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Word of the week: humpenscrump and hurdy-gurdy

August 27, 2019 Peter Kimpton
Hurdy-gurdy

Hurdy-gurdy

Word of the week: It sounds like a medieval insult, disease or even sexual position, but it's a basic form of the stringed instrument played with keys and by turning a hand-crank wheel that rubs against the strings like a mechanised violin

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In experimental, folk, rock, prog rock, traditional Tags instruments, hurdy-gurdy, medieval, Hieronymus Bosch, Patrick Bouffard, Valentin Clastrier, The Pogues, Jem Finer, Spencer Tracy, film, film soundtracks, Nigel Eaton, Jimmy Page, Robert Plant, Led Zeppelin, Blind Willie Johnson, Ritchie Blackmore, Weezer
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Word of the week: quena

June 24, 2019 Peter Kimpton
A selection of quena flutes

A selection of quena flutes

Word of the week: It's an instrument that brings to mind the soaring condor and mountainous  Andes – a haunting, beautiful sound emanating from this simple, traditional wooden flute

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In folk, rock, traditional Tags music, word of the week, words, quena, flutes, wind instruments, instruments, Andes, Facio Santillan, South America, Illapu, Vladimir Khrobystov, Los Koyas, Los Enanitos Verdes
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Word of the week: vibraslap

May 20, 2019 Peter Kimpton
The vibraslap is a replacement for the jawbone

The vibraslap is a replacement for the jawbone

Word of the week: It's one of the most modern of all analogue percussion instruments, a combination of stiff wire, wooden ball and box with metal teeth, a replacement for animal bones, but where does it appear in songs?

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In country, dance, electronica, funk, hip hop, indie, pop, rock Tags songs, word of the week, words, rhythm, vibraslap, Martin B Cohen, Jimi Hendrix, David Bowie, Brian Jones, R.E.M., Dr Dre, Cake, Kasabian
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Word of the week: aardvark (and aardwolf)

April 2, 2019 Peter Kimpton
What’s not to love? Aardvarks

What’s not to love? Aardvarks

Word of the week: It’s that appealing, nocturnal, burrowing African mammal with a long snout that lives on ants and termites, but is also slang in parts of the US for an mistake-prone person and even an uncircumcised penis

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In comedy, hip hop, postpunk, rock, pop, psychedelia Tags words, word of the week, animals, aardvark, aardwolf, Africa, GZA, Wu-Tang Clan, Ransom, Vinnie Paz, Buck 65, The Guess Who, The Korgis, Allan Sherman, comedy
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Word of the week: bombast, bombastic, bombastry

March 25, 2019 Peter Kimpton
Bombast, ironic and otherwise, comes in this album by The Fall

Bombast, ironic and otherwise, comes in this album by The Fall

Word of the Week: It describes high-sounding, pretentious, showy language with little meaning used to impress people, and explodes enjoyably when pronounced, but how it is used in lyrics, and does it affect the natures of the song itself?

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In dance, electronica, folk, funk, indie, pop, punk, postpunk, rock Tags word of the week, words, Mark E Smith, The Fall, Soundgarden, Chris Cornell, Grant Lee Phillips, Lou Reed, Edgar Allan Poe, Guided By Voices, Britney Spears, The Artful Dodger, Craig David
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Word of the week: donnybrook

March 5, 2019 Peter Kimpton
Fighting at Donnybrook Fair

Fighting at Donnybrook Fair

Word of the Week: It means an uproarious drunken brawl, a scene of heated argument and fighting, and an Irish jig, but takes its name from a longstanding fair in a district of Dublin. So where does this word appear in lyrics?

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In folk, rock, punk, traditional Tags word of the week, words, songs, Ireland, Dublin, history, folk, Tommy Makem, Silly Wizard, Street Dogs, Cheap Trick, Dropkick Murphys
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Word of the week: flimflam

February 17, 2019 Peter Kimpton
Flim flam isn’t only what people might say, it’s also a font

Flim flam isn’t only what people might say, it’s also a font

Word of the week: It means pseudo-intellectual nonsense, insincerity or a confidence trick perpetrated by elected officials, so while antiquated, always current and relevant, and with a lovely musicality where has it been used in lyrics?

