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Click the links and join: songs about chains

June 12, 2025 Peter Kimpton

Grow the chain …

Everything’s linked, but this week we get more specific, literally or in metaphor on these metal or other material sets of serial bindings, all they pulling, confining, binding or joining, on any scale …

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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, musicals, playlists, pop, postpunk, prog, psychedelia, punk, reggae, RnB, rock, rocksteady, showtime, ska, songs, soul, soundtracks, traditional, trip hop Tags songs, playlists, chains, Nelson Mandela, slavery, Charles Dickens, Franz Kafka, Mary Wortley Montagu, Andy Warhol, John Lanchester, Paul Whiteman, Mr T, Arthur Kornberg, William Blake
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Grace notes: songs about mercy

April 3, 2025 Peter Kimpton

A surprising final act of mercy: Bladerunner (1982) with Rutger Hauer and Harrison Ford

From wars to trade tariffs, it’s arguably never been more absent and more required in the modern world. But here, with some cinematic inspiration, how is it expressed in song? With idioms or stories, calling for, or dispensing it, and much more …

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In African, avant-garde, blues, 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, prog, psychedelia, punk, reggae, RnB, rock, rocksteady, showtime, ska, songs, soul, soundtracks, traditional, trip hop Tags mercy, Abraham Lincoln, Thomas Aquinas, Graham Greene, Susan Sontag, William Shakespeare, Shakespeare, Charles Dickens, Mose Allison, US foreign policy, Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin, Film, books, film soundtrack, Robert Bresson, Maurice Cloche, Victor Hugo, Charlie Chaplin, David Lynch, Anthony Hopkins, John Hurt, Gavin Hood, Rutger Hauer, Harrison Ford, Alastair Sim
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A shade more interesting: songs about the colour grey

February 27, 2025 Peter Kimpton

Dappled greys on a misty morning …

An unheralded hue between black and white, it’s the shade of ambiguity, subtlety, diplomacy and poetry. Dove, slate, mountain, pewter, flint, pebble, dawn, snail trail, bark, granite, graphite, bone, frost, smoke, mist, also in many animals and metaphors, so how does it work in culture and song?

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In African, avant-garde, blues, calypso, classical, colours, 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, musicals, playlists, pop, postpunk, prog, psychedelia, punk, reggae, rock, rocksteady, showtime, ska, songs, soul, soundtracks, traditional, trip hop Tags songs, playlists, colours, grey, gray, Agatha Christie, Charles Dickens, George RR Martin, animals, minerals, Oscar Wilde, George Clooney, El Greco, Rembrandt, Anthony Van Dyke, art, William Gibson, David Bowie, Keir Starmer, Emmanuel Macron, pigeons, artificial intelligence, nanotechnology, Edwin Morgan, poetry
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Kick-ass topic! Songs about bad boys and bad girls

September 19, 2024 Peter Kimpton

You simply don’t mess with Tura Satana, portraying Varla in 1965’s Faster Pussycat! Kill! Kill!

Ambiguous, mysterious, sexy, full of charm but also harm, they're the objects of obsession, as it's often unclear what the balance of good-bad may be. Fictional or real, famous or personal, let's find songs inspired by them ...

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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, musicals, playlists, pop, postpunk, prog, psychedelia, punk, reggae, rock, rocksteady, showtime, ska, songs, soul, soundtracks, traditional, trip hop Tags songs, playlists, Film, music, film soundtrack, Tallulah Bankhead, Taylor Swift, Peter Tosh, Ian McShane, Jethro Tull, Fiona Apple, Christina Aguilera, Mae West, David Niven, Charles Dickens, Greek mythology, James Cagney, James Dean, Marlon Brando, Elizabeth Taylor, Lana Turner, Courtney Love, Tura Satana, Russ Meyer, Sid Vicious, Ariana Grande, Sophie Turner, Game of Thrones, Stephanie Mills, Carrie Fisher, Debbie Reynolds, Eddie Fisher, Montesquieu, Anthony Trollope, Shakespeare, William Shakespeare, Madonna, Belinda Carlisle, Patti Smith, Katy Perry, fiona apple, Olivia de Havilland, Kate Beckinsdale, Chloe Sevigny, Marlene Dietrich
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Concentrate! Songs about single-mindedness

