FEATURE: Spotlight: Clara La San

FEATURE:

 

 

Spotlight

 

Clara La San

__________

I have been aware…

PHOTO CREDIT: Lane Stewart

of the brilliance of Clara La San for a little while now. However, I feel this year is going to be her year. Her terrific album, Made Mistakes, was released in 2024. Her recent single, Old Me, came out in November. There is a lot of excitement around La San. I do think that solo artists will dominate this year, in spite of the fact there are some incredible groups around. Clara La San is someone you need to put on your radar. If you can go and see Clara La San perform, then go and see her. She plays London’s Electric Brixton on 2nd April, so I may well see if I can go along and review the show. Before coming to some interviews from later last year, I want to first go back to 2024 and FADER’s interview. They note how this R&B artist – who they term “reclusive” -, “perfectionism, viral stardom, and her stunning new album Made Mistakes”. It was Clara La San’s first interview in years. However, I think that it is judgemental to call her reclusive.

Resolution, either gaining it or acknowledging that it’s not coming, is a constant on Made Mistakes. “I've made mistakes in my life,” La San says. “People seem to think it’s bad to make a mistake. But all of these songs come from real life experiences. It’s me writing from a vulnerable place and learning how to grow through accepting those things.”

A common theme in music over the past decade, from stadium-sized pop stars to underground artists grinding out a living, has been a need to be ever-present. Always posting, constantly sharing. Going quiet is one thing, but removing the bulk of your music from the internet is a different level of not playing the game. So why did La San take Good Mourning offline? “I loved working with Jam City but I have a really specific way of how I want my songs to sound,” she says. “There was something that just didn't really feel ready [about it]. I can be a bit of a people pleaser but when it comes to music, if I don't like it, everyone's going to know about it.” She hopes to re-record the shelved songs in the future, though there’s no firm timeline.

“I write songs how someone else would write in a diary or speak to a therapist,” she says when asked about her slow creative process. “It is a way of answering your own questions and I don’t feel nervous by not sharing that with the world.” That’s not to say she is indifferent to returning. “There is this nice feeling knowing that an album is finally coming out,” she admits. “It's like, ‘Oh, I can rest a little bit now that people know I still exist.’”

La San admits she can be a harsh critic of her own music. Ultimately, however, she reasons that when a song makes her feel a certain way, there is a good chance it will do the same for others. That theory was backed up last year when “In This Darkness,” first released in 2014, went viral. It was one of her earliest songs and had existed as a SoundCloud loosie, sitting idly on her account for years.

Like much of her material, “In This Darkness” merges sparse but warm textures with a melancholy air. “I get lonely when you're not here,” she sings. “And this darkness appears, leaving me stranded.” It has been used in hundreds of thousands of TikToks depicting a wide spectrum of emotion: gaining clarity years down the line or simply mourning the break-up of Travis Scott and Kylie Jenner. The song has been streamed over 150 million times on Spotify. “It’s just crazy,” says La San, who decided to put her audiophile tendencies aside and return the track to streaming. “I see a lot of people sharing the song and how it relates to their life. I guess a lot of people out there feel sad.”

“In This Darkness” returned La San to wider consciousness, but it would be unfair to say she vanished completely after Good Mourning. She had a writing credit on the most recent Yves Tumor album and appears on Bryson Tiller’s “Random Access Memory.” She also contributed vocals to a couple of songs by Belfast rave duo Bicep. La San identifies a shared love of “escapism and euphoria” in both her and Bicep’s music, though laughs when asked if she spends much time in clubs. “I never go to raves,” she says, “I just listen to music in my headphones.”

The discussion returns to keeping things secretive and the pros and cons of working in isolation. La San is quick to acknowledge that her isolated workflow has shielded her from some of the sexism that affects so many female producers. “I just feel like anything is possible. I can create anything,” she says of her zero deadlines, pressure-free schedule. It all begs the question as to whether this album will herald another disappearing act. “I might vanish again,” she says with a grin, “but I don't think it will be for seven years. I’m in a groove now”.

I am going to move to a couple of interviews from last year. I do feel like it is wrong to refer to Clara La San as a ‘new’ artist or someone breaking through. However, she may not be known to everyone, so I think that it is important to highlight her in case you are not conscious of what she has put out so far. COEVAL spent some time with Clara Le San a few years ago:

Writing, producing, and performing mostly on her own, she approaches music as a quiet exploration, translating emotion into melody with care and precision. Her songs are intimate yet relatable each lyric a small story, a fleeting memory, or a late night thought made audible. Clara's honesty, calm, and self-awareness invite listeners into her world without spectacle, creating a space where vulnerability is strength and reflection is welcomed. In this interview for Coeval, Clara talks about love and loss, creativity and solitude, and the moments that push her to write. Her words offer insight into the artist behind the songs, revealing not just music but a perspective on life lived openly and thoughtfully.

Your music has always been about emotion, but Made Mistakes feels even more open. How do you decide what parts of your personal life you want to share through your songs?

For the most part I try to write music that's relatable. For me it's a way to process or heal from things that have happened to me. Life passes us by fast and I don't want to grow old with regret by not making my mark and sharing personal songs that are relatable to others.

Many of your lyrics talk about love not fantasy, but real love: complicated, painful, always honest. What does "real love" mean to you today?

Real love keeps me sane in world that teels so broken. Love is the one thing in this world that feels pure and worthwhile. I can't and don't want to imagine life without it.

You often produce and write everything yourself. Does that solitude make your process more personal, or do you sometimes wish for someone to share it with?

When it's just me producing and writing, I have the ability to unlock thoughts in my brain, thoughts that maybe I don't feel comfortable sharing with a collaborator straight away. I also love taking my time writing lyrics, I don't really like writing lyrics under pressure. They have to mean something to me, otherwise what's the point?

You first released Good Mourning in 2017 and then your debut album Made Mistakes in 2024. How would you describe the change in your sound and in yourself between those two moments?

I don't feel like there's a change in my sound when it comes to the production, but I do feel like the new mix of Good Mourning is definitely more dialled in. With the re-release of Good Mourning being my second mixing experience I knew exactly how I wanted it to sound and how to articulate that.

Do you ever feel pressure to protect your privacy or to hide behind the sound?

I've never been afraid of being vulnerable in my music or hiding because of that, I just don't like the superficiality of putting our faces at the forefront. Society has made us believe our appearance is our most important asset, but I don't care about that. For me it's what's inside that truly matters.

For many people, sad songs are therapy. Did you ever write a song that healed you or that changed the way you saw yourself?

I guess most of them. I either write about my own experience, or what could happen to me in the future.

The album is called Made Mistakes- do you see mistakes as part of becoming who you are, or as something you still wish you could fix?

It's not healthy to live in the past because we can't undo what's been done.

What do you do when you don't write? Tell me one of your obsessions.

I love to take walks. These are the moments when I disconnect myself from my phone and people in general. I try to do it as often as possible.

When will your new album be released? Give me a spoiler

I released a new single “Old Me" this month which I love, and I feel really inspired to keep writing and releasing at the moment”.

The penultimate interview I want to bring in is from earlier in 2025. The Creative Independent spoke with Clara La San about her creative process and how she really does not follow industry rules when it comes to release. Swerving games and working in her own way. Creating music that is timeless. Clara La San also talked about “working from a clean slate, not putting pressure on yourself, and making art simply to understand how you’re feeling”:

Let’s say it’s a typical month of the year and you’re in writing, producing, and songwriting mode, but you’ve also got things to promote, live shows to prepare for, interviews to do. How do you balance all of that and retain your passion for songwriting and production?

For the most part, during the campaign runs, I wasn’t really creating that much music, just because I find it so hard to focus my mind on creating new material when I need to do all this other stuff. So I don’t put pressure on myself. I’m just like, “I know that I’m going to want to write when the time is right and when I have the mental space to do that,” unless I’m in a session or something. If I’m working with somebody else, it can motivate me, and that can really help. But for the most part, I just don’t put pressure on myself and just focus on what I need to.

Have you always been somebody who doesn’t put pressure on yourself, or has that been something you’ve learned over time?

I think so, unless it’s a deadline. Then, I’ll put pressure on myself. But for the most part, the best music I write is just when I’m in a certain mood, or when I’m experiencing a certain emotion and then I have something to say. I don’t force myself. I don’t say to myself, “I need to write today.” If I feel inspired to write, I’ll write, and if I have a deadline, I’ll put pressure on myself in that respect. But when it comes to creating, I’ll just let myself come around when I feel inspired, or I’ll find inspiration from somewhere to help.

A lot of press about you evokes this image of you as a recluse, but working with other people is so integral to what you do—like you said, you work with Jam City, you work with co-producers. If it’s true that you’re more drawn to solitude overall, how do you balance that aspect of yourself with your creative need for collaboration?

I love collaborating. I’m just quite particular with it, and I really just want it to be a back-and-forth process where whoever is involved has their say. It’s important for me to find a collaborator [with whom there’s] mutual respect for each other. And so I’m more particular with who I work with on projects. It’s important to find someone who wants to listen to what I have to say and lets me have my moment, whether it’s in the production or songwriting and everything.

For some creative people, they’ll go through a set of potential collaborators and not feel certain that any of them fit. Can you talk more about how you find great collaborators?

The first thing I like to do when I’m working with somebody is to share. I gauge a lot off the initial reaction and how a potential collaborator has reacted, whether they really like it or they don’t, and then you just know you are on the same page.

When I worked with [executive producer] Yves Rothman on Made Mistakes, that was an amazing experience because I had these songs already, but instead of him changing anything, he kind of just elevated it and didn’t go off on a different tangent. He got them to a place where I was really struggling to get to myself, but it was exactly where I wanted to take them, and that was an amazing collaborative experience and so enjoyable to work in that setting together.

That was everything I wanted to ask you today, but if there’s anything else you want to say about creativity in any way, shape, or form, please go for it.

When it comes to songwriting, it’s a journey of self-exploration. The best music I make is when there’s a mood that’s consuming my thoughts and interrupting my day-to-day, when I feel like, “Okay, I have to actually sit down and figure this out.” That’s how certain songs have come about that I love the most. Just basically having that inner pressure of, “I have to write in order to understand these emotions or the way that I’m feeling.” I can’t not, basically. That’s probably the time I enjoy writing the most, as much as I don’t because it’s frustrating having that feeling, but then, you’re creating really great art out of it”.

I am going to end with an interview from December from 10 Magazine. They asked her ten great questions (though I am not including all of them). Ending last year with great new music, having toured extensively, she will be looking at this year perhaps as one to reset and work towards a new album. There is a huge amount of demand for her to perform live, so that will also keep her pretty busy:

We love your recently released music, especially Old Me. How did this song begin? What was the catalyst?

I wrote Old Me in Los Angeles alongside Justin Raisin and Lewis Pesacov. The session started by Justin playing me some loops and I found that one of them in particular really resonated with me. Instinctively I’m drawn to melodies that feel melancholic, so when I heard his piano loop I knew instantly we had to build on it.

What did they bring to your sonic world?

Working with them allowed me to approach writing though a different scope and I’m so grateful for their input. The energy of Justin and Lewis in the sessions made me want to push something different that still felt inherently me, which I find really inspiring.

Where have you been crafting the new music? Has there been an environment that has been specifically conducive?

At the moment I’ve been writing from my home studio in the UK. I find I work well when I isolate myself and I like to explore what comes from that. I go through phases though, there are times when I like to be around people but for now I just want to be alone.

How does England and growing up there infuse into your sound?

The weather definitely plays a part. Maybe the bleakness sometimes comes through in my thoughts while writing music. I’m not saying it would change if my environment was different, it’s just easier for me to get into my preferred mindset here.

With this new music coming out, how do you think you have grown and evolved as an artist since your 2024 debut album? Are you creating differently now?

I feel like I’m continually evolving my sound. I guess it’s all a process though because I’m constantly learning new things, but I can’t take all the credit for that. I have a lot of people around me who I am grateful for, who inspire me to no end.

Are there either artists that have been exciting and inspiring you recently? Who is on your radar?

I’ve been kind of switched off to new music lately due to touring and various other things. I go days without listening to music but if I do hear something I like I’ll binge on it. I’ll play it over and over again until I get bored. The last time I remember doing that was on my flight to LA. The song was On My Back by Cardi B. That beat is hard.

What’s something important to you aside from music? Something your passionate about that you want to use your growing platform for?

I love building the world from a visual perspective so that’s something I’ll continually do.

What’s next?

Continue being me”.

I hope that as many people as possible check out Clara La San. She is a wonderful artist that I have known about a bit, but there are some who perhapos are not aware. Do take some time to check out her stuff and, as I said, see her live if you are able to. Whilst perhaps not a ‘risinbg’ artist, she is someone worth spotlighting as one fo the most important and interesting artists of this year. Someone that I know…

WILL be making music for years to come.

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Follow Clara La San

FEATURE: You’re All Grown Up Now: Kate Bush in Her Thirties: The Changes and Challenges

FEATURE:

 

 

You’re All Grown Up Now

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush at her home in Eltham, London on 13th September 1989/PHOTO CREDIT: Kevin Cummins/Getty Images

 

Kate Bush in Her Thirties: The Changes and Challenges

__________

I am borrowing heavily…

from Graeme Thomson’s excellent biography, Under the Ivy: The Life and Music of Kate Bush. It is a book that I use a lot when writing features about Kate Bush. One of the most interesting chapters concerns Kate Bush turning thirty. Around the release of The Sensual World in 1989 and the period before that. Her final album in the 1980s, I guess turning thirty was not a huge deal for her. However, in terms of emotional maturity, life priorities and relationships, it was an important birthday to celebrate. One that must have caused her to pause and reflect. I have written about this particular fact before. On 30th July, 1988, Bush’s thirtieth birthday, she was typically donating her time to other people. Rather than spend the day making it all about her – though I hope she did celebrate with family in the evening -, she spent the day with other celebrities raising funds for the Terrence Higgins Trust. She was participating in the Shop Assistance charity event in London. She worked as a celebrity shop assistant at the Blazers menswear store in Covent Garden. This initiative involved celebrities selling merchandise to support HIV/AIDS awareness and care. This was a disease that would impact her life and claim the life of those close to her. It is a whole other chapter regarding Bush’s charity work and how she dedicates so much time and herself to these incredible causes. At the end of the 1980s, there was a lot of conversations around AIDS and HIV. Artists like Madonna bringing it into their work. Before 1988, there was a lot of rumours about her weight. Bush had gained a little weight and there were a couple of live appearances in 1987 – The Secret Policeman’s Third Ball and performing Don’t Give Up with Peter Gabriel at Earl’s Court -, but she address the work-diet-exercise balance and there was this new fitness regime.

There was no dramatic changes as Bush turned thirty. She was spotted at the odd show and was staying at home. She was not someone who loved jaunting abroad on holiday. Preferring to stay put, she did the odd bit here and there. However, it was clear that turning thirty did influence and infuse what we hear on The Sensual World. There was a major change in terms of collaborations. This was the first time she brought other female singers into the studio. The Trio Bulgarka appeared on The Sensual World and The Red Shoes (1993). Bush discovered them towards the end of the Hounds of Love sessions. Yanka Rupkina, Stoyanka Boneva, and Eva Georgieva added new dynamics and tones to her work. Before July 1988, Bush was busy still with promotion. Promoting Hounds of Love through 1986, 1987 was a year when she could start work on a new album. Writing This Woman’s Work in spring 1987 for John Hughes’s She’s Having a Baby, it was a kick. The Bulgarian sessions definitely gave new impetus and energy to an album that was floundering and faltering at times. It was the task of having to follow a masterpiece like Hounds of Love that was this massive success. Not wanting the next album to be similar, it was a massive task trying to release something that would prove popular but also perhaps not deviate too far from what people expected. One of the most notable aspects of Hounds of Love and The Sensual World is when they were released. The former is forward-thinking and innovative, yet it easily slotted into 1985 and was not that alien. It is hard to think of much else like The Sensual World in 1989. The scene had shifted drastically and it was harder for Bush to be relatable and innovative at the same time. I think that milestone birthday refocused her priorities. Perhaps wanting an album more womanly and feminine, I also feel that she was looking to head more away from conventional Pop music. Not that you could ever see her a traditional Pop artist. However, Hounds of Love had some big and bright songs. Some commercial successes alongside more conceptual tracks. The Sensual World she saw as ten stories tied together. You can hear more influences of Folk and voices like the Trio Bulgarka. Less intense and dramatic as Hounds of Love, The Sensual World has this warmth and sense of loss to it.

It is fascinating to think about Kate Bush turning thirty in 1988. Already working on a new album, I do feel like there were changes and new considerations. Bush was personal on Hounds of Love and previous albums. However, I feel like there is this mix of desire, loss and growth. Hounds of Love’s title looked at Bush being chased by metaphorical hounds of love. Afraid to commit, there was not much else in the way of her talking of love and close relationships I feel. There is more on The Sensual World. Perhaps one of the first albums where Bush is angrier, defeated and mournful. Her parents still close to her heart. Her dad, Robert, can be heard on The Fog. There is still room for oddness and fantasy. Songs like Deeper Understanding and Heads We’re Dancing step away from love and relationships. Desire and sensuality. Hounds of Love had twelve tracks, though The Sensual World keeps it to ten. The same as The Dreaming (1982). It is interesting what Graeme Thomson notes about the technology Bush used for The Sensual World. Bush and Del Palmer upgraded the farm studio and added an SSL console. There was a sense of her being overwhelmed by all the technology around her. Working with the Fairlight III and DX7 synth to form demo-masters, Bush recorded quickly and then took a break for several months or so. I think The Sensual World is one of her best albums, though it is clear it did not come together as easily as others. At a stage in her career and life when she had worked tirelessly for over a decade, she wanted to end the 1980s with an album that was unlike anything she did previously. The daunting thing of the blank page. Less conceptual than Hounds of Love, The Sensual World is a songwriter’s album. Perhaps taking us back to her work from 1978. This was Bush stripping layers to an extent. In 1988/1989, there were other artists being compared to Kate Bush. It was harder for her to stand out and push her music forward.

I think the twenties for most artists is about putting out work and keeping busy. Priorities more about work and promotion. For women especially, this sense of ageism in the industry means that they may be discarded or sidelined when they hit thirty. You can see it in modern Pop. The ferocity in which women in their twenties (and even thirties) are pushing themselves and the amount of touring they do. Bush also didn’t need to prove herself. Having released commercially successful and stunning albums, that pressure to top what went before was perhaps not on her mind. She did still value music and wanted it to be amazing, though she was perhaps not as intense as she once was. In terms of hours logged in the studio and how little free time she had. Also, between the release of The Sensual World and The Red Shoes, she would be affected by loss and tragedy. Alan Murphy, her guitarist of ten years, died in 1989. One of her longstanding dancers, Gary Hurst, died in 1990 (both Murphy and Hurst contracted AIDS) a Her mother, Hannah, died in 1992. Like volunteering to work for Blazers in Covent Garden on her thirtieth birthday and raise money for charity, she was very much not doing what a lot of her peers were. Personal loss definitely did reshape how she saw music and its importance. Maybe not strictly related to Bush turning thirty. She did change her compositional and technological relationship. Wanting to go more back to basics, especially for The Red Shoes, maybe a feeling her work was too complex and hard to follow. The Dreaming experimental and layered. Hounds of Love a big and complex album too. The Sensual World was slightly more rooted or sparse in some ways. You can feel something different come through. The Red Shoes would be Bush working at the piano again and writing in a different way. Trying to make her music easier to follow and appreciate. That personal and spiritual growth. Different priorities and objectives regarding her music. Not making it cinematic or grand. Something more direct and accessible.

I do like how there was this reordering of her priorities. I keep using that word but, as Bush entered her thirties, she was a different person. I think she also wanted to change how the press saw her as well. Her promotional photos becomes less sexualised. Less provocative. She did not want to be seen as a sex symbol or have people talk about her body. I want to end by quoting from a Pulse interview from December 1989. Will Johnson asking the questions.

She's genuinely bemused that one of her appeals, initially, at least, was a certain physical allure. Anyone who's seen clips of Bush's only live shows ever played in the spring of '79 can't help but be stimulated by her inimitable stage performance -- a visual spectacular of music, dance, mime and sorcery. The whole experience of releasing records quickly and keeping pace with the related promotion work eventually wore her down. The '80s would see Bush slow her pace.

"The problem with my live work," she admits, "was that I had to expose myself in public so much, whereas now I can concentrate on just doing videos for my work. What I really like about videos is that I'm working with film. It gives me a chance to get in there and learn about making films, and it's tremendously useful for me, because one day I might like to make films myself."

Bush's videos, which she codirects, are easily as vibrant as her vinyl work. In the video for "The Sensual World," Bush stars as a black-and-white Molly Bloom touching that oh-so-black-and-white sensual world. [What? The video is in full color!] Her own favorite is "Cloudbursting" [sic], in which she stars with Donald Sutherland.

In '80, her third album, Never Forever, included tracks like "Babooshka" and "Breathing." The latter concerned itself with the nuclear age and how man insists on screwing up the environment. In the video Bush appeared inside a large bubble, predicting the era of the ozone friendly consensus, lamenting: "Outside gets inside, through the skin," followed by the slow chant: "In, Out, In, Out, In, Out."

"I think it's really good, the fact that it's so fashionable now," says Bush. "Everyone's pleased 'cause everyone's wanted to do something about it, come out of the closet as it were. Unfortunately it's like most things -- it's not until things start going horribly wrong that you try to do something about it. I think the media's got a lot to do with it, people like David Attenborough (renowned filmer of wildlife, best-known for his strange antics with gorillas, and brother of well-known film producer Sir Richard) 'cause they present things in a human way. There's no lecturing, there's no saying, 'Look, you're very, very naughty treating the earth like this,' but saying, 'Look at all these beautiful things.' The photography is so superior, it just moves people. I mean, years ago, people would not stay in to watch a wildlife program, would they?"

Since 1982's The Dreaming LP ("the album was so difficult to make, just about everything that could go wrong did during that period"), Bush has been more determined to do things her way -- especially in image terms, to get away from her marketing image of "The Tease." She's become progressively quieter; you won't find her sipping Tequila and Cherryade at Stringfellows, or whooping it up in a rubber mini at The Hippodrome, or lobbing french fries around Langan's Brasserie. It's just not her idea of fun.

"I do like the quiet life," she replies almost bashfully. "I do like having privacy; it's incredibly important to me, because I do end up feeling quite probed by the public side of what I have to do. I'm just quite a private person, really. You just end up feeling quite exposed; it's this vulnerability. After I've done the salesman bit, I like to be quiet and retreat, because that's where I write from. I'm a sort of quiet little person."

Which my explain why it's taken so long for this idiosyncratic yet compelling artist to break in the States. "Yes," she says perkily, "I've really had no success in America at all, apart from the Hounds of Love LP. That did quite well, and it was really exciting to think that there were people out there wanting it. But I've never seen it in terms of you make and album and then conquer the world. I must say it's never really worried me that I've not been big in America, but I'm with a new record company over there now, and I really feel good about the people -- they're lovely to talk to and to deal with. It's quite exciting for me. I just hope people out there will have the chance to know that the album's out. Then, if people want to hear it, they can. If they don't, well, that's absolutely fine.

"You know," she continues, "what I like about America is that there's a tremendous sort of hyper energy that I really like. Especially in New York -- there's a much stronger social setup, especially between artists. It's a very isolated setup here, because London's so spread out and everybody's off doing their own thing. You don't seem to bump into people the way you do over there; it's exciting to have that interchanging of ideas, just to talk to people who're going through similar things. It's real modern energy stuff. And also, I really like the positivity of the Americans. I mean here, although I love being here and I love the English, we're very hard on one another, very critical, whilst they have a wonderful willingness to give everyone a chance. We're really hard on people trying to get off the ground -- it's really unfair."

[If Kate likes America so much, why on earth doesn't she *come* here?]

One of the most engaging characteristics of Bush's persona is that she's so much the epitome of The English Rose, the natural beauty with innate intelligence -- a woman who just doesn't have to try. On The Sensual World, she feels that it's the Bulgarian influence -- three aging ladies named The Trio Bulgarka -- that add what she calls "a very interesting female aspect" to the LP, complementing Bush's own very feminine touch. The Trio's music was introduced to her by brother Paddy, and, as a result, she ventured over to Sofia, Bulgaria to meet the threesome. The Trio has an intensity about their voices, a deep expression of womanly pain and suffering, that hit a chord with Bush: "They were so important for me," she relates, "both musically and personally. I got a tremendous amount out of them as people, and a very important musical influence."

The release of The Sensual World ushers in a few changes for Bush: a new record label, a growing profile in America, and a realization that there's life outside the recording studio. "Something that really hit me on this album a bit like a hammer," she says, almost embarrassed, "is that I didn't really have any hobbies, and all I did was work, and everything that had been my hobby had sort of turned into work, like dancing, even reading -- in a way, because your're continually drawing from things that happen to you.

"But recently," she adds, "things like gardening have now entered my life, which is wonderful. I've never had a garden before, just very down-to-earth things like that. Again, it's just having a bit of contact with nature, you know, and planting things and seeing the slowness of it all. I've planted a flower bed; you have to be very patient. And it's a good thing for me to work with, ' cause making an album, you have to be very patient, and this flower bed helped me, *tremendously*, to watch how things have to fight for space: You have to get the weeds out, a little bit of water everyday, everyday a little something. Odd things like that, really!”.

Bush giving herself more time and space for hobbies. Some might see this as Bush becoming a bit boring but, after burning through her twenties without putting her feet up for a second, you can tell that she wanted things to be different. I hope that I have got to the heart of how things changed personally and professionally for Kate Bush after July 1988. I think there is more to be said about it. The Sensual World was definitely the first sign that she was perhaps looking to spend less time with music and not work as tirelessly as before. Reshape and redesign her career path. However, you cannot deny the brilliance of her sixth studio album. Featuring some of her most enduring and spectacular songs, it was the work of an artist…

STILL at the top of her game.

FEATURE: Beneath the Sleeve: Kate Hudson - Glorious

FEATURE:

 

 

Beneath the Sleeve

 

Kate Hudson - Glorious

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A remarkable album…

PHOTO CREDIT: Guy Aroch

from 2024, Glorious is the debut from Kate Hudson. Though better known as an actor – who has starred in some truly huge films -, she has naturally transitioned into music. Releasing her debut album at the age of forty-four, I do think there were perils. The music industry has always been ageist and sexist, throw into the mix this is a famous actor making music, and there could have been this backlash and huge criticism. I did see some of that come up, though there was a lot of interest and positive reviews around Glorious. It is a stunning album that I hope Kate Hudson follows up. Right from the punchy Gonna Find Out, Kate Hudson reveals this incredible voice and musical talent. You can get the album on vinyl here. It has this beautiful and memorable cover. Before finishing with some reviews for Glorious, I want to cover some interviews Kate Hudson gave in 2024. The first I am coming to is from Rolling Stone. The fact that she possesses this Rock star voice and is a huge musical talent, she wasn’t ready until now (2024) to release an album. Let’s hope that she keeps the momentum going:

It took decades, lots of therapy, and a global pandemic for Hudson to break through all of those barriers and finally write and record an album of her own. The result, Glorious, is one of the year’s most pleasant musical surprises, a thoroughly grown-up and strikingly assured collection of guitar-heavy songs that tend to land somewhere between Adele and Sheryl Crow, with Hudson’s big, slightly husky voice and deep rock & roll fandom always front and center. “The spirit of Penny Lane descends on everything in my life,” Hudson says. “Because I was Penny Lane.… I love all kinds of music, but I love rock music, and I love women in rock. Linda Ronstadt is my favorite rock star.”

When the Covid lockdowns hit, Hudson found herself forced into introspection. “I was like, ‘What am I doing?’” she recalls. “‘What is my life? What’s going to happen if I die? This will be my great regret ever, that I didn’t allow myself to share music. And even if it’s one person who loves it, it would mean so much to me.’ And that was it. Like, ‘OK, it’s time.’” So, she was in the mood to say yes when a friend of hers, Tor E. Hermansen of the production duo Stargate, asked her to sing a cover of Katy Perry’s “Firework” for a school-charity Zoom. Soon afterward, Hudson got a surprise phone call from songwriter and producer Linda Perry, a parent at the same school. “She was like, ‘What the fuck? I didn’t know you could sing like that! Do you write music?’ And I go, ‘Yeah.’ She’s like, ‘Well, come in the studio.’”

Hudson and Perry were near-total strangers, but Hudson arrived at the studio with another, much more familiar collaborator. Danny Fujikawa, her fiancé and father of one of her children, had a music career of his own as a guitarist and songwriter for the indie band Chief, who released an album on Domino in 2010. The touring life had led to substance issues for Fujikawa, and he thought his musical life was over. “Kate brought me back into music with this album, kind of full circle, and it’s been such a blessing for me,” he says.

At that first session, Fujikawa recalls, “it was me, Kate, and Linda Perry sitting in a room, and it was like an awkward first date. Linda just strummed a chord and then belted some howling, crazy sound out of her mouth. That kind of set the tone for Kate, and then, honestly, we just hit the ground running. We wrote 30 songs or something over the course of three weeks.” Fujikawa and Hudson eventually finished the album with another musician, onetime Max Martin collaborator Johan Carlsson, who co-wrote Ariana Grande’s “Dangerous Woman,” among other hits.

The album’s power-ballad title track was one of the easiest Hudson-Perry collaborations, written in all of 10 minutes. “The process felt like channeling, and ‘glorious’ just was a word that came out,” Hudson says. “It was like we were in each other’s heads. It was awesome.” She connects that feeling to something that she’s experienced as an actor: “It’s the moments when you hit a scene with someone and everything goes away and it feels so good. It feels completely present. That’s the same thing for me writing music. You’re so present in it. ‘Glorious’ was just the best. It was better than sex.”

Hudson doesn’t mind acknowledging there are moments on the album that evoke the Black Crowes, the band fronted by her ex-husband, Chris Robinson. “Well, listen, I mean, talk about a foundation of my life,” she says. “I was a fan of my ex-husband before I met him. I remember what I loved about the Black Crowes when I was younger, before I fell in love with him — the naughtiness and the freedom in which they chose to create. I have a soft spot for people like that, even though they’re challenging and tough. Chris and I, we didn’t fall in love ’cause we liked opposite things. We fell in love ’cause we were into the same shit.”

Hudson, who was also once engaged to Muse’s Matt Bellamy, adds, “People always go, ‘You really like those music guys.’ And I’m always like, ‘They might like me, too!’ You know, there’s something about music. I’ve been in relationships where I can’t speak that language with someone, and I don’t know if I could exist in a unit where I couldn’t share it properly. It’s a really, really nice thing to share, and that’s been why I always end up having babies with [musicians]. It’s like my pheromones are like, ‘We’ll make a good child. We’ll make a musical child. So let’s do this!’”

Finishing the album felt almost like as momentous an occasion. “There’s so much emotion attached to it, and personal obstacles to overcome to get here,” she says. “When I knew it was done and everything was mastered and I was signing off on it, it was like giving birth to a baby — it really felt that way. I was incredibly emotional. But what was interesting was that I didn’t have any fear.”

Now, Hudson is looking forward to her first tour of her own, eyeing favorite venues like New York’s Bowery Ballroom. And as music biopics start to look like the new superhero movies, she has a few dream roles in mind that could combine her two artistic pursuits. “I think Dusty Springfield is a really interesting story,” she says. “People don’t know a lot about her, and she’s one of my favorites. She was very shy. She had a lot of stage fright and struggled with being open about her sexuality. That could be a very powerful movie”.

There are a couple of other interviews I want to come to before getting to review. GRAMMY spent some time with Kate Hudson to discuss her Glorious debut. I think that is genuinely is one of the best albums for 2024, and a work I would recommend to everyone. Go and get it on vinyl if you can. I have not seen Kate Hudson perform live, though I will try and catch her if she is coming to the U.K. this year:

When legendary songwriter Linda Perry discovered that Kate Hudson could sing, she enabled the actress' childhood dream to come true.

In the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, Perry happened to be on a virtual school program during which Hudson sang a rendition of Katy Perry's "Firework." Soon after, Perry called Hudson in for a studio session — and before they knew it, they were creating Hudson's debut album.

But their interaction was much more serendipity than it was coincidence. And perhaps you could say the same for Hudson's breakthrough role as the music-obsessed "band-aide" Penny Lane in 2000's Almost Famous. Music was always Hudson's first love, now manifested as Glorious — a glittering musical coronation.

Across 12 tracks, Hudson shows off her sultry voice over an array of pop-rock melodies, conjuring the enchanting air of Stevie Nicks and the dynamic vocal power of Sheryl Crow. While some may remember hearing Hudson sing in the 2009 film adaptation of the musical Nine or her short stint as a sassy dance instructor on season 5 of "Glee," Glorious shows an entirely new side of the actress. She feels right at home as she rocks the soulful opener "Gonna Find Out," hits you in the heart on the tender ballad "Live Forever," and surprises with belting power on the soaring title track.

A musical venture has been on Hudson's vision board, first recognizing the pop star prowess of Madonna and Belinda Carlisle when she was just 5 years old. That lifelong aspiration has led her to feeling more assured in her debut album than anything she's done in her career thus far. As she declares, "I've never felt more present in something in my life."

She's already felt that synergy on stage, too. Hudson made her performance debut in Los Angeles the day after Glorious lead single, "Talk About Love," premiered in January; she's since shocked viewers of "The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon" and "The Voice" with her prowess ("Who knew Kate Hudson could sing?" one "Voice" fan tweeted). And while her singing career doesn't mean her acting chapter is closed, she's ready for a tour: "I can't wait to actually go out and meet people that I've never been able to meet before."

