Monday, 18 August 2025

101 Songs again and again

Right, I seem to put a list of my 101 Favourite Songs on here every five years or so, and the time has come round again.

Obviously, I've done countless sub-lists in the intervening period, but nice to go back to basics with no parameters.

Apple Music recently offered me my 100 Most Listened To songs of the last 10 years, so here, in the link, is that for comparison. Obviously, that has a significant weighting towards the toddler tyranny of the Disney years, which my own list, mainly, will not.

https://music.apple.com/gb/playlist/replay-all-time/pl.rp-bwCb43xN

There is a lot in common, of course. I tend to listen to songs I like. I think, more than usual, I've included passing fancies in this list as much as longstanding favourites, so probably when I look again in five years there'll be a few were I'll wonder what the hell that's doing there ...

Anyway, here's the list. No big surprises, I'd have thought ...

  1. From the Morning - Nick Drake
  2. When the Haar Rolls In - James Yorkston
  3. Can't Do Much -Waxahatchee
  4. Pa'lante - Hurray for the Riff-Raff
  5. Take It With Me - Tom Waits
  6. Something Like Happiness - The Maccabees
  7. All My Friends - LCD Soundsystem
  8. In California - Joanna Newsom
  9. She's Your Lover Now (Take 16) - Bob Dylan
  10. Diamonds - Rihanna
  11. Impossible Germany (Live) - Wilco
  12. Doo Wop (That Thing) - Lauryn Hill
  13. Caravan (Live) - Van Morrison
  14. Head Rolls Off - Frightened Rabbit
  15. Fourth of July - Sufjan Stevens
  16. Witness (1 Hope) - Roots Manuva
  17. Being Alive (from Company)
  18. My Baby Don't Understand Me - Natalie Prass
  19. A Matter of Time - The Leisure Society
  20. Love It If We Made It (Live) - The 1975
  21. Ruby Falls - Waxahatchee
  22. Place to Be - Nick Drake
  23. Yes - McAlmont and Butler
  24. Dancing on My Own - Robyn
  25. Surf - Roddy Frame
  26. Losing You - Solange
  27. Grace - Jeff Buckley
  28. Ignore Tenderness - Julia Jacklin
  29. Song for Our Daughter - Laura Marling
  30. Famous Blue Raincoat - Leonard Cohen
  31. The Mercy Seat (Live) - Nick Cave
  32. Would I Lie to You? - Charles and Eddie
  33. Good Luck, Babe - Chappell Roan
  34. Better Son/Daughter - Rilo Kiley
  35. Isis (Live) - Bob Dylan
  36. Angela Surf City -The Walkmen
  37. Rise to Me - The Decemberists
  38. The Only Living Boy in New York - Simon and Garfunkel
  39. She's a Jar - Wilco
  40. I See a Darkness - Johnny Cash/Bonnie Prince Billy
  41. Rainy Night in Soho - The Pogues
  42. Thunder Road - Bruce Springsteen
  43. The Wild Kindness - Silver Jews
  44. No Children - Mountain Goats
  45. Why Does the Earth Give Us People to Love - Kara Jackson
  46. With Every Heartbeat - Robyn
  47. The Modern Leper - Frightened Rabbit
  48. Moon River - Audrey Hepburn
  49. The Rat - The Walkmen
  50. Sultans of Swing - Dire Straits
  51. Hummingbird - Wilco
  52. Downtown Train - Tom Waits
  53. The Place Where He Inserted the Blade - Black Country, New Road
  54. St Elmo's Fire - John Parr
  55. She's Got You High - Mumm-Ra
  56. Rise - Josh Rouse
  57. Au Fond Du Temple Saint - Jussi Bjoerling
  58. Alyosha - Susanne Sundfor
  59. Danny Callahan - Conor Oberst
  60. Green Light - Lorde
  61. Redemption Song - Bob Marley
  62. Blind Willie McTell - Bob Dylan
  63. Under the Westway - Blur
  64. Slow Life - SFA
  65. Sally MacLennane - The Pogues
  66. Stars - Simply Red
  67. The Dark is Rising - Mercury Rev
  68. Like a Prayer - Madonna
  69. Dollar Days - David Bowie
  70. Idiot Wind - Bob Dylan
  71. Don't Let Go (Love) - En Vogue
  72. You've Got a Friend - Carole King
  73. So Now What - The Shins
  74. The Way You Look Tonight - Frank Sinatra
  75. All My Happiness is Gone - Purple Mountains
  76. Killing in the Name - Rage Against the Machine
  77. Modern Girl - Sleater-Kinney
  78. There Must Be an Angel - Eurythmics
  79. Right Back to It - Waxahatchee ft MJ Lenderman
  80. Young Hearts Run Free - Candi Staton
  81. Iceblink Luck - Cocteau Twins
  82. Two Princes - Spin Doctors
  83. Suite: Judy Blue Eyes - Crosby Stills and Nash
  84. A Woman of Heart and Mind - Joni Mitchell
  85. In the End - Linkin Park
  86. Chicago - Sufjan Stevens
  87. How Far I'll Go (from Moana)
  88. Save It for Later - The Beat
  89. Sunday - Let's Eat Grandma
  90. My Girl - The Temptations
  91. Danko/Manuel - Drive-By Truckers
  92. Carey - Joni Mitchell
  93. Takeover - Jay-Z
  94. Werewolf - Fiona Apple
  95. Nutmeg - Ghostface Killah ft RZA
  96. Llorando - Rebekah Del Rio
  97. Party Fears Two - The Associates
  98. Back to the Radio - Porridge Radio
  99. Still Life - Suede
  100. Paper Planes - MIA
  101. Bryte Side - Pernice Brothers


