Category: Other

  • Music Jar – week 48

    Each week I listen to a band or artist I’ve never explored before.
    How do I find them you may wonder?
    I asked friends to help me compile a list at the start of this hell year of people I should know more about. There are huge gaps in my knowledge and I wanted to plug them. This week was the turn of new wave darlings, Tears For Fears.

    What I Knew Before
    I liked Tears For Fears because of their appearance on the Donnie Darko soundtrack, alongside another Music Jar band, INXS. Aside from that, I probably heard Martin Day play them on his 80s show on Essex FM.

    What I Know Now
    It’s essentially that. Tears For Fears have some hits and they have some wonderful cover versions to discover, but they were never going to be a band to blow me away.
    I was however surprised to learn that they were from Bath. They don’t sound very Bath. I think it’s the lack of spa activities in their set. That aside, there’s something very pertinent about their music as that whole shoegaze romanticism rears its head once more because it’s all cyclical.

    Favourite song(s):
    Everybody Wants To Rule The World, Shout, Head Over Heels and Mad World.

    Favourite album:
    Songs From The Big Chair

  • Music Jar – week 47

    Each week, as penance for trying to make plans in 2020, I take an artist from the music jar and do what I can to ignore the world and lose myself in their music.
    This week was the turn of California Girl, Sara Bareilles.

    What I Knew Before
    I recently listened to Bareilles on Armchair Expert, one of my favourite podcasts. As a result, I knew more about her than I should have done. Mostly how she came to be so adored, her work on Waitress and the issues she has with her face in profile (same here, sister).

    What I Know Now
    More of the above, and also the undeniable fact that Sara Bareilles writes some of the best pop music in the world today.

    Favourite song(s):
    Love Song, She Used To Be Mine, I Choose You, Bottle It Up – Live At The Fillmore and Goodbye Yellow Brick Road – Live at the Variety Playhouse

    Favourite album:
    Between The Lines: Sara Bareilles Live At The Fillmore

    Spotify my favourite songs from this project.

  • Music Jar – week 46

    Each week, inspired by A Beautiful Mess, I take the name of a band or artist from a pickle jar and listen to that band for the week. This time around, it’s California pop-ska-rock tromboners, No Doubt.

    What I Knew Before
    No Doubt were, without doubt, a band who were around when I was coming of age, and absorbing all of the music of the time. I think I learnt to play Don’t Speak on guitar. I only ever knew the hits and, of course, I really appreciated Gwen’s crop tops.

    What I Know Now
    No Doubt were around for an impressive thirty years and are currently on hiatus. They have more past members than any other band I’ve had the pleasure of listening to this year – thirteen.
    I listened through each of their albums, from 1992’s No Doubt all the way through to 2012’s Push and Shove and I just didn’t really feel a lot for it beyond the nostalgia of the hits. Maybe that says more about me than it does about them.

    Favourite song(s):
    All the cliches; Don’t Speak, Just A Girl, Underneath It All

    Favourite album:
    Return of Saturn

    Spotify my favourite songs from this project.

  • Music Jar – week 45

    Each week, I listen to an artist or band that I should know better, taken at random from a pickle jar.
    This week was the turn of heartbreaker, Tom Petty.

    What I Knew Before:
    I once worked with an older guy who took me under his wing and introduced me to a lot of bands that I wouldn’t have been into otherwise. He would turn up for work with DVDs to give to me which he would drop by my desk, much to the confusion and chagrin of everyone else we worked with. I was told to use the relationship to my advantage. I don’t know what that means. One of those DVDs was a live Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers gig. I recognised that there was something cool going on there, but ultimately, it wasn’t something that I would return to. I filed it away.
    The only other link I feel to Tom Petty is through the song American Girl, and its use in Silence Of The Lambs. My god, that’s a well-placed track.

    What I Know Now
    I wanted to enjoy Tom Petty more than I did. There are some great songs in there and his work with the Wilburys is a particular treat for me, but I still wasn’t completely wowed by it. I don’t think it helped that Tom Petty was pulled from the jar in a week when I was glued to the news and unable to really focus on much else. That has all worked out well. Kamala is now our American Girl.