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In folk, indie, pop, poetry, rock, soul, hip hop Tags songs, word of the week, words, Nat King Cole, Jeff Healey, Van Dyke Parks, Sam Sneed, Dr Dre, MC Serch, 3rd Bass
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Word of the week: ichthyosaur

January 23, 2019 Peter Kimpton
An ichthyosaur could be a long as 15 metres. Surely that’s worth a song or two?

An ichthyosaur could be a long as 15 metres. Surely that’s worth a song or two?

Word of the week: After last week’s fictional Jabberwocky, a real-life deep-sea dinosaur, a fish-reptile with an extraordinary evolutionary history on land and sea, famous in fossils, but where can we dive to find it in song lyrics?

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In comedy, pop, rock Tags songs, word of the week, words, dinosaurs, evolution, ichthyosaur, fossils, fish, reptiles, They Might Be Giants
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Word of the week: kismet

January 8, 2019 Peter Kimpton
Kissed and met: Elvis Presley’s endless 1960s movie destiny

Kissed and met: Elvis Presley’s endless 1960s movie destiny

Word of the week: It’s originally from an Arabic word, qisma, meaning portion or lot, and taken from Turkey in the 19th century, meaning fate, but where has in turned up in song lyrics since the 20th century?

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In classical, traditional, rock, punk, hip hop, country, pop Tags words, word of the week, songs, Arabic, fate, destiny, Elvis Presley, Dick Dale, Woody Herman, Blondie, A Tribe Called Quest, film, film soundtracks
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Word of the week: lux

December 22, 2018 Peter Kimpton
The days are getting longer …

The days are getting longer …

Word of the week: It’s not all doom and gloom right now. With the winter solstice just gone by, days will slowly lengthen, allowing us to perceive more lux, that unit of illuminance and luminous flux. It’s a beautiful word, but where does it appear in lyrics?

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In blues, classical, country, folk, pop, rock, indie, soul Tags songs, light, winter solstice, Glasvegas, Lorde, Stan Kenton, June Christy, Joe Greene, Ella Fitzgerald, Steeleye Span, Medieval Baebes, Linda Ronstadt, Emmylou Harris, First World War, David Olney, prayer, religion
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Word of the week: nebula, nebulous, nebulist, nebbich

December 4, 2018 Peter Kimpton
The Crab Nebula, a supernova remnant of the constellation of Taurus

The Crab Nebula, a supernova remnant of the constellation of Taurus

Word of the week: It’s a cloudy cluster of related words as we play with lovely sounding space dust, a haziness or vagueness and more, but where can it be found song lyrics?

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In folk, indie, pop, postpunk, prog rock, rock, jazz, funk Tags songs, word of the week, words, nebula, nebulous, space, science, psychology, Bjork, Slapp Happy, British Sea Power, Rita Ora, Siouxsie and the Banshees, Joni Mitchell, David Bowie
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Word of the week: quark

November 13, 2018 Peter Kimpton
From Hawkwind’s 1977 strangely particular album …

From Hawkwind’s 1977 strangely particular album …

Word of the week: It's the infinitesimally small subatomic particle which forms matter, a type of curdled cheese from soured milk, is used in computer language and in sci-fi fiction names, but where in lyrics?

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In electronica, goth rock, pop, prog rock, rock, postpunk Tags words, word of the week, particle physics, science, food, James Joyce, Murray Gell-Mann, Hawkwind, Wire, Bad Science
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Word of the week: rhapsody

November 6, 2018 Peter Kimpton
Scaramooche, scaramooche …

Scaramooche, scaramooche …

Word of the week: With an appropriately flamboyant sound and rhythm it’s a word best known for the title of Freddie Mercury’s epic Bohemian Queen song, and several major classical works, but where is it used in song lyrics?