Saturday, 16 August 2025

Ars Gratia ...

Went to see a little work of art you might of heard of called the Mona Lisa last week. I say "see" ... more like catch the top of it from about 25m away over a sea of camera phones. But that's fine with me, we saw it and I can tick it off. I'm vey much from the tick-it-off school of art.

My favourite painting is a little work of art you may heard of called The Starry Night. When I saw it, I hadn't really fully 100% consciously made the connection between the song Vincent and an actual painting called The Starry Night and I turned a corner in MOMA straight into it, and it really was one of my few "well, holy shit, there's that" moments with a painting. I like that it looks a bit like a child's painting. Well, anyway, I like a lot about it.

My sweet spot with art is probably around 1885-1950. I wonder, if you tried to equate ages of art with ages of music, how one would do it. Would the impressionists be 60s rock'n'roll? Da Vinci Mozart? Doesn't really work at all does it? Maybe someone could make it work ...

Anyway, though I like to tick off art, I do also like to look at it, and the people I've most enjoyed looking at, I think are

Van Gogh

Malevich

Durer

Mondrian

Seurat

Bosch

Miro

Waterhouse

Rothko

and of course Bob Dylan!

Just kidding there. I've had a few people tell me Bob Dylan's paintings art is not good, though some critics will say it is actually pretty good. I think it's pretty variable, I do think some of his paintings show some aptitude, but the interesting thing with Bob Dylan's art, as may come out a bit more after his death, is, well, look ... reading Heylin's exhaustive and exhausting biography and a few other things, Dylan has a relationship to not giving people what they think they're getting which is quite dazzling. I suspect were he not one of the great American artists he would be one of the great American white collar criminals ... as it is, maybe he's both, who knows...

anyway, art, you should try it, it can be good ...

Thursday, 31 July 2025

Lucy Bronze

It strikes me that Lucy Bronze is, clearly and obviously, one of the greatest sportspeople in British history.

As much as it is extremely pleasing that Chloe Kelly learnt her magnificent technique on the mean streets of Ealing, most of my emotions at the end of Sunday's game were attached to Bronze, who is a quite remarkable person.

Lucia Roberta Tough Bronze - you couldn't make up a name like that. Somehow each word in it tells a story.

Let's start with the football. The scale of Bronze's accomplishment has no comparison in British football.

She was won nine league titles (with five different clubs), five Champions Leagues, two major international tournaments whilst runner-up in another, she was been in the FIFA World XI 7 times, she has been the best (or second best) player in a World Cup (2019), been judged the FIFA Best Player in the World.

No one else in Britain has a record, as an individual and as a team-member, like that - the closest is Bobby Charlton, who won the league three times, the European Cup once, the World Cup, won the Ballon d'Or (and was nominated several more times.)

That is across all of men's and women's football. That's the bare bones of it. There have been more brilliant players, perhaps, whether it's Kelly Smith or Lauren Hemp, Bale or Best, but no one else has won so much nor been judged, so regularly, so close to the top of the game.

Although not a genius of football like Aitana Bonmati, it is also not right to see Bronze just in terms of character and application. At her best, as in the 2019 World Cup, she was a joke, just the best player on any pitch she was on, a computer game character picking the ball up at one end of the pitch and running past everyone else to the other end before pinging a cross in. Injuries have meant she's a little past that now, but still, her athleticism, nous, strength, will, technique, made her one of the best players of the 2025 tournament. England would not have won without her - certainly not the quarter-final vs Sweden, where her goal and penalty were the key moments in the game.