November 9, 2023 Peter Kimpton

Moving moment? Anatoly Karpov …

Concentration, drive, relentless purpose and pursuit are needed for certain levels of achievement, but how is it expressed in song lyrics? In finding love or 'the one", to work, to gain acclaim, achieve fame, or a particular goal? For inspiration here are examples in music, film, sport and more …

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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 single-mindedness, concentration, psychology, music, sport, Film, books, chess, Anatoly Karpov, Gary Kasparov, Susan Sontag, E.R. Eddison, Tim Wu, Alan Watts, Stanley Kubrick, Andrew Carnegie, Aldous Huxley, Focus, Brian Wilson, The Beach Boys, Kevin Shields, My Bloody Valentine, PJ Harvey, Fiona Apple, Joanna Newsom, Charles Dickens, Joseph Conrad, tennis, swimming, Diana Nyad, documentary
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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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Rush hour: songs about taking recreational and illicit drugs

June 1, 2023 Peter Kimpton

From Salvador Dalí’s The Seven Lively Arts: The Art of the Concert

Trip up, or down? Hallucinogens, amphetamines, barbiturates and more, it’s time to feel stimulated and inspired by a big creative subject in the world of music, with songs about and expressing the ups and downs and experience of taking illicit, recreational drugs

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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, drugs, Salvador Dali, Shakespeare, William Shakespeare, Aldous Huxley, Jean Cocteau, Irvine Welsh, Jim Morrison, Keith Richards, David Sedaris, Frank Zappa, William Gibson, David Lee Roth, Robin Williams, LSD, ecstasy, heroin, cocaine, marijuana, cannabis, animal behaviour, animals, Thomas De Quincey, Walter Scott, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Lord Byron, John Keats, Charles Dickens, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Sigmund Freud, Edgar Allan Poe, Hunter S. Thompson, Jerry Garcia, The Grateful Dead, Alan Moore, Eddie Izzard, Timothy Leary, John Higgs, Carrie Fisher, David Foster Wallace, Lemmy, Nikki Sixx, Disney, Pendleton Ward, Duncan Trussell
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Fancy a flutter? Songs about butterflies and moths

March 9, 2023 Peter Kimpton

Hey, this way. Don’t forget the moths, says the rosy maple

Fragile mutability, intangible beauty, or a hairy horror with collecting obsessives? Metaphor or more, in lyrics or music, with a four-stage life cycle, from egg to pupae, caterpillar to winged wonders, let’s hear it for all these wondrous lepidoptera, with as much for the moths as for the butterflies

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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 insects, butterflies, moths, songs, playlists, Robert A Heinlein, Haruki Murakami, Charles Dickens, Bashō, Hadinet Tekie, George Carlin, Richard Buckminster Fuller
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Court in the act: songs about judges and trials

October 20, 2022 Peter Kimpton

Sing out the scales of justice …

It’s time for the musical scales of justice to sing out as we explore songs about trials, short or long, from or about any perspective of those present, accused or accusers, jurors or judges, or even lawyers, as long as as the action is in court

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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, law, judiciary, Socrates, George Herbert, Charles Dickens, George Chapman, Roe v Wade, US Supreme Court, Lord George Jeffries, Judge Judy, television, Michael Jackson, OJ Simpson, Court Cam, Lord Denning, Lord Wilberforce, Lady Hale, Ketanji Jackson, Peter Fonda, Film
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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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A spectacle of canticles: songs about eyewear

