Thursday, 30 April 2026
Celebrity Jukebox #75: Gerry Conway
Wednesday, 29 April 2026
Another Day #13: International Noise Awareness Day
Loud environments don’t just overwhelm the ears. They can raise blood pressure, disturb sleep, and even slow down how well children learn. Many studies warn that constant noise wears down both the body and mind.
Tuesday, 28 April 2026
Namesakes #186: Michael Jackson
There's a Michael Jackson movie coming out. (It might even be out now. I wrote this post a while back and release dates change.) You may have heard about it. If not, here's the trailer...
That, however, is not the business of the day. Instead, we are gathered here to listen to music by lots of different people called Michael Jackson. Because if that's your name... You Are Not Alone.
MICHAEL JACKSON #1
Who’s bad? Back in 1926, the answer to that question would
be Kentucky jazz and blues pianist Mike Jackson, performing here with Mabel
Richardson on vocals. I really wanted to find the flip side, which was
apparently called I’m Gonna Kill Myself. But the tube of you always gets upset when I type that into my search engine.
Mike
Jackson & Mabel Richardson – Just Too Bad
MICHAEL JACKSON #2
Next - another Mike Jackson, this one the drummer and songwriter
with US garage band The Fugitives in 1966…
MICHAEL JACKSON #3
Bradford-born Mick Jackson was the bassist with The Love
Affair (see Namesakes #157) from 1967-71. Which gives us another excuse to
listen to this…
The
Love Affair – Everlasting Love
MICHAEL JACKSON #4
Which brings us to the oh-so-controversial King of Pop… though, as Swiss Adam pointed out
in a past edition of Cancel Culture Club, despite his sins, radio still plays
his songs. Hopefully they focus on the stuff up to and including Thriller , because after that it’s all a bit ropey. Bad has dated Badly,
and the only good thing about Earth Song is Jarvis Cocker’s bum-wiggling
interruption at the BRITS.
Go further back though, and his achievements are still
worthy of note – not least for becoming the (joint-) lead singer of the Jackson
Five when he was only six years old.
MICHAEL JACKSON #5
Connecticut-born jazzman Michael Gregory Jackson released
his first records in the late 70s, but
dropped his surname from the record sleeves in the mid-80s, to be known only as
Michael Gregory after that.
Michael
Gregory Jackson – Steel Your Heart
MICHAEL JACKSON #6
Pick up a copy of the 1979 hit Blame It On The Boogie by The
Jacksons and you’ll notice it was written by one M. Jackson. You’d be forgiven for
thinking that this was Michael sharing a hit with his brothers to balance out his
blossoming solo career, but not so. Boogie was actually the brainchild of
English singer-songwriter Michael George Jackson, his brother David Jackson and
one Elmar Krohn – no relation. Mick’s version battled it out in the charts with
the Jacksons – Capital only played his version, while Radio 1 favoured The
Jacksons. The NME and the Melody Maker also took sides. Ultimately, Mick lost
out, only getting to #15, while The Jacksons crashed the top ten. Mick's follow-up
single, Weekend, also made the Top 40, and he got to appear on the same
edition of Top Of The Pops as his more famous namesake.
Mick
Jackson – Blame It On The Boogie
MICHAEL JACKSON #7
OK, I’m ready for the accusations of barrel-scraping now,
but when I discovered that one Michael Thorpe Jackson was involved in the
production of the second best single from the 80s called Atmosphere, I knew he
deserved a place here. Joy Division fans can rest easy – they’re not second
best to anyone. But Russ Abbot’s Atmosphere…? ‘Nuff
said.
Sadly, it turns out that MTJ had nothing to do with the
A-side and only arranged the B-side, a woeful Russ Abbott composition (of
course Russ didn’t write Atmosphere!) which I’m sharing here today purely because
I’m a sadist.
Russ
Abbott – Thoughts Of A Child
MICHAEL JACKSON #8
Next up to Rock With You - the keyboard player with Seattle-based prog-metal band Heir
Apparent, but only between 1987 and 1989, when this was recorded…
MICHAEL J. JACKSON #9
Lead singer with British metal band Satan, proud NWOBHM-heads that they were, from 1986 till… well, it seems like they’re still going.
Who’d
have thought that one of our MJs might have had any direct links to Satan?
MICHAEL JACKSON #10
Here’s Buffalo-born Michael Lee Jackson rocking out in 2006,
with Ian Gillan on backing vocals. He also takes a nice photo – we should
get him to join John Medd’s Photo Challenge.
Michael
Lee Jackson – Clean And Dirty
MICHAEL JACKSON #11
Imagine the pop potential of Michael Jackson and George
Michael! Put them together and you get George Michael Jackson: the man on guitar,
vocals, harp and songwriting duties on this 2014 tune by The Naked Heroes. How
could it fail?