So, those are things people will remember of her from the 2025 tournament. Oh yes, that, and strapping up her own leg on the pitch like a medical pro. Oh yes, and the fact she revealed at the end she'd played the whole tournament with a broken tibia.

Look, I've broken a tibia, and while I can safely assume her tibia was not broken like the great schism of my broken tibia, we can also say that that's pretty ... impressive.

And in character. There's a lot of detail to Lucy Bronze. She can speak four languages. Her father is Portuguese, her mother from Northumberland - she grew up mainly on Holy Island, also Alnwick, but also spent time in Faro - a good combo. When she was young, she was also county champion in cross-country. hockey and tennis. She might have been an 800m runner. She also won awards in maths. In 2013, at university, she wrote her dissertation on ACL injuries on women's sport, which is probably one of the most important issues in all of women's football. At the 2023 World Cup, she won everyone's eternal respect by refusing to shake the hand of football's grotesque head honcho Gianni Infantino, after some entirely typical remarks he made about women's football.

She recently revealed that she is autistic and has ADHD. Years ago, I remember speaking with my wife about people in sport with autism, wondering if many of the qualities associated with autism might lend themselves very well to high achievement in some sports. When we looked it up at the time (probably around 2012) we found that there were basically no high-level sportspeople who were openly autistic.

In the last decade or so, the dialogue and understanding on ASD and ADHD has changed a fair bit, but still, for one of the top sportspeople in the world, who is known for being very protective of their personal life, to speak up, was, I think, pretty powerful and groundbreaking.

In her initial interview, there was huge insight into how someone neurodiverse, or even just someone who struggles socially, might attempt, and succeed, to integrate into the often extremely intimidating and baffling world of team sports.

I mean, imagine how important that is, or can be ...

Anyway, that's all, really. I think Lucy Bronze is the hero a lot of young people need.

Tuesday, 29 July 2025

Save It for Later

Talking of music on The Bear, this song, Save it for Later, appears several times, either in the original version by The Beat, or covered by Eddie Vedder.

It's a song that had somehow passed me by until the last year or so. To be fair, it was not a big hit single nor was it ever played on the radio. The whole story of it is pretty interesting.

The Beat were (certainly in my perception of them) primarily a ska group, a multiracial band who had a few hits but were a notch below The Specials and Madness in success.

Dave Wakeling, the lead singer, wrote Save it for Later before the band even began, but the bassist Dave Steele did not want it released it by the band as he felt it was too "classic rock". Eventually, it was only on their third (and last) album, and at the insistence of the record company, that it got recorded and released.

The tuning is DADAAD, which is, apparently, pretty unusual, and only came about by mistake because Wakeling was trying to tune to DADGAD. Wakeling recounts that he once got a phone call from Pete Townshend and David Gilmour asking how the tuning worked. It is one of Townshend's favourite songs, and he recorded it and played it in concert.

It has also been covered by Counting Crows and Pearl Jam, and has gradually become The Beat's most popular song. I've never been a fan of Pearl Jam (one of those bands, like The Beat, that are near what I like but have just always passed me by) but the version by Vedder on The Bear is lovely, and really brings something out in the song.

The song has been a complete earworm for me for the last month - I really can't get it out of my head, but it's one of those specific earworms (do you know the ones) where I also can't quite get it completely into my head either. I guess, perhaps, because of the song's unusual tuning, I have real trouble pinning it down exactly when I recall it. Perhaps by writing about it here I will put that to bed. Anyway, here are The Beat and Vedder versions.

Save it for Later - The Beat

Save It for Later - Eddie Vedder

It's a pretty perfect song, I think - intriguing, somehow profound, but also joyous and catchy. 

Thursday, 24 July 2025

The Bear

'The Bear' is one of my favourite TV shows of the last few years, but, unlike most other things I love, I can understand without hesitation why some people might not like it so much. Because The Bear is above all a vibe, a vibe for people like me, and however well written or acted it is, I think the vibe is the main reason I love it.

I first heard about The Bear when I saw US music journalists talking about it on Twitter. They were talking about the fact it had used Wilco songs, at length, twice in the same series. I immediately thought "This is the show for me"

The Bear is for men who love Wilco. There is a lot of music in The Bear, not all of which is by Wilco, most of which I love, and it does not sound as if it was carefully designed by committee, it sounds like it is one or two middle-aged guys' favourite songs.

