Saturday, 18 April 2026

Saturday Snapshots #444


You know it's a wonderful life when you can turn on your computer on a Saturday morning and find some Snapshots to identify.

Who are the folks below and how are their songs connected? 


15. Soft focus.

14. Inflexible pinkies.

13. Pigswill company loses a litre, but finds a band inside. (Presumably a rather smelly band.)*

(*This clue was inspired by the latest edition of Ernie's Pun Fun.)

12. Spidey unmasked by Norton!

11. Paints pictures about how it's gonna be... home, kitchen, earthen.

10. Dragon Lady.

9. BAD boys.

8. Egyptian life force, German affirmation, Iris's Dolls.

7. Austrian poet.

6. Polish sextets in disarray. 

5. Ape king found in whale.

4. Sistine, Lady, Fallen. 

3. Clear victors in the Dads Vs. Lads match.

2. Winners of the 1973 "Longest Band Name Without Any Vowels" competition. (Semis not counted.)

1. Found confused, but only after rehab.

Look out your Rear Window tomorrow morning and you might just see the answers!


Friday, 17 April 2026

Thursday, 16 April 2026

Mid-Life Crisis Songs #134: Honeymoon


We were lucky that Sam and I had misaligned holidays this Easter, so while he's back at school this week, I'm still off... allowing Louise and I the rare luxury of getting away to the Peak District for a couple of days peace and quiet. (Sam is being looked after by appropriate adults, in case you're on the phone to Child Services.)

So this is what passes for our Honeymoon. Appropriate (and inappropriate) tunes will follow...



















Paul Hampton - Two Hour Honeymoon (Definitely the most bizarre thing you'll hear today!)


I will, of course, be following the advice below to the letter...

Don't ski naked down Mt. Everest
With lilies up your nose
Don't punt up the Ganges in a vest
And holler 'Thar she blows'
Don't fish for tunny in Meat Madras
With blotting pads as bait
Don't converse with shrimps of higher class
About the church and state

Don't dance the polka in a dhoti
Arid whistle the right of Spring
Don't recite Hamlet's soliloquy
While munching onion rings
Don' t plant a stickleback in a field
On St.Augustine's Day
Don' t sharpen your sword and beat your shield
And somersault up a brae

Don' t build a pyramid on the pole
With Frosties packets and glue
Don' t serve rubber bullets in a bowl
And call it Irish Stew
Don' t change all the water into wine
And walk on the Dead Sea
Never sing the Song of the Golden Rhine
With an augmented flea



Wednesday, 15 April 2026

Modern Life Is Rubbish #7: Only The Names Change

This post was inspired by a new song from Stephen Wilson Jr., an Americana artist I’ve only recently discovered. He’s worthy of further investigation if this sort of thing is your bag.

Anyway, the chorus informs us, “There ain't a lot of boys named Gary these days”, a reminder of how birth names fall in and out of fashion. (Amusingly, they’ve got the actor Gary Sinise to star in the video… although it doesn’t end well for him.) This got me thinking about the names of the kids Sam goes to school with… versus the ones I went to school with.

I have a nephew called Gary. He’s about ten or twelve years younger than me. But there are no Garys in Sam’s school. Neither is there a Neil or a Sean, the names of my other nephews.

I started to think about the most common names of kids I grew up with.

Sam doesn’t know any Richards. No Ricks or Rickys either. And while he probably knows a few dicks… there are definitely no Dicks.

Billy Bragg - Richard

He also doesn’t go to school with anyone called Paul.

Landspeed Loungers - Paul

Steven? Stephen? Steve? Stevie? Not a one.

Billy Reeves - Steve

Andrew… he knows one Andy. There must have been a dozen in my school.

Fantastic Negrito – A Boy Named Andrew

Most shocking of all though… Sam doesn’t know anyone called David.

No Daves!?!

Everyone knows a Dave – surely?! Two of my best mates are called Dave – and I only have three and a half friends.

Boomtown Rats - Dave

No Darrens, no Phils, no Jasons, no Brians, and definitely no Kevins.

The Undertones - My Perfect Cousin

He does know a heck of a lot of Georges though… he told me he could count 15, but he might have been exaggerating. Slightly.