Below, Hudson details her journey to Glorious in her own words — from letting go of potential criticism, to gaining confidence in her voice (with help from Sia!), to simply enjoying a particularly special life moment.

I would always say no if someone asked me to sing. [Whether] it was a charity [event] or some sort of show, I just always had this thing where I didn't want to put myself out there like that.

I realized I had a fear of being on stage. And I was like, You know what, I've got to just start saying yes. So it started with that — I'm just going to say yes to singing, even if it scares me to death.

It's my happy place, singing and writing. The only thing that would have been holding me back was the fear of what people might say about it. And that is, I think, the worst possible thing to do — not make art because you're afraid of the criticism.

I'm always writing, but when Linda [Perry] said, "Will you come in and sing this song?" and I did, and then she asked if I wrote music, and she's like, "We should write together," that was sort of the beginning of what this album became. Getting in the studio with Linda, we had no expectation, we didn't know what it was going to be — one song, four songs. It ended up being, like, 20-plus songs.

It was a real passion project, versus being a younger artist, and wanting that to be my number one vocation. So I was able to be more present in the process and with no expectation. It sort of had that domino effect of starting the writing and then really just loving it — becoming kind of all-encompassing. Once you open the floodgates, there's so much to write about. I can't wait to get back in the studio already.

I think [my hesitation to sing before] was more about, Why am I singing? I find music so precious that, if I wasn't ready, ready, ready, I just didn't want to do it. And it's kind of my personality too. I was the little girl that wouldn't do anything unless I felt like I had perfected it and had the confidence to be doing it.

And then COVID [hit]. Honestly, it was like, Okay, I'm not getting any younger. I want music to be a part of my life in a bigger way. I can sort of see myself, as I get older, being more surrounded by music and writing music, and being more immersed in music like that, because I love it so much.

I was thinking about this the other day — lately, Danny [Fujikawa, Hudson's musician/actor fiancé] and I write, like, a song a week, and sometimes multiple. I love it, we love doing it together. So it's something that I can't wait to, hopefully, be able to do just more of.

The performance thing is so new for me that it's wild. This past month of performing, and being in front of people, and sharing music, and sharing my voice like that, is something brand new. I call it, like, putting on a new pair of shoes and wearing them in a little bit — going to different places and your voice sounds different in different rooms.

In reflection, at that time, crossing over [into music] was sort of looked poorly upon— if you're starting to become successful in one thing, you need to stick to that. You have to understand, like, if someone even did a commercial, the perception of it would be like, "Oh that person's career is over."

Now, the world has completely shifted and it just doesn't matter anymore. Which is such a nice thing for a lot of artists.

At the end of the day, these are art forms that we really care about. It's really important to us to make the right movies — when you're creating a character, or when you're writing an album. People might not see [that] from the outside in. It fuels something that is just like, you couldn't live without it.

So when you get to a certain place that you are being known for what you love, for the art form, and you become a celebrity, the criticism is so extreme. It's so extreme that it's like, if you feed into it, it will stop you from wanting to take any risks as an artist. You start to become precious about things — you get nervous to step out on a limb because it could destroy things that you've been really working hard to build. But the irony of that is, you aren't really an artist unless you're taking those chances.

Entering this phase of my life age-wise, I've been through all of that harsh criticism so many times that after a while, you realize like it just doesn't matter. What matters is that you're putting your best foot forward, you know?”.

The final interview I am keen to spotlight is from Variety. Maybe there was surprise that Kate Hudson was a great singer. However, more and more actors are going into music. I can imagine singing and having a strong voice is important for a lot of actors, so not a huge shock that Hudson is a natural musician. Glorious is an album that really cannot remain the only album from Kate Hudson! I feel like a strong debut like this will build all this anticipation:

A commonality of a lot of the promotional appearances you’ve been doing for this album is people telling you what a great voice you have, as if they’re surprised. You’ve probably experienced that hundreds of times in recent months. Do you think you might get tired of people telling you you have a fantastic voice?

Oh my God, how could you ever get tired of hearing that? It’s so kind. You know, I think the thing that feels really good is that I can feel a lot of kindness around this. On social media, people have a tendency to want to be very mean to people, and some people really like to be able to jump on that opportunity. So I’ve felt very emotional about the kindness that I’ve felt. I don’t know what that is about. But it brings up the reality that when you’re doing something from a really honest place, I think most people feel it and root for it. I’ve felt that in certain moments in my career, but this feels different because this is so personal to me. As you know, as a writer, you’re sort of jumping off of a cliff a little bit, and you just kind of put it out there and it doesn’t really belong to you anymore. It’s like having a baby, you know? I remember what my mom said when I had my first son. I was like, “Why am I so sad?” And she goes, “Because when he comes out, he doesn’t belong to you anymore.” And I feel that way about this album and music: It belongs to everybody else. And so I think that’s why it really hits the heartstrings when I feel people being supportive and kind.

Can you talk about the style you arrived at? Because it feels like what you are doing is ultra-mainstream in one sense, and yet, there’s not a lot of it around.

It’s so funny that you just said it like that, because I feel that way about it.

It recalls for people Fleetwood Mac or Sheryl Crow, and you’ve mentioned the Rolling Stones as an influence, too, not just to make it about female front-people. But it’s funny that when that “Daisy Jones and the Six” series came around, it made people wish this fictional band was real, because it reflects a thing people want and don’t get that much of.

I did what I love. And I’ve written all kinds of music, , but when I was making the album, I was like, what I love is band-led, and guitar-led… I like music that makes you feel like you’re surrounded by the band. You mentioned Sheryl Crow. I was a 14-year-old girl when “Tuesday Night Music Club” came out. That album and (the Stones’) “Tattoo You” were it for me when I was 14 and discovering music. Sheryl was my foundation of loving female rock music. And from “Run Baby Run” to “I Shall Believe,” I was like, this is it. Just in my stomach, just thinking about it now, it’s like, ugh — it’s just the fucking best. She’s such a rock star, and she was a real hero of mine when I was younger. And then, from there, obviously really discovering Fleetwood Mac and all of the women, like Pat Benatar and fucking Joan Jett, and the women in Heart. Ann Wilson is like that voice, and Nancy’s songs, and getting to know Nancy during “Almost Famous”… That kind of band-led music for me was it.

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Hudson performs onstage during the album release concert for Glorious at The Bellwether on 18th May, 2024 in Los Angeles/PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images

But it was also the brightness… I like that kind of golden sound that comes from David Crosby’s album with “Laughing” (1971’s “If I Could Only Remember My Name”), or discovering Neil Young’s “Harvest Moon,” which to me also has that kind of golden feeling. Sheryl has it; I think Lucius, now, have that sound. I just love it and so I’m sure it comes out in the album. I hope it does. When I’m singing the Patty Griffin song (“When It Don’t Come Easy”) on stage… there’s something about organic music. That being said, then I get into Brian Eno and I’m like, ooh, I could get weird too. I don’t know where it’s gonna go. Fuck, there’s so much great music out there, you know?

What covers do you most enjoy doing on stage?

The one we all love playing the most is “Voices Carry” (by Aimee Mann, from ‘Til Tuesday). You know it so well, but you don’t hear it all the time. People love that cover… I love taking a song like “Vaseline” (by Stone Temple Pilots) that wouldn’t be necessarily a song that I would write, but it’s a song that moves me, and is from a time in my life,and then you can build a fucking jazz sound around it… I’m such a huge TP fan. I had the honor of being on the road with Tom Petty one summer when the Black Crowes opened for them, and so I got to really meet their whole crew and to live with that music. He was the best… a very quiet, shy man. I’ll always want to do his songs, and we worked up a bluegrass version of (“You Don’t Know How It Feels”), which is one of my favorites”.

I shall end with a couple of positive reviews for Glorious. A remarkable album (the song included above is from the Deluxe version) from a renewed actor who I feel is equally strong an artist, there were some who claimed this was a vanity project. That is was undemanding music. I think it is incorrect, offensive and elitist. Because Kate Hudson is an actor and is going into music. If she were an unknown artist in her own right, then those words would not be applied to Glorious. Those who heard the album and judged it as a debut album from an artist and not an actor trying out music, you get something more considered. This is what AllMusic observed in their review:

Kate Hudson spent much of her career orbiting the center of rock & roll so the transition from acting to singing doesn't seem awkward in the slightest on Glorious, her debut album. Hudson spends the record on comfortable ground thanks to her chief collaborators Danny Fujikawa -- the onetime leader of Chief and Hudson's domestic partner since 2016 -- and Linda Perry, the superstar producer who encouraged the actress to follow her dream of writing and performing music after hearing Hudson sing for a charity event at a school both their children attend. Perry's schedule didn't allow for her to complete Glorious, giving Hudson and Fujikawa the opportunity to work with Johan Carlsson, an associate of Max Martin who found success co-writing with Ariana Grande. Having two prominent producers as collaborators winds up putting the spotlight on Hudson herself, as her passionate, full-throated vocals -- raspy without seeming ragged, powerful yet controlled -- are the focal point throughout the record. Unsurprisingly for an actress who became a star playing Penny Laine, the chief "Band Aid" in Cameron Crowe's album rock epic Almost Famous, Hudson is firmly rooted in classic rock, displaying clear debts to such '70s titans as Linda Ronstadt and Stevie Nicks. The trick Hudson pulls off on Glorious is that her classicism never seems staid: it's bright, lively, fresh and fun, tuneful, and knowing without succumbing to rote, respectful tropes of traditionalism. Part of the reason Glorious sounds so engaging is that she's working with Perry and Carlsson, pop producers who are keenly aware of fashion but who also know Hudson isn't gunning for the Top 40. Instead, the team knows how to give the insistent "Romeo" and pulsating "Fire" a New Wave sheen and how to let the power chords of "Gonna Find Out" settle into a blues-rock groove that's as slick as it is earthy. Similarly, there are both dimension and depth to the quieter moments -- "Live Forever" builds from a hushed acoustic guitar to a lovely shimmer of harmonies and strings -- that emphasis emotion instead of overwhelming it. The suppleness of the production mirrors Hudson's range -- she not only adeptly handles the shifts in style and tone, but provides the music with a dynamic center. Perhaps Hudson is indeed a bit of a throwback to another era -- not so much the '70s as the dawn of the 2000s, when Sheryl Crow made this kind of colorful classic rock a radio staple -- but Glorious shows she's a rock star in her own right”.

I will wrap things up with The AU Review. Awarding Glorious four stars, they heralded someone proving themselves to be a Pop poet. Glorious debuting at number 3 on Billboard's Heatseekers Albums chart and number forty-one on the Independent Albums chart. The album got to number nineteen on the Vinyl Albums chart. In the U.K., Glorious debuted at number eighty-one on the UK Album Downloads Chart Top 100 on, peaking at number eighteen in February 2025, after the release of the deluxe version of the album. In 2025, Glorious debuted and peaked at number twenty-eight on the UK Independent Albums Chart, and at number seventy-one on the UK Physical Albums Chart. Even if it was not a massive commercial success, I feel Glorious is a wonderful album that deserves to be played and appreciated:

It isn’t an uncommon road travelled for actors to further express their creativity through the release of music.  Whilst some commit to both with a certain vigour (Jennifer Lopez, Cher, etc) and others dabble with more consistent subtlety (Keanu Reeves, Ryan Gosling, Russell Crowe), it does feel a little out of the ordinary to switch to the medium so late into an already established career.

That’s how it may appear on the surface when looking at Kate Hudson and her foray into music with the release of Glorious.  But, if you’ve paid close enough attention, you’ll know that Hudson has always had an instrumental expression running through her blood, she just hasn’t had the ability to

At the age of 21 when she was thrust particularly into acting stardom off the back of her Academy Award-nominated performance as Penny Lane in Cameron Crowe’s Almost Famous (2000), Hudson – whose father Bill Hudson was a vocalist in the familial troop The Hudson Brothers – rode the wave of attention towards a fruitful career that saw her top such studio successes as How To Lose A Guy in 10 Days, The Skeleton Key, Fool’s Gold and, most recently, the Knives Out sequel, Glass Onion.

Hudson has stated that music is something she’s always wanted to pursue, but acting, for whatever reason, took precedence.  She fuelled her own musicianship through a recurring role on the TV series Glee and as one of Daniel Day Lewis’s muses in the musical Nine, and, however ill-advised the film ultimately ended up being, she flexed further in the Sia-penned Music.

Those musical outlets were specific to those projects however.  Glorious is authentically Kate Hudson, with the creative leaning into a poetic songwriter mentality that comes across as a folk-inspired Adele or a pop-fused Joni Mitchell.

The album’s launch single, “Talk About Love”, is indeed the most commercial sounding of the 12 tracks on hand.  It may not necessarily be a sonic representation of Glorious as a whole, but with its booming chorus and plucky riff it makes sense as to why it would suit as an introduction to Hudson as an artist.  The album flits between a predominant soft-rock and country aesthetic (the romantic “Live Forever” and the boot scootin’-lite “Romeo” proving strong examples), but her pop hook sensibilities are never discarded in favour of lyrical depth, with “Lying To Myself”, with its 80s inspired bassline, serving as a spiritual sibling to the aforementioned debut single.

The slight husk in Hudson’s voice at once suits the rock edge the album oft leans into, whilst also serving the vulnerability required for the softer, more open moments that speak to her strength as a storyteller.  The album opener “Gonna Find Out“, a breathy rock number that expresses a more sexually liberated Hudson (“It’s a hot night, it’s a low light. It’s a full moon, I’ll take you on a fun ride, I’m gonna stay down
‘Cause you’re my goal line”) and the following “Fire”, which enjoys a new wave-lite instrumental that brings to mind Icehouse’s seminal “Great Southern Land”, ensure the listener’s attention before the softer touch of “The Nineties” allows a moment of reflection.

Given the stigma that can so often come from an actor trying their hand at music, it’s a testament to Hudson’s commitment that she packaged Glorious and set it out for all the world to listen.  And whilst her bubbly, inviting persona may suggest a fluffier approach to pop music at its most basic, the emotionality and maturity of both her vocal tone and the production is sure to silence any naysayers that assume this venture is void of credibility”.

Turning two in May, I wonder if Kate Hudson has plans for a sequel to Glorious. She is a wonderful singer and artist who I would love to hear more albums from. I would love to see her perform live too. She may well be tempted to record more music after appearing in Song Sung Blue last year, where she starred alongside Hugh Jackman as the Neil Diamond tribute band, Lightning & Thunder. The role has won her a BAFTA nomination for Lead Actress. On 22nd February, we will see if she walks away with the award. Looking ahead, I do hope that she find time between film projects to record another album, as Glorious is a superb debut album. One that I get something new every time…

I pass through it.

FEATURE: The Digital Mixtape: Songs Produced by the Great George Martin

FEATURE:

 

 

The Digital Mixtape

IN THIS PHOTO: George Martin/PHOTO CREDIT: Popperfoto/Getty Images

 

Songs Produced by the Great George Martin

__________

IT is worth revisiting…

IN THIS PHOTO: The Beatles in 1967

George Martin ten years after his death. We lost him on 9th March at the age of ninety. Many people define him with The Beatles and no other artists, though he dd produce for others. However, the importance of his role in The Beatles’ music cannot be overstated. He helped define popular music. His input as a musician and producer not only help shape and transform their songs. He was very much part of the group. I don’t think The Beatles could have existed and got to where they did without George Martin. In 2028, we will get Sam Mendes’s films about The Beatles. Harry Lloyd will play George Martin. It will be fascinating to see how much screen time he gets and how they portray Martin. He is one of the greatest producers of all time. I want to move to the BBC’s obituary from 2016:

His career spanned six decades; in that time he produced more than 700 records, wrote film scores and worked with music's greatest talents.

His technical knowledge and love of experimentation saw him produce incredible sounds from equipment that modern musicians would consider primitive.

His greatest success came with the Beatles; from the loveable mop-top recordings of the early 1960s to the acid-drenched psychedelia of Sergeant Pepper.

George Henry Martin was born on 3 January 1926 into a working-class family in north London. His parents, a carpenter and a cleaner, wanted "a safe civil servant's job" for their son.

Four Liverpudlians

He won a scholarship to St Ignatius' College in Stamford Hill, but when war broke out his parents moved out of London and he went to Bromley Grammar School.

His passion for music really began when The London Symphony Orchestra, under Sir Adrian Boult, arrived to play a concert in the school hall.

"It was absolutely magical. Hearing such glorious sounds, I found it difficult to connect them with 90 men and women blowing into brass and wooden instruments or scraping away at strings with horsehair bows. I could not believe my ears."

He harboured secret ambitions to be a composer but, in the event, took a job as a quantity surveyor before joining the Fleet Air Arm in 1943 where he qualified as a pilot.

By 1947 Martin was playing the oboe professionally and had been accepted to study at the Guildhall School of Music, despite being unable to read or write a note.

After graduation he spent a brief spell at the BBC's classical music department before walking through the doors of EMI in Abbey Road as a record producer. He took to the mixing desk like "a duck to water".

Five years later, at the age of 29, as head of the Parlophone label, he worked with artists such as Shirley Bassey, Matt Monro and the jazz bands of Johnny Dankworth and Humphrey Lyttelton.

Martin also produced catchy, comic numbers, and enjoyed such successes as Right Said Fred with Bernard Cribbins and Goodness Gracious Me with Peter Sellers and Sophia Loren.

In 1962, Brian Epstein introduced him to four Liverpudlians. They had been rejected by every major record label in the country and Martin himself was more impressed by their strong personalities and natural wit than by their music.

"They were raucous," he later remembered. "Not very in tune. They weren't very good."

Nevertheless, he signed the Beatles and Love Me Do became their first hit later in 1962. Thus began the most successful recording studio partnership of all time.

Learning curve

For the next eight years, Martin guided the Fab Four from the frothy pop sound of I Want To Hold Your Hand to the ambitious experimentation of Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band and Abbey Road.

It was a steep learning curve for both producer and musicians. Martin had very little experience of pop music and the band had no idea how a recording studio worked.

Martin's main talent lay in his ability to translate the adventurous ideas of Lennon and McCartney into practical recording terms.

While McCartney could express his requirements, Lennon was often more vague. If he was searching for what he called "an orange sound", it became Martin's task to find it.

But it all worked. In a 1975 interview with the BBC's Old Grey Whistle Test, John Lennon said that it was a true partnership.

"Some people say George Martin did all of it, some say The Beatles did everything. It was neither one. We did a lot of learning together."

Martin's classical training became ever more valuable as the Beatles continued to push the boundaries of their music. He wrote and conducted the strings on Eleanor Rigby and the eclectic backing to I Am The Walrus.

All this was being achieved on what would now be considered basic recording equipment, which would be pushed to the limit for the recording of the Sgt Pepper album.

At the time, EMI had only four-track tape machines so Martin, and his engineers, devised a technique whereby a number of tracks were recorded and then mixed down on to one single track, giving the flexibility of a modern multi-tracked studio.

He also made much use of recording different tracks at various tape speeds to change the texture of the final sound, a technique used to good effect on Lucy in the Sky.

The harmony between band and producer suffered one of its rare hiccups when George Martin was temporarily unavailable and McCartney brought in another producer to arrange the strings on She's Leaving Home.

By the time The White Album came to be recorded, Martin was working with a number of different artists and The Beatles produced many of the tracks themselves.

Following the 1970 break-up of The Beatles, Martin worked with artists such as Sting, Jose Carreras, Celine Dion and Stan Getz, as well as Lennon and McCartney on their solo projects.

By then he had set up his own company, AIR studios, which enabled him, for the very first time, to be able to receive royalties for his work.

In the late 1970s, Martin built a studio on the Caribbean island of Montserrat, and artists including Dire Straits and The Rolling Stones travelled there to record albums under Martin's respected guidance.

When Hurricane Hugo devastated both island and studio in 1989, Martin produced a benefit album to help raise funds for the victims.

Martin received a knighthood in 1996, and a year later, Elton John asked him to produce the reworking of his song Candle in the Wind for the funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales.

He persuaded the singer just to sit down in the studio and record it exactly as he had played it in Westminster Abbey. The resulting single was Martin's 30th number one record, the highest of any musical producer.

He retired two years later after producing what he decreed would be his final album, In My Life, a collection of Beatles songs, rearranged and recorded by a collection of singers, film actors and musicians.

However, he was not able to completely relax. In 2002 he was part of the team which put together the Jubilee concert at Buckingham Palace and in 2006 he supervised the remixing of 80 Beatles tracks for use by Cirque de Soleil in a Las Vegas stage show called Love.

In his career, George Martin worked with some of the best-known names in popular music - ranging from Jeff Beck, through Ultravox to the Mahavishnu Orchestra.

But his enduring legacy will be his work with The Beatles whose timeless sounds, as acknowledged by the band members themselves, owe much to his input as a musician, arranger and producer”.

It is the instinct and imagination of George Martin that very much added something exceptional to The Beatles’ music. Even though he lived a long and full life, his absence is very much felt. He was this genius that did so much to get The Beatles to where they ended. In terms of the band’s legacy and brilliance, you have to salute George Martin and his production talent. The likes of which we will…

NEVER see again.

FEATURE: Sweepin’ the Clouds Away: The Continuing Brilliance of Sesame Street and Its History of Music Guests

FEATURE:

 

 

Sweepin’ the Clouds Away

 IN THIS PHOTO: Sabrina Carpenter is one of the most recent music guests who has visited Sesame Street/PHOTO CREDIT: Disney+

The Continuing Brilliance of Sesame Street and Its History of Music Guests

__________

ONE of the most joyous…

IN THIS PHOTO: SZA appeared on Sesame Street in 2025/PHOTO CREDIT: Sesame Workshop

and important T.V. series ever has new episodes out. Sesame Street first aired in 1969. It is amazing to think that it has been running that long (you can watch episodes here). Most of us know about it, though I feel like it is so relevant today. Whilst you may feel it is not cutting-edge or socially aware because of the premise and how it is aimed mostly at children, it is a show that has always been socially aware. Maybe it is more directed at adults than imagine. I think the fact that it does exclude or punch down in terms of how it addresses the audience. It is not infantilising or restricted to children, nor is it too inaccessible to children. Before getting to music and discussing why this is such a great series when it comes to showcasing artists in a different light, I want to come to this Forbes feature from 2021 regarding the 2021 documentary, Street Gang: How We Got to Sesame Street:

Street Gang: How We Got to Sesame Street offers a nostalgic gaze into the minds of the visionaries who created the influential show, while also delving into never-before-seen archival footage and touching interviews with the cast, writers and crew. Directed by Marilyn Agrelo (Mad Hot Ballroom) and based on Michael Davis’ 2008 book, Street Gang: The Complete History of Sesame Street, the documentary includes a thorough look at the show’s goals: to educate children in underserved, lower-income communities with a diverse cast and to address real-life, contemporary problems, from the 1960s onward.

Joan Ganz Cooney, the first executive director of the Children’s Television Workshop, and Sesame Street co-founder Lloyd Morrisett, were deeply inspired by the civil rights movement. After Ganz Cooney noticed the educational gap in lower-income schools, she felt compelled to create a show that would speak to children everywhere. Another aim was to create educational programming in an experimental and creative format that didn’t seek to advertise to its young viewers. Federal funding made that possible, and Ganz Cooney’s vision drew in masterminds, including children’s television writer, director and producer Jon Stone and Muppets creator Jim Henson. The show consulted educators and psychologists on how to approach sensitive topics with children, without ever talking down to it’s young audience or underestimating their intelligence.

I spoke with Marilyn Agrelo about the film’s timeliness, how she because involved in the project and how quarantine has helped her to thrive in her creative work.

Risa Sarachan: How did you get involved with this project?

Marilyn Agrelo: I was lucky enough to be asked to direct a segment on Sesame Street about five years ago. It was a music video with Ernie and it was fantastic. At the end of the shoot, I posted a picture of Ernie and me on Facebook. Trevor Crafts, who had optioned the book and who I've known for twenty years, saw me on Facebook and he said, “Oh my God, Marilyn, I think she’d perfect to be the director of this documentary.” It was one of those crazy, amazing things. And so he called me, and we started talking, and that was the beginning of the partnership.

Sarachan: So many times I want to turn on social media, but then you hear stories like that, and you're like, okay, well, maybe it does bring some good into the world.

Agrelo: Trevor and I always joke that well, Facebook was at least good for one thing.

Sarachan: What did you want to make sure you kept from Michael Davis’ book while you were creating the film?

Agrelo: First of all, I was not aware of the political roots of Sesame Street and the fact that it really did come out of the civil rights movement. For me, that was the most amazing part of it.

I also love that Michael told the story from a very adult point of view, and I wanted to do that. I wanted to make a movie that was for adults, about adults, and capture the real struggle. They had all these ups and downs and setbacks in the beginning. What I do not want to do is make a love letter with a lot of clips of Sesame Street that you can get from YouTube. I wanted to go behind the curtain a little bit, and I think Michael's book introduced that idea to me.

Sarachan: That makes a lot of sense to me. The clips bring you to that nostalgic place, but I also had some revelations watching this. It explored ideas behind the show that I’d never thought about before.

Agrelo: That was really the hope. As in my first documentary, Mad Hot Ballroom, yes, it’s about kids in a dance competition, but it's really about all these other things, you know? And [with] this movie, yes, it's about Sesame Street, but it's really about this band of idealists and activists who wanted to make a difference in the world. Looking at it and telling the story from that lens, I think it tells a little bit of a different story than solely a story of Sesame Street.

The fact that they wrote it with such sophisticated humor and social commentary, they were writing for adults - which is just fantastic. The final thing about this film that I really wanted to bring out was the fact that Jon Stone is someone who nobody has heard of really. People will always assume - oh yes, Jim Henson started Sesame Street, and in fact, the genius of Jon Stone has been overlooked for 50 years. So, it was really important for me to, first of all, learn about him and then tell his story.

Sarachan: Yeah, it was really this whole team of people who were responsible for the show’s success. You can tell it wouldn't have been what it was without every single member of that team.

Agrelo: [That’s] exactly right. Joan Ganz Cooney, who, you know, there were no women executives in the television - there were no women put in a position to be in charge of such an experimental project. It was her vision of her leadership. Her ego didn't get in the way. She allowed people to express themselves and to be [their] crazy creative selves in a way that let everybody shine.

Sarachan: What do you think it is about Sesame Street that lingers with so many of us into adulthood?

Agrelo: I think it's this daring creativity. I think Sesame Street became, for all of us, a place where we wish we could be. I think all kids, even kids who had never seen a New York City stoop [and] didn't even know what that was, found this place where everyone was accepted, everyone was unified. Most kids, I'm guessing in the sixties, didn’t live in such an integrated neighborhood, and they saw that. No one talked about it, they just showed it. And I think it made everybody yearn for something. Then, of course, who doesn't want to live on a street where a giant bird is walking around? There's always that too. But I think it presented this ideal world in a way without being a fairy tale. It presented an ideal world but in a very real setting. It was so unique. I think it just gave kids a place to yearn to be.

Sarachan: What future programming do you think was influenced by the revolutionary work that Sesame Street created?

Agrelo: I think all of [the shows] since Sesame Street have taken notes. They've all tried to be like Sesame Street. They've all taken little bits of it and tried to incorporate it because there's no doubt that this was spectacularly successful. What Sesame Street did that no one else did and few people have done since is really bring in this level of educational expertise and really work with educators, psychologists, all kinds of people in our society who are advising.

I know that right now, they’re integrating stories of protests. They're integrating stories about homelessness. They're integrating stories about racial harmony. They’re mirroring the world and I think this is something that they were the first to do certainly and really raised the bar for everyone that has come since.

Sarachan: I haven’t watched Sesame Street in so many years. I’m happy to hear they are addressing the pandemic and the Black Lives Matter movement.

Agrelo: Exactly, because kids see all of this, and they have a lot of questions. It's the most serious time, I think, for kids to be exposed to the world. Much more so than when we were kids. So, I do think they have introduced something amazing into children's programming. The people at Sesame Street were frustrated because they could never really gauge their success. And the reason they couldn’t gauge it is that there was never a control group that they could compare with kids that were watching Sesame Street and kids that weren't. They could never find kids that weren't watching. They knew that they did raise the level of inner-city underprivileged children of color, but they also raised up the white children. It was quite amazing. I think it was far exceeded their expectation in every way.

Sarachan: I was reading about how many different countries play Sesame Street! It’s so impressive.

Agrelo: I know! It's in many different languages. Sesame Street also has programs in war zones. They are bringing muppets into Syrian refugee camps because they have found that this is very healing for little kids who are in crisis. So, they are doing so many things out there in the world that we're not even aware of.

Sarachan: How have you been able to access creativity during the pandemic?

Agrelo: I live in New York City. In New York, the impulse is always to go out: you go out to dinner, you meet friends for drinks, everything is out, and it has been very interesting to be so cut off. Luckily, in the course of making this film, we had shot everything before the pandemic hit, but it has very much forced me to observe. I've been watching a lot of stuff. It's fed my soul in a funny way because it's given me an excuse not to always be doing but to sit back and just watch. I think that is important for someone who is a storyteller or aspires to be an artist or to make things that people are going to see. You need to get back from the world a little bit. I think that's done a similar thing for many people that work in storytelling and filmmaking.

Sarachan: When you talk about sitting back and observing during this time - what has been feeding your soul creatively during this time? What books have you’ve been reading or films have you been watching?

Agrelo: I've been reading a lot, actually. They just finished a book called American Dirt, which is about this family coming across the border into this country. I really want to do a story in some way about the process of a child entering the United States. I'm an immigrant. I was born in Cuba. I've been watching everything that's happening this past year about acceptance. I'm very much thinking along those lines.

I feel almost like we're in the same moment that we were in 1969 when Sesame Street came on the air. You know, with the Black Lives Matter movement or with all of these things - everyone's consciousness being raised again. It seems a perfect moment really to bring this film out and to bring stories like this out into the world”.

IN THIS PHOTO: Miley Cyrus appeared in Sesame Street’s fifty-fifth season in 2025/PHOTO CREDIT: Sesame Workshop

I wanted to highlight that interview, as we can feel the history and influence of Sesame Street. What I especially like about Sesame Street is that they bring in big names and interact with them. Through the years, everyone from R.E.M. to Paul Simon to Katy Perry have stepped into Sesame Street. I do think that we often see artists in a particular way, as the promotional circuit and social media casts them that way. I think a show like Sesame Street allows these well-known artists to cut loose and be off guard. They can inhabit this fast and different world and we see different sides to then. Sabrina Carpenter is one of the most recent musical guests. Before coming to more about music guests and Sesame Street today, The Guardian wrote about why 2026’s Sesame Street must-watch T.V. Some huge names dropping by for a chat:

That’s why we love them. Do we not, too, know ourselves to be odd, hapless psychological caricatures? Do our plans not also lead to flaming wreckage? Do we not long to put on a vaudeville-style variety show in a classic theatre?

Which brings us to the 2026 Muppet Show (Disney+, from Wednesday 4 February), with executive producer Seth Rogen on board. It’s a one-off, but could lead to a whole new series, the trailer reveals, “depending on how tonight goes”. Happily, it hasn’t been updated so Fozzie is doing bits on TikTok, or Rowlf protesting about streaming royalties. The guys are still trying to put on that variety show, and it’s still all going wrong.

Something I love about these geniuses made of rod and felt is their lack of false modesty. They know we love them. Every famous person in the world would kill to be on the Muppets (though what a horrific negotiation). They turn this popularity to farce: producer Kermit replies to every act who expresses interest in appearing, “That sounds like fun!” It’s a polite way of saying no, he confides to stage manager Scooter. “That’s very indirect,” responds Scooter, with misgivings.

Naturally, the overstuffed running order runs into crisis, with cuts needing to be made, a disaster for any fragile egos in the vicinity. At least guest star Sabrina Carpenter is unflappable. Like Rogen, the former Disney channel child is a perfect fit. She gets in a saucy joke with a straight face, doesn’t upstage the real stars and proves herself game. Or fowl, given her musical number backed up by a bunch of hens.

A highlight is when Carpenter meets Miss Piggy, gushing how she has always loved her, and even copied her look. “My attorneys have taken note,” Piggy replies primly. The porcine diva is energetic throughout, trotting backstage to announce to anyone present that she is “on vocal rest”. Protecting her place in the running order, she undertakes a water-based romantic rescue mission, which culminates in a bisexual rug-pull moment. She’s doing a lot.

Even the show within the show is good. Expect toe-tapping needle drops old and new. Skits include period-drama parody Pigs in Wigs, and a science segment about screen time, which ends with Beaker losing his eyes. Unlike Sesame Street, where the Muppets also appear, there is no educational agenda. The agenda is electric mayhem.

The Muppets have always been subversive. I thrill to the meta winks, comic timing, the sheer weirdness of this world. There’s a throwaway bit in which audience member Maya Rudolph dies and apparently goes to hell; it’s one of the sweetest things I’ve seen. Given that young people love choreographed K-pop and makeup tutorials, I wonder if nostalgic parents are now the primary audience. The kids may be just an alibi for them to watch.

The show’s resident theatre critics, Statler and Waldorf, remain unmoved by the Muppets. (The fact they live in a box, and have never missed a show, suggest a resentful dependence.) They are my spiritual teachers, yet here we must part company. This show isn’t half bad; it’s all great. In 30 minutes, I laughed more than I can count. In the end, it doesn’t matter why we love the Muppets. Joy needn’t be dissected, like a frog on the table. It’s meant to be felt”.