There are other things that are good about The Bear too. From early on, it has had utterly believable interactions between its characters - the chemistry (or, presumably, actually, level of rehearsal and skill) is outstanding. 

For me, the key character is Tina, played by Liza Colon-Zayas, a supporting character who is a middle-aged line cook. The screen has always crackled when Tina is on it. She holds the past and the future of the restaurant. 

Seasons 1 and 2 of The Bear had universal acclaim, whereas 3 had more mixed reviews. So did 4, which surprised me, as I thought 4 was as good as 1 and 2. Perhaps I am biased because Season 3 was the only one that didn't have Wilco on the soundtrack. Big mistake. In any case, what I was going to say was that even though 3 had a few issues, going too hard on Bear tropes and overegging the cuteness of some supporting-character comedy, it had a few outstanding episodes, none better than the one that focused on Tina's "origin story" - one of the best ever Bear episodes.

Although they have become famous, most of the main actors in The Bear were not particularly famous before it started. On the other hand, one of the features has been the litany of famous faces in cameo roles. Or rather, cameo roles is not quite right. They start off looking like they're going to be cameos and then end up being regular supporting roles. In Season 1, that was just Oliver Platt as Jimmy. The regularity of a genuine star turning up once and then again has increased from there - Jamie Lee Curtis, Bob Odenkirk, Josh Hartnett (one that seemed like a slightly jarring in cameo in Season 3, but became a really nice supporting performance in Season 4), Olivia Colman, Will Poulter, Sarah Paulsen, John Mulaney, Rob Reiner, Danielle Deadwyler, Brie Larsen, not to mention Jon Bernthal in flashback, as Mikey, Carmen's brother, whose suicide underpins everything.

There are also appearances from chefs, whether its the owner of The Beef itself which was the inspiration for The Bear, Matty Matheson as Fak, or famous chefs like Rene Redzepi.

I imagine another big vibe for Bear fans is food fetishization, which is not really my thing, but I do love some of the food/kitchen stuff, particularly the stopwatch/race against time stuff, like Tina's battle to cook a pasta dish within 3 minutes in Season 4.

But it's the music for me. One funny little thought I  had watching Season 4, on the episode they wisely included some Wilco again (a studio outtake of I'm the Man Who Loves You), the song played over the credits was Stay Young by Oasis. Stay Young, of all the Oasis songs, the one I go on about being the last, lost Oasis classic. So after my own heart, it might almost have been curated by me.

Of course, it wasn't. But my idle fancy, which I last had when watching the TV version of One Day, when every track seemed to be directly taken from the compilation tapes I was making in the early 2000s, was "wouldn't it be funny if someone read my blog".

Of course, no one reads my blog. Occasionally, there are bursts off quite large reader numbers, but I've always presumed they were bots or something, but funny if they were people who do soundtracks for TV shows ...

If that is the case, I will only believe it if I hear Bryte Side by The Pernice Brothers on the soundtrack to a hit show about cricket ...

Friday, 4 July 2025

What do you see in a rock band?

I watched (on TV) The 1975 headlining Glastonbury on Friday night. I thought they did a pretty good job, but also it gave me the slightly melancholy thought - is this the last British guitar band that will headline Glastonbury for the first time?

The 1975 are a big, notorious band and they've been around a while. They've had five UK Number 1 albums, an actual Number 1 album in the USA, 25 songs with 100 million+ Spotify streams [my new personality is middle aged man obsessed with streaming numbers), yet still, they were only just big enough for that stage.

You wouldn't say that any of their songs are really and truly embedded in the national consciousness. They haven't had any proper big big hit singles. No guitar bands have, for years.

What are the biggest (both real and potential) current British bands (which haven't already headlined) ... Wolf Alice, Wet Leg, The Last Dinner Party, maybe? Fontaines DC if you're counting Irish ... Idles? Blossoms? Don't think any of those are close, really (Wet Leg most likely to prove me wrong) - Headlining Latitude, maybe, but not Glastonbury ...

Someone older who hasn't done it yet ... Keane? Franz Ferdinand? Elbow? Wouldn't have thought so. Those bands are getting smaller, not bigger. Suede? They might actually be able to pull it off, but very unlikely to be chosen.

Someone not yet known? Possible. Things change and come round again, but it really has been a long time since any bands really blew up, like Oasis, like Coldplay, like the Arctic Monkeys, and there's no reason, based on how music and society is now, for that to change.

