Showing posts with label Athlete. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Athlete. Show all posts
Sunday, 29 July 2018
Saturday Snapshots #43 - The Answers
You don't bring me flowers anymore... the least you could do is bring me the answers to this week's Saturday Snapshots. No need to feel Guilty if you didn't get them all right...
Martin was this week's winner, though he needed help with some of the answers from C, FurryBoots and Chris. Charity Chic gets extra points for the detective work involved in cracking #10.
10. Three step Eddie takes an E with a boy cat on the road to death.
A boy cat is a Tom.
Add an e to (Eddie) Cochran and you get Cochrane.
The road to death? Life.
Tom Cochrane - Life Is A Highway
9. Mo Farah heads away from the East End.
Mo Farrah is an Athlete.
Leaving the East End will take you to the Westside.
Athlete - Westside
8. CB airgun endorses Kate's cloudbusting prediction.
Yes, CB airgun is an anagram of Bic Runga.
In Cloudbusting, Kate knew that something good was gonna happen.
Bic Runga - Something Good
7. Made up flowers for the construction industry.
The base of make up is Foundation.
The Foundations - Build Me Up, Buttercup
6. David Ruffin discovers the edge of Stevie's paradise.
David Ruffin was a Temptation.
Steve Nicks sung about The Edge of Seventeen.
Paradise is heaven.
Heaven 17 - Temptation
5. Curling irons cause Sonny & Cher's baby to go missing.
Curling irons cause split ends.
Sonny & Cher sang I Got You, Babe. If their baby went missing...
Split Enz - I Got You
4. I feel my favourite ballads of all time.
I feel emotions. (Well, sometimes.)
My favourite ballads would be The Best Of My Love.
The Emotions - The Best Of My Love
3. When you quit like that, you'll get Cash with one last wage slip.
Johnny (Cash) gets one final Paycheck when he quits...
Johnny Paycheck - Take This Job And Shove It
2. Travel east for E-cigs.
E-cigs involve vapours, for Vaping.
If you travel east, you could be turning towards Japan.
The Vapors - Turning Japanese
1. Lucky boy starts to believe in purification again.
A lucky boy would be a fortunate son.
Believing something involves credence. Water purication makes it clear. Starting again is a revival.
Test your Memory again next Saturday morning...
Monday, 12 October 2015
My Top Ten Songs For Electricians
Some time ago (well, 2+ years... my, how time flies) when I unveiled My Top Ten Carpentry Songs I fully intended to follow it up with songs devoted to other popular trades. Finally, I decided to have a go at electricians - but I wanted to avoid all the obvious Electric songs (Dreams / Friends / Avenue / Ladyland / Spanking of War Babies etc.) because they'll fit into their own post one day. So here, instead, are ten songs specifically about electricians... or about the things they deal with on a daily basis.
Special mention to Cliff Richard - Wired For Sound which is as close to a guilty pleasure as I get (considering how broad and cheesy these lists do sometimes go). I tried to find room for Sir Cliff here, but in the end I had to admit that it's a song more about speakers (tall ones and small ones - Cliff has no time for midi). The rollerskating video is always worth a look though...
Further special mentions to Elvis and George Harrison, both of whom (according to t'internet) started out as apprentice electricians before more successful careers beckoned...
10. Robert Palmer - I Dream Of Wires
Perhaps I should have gone with Gary Numan's original version, but I was always a huge fan of Bob Palmer's voice and I consider it a tragedy that he died as young as he did because I bet he could have gone on and on... as Numan himself has done.
Anyway, I Dream Of Wires is one of the few songs I know that actually mentions an electrician in its lyrics, though it actually tells of a completely "wireless" future wherein the "last electrician alive" looks back fondly on a world that was a little less alien...
We opened doors by thinkingOther songs to mention electricians directly include Better Things by Massive Attack & Tracy Thorn (You say the magic's gone / Well, I'm not a magician / You say the spark's gone / Well get an electrician), Demystification by Zounds (My electronic shaver won't plug into the wall /
We went to sleep by dialing 'o'
We drove to work by proxy
I plugged my wife in, just for show
New ways, new ways
I dream of wires
So I press 'c' for comfort
I dream of wires, the old days
Now I can't go to the party, the electrician didn't call) and Nick Cave's amazing Babe, I'm On Fire. Oh, and this...