    Favourite songs:
    I suppose I have to consider solo TP as well as Heartbreakers tracks. I know he was in and out with the band. I Won’t Back Down is the best Petty song but Refugee, Mary Jane’s Last Dance and American Girl are all great Heartbreakers songs.

    Favourite album:
    Full Moon Fever

    Spotify my favourite songs from this project.

  • Music Jar – week 44

    Each week, I take a different band or artist and indulge in their back catalogue to try and escape that hellscape that 2020 has become.
    This week was the turn of Hampshire-born indie band, Blaenavon – a band I cannot spell correctly on the first attempt.

    What I Knew Before
    Absolutely nothing. The recommendation for Blaenavon come from my friend Sarah at work, who has an impressive track record for such things.

    What I Know Now
    With a very basic level of research I have learnt that the band have been together since 2016 after meeting at secondary school. Unlike most bands formed by friends in school, they are good, and have released three albums to date.
    Each album has a very different sound to it but there’s something compelling to each.

    Favourite song(s):
    I Want You, Take Care and whatever u wanna B

    Favourite album:
    That’s Your Lot

  • Music Jar – week 43

    Inspired by A Beautiful Mess, each week I listen to a different band or artist, taking the name from a pickle jar I filled with suggestions at the start of 2020, not knowing that the year would be a pickle itself. This week was the turn of seasoned LA geek rock band, Weezer.

    What I Knew Before
    When we were teens, Weezer weren’t quite hard enough. They didn’t rock. I can remember turning Kerrang TV over when the video for Hash Pipe came on.

    What I Know Now
    I certainly had it wrong. I had it so wrong in fact that I issued a public apology to one of my friends who was and is a huge Weezer fan. Weezer absolutely rock. They have rocked since they formed in 1992 and I should have respected that.
    I went for a skate on Monday, because I’m still a child. I listened to their self-titled first album, also known as Blue and realised I had been very wrong. Every song on that album absolutely slaps. My Name Is Jonas, No One Else and The World Has Turned And Left Me Here open that album. An unreal presentation. I don’t know if there’s a debut album I have heard in a long time that hits in that way. Weezer are something special and I’m sorry I didn’t recognise it.

    Favourite song(s):
    My Name Is Jonas, Buddy Holly, Say It Ain’t So, Undone – The Sweater Song, All My Friends Are Insects

    Favourite album:
    Weezer (Blue)

    Spotify my favourite songs from this project.

  • Music Jar – week 42

    Each week, I take the name of an artist or band from a rapidly diminishing supply in a pickle jar, and do what I can to explore their back-catalog. This week was New York’s own, Talking Heads.

    What I Knew Before
    Of course I knew Talking Heads before this week. It’s impossible to make it to 33 without realising that this is not my beautiful house and this is not my beautiful wife.
    I knew Talking Heads came up as part of the CBGB sect in the 70s – I visited what is left of the site last year. I am aware that David Byrne is one of the most important silver foxes in the world today (a list which also includes Taiki Waititi, Max Joseph and Keith Murray). What I didn’t know, is how much music there was and how little of it I had explored. I maybe had the top five tracks committed to memory but the deep cuts on Speaking in Tongues were somewhat beyond my comprehension.

    What I Know Now
    Talking Heads are the most important band I’ve discovered this year since My Chemical Romance (a sentence that doesn’t make sense in a linear fashion and probably hasn’t been spoken before).
    I have learnt that I missed out on seeing American Utopia in person (I believe it was on in London where a friend of mine saw it and cried) and also on in New York while I was there. The Spike Lee directed version has appeared online in the last week but again, I failed to catch it when it was shown on the BFI Player. I must try harder and learn to keep my eyes open in future.

    Favourite songs:
    Psycho Killer, Once In A Lifetime, Born Under Punches, Life During Wartime, (Nothing But) Flowers.

    Favourite album:
    Talking Heads ’77 or Remain in Light

    Spotify my favourite songs from this project.

  • Music Jar – week 41

    Each week I listen to a different musical artist, taken at random from a pickle jar that I filled up at the start of the year.
    This week was the turn of a little singer you might have heard of, Elvis Presley.