Through their career and on Friday night, a lot of people have found Matty Healy and The 1975 irritating. I can see why, indeed that has included me, but I've come to quite admire his schtick and quite like their music. Quite in the English, not American, sense. All quite quite. They've got, for me, one all-timer of a song (Love It If We Made It), which they didn't quite nail on Friday night, and quite a lot of pretty catchy, derivative, good tunes, with quite funny, occasionally slightly scabrous lyrics. He is well served in being bearable in his knowing dissolute rock star performance by being in a group of friends, rather than a solo artist. He is like a more bearable Robbie Williams, more bearable perhaps because he leans harder into being irritating and doesn't demand the love in return to quite the same extent.

Anyway, watching them on Friday night made me think quite a lot about big rock shows, how to carry it off and how not to carry it off. I'd give The 1975 a 7/10, and maybe their new album (from which they, quite safely, played nothing) will contain a couple more all-timers which will lift them to an 8/10 if they headline Glastonbury again.

I'd maybe be more effusive about them had I not watched The Maccabees on Sunday night, a band of a similar (slightly earlier) vintage who never got quite so big, split up and have now reformed. The Maccabees headlined a smaller stage, the Park Stage, and it was, from my sofa, a 10/10.

I rather love the Maccabees, as I've said before, and this triumphant gig only emphasized, for me, that they're the one that, so far, got away, a band that, with different timings and a fair wind, might have been properly huge - not Coldplay-huge maybe, but bigger than Elbow-huge. This wasn't a truly big gig, though, just the Park Stage - a far easier win. Their big gig comes at All Points East in August, when they headline their own show. Would love it if they made it.

Amongst many things I liked about the Maccabees is how close (and democratically) they stood. Their three main members stand level with each other across the front (bassist to the side). They are much more of a guitar band than The 1975. Usually three, sometimes four, guitars coming right at you. Lots of all singing together, a barrage of harmonious noise.

Right, I must say, at this point, my intention was to analyse, in detail, from my experience, the different things that make a headline set work or not work, but it strikes me that would be a) unsatisfactory and b) lead nowhere.

Let me simply say the best big shows I've been to have been Blur, and the worst have been The Strokes (both bands I've seen three times). The most mundane and going through the motions was Oasis. The most brilliant because I caught them right at their peak (though one wouldn't have known they were peaking) were Franz Ferdinand and Ash.

Anyway, going back to my original point, my elegy for the big British guitar band, I decided to put together a playlist.

Now, I started making compilation tapes in the mid-90s, and making countless compilation tapes and latterly playlists taught me to always do your best to be eclectic. I might, at times, only listen to one type of music, but you wouldn't entirely know it from the tapes I made.

But this list will be given over, in the most part, the one dimension - the white guys with guitars.

It will be the (a) tale of British guitar bands from 2000 to 2025 - always bands, never solo artists. It will not be cool, but I think it will be an enjoyable listen. All the songs will be songs I enjoy and, when it comes to British indie rock, my taste tends to the straightforward and anthemic. But I won't include Kasabian. Or Scouting for Girls. We start at, or near, the beginning.

