Saturday, 23 August 2025

Saturday Snapshots #410


Cracking Snapshots, Gromit!

Below are 15 celebrities of the popular music world.

Who are they, and how are their songs connected?


15. Adrian - SOS! What a kerfuffle.

14. Come in, Spanish lads.

13. Office David climbs Ronnie.

12. Like Beck, almost.

11. Sorry, Bono I... no, I can't complete that sentence.

10. Senior officer required to take care of this boil.

9. Tony Stark: lepidopterist.

8. Asking for them is an insult to the chef.

7. Primal Scream headspinner.

6. High Street Chemist rebrands itself as discotheque.

5. Raunchy paperbacks.

4. Sheeran's market stall.

3. A can of beans or... some Nescafé and ice.

2. In the beginning, he had a kit.

1. Bilinguals revolt when they hear his name.


If you ended up in the Wrong Trousers, you will find the Right ones here tomorrow morning...


Friday, 22 August 2025

Listening Post #37: This Year


Very tired.

So very, very tired.

End of the fifth week of the summer holidays and this has been the most exhausting one yet.

Wish I could just lie under that willow tree and watch the house martens swooping overhead for the next week. But that is not to be.

I take heart in the words of John Darnielle and his Mountain Goats...

I'm gonna make it through this year
If it kills me



Thursday, 21 August 2025

Snapshots Spillover: More Coat Songs

Should have posted these on Monday, but other business took precedent. Some more songs that were left in the Snapshots cloakroom after last weekend...

Dan Bern - Hoody

Black - Her Coat And No Knickers

Gorky's Zygotic Mynci - When You Laugh at Your Own Garden in a Blazer 

Glenn Miller - Tuxedo Junction

David Bowie - Sell Me A Coat

Another Sunny Day - Anorak City

Cake - Short Skirt / Long Jacket

Luke Haines - Bomber Jacket

Luke Kelly - Raglan Road

Dolly Parton - Coat Of Many Colours

And yes, that's why Jason Donovan was the picture clue on Saturday...

Jason Donovan - Any Dream Will Do

See also...

Quicksilver Messenger Service - Joseph's Coat

Speaking of colourful coats (beyond the famous blue one)... do any of these take your fancy?

Philip Jeays - In My Long Grey Coat

Bob Dylan - Man In The Long Black Coat

A. Savage - My New Green Coat

Bubblegum Lemonade - Famous Blue Anorak 

Lloyd Arnold - Red Coat, Green Pants & Red Suede Shoes

New Model Army - White Coats

Red Hewitt &The Buccaneers - The Girl In The Teddy Bear Coat

And here are some to protect you from the elements...

E - My Old Raincoat

Josh Ritter - Rainslicker

Ariel Pink - Plastic Raincoats In The Pig Parade

The Sprites - Winter Coat

Benjamin Shaw - Goodbye, Kagoul World

Guy Clark - Like A Coat From The Cold

REM - Harborcoat

And before we go, a brief exchange between Eliza and Cat.

Eliza Gilkyson - Take Off Your Old Coat

Cat Power - The Coat Is Always On

That's her told. 

Finally then, a brief word from JOhn...

John Cooper Clarke - Gaberdine Angus

Not really a song, that last one, but maybe the man in the Gaberdine coat was a spy...



Wednesday, 20 August 2025

Celebrity Jukebox #54 (Redux): Terence Stamp


When I began the Celebrity Jukebox, it wasn't just for celebs who had passed away. Living legends were also featured. Nowadays though, it's just a place to celebrate those who have left us. Sadly, this means I now have to revisit this edition from 2022. Rest in peace, General...

“Kneel before Zod!”

For most of my generation, our first encounter with Terence Stamp was as the evil General Zod in Superman II. The Grauniad called him “the master of the brooding silence”, and he certainly sent shivers down my spine. Gene Hackman’s Lex Luthor was a pussycat in comparison.

I was surprised General Zod didn’t get referenced all over the place, but only Eminem (who’s the same age as me) was prepared to kneel before him.

Eminem – Rap God

Terence Stamp had been around for a couple of decades by the time he played that memorable supervillain, making his screen debut in the movie Billy Budd, an Oscar-nominated performance that obviously made some impact on a young Steven Patrick Morrissey…

Morrissey – Billy Budd

Morrissey also used an image of Stamp in The Collector as the cover of the third Smiths single, What Difference Does It Make? 

Stamp originally refused permission for the picture to be used, but relented in the end… possibly after he’d seen Morrissey’s alternative.

