Seven Songs for the Week #140

  1. 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.

  2. 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.

  3. 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.

  4. 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.

  5. Nisennenmondai

    Heard this on the radio and Shazammed it. I'm a sucker for this kind of Neu-esque never-ending groove.

  6. 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.

  7. Yes, this week was the 45th anniversary of Lennon's murder. Not the reason I chose this, but now is not the time.

Seven Songs for the Week #140 is an album list curated by Jason Carty:

Music listener in Dublin. Do doctory & IT things for pay. Maybe you've heard www.nothingisrealpod.com ?

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