This week’s theories, rants, ruminations, recollections, weak gags and free and frank exchanges of view alight upon the following …
… is pop music now all about identity?
…. the recording of the Animals’ House of the Rising Sun and other apocryphal tales.
… has any act been as ubiquitous since Frankie Goes to Hollywood in 1984?
… or has anyone inspired a greater level of personal devotion than Taylor Swift?
… Peter Green, a shotgun and his accountant.
… books bought but never read.
.. re-reading Nick Hornby’s High Fidelity and the changing benchmarks for good and bad musical taste.
… intriguing parallels between the book and record industries.
… and Neil Tennant braves the digital lynch-mob.
Plus Adam Clayton’s garden, Konstantin Chernenko, Richard Burton, Rebel Wilson, Dark Academia, creepy weepies and birthday guest John Montagna looks at singles by the same act that are ‘descendants’ – ie pretty much identical – eg the Monkees’ Teardrop City and Last Train To Clarksville, the Kinks’ You Really Got Me and All Day And All of the Night and Mark Knopfler’s Cannibals and Walk Of Life. Or just try the first few seconds of these four by the Inkspots – Maybe, I Don’t Want To Set The World On Fire, If I Didn’t Care and Whispering Grass.
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Steve Howe of Yes tells a few tales from topographic oceans
The evergreen record that’s 50 years old & Jeremy Thorpe at a hippie commune
Richard Coles has faced every audience imaginable, one armed with pea-shooters
For Jah Wobble driving tube trains was even more thrilling than playing Glastonbury
Steve Wright and other great radioheads, McCartney’s bass & the non-profits of Python
Max Décharné reboots the golden age of the Teddy Boys
Guy Garvey remembers the Grumbleweeds in panto, Santana fantasies & a song nicked from Roy Castle
Lulu, when Prince did a bad thing and how the Beatles changed the shape of the human head
Musicians and their mothers and the records we could never sell
Tom Hibbert (the world’s funniest music writer) and why Madonna should be sued
TV's greatest musical moment - and are we still allowed to laugh at hopeless old rock bands?
Graham Gouldman knows where to alphabetically file 10cc records
Annie Nightingale (“the great goth auntie”), choirs on pop records & the music they sent into space
Jim Gordon - the supernatural gift and tragic fate of “the greatest rock drummer” with Joel Selvin
Great albums now 50 years old, the best gag ever & the haircut that launched folk-rock
Noel Coward, Gallagher & Squire’s superpower summit & the art of the Bob Dylan backbeat
Hipgnosis album art, the hardest working man in showbiz & the moment the world went mad
Denny Laine, the Move’s catastrophic court case & the man who's made 700 albums in 2 years
The Beatles as seen by their roadie, co-conspirator & friend Mal Evans – and Kenneth Womack
A drink to Shane MacGowan, Spinal Tap rebooted and lunch with Randy Newman
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