Song of the Day: After A Quiet Place by Garnet Mimms, more neighbour disturbance with a ‘68 rocksteady classic inspired by another song penned by Paul Witt, and then an electronic landmark sung by Horace Andy from 1998’s album Mezzanine
Read moreMassive Attack – Teardrop
Song of the Day: After yesterday's Amy Winehouse, tears of another taste from another enthralling voice – Elizabeth Fraser formerly of the Cocteau Twins
Read moreCarla dal Forno – The Garden
Song of the Day: Sculptured, sparse, dark and melancholic, this title track is from a new four-song EP by the London-based Australian artist who has also worked in Berlin. The title is nod to Einstürzende Neubauten, but here day becomes night, a place of refuge, glissando bass and brittle effects, but also fear and fragile emotion, and echoes of Massive Attack's Protection
Read moreNicolette – No Government / Don't Be Afraid
Song of the Day: Alongside Tricky, another collaborator who appeared on Massive Attack's 1994 album Protection, Scottish/Nigerian Londoner Nicolette Love Suwoton's slightly forgotten gem from her brilliant second LP Let No-One Live Rent Free in Your Head, is a sensual mix of electronica, pop, jazz and and trip-hop, yearning for an apolitical utopia
Read moreTricky – The Only Way / Hell Is Round The Corner
Dark, simmering, brooding, two tracks spanning and capturing the raw, visceral, yet tender and sensual music of one of British music's most innovative and distinctive artists from the past 25 years …
Read moreIsobel Campbell & Mark Lanegan – Come On Over (Turn Me On)
Song of the Day: Sunday morning? Sometimes it can turn steamy, here with a slow building and sexy collaboration between two voices that intertwine with passion in every breath
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