July 14, 2022 Peter Kimpton

Eyewear icons: Roy Orbison and Buddy Holly

They correct or protect our vision, but can also change our appearance. But what do they signify and what happens to the wearer? Form distance to reading glasses, sunglasses to goggles to monocles, it's time to see how they look in lyrics

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Tags songs, playlists, spectacles, eyewear, sunglasses, Roy Orbison, Buddy Holly, Steven Wright, Marilyn Monroe, Tony Curtis, Film, John Kennedy Toole, John Hegley, Fred Allen, Jack Nicholson, Ptolemy, Pliny The Elder, Robert Grosseteste, Roger Bacon, Giordano da Pisa, Samuel Pepys, Charles Dickens, Samuel Johnson, Nana Mouskouri, Mahatma Gandhi, Groucho Marx, Harold Lloyd, John Lennon, Dizzy Gillespie, Elvis Costello, Janis Joplin, Elton John, Bono, Brittany Howard, Elvis Presley, Peter Sellers, Cary Grant, Michael Caine, Burt Lancaster, Philip Larkin, Henry Youngman, Friedrich Nietzsche, Alexander Pope, Gloria Estefan, Jon Pertwee, Dan Ackroyd, Al Pacino, Edgar Davids, Edwin Moses, Louis Theroux, Mark E Smith
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Late, early, or right on time? Songs about punctuality

June 23, 2022 Peter Kimpton

Better late then never?

It’s something attempted to be trained into us from school to to the work place, and appears to be both necessary, but perhaps also unnatural. This week it’s time to pin down the essence of punctuality in song, with all the tensions and consequences of being early or late

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In African, avant-garde, blues, calypso, classical, colours, comedy, country, dance, disco, dub, drone, electronica, experimental, funk, folk, gospel, hip hop, indie, instrumentals, jazz, metal, music, musical hall, pop, playlists, musicals, postpunk, prog, punk, psychedelia, reggae, rocksteady, rock, showtime, ska, songs, soul, soundtracks, traditional Tags songs, playlists, punctuality, time, Evelyn Waugh, GK Chesterton, Mark Twain, Oscar Wilde, Sukant Ratnakar, Franklin P Jones, Dr Seuss, Grace Jones, Lord Nelson, Louis XVIII, William Shakespeare, Shakespeare, William Hazlitt, Karen Joy Fowler, Machiavelli, Charles Dickens, E.B. White, Rose Macaulay, John Kennedy Toole, television, Film, books, David Niven, John Cleese, Kiefer Sutherland, 24, Anvil, Marilyn Monroe, Alan Jay Lerner, Lewis Carroll, Ray Davies
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Cruel to be kind: songs that reference fairytales

April 21, 2022 Peter Kimpton

The famous Grimm’s edition illustrated by Arthur Rackham

They fuelled the fevered imaginations of our childhoods, and contain many adult themes of love and lust, violence and identity, but how are these characters and narratives used in song? Are you sitting comfortably? Then we’ll begin …

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In African, avant-garde, blues, calypso, classical, comedy, country, dance, disco, drone, dub, electronica, folk, experimental, funk, gospel, hip hop, indie, instrumentals, jazz, metal, music, musical hall, pop, playlists, postpunk, prog, psychedelia, punk, reggae, rock, rocksteady, showtime, ska, songs, soul, soundtracks, traditional Tags songs, myth, fairytales, fairy tales, Grimm Brothers, Arthur Rackham, Mae West, Albert Einstein, Toba Beta, Jack Zipes, Fiadhnait Moser, Hans Christian Anderson, GK Chesterton, Dejan Stojanovic, George MacDonald, Mo Willems, Neil Gaiman, Joan Gould, Joseph Jacobs, Madame D'Aulnoy, Luna Lindsey, Gustave Doré, Antti Aarne, folklore, Gabrielle-Suzanne Barbot de Villeneuve, witchcraft, WW Jacobs, JM Barrie, Lewis Carroll, Oscar Wilde, Thomas Keightley, T. Crofton Croker, L. Frank Baum, The Wizard of Oz, Disney, Julia Roberts, Grace Kelly, Theodora Goss, Charles Dickens, WB Yeats, William Makepeace Thackeray, Maurice Sendak, Angela Carter, Guillermo del Toro, Film, Lou Carter, Deborah Allwright
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There goes the neighbourhood: songs about the urban environment

