Saturday, 25 April 2026

Saturday Snapshots #445


Heaven Can Wait this Saturday morning, but Snapshots can't. Frankly, it's The Only Game In Town.

Hopefully you won't have to be Dick Tracy to solve the clues below... who are they and how are their songs connected?


15. Slightly longer than a Buzzcock.

14. Useful for campanologists.

13. Tastes like Homer's beer.

12. Revolutionary War singer, without his comrades.

11. Lard, Sweet Pea & Ivy.

10. Found in the back of a taxi and on short British Airways flights.

9. Looming over a Norfolk Festival.

8. Confused, but they still made a rich packet.

7. AU + a short Friar + Spider-Man, initially. 

6. Lapwings dressed as lambs.

5. Modern American Music Hall players.

4. Globe loathing.

3. The Pink... Parsons.

2. Curt is always with them.

1. Regularly received mail from strangers.

Answers tomorrow morning!


Friday, 24 April 2026

Another Day #12: Scream Day


Today is Scream Day, "an unconventional yet meaningful observance that encourages individuals to release stress, frustration, and emotional tension through a simple act—screaming."







"In a fast-paced world filled with pressure and responsibilities, this day serves as a reminder that emotional expression is essential for mental well-being."

Amen to that, brother.







Have a good scream on me today.


Thursday, 23 April 2026

Modern Life Is Rubbish #8: What's Your Name Again?

As a follow-up to last week's post about there not being a lot of boys named Gary anymore, I promised to tackle girls' names next. And Sam was once again very helpful, particularly when this song popped up on an in-car mixtape...


Still one of Paul Heaton's finest hours, that - and I love the guest appearance by George Michael in the video.

Anyway, as the song played, Sam told me, "there's none of those girls in my school."

Which means, he doesn't know any kids called...

Oh Shirley, oh Deborah, oh Julie, oh Jane...





And he doesn't go to school with anyone called...

Jennifer, Alison, Phillipa, Sue, Deborah, Annabel, too




(I had to search for that one. Not enough songs about girls called Philippa. There was a Pippa in my 6th form. I fancied her. No chance. She went out with my mate Simon.)




And for completeness' sake, here's the other name mentioned in Song For Whoever... but not in Sam's school register.


I asked Sam about a few more of the names I went to school with. He didn't know girls by any of these names either...



(Apologies if you wanted to hear Gilbert.)



Some success though - he did at least know one Sarah and one Emma. I think every other girl in my school was called Sarah or Emma...



He didn't know any Louises though. Except for his Mum!


There's a lot of good things to be said about that song, and its video - but mostly, I want a barge covered in books like the one Phil has.

I would be remiss if I didn't also feature the other great Louise song of that era...


So then, I hear you ask, if Sam doesn't go to school with any of the girls above... what are his female schoolmates called? Well, he knows at least five girls called...


Shocking Pinks - Emily

And four called...



OK, that one had me stumped. If you know a song about a girl called Isla, please let me know.

He also knows two or even three different girls with each of the names below...






That last one was a stretch too.

As with the boys' names then, there's been another major shift in what parents are choosing to call their kids these days... and the most popular names are ones that would mostly have belonged to old people when I was a kid. 

It's also highly unlikely that Marie will be the name of anyone's latest flame in Gen A... making all these old songs sound even more out of date.



Wednesday, 22 April 2026

The Enigma of CD87: Part 6

Here we go with the final four songs from my in-car CD #87. The purpose of these CDs has always been to introduce my son to as a wide a variety of pop music as possible, not to steer him down any particular musical road or inculcate tribalism, which I’ve always believed to be a Very Bad Thing when it comes to musical appreciation.


Track 19: Vampire Weekend - A-Punk

Way, way back in the first decade of this disappointing millennium, Vampire Weekend were the Next Big Thing for all of three weeks or so. That said, this appears to be the average duration of Next-Big-Thingness in a world that constantly craves something NEW and rapidly loses interest in any artist with more than a couple of albums under their belt. 

A-Punk is the second single from VW’s eponymous debut album, and it’s a perfect example of their early “Paul Simon meets Talking Heads” sound. Or, as iffypedia puts it, “they bonded over a shared love of punk rock and African music”… so the Paul Simon bit is actually Graceland-era Simon, where he was nicking all his rhythms (and more) from South Africa. Of course, there’s a whole political / cultural appropriation argument to be heard when anybody brings up Graceland, but it was and still is one of my favourite albums of all time, so I’m not opening that can of worms here… other than to say that it was nice to hear a New York indie band doing something in the same style. That’s what drew me to Vampire Weekend more than anything.

The lyrics here are barked out at such speed that I’ve never stopped to ponder what the song is actually about, but there’s a rather confused examination to be had on Genius if you’re into that sort of thing. The closest thing A-Punk has to a chorus is the repeated line, “Look outside at the raincoats coming, say: Oh-oh-oh-oh”, which the Genius interpreter suggests might be a reference to “the redcoats are coming” (i.e. British soldiers in the American revolutionary war) or The Raincoats (the British postpunk band, one of the band’s musical reference points). Or it could just be that the song involves a character driving slowly into New York on a snowy day, and so everyone she sees is wearing a raincoat. Is that too literal?



Track 20: Them - Gloria

“G-L-O-R-I-A”, sings Van The Man, in a song he wrote when he was 18, back in 1963, and it was only a B-side… but it still went on to become one of the most famous songs in the history of rock. The Shadows of Night had a bigger hit with it, but they didn’t sound like they were making it up as they went along like Van did (especially live, where this 2 ½ minute pop song was often stretched to 20 minutes of pure madness).  And that was long before Patti Smith got a hold of it and really blew the doors off.

