Is U2’s new Songs Of Surrender album just plain wrong?
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Whistling, clicking our heels, swinging round lampposts and lobbing the odd shiny florin to a flaxen-haired child, this week’s free-wheeling navigation of the rock and roll boulevard alights upon the following hot topics …   … why Indie music is like student drama.   … what the Beatles achieved in “the 585 most productive minutes in the history of recorded music" (aka the recording of Please Please Me) and the albums released the same day every decade after.    … Death & Vanilla, Frightened Rabbit and – to deafening applause – the welcome return of the Stackwaddy game.   … albums performed as ‘plays’ (by musicians who didn’t make them). A band featuring Clem Burke and Glen Matlock has just toured playing Lust For Life in its entirety. What others would work as well? The Band’s second album? Liege & Lief? The Ramones? Hot Rats?  … unappetising song titles.   … what Bob Dylan did so “my mother would finally think I'm somebody”. And how his Mum reacted to his success.     … and why bands end sets with Country Roads, Mustang Sally and Twist And Shout. Subscribe to Word In Your Ear on Patreon for early and ad-free access to every future Word Podcast!: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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We stuck a few coins in this week’s Wurlitzer and these were the tunes that got played …   … when records became all about sound not songs.   … Fonzworth Bentley, Puff Daddy’s butler, the man who held an umbrella over him on the beach at Cannes.   … what Henry Kissinger, Martha Stewart and...
Published 05/05/24
Steve Diggle met Pete Shelley when the Pistols played Manchester in 1976 and the Diggle-fronted Buzzcocks are now on a world tour that began in Mexico and takes in North and South America, Europe and Australasia before winding up at the 100 Club where they played the Punk Festival 48 years ago –...
Published 05/03/24
Published 05/03/24