One of the greatest legacies Sesame Street has is its musical guests. There have been some classics through the years. Paul Simon is one of my favourite. Last year, they welcomed in great modern artists like Reneé Rapp. There must be this wish-list of artists who they’d like to book. I think that ROSALÍA ad Chappell Roan would be specially great. Last year, ABC News explained why the long history of musical guests on Sesame Street continues:

The music of Sesame Street lives rent free in many of our brains.

Songs like The People in Your Neighbourhood, Rubber Ducky, and C Is For Cookie introduced us to the soothing, educational and celebratory powers of music. They delivered little shots of pure joy into our lives. They helped raise us, and continue to comfort and delight the young people we cherish today.

These days, children around the world rinse all manner of kids songs of varying qualities ad nauseam, but there's a sophistication to the work from history's most famous kids show that has set it apart since it first aired in 1969.

"When you have a child who's singing one of your songs and doesn't even know that it's a learning thing at the same time, that is really the ultimate thing," says Bill Sherman, Sesame Street's long-time music director.

"It's not meant to be subliminal by any means, but in the same way we teach the ABCs in classrooms, a song is just another mnemonic way of learning something.

"The great songs on Sesame Street are the ones that do two things: they get stuck in your head because somebody wrote a great song, and whatever that thing is that's in your head is something you're learning.

"If you can do both of those things at the same time, that is a successful Sesame Street song. And a successful learning experience. I think that both are equally as important."

The famous people in your neighbourhood

Sesame Street has perhaps had the best musical guest list of any TV show in history. From Destiny's Child to Dave Grohl, Billy Joel to Diana Ross, Stevie Wonder to Carrie Underwood, Smoky Robinson to Katy Perry, most artists of note have figured out how to get to Sesame Street.

The latest season, which is screening now on ABC Kids, features influential R&B chart topper SZA, folk heart-throb Noah Kahan and the Zeitgeisty Reneé Rapp.

A particular highlight of this year's soundtrack comes from country star Chris Stapleton, whose song You Got A Friend In Music feels like a future Sesame Street classic.

It's a tribute to music's ability to heal, with Stapleton's soulful, gruff-yet-toasty vocal reminding kids (and the rest of us) that there's a song to match every mood.

"Chris Stapleton is one of those people that when he opens his voice, you can't imagine that he could do anything else," Sherman says. "He exudes music. Even when he talks it sounds melodic.

"Another guy who's like that is Ed Sheeran, who's just unbelievably musically oriented.

"It's really an honour to get to work with them, and to co-write a song is one of the great joys and achievements in life."

In his tenure at Sesame Street, Sherman has worked with many of modern music's biggest names, and says there's no one size fits all approach to a successful collaboration on the show.

"[Stapleton] was dead set on writing a song, so he wrote this song and sent it to us. Most of it is what you hear. We have our curriculum goals and our educational goals, and we've got to implement those back into the song.

"Sesame Street's been around for a very long time, and there's a very high level of musicianship and history. Getting songs together is sometimes a difficult task because the level is so high. But with a guy like Chris Stapleton, he comes in with so much that it's just sort of sculpting and moving parts around."

While Sherman is no slouch on the tools — his past credits as a producer, orchestrator and arranger include Broadway smashes like Hamilton, In The Heights and & Juliet — he reckons his key role is directing the creative traffic.

"I think my job in a lot of this is like setting the table, bringing everybody over to have dinner and then, whatever happens at dinner, just trying to guide it to be the best thing.

"It's just putting the right people in the room and making sure that everybody knows the end goal, and then figuring out the most graceful, efficient way to get there.

"And not being a jerk, just being a nice person helps."

It also helps to have an inherent understanding of the magic the artist you're working with possesses.

"I think the best compliment I can get is when we go to shoot it, and they're there and they go, 'Oh my God, this song sounds like it should be on my next record.' That's only happened like two or three times, but that to me is the ultimate compliment."

A song like The Power Of Yet, Sherman's 2014 collab with neo-soul shapeshifter Janelle Monáe, is a strong example of a song that fits with an artist's own creative approach.

"I had just seen her in concert and there was so much James Brown happening," he recalls. "There was so much gut funk, awesome horns and dancing and everything.

"I just wanted to make something where she could do all of that. She could really sing, and then she could really have a full dance break moment and all this stuff.

"She did the vocal and it was awesome, and she was just super into it. As I watched her move and dance, she became like her own Muppet, her own character of Janelle Monáe on Sesame Street. It was such a fun day, and such a great thing to watch and be a part of. She was super into it. She took some liberties on the melody and did all this stuff that really made it hers”.

The great Samara Joy, SZA and Sabrina Carpener just a few of the amazing music guests that Sesame Street has hosted the past year. Miley Cyrus also appeared. It is going to be amazing seeing which musicians appear next. I do feel there is this enduring message of hope and togetherness. Sesame Street not afraid to react to modern events and politics, though it also provides this escape too. Incredible music, a cast of beloved characters. Sesame Street is filmed in New York City, primarily at Kaufman Astoria Studios in Queens. You do get this feeling of being somewhere real, albeit with a slightly glossier edge. Rather than Sesame Street feeling like it is in a studio with an audience, instead, it is like being in a magical part of New York with this great community. Natural and real, maybe the opposite of the chat show studios. I am not a fan of chat shows, as it feels fake, forced and a bit sickly. Audiences that are a bit too over-excited. Sesame Street is infectious and not too cloying or happy. It is full of charm and there is no angle for artists to promote or do anything like that. They can relax into things and be playful. It is a remarkable show that I hope runs for decades more. That combination of major names coming by and the regular cast interacting. The real-world and make-believe together. Not a lot like that exists on T.V. Not in the same way. Sesame Street is this institution and icon of the screen.  I do think that, especially in the U.S., Sesame Street is needed now more than ever. Providing that heart and kindness that is missing from the government. Maybe President Trump would see it as a propaganda channel or something anti-America. However, the fact that this series has been on the air for over fifty-five years and continues to captures the minds and imaginations of new generations is testament to its format, popularity and brilliance. No wonder so many giant artists are appearing on Sesame Street. It is an offer that is…

IMPOSSIBLE to refuse.

FEATURE: Pause: A Film That Explores Memory Loss and Music and the Profound Effect, Both Negative and Positive

FEATURE:

 

 

Pause

IN THIS PHOTO: Florence Pugh in 2025 for Who What Wear/PHOTO CREDIT: Greg Swales

 

A Film That Explores Memory Loss and Music and the Profound Effect, Both Negative and Positive

__________

IN part inspired…

IN THIS PHOTO: Broadcaster and D.J. Laurene is an ambassador for Music for Dementia (a U.K.-based campaign and initiative), advocating for personalised music to be an integral part of dementia care to reduce anxiety and improve quality of life

by Music for Dementia and the important and incredible work they do, it made me think about the subject of music and memory. How there are so many people out there who live with dementia and other debilitating and horrible conditions which means they lose their memory and their identity. So debilitating and challenging, it can be especially tough and harrowing for loved ones. If someone has dementia or Alzheimer’s, they may have ‘good’ days, where they are quite lucid and can remember people around them. However, there are those darker or more regular days when people forget names, people, places and simple things. One of the most upsetting elements is how people can forget their past. Those vital memories of childhood and your young years which can give us strength and escape in a world that is becoming increasingly bleak and helpless. I do not live with these conditions myself, yet my memory is not great. I feel like I am losing grip and sight of memories I should be able to retain. Things from my teenage years – I am forty-two – becoming patchier and  fading somewhat. There will be as time, perhaps not too far away, when everything from my childhood up to the age of thirty or so, might evade memory forever, It is dreadful to realise that, as my parents (who are in their late-sixties/seventies) can recall their childhood and younger years much more clearly than me, It makes charities like Music for Dementia so important for those who actually live with conditions which impact their memory and mind in ways much more intensely and complexly than anything I will go through. I am very fortunate as I only have memory lapses and minor issues.

Lauren Laverne is an amazing D.J. and broadcaster who spearheaded the campaign to give everyone with dementia access to music, encouraging personalised playlist creation. Not only can it help gain access to memories that would otherwise have been lost. It is a way to understand the power of music for people who live with conditions like dementia. How you can access parts of your brain and memory with songs. Those that unlock something that words or conversation cannot. It does get occasionally discussed on the screen, though I am racking my mind to think if there has been a film where someone living with a condition like dementia has been brought to the screen. More specifically, where music is integral. How they are losing their memories and struggling to recall people and events from their life. Music helps them access that and gives them that clear glimpse of the past. There have been films concerning memories and wiping them. I am thinking of Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004). Something like Memento (2000). Both are very different films, yet they concern memory. Films have been made where music is integral. Mixtapes, for example. Though it is a documentary-film concerning real people, 2014’s Alive Inside: A Story of Music and Memory is closest to what I am talking about. a 2014. Directed and produced by Michael Rossato-Bennett, the documentary includes a series of interviews with individuals on neurology, geriatrics, and music. The documentary tells the story of patients and their experience with music and creating personalized playlists for elderly patients with dementia and Alzheimer's disease based on their music preferences. I have been thinking about work like this and how important they are. Conditions like dementia and Alzheimer’s can and possibly will impact most of us in some form through our lives. Illnesses that must be at times impossible to manage and it can be so upsetting for loved ones who have to see someone they care about deteriorate and struggle to recall simple things, the fact is that music can be of huge benefit.

Maybe I will come up with a better and more intelligent title, but I envisage a film called Pause. The title would refer to the pause button on a Discman/Walkman, but also a pause in memory. How there would be this silent and astatic moment of nothing. It also has a third meaning, in the sense of music puts a temporary pause to some of the worst aspects of dementia and similar neurological conditions. In this case, it would be a story told through the eyes of a young couple. A young woman living with a condition whereby she struggles to remember. That is why I mentioned films like Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. Its director, Michel Gondry, has inspired my idea. In terms of a lead actor, Florence Pugh instantly sprung to mind. Someone who could handle the emotional heaviness and also mix in lighter and more comedic touches. She may not have a condition like Alzheimer’s, though she is in a position where she is living with an injury or disorder affecting her brain (maybe an injury after a car crash that then led to a neurological disorder). To me, it would be a story where we briefly see how she used to be and where she is now, though the bulk of the film is about the here and now. Maybe set in New York – because most of my film ideas are set there! – in the ‘00s perhaps, the action would flash back to her childhood and teens. Maybe growing up and also memories of the 1990s, when she was with her other half and they were falling for each other. An incredible soundtrack that would feature major artists and also some smaller acts, she is in this horrible situation where she can lead her life but also is struggling to remember. So much of her is gone forever. The film would have an amazing twist ending or revelation based around the narrative and time period. Songs from the current and recent timeline would flash us back. Certain songs would bring up these scenes. However, because her memory is not clear and perfect, the visuals would be influenced by directors such as Michel Gondry and Christopher Nolan (who directed Memento). In terms of the former being quirkier and the latter building these complex and multi-layered films like Tenet and Inception.

Not only would there be unique selling points around the film’s promotion, trailer and soundtrack, the actual film itself would take us inside this relationship – and the couple’s wider world – that tackles the darker days when the lead’s memory is fading and it causes tensions. How they flash back to times of happiness and there are joyous scenes where an incredible song unlocks something wonderful. Michel Gondry has a whimsical, D.I.Y. aesthetic that blends surrealist dream logic with deep human emotion. He prioritizes practical, in-camera effects over CGI—using cardboard, animation, and forced perspective to create handmade, nostalgic worlds. This would influence a lot of the flashbacks and how the music, lyrics and themes in the songs might spill into the scenes and there would be this blend of worlds and timelines. Christopher Nolan uses immersive realism and time-bending storylines. This also would really suit Pause. I don’t think that blend has been used before. However, I am also influenced by directors like Celine Song and Agnès Varda in different ways. In terms of the visuals and style. In terms of Celine Song, 2023’s Past Lives has stayed with me. Maybe blending all this would be chaotic and a bit of a mess. Though, in some ways, that is the point. I feel like there could be enough justification to blend these different directions and visuals elements. However, budget would be a major concern. It would be quite an expensive film, though I think this is s story that needs to be told. It would not be too heavy a watch. There would be plenty of humour, some fantasy and wonderful moments. Of course, there would need to be more serious and draining scenes, as we are dealing with something very serious that requires that respect and examination. I like the idea of there being this split between a '00s/contemporary setting and going back. Though the timelines and realities would be bent and blurred so that we get this amazing twist and final few scenes.

I do feel like music has this transformative power. Bringing that into a film. One scene would essentially be a recreation of Perter Gabriel’s Sledgehammer video. This song that is important for a specific reason, that would then instantly cut to another scene where parts of the video set can be seen and are there but it is in the street (the Michel Gondry influence). This is about the fragmented and slightly unreliable and damaged side of memory and the brain and how visions and memories of the past could not be as cohesive, coherent and focused as they should. It takes me back to Music for Dementia and the work they do. Other charities who use music and playlists as a way for those living with awful conditions to better access memories or use music as a therapeutic tool. I am not sure whether that aspect has been represented through film. As I say, there have been films where music has been instrumental for people with autism or someone being bullied. The 2021 film, Mixtape, is interesting. In 1999, twelve-year-old Beverly discovers a broken mixtape made by her late parents. She sets out to find the songs -- and learn more about her mum and dad. Films like 2014’s Still Alice deal with the impact of Alzheimer's. I have not really seen anything that combines music and its power with something like dementia or Alzheimer's. That is why I want to eventually get Pause made. It would be new and quite timely in a way.  A film with hope at its heart, the mix of these visual and limnetic styles, the time-jumping and bending narrative and powerful central performances, tied to this incredible soundtrack, would make the film a success, I feel. Whilst it might only be a concept or fantasy at the moment, I would really love for this idea to…

BE brought to the screen.

FEATURE: Modern-Day Queens: Deb Grant

FEATURE:

 

 

Modern-Day Queens

 

Deb Grant

__________

ONE of my favourite…

broadcasters and D.J.s, the simply brilliant Deb Grant can be heard on BBC Radio 6. She also writes for the Big Issue. I have written about her before, though not really in as much detail as I should have. I am going to drop in some interviews, as Deb Grant is a champion of new music. Someone who has this deep and passionate love for music and is a staple of the BBC Radio 6 Music schedule. I love the shows she presents and I hope that she is there for many more years. Such a warm, funny, and hugely knowledgeable music fan who has turned me on to so many great new acts, classic albums and some great Jazz artists/albums, she is someone I have huge and boundless respect for. I will end with a recent Big Issue article she wrote concerning this year in music. I am going to start out with some biography from her official website. You can follow and find Deb Grant on Instagram, and Twitter (though she is more active on Instagram):

At the heart of the best DJs craft is a commitment to digging – dusty-fingered dives in dingy basements and obsessively combing through every corner of the bargain bins. Deb Grant’s restless search for the perfect beat enables her to interlace the most mind-blowing tracks to move people physically, emotionally and spiritually. At this point Deb’s breadth of knowledge and arsenal of secret weapons ranks her in the upper echelons of headsy selectors operating out of London, but it’s the vibe she creates in the mix that makes her so effective at bringing a get-down to life.

Whether on air or playing a heavyweight club session, Deb knows what she likes – her palette is broad but focused, with an emphasis on foundational disco, P-funk and soul, and the natural bedfellows of 80s boogie and early rap. The narrative she deftly weaves between those genres is as buttery smooth as the tunes themselves, and she’ll as likely drop a well-timed classic as a private press holy grail when the moment calls for it.

Growing up in Dublin, Deb was buying records from an early age and started DJing when she was just 15. Her career has been a consistent pursuit of exciting opportunities to share her favourite records with a crowd ready to get down. She’s spun at major festivals (Field Day, Green Man, Love Supreme) and sizzling hot club nights in NYC, and been called upon by MGMT and Beth Ditto to play after-parties for people who take their party music very seriously. Beyond her commitment to the club, she’s also a prolific broadcaster on BBC6Music, where she hosts the New Music Fix Daily show with Tom Ravenscroft, hunting down and sharing the freshest new releases every Monday to Thursday evening.

Such an active life in music means Deb is always pushing herself forwards, discovering fresh sounds that fit into her formidable repertoire. It also means her selecting is imperiously tuned up and tuned in, drawing on a life immersed in digging culture to deliver unforgettable experiences where heart and soul, funk and groove move in perfect harmony across the floor.

Alongside her club and radio work, Deb has been part of the judging committee for the Brit Awards, hosted and compered many industry panels and events and writes a regular music column in the Big Issue”.

The point of this feature series is to spotlight and celebrate amazing women in music. I have written features about and interviewed incredible D.J.s. I think that Deb Grant is one of the best out there. In addition to being this supreme voice on radio. I am excited to see where she heads on BBC Radio 6 Music. As the station turns twenty-five next year, I hope she gets even bigger a role and gets some many great opportunities. I especially love her columns for Big Issue. Always so fascinating and informative. I want to move to an amazing and really deep interview from January last year from Dust and Grooves. It is one where we dig deep into Deb Grant’s vinyl collection. The wax she loves and some of the most treasured albums. We get a great insight into Grant’s music route and background. She is someone that definitely has this love for physical music and the tangibility and purity of vinyl:

As an erstwhile mod, and atheist Irish Jew who grew up in Dublin before being wooed by the bright lights of London, Deb Grant isn’t your average record collector or your average DJ. Her star has risen rapidly over the past few years as the club DJ and vocalist formerly known as Anne Frankenstein (she dropped the moniker post-pandemic when radio became her main artistic outlet) moved from London indie radio station Resonance FM, to be picked up by Jazz FM, and then taken on by BBC 6 Music to host the New Music Fix Daily with Tom Ravenscroft, son of the legendary John Peel.

Deb gravitates towards the unknown, the weird in the vast plains of music out there. For her, the quest towards oddities is fueled by musical authenticity. “Anything that was made by someone who sounds like they have no connections whatsoever to popular music, and very authentically makes the music that’s inside of them with no real thought about how it’s going to land—that’s my absolute favorite thing.”

So how did this sometime folk singer, voice-over artist, and self-confessed lover of “outsider music” come to be one of the most recognizable voices and future light entertainment legend on one of the Beeb’s most popular radio stations? In the following, we’ve managed to find out…

Deb, how do you normally introduce yourself and what you do?

I’m Deb Grant, I’m a DJ, writer and broadcaster and I currently host the New Music Fix show on BBC6 Music.

Firstly, what does vinyl mean to you? Why is it important when listening to music??

I really struggle to listen to music passively. I’m not really into background music. I’m either out, listening to music in my headphones, or I’m sitting down with a record player, picking out a record and listening to it. It’s very rare that I’ll have dinner with a record playing in the background. To me, it’s an active thing.

So, listening to records is part of that. It’s like switching on the TV and watching something, or more like taking a book off the shelf—so having a record library is crucial to that too. In terms of having records to DJ with, I like the idea that I have to curate something out of a limited selection of music. I find the thought of having any possibility open to me when I’m DJing simply dull! In fact, it makes me panic a little bit. I love the concept that there’s only one or two places I can go next. I enjoy that challenge. There’s also, of course, the physicality and tactility of it as well.

In terms of your journey, was it vinyl from the beginning for you?

The records came first. From a really young age I was really into 1960s and ‘70s mod stuff and completely obsessed with that whole era. So listening to vinyl was a part of that. At the age of eleven or twelve, I had my grandad’s old record player set up in my room and borrowed some of my parent’s old records to listen to on it.

Aside from records, I was also making tapes for the car and I always enjoyed forcing people to listen to my selections. So that’s where the idea of DJing came from I guess. I was buying records from all genres and building up my collection. My friends were really into records too, especially the BritPop movement of the time, which was such a throwback to the ‘60s and ‘70s, and that was part of the reason I was so interested in it.

And what about your rarest, or most treasured, esoteric piece of wax?

I think that has to be Drugs Don’t Do It by War On Drugs. A super obscure, self-published, private press record from the US. I picked this up when I was in Baton Rouge. I was in a record store where everything was sealed and there were no listening stations, but this record was playing and I was thinking “what the fuck is this? I need to know what this is!” I was also intrigued by the blurb on the back of the LP that goes into all these details about how drugs are a scourge of US culture. I often play it out and people will ask me what it is without fail. It’s a really gentle Afrobeat track with sort of rapping over the top of it and also lots of airplane noises. It’s got pretty much everything! And no, it’s not that War On Drugs, obviously.

Your work, especially as a radio DJ, is increasingly taking you around the globe. What might be the most random or “out there” purchase you’ve made in a far-flung country?

That could very well be Jazz Dance: Introductory by Mari Tachikawa. It’s a recording of exercise instructions and gentle jazz. It’s basically a woman giving out instructions in this soft voice in Japanese while this mellow jazz plays in the background. I picked it up when I was in Japan (for the first time) a few years ago. Japan is a somewhat overwhelming place for buying vinyl. There are so many records that are from Japan that just look amazing, but there’s no indication of what they are. I made the mistake when I was in Tokyo of picking up a load of random vinyl I thought would sound amazing and then bringing them home and that was simply not the case! But fortunately, this was one record that didn’t disappoint. I think it was in the “Exercise Jazz” section in a little niche record shop, ha!

Radio must also have put you in the same room as your idols in recent years. Is there a record in your collection that connects a particular meeting that stands out in your mind?

I would have to say Solo Piano Volume Two by Cameroonian legend Manu Dibango. I picked it up when I was working at Flashback Records in Shoreditch, East London. I was already a fan and he’s obviously very well known for his funky Afro-jazz material, and I already really loved him for that, but I really gravitate towards solo piano music, so this was a perfect meeting of those two things for me. I put it on the deck (at the shop), listened to it, and was completely blown away. It’s so stunning! He’s not known as a piano player, but he’s such a great pianist and these are such gorgeous simple tunes, put together so beautifully. It’s probably one of my favorite records of all time.

And yes, I had the chance to meet him before he died, and he was like this lovely warm grandad. I said to him, “I love your music so much, but I have this album of yours of piano melodies” and his response was “that’s one of the worst albums I ever made!”

Finally, is there a record collector or DJ you’d like to see be part of Dust & Grooves?

WrongTom. A DJ and dub reggae producer, radio presenter, and journalist. He’s a bit of a dub legend with an amazing record collection and incredible musical knowledge. He’s like a one-man musical encyclopedia! Tom is a dub producer but what he works on goes way outside of that scene from indie to pop to jazz to punk—just the way I like it!”.

Joyzine spoke with Deb Grant last year. Presenting New Music Fix (now with Nathan Shepherd), she is this amazing and committed champion of new and rising artists. Filling floors as a D.J. and inspiring people as a broadcaster, Deb Grant is one of my favourite people. I love everything that she does. I will wrap with her great Big Issue article, where she looks to what this year in music will look like:

Who was your inspiration growing up?

I grew up in Dublin and listened to a pirate station called Spectrum 101, which became Phantom FM. I used to phone up and chat to the DJs, they were kind to me and I couldn’t believe they were so accessible. I also loved John Kelly, who had a show on RTE radio called the Mystery Train, where you’d here everything from Phillip Glass to Patti Smith to contemporary electronica to 1920s calypso. He made it seem possible to find a place to play whatever I wanted on the radio.

How do you prepare for your  ‘New Music Fix’ show?

Constant listening! I get sent so much music and I try to listen to everything. The show is prepped on the day of broadcast so I’ll pick out my favourite tracks in the morning to be played on the show that evening. I usually arrive in the studio an hour before we go live and gossip with Tom before we go on air.

How important is radio when it comes to breaking an act?

Given how much more agency artists have in terms of putting themselves out there these days, radio still seems to be very important. The show just feels like Tom and I casually sharing our favourite music, but often we’ll hear of a band selling out a tour or getting booked for major festivals after we play them on the radio. I think people listen to BBC6 because they trust the DJs to introduce them to their new favourite artists and help them to keep on top of what’s worth listening to – that’s why haven’t been replaced by the algorithm. Yet.

What advice would you give to any budding DJ’s out there?

Just do it as much as you can and have conviction in your own taste, and don’t treat liking music like a competition, it’s not, it’s something that helps people to connect, not a tool for one-upmanship.

Dream festival line up?

Manu DibangoGrace JonesJonathan RichmanBlackhaineDead Kennedys and a goodnight set from Ivor Cutler and Raymond Scott”.

Jumping ahead to last month, and Deb Grant’s article from last month for Big Issue. She discussed things that she is looking forward to. Her writing is so personal, yet it brings readers in. Someone who is perhaps a bit more outsider, esoteric and more original with her music choices and recommendations compared to some – perhaps me included! -, I always get something from reading her columns and listening to her radio shows:

Wordplay Magazine returning to print, for example, is a welcome course correction. Wordplay has always been good at holding jazz, rap and soul in the same conversation without smoothing off any edges. After four years as a purely online enterprise they relaunched at the end of November 2025 with Lord Apex and Emma Jean Thackray on the covers, and will be rolling forward into 2026 as an object that lives on coffee tables, filling homes with that inimitable freshly printed magazine smell.

I’m also looking forward to holding Madra Salach’s debut EP It’s a Hell of an Age (out 23 January) in my hands. A buzz has been gathering around the Dublin six-piece owing to their brilliant live shows and singles blending post-rock and traditional Irish references, particularly the lyrics and delivery of frontman Paul Banks, with a voice reminiscent of Luke Kelly’s forceful tenor. Their debut single “Blue & Gold” attracted much enthusiasm both on air and in print, and the band will be touring the UK in March.

Belgian electronic duo Charlotte Adigéry and Bolis Pupul are rumoured to be releasing a new album, finally following up 2022’s Topical Dancer, a record hailed around the world for its lush, dynamic production and satirical lyrics covering everything from cultural appropriation to sexual awakenings. The record still sounds like nothing else and has had many of us on tenterhooks, nearly four years later, anticipating whatever they’re planning next.

This year also presents a long-awaited opportunity to read Flyboy in the Buttermilk, Greg Tate’s dispatches from the edge of US culture, featuring notes on jazz, hip-hop, politics, fashion, art and African American identity, as it comes back into print in early February. Originally published in 1992, this new edition will feature an introduction by Hanif Abdurraqib and a foreword by Questlove. Tate, who passed away in 2021, wrote extensively for theVillage Voice, Vibe andSpin during the ’80s and ’90s and was known for his humour as much as for his candour. He was posthumously awarded a Pulitzer Prize in 2024.

More reading material arrives in May as Daniel Dylan Wray’s history of independent music in Sheffield, Groovy, Laidback and Nasty, is published by White Rabbit. It promises a sweep of nearly seven decades, more than 150 interviews with some of the architects of the city’s world-renowned music scene, from Cabaret Voltaire and The Human League through Pulp and Arctic Monkeys, Self Esteem and Richard Hawley. I am curious to hear the consensus on what makes the city such fertile ground for such a broad range of sounds.

When I’m finished hibernating, I have a few festivals in my sights, although one of them I am loath to mention as its low key intimacy is a large part of its appeal. Krankenhaus, a festival curated by Sea Power in the stunning grounds of Muncaster Castle on the west edge of the Lake District, was set to take a break this year but the team have fortunately been forced by popular demand into returning at the end of August. I do mean intimate; the tickets are limited to around 2,000 people and the whole event takes place between one small barn, one smaller outdoor stage and various atmospheric, high ceilinged, slightly spooky rooms within the castle itself.

Sea Power will play, although no one else has been confirmed for the line-up yet. Last year featured Stewart Lee, Arab Strap, Throwing Muses and Jane Weaver along with the annual dog show, curated walks and falconry. It was the highlight of my summer.

This year I’m also determined to finally attend We Out Here festival in Dorset, Gilles Peterson’s four-day gathering celebrating jazz, soul, hip-hop, house and all the liminal spaces in between. Stereolab, Yazmin Lacey, Mulatu Astatke and Arthur Verocai are already confirmed for 2026, but the music is almost beside the point; everyone I know who has attended mentions the energy as being unlike any other festival, a sort of lucid dream where you discover your new favourite band while also making new friends for life. I’m hoping it meets my expectations. Regardless, it’s something else to look forward to”.

Go and listen to Deb Grant, read her work in Big Issue and…I almost recommended you go read her book, without realising there is not one out there! I feel there is a music book in her, though I am not sure what it would concern! There is no doubt she is one of the world’s best broadcasters and D.J.s. When it comes to her commitment to new music, her eclectic range of favourite artists, her passion for vinyl and how completely engrossed she is in music, there are few out there as impressive and dedication. Such a magnetic and compelling voice, Deb Grant is someone that is…

ALWAYS fascinating to listen to.

FEATURE: I Had a Dream She Took My Hand: Jameela Jamil, Producer

FEATURE:

 

 

I Had a Dream She Took My Hand

IN THIS PHOTO: Jameela Jamil/PHOTO CREDIT: David Dee Delgado/Getty Images for The New York Times 

 

Jameela Jamil, Producer

__________

I am a big fan of Jameela Jamil

IN THIS PHOTO: James Blake/PHOTO CREDIT: Harrison & Adair

and have been for many years now. I think that my first experience of her was her presenting music shows back in the day. Jamil became the first woman to present The Official Chart show on BBC Radio 1. As the actor, podcaster, activist and broadcaster turns forty on 25th February, she will enter a new decade where one thing about her career is not discussed or given importance. Before that, it is worth mentioning all the great things she does. I have written about her before, though there is a lot to bring in since then. I would urge people to check out Wrong Turns with Jameela Jamil, which is the successor to the I Weigh podcast. She is a terrific actor, though I feel she is worthy of more than she has been offered. I can see her fronting a long-running U.S. sitcom (She was in The Good Place, but more as a supporting role) or even helming a major film. She has appeared both on film and T.V. A phenomenal comedic actor but someone who can also perform these dramatic roles, you do feel like there are so many projects where she could be at the centre of. I also wonder whether we will see any new documentaries or music-based projects. As this incredible activist and feminist, there is so much to tackle today in terms of how women’s rights are evaporated and they are exposed to even more misogyny, abuse and harm through politics, the streets, online and the wider world. She attended the Hay Festival last year, and I know that there will be a lot from her this year. Not to force projects on her or trying to manifest things, though I feel Jamil is overdue huge roles and some incredible projects! Maybe she will direct, or there will be documentaries from her. Or maybe she doesn’t need my suggestions and she will do her own thing! It all comes from a place of huge respect and admiration.

However, one of the (many) things that is seldom mentioned when we think of Jameela Jamil is her role as a producer. I think we live at a time when female producers are not as respected as they should be. Massive inequality and lack of visibility in professional studios. Whilst many female artists produce their own works, statistic around the industry and how women are held back is shocking. Think about the recent GRAMMY nominations, and there is still inequality there. It is the same with film and how few women are nominated in technical categories and how few female directors are included at the Academy Awards, BAFTAs and other events:

Although last year’s study documented a significant change for women, the latest study finds little forward progress made by the music industry in 2024. Women comprised 37.7% of artists across the Billboard Hot 100 Year-End Chart last year, which is only slightly higher than in 2023 (35%) — though it represents a significant improvement from 2012 (22.7%). There were no duos or bands with women in 2024. Additionally, more than a third (38.9%) of individual artists were women, compared to 40.6% in 2023 and 35.8% in 2012.

“Women artists in 2024 saw little change,” Smith said. “In fact, it is the number of men that has declined while the number of women in 2024 was consistent with prior years. This suggests that it is fluctuations in the number of men, not gains for women, that is driving these findings. For those interested in seeing change in the music industry, this is not a sign of progress.”

Behind the scenes, there was also little movement for women. The percentage of women songwriters in 2024 was 18.9%, similar to the percentage in 2023 (19.5%) and significantly higher than the 11% in 2012. Just over half (54%) of songs in 2024 featured at least one woman songwriter, on par with 2023 and significantly higher than 2012. Additionally, women of color were largely responsible for the gains seen in 2023, but not in 2024: Last year, the number of women of color working as songwriters dipped while white women increased.

“The music industry is a mirror to the film industry — there is a lot of fanfare about supporting women, but little actual change among the most popular songs,” Smith said. “While there may be movement in the independent space, the songs and charts evaluated represent the agenda-setting music that has the greatest opportunity to launch and grow a career. Until the people in the executive ranks and A&R roles take seriously the lack of women in the industry, we will continue to see little change.”

The amount of women popular music producers also saw no significant increase in 2024. A total of 5.9% of producing credits were held by women, compared to 6.5% in 2023 and 2.4% in 2012. Of the 14 women producers in 2024, only two were women of color. Across all 13 years, 93.3% of songs were made without women producers”.

This does take me to James Blake. Rather than, as a lot of articles do, refer to her as Blake’s ‘girlfriend’ – which is technically true -, I think she is often seen as a muse or inspiration, rather than an integral part of his career and music. It is the same for so many other women. Not only in terms of how they affect the songwriting. I mean the production side. It is not a case of Jameela Jamil suggesting things and lobbing in the odd note here and there. She is a fully-fledged and exceptional producer. I do wonder whether she will produced for other artists, though she had a big role to play in James Blake’s forthcoming album, Trying Times. That is out on 13th March. You can pre-order it here. There is still this misogyny around women who are part of a musical couple. Those who are in relationships with artists. The assumption they can be little more than lyrical inspiration or the ghastly ‘muse’ word! I have heard interviews recently where James Blake discussed the album – one on BBC Radio 6 Music was especially interesting - and he talked about Jameela Jamil and how she helped shape the album. As a producer, listening to these songs and being very honest. That they could be x% better or bolder. Technical notes and really improving everything. In terms of the release date, sound and feel of the album, all the credit will be given to James Blake. He wrote the songs and sings them, yet I feel like a producer such as Jamil will not be given credit – or even talked about! I am aware I am one of the only journalists in the world who will write about her brilliance as a producer. This is not the first album where Jameela Jamil has acted as a producer. For 2021’s Friends That Break Your Heart, as this article explains, there was a lot of condescension and misogyny around those credits:

Actress, activist, and former DJ Jameela Jamil has responded to sexist and misogynistic comments on Twitter stating James Blake only credited her “to be nice” on his latest album, Friends That Break Your Heart. Jamil is credited on 12 of the tracks.