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In country, dance, electronica, folk, goth rock, hip hop, poetry, pop, prog rock, rock, soul, classical Tags word of the week, words, rhapsody, Queen, Freddie Mercury, poetry, Greek, Rachmaninoff, Franz Liszt, George Gershwin, George Fragos, Jack Baker, Dick Gasparre, Jimmy Dorsey, Dinah Shore, Charlie Barnett, Frank Sinatra, Tony Martin, Coleman Hawkins, Art Blakey, John Coltrane, Bill Evans, jazz, Siouxsie and the Banshees, America, Jonathan Wilson, Lou Christie, Roxy Music, Bryan Ferry, Bob Marley, Mel Tormé, Joni Mitchell
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Word of the week: simian

October 30, 2018 Peter Kimpton
You must remember this … a kiss is just …

You must remember this … a kiss is just …

Word of the week: It’s an adjective with a beautiful sound. It means the characteristics of our ape cousins, but of course sharing almost all the same DNA, it also means us. But where is simian in lyrics?

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In comedy, dance, electronica, poetry, pop, rock, soul Tags songs, word of the week, words, simian, apes, animals, evolution, Planet of the Apes, David Attenborough, books, film, Will Self, The Velvet Underground, Lou Reed, Ian Brown, The Stone Roses, Elbow, Guy Garvey, Janelle Monae, Saul Williams, Aesop Rock, Simian Mobile Disco
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Word of the week: Tesla

October 23, 2018 Peter Kimpton
Sparky: ArcAttack perform with a massive Tesla coil

Sparky: ArcAttack perform with a massive Tesla coil

Word of the Week: It sizzles off the tongue, it’s the name of a great inventor, and after him, a unit of magnetic flux density, and it’s also a car, and in slang recreational drug, but where does it appear in song lyrics?

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In hip hop, country, folk, pop, prog rock, rock, electronica, dance Tags word of the week, words, Nikola Tesla, electricity, inventions, science, Thomas Edison, Wilhelm Weber, David Bowie, film, cars, energy, drugs, ArcAttack, Joe DiPrima, Arcadia, Glastonbury Festival, Bjork, They Might Be Giants, Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark (OMD), Ani DiFranco, Death Grips, Aesop Rock
Comment

Word of the week: umbrella … umbracious ... umbraculum

October 16, 2018 Peter Kimpton
Any umbrellas? Should we focus on Rihanna for some shelter?

Any umbrellas? Should we focus on Rihanna for some shelter?

Word of the Week: It’s a word with a beautiful sound formed from the Latin word, umbra, for shade, is not merely an expanding accessory to shelter from the rain, also a general term of protection or a thing made of many parts

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In hip hop, pop, rock, folk Tags word of the week, words, umbrella, XTC, The Hollies, Sammy Fain, Irving Kahal, Francis Wheeler, The Andrews Sisters, Bing Crosby, Perry Como, The Fiery Furnaces, Rihana, Jay-Z, Lou Reed, jazz, swing, soul, R n B
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Word of the week: vesper, vespertine, vespertilian …

October 9, 2018 Peter Kimpton
Vesper cocktail, but that’s just one of many evening meanings …

Vesper cocktail, but that’s just one of many evening meanings …

Word of the Week: It’s a famous Bjork album, but where does it come up in lyrics? The root of this word relates to the evening and its tolling bell, but also bats, Venus, a cocktail, and in slang – a kind, smart, cool girl

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In folk, hip hop, poetry, pop, prog rock, rock, goth rock Tags songs, lyrics, words, word of the week, Bjork, Scott Walker, The Walker Brothers, Blossom Dearie, Carmen McRae, Barbra Streisand, Michel Legrand, Johnny Mercer, Ralph McTell, Jim Croce, Charles Aznavour, Aesop Rock, Hurts, Alison Moyet, Frank Sinatra, Bing Crosby, Leonard Cohen, sToa, Jedi Mind Tricks, Chief Kamachi, Mars Volta
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Word of the week: whippet

October 2, 2018 Peter Kimpton
A famous whippet frisbee-catching champion?