Pete Townshend from The Who has a younger brother called Simon who has occasionally play with big bro’s band, as well as ploughing his own lonely solo furrow. Here he is with a track called Highness, which begins thus…

I am what I am
I just happen to be related to the king

…before named dropping Bowie, Eddie Vedder and Rod Stewart, as well as… yes, you guessed it, Terence Stamp.

Simon Townshend – Highness

48 Cameras are described on their bandcamp page as “Collectif international à géométrie variable”, which means they come from all over the place, but mostly Belgium. This is from their 2006 release After All, Isn’t Tango The Dance of the Drunk Man? It sounds like an orchestra tuning up to me, but what do I know? It's probably art.

48 Cameras – Terence Stamp For A Time

The biggest Terence Stamp fan I could find in the pop world was Adam Ant. He namedrops Terry twice, mostly recently here…

Adam Ant – Punkyoungirl

Punky young girl needs a Terence Stamp
Perfect at swinging sixties vamp

And on this memorable b-side in which Stuart Goddard claims to be friends with everybody from Mister Pastry to Jim Morrison to Arthur Askey, and…

I’m a friend of Stevie Wonder
I’m a friend of Eric Fromm
I’m a friend of Bryan Ferry
I’m a friend of Terence Stamp

Almost at the end now, and a reminder from Philadelphia’s Bill Ricchini…

Bill Ricchini – Julie Christie

You look just like Julie Christie
And I feel just like Terry Stamp

A reminder that Terry and Julie went together. They met at Waterloo Station, every Friday night...



Tuesday, 19 August 2025

Namesakes #151: The Soul Searchers


George is back, with the much-anticipated sequel to not only last week's post on The Searchers but also his previous Soul Seekers Namesakes... all this enables me to sit back on my deck chair and enjoy the summer. Thank you, George.

After the roaring success of the Soul Seekers edition of this series, it came as no surprise to be invited back to contribute another article, obviously to boost Rol’s flagging readership. I think it is highly likely that today will feature a plethora of soul and gospel groups, which is No Bad Thing, of course.

THE SOUL SEARCHERS #1


Our first group were label-mates of Bill Withers, and the leading member was Chuck Brown (and were sometimes known as Chuck Brown and the Soul Searchers, probably to distinguish them from the 209 other Soul Searchers groups). But the record cover says Soul Searchers, otherwise they would not feature here. I would classify their music as funk-soul.


THE SOUL SEARCHERS #2


Gospel now, from a Grammy-nominated Soul Searchers, who used the name of lead singer Troy Ramey in their title from the third album on. Hence a track from the first or second album (because I believe in sticking to the rules, Rol). 

Rules, schmoolz.

And for $9 plus your VAT, from Bandcamp this album could be yours...


THE SOUL SEARCHERS #3

Bandcamp again, not for the NuMichiganSoulSeachers of course, but for this lot from Gig Harbor, Washington...


They seem to have given up after this track. Not sure what genre this is, lo-fi indie? Plinky-hesitant-noodling indie? 

I'm not sure, but I'm impressed that they count among their members both Dylan Thomas and Geoffrey Hughes.

If Wade Washington was not so egotistical, his group would have been next...

What, you mean this dude?

THE SOUL SEARCHERS #4


Don't know how that got in here. The doorman must be slipping.

THE SOUL SEARCHERS #5


So now it’s a band who backed Richard Berry, but on this one I think it’s just the band (as the Louie Louie chappy’s name is not on the label).


THE SOUL SEARCHERS #6

Some British soul searching next, from 1975. A founder member of a jazz rock combo* was a co-writer of this song……and if you want your own copy it will cost you at least £14.

(I think George is being deliberately obtuse here because of their links to Genesis.)


THE SOUL SEARCHERS #7

And now a truly belting southern soul track, probably from 1966 or ‘67...


I think I've told you before, George, about playing Christmas records in August. But I'll let that one pass as it is a belter. And because of these wonderfully cheesy spoken-word lyrics...

A lonely soldier laid dying in a foxhole in Vietnam
A friend of his walked over and kneeled down beside him
Did you know its Christmas back home
What we should do here today is have Christmas in Vietnam
Slowly they began to sing a song that goes something like this
Jingle, jingle bells, jingle, jungle bells
What do you know? It's Christmas in Vietnam!
Merry Christmas!

THE SOUL SEARCHERS #8


North Carolina’s answer to San Francisco’s Mamas and Papas now, and some cheesy Christian crooning...


No 70s “UK gospel”, alas, and as for the remaining bands, I am unable to find any songs. So only 7 (well, 8) Souls to Search. Who will it be?

Thanks to Rol for posting this, and thanks for listening to the tracks.

And thank you, George, for another week off.



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