“A lot of mostly women insisting I couldn’t possibly have actually worked on my boyfriend’s music, and that he must have just credited me to be nice,” Jamil tweeted on October 8th. “I was a DJ for 8 years, and studied music for 6 years before that. You are part of the problem of why women don’t pursue producing.”

Jamil has been dating Blake since 2015. She said the renowned artist had to fight her to take credit on his 5th studio album, which has been critically acclaimed. “I was so preemptively sick of the internet,” she said.

But this isn’t the first time The Good Place star has been the victim of sexism and misogyny.

The music industry is flooded with these seemingly endless comments and ideologies, pushing women to not get into music production or take credit for the exprbitant amounts of time and energy they put into a project. We are, however, beginning to see changes, but not fast enough.

“I hope you’re taking credit for your work wherever you are in the world right now,” Jamil wrote in an Instagram post. “I hope you know that if you’re not being believed over your achievements… that it’s not a reflection of you… it’s a reflection of people who are so underachieving, cowardly and insecure that they can’t fathom that you could be impressive. It happens at every level in every industry. Even to me. Even when I don’t credit myself, my boyfriend just quietly credited me. We are in this shit together. Representation matters. It is not our responsibility to be believed, liked, understood or approved of”.

Jameela Jamil has produced on James Blake after that. The most recent being on Playing Robots into Heaven of 2023. I don’t think that she was given respect or any sort of acknowledgement for that. People still feeling she was being credited our of nepotism or that her boyfriend recorded the material. As we have heard in new interviews, Jamil was a huge part of Trying Times. Her experience as a D.J. and someone with this extensive musical and technical knowledge, she has been in the industry for a very long time. If people think it is all James Blake producing and guiding the music, the album that comes out on 13th March would not be the same without Jamela Jamil. The songs would not be as strong and impactful. Essentially, it would not be as good as it should be - or ready. With there still being so much misogyny around women in production and the industry not doing enough to address imbalance and discrimination, I do feel like women like Jameela Jamil need to be addressed and seen as great producers, rather than muses, girlfriends, or someone given a credit because the artist is being nice. The songs I have included above are ones Jamil has produced on. Showing her instincts, skills and knowledge, they would be lesser tracks without her. I am interested to see the credits for Trying Times, as I feel she is more involved in James Blake’s music and production than ever. Even though she is based in the U.S. these days, I hope that Jameela Jamil spends some time back in the U.K. soon. I am a member of The Trouble Club, and she would be an amazing guest. I hope that happens one day. That is a slight detour. I wanted to publish this feature because there was so much misogyny around her production work in 2021 for Friends That Break Your Heart. When Trying Times is released, will there be retrospective apology and respect for someone whose contribution and brilliance on James Blake’s recent albums is a reason why they are so acclaimed and memorable?! Even if they are in a relationship, there is this professional one – albeit, one with more affection and a different nature of trust – that is separate. In terms of women being credited and respected as producers, we are still in the Dark Ages. I hope that things shift in the industry! I am a fan of James Blake and love his music. He is a wonderful singer, songwriter and producer. However, I feel that his album are as strong and enduring…

BECAUSE of Jameela Jamil.

FEATURE: Top of the City: Why Kate Bush Is Overdue New Award Recognition

FEATURE:

 

 

Top of the City

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in 1981/PHOTO CREDIT: Clive Arrowsmith

 

Why Kate Bush Is Overdue New Award Recognition

__________

I have brought this up…

IN THIS PHOTO: GRAMMY-winning, BRIT-nominated Olivia Dean, I feel, is an artist who you feel is influenced by Kate Bush, alongside so many other artists who released year-defining albums in 2025

for other Kate Bush features, but it does seem overdue that she is given an award. I am not suggesting that a spurious award is provided just for the sake of it. I was shocked that she has not been made a Dame yet. Considering King Charles is a fan of her music, why does this honour allude her?! Some suggested Bush was approached and declined but that is just speculation and wild guessing. I see no reason why she would decline being made a Dame. I think, more importantly, there should be a music honour going her way. It is great that the GRAMMY Awards are honouring some incredible people. Brandy being given the Black Music Icon Award is truly deserved. GRAMMY nominations have not evaded Kate Bush, though she has not been honoured with an award. Given her impact in America now and how Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) has dominated and reached so many new people, her endurance and impact remains huge. I do feel like she is one of the most influential artists ever. I also recently wrote how so many of the best albums of 2025 were graced with Kate Bush’s D.N.A. and influence. Artists who have alluded to her and are inspired by Bush. It does seem like this will continue. The endless importance of Kate Bush. Whilst there is time to honour Kate Bush, I think this year is important. The GRAMMY Awards and BRIT Awards made their selections, and Kate Bush was not included. That is fine and fair. However, I have been looking at albums from last year. Those where you can feel Kate Bush’s influence. How she continues to affect and infuse the music world, even if she herself has not put out an album in nearly fifteen years. I am not suggesting we force her into the public and put her on the stage. The last time she was on a stage collecting an award was back in 2014. Bush won the Editor's Award at the Evening Standard Theatre Awards; and was subsequently nominated for two Q Awards in 2014: Best Act in the World Today and Best Live Act. Those honours were for her residency, Before the Dawn.

I think that is the most recent time she won an award. Bush was entered into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2023 but did not attend the ceremony. You do feel like she is overdue, considering everything that has happened over the past few years. How we view her now. Almost like she is entering a new chapter of her career. The Music Week Awards 2026 takes place in May. The YN Rolling Stone Awards took place last November, so throw ahead to this coming November, would that be a moment where Kate Bush is celebrated? That month marks fifteen years since her latest album, 50 Words for Snow, was released. There would be no guarantee that she would attend to pick up an award, though she is not averse to awards and being spotlighted. I do think, if it was an Icon award or a celebration of her career with this achievement or recognition prize then she would attend. I think Rolling Stone will be back at London’s Roundhouse this year. A terrific venue to bring Kate Bush to. Of course, this is just a fantasy. You cannot force people to give awards or make these big decisions. However, we need to think about how she really inspired so many artists. Not just this legacy artist who affected a certain generation, you can clearly see that she is as important to Gen Z and Generation Alpha as she is to people older. It is a bit scandalous that there has been very little in the way of award wins the past decade or so. There would be so much curiosity from people just seeing Kate Bush in the flesh. Maybe that pressure would be too much, though I am not sure whether that would be a concern if she were awarded. More than anything, it is this recognition I feel she deserves. How she continues to innovate and break ground nearly fifty years since her debut album was released. One of the most enduring and important artists ever.

I feel this year is the right time to award Kate Bush. I know that Bush will release another album at some point. When that album is released, I guess that there could be award nominations for that. Not that awards are the most important thing ort matter hugely. They do acknowledge the excellence of artists, songs and albums. As I see new artists turn up for the GRAMMYs and BRITs, you sort of feel like there is a lot that many owe to Kate Bush. You can feel her impact now among so many of those highly lauded artists. They are all deserving of their nominations. However, Kate Bush reached number one in 2022 with Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God). There was that Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction in 2023. The Little Shrew (Snowflake) video and fundraising for War Child. The second wave of appreciation for Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) last year. So many of the finest and most important albums of last year were released by artists who are fans of Kate Bush. For her constant relevance, charity work and the way in which she is affecting and touching new fans and younger generations, it would be nice to gather musicians legendary and new to show love for Kate Bush. This year marks twenty-five since Bush attended the Q Awards to collect the Classic Songwriter award. In 2020, Bush was made a Fellow of The Ivors Academy. I do think a Legend or Icon award should come her way. I am excited to see what happens this year. Weather Kate Bush will release anything. Maybe not a new album just yet. However, there are other possibilities and avenues. She is always present and you can feel her influence heavily today. Even if she has not been made a Dame and will never be, there is no doubt that she is…

A music queen.

FEATURE: Let Me Blow Ya Mind: Eve's Scorpion at Twenty-Five

FEATURE:

 

 

Let Me Blow Ya Mind

 

Eve's Scorpion at Twenty-Five

__________

THE second studio album…

IN THIS PHOTO: Eve in 2002/PHOTO CREDIT: Interview Magazine

from the incredible Eve, Scorpion turns twenty-five on 6th March. On 5th February, its lead single, Who’s That Girl, turned twenty-five. Many might see that as her defining song. It is definitely one of her best. I want to come to some reviews for Scorpion ahead of its twenty-fifth anniversary. The other single from the album was the Gwen Stefani collaboration, Let Me Blow Ya Mind. Maybe that is my highlight from the album. However, there is so much to explore. I shall come to a feature from Stereogum, where Eve discussed her career highlights – including Let Me Blow Ya Mind. Though her 1999 debut album, Let There Be Eve...Ruff Ryders' First Lady, is incredible and acclaimed, I feel that Scorpion is a more confident album. That is what some critics noted. How it is also more muscular. Perhaps, at sixteen tracks, there are a couple of tracks not as strong as the others. However, twenty-five years after its release, and Scorpion still stands up. I will get to that Stereogum interview first of all:

Moving into your collab with Gwen Stefani -- nowadays, cross-genre collaborations happen all the time in popular music. But when you said, “I want Gwen to sing on ‘Let Me Blow Ya Mind,’" how hard was it to convince your team that it was worth trying?

EVE: I mean, when I did that record, [Gwen] was the first person I thought of. I've always listened to all types of music and I always have felt that good music is good music, no matter what. So I was like, "She would be amazing." But when I mentioned her to some of the people that were in Ruff Ryders, some of the people that helped us put the songs together, A&R, whatever, it definitely was, "Eh, I'm not sure. I'm not sure if that will match. How people are going to feel about it."

Thankfully, Gwen was on my label, so getting her was not the hard part. It was convincing. "Well, let's just record it and if it sucks, it sucks, and we never have to put it out." I think there were equal parts "Hell no, this is not going to work" and "Hey, let's just try it." And thankfully, I mean, I'm pretty much annoying when I want something done, so I did not give up on it and thankfully it all worked out. And then once they heard it, that's when everybody came around, they were like, "Actually you know what? This might work." And thankfully, it did.

Yeah, I can't imagine that there was a ton of precedent at the time. The only thing I can really think of at the moment without doing an internet deep dive is Run-D.M.C. with Aerosmith.

EVE: Yep. Yep, exactly. That's all I think of at first, that's the first thing that popped to my head because I was even thinking just now, what else could it have been? But that is the one collaboration I would say. I'm sure it might be more, but I can't think of any right off the top of my head.

Are there many other aspects to the music industry you came up in the early 2000s that you see as being different today? Aspects that you wish you hadn’t had to contend with at the time?

EVE: I do think some of the things that have come out in the last years, whether it's collaborative, whether it's the way that songs are set up, the way that some artists were able to express themselves. Or whatever... I have had some frustrations, I'm not going to lie. I have heard people talking like, "Damn. That's something I tried to do years ago." And what was the confirmation for me was years ago, about three years ago, an A&R of mine, he called me and actually apologized and said, "You know what? I just want to tell you, I wish I would've listened to some more of your ideas back then, but I just wasn't there and I don't think we were there as an industry." And that was confirmation for me, I'm like, "Fuck, I wasn't crazy." You know what I mean?

Because I've always been the type of person... I mean, I'm like this in my life. I do not believe in limiting boxes, even back then as an artist. Yes, of course I'm a female MC, I do hip-hop, but I listen to every type of music. And like I said before, good music is good music, why can't it be a collaboration? And back then, I definitely got turned down for some of the ideas I had, but ultimately, I cannot complain. My life has been amazing and we're going into the 20-year refresh of this album [Scorpion] that is... It's a celebration. So I can't be upset, everything happens how, and when, it was supposed to. It only leaves it open for me to be able to experiment now the way I want to when I get back to music, so it's all good”.

There are a few interviews I want to get to. Before that, this article from Hot New Hip Hop in 2022 reacted to the Deluxe version of Scorpion, and an interview Eve gave, where she revealed how the album was recorded quite quickly. Also, she shared a story where her hair caught fire while preparing the release of her second studio album:

Ruff Ryders legend Eve released her critically and commercially successful sophomore album Scorpion on March 6, 2001. Scorpion boasted singles like "Let Me Blow Ya Mind" and "Who's That Girl?" and sold approximately 162,000 copies in its first week. The album eventually went platinum and secured Eve a Grammy for Best Rap/Sung Collaboration in 2002, and today, it still remains one of the fan-favorite albums from the former Ruff Ryders femcee.

In honor of the album's 20-year anniversary, Eve has shared a deluxe version of Scorpion, complete with 12 bonus tracks, and talked with HipHopDX to discuss the album's impact and share new insights on the album's creation process.

"It’s very weird. I’m like, ‘Who pushed the speed up button?'" she tells HipHopDX, reflecting on her beloved album's 20-year milestone. "It’s amazing to look back on this because I have to say, I’m really seriously lucky that my songs are still being played in places and that people still want to hear the music and still get excited when they hear the music. So I don’t take that for granted. I really don’t."

Deeper into the interview, Eve reveals that she had a very limited amount of time to create Scorpion. For her follow-up to 1999's Let There Be Eve…Ruff Ryders’ First Lady, HipHopDX reports that she had a mere two months to get the album done. Throughout the mad dash, the "Love Is Blind" artist claims to have accidentally lit her hair on fire, leading to the iconic look seen on the album's cover artwork as well as in her music video for "Let Me Blow Ya Mind."

"That album was so fast to do,” she says, starting the story. "There were a lot of things that happened. For one, we recorded in Miami, so it was the first time I was able to take the budget and go somewhere, get a dope house and all the Ruff Ryders were there, going through the studio”.

I am going to bring in a few reviews of Scorpion before finishing off. In 2021, Pitchfork reviewed this phenomenal album twenty years after its release. It is interesting what a feminist album Scorpion is, yet Eve never really identified herself as one in 2001. Maybe that has changed now. It is such an empowering work from one of the music world’s absolute best. I recall when the album came out and instantly being transfixed by Eve:

On her second album, recently reissued for its 20th anniversary, the lone woman of Ruff Ryders took the reins and made the loudest statement of her career.

Eve’s debut album cover emphasizes her crew’s name and her position in bold type: “Ruff Ryders’ First Lady” looms right above her paw-print chest tattoos. More than just their resident woman, though, she was easily their most versatile member, a hardcore softie adaptable enough to perform beside street cliques like Cash Money or with pop acts like Nelly and Jessica Simpson on a TRL tour. Her range made her marketable, but what Eve really offered for women in rap was proof of dimension. All she wanted for her second album was the freedom to show it.

Though in interviews at the time, Eve danced around calling herself a feminist, Scorpion is one of the most explicit pro-woman declarations in rap. “My goal is to be known as a strong independent woman who stands up for what she believes in, who stands for something other than taking your money or having you pay my bills,” she told XXL in 2001. “I’m Eve, and there’s no man in the world who can ever speak or try and write (for me).” Mass-appeal party records like “Who’s That Girl?” and “Let Me Blow Ya Mind” double and triple as power anthems and kiss-offs that affirm Eve as a multifaceted, enterprising rapper, singer, and pop star with a high emotional IQ. The cover image fittingly blends three shots of Eve: a front-facing, a profile, and a closeup of one eye gazing outward.

Within a few years of her debut, Philly’s self-professed “pitbull in a skirt” had gone double platinum and become only the third female rapper to earn a No. 1 album. She began scoring invites to fashion events like the Chanel boutique opening and invested in stock. She had enough income at then-22 to buy a house for her mom and one for herself: a lavish three-bedroom in New Jersey that was soon occupied by a live-in boyfriend, Steven “Stevie J” Jordan, a member of Bad Boy’s unstoppable Hitmen production squad who’s now better known as a sleazy reality TV player. Eve’s own real-life intersecting conflicts—her work ambitions, love spats, and efforts toward self-sufficiency—exist in equilibrium on the album.

Media celebrated Scorpion as Eve’s declaration of independence; The New York Beacon ran a review under the actual headline “You Go, Girl!” And in fairness, the first half is a total coming-out party amped up by call-and-response records like “Cowboy,” where Eve methodically lists her achievements and lays out future ones. As Swizz Beatz plays hypeman over his typically exuberant production on “Got What You Need,” Eve cautions women to demand more of aspiring ballers, ending her first verse with a shrug: “If he actin’ cheap then, fuck him, you ain’t need that.” Her flow is relentless and newly melodic across the album—she harmonizes and sings most of the hooks, and proves herself more than capable.

The album’s timeless centerpiece, lead single “Who’s That Girl?” starts with a rhythm that evokes Morse Code: nine short horn bleats, the ninth note elongated, then two quick ones, and the cycle repeats before the beat hardens into a vibrant Mardi Gras-style collision of bells and bass, all produced by Teflon. (The deluxe reissue comes with three additional remixes, the best being a dreamy, mellowed-out version by C.L.A.S.) In this one song, Eve raps enough affirmations to adorn a SheEO merch line. The lyrics might sound like empty slogans in a post-girlboss world, but in Eve’s voice, they become smooth mantras. She can fend for herself financially (“Eve want her own cash, fuck what you bought her”), that she has influence (“Power moves is made every day by this thorough bitch”), and the world is her oyster (“Bottom line, my world, my way, any questions?”). In “You Ain’t Gettin’ None,” she entertains lust for a guy while making it clear that the decision to go further is hers. “Should I give in? Ready to open my garage/And let you park in the dark,” she raps, later deciding, “Dinner was lovely, but I really gotta go.”

When Eve brags about writing her own rhymes on “Let Me Blow Ya Mind,” it’s both a boast and a reality check: this is a job, and songwriting earns her royalties. Dr. Dre’s workhorse beat pairs with breezy Scott Storch keys to produce a classic pop-rap earworm. It was Eve’s idea to collaborate with Gwen Stefani, who later said Dre was so hard on her in the studio that she cried afterward. The meta-hit about the power of a hit song somehow only peaked at No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 but won the Grammy’s first-ever Rap/Sung Collaboration award, solidifying Eve as a household name. The album reissue adds a summery Stargate remix that underscores how well the original beat amplifies Eve’s swagger.

As always, her music lands firmly on the side of scorned women. Stevie J appears on Scorpion as both a rose and a thorn in her life; he figured prominently in her interviews at the time. (In a Rolling Stone profile in 2001, he gauchely reveals Eve’s spending habits, claiming, “She spent a hundred grand real quick.”) The couple’s on-again, off-again tension manifests in a skit and a breakup anthem, “You Had Me, You Lost Me,” where Eve sounds legitimately fed up as she vents about the audacity of a cheating partner. “You fucked around and played around and now you’re feeling sad,” she croons in the chorus above a dub of herself singing the familiar playground taunt “na-na-na-na.” Ironically, Eve had reunited with Stevie by the time the album dropped, making the song’s heartfelt fury more relatably tragic. The song lives on as a document of her growing pains.

Scorpion’s backend is a collection of boutique collaborations meant to showcase Eve’s range: a laid-back reggae cut featuring Stephen and Damian Marley sits alongside a duet with soul legend Teena Marie about resilience. The records feel like icing on an already decadent cake, but they’re the sum of Eve’s parts that helped her step so fluidly into pop on her own terms. On the crew anthems—a staple on all her albums—labelmates DMX, Drag-On, and The Lox appear as shadows in her journey and risk eclipsing her message even as they line her path toward independence with flowers. Solidarity is nice. But at that point, she didn’t need the backup”.

A couple more reviews to get to. I want to move to NME and their 2005 take on Scorpion. Awarding it a perfect score, they make some interesting observations about it. I would urge anyone who has never heard this album to go and put it on. It is absolutely phenomenal! I would also recommend getting the memoir, Who’s That Girl from Eve and Kathy Iandoli. It is a must-read for anyone even curious about Eve:

Scorpion’ begins with Eve declaring: “Y’all niggas think this is a fuckin’ game!!!”. She then sets about bursting the seams of the gangstress role established by her US chart-topping ‘Let There Be…’ LP, rushing a ghetto hit into your safe suburban home. With a sigh like a knife between the ribs, she seduces pop, reggae, rap and R&B, turns them to mush at her feet, enslaves them to her rhythm, then, just like that, drops ‘Who’s That Girl? (Main Pass)’, the gonna-be Riot GucciGrrrl smash hit that delivers this prophecy with the absolute confidence of fact: “Little boys hang me on their walls growing chest hair/Why you listening to the other shit?/You got the best here…”

No point in fucking around. ‘Scorpion’ is the strongest, sexiest, most determined, focused, joyful and inspirational album you’ll hear this year.

Ladies, this one’s for you.

The killer weapon in Eve’s arsenal is her sexuality. Listening to ‘Scorpion’, it’s no coincidence that she was once, for a short time, a stripper. She wears her sex so upfront it’s scary, forcefully raising – and settling – the age-old conundrum of who’s exploiting who – the voyeur or the stripper? Eve’s in control, ain’t no doubt about it. Call her a bitch, she’ll call you a dog. “All men are dogs” she once said. “I can train a dog”. And ‘Scorpion”s got ’em sniffing, barking and howling all around her back door. ‘You Had Me, You Lost Me’ dumps the traditional weepy ballad on its wimpy ass. When the dude walks out for another squeeze, this chick doesn’t dissolve into self-pity. She brags like a brat in the schoolyard: “Nah nah nah nah nah nah… you fucked around… now you’re feeling sad”.

She won’t give it up for cars or furs or jewels or fame-by-proxy. She’s seen her sisters prostitute themselves into subservient positions. ‘You Ain’t Getting None’ explores the temptations – the bit on the side, the game played out between the hard snarl of the hood gang-girl in the verses, and the melting compliant babe of the chorus.

Every song on ‘Scorpion’ is a street drama demanding high rotation radio. Eve ropes in DMX, Lox, Da Brat, Dre, even Gwen Stefani to people the scenes while Swizz Beats do for her what The Neptunes did for Kelis, creating a clean, bright, svelte, diamond-hard setting for her verbal rocks. She even gets the Marley boys Damian and Stephen in to make the dancehall classic ‘No, No, No’ into her own personal property.

Most of all, ‘Scorpion’ is a powerplay.

“Eve don’t give a fuck about you/Dat’s what it is/Eve is the hardest bitch/Dat’s what it is/But she’s gon’ stay ladylike…” So goes The Lox and Drag-On in ‘Thug In The Street’ and so goes this album. Success, respect, fame, riches, the world… all on her own terms or it don’t mean shit. Makes Madonna sound like Myleene Popstar.

As the OTT R&B gospel belter ‘Life Is So Hard’ declares, Eve riding the devotional rush with Teena Marie: “Whatever doesn’t kill me makes me stronger”. Eve set out to carve herself a role the equal of any and she has totally succeeded. And more. ‘Scorpion’ is the stuff of superheroes. It will annihilate all your preconceptions. You’d better Saddam and Eve it, boy. It is, as they say, the absolute fucking bomb”.

I am finishing on a review from 2001. Entertainment Weekly provided their thoughts on a Hip-Hop masterpiece. A lot of people may not have heard Eve’s 1999 debut, Let There Be Eve...Ruff Ryders' First Lady. Scorpion took her to the world. It was a breakthrough. I listen to the album now and am still blown away by it:

Perhaps it was wishful thinking, but wasn’t The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill supposed to set a new standard for hip-hop, especially in the realm of female MCs? Hill isn’t the funniest or most dexterous rhymer, but the musical diversity and respect-yourself vibe of her album still put nearly every other female hip-hopper in the land to shame. Few seem even remotely interested in picking up where the former Fugee left off, leaving us to settle for the likes of Lil’ Kim and Foxy Brown, both better known for their hoochie-mama wardrobes than for music (and rightfully so, since most of their tracks have been cluttered or lackluster).

And then there’s Eve. On her first album, 1999’s Let There Be Eve … Ruff Ryders’ First Lady, the former Eve Jihan Jeffers fell somewhere in between the Hill and Kim camps. Unlike most of her peers, she radiated power, and she clearly had the verbal skills to fend for herself amid the testosterone-fueled world of the Ruff Ryders posse. Yet with her ultra-close-cropped blond Afro and Xena: Warrior Bitch wardrobe, she wasn’t above presenting herself as a rap fantasy object, and thanks to its underwhelming beats and conventional flow, Let There Be Eve … wasn’t the knockout it was hyped to be. Its follow-up, however, is another matter. More than just a dramatic improvement over its predecessor, Scorpion is the first female hip-hop project that even attempts to fill the void left by The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill.

The reasons why are immediately evident in the music. Scorpion is rooted in hardcore stomp, rhymes, boasts, and slams. But just as Hill’s album encompassed a broad range of styles, so does Scorpion; it even covers some of the same territory. The diverse array of grooves dips into reggae (a remake of Dawn Penn’s ”No, No, No,” coproduced by Bob Marley’s son Stephen) and gospel (”Life Is So Hard,” with old-school R&B queen Teena Marie exhorting along). With its stark, brooding interpolation of beats and strings, ”That’s What It Is” (one of two tracks helmed by Eve’s onetime mentor, Dr. Dre) feels like a sequel to Hill’s ”Everything Is Everything.” Throughout the album, Eve both sings and raps, much as Hill did.

Yet Scorpion whacks out its own path with a sharp machete. So much contemporary hip-hop feels sluggish and monochromatic; it’s no wonder Eminem stands out. From start to powerful finish 16 tracks later, Scorpion pumps up the volume, the rhythms, everything. Swizz Beatz, the young producer who oversaw most of Eve’s debut, is back, and his contributions — the I’ve-returned anthem ”Cowboy” and ”Got What You Need,” another back-and-forth with fellow Ruff Ryder Drag-On — are among his best, their rubbery bounce cushioning Eve’s burly, taunting machine gun of a voice. ”Who’s That Girl” and ”You Ain’t Gettin’ None” also prop up their no-scrubs-allowed sentiments with, respectively, a swaying Caribbean vibe and girl-group harmonies. Like The Marshall Mathers LP, in fact, the album hits you with one hook after another, even if Eve isn’t anywhere near as psychologically complex as Eminem.

Sometimes, of course, you wish she were; Eve’s raps are largely about her skills. On ”Be Me,” she brags about owning her own publishing rights (a first in a song lyric?), and her rough ride in the music business during the last two years (which she’s said resulted in a mild depression) is one of the album’s underlying themes. Her other principal topic is blowing off, and declaring independence from, feckless men: ”You’ll never catch me wishing on a star for some nigga to come bless me,” she announces in the self-explanatory ”You Had Me, You Lost Me.” The stance is very much part of the current trend in female pop, but it grows a little tiring. At times during Scorpion, you may find yourself longing for a little of Hill’s civics-class sermonizing. But Eve has such vocal presence (and her producers such a flair for texture) that her lyrics don’t detract from the album. Even the inevitable series of cameo appearances, including Da Brat and No Doubt’s Gwen Stefani, don’t overwhelm her.

On ”Scream Double R,” Eve gripes, ”I’m tired of the same old beats.” Thankfully, Scorpion is one hip-hop album that lives up to that lyric. On that same track, she even gets the notoriously surly and far from touchy-feely DMX to pledge his allegiance to her. When was the last time that happened?”.

A massive success that won critical applause and was a massive-selling smash, I do hope that more is written about Scorpion. Its impact and the effect it had on the Hip-Hop scene. Also, Scorpion as this powerful feminist statement and mandate. A bold and essential album that does not get discussed as much as it should have. On 6th March, we celebrate twenty-five years of a classic. One of the all-time best Hip-Hop albums, you have to salute the genius of…

THE mighty Scorpion.

FEATURE: The Way That I Love You: Alicia Keys’s Fallin’ at Twenty-Five

FEATURE:

 

 

The Way That I Love You

 

Alicia Keys’s Fallin’ at Twenty-Five

__________

THE lead single…

PHOTO CREDIT: Philippe Bialobos

from her debut album, Songs in A Minor, Fallin’ turns twenty-five on 28th March. I remember when the song came out. It was a real moment. In terms of its power. I was not aware of Alicia Keys at that point, so it was the discovery of this incredible new artist. Fallin’ reached number one on the US Billboard Hot 100 and the top ten in several countries. Written and produced by Alicia Keys, her debut album, Songs in A Minor, turns twenty-five in June. I wonder if Alicia Keys will mark the anniversary in some ways. I keep saying how 2001 is a strange year in terms of looking back. With the terrorist attacks in the U.S., you sort of reflect with that in mind. However, when Fallin’ did arrive, there was this instant reaction. One of celebration and wonder. Of course, Alicia Keys is a music legend. One of the true greats. In 2001, there were many who just discovered her. Fallin’ remains her signature song. The one people associate with her. I will explore it more ahead of its twenty-fifth anniversary. I am going to start out with a 2001 interview from FADER, where Keys reacts to the massive success of her debut album:

Alicia Keys has a weird habit: when she curses, which she doesn't do often, her mouth makes a weird shape out of the word she wants to say, but the sound doesn't come out. It's almost as if she is already doing the job for TV and radio so they won't have to censor her bad language.

This is Keys' first interview and in the distance you can hear the distinct noise of the hype machine starting to hum and whiz. Keys is one of the first artists signed to J Records, the company founded by record industry legend and former Arista big macher Clive Davis, and you know that they can't wait to make sure you know her name. Pretty soon the rest of the glossy mags will make the rounds asking about her mentor at the performing arts school she attended [Fame!], about growing up in New York's Hells Kitchen [scary-sounding!], and about the biracial background the record company lists as one of her selling points [unconventional!]; but for now she is spending a lot of time meeting with stylists, auditioning back-up singers, doing industry showcases, and keeping herself busy with the stuff that keeps superstars-in-training busy.

In the pop-strumpet climate of modern music, however, Keys is a curious choice to be pegged as a breakout star. For one thing, she knows what she's doing, even though she's only 19. She's a classically trained pianist who can talk about Porgy and Bess, Schubert and Erykah Badu. She's already survived a go-nowhere record deal with a major label who wanted to hook her up with a male studio svengali instead of letting her produce her own records like she is currently doing (she won't tell which label when you ask her, but it was Sony.)

Keys is also surprisingly down to earth despite all the buzz going on around her. In fact, she is forthcoming about the demand she is feeling. "There are times, I'm not going to lie, when I feel a little bogged down and I want to meet all the expectations. So therefore, sometimes it can create its own pressure if I allow it, and sometimes I do." She is also wary about dealing with the individuals whose job it is to package and market her. "It's scary, because when you put yourself out there, you can only hope that you can make the person understand you in that hour or two you have with them. Are they really going to understand who am I in two hours? Can they capture it?"

Her maturity, however, is most evident when she discusses what will happen if she doesn't become an instant pop music phenomenon. "I can be satisfied with not selling 12 million records and not going on tour with N'Sync. That's okay with me. But say my album is released and I do sell 12 million records? It's almost like, what can you do after that? Can you sell another 12 million records? That's creating an even bigger hype that you then must surpass”.

There may be some who have not heard Fallin’ or cannot recall why it was so lauded. I want to bring in some features about it. Last year, Rolling Stone Australia ranked the best 250 songs of the century so far. They placed Alicia Keys’s Fallin’ at 155: “Alicia Keys’ debut single is still her signature for a reason: The soulful cut highlights Keys’ strengths as a singer, pianist, songwriter, and producer. Just 20 when the track was released, Keys sings of the emotional turbulence of being in love with someone with wisdom and pain beyond her years, with the type of emotive runs built for car sing-alongs and karaoke rooms for decades to come. The track hit Number One on the Billboard Hot 100 and won Song of the Year at the Grammy Awards. “I was going through it bad,” Keys said of the relationship that inspired the song. “But it helped me work things out.” —B.S.”. In 2024, Alicia Keys spoke with The New York Times about reimagining Fallin’ for Broadway. I am going to finish up with a feature from Stereogum from 2022. Looking inside this incredible number one single, I still think that it reverberates and resonates twenty-five years later:

Alicia Keys seemed too good to be true. I didn’t trust her. When the 20-year-old Keys became MTV-omnipresent, it seemed like Clive Davis had figured out how to sand all the rough edges off of the woozy, psychedelic neo-soul that was making mainstream inroads at the time. Artists like D’Angelo and Erykah Badu were ultra-talented but also mercurial and unpredictable. Where mainstream R&B singers adapted rap beats and poses, D’Angelo and Badu and their contemporaries took different things from rap — the sense of rhythmic experimentation, the cut-and-paste approach to musical history. That whole Soulquarian movement was hugely exciting, and to a total outsider like me, Alicia Keys seemed like a threat to all that.

Alicia Keys wasn’t a threat because she was untalented; it was quite the opposite. Keys seemed like a record executive’s dream. She wrote and often produced her own stuff. She was a prodigy who’d been playing piano since she was barely old enough to walk. She looked like a model. She’d grown up in New York and absorbed the sound of rap music, almost through osmosis. She gave off the impression that she’d been immaculately media-trained, that she’d been grown in a record-label lab. The support of Clive Davis, who’d turned Whitney Houston into a commercial juggernaut and who wasn’t exactly known for facilitating his artists’ challenging artistic statements, seemed like another cause for suspicion. I thought of Keys as a product of the machine — one who assumed the form of a neo-soul insurgent while slinging a form of streamlined pop that wouldn’t make anyone uncomfortable.