A famous whippet frisbee-catching champion?

Word of the Week: It’s a slim, fast dog, the name of a car, a ship, a tank and a light aircraft, and also slang for recreational use of nitrous oxide from small metal containers, but where does it appear in song?

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In pop, rock, hip hop, comedy, folk Tags songs, words, word of the week, dogs, animals, baseball, transport, cars, aeroplanes, drugs, The Beastie Boys, Tom Robinson, Phish, Caspar Babypants
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Word of the week: Xanadu

September 25, 2018 Peter Kimpton
One of many visual impressions of the imagined stately pleasure palace

One of many visual impressions of the imagined stately pleasure palace

Word of the week: It’s an idealised location of magnificence and beauty with Chinese origins described in Coleridge’s poem, and a 1980 film starring Olivia Newton-John and song performed with ELO, but where else does it appear in lyrics?

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In pop, rock, poetry, prog rock, showtime Tags words, word of the week, songs, Xanadu, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, poetry, film, theatre, astronomy, history, China, Electric Light Orchestra, Jeff Lynne, Olivia Newton-John, Gene Kelly, Rush
Comment

Word of the week: zephyr

September 11, 2018 Peter Kimpton
The 1961 Ford Zephyr MkII. Other Zephyrs are available in song lyrics

The 1961 Ford Zephyr MkII. Other Zephyrs are available in song lyrics

Word of the week: Launching a new Song Bar series highlighting words or phrases used in lyrics for the oddness or musicality, let’s start with a z-word, and several examples including Madonna, Bill Callaghan, Frank Sinatra and Ian Dury

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In rock, pop, country, folk, poetry, showtime Tags words, lyrics, word of the week, zephyr, cars, motorbikes, Greek gods, Madonna, Frank Sinatra, Bill Callahan, Mary Chapin Carpenter, Split Enz, St Vincent, Ian Dury, Kilburn & The High-Roads
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DRINK OF THE WEEK

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SNACK OF THE WEEK

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New Albums …

Featured
Dove Ellis - Blizzard.jpeg
Dec 9, 2025
Dove Ellis: Blizzard
Dec 9, 2025

New album: An extraordinarily mature, passionate, poetic, and outstandingly powerful debut by the Manchester-based Galway-born singer-songwriter, whose soaring delivery has instant echoes of Jeff Buckley and lyrics that go above and beyond

Dec 9, 2025
Spíra by Ólöf Arnalds.jpeg
Dec 5, 2025
Ólöf Arnalds: Spíra
Dec 5, 2025

New album: A gorgeous, delicate, ethereal first release in a decade by the Icelandic singer-songwriter, acoustic instruments and her gentle, high, pure voice, all in her native language, caressing this listening experience like pure waters of some slowly trickling glacial stream

Dec 5, 2025
Melody's Echo Chamber - Unclouded.jpeg
Dec 5, 2025
Melody's Echo Chamber: Unclouded
Dec 5, 2025

New album: A fourth album, here full of delicious uplifting, dreamily chic, psychedelic soul pop by the French musician Melody Prochet, with bright, upbeat, optimistic numbers and a title lifted from a quote by the acclaimed Japanese animator Hayao Miyazaki, about achieving equilibrium

Dec 5, 2025
Devotion & The Black Divine by anaiis.jpeg
Dec 2, 2025
anaiis: Devotion & The Black Divine
Dec 2, 2025

New album: Following a summer Song of the Day - Deus Deus, a review of the autumn release and third LP by the London-based French-Senegalese singer-songwriter of resonantly beautiful, dynamic, sensual soul, gospel, R&B and experimental and chamber pop, with themes of new motherhood, uncertainty, religion, self-love and acceptance

