, hip hop, indie, jazz, instrumentals, metal, music, musical hall, musicals, playlists, pop, postpunk, prog, psychedelia, punk, reggae, rock, rocksteady, ska, showtime, songs, soul, soundtracks, traditional Tags songs, playlists, Queen Victoria, 19th century, history, Charles Dickens, Frederick Douglass, Mrs Isabella Beeton, Charles Darwin, Abraham Lincoln, William Wilberforce, Florence Nightingale, transport, trains, China, Russia, American Civil War, slavery, Harriet Tubman, Great Reform Bill, suffrage, Peterloo Massacre, Tolpuddle Martyrs, Ireland, migration, emigration, Irish diaspora, Humphry Davy, Michael Faraday, Alessandro Volta, Thomas Edison, Lewis Howard Latimer, Isambard Kingdom Brunel, James Watt, Richard Trevithick, railways, London 2012 Olympics, Peter Durand, Charles Babbage, Ada Lovelace, Lord Byron, William Whewell, Samuel Morse, Karl Benz, Elisha Gray, Alexander Graham Bell, Karl Marx, Hegel, Jane Austen, Robert Browning, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, William Thackeray, John Keats, Rudyard Kipling, John Constable, JW Turner, Beethoven, Mahler, Pedestrianism, sport, The Great Exhibition
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Get cartography: songs about maps

May 14, 2020 Peter Kimpton
Living maps? Leo Belgicus by Hondius & Gerritsz, 1630

Living maps? Leo Belgicus by Hondius & Gerritsz, 1630

Accurately marked with facts and perfect proportions? Or fuel for fantasy and the imagination? Maps make stories, and stories make maps, and their fascination leads to where X marks the spot. So let’s go there and start digging …

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In African, avant-garde, blues, calypso, classical, country, dance, disco, dub, electronica, experimental, folk, funk, gospel, hip hop, indie, jazz, instrumentals, music, musicals, playlists, pop, punk, prog, postpunk, reggae, rock, rocksteady, showtime, ska, songs, soul, soundtracks Tags songs, playlists, maps, cartography, geography, history, books, Film, Nicholas Crane, Judith Schalansky, Roseanne Barr, Mark Haddon, Miles Harvey, Ptolomy, Da Ming Hun Yi Tu, China, Babylonia, Greece, Ancient Rome, Ancient Greece, Louise Penny, Charles H. Hapood, Lennart Meri, Muhammad Ali, Lech Walesa, Poland, European Union, Charles Darwin, Gerald Durrell, Marion Cotillard, Andrew Bird, Bill Bryson, Ken Jennings, Bill Dedman, Roisin Murphy, Google, GPS, Google Earth, Google Maps, Carlo Ratti, Eric Schmidt, Yuval Noah Harari, Catherynne M. Valente, Gilles Deleuze, Charles Frazier, Reif Larsen, David Mitchell, Terry Pratchett, JRR Tolkien, Stanislav Grof, psychiatry, Alexander McCall Smith, Nelson DeMille, Debbie Lee Wesselmann, Lisel Mueller, Mark Jenkins, Bea González, Amie Kaufman, Christopher Barzak, Jennifer Zeynab Joukhadar, Abdulrazak Gurnah, Gina Greenlee, Rebecca Solnit, Christopher Columbus, Noam Bardin, Dean F. Wilson, Bangambiki Habyarimana, John Steinbeck, Robert Louis Stevenson, The Da Vinci Code, Dan Brown, Harry Potter, Indiana Jones, Moonrise Kingdom, Wes Anderson, Humphrey Bogart, Monty Python, Joni Mitchell, Bjork, Luke Abbott
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Reflections on … songs about confidence. Is that OK?

April 19, 2018 Peter Kimpton
Paws for thought: is confidence is what you see in yourself?

Paws for thought: is confidence is what you see in yourself?