March 17, 2022 Peter Kimpton

Urban jungle? A growing trend …

Ugly or beautiful, hostile or friendly, boring or dynamic, urban environments are where people live but they are constantly in flux. This week it’s time to get a different sense of place in this potentially vast subject that also can do into tiny detail

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In African, avant-garde, blues, calypso, classical, colours, country, dance, disco, drone, dub, electronica, folk, experimental, funk, gospel, hip hop, indie, instrumentals, jazz, metal, music, musical hall, musicals, playlists, pop, postpunk, prog, punk, reggae, rock, rocksteady, showtime, ska, songs, soul, soundtracks, traditional Tags songs, playlists, cities, urban life, urban environments, urban sprawl, Italo Calvino, Charles Dickens, David Byrne, Socrates, Umberto Eco, Thomas Pynchon, Elliot Connor, Joan Didion, Cyril Connolly, John Steinbeck, Patrick Geddes, Christopher Morley, Philip K Dick, Bladerunner, books, Film, Bernard Herrmann, Toyko, Minoru Mukaiya
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It's that time again: songs about tradition

December 16, 2021 Peter Kimpton

Santa’s scary helpers: Krampus procession in Austria

From the ceremonious to the cerebral, the wonderful to the weird, the historical to the hysterical, let’s explore the world of traditions through all spheres and societies, from religion to culture, relationships and death, and of course, Christmas

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Tags songs, playlists, tradition, Christmas, festivals, religion, politics, society, Laura Greenwood, Woody Allen, Carlos Fuentes, William Shakespeare, Gustav Mahler, Mahler, Shakespeare, Warren Ellis, Marty Rubin, Lars Svendsen, GK Chesterton, Henry James, Somerset Maugham, India, China, Austria, Italy, Spain, Yung Chang, The Netherlands, Mummers, Bruce Springsteen, Irvine Welsh, Arlo Guthrie, Bonfire Night, Japan, James Baldwin, Richard Dawkins, Charles Dickens
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Highs and lows: songs about the tide

March 25, 2021 Peter Kimpton
The tide has brought in John Cooper Clarke …

The tide has brought in John Cooper Clarke …

Highs and lows to ebbs and flows, literal, littoral and metaphorical, specific locations, mudflats and estuaries, wildlife, mudlarking, shorelines and coasts, this week it’s all about the movement of water in and out, and what that is all about

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In African, avant-garde, blues, calypso, classical, comedy, country, dance, disco, dub, electronica, experimental, folk, funk, gospel, hip hop, indie, instrumentals, jazz, music, musicals, playlists, pop, postpunk, prog, punk, reggae, rock, rocksteady, showtime, ska, songs, soul, soundtracks, traditional Tags songs, playlists, tides, coasts, sea, oceans, marine biology, John Cooper Clarke, William Shakespeare, Charles Dickens, Otis Redding, Jim Morrison, Bob Marley, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Tommy Cooper, Chaucer, Nova Scotia, Australia, Sir David Attenborough, Thames, mudlarking, beachcombing, King Canute, Henry David Thoreau, Nikola Tesla, Victoria Carless, Sanober Khan, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, Dylan Thomas, Shirley Manson, Johnny Cash, Joseph Conrad, Herman Melville
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Great expectations: songs about social mobility

October 15, 2020 Peter Kimpton
Class act: John Cleese, Ronnie Barker and Ronnie Corbett in 1966