Dec 2, 2025
De La Soul - Cabin In The Sky.jpeg
Nov 26, 2025
De La Soul: Cabin In The Sky
Nov 26, 2025

New album: The hip-hop veterans return with their first without, yet including the voice of, and a tribute to, founding member Trugoy the Dove, AKA Dave Jolicoeur who passed away in 2023, alongside many hip-hop luminary guests, with trademark playful skits, and all themed around the afterlife

Nov 26, 2025
The Mountain Goats- Through This Fire Across From Peter Balkan.jpeg
Nov 26, 2025
The Mountain Goats: Through This Fire Across From Peter Balkan
Nov 26, 2025

New album: An evocative musical journey of a concept album by the indie-folk band from Claremont, California, fronted by singer-songwriter John Darnielle, based on a dream of his in 2023 about a voyage to a fictional island by the titular captain, charting adventure, wonder and tragedy

Nov 26, 2025
Allie X - Happiness Is Going To Get You.jpeg
Nov 26, 2025
Allie X: Happiness Is Going To Get You
Nov 26, 2025

New album: A hugely entertaining, witty, droll, inventive, chamber and synth-pop fourth LP with a goth twist by the charismatic and theatrical Canadian artist Alexandra Hughes, who brings paradox and dark themes through sounds that include string quartet, harpsichord, classical and pure pop piano with killer lyrics

Nov 26, 2025
Tortoise - Touch.jpeg
Nov 25, 2025
Tortoise: Touch
Nov 25, 2025

New album: A welcome return with a cinematic and mesmeric groove-filled first studio LP in nine years, and the eighth over all by the eclectic Chicago post-rock/jazz/krautrock multi-instrumentalists Dan Bitney, John Herndon, Douglas McCombs, John McEntire and Jeff Parker

Nov 25, 2025
What of Our Nature by Haley Heynderickx, Max García Conover.jpeg
Nov 24, 2025
Haley Heynderickx and Max García Conover: What of Our Nature
Nov 24, 2025

New album: Beautiful, precise, poignant and poetic new folk numbers inspired by the life and music style of Woody Guthrie as the Portland, Oregon and New Yorker, now Portland, Maine-based singer-songwriters bring a delicious duet album, alternating and sharing songs covering a variety of forever topical social issues

Nov 24, 2025
Tranquilizer by Oneohtrix Point Never.jpeg
Nov 24, 2025
Oneohtrix Point Never: Tranquilizer
Nov 24, 2025

New album: Ambient, otherworldly, cinematic, mesmeric, and at times very odd, the Brooklyn-based electronic artist and producer Daniel Lopatin returns with a new nostalgia-based concept – constructing tracks from lost-then-refound Y2K CDs of 1990s and early 2000s royalty-free sample electronic sounds

Nov 24, 2025
Iona Zajac - Bang.jpeg
Nov 24, 2025
Iona Zajac: Bang
Nov 24, 2025

New album: A powerful, stirring, passionate and mature debut LP by the 29-year-old Glasgow-based Scottish singer with Polish and Ukrainian heritage who has toured as the new Pogues singer, and whose alternative folk songs capture raw emotions and the experience of modern womanhood, with echoes of PJ Harvey, Patti Smith, Aldous Harding and Lankum

Nov 24, 2025
Austra - Chin Up Buttercup.jpeg
Nov 19, 2025
Austra: Chin Up Buttercup
Nov 19, 2025

New album: This fifth studio LP as Austra by the Canadian classically trained vocalist and composer Katie Stelmanis brings beautiful electronica-pop and dance music, and has a bittersweet ironic title – a caustically witty reference to societal pressure to keep smiling despite a devastating breakup

Nov 19, 2025
Mavis Staples - Sad and Beautiful World.jpeg
Nov 18, 2025
Mavis Staples: Sad and Beautiful World
Nov 18, 2025