It's cleverer and sexier than brains or beauty. Musicians and performers have it spades – but in equal measure to insecurity. So this week let's explore songs all about wanting it, getting it, using it or losing it

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In blues, classical, comedy, country, dance, electronica, folk, gospel, hip hop, indie, jazz, metal, music, musical hall, musicals, playlists, pop, postpunk, punk, reggae, rock, rocksteady, showtime, ska, songs, soul, soundtracks Tags Songs, playlists, confidence, psychology, sex, beauty, intelligence, Bruce Lee, Lauren Bacall, Samuel Johnson, Leonardo DiCaprio, Thomas Carlyle, Dale Carnegie, David Beckham, Jack Nicklaus, golf, sport, football, Mark Twain, Charles Darwin, Archimedes, Mae West, Jessie J, Tyra Banks, Katy Perry, Lucille Bogan, George Clinton, Bo Diddley, Josh T. Pearson, Jennifer Love Hewitt, Sigmund Freud, Gene Wilder, Eminem, Joan Collins, Barbra Streisand, James Comey, FBI, politics
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Born this way … biographical and autobiographical songs

September 28, 2017 Peter Kimpton
From the cover of The Slits' guitarist Viv Albertine's book Clothes, Clothes, Clothes. Music, Music, Music. Boys, Boys, Boys (2014)

From the cover of The Slits' guitarist Viv Albertine's book Clothes, Clothes, Clothes. Music, Music, Music. Boys, Boys, Boys (2014)

Let me tell you a story … this week we're looking for songs that capture the narrative or arc of a person's life, about themselves or others, famous or unknown, whether that's in the first or third person

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Tags Songs, biography, autobiography, Viv Albertine, The Slits, James Boswell, Samuel Johnson, books, Mark Twain, Samuel Goldwyn, Film, Steven Wright, Comedy, showbusiness, Mike Leigh, David Thewlis, evolution, Charles Darwin, art, painting, Jackson Pollock, Oliver Reed, Brian Blessed, Marx Brothers, Harpo Marx, David Niven, Hollywood, Marlon Brando, Robert Evans, Quincy Jones, Ice Cube, Keith Richards, The Rolling Stones, Mick Jagger, Johnny Cash, Slash, Guns 'n' Roses, Woody Guthrie, Nick Tosches, Dean Martin, The Rat Pack, mafia, Jerry Lee Lewis, Elvis Presley, Diana Ross, Emmylou Harris, Gram Parsons, Humphrey Carpenter, Ian Mckellen, acting, Orson Welles, Ernest Hemingway, James Joyce, Charles Dickens, Peter Ackroyd, WH Auden, John Kennedy Toole, Oscar Wilde
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Sing out, act on CLIMATE CHANGE

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CONDEMN RACISM, EMBRACE EQUALITY

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DRINK OF THE WEEK

Prune juice


SNACK OF THE WEEK

celery sticks in guacamole dip


New Albums …

Featured
Sam Grassie - Where Two Hawks Fly.jpeg
Apr 29, 2026
Sam Grassie: Where Two Hawks Fly
Apr 29, 2026

New album: Beautiful debut LP by the London-based Glaswegian fingerstyle folk guitarist and singer-songwriter, with added saxophone, double bass, flute, clairsach and clarinet in a release of mostly the traditional, covers, sung or instrumental, and supported by the Bert Jansch Foundation

Apr 29, 2026
Irmin Schmidt - Requiem.jpeg
Apr 29, 2026
Irmin Schmidt: Requiem
Apr 29, 2026

New album: A strangely mesmeric, avant-garde and analogue-ambient, field recording-based experimental release by the last surviving founding member of experimental ‘krautrock’ band CAN, who, approaching the age of 89, has also written over 40 TV and film scores

Apr 29, 2026
Gia Margaret - Singing.jpeg
Apr 28, 2026
Gia Margaret: Singing
Apr 28, 2026

New album: Gently profound, and full of wondrous, mesmeric, slow, delicate experimental songs, this simple title has a powerful resonance – it is the Chicago artist’s first vocal album since 2018’s There’s Always Glimmer (there have been two instrumental LPs since), having suffered and recovered from a severe vocal injury, she returns with a delicate, candid, whispery but hauntingly beautiful delivery