9. John Parish - Kansas City Electrician
An artist whose solo work I only discovered quite recently, though he's been knocking around for years, working with the likes of PJ Harvey, Eels and Sparklehorse. KCE sounds like classic American alt-rock, so I was surprised to find out that Parish is actually from the UK (Yeovil), though I guess his lyrical slang ("nowt", "that bloke") should have given him away. A great song: made me go out and buy the album.
8. Muse - Plug In Baby
I have a curious relationship with Muse. I liked their early material very much and even went to see them playing live when they were just starting out (at The Leadmill, I think). Matt Bellamy spent most of the show with his back to the audience... and I never really recovered from that. (Believe it or not, I much preferred the support act. They were called Cold something. Cold...play? No idea what happened to them.)
7. Teenage Fanclub - Sparky's Dream
A cracking single from the Fannies, one of their best. The Byrds have a lot to answer for.
6. Electric Six - Danger! High Voltage
Very silly.
Very.
Very.
Silly.
Good, though.
The video's a work of art.
5. The Wonder Stuff - Change Every Light Bulb
The opening track from what is sometimes my favourite Stuffies album, Construction For The Modern Idiot. Not heard this in ages.
4. Athlete - Wires
A very emotive song, more so when you know that it's about the premature birth of lead Athlete Joel Pott's daughter and the life support system that kept her going.
3. Slaves - Sockets
I haven't made up my mind yet, but Slaves are definite contenders for the best new band of 2015. They've got the snotty punk appeal of early Supergrass, but a little more to say for themselves lyrically. They're just two lads from Kent (Laurie Vincent on guitar / bass and Isaac Holman on drums: they both sing) but they make a hell of a satisfying racket.
On first listen, the Sockets they sing about here appear to be the ones in your head rather than the ones an electrician would fix. The video suggests otherwise...
2. Barenaked Ladies - Light Up My Room
The Barenaked Ladies are a clever band - sometimes a little too clever - but this is the closest they ever got to capturing my heart as well as tickling my funny bone. Here, a whole town is infected with electricity thanks to a nearby Hydrofield (what the Canadians call a bunch of pylons, basically), making every resident into an amateur electrician.
I can put a spare bulb in my hand1. Glen Campbell - Wichita Lineman
And light up my yard...
Longtime readers of my ramblings may have seen this one coming: but I'll be honest with you, when I started planning this post I hadn't even considered that a lineman was an electrician. Once I'd made the connection, it had to be Number One, for the sheer fact that it is the greatest song ever written (Jimmy Webb Is God) and, though there are many fine versions in existence, no one will ever top Glen's haunting and heartbreaking delivery. I could go on and on about what makes it so special (the way that the melody and the lyrics merge together to create a seamless jewel; the yearning romanticism and evocative imagery; "And I need you more than want you / And I want your for all time") but I've probably said it all elsewhere. Simply put, there is no finer recording and if I could make it Number One every week, I would.
Which one would you get to wire your house (for sound)?
Monday, 2 September 2013
My Top Ten Hurricane Songs
Hold onto your hats... there's ten hurricanes coming.
10. Catherine Feeny - Hurricane Glass
Much consternation on youtube over the way Catherine treats her guitars in this video. I'm amazed people have the time.
9. Athlete - Hurricane
Impending doom for the Athlete lads as a hurricane threatens to strip them of all they hold dear.
8. Florence & The Machine - Hurricane Drunk
In which Florence gets self-destructive... she's gonna drink herself to death.
7. Black Kids - Hurricane Jane
It's Friday night and I ain't got nobody.Slovenly.
Oh, what's the use of making a bed?
6. Alice Cooper - Hurricane Years
Mr. Cooper: legend.
5. The Hold Steady - Hurricane J
Jessie's like a hurricane... but Craig might not be the one to save her from herself.