New album: A timelessly classy release by the veteran soul, blues and gospel singer and social activist from the Staples Singers, in a release of wonderfully moving and poignant cover versions, beautifully interpreting works by artists including Tom Waits, Curtis Mayfield, Leonard Cohen, and Gillian Welch

Nov 18, 2025
Stella Donnelly - Love and Fortune 2.jpeg
Nov 18, 2025
Stella Donnelly: Love and Fortune
Nov 18, 2025

New album: Finely crafted, stripped back musical simplicity combined with complex melancholic emotions mark out this beautiful, poetic, and deeply personal third folk-pop LP by the Australian singer-songwriter reflecting on the past and present

Nov 18, 2025

new songs …

Featured
Peter Perrett - Proud To Be Self-Hating.jpeg
Dec 12, 2025
Song of the Day: Peter Perrett - PROUD TO BE SELF-HATING (irony and provocation)
Dec 12, 2025

Song of the Day: The veteran British artist, originally frontman of The Only Ones, and now with three solo albums, who actually has Jewish heritage, releases a gently powerful, nuanced, pro-Palestine acoustic number as a response to ongoing genocide by the Israeli government, out on Domino Records

Dec 12, 2025
Maddie Ashman - Jaded.jpeg
Dec 11, 2025
Song of the Day: Maddie Ashman - Jaded
Dec 11, 2025

Song of the Day: Magical, delicate, eclectic, intricate, experimental microtonal music by the London musician and singer, released alongside a longer track, In Autumn My Heart Breaks

Dec 11, 2025
Ye Vagabonds.jpeg
Dec 10, 2025
Song of the Day: Ye Vagabonds - The Flood
Dec 10, 2025

Song of the Day: Wonderfully warm, rich, lively fiddle-driven Irish folk by the award-winning band fronted by Carlow brothers Brían and Diarmuid Mac Gloinn with a heartbreaking number about the housing crisis, heralding their upcoming new album, All Tied Together, out on Rough Trade’s River Lea Recordings on 30 January

Dec 10, 2025
DBA! band.jpeg
Dec 9, 2025
Song of the Day: DBA! A Poet And A Clown
Dec 9, 2025

Song of the Day: Catchy fuzz-guitar indie rock with a swagger by the Liverpool-formed trio of Sam Warren, James Lindberg and Joshua Grant in a song described as “a confessional story of desire tangled with religious guilt”

Dec 9, 2025
Puma Blue - Croak Dream.jpeg
Dec 8, 2025
Song of the Day: Puma Blue - Croak Dream
Dec 8, 2025

Song of the Day: A dark, esoteric, mysterious and stylish title track with a hint of Radiohead and playing with the idea of knowing your future death, from the experimental indie/goth/ambient London artist Jacob Allen’s forthcoming album out on 6 February via Play It Again Sam

Dec 8, 2025
ELIZA - Anyone Else.jpeg
Dec 7, 2025
Song of the Day: ELIZA - Anyone Else
Dec 7, 2025

Song of the Day: Stripped-back, bluesy, fuzzy funk with slight echoes of Prince and alt-R&B are conjured up in this love song by the London-based singer-songwriter Eliza Caird, her first single for two years, now off the mainstream and out on Log Off Records

Dec 7, 2025
SILK SCARF by Tiga & Fcukers.jpg
Dec 6, 2025
Song of the Day: Tiga (featuring Fcukers) - Silk Scarf
Dec 6, 2025

Song of the Day: A fun, sensual, quirkily oddball electronica dance single with a slick, fetish-flirtatious ode to a favourite smooth material by the Montreal musician (Tiga James Sontag) joined here with vocals by the New York band (Shanny Wise and Jackson Walker Lewis), and heralding Tiga’s upcoming album Hotlife, out in April on Secret City Records

Dec 6, 2025
Flea - A Plea.jpeg
Dec 5, 2025
Song of the Day: Flea - A Plea
Dec 5, 2025