Edwyn Collins - Gorgeous George

Other common boys’ names in Sam’s school?

Harry.

Sham 69 - Hurry Up, Harry

Arthur.

The Kinks - Arthur

Albert.

Essential Logic - Albert

Isaac.

Bear's Den - Isaac

Frank.

The Monochrome Set - He's Frank (Slight Return)

Eli.

Three Dog Night - Eli's Coming

Alfie.

Dionne Warwick - Alfie

(Sorry, Cilla's version goes right through me.)

The weird thing is, I didn’t go to school with a single one of those. In fact, if you’d asked me when I was a kid, I would have told you they were all old men names. Harry Bamforth was an old farmer who lived across the fields from us. So was Arthur Lockwood. And Frank Shaw. Albert Tatlock and Alf Roberts were old blokes on Coronation Street. Eli and Isaac were names I only read about in Old Testament RE lessons.

I wonder if, in another 20 years’ time, the classrooms will be full of Garys, Darrens and Daves again? There probably won't be many Donalds... but I could be wrong.

A final word today from Nigel (no Nigels in Sam's school either)...

A woman who described herself as "a little bit 'Bridget',
A little bit 'Ally', a little bit 'Sex and the City'"
And chose to call her baby boy Fred
As a childishly rebellious attempt at a clever reaction
To those who might have expected her to call him Julian or Rupert
Bit of advice, call him Rupert, it fits, and besides it's a good name
Don't be calling him Fred or Archie
With all its cheeky but lovable working class scamp connotations
Unless you really do have plans for him
To spend his life in William Hills waiting
For them to weigh in at Newton Abbot

In case you're wondering - yes, there will be a follow-up to this post about girl's names.

Probably next week some time.


Tuesday, 14 April 2026

Namesakes #184: The Times


Boo, Rupert Murdoch, right wing rag, etc. etc. 

But unlike the paper, I'm not here to tell you how to think... you can make your own mind up which band called The Times is best.

Have you got The Times for all these? Let's see...


THE TIMES #1


We start this week in Australia, with a three piece beat band on Perth label Clarion Records in 1965.



THE TIMES #2

The Warrington Times, from 1966, featuring Alan Taylor, Gordon Struthers, Kenneth Crank and Malcolm Unsworth. Proper rock star names, all of them. This was their second, and presumably last, single. Where did all the good Times go?



THE TIMES #3


Dennis Burlage and his two brothers (plus a couple of mates) came from Norfolk, Virginia in 1967 and produced this "psychedelic masterpiece" / ripped off The Byrds.



THE TIMES #4


Irish "show band" (not sure what a show band is - presumably a band that plays shows... but don't they all?) from the late 60s and early 70s.

 

THE TIMES #5


I first became aware of Edward Philip Albert Tome Ball when he released the solo track The Mill Hill Self Hate Club, a Brit pop favourite from the glorious year of 1996. It was only later that I realised Ed Ball had been at this pop music lark for quite a while, starting in 1977 when he was a member of Television Personalities. As the 80s arrived, he formed his own band called The Times, featuring a rotating membership of musicians from the Wham! Records label (run by Ed and his mate Dan Treacy). The Times continued to release records on and off for the next 20 years. This tribute to The Prisoner is probably their most fondly-remembered tune...



THE TIMES #6


Also known as The U.S. Times, this Louisiana "dance band" were a'changing with the times in the early 80s.

The Times - Hip Isn't It


TIMES #7


Post-punk electronic band Venus In Furs hailed from Sussex in the early 80s. They started out as a four piece, then came back as a two piece, before eventually becoming a one man solo project. The man behind all these ventures occasionally called himself Jeremy Christ, but most of the time he went simply by the name: Times.

TIMES #8


Good times from Cleveland, Ohio in 1982. 



THE TIMES #9


Knock Three Times! More power pop from 1982 - this time via Nashville.



THE TIMES #10


South African soul group, and part-time jeans models: a sign of the times from 1990.



THE TIMES #11


And finally today, this Malaysian indie rock band were practising their Times tables in the noughties.



Eleven Times to choose from... but do you agree that Even The Bad Times Are Good?


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