MICHAEL JACKSON #12
And finally, from 2018, the man who now promotes himself as “The Living
MJ”: musical theatre composer, lyricist, writer and trash talker, Michael R.
Jackson. “Honesty is his brand.”
Monday, 27 April 2026
Snapshots Spillover: More W-onderful Places
Next we go to the current World Capital of Corruption and Idiocracy...
The Magnetic Fields – Washington DC
Hopefully that won't always be the case... though there is a worry that Michael Martin Murphey might be correct...
Michael Martin Murphey – The Wild West Is Going To Get Wilder
And back home to a Country whose name appears in far too few song titles...
Drive East from there and you might end up here...
The Capital Letters - Wolverhampton
Or even here...
Go Kart Mozart - West Brom Blues
And if you were going South East, you could be going towards...
And on the way, you might call in here..
Just don't stop at the services - they charge a fortune!
Meanwhile... yesterday, Andy Bell sang us a lovely song about Weston-Super-Mare. Just be grateful I chose that rather than...
The Wurzels - Sunny Weston-Super-Mare
Now before we head back across the pond, how about a word about one of the oldest cities in northern Europe?
Ask Walter if you don't believe me.
So then, we finish our travels back in "the land of the free"... although these guys are from Melbourne, so what do they know about it?
Now Winnemucca is clearly the best place name beginning with W. Sadly, I couldn't find any songs about it... but Richmond Fontaine did name a whole after after it.
Richmond Fontaine - Out Of State (from Winnemucca)
Then there's Waco, a town famous for its infamous siege...
The Indelicates - Something's Goin' Down In Waco
Although other things have happened there.
Charley Crockett – The Man From Waco
I had to finish today back in Canada though. Not exactly the best tune you'll hear today... but definitely the best song title.
Sunday, 26 April 2026
Snapshots #445: Songs About Places Beginning With W
Here's Denzel Washington with the answers to this week's quiz. I almost used his photo yesterday, but you guys are getting a bit too smart when it comes to the top of the page pic, so I went with Warren Beatty instead. Warren is a city in Ohio. There's also a Warren in Michigan. And one in Cheshire. Probably some others too.
Here are 15 more places that begin with W... Washington, Wales and Wuhan were conspicuous by their absence. Maybe in tomorrow's spillover edition...
15. Slightly longer than a Buzzcock.
Pete Shelley was a Buzzcock. This is almost his Namesake...
14. Useful for campanologists.
That's a handy bell!
That's a great tune from the Erasure dude.
13. Tastes like Homer's beer.
12. Revolutionary War singer, without his comrades.
60s band Paul Revere and the Raiders were named after a famous soldier from the American Revolutionary War. The band were also named after their keyboard player, whose real name was Paul Revere Dick. He dropped the surname on stage. Can't think why.
The lead singer of Paul Revere and the Raiders was...
Mark Lindsay – Windy Wakefield
I've no idea why he's singing about a town just a few miles down the M1 from me.
11. Lard, Sweet Pea & Ivy.
Lard was, of course, the nickname used by DJ Marc Riley when he worked with Mark Radcliffe in the 90s. He was also in The Fall. But whenever Mark E. Smith kicked him out, he returned to his own band...
Marc Riley With The Creepers - Bard of Woking
10. Found in the back of a taxi and on short British Airways flights.
Back of a cAB... and on BA flights.
9. Looming over a Norfolk Festival.
Weavers used looms - or wanted to smash them. The Norfolk music festival is held at Houghton Hall... although these guys actually came from Westhoughton in Greater Manchester. Which might explain how they spotted the UFOs below...
The Houghton Weavers - The Martians Have Landed In Wigan
8. Confused, but they still made a rich packet.
"Rich packet" was an anagram.
Cheap Trick – A Long Way To Worcester
I had to listen carefully to make sure Cheap Trick weren't signing "A long was to Wor-chester". Actually it sounds more like they sing "Wister" than "Wuster", but close enough, I guess.
No idea why though.
7. AU + a short Friar + Spider-Man, initially.
AU is Gold. The abbreviation for a Friar is Fra. Spider-Man is Peter Parker.
Goldfrapp - Ride A White Horse
Whitehorse is the capital of Canada's Yukon territory.
6. Lapwings dressed as lambs.
We needed a native band to sing about the capital of New Zealand.
5. Modern American Music Hall players.
New Vaudeville Band - Winchester Cathedral
4. Globe loathing.
Theatre Of Hate - Do You Believe In The Westworld?
I didn't say they had to be real places.
3. The Pink... Parsons.
Lily The Pink meets Alan Parsons.
The Pet Shop Boys were disqualified for upsetting George.
2. Curt is always with them.
Ian Curtis, that is.
1. Regularly received mail from strangers.



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