As usual, I had it all fucked up. Alicia Keys was hugely talented at a wildly young age, and she did make a smooth and frictionless form of pop music, but those aren’t ultimately bad things. Even though she was young, Alicia Keys was already a music-business veteran who’d fought her way out of a couple of bad label situations. Clive Davis has a rep for molding artists into chart behemoths, but with Keys, he was smart enough to take a hands-off approach after other execs had tried to dictate the path of Keys’ career. “Fallin’,” Alicia Keys’ pop breakthrough and first #1 hit, was her debut single, but it was also the product of years of struggle. You might even hear that struggle in the song itself.

Alicia Augello Cook grew up Hell’s Kitchen, back in the day when that Manhattan neighborhood actually earned its name, before it was a strip of decent restaurants and off-Broadway theaters. (When Alicia was born, the #1 song in America was John Lennon’s “(Just Like) Starting Over.”) Alicia’s mother worked multiple jobs; her father wasn’t around. Alicia was an only child, and she lived with her mother in a one-bedroom apartment. Alicia started singing in school musicals when she was still in preschool, and she started playing piano at six. She studied seriously, learning the classical canon and playing for hours every day. Eventually, she dropped her exhausting slate of after-school activities to focus entirely on piano.

Alicia was 12 when she started writing songs, and she was 14 when she enrolled in New York’s Professional Performing Arts School. Her whole biography gives the impression of a classic young overachiever. Alicia moved from classical piano to jazz, and she also had big ideas about pop stardom. As a teenager, Alicia took vocal lessons in Harlem, and that’s where manager Jeff Robinson discovered her. Robinson’s brother was one of Alicia’s teachers, and she was performing at the Police Athletic League center in Harlem as part of a girl group called, appropriately enough, Ambition. Ambition never got a record deal, and they eventually broke up, but Robinson signed Alicia and convinced her to try for a solo career. Robinson is also the one who came up with the Alicia Keys stage name; the artist originally planned to call herself Alicia Wilde.

Jeff Robinson booked Alicia Keys to play some showcases, and Jermaine Dupri’s father Michael Mauldin signed her to Columbia Records in 1996, when she was 15. Columbia turned out to be a bad fit. Alicia was still in high school, though not for long. She graduated at 16, serving as her school’s valedictorian, and she started studying at Columbia University (no relation) while working with the label. The execs at Columbia tried to mold her into a pop-friendly teenage R&B singer. She wanted to write her own songs and to pursue her own aesthetic ideas, and the label wasn’t interested. The whole time that she was on Columbia, Alicia only released two songs: “Little Drummer Girl” on a Christmas compilation from Jermaine Dupri’s So So Def label and “Dah Dee Dah (Sexy Thing)” on the Men In Black soundtrack.

Alicia Keys hated working with the outside producers at Columbia, so she decided to teach herself how to produce. Alicia moved into a Harlem apartment with her much-older boyfriend Kerry “Krucial” Brothers, and they built a bedroom studio there. When she brought her tracks to Columbia, the label rejected them. In 1998, Alicia fought to get out of her Columbia contract, and Clive Davis immediately signed her to Arista, paying Columbia a pile of money for the rights to the songs that Alicia had recorded while under contract to that label. “Fallin'” was one of those songs. In retrospect, it’s crazy that a big label worked so hard to alienate the young can’t-miss prospect that they’d just signed, but that’s the record business for you. Alicia landed songs on the soundtracks of Dr. Doolittle 2 and the 2000 Shaft remake, but soon after she signed with Arista, the label pushed Clive Davis out. Davis immediately started J Records, his next label. He got distribution through BMG, and he took Alicia Keys with him.

In certain circles, Clive Davis is notorious for refusing to allow his artists any artistic freedom; Kelly Clarkson, an artist who will eventually appear in this column, spent years fuming about Clive’s assessment of her songwriting abilities. But Clive Davis let Alicia Keys do her own thing. He trusted her, and he had good reason. Clive had heard the music that Alicia was making on her own. Songs In A Minor, Keys’ 2001 debut album, features contributions from some big songwriters and producers: Brian McKnight, Jermaine Dupri, Kandi Burruss. But Alicia Keys wrote and produced much of the album herself. “Fallin’,” the first single, is all Alicia; she’s the sole writer and producer.

Alicia Keys wrote “Fallin'” in a rush, while some of her other tracks were being mixed at Columbia. She’s said that the song was inspired by a real relationship. (I would assume that she wrote the song about Kerry “Krucial” Brothers, but I don’t think she’s ever specified.) When Alicia first got to work on “Fallin’,” she was thinking that she might give the song to another Columbia artist, the extremely young R&B prodigy Kimberly Scott. In Fred Bronson’s Billboard Book Of Number 1 Hits, Alicia says, “I thought how crazy it would be for somebody young to sing this deep song about life and love and bring it across as if they lived it.” Alicia didn’t seem to consider the idea that she was also very young, but by the time she finished the track, she realized that she should keep it for herself.

“Fallin'” is a simple song, and its simplicity is what makes it stand out. The song opens with Alicia Keys’ bare voice, and for the first few melismastic syllables, she sounds wracked with pain: “I keep on fallin’ in and out of love with you.” By the time she gets to the “out of love” part, though, her voice slides into an easy, bluesy groove, her vocal cadence syncing up with her piano arpeggio. The howl turns into a sort of sigh. She’s singing about an emotionally uncertain state, and she sings in a way that mirrors that state. By the time she hits the second line, gospel-style backing vocals well up behind her, emphasizing certain lines: “Sometimes I love ya!” But those backing vocals disappear when she sings that sometimes this other person makes her feel blue. And then the drums kick in. Given that “Fallin'” was the first thing that most of us heard from Alicia Keys, that’s a remarkably self-assured intro.

I can’t separate that “Fallin'” intro from the image of Alicia Keys in the video. Director Chris Robinson, who would later make the movie ATL, films Keys in a tight close-up, her braids framing her unlined face just so. At first, she’s looking down at her piano. But when she sings the words “with you,” she looks up, making eye contact with the camera. It’s an electric moment. Again and again, she makes eye contact with you, the viewer, and it never loses its charge. Maybe that’s why I didn’t trust Alicia Keys at first. Maybe there was too much power behind those eyes.

Even at its most orchestrally grand, “Fallin'” sounds locked-in and elemental — as if the song was specifically created to cut against the grain of the bright, programmed club-thump that dominated that moment’s R&B. With all those allusions to classic soul, “Fallin'” sounded, consciously or not, like a throwback. Alicia’s delivery is slow and deliberate, and “Fallin'” has far fewer lyrics than most of the hits of that moment. One of those lyrics is constructed pretty awkwardly: “Just when I think I’ve taken more than would a fool, I start fallin’ back in love with you.” But Alicia sounds raw and graceful and confident, and she makes that line work. When Alicia and the backup singers cascade all over each other on the bridge, “Fallin'” starts to sound less like a retro exercise, more like something eternal.

Because of her allusions to older styles, some early-’00s critics overreached, comparing Alicia Keys to classic soul figures like Aretha Franklin. That kind of thing was always ridiculous. Alicia Keys has a warm, fluid voice, but she’s not a force of nature like the greats who she consciously evokes. Her delivery is a little too light, too studied. The music holds back, too, never exploding into full catharsis. But that simplicity would cut through the noise. When “Fallin'” came on the radio, it didn’t fade into the background. People noticed.

Clive Davis put his full promotional weight behind Alicia Keys and “Fallin’.” He wrote a letter to Oprah Winfrey, asking her to book Alicia Keys on her show. When Oprah heard “Fallin’,” she agreed. Alicia played the song on Oprah, using “Moonlight Sonata” as her intro, and she left a big impression. She performed on The Tonight Show, too. Songs In A Minor came out in June of 2001, and it debuted at #1 — a rare feat for a new artist’s debut album. The “Fallin'” single went gold — and then later, in the streaming era, triple platinum. After “Fallin’,” reached #1, Alicia followed it with the ballad “A Woman’s Worth,” which peaked #7. (It’s a 6.) A third single, Alicia’s cover of Prince’s 1982 B-side “How Come U Don’t Call Me,” peaked at #59, but Songs In A Minor still went platinum seven times over.

You will probably not be shocked to learn that Alicia Keys cleaned up at the Grammys in 2002. Grammy voters love few things more than a young classicist who can sell records by the pile. That night, Alicia won five awards. “Fallin'” won Song Of The Year, and Alicia took home Best New Artist, beating out Linkin Park, David Gray, India.Arie, and Nelly Furtado. (We’ll see Furtado in this column eventually.)”.

On 28th March, Fallin’ turns twenty-five. It is quite a big moment. I wonder how Alicia Keys will reflect on the song’s enduring success. The wonderful Keys was released in 2021. I wonder whether we will get more music from her this year. 2001 was this big year for me in terms of going to university and this important stage in life. The music from that year is very important. Fallin’ is a song that was a source of strength for me. Without doubt one of the most important and remarkable songs from the 2000s, it still has the ability move…

ALL these years later.

FEATURE: I Just Want Your Extra Time and Your… Prince’s Kiss at Forty

FEATURE:

 

 

I Just Want Your Extra Time and Your…

 

Prince’s Kiss at Forty

__________

RELEASED on 5th February, 1986

IN THIS PHOTO: Prince in 1986/PHOTO CREDIT: Everett Collection/Bridgeman Images

Kiss is one of Prince’s most adored and acclaimed songs. One of his most recognisable. It was the lead single from Prince and The Revolution's eighth studio album, Parade: Music from the Motion Picture Under the Cherry Moon. The album is the soundtrack for the 1986 film, directed by and starring Prince. Although the film was panned upon its release and is not really worth watching like 1984’s Purple Rain, the songs from Under the Cherry Moon are phenomenal. I am going to get to some insight into Kiss. How it came together and why it is so impactful. A number one smash in the U.S., I think that 1985 and 1986 are years of Prince’s career not as investigated and respected perhaps as what came before and after. The fact is that 1985’s Around the World in a Day and 1986’s Parade: Music from the Motion Picture Under the Cherry Moon were sandwiched between 1984’s Purple Rain and 1987’s Sign o’ the Times means they will always fall short. However, Parade (I will shorten it for the rest of the feature) has plenty of incredible songs. New Position, Girls & Boys, Under the Cherry Moon and Sometimes It Snows in April are classic examples. In terms of singles from Parade, some less obvious songs were released instead. Mountains and Anotherloverholenyohead are less obvious singles. If some felt Parade was overblown and not to his usual high standard, Parade was a commercial success and in years since is ranked alongside the best and most important Prince albums. How Parade led to the mighty Sign o’ the Times. I think that Kiss is one of those songs that everyone knows the words to. Covered by the likes of Tom Jones, nothing beats the electric and sexy original! There are various features written about Kiss. Varying in length, insight and quality, there are two very detailed ones I am going to draw and quote heavily from. The first is from Sound on Sound that was published in 2013. There is a tinge of sadness looking ahead to 5th February. Just over a couple of months later, we mark ten years since Prince died. It still doesn’t seem real that he is no longer with us. However, thanks to his legendary Vault, there is material and whole albums still being released by his estate:

"For a long time, Prince had been talking about forming his own record label,” says David Z, who by then was heavily into the creative employment of sampling, synths, loops and drum machines that had already become characteristic of that era. "One day, he called me and said, 'There's a group that I've just signed and want you to have something to do with. Come to LA.' So, I went there, walked into Sunset Sound, and he said, 'You're going to produce this group called Mazarati.' That was the first time I'd been labelled a producer, which I'm very grateful for. It got me started.”

Formed by the Revolution's bassist Mark Brown (aka Brown Mark), Mazarati was a funk/R&B outfit whose only hit was the Z-produced/Prince-co-written '100 MPH', but whose greatest claim to fame was a recording that never saw the light of day — at least, not in the form that the band members intended.

"We did a bunch of songs for Mazarati's album,” Z recalls. "Then, when we needed a single, Prince gave me this demo of him just playing straight chords on an acoustic guitar — one verse and one chorus — while singing in a normal pitch; not the falsetto that's on the finished record. To us, it sounded like a folk song and we were wondering what we could do with it. No way was it funky. Anyway, starting with a LinnDrum, I programmed the beat and began experimenting. Taking a hi-hat from the drum machine, I ran it through a delay unit and switched between input and output and in the middle. That created a very funky rhythm. Then I took an acoustic guitar, played these open chords and gated that to the hi-hat trigger. The result was a really unique rhythm that was unbelievably funky but also impossible to actually play... I'm sure that sound influenced the fabulous new Daft Punk song 'Get Lucky', because it uses the same trick, with the guitar gated to some sort of rhythm and sequencer.

"Next, I remembered a little piano part from a Bo Diddley song called 'Say Man' and put it on there, and then Tony Christian sang the lead part, an octave lower than what Prince wound up doing. The background vocals I adapted from the Brenda Lee song 'Sweet Nothings' — good music is always taken from somewhere else — and that was that. The whole thing was done in a day.”

Hijacked

Or David Z and the guys in Mazarati thought it was. The fact is, in this form 'Kiss' sounded OK — a so-so dance number. However, Tony Christian's lead vocal was a little soulless and uninspiring, and when Prince heard the track he decided to head in a different direction... with himself at the helm.

"When I came back into the studio the next morning, Prince had already taken it off the machine, replaced the vocal with his own falsetto performance — which, I guess, he felt it needed — got rid of the bass part and added a James Brown 'Papa's Got A Brand New Bag' guitar lick,” Z recalls. "'What happened?' I asked, to which he replied, 'It's too good for you guys. I'm taking it back.'”

Boasting a four-octave range, Prince sang virtually the entire song in head voice, reverting to chest voice for the final line, as well as a single note before the last chorus. "At the time, I think he was into using a [Sennheiser MD] 441,” says Z.

"We only used nine tracks for that song, including a bass drum on one track, the rest of the drums on another and the hi-hat on a separate track. As for the lack of bass guitar, we always ran the kick drum through an [AMS] RMX16 and put it on the Reverse 2 setting to extend the tail of the reverb. That served as a kick drum and a bass, and it was a signature sound that we used all the time with Prince. We didn't need a real bass. And there was no reverb on anything else; just the kick. The guitar was dry and gated, and everything else sounded kind of different to the corporate rock that was on the radio at that time.”

Mazarati's backing vocals ended up on the finished record, yet this was scant compensation for what they had hoped would be their breakout hit.

"They were pissed,” says Z. "Prince had promised everyone a share of the songwriting credit, but that never happened and they were kind of mad about it.”

While Z had engineered the Mazarati recording in Sunset Sound's Neve 8088-equipped Studio 2, Prince used the API/DeMedio-equipped Studio 3 to record his overdubs.

"We had a factory going,” Z says. "I did a bunch of things like that, with him always in the other room. That's also how we worked at Paisley Park.”

According to David Z, the minimalist arrangement of 'Kiss' required him and Prince to spend only "about five minutes doing the mix”. Nevertheless, he wasn't involved with the 12-inch mix, which, built around the funky guitar lick and featuring additional lyrics as well as a more comprehensive arrangement — complete with organ and bass guitar — could be heard in Prince's critically-panned, commercially disappointing 1986 musical-drama movie Under The Cherry Moon, which he directed and starred in.

"The 12-inch was done by Prince after the fact,” Z explains. "He was obligated by the record company to do a dance version, and it was just a matter of editing in eight bars and then another eight bars of something different. Prince did a lot of his own engineering; sitting behind the board and singing, playing guitar or playing bass while punching buttons at the same time. He worked super-fast. And, apart from the first album, that went for everything we did.

"We'd have these stations set up, with drums out in the room, the bass plugged in, the keyboard plugged in, the guitar plugged in, and he'd jump around between stations while expecting everyone to work as super-fast as he did. If someone didn't, there'd be hell to pay; I've seen him be really hard on some second engineers. So we had to be aware of what he was doing and when he wanted it done. He'd jump to the guitar, you'd hit 'record' and bam, it was done.

"There was no rehearsing. I think he just rehearses in his head, 24/7. He'd start a song, do all of the parts, and then we'd mix it and take it off the board before starting another one. We often did two songs a day, and it was usually a constant process of starting a song and totally finishing the song within about fours hours without any coming back to overdub or remix.”

Power Play

The soundtrack album, Parade: Music From The Motion Picture Under The Cherry Moon, was the final record on which Prince was backed by the Revolution. He was reinventing himself, as evidenced by the new image that saw him dispense with his curly mane, purple outfits and ruffled shirts in favour of shorter, slicked-back hair and smoother-looking clothes. Accordingly, 'Kiss' matched the mood of the moment, yet it initially didn't impress the record-company honchos.

"It was so different to everything else out there that the Warner Brothers executives freaked out when they first heard it,” David Z confirms. "I was going to get credit as the producer, arranger, everything, but when I talked to the Warners A&R guy he said, 'Oh man, Prince really screwed up. It sucks.' I thought, what? My heart just hit the floor. He said, 'It sounds like a demo. There's no reverb, there's no bass — it's terrible.'

"I was shaken and really disappointed. At that time, however, Prince had enough power to go, 'That's the single and you're not getting another one until you put it out.' The rest is history. When he recorded 'Kiss', Prince was actually going down in terms of his popularity. He had already hit his peak and people were going, 'Ah, Prince is over with.' Well, that song, because it was so different, totally reignited his career and a year later Warners were trying to sign people who sounded like that”.

I am going to conclude with a feature from Stereogum. They explored the sublime and supreme Kiss as part of their The Number Ones run. Although it was number one for only a couple of weeks, it is one of Prince’s most enduring tracks. You can play it to anyone and get a reaction. It is insatiable and slinky. Sweaty and seductive. Classic Prince! If you have not listened to this song for a while then go and play it now:

In the first decade of his career, Prince released 10 albums. Most of those albums are essential. A couple of them are double LPs. The man kept up an insane pace, but he didn't release all the great songs he wrote. By the early '80s, Prince had already made a habit of gifting hit singles to other artists.

Sometimes, other artists covered Prince's songs and turned them into hits. That's what happened with "I Feel For You," Chaka Khan's 1984 take on a 1979 Prince track. (Khan's version of "I Feel For You" peaked at #3. It's a 9.) Other times, artists took Prince's melodies and built new songs out of them. Stevie Nicks' 1983 single "Stand Back" is essentially a rewrite of "Little Red Corvette," the Prince single from that same year. Before she recorded "Stand Back," Nicks called Prince to tell him that she'd used his song, and Prince came in to play keyboards on Nicks' track. ("Stand Back" peaked at #5. It's an 8. "Little Red Corvette," meanwhile, peaked at #6. It's a 10.) There were also plenty of cases, like Phil Collins' "Sussidio," where artists landed huge hits by outright biting Prince songs and not getting his blessing beforehand.


The stories I love the best are the ones about Prince just writing these glittering and immaculate pop songs and tossing them out to whoever he felt like helping out. By 1986, Prince had done that for plenty of people. In 1984, Prince wrote and co-produced Sheila E's "The Glamorous Life," which peaked at #7. (It's a 9.) A year later, Prince wrote "Sugar Walls" for Sheena Easton, and that one peaked at #9. (It's an 8.) One week in the spring of 1986, the top two songs on the Billboard Hot 100 were both tracks that Prince had written with other artists in mind. With one of those tracks, though, Prince heard what the other artist did with the track and decided that he wanted the song back. This was a wise decision, and it may have saved Prince's hitmaking career.

It seems far-fetched that Prince's mid-'80s run was ever in any kind of jeopardy, especially just two years after the global-conquest move of Purple Rain. But in 1986, many of Prince's ambitions got the better of him. Prince had followed up Purple Rain with the psychedelic pop LP Around The World In A Day. That album went double platinum and sent two singles into the top 10 -- including the classic "Raspberry Beret," which peaked at #2. (It's a 10.) But Around The World In A Day only managed a fraction of those Purple Rain sales, and then Prince went even further down that rabbit hole.

Prince's next album, 1986's Parade, was straight-up Sgt. Pepper-style baroque pop opulence. Parts of it, like the woozy ballad "Sometimes It Snows In April," are brilliant. But other parts are lushly disjointed to the point of absurdity. For the most part, Parade marked a severe departure from the pop zeitgeist of the moment. While most of Prince's peers were going for big drum-machine boom -- doing variations on Prince's Purple Rain sound -- Prince was fucking around with fussy string arrangements and flugelhorns. On top of that, Parade was also the unofficial soundtrack to Prince's second film, the black-and-white musical Under The Cherry Moon. Prince directed the movie himself, and it became an instant-punchline flop. (I've never seen Under The Cherry Moon, and now, watching the trailer, I feel like I should fix that.)

Ultimately, though, none of those moves wounded Prince because Prince was smart enough to drop "Kiss" right in the midst of all this. Originally, "Kiss" wasn't supposed to be a Prince song. At the time, Brownmark, the bassist for Prince's backing band the Revolution had a synth-funk side project called Mazarati, and they were signed to Prince's Paisley Park label. (Mazarati's highest-charting single was 1986's "100 MPH," which Prince wrote and co-produced. It peaked at #19.) Prince wrote "Kiss" with Mazarati in mind.

When Prince gave Mazarati the "Kiss" demo, it was a short and bluesy acoustic sketch of a song. At the time, Mazarati were working with producer David Z, a longtime Minneapolis music-scene fixture who'd played guitar on Lipps, Inc.'s "Funkytown" and whose brother was the Revolution's drummer Bobby Z. David Z took Prince's "Kiss" demo and rearranged it, using a LinnDrum drum machine to turn the song into a spacey, funky vamp. In other words, David Z made "Kiss," a song that Prince had written, sound like a Prince song. Mazarati recorded that version of "Kiss," but when Prince heard it, he decided to take it back for himself. David Z tells Sound On Sound that Prince literally told the band that "Kiss" was "too good for you guys."

Prince wasn't wrong. Mazarati's version of "Kiss" is close to the finished version, but singer Tony Christian sounds weirdly bored on it, and not in a cool way. Prince took that version of the song and made a couple of key adjustments, singing it in a squeaky falsetto and adding the spider-funk guitar fill from James Brown's "Papa's Got A Brand New Bag." ("Papa's Got A Brand New Bag" peaked at #8 in 1965. It's a 10.) Prince credited David Z as the arranger for "Kiss," and he left Mazarati's backing vocals intact. But Prince didn't give Mazarati co-writing credits for Kiss, which infuriated Brownmark. (David Z will eventually appear in this column as a producer.)

You wouldn't think a song as simple as "Kiss" would have that complicated a backstory. It sounds like the kind of thing that Prince could do in his sleep. For most artists, this would be a complaint. For Prince, it's anything but. "Kiss" stands out on Parade because it's the one song where Prince doesn't work to smother his funkiest instincts. Instead, it's all negative space and swaggering fuck-squeak -- one of the most fundamentally Prince songs that Prince ever made.

When Prince first wrote the "Kiss" lyrics, he might've meant them as reassurance: "You don't have to be beautiful to turn me on/ I just need your body, baby, from dusk till dawn." Over and over, Prince tells this potential lover that she doesn't have to change anything about herself. She doesn't have to be rich or cool or experienced. She doesn't have to watch Dynasty. (Was there social pressure to watch Dynasty?) Prince would prefer it if this potential lover did not act younger than her age or attempt to talk dirty, since Prince can talk dirty enough for both of them. Mostly, though, he just wants her to be herself. That's all he needs -- her extra time and her kiss.

In its final form, though, there's nothing reassuring about "Kiss." Instead, it becomes a radically horny statement of intent. Prince sounds like he exists on the outer edges of the sexual imagination. He sings the whole thing in a near-inhuman falsetto, like Barry Gibb taking hits of helium. The beat is a spartan echo of a shimmy, a mechanized strut. His guitar needles and itches. The lyrics tell you that everything is going to be OK, that he just wants to hang out with you. The music tells you that everything is not OK. It tells you that you're about to go on a journey.

Just as much as that syncopated yip-stomp, the "Kiss" video speaks of fuck-worlds that most of us can scarcely imagine. Fashion photographer Rebecca Blake directs, filming Prince sliding and mugging in rooms full of sunset colors. Prince somehow looks more scandalous in his giant leather jacket and tiny little half-shirt than he does when he's straight-up shirtless. He does splits and spinkicks and twirls in towering heels. Dancer Monique Mannen and Revolution member Wendy Melvoin are both in the video, and both are plenty charismatic. But Prince carries himself like he exists on a whole other plane, like he's the only man in existence. It's some of the greatest peacocking ever put to film.

Decades of constant repetition have hurt "Kiss." Sometimes, its minimalism can sound slight and brittle, and it doesn't have the same heft or presence as Prince's best Purple Rain songs. But as a workout, it's extremely slick and beguiling. It's the kind of song that must take unearthly confidence to pull off. At the time, some Warner executives thought "Kiss" was too weird to be a single, even though it might be the least weird song on Parade. But at the time, nobody was going to tell Prince no.

After "Kiss," none of the other singles from Parade cracked the top 10. Parade would be the last album credited to Prince & The Revolution. Prince ditched most of his backing band after they finished touring behind Parade. Mazarati broke up a few years later without making any more hits. (Two members of Mazarati will eventually appear in this column, but only by voicing a rapping cartoon character.) Prince, meanwhile, went on to record Sign O' The Times, the astonishing double album that turned all his Parade-era pretensions into something sprawling but cohesive. We'll see Prince in this column again.

GRADE: 9/10”.

Kiss came second when The Guardian ranked Prince’s greatest singles in 2019. Many might place Kiss a bit lower, though the fact it has this legacy and remains flawless speaks volumes. It is a song I heard as a child and never get tired of: “By 1986, Prince was peerless, so far ahead of everyone else in contemporary pop it was almost laughable. Kiss was all the evidence you needed. It repeated When Doves Cry’s hugely impressive trick of conjuring up funk without a bassline, and added perhaps the most indelible chorus of his career and a vocal that turns into an astonishing lust-racked scream at 3min 20sec”. American Songwriter declared Kiss as the third-best Prince song in their 2022 article. In 2024, when Rolling Stone decided on the best 250 songs ever, Kiss came in at eighty-five: “When Mazarati, one of the bands in Prince’s Paisley Park orbit, asked him for a song, Prince dashed off a bluesy acoustic demo for them. Mazarati added a funk groove, and Prince was smart enough to take the song back, maintaining some of producer David Z’s arrangements and the band’s background vocals but no bass line, to the disappointment of his label. “At that time, however, Prince had enough power to go, ‘That’s the single and you’re not getting another one until you put it out.’ The rest is history,” Z recalled in an interview. “That song totally reignited his career, and a year later Warner Bros. was trying to sign people who sounded like that”. On 5th February, it will be forty years since Kiss was released. The lead single from a fascinating soundtrack album that I think works better standalone, rather than tie it to Under the Cherry Moon, Parade is a masterpiece. Kiss is its brightest and boldest song. In 1986, with the world at his feet, Prince was this titan of an artist that…

FEW could equal.

FEATURE: What I Do: Donald Fagen’s Morph the Cat at Twenty

FEATURE:

 

 

What I Do

 

Donald Fagen’s Morph the Cat at Twenty

__________

IN terms of artists I would love to…

IN THIS PHOTO: Donald Fagen in 2006/PHOTO CREDIT: Rick Diamond

hear an album from, there is this shortlist. I feel, because it has been quite a while, Donald Fagen is near the top of that list. His most recent album, Sunken Condos, was released in 2012. I do wonder if he will release another solo album, as there is nobody out there like him. Many might know him as the co-founder of Steely Dan alongside the late Walter Becker. The final Steely Dan album was 2003’s Everything Must Go. Donald Fagen had a solo career after the group/duo went on hiatus after 1980’s Gaucho. Morph the Cat was his first solo album of the 2000s. On 7th March, 2006, this incredible album came out. Whilst not quite up there with Sunken Condos, I feel Morph the Cat is an extraordinary work that needs to be highlighted. I am going to come to a few reviews. Many note how it was business as usual for Donald Fagen. In terms of it was not a huge break from his previous solo and Steely Dan work, though it is was still extraordinary and better than a lot of what was out there. It is strange that Fagen saw Morph the Cat as his ‘death album’. He was only fifty-eight when it was released, so I wonder how he feels twenty years later. The fact Morph the Cat is recorded and written in the wake of the September 11 attacks and the devastation in New York and the shockwaves caused gives Morph the Cat this idea of being very serious and a hard listen. Maybe not as witty and light as Sunken Condos or even The Nightfly (1982), there is plenty of dry humour, sarcasm and fascinating characters. The eponymous Morph the Cat is this spirit and shadow that hovers over New York. Maybe this symbolism for foreboding or a black cloud, it is a song that is full of interesting and humorous ideas. I love the eponymous H Gang, Security Joan and the fella who is a more multicoloured version of Death. He is the unnamed lead of Brite Nightgown. It is an album that takes its time to unfurl. Longer songs that many Donald Fagen/Steely Dan albums, maybe that slight lack of economy is a fault.

However, I really like how the music occasionally wanders and you get longer to spend with these great tracks. If mortality and a certain dread following the 2001 terrorist attacks and the danger the world faced in the first decade of this century, I feel you could adapt Morph the Cat today and apply it to Donald Trump, genocide, domestic terrorism and fears in the U.S. That is why a Donald Fagen album would be much needed. Reacting to ICE, Donald Trump’s dictatorship and the situation in the U..S., maybe even he feels reality is too bleak to bring into the studio! I think anyone who has not heard Morph the Cat should give it a play. My favourite track is the opening title cut, as it has a truly funky riff and a great Fagen vocal as he watches this ominous-but-cute Morph float above Manhattan. Before getting to some reviews, there is an interview from The New York Times from 2006 that I want to spotlight. Donald Fagen discussing the album but also displaying his trademark humour and sardonic edge:

THIS is my death album," Donald Fagen said in his office on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. "It's about the death of culture, the death of politics, the beginning of the end of my life." Then he mock-sobbed, "Boo hoo hoo."

Mr. Fagen, best known as the vocalizing half of the rock band Steely Dan, turned 58 years old in January. His new CD, "Morph the Cat," is his first solo album in 13 years, and he's kicking it off with an 18-city concert tour, starting this Wednesday -- his first live shows with his own band ever.

He wrote "Morph the Cat" in the wake of Sept. 11, and it's an album about fellow New Yorkers dealing with the aftershocks -- tales of love and dread in a time of terror.

One of its eight songs, a ballad called "The Night Belongs to Mona" is about a woman who stays cooped up in her Chelsea high-rise. At one point, Mr. Fagen, playing one of Mona's worried friends, sings, "Was it the fire downtown/ that turned her world around?" It's the album's only reference to the World Trade Center. But the attack lingers as a constant backdrop.

"The Great Pagoda of Funn" is about two lovers who stay together as shelter from the world's horrors, itemized by a choir of background singers: "Poison skies/ and severed heads/ and pain and lies "

"I wrote that after several beheadings in Iraq," Mr. Fagen said. "You can thank Mr. Zarqawi for that song."

"Security Joan" is a comic blues about a man who swoons for an airport guard while rushing to catch a plane.

When I felt her wand sweep over me

You know I never felt so clean

Girl you won't find my name on your list

Honey you know I ain't no terrorist

The album's finale, "Mary Shut the Garden Door," sounds like the score for a spooky political thriller. Mr. Fagen's liner notes describe it: "Paranoia blooms when a thuggish cult gains control of the government."

"I wrote that song right after the Republican Convention took over New York," he said. "I'm afraid of religious people in general -- any adult who believes in magic." It's a gloomy number -- the doo-wop background singers chant, "They won/ Storms raged/ Things changed/ Forever" -- but it holds out a thin hope in its last line: "This ballad is for lovers/ with something left to lose."

That's a contrast to the most recent Steely Dan album, 2003's "Everything Must Go." It too was produced in the shadow of 9/11, but it responded to catastrophes with mordant retreat ("the long sad Sunday of the early resigned") or down-with-the-ship partying ("Let's switch off the lights/ and light up all the Luckies/ Crankin' up the afterglow").

All nine Steely Dan albums over the past 34 years -- which Mr. Fagen wrote with Walter Becker, his musical partner since their undergraduate days at Bard College -- dwell to some degree on destruction and doomsday, but usually with black humor or a diffident shrug. "Morph the Cat" has the familiar Steely Dan sound: the dense chords, jazz vamps, laser backbeat, skylark guitar riffs and sly lyrics -- polished narratives of insouciant irony and cryptic allusions -- sung by Mr. Fagen in a nasal troubadour's wail. But this time, he's staring at the darkness with open apprehension.

"Part of the difference," he said, "is that Walter's more snarky than I am. He's more realistic; I'm more of a fantasist, a romantic. Walter has that side, too. But when we write together, we assume this collective guise -- this guy you could call Dan -- who isn't either of us, really. Dan's a much colder dude. Or maybe he just seems cold. Maybe he's afraid to show his emotions; that's more likely."

Cut loose from Dan, Mr. Fagen writes songs that are "more personal," he said, "and, as it turns out, more autobiographical." The keys to this chapter of his chronicle are not just the attack on his city but also the death of his mother, in January 2003, after a long bout with Alzheimer's disease.

"It was a horrible death, very agitated toward the end," he recalled. The album is dedicated to her. "In memory of Elinor Rosenberg Fagen, a k a Ellen Ross," the liner notes read. "Ellen Ross was her stage name," he explained. "She was a professional singer from the age of 5 years to 15. She was the Shirley Temple of the Catskills. Her mother would take her up there in the summers to sing in a hotel. One time, the guy who owned the hotel took her over to an amateur-hour radio show. She had an anxiety attack. That was the end of her career."