  • Yellow - Coldplay Well, British "indie" "rock" music of the 2000s unquestionably starts here, with this undeniable song, which Coldplay never really sounded like again. Still my favourite Coldplay song, maybe their only one I like unambiguously, and still their most popular.
  • The Cedar Room - Doves I loved Doves a lot at the start of this century, felt this was the direction guitar music would go in, but it never really happened.
  • American Trilogy - The Delgados. Not surprising that there are so many Scottish acts in the first couple of years, that being, very much, where I was at.
  • Actually it's Darkness - Idlewild
  • I Need Direction - Teenage Fanclub. A large part of music in the 2000s, for me, was albums by older bands that were still good - also true that nearly all the 90s bands I've chosen here were, though around at the time of Britpop, not usually called Britpop.
  • Winterlight - Clearlake. Man, the epic, cinematic indie of the early 2000s, that's really something ...
  • Always: Your Way - My Vitriol
  • To You - I am Kloot From the short-lived "new acoustic movement"
  • Flowers in the Window - Travis. Co-written, apparently, by a little fella in a great little blues band, Mr Paul McCartney. And you can hear it. Travis were the biggest British guitar band at the start of the century, which is strange ...
  • Don't Just Do Something - Spiritualized. Not Ladies and Gentlemen ..., but I've always found this languorous epic from the mainly disappointing follow-up incredibly moving and also extremely good advice. Only recently realised that he almost certainly substituted "cigarettes" in for "heroin" in the lyrics, at the last moment.
  • Julie Christie - Spearmint. I listened to this none-more-indie album again recently. Scottish Pop, this, The Flaming Lips, Stealing Beauty. Absolutely lush and full of pop culture references.
  • Time for Heroes - The Libertines. Though The Libertines are my age contemporaries, I also felt they were a generation, musically, below my first love (Blur, SFA etc) so, thankfully, was always a bit removed. They're not good, really, but there were good songs on that first album.
  • Envy - Ash. Actually, the start of Ash's down slope, because this was a standalone single but not a massive hit, and obviously Shining Light and Burn Baby Burn are the sensible choices, but I always rather loved Envy.
  • Slow Life - SFA 
  • Darts of Pleasure - Franz Ferdinand. When I saw Franz Ferdinand for the first time, headlining Benicassim (I saw them a couple of years later headlining Latitude), what struck me was gleeful choreography and the menacing joie de vivre of the non-Kapranos members. They just had so much personality, and I think it got too Kapranos-focused, really, and something was lost.
  • Lose Yr Frown - Electric Soft Parade
  • Friday Night - The Darkness
  • The Final Arrears - Mull Historical Society
  • Time is Running Out - Muse. Don't really like Muse, but felt I should include the bands that have headlined Glastonbury (which they've done a baffling three times) ... couldn't face including Oasis, Kasabian or The Who, though (yes, The Who have headlined Glastonbury and released new music this century ...)
  • Run - Snow Patrol
  • Forned a Band - Art Brut. A break from the morose and overblown.
  • Four to the Floor - Starsailor. Were supposed to be massive, but their hammy balladeering was maybe a step too far, but with this song they happened to do a song people could dance to, so it had a bit of a life of its own.
  • To You Alone - The Beta Band. Lovely standalone single from that weirdly magical band.
  • Somewhere Only We Know -  Keane
  • I'm a Cuckoo - Belle and Sebastian. If ever this band was going to get properly big ...
  • Long Time Coming - Delays
  • Vice - Razorlight. Actual decent first album.
  • Our Mutual Friend - The Divine Comedy
  • Heliopolis by Night - Aberfeldy
  • Dakota - Stereophonics
  • All Night Disco Party - Brakes. As I've said before, I saw Brakes about five times at small festivals in the late 2000s, and they were the most fun little festival band I ever saw.
  • In the Morning - The Coral
  • Wires - Athlete. Finished a few seconds ahead of the lead singer at the Ashford Parkrun a few weeks ago. Huh, some "athlete", McGaughey quipped ...
  • Banquet - Bloc Party
  • Godhopping - Dogs Die in Hot Cars. Hmm, do we think we should maybe have called ourselves something else, members of little remembered but highly catchy Fife indie band Dogs Die in Hot Cars sometimes say to each other ...
  • I Predict a Riot - Kaiser Chiefs. In the 2000s, millions of people going mental to this and Mr Brightside. Mental. That's just how it was.
  • Ashes - Embrace. Embrace at Barrowlands was the first gig I ever understood the power of live music - big guitars, singalongs, throwing beer, the heady fun of it. So I don't care, still got a soft spot for the most-maligned of the much-maligned ...
  • The Coast is Always Changing - Maximo Park Maximo Park and the Futureheads are absolute peak "new rock revolution" era, weird little bands having proper hits. Saw them both on successive days at Benicassim and, let me say. those were good times.
  • Hounds of Love - Futureheads
  • Forever Lost - Magic Numbers 
  • Sewn - The Feeling At the time, the press tried to make that The Feeling were doing something unusual, that their influences were different from other bands ... i mean, that's pretty hard to make out.
  • Trains to Brazil - Guillemots
  • Burning Benches - Morning Runner. 
  • My Brittle Heart - Lucky Soul. Aah, this was a nice album.
  • Suzie - Boy Kill Boy. A catchy song.
  • Reckoner - Radiohead. Pure landfill indie this. Just another bunch of chancers cashing in on on the fad.
  • She's Got You High - Mumm-Ra. The ultimate.
  • Giddy Stratospheres - Long Blondes. "A woman?" said Bond archly. Yes, I have noticed that up to this point it has all been men, and that is truly shocking, yes, and does explain a lot about why people were sick of the boys in the band. The tables do gradually turn after this. Anyway, Long Blondes - great.
