Whilst not wanting to glamourise the feast of All Hallow’s Eve in the wrong way, I came across the amazing Broken Peach through their version of Halloween from the movie The Nightmare Before Christmas’. Not only is it a very catchy song but they put their whole selves into creating the music video. On their […]
Instrumentals 2
Yesterday, I posted some instrumentals from the early 1960’s. After a plethora of hits during 1960-1963, the instrumental seems to has fallen into decline until 1968-69 when it makes a triumphant comeback. It begins when an instrumental version Love Is Blue recorded by French orchestra leader Paul Mauriat, whose version (recorded in late 1967) became […]
Instrumentals 1
Today we begin a series of posts on that ‘unsung’ mode of popular music – the instrumental. Since inception of the UK Top 20, there have been more than 1,350 number ones; of these, instumental tracks have topped the chart on only 27 occasions for a total of 89 weeks. Probably my first experience of […]
Talisk
Talisk are a Scottish folk band composed of Mohsen Amini, Hayley Keenan and Graeme Armstrong. The band rose to prominence after winning the 2015 ‘BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards’ Young Folk Award and the ‘MG Alba Scots Trad Music Awards’ Folk Band Of The Year award in 2017. Amini then followed to be named the […]
Kent
Kent were a Swedish band, formed in 1990. With members Joakin Berg, Martin Skold, Sami Sirvio and Magnus Mustonen, the band has had numerous radio hits throughout Sweden and Scandinavia and consecutive number-one studio albums on the Sweden top list beginning with the release of Verkligen (1996) and led by the single “Kram”. With origins […]
Jerome Kern
Jerome Kern (1885 – 1945) was an American composer of musical theatre and popular music. One of the most important American theatre composers of the early 20th century, he wrote more than 700 songs, used in over 100 stage works. A native of New York, Kern created dozens of Broadway musicals and Hollywood movies in […]
Trio Mandili
I’ve spent the odd hour during lock down watching the Antiques Road Trip and therefore when one of the experts says that something that they have forund is Georgian, then I normally associate this with the period in British history from 1714 to c. 1830–37, named after the Hanoverian kings George I, George II, George […]
Hurdy Gurdy
After yesterday’s delights of the Goddesses of Bagpipes, I thought we make take another excursus into the world of another under valued instrument the Hurdy Gurdy. The hurdy-gurdy is a stringed instrument that produces sound by a hand crank-turned, rosined wheel rubbing against the strings. The wheel functions much like a violin bow, and single […]
Bagpipes!!!
I have never been a great fan of the ‘pipes’ as they are usually associated with the Scottish Bagpipe Bands playing versions of Amazing Grace. However I have recently come across the music of the so called ‘Goddesses of Bagpipes’ who have made me re-evaluate my opinion. So let’s begin with them playing together their […]
Spencer Davis
It was announced yesterday that Spencer Davis had died of pneumonia at the age of 81. I thought it might be appropriate to remember him and his contribution to music in the mid-1960’s. Davis was born in Swansea in July 1939. He began learning to play harmonica and accordion at the age of six. He […]