While Mr. Fagen was growing up in the New Jersey suburbs, his mother sang show tunes around the house, encouraged him to play piano, and took him into Manhattan on weekends to see Broadway musicals. "I got most of my musical theory from her," he said.

"Morph the Cat" begins with the title song, which sounds like an R. Crumb cartoon theme about a cat named Morph who flies above Manhattan and seeps into apartments, spreading good cheer. But when the tune is reprised at the end of the album, after the songs about severed heads and so forth, Morph (as in Morpheus, god of dreams?) seems more menacing.

"Yeah, the cat is narcotizing the citizens," Mr. Fagen said. "I observe it in people, this mind-death, these layers of brain-washing that's gone on for so many years. It's in the techniques of political machines, the unbelievable stupidity on television." He stopped and raised his eyebrows. "Hey, maybe Morph is television."

Then he backed away, chuckling. "I refuse to take responsibility for any interpretation," he mumbled.

Last week, he was busy rehearsing for his tour. Steely Dan gave up live performance in 1974. "I burned myself out quickly, my voice was getting tired, I was in my mid-20's, my lifestyle wasn't very healthy." Mr. Fagen recalled. After he and Mr. Becker broke up the band in 1980 (a split that lasted 16 years) , "I didn't have the confidence in myself to organize a band and a tour without him."

In the late 80's, he met a producer, Libby Titus, whom he later married. "She was putting together what she called these 'horrid little evenings,' " he said, concerts with several big-name pop singers, performing one after another. Mr. Fagen joined them. At first, he just played piano; then, under her prodding, he sang again, too. "So," he said, "I got back into it a bit."

Still, his element is the studio. Last August, he sat in a booth at Avatar Studios, in Midtown, with his engineer, Elliot Scheiner. Mr. Fagen had spent a year recording the album's tracks. Now it was time to mix them. He and Mr. Becker were notorious perfectionists in mixing the Steely Dan sessions. That part hasn't changed.

"Mmmm, bring the snare down in those two bars by one-tenth," Mr. Fagen said, listening to the rhythm tracks of "Mona." He meant one-tenth of a decibel, a minuscule adjustment in volume.

Later, listening to the horn tracks, he said, "After the first bop-bop, you've got to bring up the da-bop."

Then the vocal tracks. Hearing himself sing the line, "To see how the story ends," he said, "The first syllable of 'story' is a little hard; bring it down two-tenths." Another line, "When you're already dressed in black," was a little soft. "Bring up the whole line one-tenth." He listened again. "Maybe only the end of the line -- "dee dressed in black" -- bring just that up one-tenth."

After five hours mixing, he said, "I'm wearying of this," in a stentorian tone. He got up, stretched, sat down, and went back at it for two more hours.

Soon, Mr. Fagen hopes to remix his previous solo disc, the 1993 "Kamakiriad." His voice on that album was buried: too soft and indistinct. "I was in my self-loathing period," he said.

The remix will be part of a three-disc box-set, which Reprise Records plans to release later this year, of all three Fagen solo albums, starting with "The Nightfly" (1982), his wistful look back at his cold-war adolescence. "I see them as Youth, Middle Age and Death," he said with a crooked smile.

But if "Morph the Cat" is "Death," what will he do for an encore?

In an e-mail note, Mr. Fagen replied, "just one of those cringe-worthy duet albums: you know, me and gwen stefani, me and tony bennett, me and gladys knight also some tricked-up duets with dead people: nat king cole, tiny tim, mae west, etc."

But those aren't booked. What is likely, he said, is another tour with his new band this summer and probably some gigs with his musical companion of youth and middle age, Mr. Becker. Just because you've done death doesn't mean you're done with Dan”.

There is one more interview that I want to source before getting to some reviews. In 2006, MP3.com’s Chris Rolls spoke with Donald Fagen about Morph the Cat. They also discuss Steely Dan, literature, and lyrical inspirations. A Donald Fagen interview is always fascinating!

Chris: Do you often draw upon literature for inspiration?

Donald: Well, when Walter and I met, we — aside from having some musical favorites in common — we were both jazz fans as, really as kids, which is kind of very unusual, especially for that time, you know, like since we were 10 or 11 years old, type of thing. But we also had some literary tastes in common, particularly what they used to call black humorist, which is not African American books so much but a dark humorist like Kurt Vonnegut and Thomas Berger, Philip Roth, and Vladimir Nabokov. And although these represent a wide variety of authors, they were kind of … in those days kind of categorized as a type of literature, which before that time really … no one had really categorized them that way, but it was very big in the early ’50s and the early ’60s.

Chris: Were you a fan of Philip K. Dick?

Donald: Yeah also…well, science fiction writers were part of that in a way, although in those days they didn’t make science fiction with what they would call literary fiction. But indeed, Philip K. Dick as well as the books of Fredrick Pohl, C.M. Kornbluth, and…Alfred Bester is another one I remember, and some of the Theodore Sturgeon stories. And just, a lot of science fiction writers really are satirists — they just use the forum to satirize the present, really.

Chris: And those literary themes have carried over very well into your lyricism, both in your solo work and with Steely Dan, and that really seems to be something that’s absent from contemporary popular music. And I’m just curious what your take is on…?

Donald: Oh, you know, reading is absent from a lot of popular culture altogether.

Chris: It is, and I feel it’s reflected in popular music, and I’m just curious how you feel about the popular music industry?

Donald: You know, I don’t have that much contact with it really. You know, I recently have been talking to some people from Warner Brothers… I’ve been in Warner Brothers since The Nightfly in 1982, and I think between… I guess in between albums I never get one phone call from Warner Brothers. Like, I have no contact with the company whatsoever unless it’s to do something specific. So when an album comes out, there’s a whole new bunch of people there because everyone else has been fired, and they’re all young, you know much younger, increasingly younger than I am and don’t even know who I am, so I have to reintroduce myself. It’s, you know, that shows how alien I am to the whole process really.

Chris: The sort of “man on the hill.”

Donald: Exactly.

Chris: Do you listen to any contemporary music?

Donald: Not that often. I mean, there’s a few things I like if someone brings it to my attention, but I only listen to the same 40 jazz records I had in high school pretty much.

Chris: It’s funny that you say you sort of have to reintroduce yourself. Your music has remained a constant over the years; it’s instantly recognizable.

Donald: Oh, well thanks.

Chris: And I’m curious do you — well it sounds like maybe you’ve answered this — but do you consciously sort of shut out anything that’s going on with contemporary music trends or…?

Donald: It’s not really necessary, because I don’t think anything has happened for 30 years or so.

Chris: Really.

Donald: Not really. You know there’s a new kind of… you know they have different names for like crunk and stuff like that, or there’s this kind of music, but you know aside from some fairly subtle things, and like, maybe they use a drum machine instead of drums or something. But that’s really kind of the opposite of evolution as far as I can say so. It’s really… I don’t think there’s anything really… I don’t see any sort of major thing that’s happened since maybe reggae music in the ’70s that’s really different.

Chris: So you wouldn’t consider, say, rap music to be new?

Donald: Well, I mean it’s more of a theatrical forum really… or poetry with music type of thing, which certainly isn’t new. And the beats are basically funk, or something else, only played by machines, it’s really not… it doesn’t sound new to me. I mean, what’s new about it?

Chris: Well…

Donald: I mean, they use sampling technology to put out a blip of sound, but it’s really like an orchestral hit will be sampled and then so… you know and maybe they do… like if they appear very rapidly, that’s something maybe an orchestra couldn’t do, because it happens faster than an orchestra could play it but… it’s not what I would call a really significant change or anything.

Chris: So no real validity to the art of sampling, in your opinion?

Donald: Well it all sounds so canned that it’s basically… since they use drum machines and sequences for even the ballads now… people are used to it now, but to me, it also sounds like the kick drum comes in the wrong place, or it sounds wrong. You know like it’s… there’s really something wrong with the groove. Although, they’re getting better at mimicking real grooves. To me there’s always something, and the fact that it’s unchanging makes it sound, it may be hypnotic, but it has no dynamics, and it has no shape.

And what’s more, if you want to continue with the technical thing, as far as the other instruments are concerned, if you use synthesizers for all the keyboards and stuff like that, they’re always out of tune, technically, and I can hear it. It’s like the top end is always a little flat, and the bottom end is always a little sharp, because the keyboards aren’t what they call “stretched.” Like, when a piano tuner tunes a piano, aside from being tempered, they’ll stretch the tops of the harmonics so they aren’t flat on the top and sharp on the bottom. So they’re… there’s no groove and they’re out of tune.

Chris: Have you adopted… well, I assume you haven’t adopted modern synthesizers then into your work?

Donald: Well, I sometimes use synthesizers, but only in special situations… I’ll play a Rhodes piano, which is tunable, or some other kind of, like a Wurlitzer piano, which is also tunable by a piano tuner, because I just can’t take the out-of-tune quality of synthesizers.

Chris: What about in your recording process? Have you adopted any of the modern recording techniques?

Donald: Yeah I think Pro Tools for instance, the digital technology is really helpful at times, just because you can maneuver around easily and quickly.

Chris: Where was the bulk of Morph the Cat recorded?

Donald: Mostly in Manhattan . My wife and I went on a vacation to Hawaii in the middle of it, but I got bored and, you know, rented this studio and did some of the vocals there as well.

Chris: Did Walter Becker help out with this particular record?

Donald: Not on this one.

Chris: OK, I know the two of you tend to work outside of Steely Dan together.

Donald: Yeah, sometimes, but we were just on a kind of a break.

Chris: Are you going to be touring in support of this?

Donald: Yeah I’ll be out in March and — with my own band — and then in the summer, I’m going to go out again, and then maybe toward the end of the summer, Walter and I will hook up and do some Steely Dan gigs as well.

Chris: Oh really! Oh that’s very exciting. What could someone expect from your live performance of solo material? Will there be theatrics involved?

Donald: Yes, smoke bombs, the usual kind of — no, I’m kidding. Usually Steely Dan, when we play, it’s pretty basic, in fact we’ll be probably … my show will probably be even more stripped down, like usually, Steely Dan has a kind of fairly deluxe-looking stage set, and lights and stuff — I’ll probably have something a little more economical.

Chris: Interesting. Well I wanted to say that I grew up listening to Steely Dan in the ’70s and listened to many of the albums. Well, my mother would play them for me. But it seemed like when I was a child, you were releasing albums quite often…

Donald: Yeah, that’s right.

Chris: And I would sit and stare at the records, and I found myself pulling them out again as I became an adult. And there’s this quality about your music that really sort of manages to transcend whatever is happening at present.

Donald: Oh, thanks a lot.

Chris: What do you personally feel it is about the music that gives it a timeless quality?

Donald: Don’t know, it’s hard to say. You know, I think as far as the lyrics, I think we’ve always tried to be honest and address problems like aging and you know…I think we didn’t even start out pretending we were adolescents or anything like that, so we didn’t have to keep that up. You know, maybe coming out of adult traditions like jazz and literary tradition kept us honest, I think, and so … but on the other hand, the Rolling Stones still pretend they’re adolescents, and they’re in their 60s, and they survived very well, so I’m not sure.

Chris: Well you seem to be surviving well. Two Against Nature brought home a Grammy.

Donald: I saw the Rolling Stones the other day. They were great. You know, I mean, Mick Jagger was in incredible shape, he was actually very inspiring … not only was he pounding around for two hours, but he seems to sing just as well doing that, as if he was standing still, which is quite miraculous.

Chris: You saw them live?

Donald: Mm hmm, in Madison Square Garden .

Chris: Are you friends with them?

Donald: No, I met Keith Richards a couple of times, but I’m not really friends with anybody, no.

Chris: With anybody?

Donald: Well, with any, you know, any like celebrity-type people for the most part.

Chris: Did the continued success of Steely Dan into this millennium, has it surprised you at all?

Donald: Yeah….when we got nominated for the Grammy and all that stuff — it was quite unexpected.

Chris: So, back to Morph the Cat . What are the themes that dominate this particular record?

Donald: Death.

Chris: Death.

Donald: Mm hmm.

Chris: Is that something that, well, is on your mind?

Donald: Well yeah. I’m 58 as I say, and so you start thinking about, you know, I have so many years left, and so what am I going to do, what’s important. My mother died a couple of years ago, so that was interesting, and then I’m a New Yorker, so 9/11 I think was particularly … had a fairly intense effect, and I think it still does on all New Yorkers. You know, this kind of underlying paranoia in the city that was never there before, and I think it also tends to eroticize the society a little bit more, in that it’s kind of a reaction to the imminent extinction.

Chris: Of the self or society?

Donald: Well just, you know, both. If they think … when people think they don’t have that much time left, and when there’s a threat of war, or during wartime, I think it’s kind of sexy.

Chris: And do you feel the same way about the sort of omnipresent paranoia and fear that’s been injected into the American mind?

Donald: Mm hmm, yeah sure.

Chris: It certainly plays upon a lot of the literary themes that you mentioned earlier.

Donald: Yeah. I think especially like, for instance, in Milan Kundera’s work, when he talks about Czechoslovakia during the communist regime he makes a point of saying, “I kind of eroticized the society,” and that’s different in many ways from what I’m talking about, but I think there’s a parallel somehow”.

The first of three reviews I want to drop in is from Popmatters. Awarding it eight-of-ten, maybe those not a fan of Steely Dan or familiar with Donald Fagen might have felt cold towards Morph the Cat in 2006. Consider albums released in that year – including Lily Allen’s Alright, Still, Arctic Monkeys’ Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not, Joanna Newsom’s Ys, and Amy Winehouse’s Back to Black – and it is a harder sell. It does stand out. A sophisticated, rich and occasionally bleak album, there is stunning musicianship, world-class harmonies and lyrics from Donald Fagen that brings in humour and intelligence but addresses terrorism, death, and subjects many artists would not be able to elevate beyond the basic or heavy-handed:

Morph the Cat is the latest product from the Dan imprint. And though it is a solo album written and produced only by Donald Fagen (The Dan’s singer and co-composer), it is inarguably a Steely Dan album in musical approach. Recorded by the very nearly the same band as Two Against Nature and Everything Must Go (particularly, Jon Herrington on guitar, Keith Carlock on drums, Walt Weiskoff on saxophones, and many others), Morph brims with tight but light funk grooves, astonishing harmonic twists going into choruses or bridges, and creepy, funny, mad lyrics that tell stories too dark for most pop music. The guitar and saxophone solos are serpentine and brilliant, and the singing — both Mr. Fagen’s flexible but sneering lead and the gorgeously layered backgrounds — is pitch-lovely.

The question of whether you’ll like this music will be based almost wholly on your gut-level feeling about Steely Dan as a whole. If you’re one of those in-my-DNA Steely Dan-haters (you know who you are: you are under 40, think Steely Dan sounds like smoove jazz with vocals, and find the whole thing contrived and plastic, utterly without soul), then this is a big-time PASS for you. It is slick-o-rific. But for those who love The Dan’s bop-cum-funk mixtures juxtaposed with sick stories, well — you’re in for the usual treat.

Lyrically, Morph the Cat is a logical successor to the first two Donald Fagen solo albums, The Nightfly and Kamakiriad. While Nightfly was set nostalgically in the 1950s and ’60s of Mr. Fagen’s youth, Kamakiriad and Morph are present tense missives from middle-age and late middle-age, respectively. The one significant difference between “Steely Dan” and “Donald Fagen” is the personal cast to the stories Mr. Fagen chooses to tell on his own. This time around, our narrator faces mortality on his home turf of 9/11-shaken New York City. The Old Bastard Death hangs around many of these songs like a bad smell, mixed whenever possible with the usual Dan/Fagen sense of creepy horniness.

Thus, in “Security Joan”, a slippery blues with all manner of harmonic elaboration, the narrator tries to explain to the alluring airport security officer both that “I’m not a terrorist” and that she is more than welcome to confiscate his shoes and perhaps his other clothes too. “The Night Belongs to Mona” describes a “child of the night” who’s become a hermit in her 40th-floor New York apartment, likely because of “the fire downtown / that turned her world around.” The couple in “The Great Pagoda of Fun” also cloister themselves “inside this house of light”, hiding from “psycho-moms / and dying stars / and dirty bombs”. No doubt, it’s an album of nightmares wrapped in crystalline music — particularly “Brite Nightgown”, a series of three dreams of Donald Fagen’s meetings with the Grim Reaper: a deadly fever, a sucker’s mugging, and an overdose. Fagen dresses this tune in a jumpy vocal that sounds as much like Prince as it does like Steely Dan — a falsetto octave syncopatedly set against the funk.

The title track is about a ghostly feline who floats over the whole city, visiting upscale apartments, playground basketball courts, and even Yankee Stadium, maybe a cousin to the devil who pads about the Russian novel The Master and Margherita cutting deals and promising a reprieve from the hardest thing there is. And Morph offers a few reprieves of its own. The “single” is “H Gang”, a story of a charismatic band that rises and then fades into MTV obscurity — perhaps the opposite of Steely Dan. It bops with fine pop pleasure. Better, though, is “What I Do”, a dastardly clever conversation between the ghost of Ray Charles and a young Donald Fagen seeking romantic tips. “I say, Ray, why do girls treat you nice that way?” Brother Ray replies: “It’s not what I know, what I think or say / It’s what I do.” You won’t find a better description of Ray’s music than this: “Well, you bring some church, but you leave no doubt / As to what kind of love you love to shout about.” This one is also a blues, but a gorgeous catchy blues with tasty stop-time for the piano and guitar. 

Despite the craft in this music — no, because of the craft in this music — most younger fans will run from Morph like it carried the very plague. No question, this album sounds uniform and rather overpleasant — engineered to a sheen of perfection by Elliott Scheiner. If that makes baby-boomers nostalgic and cozy, remembering cruising in their 1974 Camero listening to Aja, it’s not really Donald Fagen’s fault. He is still making — unapologetically — some very beautiful and very weird music that comes through the gate like a Trojan Horse and then explodes with disturbing imagery.

Indeed, “Mary Shut the Garden Door” is about that very topic: “They came in under the radar / When our backs were turned around / In a fleet of Lincoln Town Cars / They rolled into our town / Confounded all six senses / Like an opiate in the brain”. Morph the Cat works very much the same way. At first it sounds perhaps too much like Two Against Nature or Gaucho, but it insinuates. The melody of “The Night Belongs to Mona” is unique and sturdy as rock, the intimacy of “What I Do” is as vulnerable and intimate as anything on The Nightfly, and the death-groove of “Brite Nightgown” is sung and played with good nastiness. All this great stuff creeps out of the belly of Morph at midnight. My recommendation: keep your eyes — and ears — open”.

The penultimate review is from the Steely Dan Reader that makes some compelling observations about Morph the Cat. It is an album that I did not hear back in 2006. However, as a massive Steely Dan and Donald Fagen fan, it is one I listen to a lot now. I would recommend it to anyone:

So Morph the Cat is the title and apparently it is the third part in a highly personal trilogy. The Nightfly about youth, Kamakiriad about midlife and Morph the Cat about endings or as Fagen himself puts it, “I’m starting to get older and began to think about mortality a little more. My mother died in 2003 and that was a big shock. When your parents start to die off, that’s going to be a revelation. So for me, this album, although it might sound quite cheery, is really talking a lot about death.” There are plans to release the trilogy as a separate box set, no doubt with extra tracks so we have to buy the albums again.

The first single from the album is “H Gang” and it’s just perfect. I am sure it will be and probably already is a radio smash and is just indicative of the album — it really is just perfect. I want to take you through my own personal mindset when I get a new album from the Steely Dan boys. Initially I really want it to be the best thing I’ve ever heard.

It starts with the CD arriving, then the anticipation about the first hearing, then strangely, disappointment as it can never live up to my non-realistic expectations. First listen over, phew, pressures off, now I can relax and really start to get into it. Every time this has happened and with repeated listens the albums just get better and better!

Well, it’s here and in my life, a new solo album from Donald Fagen and I can’t stop playing it, over and over. Those “right in the pocket” grooves, heavenly harmonies, strange lyrics and subject matters, fantastic musicianship, Fagen’s strained but powerful vocals, it’s everything you could want and more. It’s not jazz, not soul, and not rock but is infused with the spirit of all these genres. It is unique and in possession of that x factor so missing in today’s money, fame and power obsessed music industry, much like Mr Fagen himself. A true original musician who has lived his life and reacted to it through his music, including long periods of writers block and inactivity, times that must have been incredibly frustrating. 

I haven’t got any sleeve notes to help me try and dismember the subject matter on hand but despite its upbeat sound the album is dark and serious and I can only hazard an educated guess about some of the songs. “Mary Shut the Garden Door” seems to be about fighting or hiding from aliens and has probably got some political agenda. “Security Joan” is another great character created for the purpose of one of life’s patience building experiences, the airport security routine, especially since 9/11.

“It’s What I Do” is a song he has had for a while, as Fagen says to explain this piece, “I think I didn’t accept myself as a performer until recently. I always thought I had this sort of fake job. Like a lot of people of my generation, I didn’t quite sink into my actual profession, so it was difficult to take myself seriously in any given role. So I had this song that concerned itself with that concept. Then when Ray Charles died, I realized it would be much better if I addressed it to Ray Charles rather than just have it about me because he was such a great role model. So that one’s really a younger version of myself addressing the ghost of Ray Charles.”

Here we have the essence of Donald Fagen, an ability to blend jazz, soul and other musical influences with extended grooves and changing musical landscapes, in fact not unlike Ray Charles! He has no problem if this album echoes our troubled times, it is the reason for his own longevity, the instinct to reflect what’s going on both in his own life and the world at large. As to the real nitty gritty I’ll leave the last word to the great man himself: “I like it when songs develop in some way and four minutes usually isn’t enough time for something to develop. I’m still kind of plugged into that Duke Ellington model – something akin to classical music – where you start something, you develop it a little bit and stick with it and when you get a groove going, time flies.”

I found out two interesting pieces of information when writing this review, firstly both Donald Fagen and Walter Becker attended Bard College along with actor/comedian Chevy Chase and the three of them played together in a band known as Leather Canary! If you have ever wondered about the meaning of some of the crazy and exotic words used in Steely Dan/Becker & Fagen songs then you will be very pleased to discover www.steelydandictionary.com where you will find out things you probably didn’t even want to know but are so glad you did. Enjoy this new album from one of music’s great original craftsman and let’s hope he tours the UK very soon”.

I am going to wrap up with this review from AllMusic. Most people share the same point that it is not a big break from any previous Steely Dan/Donald Fagen album. Even if the same hallmarks are there, the lyrics themes and players are different:

There are no surprises in sound and style on Morph the Cat, Donald Fagen's long-awaited third solo album, nor should any be expected -- ever since Steely Dan's 1980 masterwork, Gaucho, his work, either on his own or with longtime collaborator Walter Becker, has been of a piece. Each record has been sleek, sophisticated, and immaculately produced, meticulously recorded and arranged, heavy on groove and mood, which tends to mask the sly wit of the songs. When it works well -- as it did on Fagen's peerless 1982 solo debut, The Nightfly, or on Steely Dan's 2001 comeback, Two Against Nature -- the results go down smoothly upon first listen and reveal their complexity with each spin; when it doesn't quite succeed -- both 1993's Kamakiriad and the Dan's 2003 effort Everything Must Go didn't quite gel -- the albums sound good but samey on the surface and don't quite resonate. Morph the Cat belongs in the first group: at first it sounds cozily familiar, almost too familiar, but it digs deep, both as music and song.

Sonically, at least superficially, it is very much a continuation of the two Steely Dan records of the new millennium -- not only does it share Fagen's aesthetic, but it was recorded with many of the same musicians who have shown up on the Dan projects. There are slight differences -- without Becker around, there's a greater emphasis on keyboards and the songs stretch on a bit longer than anything on Everything Must Go -- but this, at least on pure sonics, could have functioned as a sequel to Two Against Nature. But Morph the Cat is very much a solo affair, fitting comfortably next to his first two solo albums as a conclusion to what he calls a trilogy. If The Nightfly concerned the past and Kamakiriad was set in a hazy future, Morph the Cat is rooted in the present, teeming with the fears and insecurities of post-9/11 America. Fagen doesn't camouflage his intent with the gleefully enigmatic rhymes that have been his trademark: his words, while still knowingly sardonic, are direct, and in case you don't want to bother reading the lyrics or listening closely, he helpfully offers brief explanations of the songs (for instance, on "Mary Shut the Garden Door," he writes "Paranoia blooms when a thuggish cult gains control of the government," a statement that's not exactly veiled). On top of this unease, Fagen faces mortality throughout the album -- he talks with the ghost of Ray Charles, borrows W.C. Fields' phrase for death for "Brite Nitegown," writes about attempted suicides -- and every song seems to be about things drawing to a close.

It's a little disarming to hear Fagen talk so bluntly -- although he came close to doing so on the deliberately nostalgic The Nightfly, the fact that he was writing about the past kept him at a bit of a distance -- but despite the abundance of morbid themes, Morph the Cat never sounds dour or depressing. In large part this is due to Fagen's viewpoint -- he never succumbs to mawkishness, always preferring to keep things witty and sardonic, which helps keep things from getting too heavy -- but it's also due to his smooth jazz-rock, which always sounds nimble and light. This, of course, is how Fagen's music always sounds, but here, it not only functions as a counterpoint to the darkness creeping on the edges of the album, but it's executed expertly: as spotless as this production is, it never sounds sterile, and when the songs start stretching past the five-minute mark -- two cuts are over seven minutes -- it never gets boring, because there's a genuine warmth to the clean, easy groove. More so than on Kamakiriad, or on the tight Everything Must Go, there is a sense of genuine band interplay on this record, which helps give it both consistency and heart -- something appropriate for an album that is Fagen's most personal song cycle since The Nightfly, and quite possibly his best album since then”.

If you have never experienced the brilliant Morph the Cat then you need to go and listen to it. It turns twenty on 7th March, and I am not sure whether there will be much new discussion or whether anyone will wrap about it. We definitely need a new Donald Fagen album. However, having not lost his wife, Libby Titus, and things in America being so bleak, it may be a while until his next solo album. In the meantime, we have works of genius like Morph the Cat. I think that it is a masterpiece…

YOU definitely need to hear.

FEATURE: When the War is Finally Done… The Importance of the HELP(2) Album

FEATURE:

 

 

When the War is Finally Done…

ARTWORK CREDIT: Jonathan Glazer

 

The Importance of the HELP(2) Album

__________

I remember when…

IN THIS PHOTO: Jarvis Cocker said he hoped the HELP(2) album would raise both money and awareness

the original HELP album came out in 1995. I had not really heard anything like until that point. I was aware of compilation albums and that sort of thing, but the notion of a range of popular artists coming together recording songs for a charity album was such an incredible idea. I am going to drop a couple of the HELP tracks in to show the type of artists who were involved. HELP(2) seem hugely important right now, as there is genocide and bloodshed around the world. The album is designed to raise money for War Child. You can donate to the charity here. Consider the scenes we see of countries afflicted by war and violence. It has been over thirty years since the first HELP album, so I do think that it is long overdue. At perhaps one of the scariest and most violent times in decades for the world, minds turn to the children affected by this. I am going to come to a feature first where producer James Ford revealed some artists approached to record for HELP(2) turned him down, as they thought it was too political. That seems infuriating, as it is not a political decision but a moral one! Supporting a charity that raise money for war-afflicted children does not make you anti-Semitic or against any nation. It is not an artist tying themselves to a political party. The thought artists would be worried fans would create backlash because it is controversial to support War Child. I can’t quite fathom why artists would do that. I know that Kate Bush has raised money for War Child and I wonder if she was approached. I cannot imagine she would decline for political reasons, but it would have been cool to see her in the fold. However, I am curious which artists declined to be a part of HELP(2). This NME article featured James Ford talking about that strange and shocking decision of artists not wanting to be part of an album raising much-needed money for War Child:

James Ford, producer of War Child’s upcoming ‘Help(2)’ album, says some artists refused to be involved as they thought it was “too political”.

The collaborative album, inspired by the landmark 1995 ‘HELP’ record for War Child, comes out on March 6 – you can pre-order here. Produced and stewarded by Ford (Arctic MonkeysGorillazFlorence + The MachineBlurPet Shop Boys), ‘HELP(2)’ was recorded through “a close collaboration with Abbey Road Studios” mostly during one week in November 2025.

So far, the album has been previewed by one track – ‘Opening Night’ by Arctic Monkeys, which also marks their first new song in four years. Now, in a new interview with the Guardian, Ford has said that some artists declined to be a part of the album out of fear that it was too political.

War Child was first set up in 1993 by filmmakers David Wilson and Bill Leeson, who had seen the effects of war in the former Yugoslavia first-hand. The 1995 ‘Help’ record saw the charity gain mass exposure and generated a significant increase in donations.

IN THIS PHOTO: HELP(2) producer James Ford/PHOTO CREDIT: Pip Bourdillon

The decision to make a new album came from the severity of the crises in Gaza, Sudan, Ukraine and Syria.

“Obviously, a lot of people I know and I’ve worked with were easy targets, so we started with them: Fontaines DC, Arctic Monkeys, Depeche Mode, Gorillaz, Pulp and people like that,” Ford told the publication.

He went on to say that curating the record was “actually a great insight into the industry: which people are willing to do something. People who you’d think would be into it flat-out refused because they saw it as too political or something like that. It was fascinating.”

Alongside Alex Turner and co’s first material since 2022’s ‘The Car‘, the album also features Anna CalviArlo ParksArooj AftabBat For LashesBeabadoobeeBeckPortishead‘s Beth GibbonsBig ThiefBlack Country, New RoadCameron Winter, Blur’s Damon Albarn and Graham CoxonDepeche ModeDove EllisWolf Alice‘s Ellie Rowsell, English Teacher, Ezra CollectiveFoals, Fontaines D.C. and frontman Grian ChattenGreentea PengKae TempestKing KruleNilüfer YanyaOlivia RodrigoPulpSamphaThe Last Dinner PartyWet Leg, The Smiths‘ icon Johnny Marr and Young Fathers.

However, shortly after being asked to lead the project, Ford was diagnosed with leukaemia. He told the Guardian that he was in the ICU during the week of recording sessions “with a pipe coming out of my fucking neck.”

“But because of technology, I could actually be in hospital, on my laptop, listening to what they were doing on the desk,” he added. “I could press the space bar and talk to everyone’s headphones, so I was remotely producing a lot of the tracks.

The record follows more than 30 years from the original and legendary Brian Eno-led 1995 ‘Help’ album that featured OasisBlurRadioheadOrbitalPortisheadMassive AttackSuedeSinéad O’ConnorManic Street PreachersThe Boo Radleys and more.

That album raised over £1.25million and sold over 700,000 copies, and was followed by other charity records including 2002’s ‘1 Love’, 2003’s ‘Hope’, 2005’s ‘Help!: A Day in the Life’ and 2009’s ‘War Child Presents Heroes’. The charity works to protect, educate, and support the mental health of children affected by war – and comes at a time of conflicts in Palestine, Ukraine, Sudan, Syria and beyond.

The original ‘Help’ charity album was reissued and made available on streaming platforms in 2020 to celebrate its 25th anniversary. In October last year, it was then reissued again, this time as a limited, numbered 7” single boxed set in celebration of it turning 30”.

IN THIS PHOTO: Arctic Monkeys/PHOTO CREDIT: Phoebe Fox

Before going into the behind the scenes and the making of, Abbey Road give all the details of where you can pre-order the album, the artists involved, the tracks that have been recorded, and some details around the original HELP album. I must mention that in-person sessions at Abbey Road Studios were assisted by phenomenal producers, Marta Salogni and Catherine Marks (who is one of my favourite producers ever):

HELP(2) is a brand new collaborative album inspired by the landmark 1995 release HELP to engage music lovers globally in support of War Child's vital work delivering immediate aid, education, specialist mental health support, and protection to children affected by conflict around the world. The new album, like the original, speaks to the urgency of the humanitarian situation globally today.

HELP(2) will be released on Friday 6 March via War Child Records. You can pre-order the album HERE.

HELP(2) carries forward the spirit of the original HELP album and was brought to life through a close collaboration with Abbey Road Studios, recorded predominantly across one extraordinary week in November 2025 under the stewardship of acclaimed producer James Ford.

HELP(2) features an incredible line-up of contributors including Anna Calvi, Arctic Monkeys, Arlo Parks, Arooj Aftab, Bat For Lashes, Beabadoobee, Beck, Beth Gibbons, Big Thief, Black Country, New Road, Cameron Winter, Damon Albarn, Depeche Mode, Dove Ellis, Ellie Rowsell, English Teacher, Ezra Collective, Foals, Fontaines D.C., Graham Coxon, Greentea Peng, Grian Chatten, Kae Tempest, King Krule, Nilüfer Yanya, Olivia Rodrigo, Pulp, Sampha, The Last Dinner Party, Wet Leg and Young Fathers. You can find the full HELP(2) tracklist below.

The spirit of the original record was reflected in the collaborative nature of the recording process with numerous impromptu moments unfolding in the studio. Damon Albarn's session for Flags saw him joined by Johnny Marr on guitar and Kae Tempest and Grian Chatten of Fontaines D.C. on vocals; and Olivia Rodrigo was connected with Graham Coxon resulting in the guitarist performing on her cover of The Book of Love.

In addition to the stellar cast of musicians involved, renowned filmmaker and Academy Award Winner Jonathan Glazer acted as Creative Director for HELP(2), working with Academy Films to assemble a team of brilliant creatives and overseeing the filming and art direction for the project. Glazer and Mica Levi’s concept was simple - By Children, For Children - with his team handing the cameras over to children in order to see the world through their eyes and serve as a constant reminder of the reason for the endeavor to the audience and all involved.