Apr 28, 2026
Angel In Plainclothes by Angelo De Augustine.jpeg
Apr 28, 2026
Angelo De Augustine: Angel in Plainclothes
Apr 28, 2026

New album: A beautiful, delicate fifth LP from the Los Angeles singer-songwriter, friend and collaborator with Sufjan Stevens with whom he shares a stylistic resemblance, here with themes on life's fragility, second chances, and picking up the pieces after an undiagnosed illness forced him to re-learn basic abilities

Apr 28, 2026
Carla dal Forno - Confession.jpeg
Apr 28, 2026
Carla dal Forno: Confession
Apr 28, 2026

New album: This lo-fi, darkly minimalist but also oddly candid fourth LP by the Australian, Castlemaine-based singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist centres on the conflicted, obsessive feelings about “a friendship that became emotionally charged in an unexpected way”, and “an album about closeness that arrives late and unexpectedly. About stability rubbing up against desire.”

Apr 28, 2026
Friko - Something Worth Waiting For album.jpeg
Apr 26, 2026
Friko: Something Worth Waiting For
Apr 26, 2026

New album: Passionate, powerful, dynamic indie rock in this sophomore LP by the Chicago-based quartet that gallops forwards with a driving momentum, some elements of early PJ Harvey and Radiohead, and is produced by John Congleton

Apr 26, 2026
White Denim - 13.jpeg
Apr 26, 2026
White Denim: 13
Apr 26, 2026

New album: This 13th LP in two decades by the Austin, Texas rock band fronted by James Petralli has a particularly mischievous experimentalism, spreading styles far beyond breathlessly paced prog rock, with wrily humorous, surreal, personal and passionate numbers across heavy funk, dub, soul, psyche, country, dirty blues and more, joined by host of outstanding extra musicians

Apr 26, 2026
Asili ya Mama by Hukwe Zawose Foundation.jpeg
Apr 24, 2026
Hukwe Zawose Foundation: Asili ya Mama
Apr 24, 2026

New album: Wonderfully evocative field recordings release of Wagogo, Waluguru and Wasambaa Tanzanian women singing traditional songs in their villages, rarely heard outside of their own circles, the title is translated as The Origin of Mother, rich in stories and capturing the place where song is first learned, first felt, first shared

Apr 24, 2026
They Might Be Giants - The World Is To Dig.jpeg
Apr 23, 2026
They Might Be Giants - The World Is To Dig
Apr 23, 2026

New album: Four decades since their self-titled debut, Brooklyn alternative rockers John Flansburgh and John Linnell return with their 24th LP, packed with of punchy, pacy, wistful, whimsical, clever wordplay and indie rock-pop, buoyantly satirical and also a little world weary at times, they remain oddball, lively commentators on the ongoing absurdity of life

Apr 23, 2026
Eaves Wilder - Little Miss Sunshine.jpeg
Apr 22, 2026
Eaves Wilder: Little Miss Sunshine
Apr 22, 2026

New album: After 2023’s Hookey EP, a strong, passionate indie-dream-pop-shoegaze full debut by the London singer-songwriter, whose breathy voice intertwines with strong, stirring riffs and textured sounds, themed around cycles of nature aiming to explain and celebrate the mercurial nature of human emotional weather

Apr 22, 2026
Honey Dijon - The Nightlife.jpeg
Apr 22, 2026
Honey Dijon: The Nightlife
Apr 22, 2026

New album: The irrepressible, prolific and charismatic London-based Chicago DJ, musician, producer and vinyl lover returns with a flamboyantly fun celebration of club and queer culture through the prism of dance music from disco to house, with a wide variety of guest vocalists

Apr 22, 2026
Tiga - HOTLIFE.jpeg
Apr 21, 2026
Tiga: HOTLIFE
Apr 21, 2026

New album: Montreal’s acclaimed electronica/techno/dance artist Tiga Sontag returns with his fourth album - inventively packed with head-nodding, toe-tapping, oddly itchy, infectious grooves, cleverly crafted retro sounds recalling Kraftwerk to acid house and electroclash, insistent bold beats and synth riffs, with lyrics of the existential, droll and surreal

