Seven Songs for the Week #140
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The Damned
I was watching a documentary about Simple Minds (more later) and New Rose was played as a shorthand to demonstrate the influence of punk. This song isn't heard enough. Better than the Pistols.
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ROSALÍA, Björk, Yves Tumor
Still getting to grips with the Rosalía album. It will take a number of listens, but it's getting there. It's appearing high up on many end of year lists, and the video for this track is worth a viewing too.
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Ben Folds Five
Heard this this week. All of it is wonderful: the melody, the harmonies, the piano, the flow of it all. He's playing Dublin next year on a tour where you are encouraged to paper-airplane requests onto the stage. Sounds like fun.
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The Louvin Brothers
Went to see CMAT this week who dominated the 13,000 3Arena in Dublin. How big can she get? The pre-gig music playlist was obviously her choice, and this was one of the songs.
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Nisennenmondai
Heard this on the radio and Shazammed it. I'm a sucker for this kind of Neu-esque never-ending groove.
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Simple Minds
I did not sit down on Saturday night to watch a documentary on BBC Scotland about Simple Minds, but that's what I found myself doing. I own none of their records, and I am not a fan whatsoever, but I have been curious about the early stuff which I do not know and which they made a turn away from when they headed for the stadiums in the mid-80s. The documentary was interesting about the decision to record Don't You Forget About Me - a song they did not write, but they understood a hit when they heard it and it changed everything. I'll doff my cap to them for their ambition, that Simple Minds are still a going concern and not a niche thing like Orange Juice or The Bluebells, but at what cost? Maybe Jim & Charlie can have a think on that in their comfortable houses... they're fine. The documentary touched on that too, although only in the last 10 minutes: the decreasing commercial fortunes in the 90s into the 00s, then the decision to work their way back by... a tour which only played deep cuts from the pre-Don't You Forget About Me era. Nowadays they are unapologetically touring as a night out, but gosh darn it, after watching the documentary, I'd be up for that.
TOP POP FACT: Keith Forsey, who wrote Don't You Forget About Me, was the drummer on Sparks' Number One In Heaven Album. He also wrote/co-wrote The Heat Is On, Flashdance (What A Feeling) and The Neverending Story, so good for him, I hope he never has work again with the cheques rolling in.
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John Lennon
Yes, this week was the 45th anniversary of Lennon's murder. Not the reason I chose this, but now is not the time.
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