Each child operated their own small camera and was invited into the studios to film the artists recording without any restrictions. In addition, Glazer’s team worked with fixers and filmmakers in Ukraine, Gaza, Yemen and Sudan to gather footage filmed by children on the ground in these conflict zones. The results are a stunning piece of work that, ultimately, connects the album to the children the music seeks to help.

Recorded in a single day in 1995, the original HELP album raised over £1.2 million, enabling War Child to provide vital support to thousands of children caught in the Bosnian conflict.

However, when HELP was first released, around 10% of the world’s children were affected by conflict. Today, that figure has almost doubled to nearly 1 in 5, or 520 million children worldwide; more than at any time since the Second World War. With conflicts escalating and funding cuts hitting hard, War Child’s work has never been more urgent and the need for these artists to carry forward the original album’s spirit of collective action could not be more vital.

“When James Ford called and asked if we’d contribute to the HELP(2) album we set to work on a song idea and assembled in Abbey Road to record it. We are proud to support the invaluable work War Child do and hope the record will make a positive difference to the lives of children affected by war.” - Arctic Monkeys

“I felt incredibly honored when War Child asked me to work on ‘HELP(2)’. The original ‘HELP’ meant a lot to me and to have the opportunity, given the current news cycle, to  help galvanize our music community into doing something as unarguably positive as helping children in war zones seemed like a no brainer. The experience of making the album itself has been very powerful, and dare I say life affirming for me personally, against the backdrop of a very difficult year. I’m extremely proud of the results and of the efforts made by all involved. I can’t wait for people to hear this very special record. ” - James Ford

“It has been such a privilege to be part of bringing a team together to film this incredible collective effort.” - Jonathan Glazer

“HELP(2) is more than an album. It’s a powerful example of what can happen when the music industry comes together around a shared purpose. It has united a diverse group of artists and creatives in support of War Child’s vital work with children affected by the devastating impacts of war. We are immensely grateful to all the artists and teams who have donated their voices, talent and time to support our mission to ensure that no child is caught up in conflict zones. We hope this record not only raises vital funds, but also awareness of the urgent need to turn compassion into action and do more to protect children living through war.” - Rich Clarke, Head of Music at War Child UK.

War Child is driven by a single goal – ensuring a safe future for every child affected by war. Using 30 years of experience and proven methodologies, War Child aims to reach children as quickly as possible when conflict breaks out and stays long after the cameras have gone to support them through their recovery.

Together with its partners, War Child delivers vital work in 14 countries across the globe, including Sudan, Gaza, Ukraine, Syria, and more. Every day, its local teams are in communities and refugee camps creating safe spaces for children to play, learn, and access psychological support. War Child also specialises in responding rapidly to emergency crisis situations as they happen, offering immediate and critical aid impartially to keep children safe and help them through their trauma.

Led by Brian Eno, the original HELP album has become one of the most celebrated charity records ever made, featuring contributions from Oasis, Blur, Radiohead, Massive Attack, Portishead, Sinéad O’Connor, Paul McCartney, Paul Weller and more.

The story behind the record and its recording is now legend: all of the songs were recorded on one single day, Monday 4th September 1995, mixed the following day, and released to the buying public a few days later, on Saturday 9th September. The idea to record in 24 hours came from John Lennon, who, when discussing his 1970 record Instant Karma said that records should be like newspapers, reflecting events as they are happening.

HELP sold over 70,000 copies on day one and reached number one in the UK compilation charts and would have reached number one on the UK albums chart had it been eligible. Following its release, the record won both a specially created BRIT Award, collected by Thom Yorke, and a Q Award to recognise its impact. It was also nominated for the 1996 Mercury PrizePulp won that year with Different Class but donated the prize fund to War Child.

HELP captured a defining cultural moment and, nearly three decades on, its unparalleled influence continues to resonate with a globally-conscious generation of listeners.

No child should be a part of war. Ever.

HELP(2) Tracklist:
Arctic Monkeys - Opening Night
Damon Albarn, Grian Chatten & Kae Tempest - Flags
Black Country, New Road - Strangers
The Last Dinner Party - Let’s do it again!
Beth Gibbons - Sunday Morning
Arooj Aftab & Beck - Lilac Wine
King Krule - The 343 Loop
Depeche Mode - Universal Soldier
Ezra Collective & Greentea Peng - Helicopters
Arlo Parks - Nothing I Could Hide
English Teacher & Graham Coxon - Parasite
Beabadoobee - Say Yes
Big Thief - Relive, Redie
Fontaines D.C. - Black Boys on Mopeds
Cameron Winter - Warning
Young Fathers - Don’t Fight the Young
Pulp - Begging for Change
Sampha - Naboo
Wet Leg - Obvious
Foals - When the War is Finally Done
Bat For Lashes - Carried my girl
Anna Calvi, Ellie Rowsell, Nilüfer Yanya & Dove Ellis - Sunday Light
Olivia Rodrigo - The Book of Love”.

Some truly major and influential artists are behind the HELP(2) album. I hope to interview some of them or some of the technical crew and those responsible for bringing the music together, as I would love to know what it was like seeing it all coalesce. Rolling Stone gave us some insight a charity album that I hope raises millions for War Child. I have heard the Arctic Monkeys’ song that has just been released, Opening Night, and it is a fantastic track:

Arctic Monkeys have their own relationship with War Child going back to 2018, when they played a show at the Royal Albert Hall and donated the proceeds to the organization. A live album from that concert, released two years later, yielded even more funds for children affected by war. “I think we’re just shy of £1.5 million from the show and the record,” Clarke says.

When the band met up at Abbey Road toward the end of 2025, it was their first time together in a studio in a few years. They decided to revisit an unfinished song that Turner had been toying with for more than a decade; Helders estimates that it first surfaced “in Joshua Tree, when we used to record out there.” (Dedicated Monkeys scholars can deduce that it probably entered the picture during the sessions for 2009’s Humbug or 2013’s AM, both partially recorded in the California desert.)

“He never got to scratch the itch of completing this song,” Helders says. “It was just one of those that wouldn’t go away in his head, I think. There was never a full version of it. We’d jam it out and try to write parts for it. It never got over the finish line, but it was too good to just leave alone.”

Now, they tried taking another run at “Opening Night” in the style they’ve evolved into on later albums like Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino and The Car. “And it just worked,” Helders says. “It’s different to what it was going to be if we did it 10, 15 years ago, but we were all really happy with it… It’s almost like this song was waiting until we were good enough to do it.”

IN THIS PHOTO: Damon Albarn

Coming Full Circle

The rest of the HELP(2) sessions, the bulk of which took place over three days at Abbey Road, featured some other familiar faces, too. Back in 1996, when Pulp won the Mercury Prize for their era-defining album Different Class, they donated their winnings to War Child, feeling that The Help Album ought to have won instead. Three decades later, Jarvis Cocker and company stepped up to contribute a characteristically droll rocker called “Begging for Change” to the new project.

The original Help album, released at the height of the Britpop craze, included an instrumental track from Blur. This time, Blur guitarist Graham Coxon dropped by Abbey Road to sit in with the indie band English Teacher, while Albarn teamed up with Chatten and rapper Kae Tempest to polish off a new song called “Flags.”

“It was quite major chords, which is unusual for me,” the Blur/Gorillaz singer tells Rolling Stone. “So when conversation of War Child came, I thought it was quite a good thing to present as an idea.”

Albarn is a fan of both Chatten and Tempest, calling them both “huge talents,” and he was delighted to form an impromptu trio with them in the studio. “Flags” wound up featuring guitar from Johnny Marr, Portishead’s Adrian Utley, and Dave Okumu, as well as backing vocals from Cocker, Barât, Declan McKenna, Marika Hackman, the members of Black Country, New Road, and several other musicians who were around that day.

“We did it all together, like a band,” Albarn says. “When you do music for charity, it can be a bit trite somehow. But I don’t think we got distracted by that sense of, ‘Oh, we’re doing a charity record.’ We all just enjoyed recording together in Abbey Road.”

All of this action was recorded on hand-held cameras wielded by a crew of grade-schoolers that Glazer, the filmmaker behind The Zone of Interest and Under the Skin, sent to Abbey Road to document the sessions. “It’s to tell the story through the eyes of children,” Clarke says. “At one point, they’d be sat next to Damon on the piano stool, or sticking a camera up Jarvis’ nose in the vocal booth in Studio Three. It had a wonderful effect on the atmosphere, because once you’ve got kids running around, it just takes the stress away.”

Sadly, Ford, who was diagnosed with leukemia in early 2025, was unable to attend the sessions in person. So War Child brought in top producers including Marta Salogni and Catherine Marks to help out, and Ford continued to provide as much remote input as possible.

On the final day of recording, Dec. 17, Olivia Rodrigo came by Abbey Road to record a quietly stunning cover of the Magnetic Fields’ “The Book of Love”; the track also features Coxon on acoustic guitar. Ford, who was receiving treatment in the hospital at the time, guided the session over Zoom. “He was actually talking into Olivia Rodrigo’s [headphones] while she was recording, while he was having a blood transfusion,” Clarke says. “Remarkable man, and an absolute genius.”

Around Christmas, Clarke got to hear Arctic Monkeys’ “Opening Night” for the first time. A longtime fan of the band — “I’m old enough to remember seeing them in Camden in skinny jeans and a flannel shirt and long hair” — he knows that getting a new single from them is no small feat. “We didn’t take it for granted,” he says. “I was absolutely blown away. It’s a brilliant track, isn’t it?”

With “Opening Night” out now and the album arriving on streaming services soon, he’s looking forward to seeing how fans respond to all the music that got made at Abbey Road for War Child. “The wonderful thing is, these rights are going to support children affected by conflict in perpetuity,” Clarke says. “The music’s the legacy piece, and the quality of that will carry through for the next 30 years, we hope. Fingers crossed”.

I will end with a BBC article that also takes us inside the recording of HELP(2). It is important because there is this crisis moment in terms of the children displaced and affected by war around the world. It is not talked about as much as it should. Whilst events in the U.S. and global politics is crucial, there is not as much media coverage of the nations affected by violence and what they are facing. HELP(2) will help shine new light on a conversation that needs to continue. Those artists who turned down the opportunity participate and add their voices, I feel, should be ashamed:

These were the scenes in London last November, as some of the world's biggest stars convened to record a new charity album in aid of Warchild.

The tracklist, revealed yesterday, is like a who's who of indie rock. Wet Leg, The Last Dinner Party, Wolf Alice, Fontaines DC, Nilüfer Yanya, Cameron Winter, Ezra Collective, Foals and Young Fathers all contribute.

Over the course of one week, 23 tracks were recorded. At times, five of Abbey Road's famed studios were in use, with collaborations springing up on the spur of the moment.

Blur's Graham Coxon plays guitar with Rodrigo on a cover of The Magnetic Fields' The Book Of Love. Damon Albarn's session saw him joined by Johnny Marr on guitar, with additional vocals by Kae Tempest and Grian Chatten.

Later in the day, Jarvis Cocker got back from a bathroom break to find them all in his studio - so he got them to sing the intro to a new Pulp song, Begging For Change.

"The just turned up, so I thought, 'Why not?'" he laughs. "I'm not used to that kind of thing, but it was really good."

The original 1995 Help album featured Noel Gallagher, Paul McCartney and Paul Weller playing a cover of The Beatles' Come Together, under the name Mojo Filters

The album is the spritual successor to 1995's Help! - recorded at the height of Britpop, and featuring contributions from Paul Weller, Radiohead, Suede, Paul McCartney, The KLF, Portishead and The Manic Street Preachers.

It was also, famously, the only time Oasis and Blur appeared on the same record, just months after their legendary (and acrimonious) chart battle.

"We'll put aside our differences for the cause," Noel Gallagher said at the time. "And it's the only time you'll see us agreeing on anything."

The record sold 70,000 copies in its first week, raising nearly £1.25m to help children in war-stricken areas, such as Bosnia and Herzegovina.

In 2025, the fund-raising is even more urgent. According to Warchild, 520 million children worldwide - almost one in five - are affected by war, with simultaneous crises in Ukraine, Sudan and Gaza.

The figure is higher than any time since the Second World War, at the same time as governments across the world are cutting international aid.

"At the moment, there really does seem to be a lot of bad things happening, and a lot of people feel powerless," says Cocker.

"They're looking at the news and they don't know what to do. So I would hope this album is something the people can enjoy, and also know that they're trying to make a positive change."

More than 15 million children are in need of assistance in Sudan alone, with more than a third of the population fleeing their homes amidst a brutal civil war.

The first single, released on Thursday, is a new track by Arctic Monkeys called Opening Night.

A sparse, sinister ballad, it finds Alex Turner singing about political sloganeering and "supercomputer crusades" before a beautifully harmonised chorus that offers a message of hope in dark times.

The song dates back a couple of years, drummer Matt Helders tells the BBC, but had never been finished.

Getting the call from Warchild was the prompt they needed to complete the song, with lyrics that felt like a call to arms.

"With charity records, it's often tempting to do a cover, or an interesting collaboration," he says, "but we enjoy making records and being in the studio, so it was fun to work on something that we'd written."

Adding to the fun was that film crew of children, principally aged between eight and 10, who documented the entire recording progress.

They were corralled by Bafta-winning director Jonathan Glazer (Sexy Beast, Under The Skin, The Zone Of Interest), who wanted to connect the music back to the young people it would help.

"They were given free reign to just roam around, which really changed the atmosphere," says Helders.

"Studios can be quite a stiff, clinical environment, sometimes. But they were walking around and bumping into stuff. It made it fun."

The stars at Abbey Road were filmed and interviewed by a cast of junior documentarians

Cocker wasn't so sure.

"I hate anybody watching me sing in the studio, because I'm kind of a self-conscious person and somebody pointing a camera at me doesn't help with that," he says.

You won't get to hear that song until Help(2) is released on 6 March. Thanks to record labels and pressing plants donating their services free of charge, it will be cheaper than standard albums - with a double vinyl costing around £26 - and Warchild receiving all the profits.

"We found that this project really lit a fire under the creative community, " says Rich Clarke, the charity's head of music. "Lots of people wanted to get involved."

He lets slip that the 23 tracks on the album weren't the only product of the week-long recording sessions.

"There's a there's a whole load of tracks, around 10 or so, that that came in when people heard about the project. So actually, there were some tough decisions for the team about what made it onto the record."

But Olivia Rodrigo's song - about the purity of love - was always earmarked as the closing track”.

Even though HELP(2) is about raising money and this wonderful and vital combination of artists, it is also intriguing looking at the tracks and artists performing together. I am particularly excited to hear Olivia Rodrigo’s take on The Book of Love. I love Peter Gabriel’s version, but Rodrigo will do something different with it. Anna Calvi, Ellie Rowsell, Nilüfer Yanya & Dove Ellis together will be awesome arrangement of talent. I do hope that there is more life in terms of a documentary coming soon and maybe in-depth magazine articles. I am not sure whether many publications and websites beyond Rolling Stone are running features with photos, interviews and insights. I will keep an eye out. I would encourage everyone reading this to pre-order HELP(2), as it is very affordable for a double album and all that money goes to War Child. It is going to be a phenomenal collection of songs and a unique occasion. These artists all together and in harmony for a great cause. On 6th March, you can experience this wonderful album. Recorded at Abbey Road Studios and thinking about the atmosphere. These amazing scenes of artists who might never interact chatting and being in the same space. The power of these performances and the possibility that HELP(2) could raise many millions. Let’s hope so. Opening Night is a tantalising cut from the album, and it may be the final track we hear from Arctic Monkeys. If it is, then it is a wonderful way to wrap things up. However, it is more than being about the artists. So paramount that War Child is supported so that they can get much-needed resources and help to those living in absolutely awful circumstances. Let’s not rule out a third volume of this album. However, here and now, everyone needs to throw their weight behind…

THE stunning and moving HELP(2).

FEATURE: It’s the Good Advice That You Just Didn’t Take… Alanis Morissette’s Ironic at Thirty

FEATURE:

 

 

It’s the Good Advice That You Just Didn’t Take…

IN THIS PHOTO: Alanis Morissette in 1995/PHOTO CREDIT: Mick Hutson/Redferns (via SPIN)

 

Alanis Morissette’s Ironic at Thirty

__________

THE fourth single taken…

from Alanis Morissette’s third studio album, Jagged Little Pill, Ironic was released on 27th February, 1996. I want to mark thirty years of one of the defining songs of the '90s. I wrote about Ironic fairly recently, though that was around the debate about whether the ‘ironic’ scenarios in the song were actually ironic. Many people thought they were being clever by saying the situations were not irony. This has been disproven. I will include an article about that. However, that is pretty much all said about a song that is a standout from the masterpiece, Jagged Little Pill. A huge chart success that Morissette has played live numerous times, I want to explore this song more ahead of its thirtieth anniversary. Let’s get the is it/isn’t it actually ironic part out of the way first. In December, American Songwriter published an article reacting to an interview Alanis Morissette gave, where she discussed her views on the controversy and discussion around the accuracy and irony of Ironic’s lyrics:

Alanis Morissette was about as big as any artist has ever been in the ’90s. Her cutting lyricism earned her many ears, thanks to the era’s affinity for punchy realism. She released one of her name-making songs in 1996, “Ironic.” Despite its massive success, there was some lyrical controversy surrounding it. According to Morissette, fans missed the real irony behind this thematically questionable track.

The Real Irony of Alanis Morissette’s “Ironic”

You might be saying to yourself, “What’s controversial about ‘ironic’?” For most listeners, absolutely nothing. But some listeners have pointed out that the lyrics, built around the idea of ironic circumstances, aren’t actually ironic—at least not in the strictest sense.

The chorus reads: It’s like rain on your wedding day / It’s a free ride when you’ve already paid / It’s the good advice that you just didn’t take / And who would’ve thought? It figures.

The list of “ironic” situations Morissette puts together in this song is more plainly unfortunate than truly ironic. Many naysayers have pointed out this fact, over the years, using this song as a punchline for Morissette’s lack of understanding.

According to the singer herself, there’s an even greater irony at play that fans have missed.

“Not Wildly Precious About It”

There are greater offenses in lyricism than Morissette missing the mark of irony. Countless artists have made up words or forced a meaning for the sake of rhyme. Lyricism isn’t always graded on grammatical correctness. This is a fact that Morissette knows and doesn’t think about too hard.

“People got really triggered by the malapropism, or whatever the word is,” Morissette said on MGM+’s Words + Music. “I am a linguist. I’m obsessed with linguistics. I also love making up words, and I also don’t care.”

“Where I go when people are triggered by anything is I quickly go to ‘what’s at the epicentre of this, what is everyone really up in arms about,’” she continued. “‘Why is everyone laughing?’ And I think we’re afraid to look stupid.”

She went on to say that she knows the irony in “Ironic” isn’t strong, but that she wasn’t being too precious about the writing process.

“I think a lot of lyrics around the planet, many, many artists, most of us aren’t being wildly precious about it,” she continued elsewhere. “So I’m 90% grammar police, which is the real irony. And then 10%, I really couldn’t care less. So I think the 10% won over on that song.”

In the end, “Ironic” has many shades of irony. And, all in all, it doesn’t matter if this song was ironclad in its use of language; it became a hit all the same”.

I might actually return to that debate about the lyrics and whether the word ‘ironic’ is used correctly, just because I found an interesting article. However, in 2024, GRAMMY published an article giving some background to Ironic and its legacy. A track I obviously first heard in 1995 when Jagged Little Pill came out, though it was more ubiquitous in 1996 when it was released as a single:

Ironic” was written by Alanis Morissette and Glen Ballard, the driving force behind her breakout album “Jagged Little Pill.” Ballard, known for his work with Michael Jackson and Paula Abdul, pushed Morissette to tap into her raw emotions, resulting in the album’s signature angsty sound. Glen Ballard handled production duties alongside engineer Jeff Greenberg.

Misunderstood Irony: A Look at the Lyrics

The song’s central theme is frustration with life’s unfair twists. Morissette strings together situations like rain on your wedding day and a ten-dollar bill blowing away from a homeless man, all punctuated by the question “Isn’t it ironic?”

However, many listeners (and critics) pointed out that the situations aren’t truly ironic, lacking the expected contrast between expectation and reality. Morissette herself has acknowledged this, stating “I’d always embraced the fact that every once in a while I’d be the malapropism queen.”

Despite the technicality, the lyrics resonate with their portrayal of life’s unpleasant surprises and the frustration of feeling like the universe is working against you. Lines like “A traffic jam when you’re already late” capture the essence of everyday annoyances that feel like personal attacks.

Chart-Topping Success and Awards Recognition

“Ironic” became a global phenomenon, topping charts worldwide and propelling “Jagged Little Pill” to diamond-selling status. While the song itself didn’t win any major awards, the album won two GRAMMY Awards, including Album of the Year.

A Flood of Covers and Enduring Legacy

Many iconic songs have been covered, a way to pay tribute to the original musician. “Ironic” is no exception, it has been covered by countless artists, from Vienna Teng’s stripped-down acoustic version to Aaron Lewis of Staind, covering it at a live show. Other Alanis classics have been covered from artists including Weird Al Yankovic’s parody songs to more traditional rendition from First To Eleven. These covers highlight the song’s versatility and ability to connect with different audiences across genres.

While the debate over the true meaning of “ironic” continues, “Ironic” remains an iconic song. It captures the emotional turmoil of young adulthood and the frustration of feeling like the world doesn’t understand you. Its raw energy and relatable lyrics continue to resonate with listeners decades after its release”.

I think there will be new interest around Alanis Morissette’s Ironic, given that Jagged Little Pill turned thirty last year and Morissette spoke about the album and its importance. There are so many great singles from that album, including Hand in My Pocket, You Learn and You Oughta Know. I will end with some critical reaction to the song. However, this article is the next thing I want to illustrate:

Alanis Morissette’s Jagged Little Pill is one of the bestselling albums of all time (33 million global sales and counting) and a staple filler of SOTB’s inaugural decade. On its 25th anniversary it remains one of those rare albums with a quintessentially distinctive sound, subsequently much imitated but never bettered. Morissette and producer/co-writer Glen Ballard wrote and recorded a song a day at Ballard’s home studio , and amazingly retained the original demo vocals for the final cut, all of which were captured in one or two takes. That live, raw and fresh lyrical brilliance snaps and fizzles out of the speakers from the opening, “Do I stress you out?” all the way through to the concluding “ if I cry all afternoon”.

Although I could have nominated many other (less reviled) JLP singles that appear later in the canon (Mary JaneHead Over Feet and Hand in My Pocket all being outstanding contenders), Ironic takes the crown for notoriety. It’s also just a damn great track. The twinkly folksy acoustic opening exploding into a monster chorus, anthemic with its grungy power chords and layered soaring vocals replete with lilting harmonies, driven on a bed of 90’s distorted drum loop. The Grammy nominated video is pretty strong too, even if it did suffer the plague of yet another “Weird” Al Yankovic interpolation in 2003. This is a song that perfectly lends itself to driving down a snowy highway in a 1978 Lincoln Continental Mark V, caterwauling the chorus whilst pounding the steering wheel and/or narrowly being decapitated by a passing bridge.

As to the lyrical content, more than enough sincere, po-faced and condescending white male superior hot-takes have already crashed like waves upon this monolith of a pop song, full of sound and fury and signifying nothing. For what it’s worth, I’m with professor Simon DeDeo, whose forensic apologetic posits an 85% hit rate for irony, be that situational, Hegelian or other. He concludes that, “[s]ince its inception, people have used it as an example of how the subtleties of irony escape the grasp of popular culture, and cited the lyrics to demonstrate their superior grasp of the concept. They hear, but do not hear.”

I do hear, and I hear the exuberant soundtrack of the Spring of 1996, vivid in all its jangling untamed brilliance”.

The American Reader explores the unbearable ironies of Alanis Morissette for their feature. There are few songs in history that have been as poured over and debated because of the lyrics or the accuracy of them. Most people would just admire a song and leave it there. However, Ironic is pulled apart and dissected:

First, let’s get this out of the way: calling Alanis Morissette’s lyrics unironic is wrong. From “irony” in the Oxford English Dictionary:

3. A state of affairs or an event that seems deliberately contrary to what was or might be expected; an outcome cruelly, humorously, or strangely at odds with assumptions or expectations.

This accurately and uncontroversially describes almost all of the song’s situations. For everyone I know, rain on one’s wedding day would indeed be cruelly, humorously, and strangely at odds with expectations. This sort of irony is usually called “situational irony,” and while I’m usually opposed to breaking irony apart into discrete kinds, the phrase works pretty well here to describe the many ironic examples that Alanis describes. Both that 98-year-old-man and Mr. Play-it-Safe possess fates that are truly ironic; they struggle to create a meaningful narrative in the face of a world that thwarts their intentions. The only moment in the song that doesn’t easily fit into this definition of irony is one of the last, with the “man of my dreams” and “his beautiful wife.” There is certainly a contrast there, but it doesn’t seem to be one of expectations; I’ll get to that later. In general, though, the song evokes the disparity of meaning that comes from the difference of expectation and actuality. Just because no one is being sarcastic doesn’t mean the song isn’t ironic.

But let’s not stop there. The more I think about it, the more I am convinced that in writing this Alanis has a much deeper, more radical, and philosophical concept of irony. It seems to me that Ms. Morissette is remarkably well versed in the theories of irony from Erasmus to Paul de Man; if she hasn’t read their works herself, then she has certainly internalized much of the theory of irony not only as a trope but as a question of philosophy.

Take, for example: “It’s the good advice that you just didn’t take.” This is the vaguest line in the song, and it seems to pose a challenge to the ironist. Presumably the situational irony here is that the listener didn’t expect the advice to apply, whereas it did indeed. But why didn’t “you” take the advice? It’s possible that you thought the advice-giver was being ironic, and didn’t intend for you to heed the advice. Or you simply thought that the advice wasn’t “good” when it was; either way you don’t take it “seriously.” In fact that word, “seriously,” haunts the end of the lyric; the irony here is one of (mis)interpretation. Paul de Man addresses this difficulty of interpretation in his essay “The Concept of Irony” (not to be confused with Kierkegaard’s book of the same name): “what is at stake in irony is the possibility of understanding, the possibility of reading, the readability of texts, the possibility of deciding on A meaning or on a multiple set of meanings or on a controlled polysemy of meanings.” Doesn’t Alanis provide the perfect example of living in a world where we’re unsure of what to take seriously, and what not to? And who, really, would have thought it figures?

A more global question: what is “Ironic” really about, anyway? I turn to the bridge/outro: “Life has a funny way of sneaking up on you / Life has a funny, funny way of helping you out” What is she talking about here? How is life helping her out? It seems to me that this song, like so many songs on Jagged Little Pill, is describing the wistful emotional reflection that a Gen-Xer feels when distanced from her own life experience. Think Daria, think Reality Bites. It’s telling that the music video features three Alanises taking a road trip: Alanis sees herself from the outside. A friend once described this popular 1990s attitude as “the meaningfulness of meaninglessness.“ Come to think of it, that describes the poetry of T.S. Eliot pretty well too.

Or, put another way, Alanis is describing the affect of Kierkegaardian irony. From the philosopher’s book The Concept of Irony:

In irony, the subject is negatively free, since the actuality that is supposed to give the subject content is not there. He is free from the constraint in which the given actuality holds the subject, but he is negatively free and as such is suspended, because there is nothing that holds him. But this very freedom, this suspension, gives the ironist a certain enthusiasm, because he becomes intoxicated, so to speak, in the infinity of possibilities…

Does this quote not perfectly describe the emotional content of “Ironic”? The situations in the song simultaneously create a feeling of freedom and one of alienation; we are free to laugh at the irony of the world, but we are unable to experience its meaning unironically. I most strongly identify with this emotion (and song) when I’m hung over.

To conclude I want to return to the troubling final example in the song, the man of Alanis’s dreams and his beautiful wife. There is a yearning here, as well as its negation or deferral, but how is it ironic? Well, in his 1828 book The Philosophy of Life and of Language, Friedrich Schlegel connects irony and love:

True irony—for there also is a false one—is the irony of love. It arises out of the feeling of finiteness and one’s own limitation, and out of the apparent contradiction between this feeling and the idea of infinity which is involved in all true love.

I don’t even want to think about false irony, and to be honest I’m not 100% sure what this quote (or book) really means, but I can tell that Alanis knows. Elsewhere Schlegel describes irony as the effect of a ‘finite being striving to comprehend an infinite reality.’ This is the feeling that “Ironic” both describes and evokes when I try to interpret it”.

I want to bring in Wikipedia and their article about Ironic. The critical reaction to a song that I think has grown in stature since 1996. It has received more praise and love than some provided it thirty years ago. It is often seen as one of Alanis Morissette’s greatest songs. It is an anthem and one that so many people can sing along to:

Jaime Gill from Dot Music commented on the original version of "Ironic", on his review of Jagged Little Pill Acoustic (2005), that "[Jagged Little Pill] gave us pop's greatest parlour game, with spot the genuine irony in 'Ironic'" and calling the song "pretty" and "catchy". Additionally, he noted that the acoustic version “actually sounds more relaxed and engaging without the hoary loud guitars of the original". Even though Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic marked the track as one of the "All Media Guide track pick" of the album, in a separate review, from the same website, the CD single release was rated with two-and-a-half out of five stars. Pareles noted that in verses of "Ironic", and another song from the album ("Mary Jane"), "it's easy to envision Morissette on the stage of a club, singing wry couplets backed by acoustic guitar". He also commented in another article he wrote, that the song was actually "unironic". Victoria Segal from Melody Maker praised it as "a perfectly nice piece of bubbling folk rock." A reviewer from Music Week rated it four out of five, noting that it "builds into another powerful anthem with beautiful echoes of The Cocteau Twins. It could see her break into the Top 20 for the first time." Dave Brecheisen of PopMatters felt that the acoustic version of "Ironic", was much worse than the original version. The single won the Juno Award for Single of the Year at the 1997 ceremony, and in the same year it was nominated for a Grammy Award, in the category of Record of the Year”.

On 27th February, it will be thirty years since Ironic was released as a single. It shows how strong Jagged Little Pill is that a song as towering as Ironic was the fourth single. Whilst the decades-lasting linguistic debate – why hopefully has been put to bed now – has somewhat stolen focus and been a disservice to a genuinely phenomenal song, the fact it received so much airplay shows that there is a lot of affection for this track. Everyone has their favourite lyrics from Ironic. Mine are these: “Well, life has a funny way of sneaking up on you/When you think everything's okay and everything's going right/And life has a funny way of helping you out/When you think everything's gone wrong/And everything blows up in your face”. I am looking forward to the thirtieth anniversary of Ironic and I hope that people show this song the respect…

IT thoroughly deserves.

FEATURE: Kate Bush: Them Heavy People: The Extraordinary Characters in Her Songs: Elvis Presley (King of the Mountain)/Prof. Joseph Yupik (50 Words for Snow)

FEATURE:

 

 

Kate Bush: Them Heavy People: The Extraordinary Characters in Her Songs

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in a promotional image for 2005’s Aerial/PHOTO CREDIT: Trevor Leighton

 

Elvis Presley (King of the Mountain)/Prof. Joseph Yupik (50 Words for Snow)

__________

I am going to pair…

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in a promotional image for 50 Words for Snow

characters from 1993’s The Red Shoes and 1978’s Lionheart before then moving to 1980’s Never for Ever and 1985’s Hounds of Love. That would mean I have included each of Kate Bush’s studio albums (excluding 2011’s Director’s Cut) twice. I am looking at her latter career for this edition. Two characters that are not named in songs but definitely are relevant. I shall move to a character voiced by a comedy legend in a minute. However, I am going back to Aerial and another great character. In future features, I am going to mention, Bertie and Mrs. Bartolozzi. I will also feature 50 Words for Snow again as there is the Lady in the Lake from Lake Tahoe and Elton John’s character from Snowed in at Wheeler Street (technically the ‘Lover’, though I am not sure how to name him). However, Aerial is relevant as it was Kate Bush’s first album since 1993’s The Red Shoes. King of the Mountain was a hugely exciting moment. I have written about the song before. It is the last video to feature Kate Bush in it., Directed by the late Jimmy Murakami, there was a lot of discussion around the video. Bush was concerned how she looked and self-conscious. Murakami has to reassure her but, after this experience, Bush did not feature in future videos. Aerial was also the first album that did not feature her – or her feet in the case of The Red Shoes – on the cover. This was not Bush’s first song since 1993. She has recorded others and I think the last single or thing she featured on was 1995/1996. However, we are still talking about a decade almost, so this was like a comeback. Appropriate given the main character that is alluded to in King of the Mountain.

Elvis Presley is very much at the heart of this song. There are other characters in the song. “Another Hollywood waitress/Is telling us she's having your baby”. I was going to write about Hollywood, the film industry and this waitress. However, critics were a little ignorant to the relevance of Elvis Presley in this song. Many not knowing that Bush was putting on an Elvis drawl. I have noted this before, but a lot of the lyrics seem to apply to Bush’s situation. Maybe allusions to an artist seen as gone and departed but more to do with Bush’s domestic life and being a mother: “Elvis, are you out there somewhere/Looking like a happy man?”. This idea that Bush was finished or retired: “And there's a rumour that you're on ice/And you will rise again someday”. What is significant is this was the first song written for Aerial. Some might think Bush wrote King of the Mountain in 2005 and she was responding to this absence and press speculation. However, we can date King of the Mountain down to 1996, so this was two years before she became a mother. In 1996, Bush was writing for this new album but also not embroiled in press runs and any pressure. It was not her retiring, but this was a period of her not immersed in making an album to a deadline. You can feel her taking on this idea of a legendary artist who had this career and is now in the mountains or hidden away. Bush herself was living in Theale, West Berkshire and very much building this new life and home. It is fascinating that Bush mentioned Elvis Presley and he was the subject of this mountain-dwelling mystical figure. There are lines that are a little oblique or that have multiple meanings or possibilities: “Could you see the storm rising?/Could you see the guy who was driving?/Could you climb higher and higher?/Could you climb right over the top?/Why does a multi-millionaire/Fill up his home with priceless junk?”.