Apr 21, 2026
Tomora - Come Closer.jpg
Apr 20, 2026
TOMORA: Come Closer
Apr 20, 2026

New album: A striking, dynamic collaboration between Norwegian experimental pop sensation Aurora and Tom Rowlands, one of half of Chemical Brothers, with a sensual, otherworldly energetic fusion of mystical, sensual ambience, and block-rocking dance beats

Apr 20, 2026
Jessie Ware - Superbloom.jpeg
Apr 20, 2026
Jessie Ware: Superbloom
Apr 20, 2026

New album: Following 2020’s What’s Your Pleasure? and 2023’s That! Feels Good!, as well as the successful food podcast Table Manners she hosts alongside her mother, the British pop singer continues to ride the 70s disco ball train, catering to the clever, kitsch and catchy with an ironic wink, adding also a luxuriant garden metaphor

Apr 20, 2026

new songs …

Featured
Alewya - Saleh.jpeg
Apr 30, 2026
Song of the Day: Alewya - Selah
Apr 30, 2026

Song of the Day: Striking, stylishly agile electronica and dance with a rich African and Arabian influence by the London-based British singer-songwriter, producer, multidisciplinary artist and model Alewya Demmisse, heralding her upcoming album, Zero, out on 26 June via LDN Records

Apr 30, 2026
metric romanticize-the-dive.jpeg
Apr 29, 2026
Song of the Day: Metric - Crush Forever
Apr 29, 2026

Song of the Day: Uplifting, effervescent electro-disco-pop by the Toronto indie rock band, with a song vocalist/keyboardist Emily Haines describes as “my love letter to strong girls in this world”, taken from their recently released 10th album, Romanticize the Dive, out on Metric Music via Thirty Tigers

Apr 29, 2026
Jim Ghedi - The Hungry Child single.jpeg
Apr 28, 2026
Song of the Day: Jim Ghedi - The Hungry Child
Apr 28, 2026

Song of the Day: Dark, gripping, visceral folk by the Sheffield singer-songwriter, with a striking number based on an early 19th-century German poem about the fatal story of a child pleading for food, and, following last year’s acclaimed album, Wasteland, also out on Basin Rock, it heralds his upcoming soundtrack for the Hugh Jackman film, The Death of Robin Hood.

Apr 28, 2026
holybones with Baxter Dury - SLUGBOY.jpg
Apr 27, 2026
Song of the Day: holybones (with Baxter Dury) - SLUGBOY
Apr 27, 2026

Song of the Day: Dark, unsettling, sleazy and strange, this is arrestingly vivid new collaborative single between the clandestine London electronic collective and the downbeat, deep-voiced poetic Londoner, out on Promised Land Recordings

Apr 27, 2026
Hand Habits - Good Person.jpeg
Apr 26, 2026
Song of the Day: Hand Habits - Good Person
Apr 26, 2026

Song of the Day: Gentle, droll, humorously self-deprecatingly, and also delicately beautiful, this new experimental folk single by the moniker of Los Angeles singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Meg Duffy addresses the love-hate relationship with making music, out on Fat Possum

Apr 26, 2026
Pigeon - Miami.jpeg
Apr 25, 2026
Song of the Day: Pigeon - Miami
Apr 25, 2026

Song of the Day: Catchy, sunny, upbeawt indie synth-pop with an African twist by the Margate band fronted by Falle Nioke, with flavours of William Onyeabor, Hot Chip and New York 70s disco, heralding their upcoming album OUTTANATIONAL, out on 1 May via Memphis Industries

Apr 25, 2026
Tricky - Out of Place.jpeg
Apr 24, 2026
Song of the Day: Tricky - Out of Place (featuring Marta Złakowska)
Apr 24, 2026