Class act: John Cleese, Ronnie Barker and Ronnie Corbett in 1966

On the move or stuck in one place? Class snobbery to pride, social control to aspiration, it’s a hugely potent part of human life, something that never seems to disappear in stories, situations, and above all the feelings it generates

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In African, avant-garde, blues, calypso, classical, comedy, country, dance, disco, dub, electronica, experimental, folk, funk, gospel, hip hop, indie, instrumentals, jazz, metal, music, musicals, musical hall, playlists, pop, postpunk, prog, punk, reggae, rock, rocksteady, showtime, ska, songs, soul, soundtracks, traditional Tags songs, playlists, society, social class, George Bernard Shaw, John Ruskin, Oscar Wilde, John Lennon, Charles Dickens, India, Hinduism, poverty, social mobility, Margaret Thatcher, Boris Johnson, music, Barry, David Lean, Film, John Cleese, Ronnie Barker, Ronnie Corbett, Stephen Fry, EP Thompson, history, Industrial Revolution, Honda Masanobu, George Orwell, Michael Moore, documentary, Robert Reich, Anohni, Eric Cantona, Thomas Harris, books, My Fair Lady, Silence of the Lambs, film, Alfonso Cuarón, Bong Joon-ho, Michael Caine, Ken Loach, David Bowie, Pulp, Jarvis Cocker, Fat White Family
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The mighty waaahh: songs about babies

October 8, 2020 Peter Kimpton
Float your ideas, and nevermind the cost. From the Nirvana album …

Float your ideas, and nevermind the cost. From the Nirvana album …

For crying out loud. This week’s topic is all about those beautiful and cute bundles of joy that we all once were, miracles of wide-eyed wonder as well as guzzling, selfish, exhausting, sleep-sapping, puking bags of expensive energy extraction

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In African, avant-garde, blues, calypso, classical, comedy, country, dance, disco, dub, electronica, experimental, folk, funk, gospel, hip hop, indie, jazz, instrumentals, metal, music, musical hall, musicals, playlists, postpunk, pop, prog, punk, reggae, rock, rocksteady, showtime, ska, songs, soul, soundtracks, traditional Tags songs, playlists, children, babies, Nirvana, George Bernard Shaw, Vincent Van Gogh, Barbara Christine Seifert, Sir David Attenborough, animals, William Shakespeare, The Cesarians, Laurence Sterne, Charles Dickens, Game of Thrones, George RR Martin, Jesus Christ, Moses, Hercules, Greek mythology, science, Film, Charles Augustus Lindbergh, Azaria Chamberlain, Meryl Streep, The Handmaid's Tale, Margaret Atwood, Roman Polanski, Mia Farrow, Ira Levin, Trainspotting, Diana Gabaldon, George Carlin, Jeanette Winterson, Liam Neeson, Michael Jackson
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Hear, hit or blame? Songs that lyrically refer to rhythm, beat or boogie

August 20, 2020 Peter Kimpton
They get down and do it. Earth, Wind and Fire your inspiration …

They get down and do it. Earth, Wind and Fire your inspiration …

You got it, get down on it, it goes on, maybe it’s a wonderland or perhaps there’s blame pinned on it. This week we’re seeking songs where in whatever genre, in lyrics, one or more of these words are spoken, shouted or sung

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In African, avant-garde, blues, calypso, classical, country, dance, disco, dub, electronica, experimental, folk, funk, hip hop, indie, instrumentals, jazz, metal, musical hall, music, musicals, playlists, pop, postpunk, prog, punk, reggae, rock, showtime, rocksteady, ska, songs, soul, soundtracks, traditional Tags Maya Angelou, Henry David Thoreau, John Lee Hooker, Gloria Estefan, Miami Sound Machine, Peter Gabriel, Michael Jackson, David Bowie, Earth Wind & Fire, Albert Ammons, Clarence PInetop Smith, Rosie Perez, Peter J Silvester, Jerry Lee Lewis, Louis Jordan, James Brown, Chuck Berry, Mose Allison, Jimmy Yancey, Meade Lux Lewis, Igor Stravinsky, Yehudi Menuhin, Gabrielle Roth, Edith Wharton, Dame Edith Sitwell, Nelly Mazioum, George Crumb, Charles Dickens, Bjork, Jimi Hendrix, Dr John, Ken Burns, Casey Kasem, Van Morrison, Ike Turner, Johnny Otis, Eric B & Rakim
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The way you wear your ... songs about hats and other accessories