I’ve never seen the early promo video Them recorded for Gloria before… but watching it now, I'm surprised to find subliminal cuts of a donkey popping up every now and then. The interweb tells me that these were added after a music critic said that Van’s voice sounded like his neighbour’s ass… which only goes to prove that The (Grumpy Old) Man must have had a sense of humour once, even if it seems to have long since deserted him.



Track 21: The Clint Boon Experience - Comet Theme Number One

I was rather obsessed with The Clint Boon Experience back in the late 90s. Clint’s organ may well be the greatest thing to ever come out of the Madchester scene, and by all accounts he was a much nicer guy than the likes of Ian Brown or Shaun Ryder. (I was listening to Guy Garvey on 6Music a couple of weeks back and he told a story about how Elbow wanted to record their first album in France, but they couldn’t afford flights, so Clint Boon drove them all there in his van… then came back and collected them when the sessions were over). 

I probably like the Clint Boon Experience even more than I like the Inspiral Carpets, partly for their DIY aesthetic, and partly because I was more ready for this kind of music in 1998 than I was ten years earlier. Comet Theme Number One was one of a string of catchy singles Clint and co. released towards the end of the last century. None of them were hits, but they all were in this house. CT#1 is also one of a couple of Clint Boon records to feature guest vocals by “Opera Dude” – better known these days as acclaimed singer Alfie Boe. 



Track 22: John Waite – Missing You

Let’s finish this CD with a classic, shall we? (How many of you just spit out your tea? I claim a point for each ruined shirt-front.)

I was 12 when Missing You was on the radio, so obviously I loved it. Here was a big rock ballad in the “methinks he doth protest too much” vein, a sub-section of songwriting that always appealed to me because as a young man I was often laughing loud and hearty while deep inside, I was blue. I was also regularly infatuated with girls who didn’t even know I existed, and there’s definitely a sense of that in this song. 

John Waite hailed from Lancaster but made more of a name for himself in the US, first as lead singer of The Babys with two Billboard Top Twenty hits in the late 70s. Missing You was his only UK solo hit, and even then it only scraped into the Top Ten, unlike the States where it knocked Tina Turner off the top spot. Waite later reunited with some of his Babys pals to form Bad English… which makes me wonder if he was casting aspersions at the UK record buying public? I’m sure he made more money in the States than he ever could have back home. 

The video, which I've somehow reached the age of 54 without ever seeing before (we never had MTV when I was a kid) deepens my nostalgia. It feels like an episode of a soft focus US TV drama, and there's an amusing moment where the girlfriend John is stalking (there were a lot of stalking-based pop videos in the 80s) opens the door into his face and appears to break his nose. There's also a bit where a larger lady tries to chat him up in a bar, but obviously he's having none of that. And to top it off, he smashes up a payphone too. Kids these days, they wouldn't even know what a payphone was.


That's it for CD87... but I'll be back soon to examine another of your random selections.

Tuesday, 21 April 2026

Namesakes #185: Black Lace


Ah yes, the secret promise of black lace. The illicit temptation. The forbidden erotic thrills. The... Conga.

Agadoo I really want to listen to a bunch of bands called Black Lace? 

Haven't I got anything better to do with my life? 

Haven't you?


BLACK LACE #1


We start today in Australia with an Aboriginal band formed in 1972 by Mac Silva... but still going strong well into the 80s.



BLACK LACE #2


Bettye Sweet, aka Black Lace, sang backing vocals on Gary Wright's big US hit Dreamweaver in 1975. A couple of years later, she teamed up with White Satin (Julie Lucero) for an album of funky disco tunes, most notably...



BLACK LACE #3


Steve Scholey, Alan Barton, Colin Gibb and Terry Dobson. They sound like the kids who used to muck around in Maths lessons, don't they? In 1979 they won A Song For Europe and went on to represent the UK in the Eurovision Song Contest. They came seventh (which these days would be a win!), and that really ought to have been the end of it. Except... it wasn't.


Because in 1981, Colin and Alan held a coup and chucked the other two guys out, reinventing Black Lace as "the ultimate party band". That's when the horror really began, especially if you went anywhere near a school disco from 1983 onwards. Superman. Do Tha Conga. The Hokey Cokey. Aga-bloody-doo. In 2003, Q Magazine voted it The Worst Song of All Time. There's more to the story. Much more. Members came and went. There were scandals, fall outs, bankruptcy, benefit fraud and worse (you can probably guess)... honestly, it made depressing reading. If you're desperate to know more, there was a documentary released late last year which the Grauniad reviewer described as "melancholy".

Anyway. Here it is. If you need extra incentive to watch the video, I'm told that one of the dancing fruit people is actually future TV star / Cruise singer Jane MacDonald. Push pineapple. Shake the tree...



BLACKLACE #4


Wash your ears out with a New York heavy rock act from the mid 80s.



BLACK LACE #5


Sometimes you look at a band photo and there's one member who seems to have wandered in from a completely different group.

Here's some more hard rocking types (plus Peter Andre) from Greece in the year they called 1990.



BLACK LACE CLUB #6


I'm bending the rules to allow this "alternative rock trio from the heart of Siberia" in here because they're better than any of the other acts I've heard today. Then again, I set a low bar.



Which Black Lace makes you feel sexier?

And which ones put you off sex forever?


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