Song of the Day: A pulsating fusion of beats, orchestral strings and the Bristol trip-hop pioneer’s distinctive, deep, croaky voice, with an emotional reference to his daughter Mina Topley-Bird (1995–2019), and heralding his first solo album for six years, Different When It’s Silent, out on 17 June via False Idols

Apr 24, 2026
Beck - Ride Lonsome.jpeg
Apr 23, 2026
Song of the Day: Beck - Ride Lonesome
Apr 23, 2026

Song of the Day: Beautiful, simmering, slow, melancholy and reflective, a surprise single and welcome return by the acclaimed US artist, evoking the haunting, sun-bleached landscapes and musical textures of his 2015 Grammy winning album Morning Phase, out now on Iliad Records/Capitol Records

Apr 23, 2026
Gelli Haha - Klouds.jpeg
Apr 22, 2026
Song of the Day: Gelli Haha - Klouds Will Carry Me To Sleep
Apr 22, 2026

Song of the Day: Described appropriately as somewhere between Studio 42 and Area 51, eccentric, effervescent, spacey, catchy and eclectic disco pop by the Los Angeles artist (aka Angel Abaya, co-written with Sean Guerin) out on Innovative Leisure

Apr 22, 2026
Leenalchi band 2.jpeg
Apr 21, 2026
Song of the Day: LEENALCHI 이날치 - Here Comes That Crow 떴다 저 가마귀
Apr 21, 2026

Song of the Day: Wonderfully catchy, funky, psychedelic and quirky new work by the seven-piece Seoul-based Korean pansori band led by bassist Jang Young Gyu with the title track of their new EP, out on 12 June via Luaka Bop, and heralding a European and North American tour

Apr 21, 2026
Jesca Hoop - Big Storm.jpeg
Apr 20, 2026
Song of the Day: Jesca Hoop - Big Storm
Apr 20, 2026

Song of the Day: Catchy, quirky experimental indie folk-pop by the innovative Manchester-based California artist, featuring a clever video that old footage and Hoop in various vintage guises, heralding her upcoming album Long Wave Home, out on 1 May via Last Laugh / Republic of Music

Apr 20, 2026
Gia Margaret - Singing.jpeg
Apr 19, 2026
Song of the Day: Gia Margaret - Alive Inside
Apr 19, 2026

Song of the Day: Delicate, dream-like, reflective experimental folk-pop by the American singer-songwriter and producer from Chicago, heralding her upcoming fourth album, Singing, out on Jagjaguwar

Apr 19, 2026

Word of the week

Featured
Song thrush 2.jpeg
Apr 23, 2026
Word of the week: throstle
Apr 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

Apr 23, 2026
Undine - Novella.jpeg
Apr 9, 2026
Word of the week: undine
Apr 9, 2026

Word of the week: It might sound like the act of abstaining from food, but this noun from derived from undina (Latin unda) meaning wave, refers to mythical, elemental beings associated with water, such as mermaids, and stemming from the alchemical writings of the 16th-century Swiss physician, alchemist and philosopher Paracelsus

Apr 9, 2026
Veena player.jpg
Mar 27, 2026
Word of the week: veena
Mar 27, 2026

Word of the week: This ornate, curvaceous, south Indian classical instrument, the saraswati veena, is a special bowl lute with a rich, resonant tone, has 24 copper frets with four playing strings and three drone strings, and is used for Carnatic music

Mar 27, 2026
Snail on a wall.jpeg
Mar 12, 2026
Word of the week: wallfish
Mar 12, 2026

Word of the week: It sounds like the singing finned picture ornament Big Mouth Billy Bass that became popular in the late 1990s, but this is a much older noun, derived in Somerset, England, pertains to the climbing gastropod that can slowly climb up any surface

Mar 12, 2026
Swordfish.jpg
Feb 25, 2026
Word of the week: xiphias
Feb 25, 2026

Word of the week: Get the point? This is the scientific name for the swordfish, in full Xiphias gladius (from the Greek and Latin for sword), that extraordinary sea creature with the long, pointy bill. But what of it in song?

Feb 25, 2026

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