    What I Knew Before
    Well, I knew of Elvis. Obviously I knew of Elvis. The first memory that comes to mind is my secondary school science teacher who had a poster of Elvis on the wall of his classroom. When we became too loud and disruptive (which was often), he would point at the sign and say: “think about what Elvis would make of this, yeah guys! A little less conversation, a little more action please.”
    This would get us straight back to our Bunsen burners.
    It’s hard not to be impacted by Elvis Presley. I mean The Beatles were impacted by Elvis. He’s the king.

    What I Know Now
    Basically, that, but with a bit more Elvis in my mind. I suppose it’s entirely possible that a week isn’t enough time to delve into the discography of one of the most important musicians of the 20th century. There’s only so far that Blue Hawaii can get you in a week.
    There’s no escaping the fact that a lot of it started with him and I’ve ever looked it until now. I’ll have to keep on listening.

    Favourite songs:
    Suspicious Minds, Jailhouse Rock, Heartbreak Hotel, Blue Suede Shoes, Hound Dog.

    Favourite album:
    ’68 Comeback Special

  • Music Jar – week 40

    Each week, I take an artist I don’t enough about from a jar, and try to listen to their back catalog in a week. This time around, it was northern Irish anti-masker, Van Morrison.

    What I Knew Before
    I was lucky enough to see Van Morrison perform at Hop Farm Festival 2010. A festival I just had to Google because it’s hard to believe the lineup. Van, Bob Dylan, Blondie and Ray Davies.
    I knew the hits. I’ve probably performed Brown Eyed Girl in a seedy karaoke bar at some point.

    What I Know Now
    Probably the same as the above, with a sprinkling more of the controversy that surrounds his recent comments. Van (The Man) was the only artist I took from the jar and pulled at my collar over, worried that in a little over nine months, his placement in the jar might have soured.
    Does his attitude change the songs he’s written?
    No.
    Does the fact he wrote Astral Weeks excuse it?
    Also no.
    I’m here for the music though, so let’s park the Three Chords And The Truth, and get into it.

    Favourite songs:
    Tupelo Honey, Moondance, Have I Told You Lately, Crazy Love

    Favourite album:
    Blowin’ Your Mind!

  • Music Jar – week 32

    Each week, I listen to an artist, someone I might have heard of but never took the opportunity to “get into”. This week was the turn of Detroit’s own, Melissa Viviane Jefferson, better known as Lizzo.

    What I Knew Before
    Lizzo is probably the artist on my list that I felt I was the closest to missing out on. I’d heard a number of her songs and knew that she was a woman with a powerful vocal range and a voice for topics. I had glimpsed her in the brilliant, Hustlers. I was also familiar with the line, “I just took a DNA test, turns out I’m 100% that bitch”. I’m sure we will all agree, highly relatable content there.

    What I Know Now
    Lizzo’s 2019 album, Cuz I Love You, is one of the most important albums to be delivered into the world in the last decade. Her songs have a dynamic range that is unlike anything else happening in modern music. She is an absolute force and I am thankful I’ve taken the time to educate myself on her.
    Lizzo released two more-hiphop focused albums earlier in her career, which were met with some critical acclaim but it was the arrival of the single Juice, and then her third album that brought her mainstream success.
    She is outspoken on body issues particularly for women in the public eye as well as being a supporter of the LGBTQ+ movement.
    She has played flute since she was a child. Her flute is named Sasha Flute.
    I could go on. She’s really something special.

    Favourite songs:
    It goes without saying that the songs of Lizzo’s that I was familiar with are the ones you would expect. They’ve gone viral through TikTok and they’re screamed in your face if you dare step into any club playing them. Feel free to correct me but I really like Good As Hell, Tempo, Juice and Truth Hurts. Cuz I Love You is a very strong opening track. When I first listened to the album, I felt my knees buckle at the absolute splendor of that track; it’s at once a 50’s bop and the best Bond theme you’ve never heard.

    Favourite album: It will come as no surprise that I am 100% that bitch. It’s got to be Cuz I Love You.

    Spotify my favourite songs from this project.