Songsmith
There are songs which keep playing on our inner jukebox. You know the stuff : a chorus, a verse, an instrumental break keeps coming to mind when you're thinking about something else. What are these songs? What is it about them that makes them special? In this occasional series, each post follows the thread of a particular song to see where it leads. This is also an opportunity to explore the Songsmiths who made these songs..
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Songsmith Timmy Thomas pleads for peace
Here's a question which never grows old. It came back to me recently. I was watching the news, images of war, theft, violence, bullying and plain old nastiness when I realised that I had had enough. Who wants to see this? I needed a break. I turned on the radio. The intro began and I knew it immediately : "Why can't we live together" by Timmy Thomas. It felt like it was playing right off my inner juke-box. It was an old song suddenly new. The work of a true songsmith.
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David Bowie – Old song, new documentary
Today is David Bowie's birthday, which we still remember although, in a couple of days, it will actually be 10 years since he passed away. David Bowie Back In Berlin is a piece from 2024 about the song "Where are we now?" which I am reposting. this song announced the end of a strange searching period in Bowie's career after the massive success of "Let's Dance" in the mid-1980s. This transition is also the subject of a new documentary called "David Bowie - The Final Act".
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Songsmith Bruce Springsteen tells dark bedtime stories – and the world wants more
The album "Nebraska" by Bruce Springsteen was first released in 1982. We'd listen to a tape of it on the battery cassette player we took in our car on long trips. "Nebraska" was a twilight choice. With each song we carried an extra passenger who would briefly be there, tell their tale, then vanish, leaving space for the next one.
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Songsmith And Beach Boy Brian Wilson Gone But In Good Company
For a long time I saw The Beach Boys as a formula, a brand name and verrrry American, I thought. Which indeed they were : toothpaste smiles, sunshine lyrics and good times almost too good to be true. That would change in late 1975 thanks to Robin, a friend at Keele University. I was a music enthusiast at the time, but Robin was a music fan who was also a musician and totally unafraid of liking music which others considered too pop to be of interest. He knew what he liked, and he could tell you why it was good. He took me into the world of "Surf's Up" and…
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Songsmith Van Morrison And The Power Of Musical Resonance
Van Morrison is a great explorer of the power of resonance and in "Listen to the Lion" he gives us a powerful example. It's basically a love song, but it explores territories which are older and deeper than most love songs. It still resonates with me years after first hearing it. Let me try and tell you why.
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Songsmith Wreckless Eric Singing About That Special Someone
Songsmith Wreckless Eric and that Special Someone. It's summer up here in the Northern Hemisphere and time to fall in love again. How about making that definitive this time? Not as easy as it sounds? Questions like these are at the heart of "(I'd Go The) Whole Wide World" by Wreckless Eric which tells the story of a mother's answer to her son's despair at ever finding that special someone. Take it away, Wreckless!
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Songsmith David Bowie Back In Berlin
At first hearing on the radio, "Where are we now?" sounded like somebody sleepwalking, a ghost from the past. Didn't I know that voice, that London drawl, that downbeat drag? By the chorus, it was clearly David Bowie. Released overnight unannounced as the lead track for The Next Day on 8th January 2013, Bowie's 66th birthday, "Where are we now?" was his first new solo single since 2003. It is also the subject of the next instalment of the series Songsmiths.
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Songsmith Chrissie Hynde and the Ladies’ Tea Party
The song "Brass in Pocket", which came out in November 79 changed everything for The Pretenders. A joint composition by Chrissie Hynde and guitarist James Honeyman Scott, it was so successful that it actually altered people's perceptions of the group's name : they were still Pretenders, but no longer pretending as in unending make believe; they were now pretenders as in contenders for the crown. Hope you like this latest piece in the Songsmiths series.
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Songsmith Mary Gauthier storytelling under the Southern Cross
I don't normally do Christmas songs, having sung one too many carols as a youngster. I see them as decorative and unifying, but in the background. Yet it is Christmas again, and they're back. To continue my Songsmiths series, I'd like to share with you "Christmas in Paradise", a song by Mary Gauthier (pronounced go-shay, s'il vous plaît). Enjoy an alternative Christmas with Mary!
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Songsmith Steve Marriott exploring tenderness with Humble Pie
I only had one Humble Pie record in my collection. It was the single "Black Coffee", which I'd seen them perform on The Old Grey Whistle Test. The singer, Steve Marriott, was in great voice. Then I did something which happens so rarely now : I flipped it over to see what they put on the B-side. I was expecting another soulful rock tune and I got "Say No More", a song which stopped me in my tracks with its tenderness and desperation. This song opens the Songsmiths series about tunes which continue to play on our inner juke box.