  • People Help the People - Cherry Ghost. Name comes from Wilco. Doesn't sound like Wilco, but a nice song.
  • Ice Cream - New Young Pony Club. Hardly qualifies, as not really guitar music. but this band was supercool for a very short while.
  • Robot Man - The Aliens. "A funny wee man with a funny wee beard"
  • Now Til 69 - The Shortwave Set
  • Starlings - Elbow. Quite a good Elbow song as they go.
  • Precious Plans - Field Music. I remember, on iTunes, seeing that I'd listened to this album all the way through over 10 times, but, although I enjoyed it, could hardly remember any of it. Just a band I tried to like a lot, but, in the end, only liked a bit.
  • I'm a Realist - Cribs
  • Waving Flags - Sea Power. Makes me quite emotional, this song. "Well, welcome in from across the Vistula, you've come so very far, all waving flags". Just what a terrible country we became after this.
  • Head Rolls Off - Frightened Rabbit. Apple's just sent me a 100-song playlist of my most listened to tracks of the 10 years of Apple Music, and, notwithstanding the Let it Gos and Hakuna Matatas I couldn't control, there are actually very few songs from this list on it. It's mainly the Americana. But this is there. Tiny changes.
  • Paris - Friendly Fires. That British version of indie-dance from around 2010, a lot of it I can't be doing with (Alt-J, just never for me) but this song I do love.
  • Two Doors Down - Mystery Jets
  • NW5 - Madness. Aah, you know, Madness.
  • Don't Upset the Rhythm - The Noisettes
  • The Sweetest Thing - Camera Obscura
  • Place for Us - The Mummers. This is, although a little sickly, a quite lovely song, maybe a bit of a steal from Us by Regina Spektor.
  • Mountains - Biffy Clyro. Bichardy ric, they might have been called.
  • Dog Days are Over - Florence and the Machine
  • A Matter of Time - The Leisure Society
  • How You Like Me Now - The Heavy
  • Daddy's Gone - Glasvegas. Dunno about including this one, really. Got talked up a lot, Glasvegas, but not great, really.
  • Something Good Can Work - Two Door Cinema Club
  • Willows of Carbeth - Trembling Bells
  • Little Lion Man - Mumford and Sons. So, notwithstanding the personal sympathy I have for the pleasant and right-on lead singer that his decision to put his name to the band now means everyone thinks he's a horrible racist, whereas in fact he diplomatically kicked the horrible racist out of the band and spends his days drumming for Joni Mitchell and doing right-on things, this band headlined Glastonbury and I certainly don't dislike their music enough not to include it.
  • Spanish Sahara - Foals. In, I think, 2011, I was at Latitude and I'd just come from some fairly middle-of-the-road headliner and stood on the edge of the second-stage tent, absolutely packed with kids and going nuts to Foals, specifically this song. And I'd have sworn that was the future, and Foals would be huge. But, no, they weren't.
  • Zorbing - Stornoway. Aaaaaah.
  • Tonight's the Kind of Night - Noah and the Whale. Writes for musicals, now, this guy.
  • Wet Suit - The Vaccines. You may have noticed the list is very top-heavy, chronologically. This is not halfway through, and we've only got about 25 songs left. Again. I guess that is very much the point.
  • Snap Out of It - Arctic Monkeys
  • Under the Westway - Blur. Blur released three very good albums this century and I could have had something from any of them, but, you know, Albarn losing it while singing this non-album single at Wembley in 2023 was really my most unforgettable Blur moment. Coxon's face doing the Lineker "someone have a word with him". And, going back to the start, seeing that it means a lot to the band can be a big part of what makes a headline show memorable.
  • The Mother We Share - Chvrches 
  • What You Wanted - Spector Kind of, the last cry of a certain scene.
  • Duet -  Everything Everything
  • Show Me the Wonder - Manic Street Preachers. The Manics have released 10 albums this century. 10! Workrate. Nearly all of them went Top 2 as well.
  • Pompeii - Bastille. You know, it's funny, I've been talking about the death in popularity of the indie band, but if you look at the upper reaches most streamed songs in the world ever, it is full of polite, sensitive Brits with guitars - Sheeran, Coldplay, Tom Odell, Passenger, Keane, and Bastille, who are, strictly, an indie band, and released this insanely successful song.
  • Default - Django Django
  • Something Like Happiness - The Maccabees. Aah, the Maccabees. My pet theory is that the Maccabees split up first time because they had this song which they thought would be sung back to them by 100,000 people, which would cross over every potential barrier ... and ... nothing. I bloody love Something Like Happiness. 
  • Don't Delete the Kisses - Wolf Alice 
  • Love It If We Made It - The I975. I guess we won't.
  • Danny Nedelko - Idles
  • Here's the Thing - Sports Team
  • Heat Waves - Glass Animals. This is a British indie band, right, and this song has three and a half billion stream on Spotify! That's, i guess, 300,000 times more than Something Like Happiness by the Maccabees. What the hex.
  • The Place Where He Inserted the Blade - Black Country New Road. Very nice.
  • Sunday - Let's Eat Grandma
  • Chaise Longue - Wet Leg. Not even this was an actual chart hit single.
  • She Still Leads Me On - Suede
  • Sweet Sounds of Heaven - The Rolling Stones. British guitar band, headlined Glastonbury this century. They qualify.
  • Back to the Radio - Porridge Radio
  • The World's Biggest Paving Slab - English Teacher
  • We Make Hits - Yard Act. Ha, they don't actually. 
  • Nothing Matters - The Last Dinner Party
  • All Now - The Staves
  • Alone - The Cure British guitar band, headlined Glastonbury this century. They definitely qualify.