I know you're gonna say what I know you're gonna say4. The Auteurs - Johnny & The Hurricanes
I know you'll look at the ground, I know you'll probably cry
You're a beautiful girl and you're a pretty good waitress
But Jessie, I don't think I'm the guy
Luke Haines' tribute to forgotten fifties rock 'n' rollers, gets extra points for mentioning Spider-Man in the lyrics.
3. The Horrible Crowes - Behold The Hurricane
Gaslight Anthem mainman Brian Fallon's side-project, this was the Horrible Crowes' debut single, and it may well be the best thing they've done. From an album called Elsie, so extra points for that.
2. Bob Dylan - Hurricane
Here comes the story of the HurricaneAt 8 minutes 36 in length, Bob beats our Number One today by just 13 seconds. It's a wonderfully noirish, novelistic piece of storytelling... yet not quite strong enough to knock this one off the top spot...
The man the authorities came to blame
For something that he never done
Put in a prison cell but one time he could-a been
The champion of the world.
1. Neil Young & Crazy Horse - Like A Hurricane
The trick of making an epic 8 minute plus rock song is to make it still seem too short.
I want to love you but
I'm getting blown away.
So... which hurricane blows you away?
Wednesday, 12 June 2013
My Top Ten Seaside Town Songs
Summer's here and the time is right for ice cream, donkey rides, deck chairs, fish and chips and slot machines...
Here's ten songs about British seaside towns where everyday isn't like Sunday...
10. Chas & Dave - Margate
It was this or Scarborough Fair. And much as I love both Scarborough and Simon & Garfunkel, there's something about Scarborough Fair that represents folk music at its most twee. Call me a philistine, but I'd rather have lyrics that sing, "Behave yourself grandad, or you won’t be going..." than, "Parsley, sage, rosemary and thyme". Maybe when I compile my Top Ten Herb Songs...
See also Mussels of Margate, written by Kurt Weill. Seriously, you can't make stuff like that up.
9. Mark Eitzel - Southend On Sea
The lead singer of American Music Club probably isn't the first person you'd expect to hear singing a song about Southend... maybe that's why it works so well. Told from the perspective of "just another ugly American melting in the heat"...
You said to me8. Athlete - Dungeness
"You're from California
And you're as dumb as can be"
You said to me
"Are you the Scarecrow, the Tin Man
Or are you Dorothy?"
You said to me
"I'm beginning to think that you're
A part of the enemy"
You said to me
"If I was drowning would you save me
From Southend-on-Sea?"
OK, so Dungeness isn't strictly a seaside town, it's a headland with a beach, a nuclear power plant and Derek Jarman's cottage on it. But let's pretend it's a big holiday destination, shall we? This song is quite, quite lovely.
7. Half Man Half Biscuit - She's In Broadstairs
Gets many extra marks for mentioning Filey, because Filey is ace.
Maybe she could tell herThe band Luxembourg also had a song called Broadstairs but the internet hasn't ever heard of it.
I’ve still got her umbrella
She prized it rather highly
It saved her once in Filey
It came on all torrential
And therefore it’s essential
6. Philip Jeays - Eastbourne
This is the last resort... I think Philip may be suggesting Eastbourne is full of pensioners.
5. Glasvegas - The Prettiest Thing On Saltcoats Beach
To quote my old music blogging hero, JC, The Vinyl Villain, "the b-side (to Geraldine) is a rather lovely romantic song about one of the least romantic coastal towns on Planet Earth." I've never been to Saltcoats so I'll have to bow to his native knowledge.
4. Luke Haines & The Auteurs - Bugger Bognor
The apochryphal last words of King George V, set to lush orchestration by the perennially grumpy southern Englishman...
Our business affairs are at the receivers3. Cud - Only (A Prawn In Whitby)
Our assets frozen
There's not much between us
So we put it on a horse
Called 'It's Grim Up North'
My favourite seaside town (I may even be there as you read this); I can think of at least two people who read this blog who would probably have made this Number One. And who knows, they may well be right.