February 20, 2020 Peter Kimpton
The divine Miss Grace Jones

The divine Miss Grace Jones

Let’s accessorise ourselves with songs about hats, gloves, scarves, sunglasses and the like, from a key lyrical moment to song as whole, with items that variously signify fashion, function, status, class, profession, character or era

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Tags songs, playlists, hats, gloves, sunglasses, accessories, fashion, clothing, Frank Sinatra, Lance Morrow, An Na, Frederick The Great, Patti Smith, Joseph Stalin, Ira Gershwin, Grace Jones, Lady Gaga, Philip Treacy, Elizabeth Taylor, Peaky Blinders, Isambard Kingdom Brunel, Margaret Atwood, Isabella Blow, Neil Gaiman, Charles Dickens, William Goldman, Carly Simon, Morrissey, Michael Jackson, Dr Seuss, John Ashbery, Tom Waits, Alison Goldfrapp, Richie Sambora, Jack Nicholson, Sir Matt Busby
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DRINK OF THE WEEK

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New Albums …

Featured
 Laughter In Summer by Beverly Glenn-Copeland.jpeg
Feb 8, 2026
Beverly Glenn-Copeland: Laughter In Summer
Feb 8, 2026

New album: Delightful, charming, old-fashioned, touching, tender and timeless, this late-career LP from from 82-year-old American-born Canadian singer alongside partner Elizabeth is a love letter to their companionship, and an embrace of the inevitable

Feb 8, 2026
URGH by Mandy, Indiana.jpeg
Feb 6, 2026
Mandy, Indiana: URGH
Feb 6, 2026

New album: An extraordinary second album by the Manchester experimental noise and electronica quartet of the visceral and playful, protest and cartharsis, in a fierce, throbbing, shape-shifting, genre-bursting tour de force that’s responds to very challenging times

Feb 6, 2026
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
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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

new songs …

Featured
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Feb 8, 2026
Song of the Day: Majke Voss (aka Broken Twin) - Coming Down
Feb 8, 2026

Song of the Day: A beautiful, sparsely crafted, mesmeric new single with gorgeous haunting violin and vocals by the Danish, Copenhagen-based singer-songwriter who previously performed and recorded as Broken Twin, returning after a decade, and now out on Broken Records

Feb 8, 2026
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Feb 7, 2026
Song of the Day: Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever - Sunburned in London
Feb 7, 2026

Song of the Day: Shimmering, bright, insightful, double-edged indie by the five-piece band from indie, returning after 2022’s Endless Rooms LP, about the UK capital city and sensory overload, out on I OH YOU/Mushroom Music

Feb 7, 2026
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Feb 6, 2026
Song of the Day: Sunglaciers - Eye to Eye
Feb 6, 2026

Song of the Day: Stylish psychedelia and indie postpunk with a racing, krautrock momentum and a mesmeric, old-footage video montage by the Canadian band from Calgary, heralding the upcoming album Spiritual Content out on 27 March via Mothland

Feb 6, 2026
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Feb 5, 2026
Song of the Day: Jesca Hoop - Designer Citizen
Feb 5, 2026

Song of the Day: A sharp, catchy, witty and socially satirical new number about current American politics and society by the innovative, experimental, Manchester-based Californian folk singer-songwriter, heralding her upcoming album Long Wave Home due out on 1 May via Last Laugh / Republic Of Music

Feb 5, 2026
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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

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
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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
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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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