Song of the Day: The dream goes on, but where might it lead next? Reaching into the power of nightmares and fantasies, an original by the US electro-punk duo of Alan Vega and Martin Rev from 1979 and two contrasting covers
Read moreSoft Machine – Why Are We Sleeping?
Song of the Day: After yesterday's Ray Davies soaring sleep song performed by Marion, a more psychedelic take on different levels of consciousness by those Canterbury pioneers from their first album of 1968
Read moreBill Wells & Aidan Moffat – The Copper Top / Bliss
Song of the Day: After yesterday's Malcolm Middleton songs, let's dip into two by his old Arab Strap friend Aidan Moffat, here joining with Bill Wells, fellow songwriter and multi-instrumentalist with two dark and humorous numbers
Read moreMel Tormé, Al Jolson, Judy Garland and others – April Showers
Song of the Day: To mark the mixed weather of spring, let's turn back the clocks to offer out a bouquet, nay a spray, of various versions of this popular song written in 1921 by Louis Silvers with words by BG "Buddy" DeSylva
Read moreEartha Kitt/Nina Simone/Jeff Buckley – Lilac Wine
Song of the Day: One flower-based song, three great voices doing their versions, all intense, intimate and intoxicating. Let's drink all of them in, interpreting this song written by James Shelton in 1950
Read moreMinnie Riperton – Les Fleur
Song of the Day: After our previous Manchester late-80s dance tracks, when flower power returned with a new chemical twist, we hark back to another petal-infused and influential song by the vocalist linked to our previous Rotary Connection selection
Read moreA Guy Called Gerald – Voodoo Ray
Song of the Day: After yesterday's classic Orb track, another club classic, this time from 1988 and synonymous with the acid rave scene of Manchester's Hacienda, but also the offbeat sample Derek and Clive aka Peter Cook and Dudley Moore
Read moreRotary Connection – I Am The Black Gold Of The Sun
Song of the Day: How to move from bluesy road tunes to this elaborate jazz-soul number at the peak of the psychedelic movement? Partly because this band also backed Howlin' Wolf and Muddy Waters
Read moreFunny Valentine? Chet Baker – Let's Get Lost
Song of the Day: The world wide web will be awash with Valentine's songs today, so here's one too - a jazz standard but with a darker edge, embellished with extraordinarily beautiful trumpet and voice of Chet Baker
Read moreSuper blue blood moon special: a selection of Tom Waits 'moon' songs
Song of the Day: On this day of this rare astronomical eclipse event, and after a series of other lunar-related songs, we come to an artist who has, across the course of his career, described this celestial body in around 100 different ways
Read moreCan – Come Sta, La Luna / Chain Reaction
Song of the Day: Continuing the lunar theme, and extending to the outer limits of experimentalism after Moondog and Captain Beefheart, the sequence also ties in with the German band also highly influential on the late Mark E Smith
Read moreMoondog – Lament I, Bird's Lament / Moondog Monologue
Song of the Day: After Captain Beefheart, could there be any musical figure more influential, eccentric, strange and innovative? Louis Thomas Hardin, aka the Viking figure who for years silently stalked New York's 6th Avenue, is a strong contender
Read moreCaptain Beefheart & His Magic Band – Moonlight On Vermont / Tropical Hot Dog Night
Song of the Day: With the recent passing of The Fall's Mark E Smith, and all the songs, tributes and stories that have followed, it now seems only appropriate to follow up with music Smith loved by one of his major influences
Read moreHugh Masekela - Grazing In The Grass / Khauleza / Soweto Blues
Song of the Day: A triple tribute to the sadly departed but hugely influential South African trumpeter, composer, singer, cornet and flugelhorn player, and leading anti-apartheid campaigner
Read moreAmy Winehouse – Tears Dry On Their Own / Back to Black
Song of the Day: The voice, the lyrics and the timing – tears don't get much more moving than this – a double from the much missed singer who had many downs, but undoubtedly hit the heights with her Back to Black album of 2006
Read moreFrank Zappa – Peaches en Regalia
Song of the Day: How could there a more joyful, eccentric, evocative and infinitely inventive opener than this, on album described by Zappa as "a movie for the ears" – 1969's Hot Rats?
Read moreElla Fitzgerald - What Are You Doing New Year's Eve?
Song of the Day: It had to be this for 31 December, with that divine voice in a 1960 recording, originally written by Frank Loesser in 1947. Looking forward and back, in gorgeous melancholy. Happy 2018, everyone.
Read moreMel Tormé – Comin' Home Baby
Song of the Day: For those facing what is often an arduous, weather-affected journey, travelling home after a Christmas visit, or waiting for their beloved to return with this 1962 classic
Read moreChrome Hoof – Tonyte / Spokes of Uridium
Song of the Day: Another selection made on the hoof, and today we're really pushing to the outer reaches of experimentation with the strange fusion of dance, psychedelia, prog-rock, jazz and electronica provided by London group from their second album, 2007's Pre-Emptive False Rapture
Read moreA Tribe Called Quest – Excursions / We The People …
Song of the Day: Two superb tracks that span the career one of the genre's most revered groups, from 1991's album The Low End Theory to 2016's We Got It From Here … Thank You 4 Your Service
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