Song of the Day: A striking, powerful new single by the Red Hot Chilli Peppers bassist (aka Michael Balzary), who brings a fusion of jazz and spoken word with a fabulous band on an impassioned number about the state of the US in a culture of hatred, social and political tensions, out now on Nonesuch Records

Dec 5, 2025
The Lemon Twigs - I've Got A Broken Heart.jpeg
Dec 4, 2025
Song of the Day: The Lemon Twigs - I've Got A Broken Heart
Dec 4, 2025

Song of the Day: Despite the title, this new double-A single (with Friday I’m Gonna Love You) has a wonderfully uplifting guitar-jangling beauty, with echoes of The Byrds and Stone Roses, but is of course the brilliant 60s and 70s retro sound of the Long Island brothers Brian and Michael D'Addario, out on Captured Tracks

Dec 4, 2025
Alewya - Night Drive.jpeg
Dec 3, 2025
Song of the Day: Alewya - Night Drive (featuring Dagmawit Ameha)
Dec 3, 2025

Song of the Day: A sensual, stylish, dreamy electro-pop single by the striking British singer-songwriter, producer, multidisciplinary artist and model Alewya Demmisse, musically influenced by her rich Ethiopian-Egyptian heritage and early childhood upbringings in Saudi Arabia and Sudan

Dec 3, 2025
Rule 31 Single Artwork.jpg
Dec 2, 2025
Song of the Day: Radio Free Alice - Rule 31
Dec 2, 2025

Song of the Day: Stirring, passionate indie postpunk by the band based in Melbourne, Australia, with echoes of The Cure’s core sound, new wave, and 90s indie-rock influences, and out on Double Drummer

Dec 2, 2025
Sailor Honeymoon - Armchair.jpeg
Dec 1, 2025
Song of the Day: Sailor Honeymoon - Armchair
Dec 1, 2025

Song of the Day: Catchy, punchy, fuzz-guitar indie rock with a droll lyrical delivery and some echoes of Wet Leg come in this new single by the trio from Seoul, South Korea, out on Good Good Records

Dec 1, 2025

Word of the week

Featured
Hangover.jpeg
Dec 4, 2025
Word of the week: crapulence
Dec 4, 2025

Word of the week: A term that may apply regularly during Xmas party season, from the from the Latin crapula, in turn from the Greek kraipálē meaning "drunkenness" or "headache" pertains to sickness symptoms caused by excess in eating or drinking, or general intemperance and overindulgence

Dec 4, 2025
Running shoes and barefoot.jpeg
Nov 20, 2025
Word of the week: discalceate
Nov 20, 2025

Word of the week: A rarely used, but often practised verb, especially when arriving home, it means to take off your shoes, but is also a slightly more common adjective meaning barefoot or unshod, particularly for certain religious orders that wear sandals instead of shoes. But in what context does this come up in song?

Nov 20, 2025
autumn-red-leaves.jpeg
Nov 6, 2025
Word of the week: erythrophyll
Nov 6, 2025

Word of the week: A seasonally topical word relating to the the red pigment of tree leaves, fruits and flowers, that appears particularly when changing in autumn, as opposed to the green effect of chlorophyll, from the Greek erythros for red, and phyll for leaves. But what of songs about this?

Nov 6, 2025
Fennec fox 2.jpeg
Oct 22, 2025
Word of the week: fennec
Oct 22, 2025

Word of the week: It’s a small pale-fawn nocturnal fox with unusually large, highly sensitive ears, that inhabits from African and Arab deserts areas from Western Sahara and Mauritania to the Sinai Peninsula. But has it ever been seen in a song?

Oct 22, 2025
Narrowboat.jpeg
Oct 9, 2025
Word of the week: gongoozler
Oct 9, 2025

Word of the week: A fabulous old English slang term for someone who tends to stand or sit for long periods staring at the passing of boats on canals, sometimes with a derogatory or at least ironic use for someone who is useless or lazy. But what of songs about this activity and culture?

Oct 9, 2025

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