So there we go, that's 100. I could have gone deeper on the landfill, some of which is memorable and catchy - no Wombats, Pigeon Detectives, The View, The Fratellis, The Others, Hard-Fi, no The Automatic, no Dirty Pretty Things,, no Hoosiers, no Courteeners or Reverend and the Makers ... there was a lot, wasn't there, and they all had bona fide hits.
I will say that it does seem to me sad that there isn't a path for hopeless boys to get together and practise and learn to play together and harmonise, write songs, to make something beautiful and make a success of it. This is the night Oasis are playing together for the first time in 16 years, and Oasis maybe embodied and sullied that image, but they don't have to be Oasis, they can be The Coral, The Jam, The Manic Street Preachers, Arctic Monkeys or The Beatles. That would be good.



Thursday, 26 June 2025

10 Films

The New York Times is doing a big survey of the Best Films of the 21st century. They've made their own critics' list and they're asking people to submit their own 10. I couldn't resist, though I did find it a bit tricky.

I went for, in no particular order

Aftersun

School of Rock

I've Loved You So Long

Inside Llewyn Davis

Killers of the Flower Moon

The Fellowship of the Ring

Adventureland

The White Ribbon

Brick

Adventureland

Most of those could have been any number of others. I tried to go with ones that had stuck with me, had haunted me in some way, or, in some cases, that had brought me joy and I would happily rewatch.

Films, unlike albums, are things I mainly don't rewatch. I guess that's true of most people who aren't pros or ultra-film buffs. So, for the layperson, coming up with a list like this is as much about the film's afterlife as the actual experience of watching it.

For example, taking Scorsese's last two - The Irishman and Killers of the Flower Moon. I was very enthusiastic about seeing both, enjoyed both, and enthused about both in the immediate aftermath. Years afterwards, though, I feel like The Irishman was merely decent, with plenty of flaws, it hasn't really lingered with me, whereas I look on KOTFM as a great film which is living inside me, thematically and visually, which tells a story that needed telling which hadn't been told before. That's the afterlife of those two films for me.

Sideways is a film I, at the time, was deeply moved by and felt would be a lifelong favourite, but I think its general critical afterlife is a bit so-so, and I've been somewhat influenced by that. So it hasn't made the Top 10.

School of Rock is, I think, in its way, the most straight-up wholesome good fun film with a masterpiece comic performance. and nothing can replicate the cusp-of-adulthood-but-still-in-touch-with-being-a-child thrill that the first Lord of the Rings film gave me in 2001.

Looking at the NYT Critics' List, I've seen nearly all of them, it's not exactly Sight and Sound's esoteric global extravaganza, it's pretty American Oscar-baity but, you know, good films, mainly. Gone Girl is probably my least favourite in the list.

I think my Number 1, at the moment, is Aftersun. It was just an absolute kick in the chest in its own new language and I still feel it.

An alternative Top 10 i could have given would be ...

Brokeback Mountain

Rust and Bone

Pride

Memento

United 93

Oldboy

Mulholland Drive

Palm Springs

The Quiet Girl

Portrait of a Woman of Fire

Those all definitely packed a little punch.

Another thing I noted from the full NYT list is Christian Bale and Bradley Cooper must be thinking "what about the critically acclaimed, Oscar-nominated films we were in? What did we do wrong?"