2. The Beautiful South - Oh, Blackpool
Why do political parties always hold their conferences in seaside towns? Is it just so the waster politicians can ride the donkeys wearing Kiss Me Quick hats? A scathing attack on the Liberal Party (SDP) of the late 80s, this is "somewhat" dated now, but it still sounds wonderful. And there's no mention of Nick Clegg, which is always a bonus.
They wore enamel badges of
David Steel on their sleeves
And "nuclear power no thanks",
"Not sure" and "yes please!"
And their faces were two fold
And their teeth they were gold
And they wore their pinstripe suits
With a rip at the knee
I'm out tonight and can't decideSee also Elvis Impersonator: Blackpool Pier by The Manics, which already did very well in My Top Ten Songs About Elvis.
Between Soviet hip or British pride
1. Queen - Brighton Rock
Songs about badgers, marrying Anita Dobson, that hair... Bryan May's crimes against cool are considerable. But it's possible to forgive him everything just by listening to the guitar solo on Brighton Rock, one of the best songs he ever wrote. Plus, Freddie sings a duet with himself, taking on both male and female vocals. The tale of a doomed holiday romance and the mums and wives who ruin it.
"Jenny will you stay? Tarry with me, prayOther Brighton belters include Upside Down On Brighton Beach by Shirley Lee and You're Not From Brighton by local lad Norman 'Fatboy Slim' Cook. See also New Brighton Promenade by The Boo Radleys, though I suspect that'll be the New Brighton in Merseyside.
Nothing e'er need come between us
Tell me love what do you say?"
"Oh no I must away, to my mum in disarray
If my mother should discover how I spent my holiday
It would be of small avail to talk of magic in the air
I'll say farewell..."
So... those are my favourite Seaside Town Songs... where will you be wearing a knotted hanky on your head this summer?
Wednesday, 16 January 2013
My Top Ten Shopping Songs
Much is being written about the precariously uncertain fate of HMV, and while I'm not the regular customer I once was (partly due to other outlets, partly due to the lack of choice and other issues I have with our only remaining high street music chain) I would be sorry to see it go. Why, I was in there only the other day (before the news was announced), buying the Jake Bugg CD.
Anyway, in tribute, here's ten songs about shops and shopping...
10. Franz Ferdinand - Shopping For Blood
The FF boys channel Iggy Pop. Lovely stuff.
9. Athlete - Second Hand Stores
Maybe this is all we'll be left with soon...
8. Helen Love - Junk Shop Discotheque
Cos my record collection is your summer injection,7. Dean Friedman - Shopping Bag Ladies
Of garage, beat, bubblegum, disco, and soul
A song that's more about the ladies than the shopping... but what a song! Even the ropey live recording can't rob it of its beauty.
6. Babybird - Cornershop
Another soon-to-extinct institution? They'll all be Tesco Directs and Sainsbury's Locals soon.
5. The Jam - Shopping
As I flit from shop window to window4. The Clash - Lost In The Supermarket
I'm trying to pick up a friendly bargain
But it's not like the adverts all make out
And there's no one to greet you as a friend
Of course, supermarkets will never replace record shops, caring only about the pile-it-high-sell-it-cheap Top 40 and their bottom line. They have as much interest in music as I have in over 60s naked sky-diving.Still, if HMV does go under, perhaps the independent record shops will strike back...?
3. The Smiths - Shoplifters of the World Unite
Now, Moz, that's hardly helpful, is it? Even if the owners of Nipper the Dog are one of the many record companies you've fallen foul of over the years.
See also Carter USM - A Nation of Shoplifters.
Well, never mind, never mind.2. Smokey Robinson & The Miracles - Shop Around
As a young man, I used to shop around... just as Smokey suggests. Long, pleasurable Saturday afternoons spent wandering around Leeds, popping into all the record shops (and comic shops!), both chain and indie, looking for a bargain. I imagine a similar afternoon would be finished much more quickly these days...
I've always loved this song, but watching the video makes me love it all the more.
1. The Freshies - I'm In Love With A Girl On The Manchester Virgin Megastore's Checkout Desk
Well, it was the only record I could think of about big chain record shops... even if it does namedrop HMV's former rival.
RIP, Frank Sidebottom.
Those were my shopping songs... which one is your must-buy?
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