It is interesting reading into King of the Mountain. After 1993’s The Red Shoes and the short film, The Line, the Cross and the Curve received some negative press, Bush was burned out and she experienced family tragedy and loss, she needed to step back. She wandered out of public view and there was this view in the press that Bush’s eccentricities were more interesting than the music. This is what Graeme Thomson notes in his book, Under the Ivy: The Life and Music of Kate Bush. Tori Amos was new on the scene and being compared to Kate Bush. Her music seemed fresher and more interesting. Björk’s Debut came out in 1993 and she was seen as a more important and complete artist. She is a big fan of Kate Bush and has shouted out to her through the years. Both these artists compared to Kate Bush but seen as more intriguing and better alternatives. Bush was lukewarm towards The Red Shoes. The first time she felt like that since 1978. Maybe overworked or balancing too much, she said she did the best she could at the time. Paddy and John Bush, her brothers, backed away from fanzine contacts and were a bit more detached. The 1994 fan convention was the last one she attended. When dubbing in Cricklewood for The Line, the Cross and the Curve, Kate Bush said she wanted to take time off. She mentioned how she loved being by the sea (she would move to Devon) and get away from the city. Maybe, as Graeme Thomson notes, connecting with her childhood holidays in Birchington-on-Sea. She wanted to be away from the studio. After the death of her mother in 1992 and splitting from Del Palmer (who continued working with her and engineered Aerial), there as reduced activity between 1994 and 2005. Bush had not really grieved her mother. She set up  new home with Dan McIntosh and it would not be long until she became a mother herself. There were rumours Bush was living in a cage, castle or gothic retreat. That she changed her name officially to Catherine Earnshaw (the heroine from Wuthering Heights). Considering all of this context, you can read a lot of the lyrics to be about Bush. Using Elvis Presley as someone who died young and was killed by excess and this awful pressure, celebrity life and working himself into the ground. Rather than thinking about him dying young, Bush imagined him as maybe being alive but now being in the mountains and away from the limelight. I see Bush talking about herself and her situation – though I could be overreading it!

IN THIS PHOTO: Elvis Presley

It is the nature of fame and industry pressure. How critics saw her and the fact that she was so busy recording and working that she could not deal with her personal life and changes. Even if there seem to be stronger songs on Aerial that would have made a good lead single – Mrs. Bartolozzi or How to Be Invisible -, King of the Mountain seems to be the most important, relevant and powerful. Del Palmer’s prowling and brilliant bass. Steve Sanger’s punchy drums. Dan McIntosh on guitar and Bush on keyboard. Paddy Bush providing backing vocals. One of the last times he would feature on his sister’s albums (he did not appear at all on 50 Words for Snow). Family old and new on this incredible single. Elvis Presley is also this music idol. I am not sure whether Bush was inspired by him musically. In this case, he was this character in her song. However, Bush did not really mention her music idols much through song. Whereas Elton John actually appeared on 50 Words for Snow and Prince on The Red Shoes (on Why Should I Love You?), there are others that never featured. Captain Beefheart, Frank Zappa, David Bowie, Paul McCartney and so many others never featured on her records. Pink Floyd’s David Gilmour did, so there is a bit of a split. However, Elvis Presxley was an artist who as taken advantage of early on and exploited. A controversial figure for sure – the fact Priscilla Presley was fourteen when they met -, he was a revelation and revolution. However, in terms of freedom, money and a private life, you feel he was not given a moment to breathe. Not that Kate Bush experienced anything as horrible. However, there were times when she was perhaps living unhealthy and really depressed. That she was being taken advantage of slightly in terms of releasing albums quickly or not given enough time early in her career to relax or have some downtime. There are connections and mentions of Elvis Presley. Far Out Magazine published this article, where they highlight an interview from 2006 from Rolling Stone France:

Despite being a private, shy and retiring figure, Bush remains iconic and beloved by many, but she doesn’t quite understand why anyone would want to pursue a career in music in any other way opposite to how she has always chosen to. Many people often choose not to pursue a career in music for this exact reason, but in Bush’s eyes, those who do go chasing the delights of being world-renowned are destined to find out the hard way that it’s hard to ever escape fame for a little bit of peace.

In a 2006 interview with Rolling Stone France, Bush was asked whether for this reason she would consider someone like Elvis Presley to be her opposite, with interviewer Philippe Badhorn stating: “You work at your own pace; you manage to have a life away from show-business when he stepped out of day-to-day reality.”

Rather predictably, Bush would state that she has no idea why someone like Presley would have actively wished for the fame that he received, and hypothesised that he never truly sought it in the first place.

“I believe he really was a sweet and fun loving nice guy who couldn’t say no,” she argued. “Nobody would want to be that famous. I was already asked if I felt I was like him. Thank god I don’t. I’m not as famous, nobody is, except maybe Frank Sinatra or Marilyn Monroe, but she died because of that sooner than him. It’s hard to have the whole world looking at you”.

I am going to move to this article, that takes a passage from Tom Doyle’s Running Up That Hill: 50 Visions of Kate Bush. It gives us more of an insight into King of the Mountain and why Elvis Presley is particularly important as a subject. Think of Bush writing King of the Mountain in 1996, I still cannot help think she was reflecting on her career and her desire to get away from everything and escape the pressures of fame. Something she never wanted, it was thrust upon her:

“‘What a horrible nightmare. Particularly for somebody like Elvis. Because the impression I get was that he was fun-loving and just happened to be really gorgeous and sexy and talented. And I think, y’know, partly why people respond to him the way they do – and I really feel strongly about this – is that people [sense] an intention from somebody, whether it’s an actor or a singer. People felt that Elvis was a really genuinely sweet person and that’s why everybody loves him so much. Not that I know a great deal about Elvis, but I thought he was a very beautiful- looking man with a fantastic voice and this fun-loving quality where you see he’s up there kind of taking the piss out of himself.’

I said I’d recently re-watched Presley’s 1970 Vegas-era documentary, That’s the Way It Is, and it had struck me that it often must have been a real laugh being Elvis.

‘Well, I hope it was. What I see is somebody who was a sweetheart in the truest sense, just being eaten alive. To be as famous as he was . . . how could anybody survive that and still be a human being? I see him as being destroyed really by the fact that he was so famous. So I just love the idea of him being alive somewhere, away from all the people and the greed and the wanting to take him over’”.

There is one more Kate Bush/Elvis Presley connection before I flip to Side B and Bush’s latest album. In 2014, when Kate Bush brought her Before the Dawn residency to Hammersmith, she became the first woman ever to have eight albums in the Official Album Charts at the same time. She was behind Elvis Presley in terms of the most albums being in the charts simultaneously, as this article reveals:

Today, two of Bush's albums are in the top 10 , The Whole Story at number six and Hounds Of Love at number nine, with a total of eight Bush albums in the top 40, the company said.

And 50 Words For Snow is at number 20, The Kick Inside is at number 24, The Sensual World is at 26, The Dreaming is at 37, Never For Ever is at 38 and Lionheart is at 40.

A further three of her albums are at numbers 43, 44 and 49.

Bush is now only behind Elvis Presley, the overall record holder who managed 12 entries in the top 40 following his death in 1977, and The Beatles, who notched up 11 simultaneous top 40 entries with their 2009 album reissues”.

IN THIS PHOTO: Sir Stephen Fry in 2024/PHOTO CREDIT: Elena Ternovaja

If King of the Mountain is very much about Elvis Presley and this real person who died prematurely, 50 Words for Snow is a song that features a fictional character voiced by a real person. Though his full name is not mentioned in the title track of Kate Bush’s tenth studio album, she does mention the name ‘Joe’ in the chorus. She revealed in promotional interviews that the character is Prof. Joseph Yupik. Voiced by Sir Stephen Fry, this is someone who I admired for a very long time. Maybe his legacy and genius has diminished slightly in my heart and eyes. Referring to a previous comment where he said abuse victims, who he saw as self-pitying, need to “grow up”. That was a bit of a blow in terms of how I saw him! However, I am detaching the artist from the art for a moment. He is someone, for the most part, whose heart is in the right place. Whilst he has not spoken out against Israel’s genocide in Gaza, he has called out Donald Trump as a fascist. Very much concerned with what Trump is doing in America and this almost dictatorship reign Fry is also someone who has appeared in some of my favourite T.V. shows ever. As a main character in two series of Blackadder, Jeeves in Jeeves and Wooster, and one half of A Bit of Fry and Laurie, he is responsible for some of my favourite comedy moments. His comedy partners, Hugh Laurie, appeared in the video for Kate Bush’s Experiment IV (1986). It is a shame 50 Words for Snow was not released as a single, as it would have been cool seeing Fry dressed as a professor. I am not sure how I see him now. Balancing some past controversy and issues with his legacy and brilliant work. Also, I did write to him when I was a depressed student and he did write me back. So I have to be thankful for that! An intellect and one of the greatest comic actors ever, Kate Bush naturally turned to Stephen Fry when looking for someone to say out loud these increasingly insane and lobate names for snow!

It is a myth that Inuit and Yupik people have fifty words for snow. Whereas most people know that fact and leave it there, an artist like Kate Bush not only used it and examined that for a song. It is actually the name of her album. I guess King of the Mountain is about mythology and the wild and wind. An atmospheric song set in the mountains. It has so much weather and mystery. Whilst that is quite a propulsive and big song, 50 Words for Snow has this groove and liquidity. In terms of the players, we have Dan McIntosh on guitar again. Offering a different sound and dynamic compared to King of the Mountain. Kate Bush on keyboard again and John Giblin on bass instead of Del Palmer. The legendary Steve Gadd on drums providing this incredible beat. What I want to explore with this song is Kate Bush and numbers. I also want to explore 50 Words for Snow being an underrated album and the comedy connection. However, before that, here is an interview, where Bush discussed this humorous and fascinating title track:

Years ago I think I must have heard this idea that there were 50 words for snow in this, ah, Eskimo Land! And I just thought it was such a great idea to have so many words about one thing. It is a myth – although, as you say it may hold true in a different language – but it was just a play on the idea, that if they had that many words for snow, did we? If you start actually thinking about snow in all of its forms you can imagine that there are an awful lot of words about it. Just in our immediate language we have words like hail, slush, sleet, settling… So this was a way to try and take it into a more imaginative world. And I really wanted Stephen to read this because I wanted to have someone who had an incredibly beautiful voice but also someone with a real sense of authority when he said things. So the idea was that the words would get progressively more silly really but even when they were silly there was this idea that they would have been important, to still carry weight. And I really, really wanted him to do it and it was fantastic that he could do it. (…) I just briefly explained to him the idea of the song, more or less what I said to you really. I just said it’s our idea of 50 Words For Snow. Stephen is a lovely man but he is also an extraordinary person and an incredible actor amongst his many other talents. So really it was just trying to get the right tone which was the only thing we had to work on. He just came into the studio and we just worked through the words. And he works very quickly because he’s such an able performer. (…) I think faloop’njoompoola is one of my favourites. [laughs]

John Doran, ‘A Demon In The Drift: Kate Bush Interviewed‘. The Quietus, 2011”.

I have written about this song before and my favourite words for snow. Some are better than others, but I love eleven (stellatundra), twenty-two (erase-o-dust) and thirty-one (whippoccino). I am surprised whippoccino is not a type of coffee inspired by Kate Bush. Maybe something with a lot of whipped cream?! Anyway, this song is essentially about numbers. Whereas Bush could have written this title track and sung more generally about Inuit and Yupik people and this myth around them having fifty words for snow, she committed to coming up with possibilities! Maybe backing herself into a corner, it is impressive she came up with so many. Think about π from Aerial and Bush reciting π. Bush recognised how numbers had a language of their own. She was always interested in how everything can be broken down into numbers. It is interesting why anyone would have more than one word for snow, let alone fifty! Stephen Fry has the unique honour of being one of very few high-profile names who have sung/narrated on her albums. Lenny Henry was on Why Should I Love You? from The Red Shoes. Two great comedy actors who Bush brought into the studio. Whilst Hugh Laurie, Dawn French, Terry Jones, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, Noel Fielding, Steve Coogan and Pamela Stephenson have, in different ways, interacted with her work or been a part of her career, there was not a lot of opportunity for Bush to work with comics and comedy actors she loved. 50 Words for Snow is one of those songs that blends Kate Bush’s sense of humour and eccentricity. If some find it exhausting and tiresome that 50 Words for Snow goes beyond eight minutes, I do think her commitment to this concept and theme is impressive! It is also the bond of Stephen Fry seriously committing to the seriousness of these words for snow. Prof. Joseph Yupik almost delivering this seminar. Having him say “phlegm de neige” and “Zhivagodamarbletash” and asking us to take this seriously is actually quite funny! I don’t think people credit Kate Bush with being a funny writer. She loved comedy and still does. I think that there is a link between comedy and her work. Kate Bush has adopted slightly quirkier personas and definitely injected humour into her work. In 50 Words for Snow, Bush’s role is popping up in the chorus to encourage Prof. Joseph Yupik. Or maybe hurrying him along: “Come on Joe, you’ve got 32 to go, come on Joe, you’ve got 32 to go/Come on now, you’ve got 32 to go, come on now, you’ve got 32 to go/Don’t you know it’s not just the Eskimo/Let me hear your 50 words for snow”. It is comedic in tone but she is also quite gravelled and growling almost. It is a vocal side that I really love!

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in a promotional image for 50 Words for Snow

Whilst it is brilliant that Stephen Fry travelled to Kate Bush’s house, was given this list of fifty words for snow very last-minute and the last words were being worked on pretty much as he walked in, he then stood in the studio and rattled them off – first take, I bet! -, he is one of several very diverse and fascinating characters. Even though there are only seven songs on 50 Words for Snow, we get everything from a wild man, a snowman that melts, the ghost of a woman who drowned in a lake, and this sweetheart of Kate Bush’s, where the two are drawn apart through various periods of history. I might also feature Little Shrew (Snowflake) in this feature, as this was Bush taking the album’s opener, Snowflake, and releasing it to raise money for War Child. The video for the song features a little shrew scurrying through this war-torn scene. It is a fascinating additional character to a rich album that never gets the respect it deserves. Bush’s latest album is one where she steps fully away from Pop and its structure and strictures. Graeme Thomson also noted this. How, with 50 Words for Snow, Bush went more int Chamber Jazz. Allowing these longer songs and greater breathing space. It is a very open album where you get so much of the outside. You could say that about Aerial, but that has a lot of different songs and what could more traditional be seen as conventional or closer to Pop. 50 Words for Snow is almost like Bush composing a film soundtrack. More cinematic and off-piste, I think, than ever, she also sort of put the piano front and centre again. Drawing back to her debut, 1978’s The Kick Inside. It will be fascinating seeing what her next album sounds like and whether we get a lot of characters in the songs. I love 50 Words for Snow and Stephen Fry’s Prof. Joseph Yupik. A pity he never made it into a video where he and Bush were int his lecture hall or setting where these words were being read from a parchment or ancient book. However, it is this brilliant song that I wanted to explore here. From a magnificent album one hopes will not be…

KATE Bush’s last.

FEATURE: …Baby One More Time: Exploring the Legacy of Britney Spears

FEATURE:

 

 

…Baby One More Time

 

Exploring the Legacy of Britney Spears

__________

YOU can’t blame…

Britney Spears for not wanting to perform in the U.S. again. Although she has millions of fans in her country, especially under Donald Trump, there are a lot of artists reluctant to perform there. Also, in terms of press intrusion and the media in the U.S., there would be this spotlight on Spears. They have not been supportive and kind to her and I feel like they have done a lot of damage. There is no denying the impact and legacy of Britney Spears. Artists like Taylor Swift owe a huge debt to her. I feel like her early career and her work at the end of the 1990s was hugely important. There had never been a Pop artist like her. Such a tremendously talented artist, her entire career has helped change and shape Pop. So many artists today (including Charli xcx) you can tie to Britney Spears. I will move to that in a minute. Attitude recently wrote about a Britney Spears post, where she hinted that she may well be coming to the U.K. to perform:

Britney Spears has suggested her next public performance could take place in the UK, after revealing she does not plan to perform in the US again.

The singer made the comments in an Instagram post shared yesterday (8 January), in which she spoke about her life since being released from the conservatorship imposed by her father Jamie Spears in 2008. The arrangement was formally lifted in 2021.

Alongside a throwback photo of herself seated at a piano, Spears told fans she is preparing to gift the instrument to one of her sons.

“Sending this piano to my son this year!!!” she wrote.

She also addressed her Instagram dance videos, explaining: “Interestingly enough, I dance on IG to heal things in my body that people have no idea about,” adding that “it’s embarrassing sometimes”.

She added in the same post, “But I walked through the fire to save my life… I will never perform in the U.S. again because of extremely sensitive reasons but I hope to be sitting on a stool with a red rose in my hair, in a bun, performing with my son… in the UK and AUSTRALIA very soon. He’s a huge star and I’m so humbled to be in his presence!!! God speed, little man!!!”

Spears shares two sons with her ex-husband Kevin Federline – Jayden, 19, and Preston, 20 – though she did not specify which son she was referring to. The ‘Gimme More’ songstress was married to the DJ from 2004 to 2007.

In his memoir, entitled You Thought You Knew, Federline shared details about the Grammy Award-winner, claiming his then-teen sons were scared to stay at their mother’s house.

Since then, Spears has spoken out on social media, labelling her ex-husband as “gaslighting,” adding she is exhausted by his claims.

When did Spears last perform live?

She has not performed live on stage since 2018. Her most recent tour was the Piece of Me Tour, which ran across North America and Europe in 2018 and included UK dates in London and Manchester.

The tour followed her hugely successful Las Vegas residency Britney: Piece of Me, which ran at Planet Hollywood Resort & Casino from 2013 to 2017 and saw her perform 248 shows. The residency was later adapted into international touring productions in 2017 and 2018.

Her final documented live performance took place in Austin, Texas on 21 October 2018. Since then, Spears has not returned to the stage, despite her conservatorship ending in 2021”.

Britney Spears is helping bring her son Jayden into music. t would be awesome to see them both perform together. However, I feel like there is this desire for fans to see Spears perform. In December, this enormously loved artist turns forty-five. There will be celebration around that. Her third album, Britney, turn’s twenty-five in October. One of her most underrated albums, 2011’s Femme Fatale, turns fifteen in March. Earlier this month, we marked twenty-seven years since her debut album, ..Baby One More Time, was released. Its title track (her debut single) was released the year before. I remember it coming out in 1998 and being thrilled by Britney Spears! I was new to her work and was not aware of her U.S. T.V. work. At the end of the 1990s, there were these incredible U.S. Pop artists coming through.

It was a really exciting time. Also, it was one perhaps where these very young women were being overly-sexualised and exploited by the press. Right from the off, Britney Spears had this confidence and strength. The video for ..Baby One More Time was her idea. She added elements to the song and was this incredible hard-working artist who was spending a lot of hours in the studio. I think there was a lot of re-examination of Britney Spears’ legacy and work around 2021 and 2022.  Spears' conservatorship began in February 2008. It was initiated by her father, Jamie Spears, following mental health struggles, granting him legal authority over her finances and personal life for over thirteen years until its termination in November 2021. That meant a Los Angeles judge gave Britney Spears autonomy and granted her sole access to her $60 million estate for the first time since 1st February, 2008. I guess there is another anniversary this year. On 26th August, it will be ten years since Spears released her most recent album, Glory.

I am not sure if it will be her final album. However, given Spears legacy today and how many artists you can draw to her – Addison Rae is another that comes to mind -, you would like to think that she has another album in her. Spears has also recently been discussing her ongoing admiration for Madonna. The Queen of Pop follows up 2005’s Confessions on a Dance Floor this year. I wonder whether Spears will maybe revisit older work and follow it up with a modern-day sequel. It would be exciting! Before looking at her legacy today in terms of artists inspired by her, I want to get to a couple of articles. The first is from TIME in 2021. They reframed Britney Spears’s legacy in terms of going beyond her music: “One thing that Spears voiced objection to in her Instagram post was the way she had been ignored by her team while “begging to put my new music in my show for MY fans.” While this plea for agency highlights recent revelations of her utter lack of it, both in her conservatorship hearings and this year’s documentary Framing Britney Spears, it also brings up a compelling question about Spears’ career and artistic legacy. Spears was the biggest pop star of the Y2K teen pop era, and she still looms large today, with artists as varied as the nightmare-conjuring Billie Eilish and the alt-rock doyenne Courtney Love spotlighting her impact on the pop world through interviews and cover songs. If the Britney Spears catalog turns out to be complete as it stands today, how will we look back on her career?”. I do think that we need some new articles where her contemporary impact and influence is explored. Think about other artists, like maybe Madison Beer and Slayyyter, who you can trace a line through to Britney Spears:

That full-length project, released in 1999, wasn’t a full-spectrum showcase of those “qualities,” but it did offer listeners a crash course in her strengths. Chief among them is her voice, which balances the husky, knowing qualities it displays on the title track and other upbeat songs like “(You Drive Me) Crazy” with the wounded, searching emotionalism heard on ballads like the sparkling “Sometimes” and the pleading “From the Bottom of My Broken Heart.”

Pop songwriting is more laden with mythology than most entertainment products; credits can include people charged with writing toplines (vocal melodies), snatches of melody, or even bits that sound like already-existing hits (a la Right Said Fred’s credit for a borrowed cadence on Taylor Swift’s “Look What You Made Me Do”). Run down the credits of Spears’ albums and you’ll see her name pop up under the lists of songwriters. What that actually might mean is fairly opaque; she could have written an entire song or just a line.

Still, Britney Spears wouldn’t be Britney Spears without the outsized, appealing personality at the megastar’s nucleus. Martin was onto something when he said he would “use [Spears’] qualities appropriately,” even if the phrasing does give one pause in the context of her present life under conservatorship. Over the years, her catalog has been studded with songs that reflect the facets of the singular traits at which she’s offered glimpses. Her 2011 comeback single “Hold It Against Me” pivots on a pickup line that sounded dated in the swingers’ era four decades prior–”If I said I want your body now, would you hold it against me?”–but her attitude, half-winking, half-serious, makes it work. Tracks like the defiant “Stronger” and the hip-shaking “Overprotected,” meanwhile, showed off her inner strength, presaging her recent courage in speaking out against her current situation. And other pieces of her catalog, particularly in the depths of special-edition bonus tracks, show off her personality’s quirks and depth, from the loopy 2016 track “If I’m Dancing” to the chilling video for her 2004 single “Everytime.”

This was why her performance at the 2007 MTV Video Music Awards, during which she sleepwalked through the brooding Blackout opener “Gimme More,” was such a blow for fans. That show, which followed a string of highly publicized personal challenges exacerbated by the cruel tabloid landscape of the era—felt like a sign that Spears’ spirit, which had propelled her into the American mainstream, had been if not snuffed out, at least misplaced.

Blackout, which contained production and songwriting contributions from the likes of Pharrell Williams (with his duo The Neptunes) and “Toxic” hitmakers Bloodshy & Avant, was hailed upon its release, presaging the synth-heavier, moodier sounds embraced by the likes of Kanye West on 808s & Heartbreak and Lady Gaga on The Fame. While Spears was reportedly more in control on that record than any other, Blackout succeeds in part because she’s a mysterious presence at its core, her signature wail refracted by effects and shrouded in synths. The shadowy vibe reflects the atmosphere surrounding her at the time, with songs like the glitchy paparazzi rebuke “Piece of Me” and the spare synth pop banger “Radar” feeling of the always-on digital age.

Since Blackout, Spears has released four albums, all of which have sold well; their reception, though, seems to parallel just how weird she can get on them. The lead single from 2013’s Britney Jean, the brittle “Work Bitch,” was shrug-worthy upon release, and lyrics like “You want a hot body, you want a Bugatti/ you want a Maserati? You better work, bitch” land uncomfortably after her conservatorship hearings. In contrast, her most recent full-length, 2016’s Glory, was hailed for its explorations of post-millennial pop’s fringes. It concludes with “Coupure Électrique,” an icily minimalist track in which Spears whisper-sings, in broken French, of love in the dark, a throwback to the Blackout era that also lets her display her playful side.

More than two decades after her debut, Spears’ legacy as a pop artist is complex, made up of dazzling musical heights and music-business-borne lows. This year, Olivia Rodrigo’s path from Disney stardom to pop-chart domination bears broad similarities to Spears’. The “drivers license” singer was born a few years into Spears’ era of TRL superiority, though, and in a recent interview with Nylon, her response to a question about Framing Britney Spears indicated that she sees the treatment of the elder pop supernova as a sign of how easily pop stardom can be undermined by supposed allies. “I just hope that this next generation of women don’t get asked [invasive] questions…. I hope reporters don’t think that that’s OK. It’s just disgusting,” she said in the interview.

The twists and turns in Spears’ story over recent years have fundamentally altered the dream of becoming a pop star, even as the appeal of finding one artist who can make a song that changes the world for five minutes remains. While Spears’ catalog is part of the canon that defines the first 20 years of this millennium, one hopes that her public struggles, and the strength she’s shown while enduring them, will lead to her cementing her true legacy: Reshaping the machine that turns those songs into cultural touchstones”.

The BBC ran an article in 2022 that seemed like a watershed moment. A sense of freedom and liberation or Britney Spears, it was a time to reconsider her legacy. Huge artists such as Lady Gaga and Charli xcx shouting her out and very much channelling her work, I do think there needs to be a 2026 update. Given how there is a mix of huge and established artists who owe a debt to her and these newer and innovative Pop artists that are reminiscent of Spears:

She has been hailed as an inspiration by everyone from Lady Gaga, who in 2009 described her as "the most provocative performer of my time", to Lana Del Rey. "There is something about Britney that compelled me," Del Rey said in 2012, "the way she sings and just the way she looks." More recently, the highly acclaimed Japanese-British singer-songwriter Rina Sawayama said Spears was the first artist she fell in love with. She recalled watching her music videos as a child and thinking: "I want her as an older sister". Spears' videos could be high-concept affairs where she played a lonely Hollywood actress (Lucky) or a vampish flight attendant (Toxic), but with 2000 single Stronger, she showed she could hold our full attention with nothing but her dance moves and simple props like a chair and a cane. Swedish singer-songwriter Tove Styrke is equally effusive when asked how Spears has influenced her as a musician. "Oh my, how hasn't she?" she tells BBC Culture. "She has inspired a maybe delusional strive for pop stardom [in me], wanting to be a pop princess with a pure heart. Her voice, her dancing, her blonde hair… all of it has been influential."

No fear

Spears is also a long-time LGBTQ icon who has influenced the contemporary drag scene with her high-octane dance routines. Jonbers Blonde, a Northern Irish drag performer who was a finalist on the latest series of RuPaul's Drag Race UK, says she was particularly fascinated by two audacious performances Spears gave at the MTV Video Music Awards. In 2000, Spears delivered an inventive medley of (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction and Oops!... I Did It Again that really showed off her commanding stage presence and precision-tooled dance moves. Then the following year, she sang I'm A Slave 4 U with a live python draped over her shoulders. "I think it was the fearlessness that she portrayed in those MTV performances that inspired me," Blonde says. "Doing drag, you need to be fearless – even to leave the house in drag is brave – and that's something that Britney definitely is."

So why, given all this praise from performers who've followed in her wake, is Spears still slightly underrated? Partly it's a result of what we might call her "origin story". As a child growing up in Kentwood, Louisiana, a small town in the US Bible Belt, Spears displayed a preternatural flair for performance. "I was in my own world. I found out what I'm supposed to do at an early age," she recalled in a 1999 Rolling Stone cover story. At 12, having already appeared on the talent show Star Search and in several TV adverts, Spears was cast in The Mickey Mouse Club, a wholesome Disney variety show on which she sang and danced with fellow future A-listers Justin Timberlake, Christina Aguilera and Ryan Gosling. But when she launched her music career in 1998, four years after the show was axed, the "Mouseketeer" tag seemed to cling a little more closely to Spears than it did to her peers.

It could be argued that Spears' rise in the late 1990s was so meteoric that the media of the time had trouble processing it. Written and produced by Max Martin, the Swedish songwriting genius who has now penned more Billboard Hot 100 chart-toppers than anyone bar John Lennon and Paul McCartney, Spears' irresistible 1998 debut single ...Baby One More Time wasn't just a hit but a pop culture phenomenon. Helped by a memorable music video in which Spears chose to wear a schoolgirl outfit – a look often interpreted as suggestive, but which also reflected her age – it became one of the best-selling singles of all time. Her debut album, also called ...Baby One More Time, ended up selling 26 million copies worldwide after spawning further huge hits with Sometimes and (You Drive Me) Crazy. "When ...Baby One More Time came out, the market, particularly in America, was saturated by boy bands," notes Alim Kheraj, a music, culture and LGBTQ journalist. "I don't think since Madonna had there been a female artist that had really skyrocketed in pop that way."

By 1999, Spears was already successful enough to embark on the Baby One More Time Tour, a 56-date criss-cross of North America, but her popularity came laced with a certain amount of disdain. Because she was so young and didn't write any of the songs on her debut album, it was all too easy to dismiss and dehumanise her as a mere "pop puppet".  "I don't doubt that, initially, Max Martin had a large role to play in how ...Baby One More Time sounded," Kheraj counters, "but ultimately the delivery, the timbre and the performance of the song is all Britney. She is in control of the song." For Kheraj, this minimisation of Spears' creative input was intensified by a toxic combination of sexism and classism. "From the off, Britney was dubbed 'stupid' and 'trailer trash' by the media," he says. Sometimes this snobbery was a little more thinly veiled, complete with patronising misogyny: Rolling Stone's review of her debut album said that Baby One More Time [the song] had succeeded in "effectively transforming this ex-Mouseketeer born in a tiny Louisiana town into a growling jailbait dynamo".

Because she broke through in the late 1990s, at the tail end of an era dominated by powerhouse vocalists like Celine Dion and Mariah Carey, Spears' distinctive singing voice was often woefully undervalued. Kheraj points to her more mature third album, 2001's Britney, which saw her embrace R&B on I'm A Slave 4 U and soft rock on I'm Not a Girl, Not Yet a Woman, as the point at which she really honed her vocal style. "She pushes her voice into more whispery textures, playing with the different sounds that she's able to create in order to elevate a song," Kheraj says, comparing her to Kylie Minogue and Janet Jackson in this respect. "Though in my opinion," he adds, "Spears' ability to be an actress with her own voice, taking on different tones, timbres and vibrations, is second to none." This assessment of Spears' vocal technique is echoed by Andrew Watt, a producer who worked with her on this year's Elton John duet Hold Me Closer. "She's unbelievable at layering her voice and doubling, which is one of the hardest things to do," he told The Guardian in August, adding: "She's so good at knowing when she got the right take. She took complete control."

Finding her voice

As Spears' career progressed, she also took more control of her music from the very start of the creative process. Kheraj says she had a predilection for finding collaborators who "would disrupt the status quo of pop" – like envelope-pushing R&B duo the Neptunes, who produced her early 2000s hits I'm a Slave 4 U and Boys, and Moby, who worked on her trance-influenced track Early Mornin'. The latter appeared on Spears' 2003 album In the Zone, her fourth, on which she co-wrote eight of 12 songs including the beautifully subdued ballad Everytime. "The video was always on MTV when I was about 11, and I remember feeling so sad for her," says Styrke, referring to the song's regretful lyrics as well as its video depicting the dark side of fame. "Hearing it [now] still makes me really feel for her."

In the Zone was another step up for Spears, but her magnum opus came four years later with 2007's Blackout, an incredibly innovative album that she executive produced. Home to the huge hits Gimme More and Piece of Me, Blackout didn't just feature cutting-edge production blending elements of techno, EDM and dubstep (then a very new genre); it also underlined Spears' fearlessness. Piece of Me, a song that savagely sends up negative perceptions of her at the time, is as self-referential as pop music gets. "Guess I can't see the harm in working and being a mama," Spears sings. "And with a kid on my arm, I'm still an exceptional earner." It doesn't matter that Spears didn't write it; she said everything she needed to just by putting it out. Blackout was a high-water mark, but Spears has displayed a knack for picking winning material throughout her career. "Have you heard her albums? They're so intelligent," avant-garde singer-songwriter Charli XCX said in 2014. "The way her songs are crafted is really amazing. I think that [her] music is really interesting and clever."

In terms of new artists controlling their visuals, videos and songs. Talking openly about their lives and that incredible stagecraft. Think about the raft of artists today like Olivia Rodrigo, Sabrina Carpenter, Tate McRae, Dua Lipa, Rina Sawayama, Billie Eilish and so many other artists who have cited Britney Spears or been influenced by some aspect of her career. Especially interesting seeing powerful Gen Z artists who are carrying the torch. Even if Britney Spears has not released an album in almost a decade and there has been little in the way of performance, I feel this year is a hugely important one. There are some important album anniversaries, and that tantalising prospect that she may perform in the U.K. The fact she could bring on to stage some of these artists that name her as an influence. A career-spanning set. I am ending this feature with a selection of her best hits and those deeper cuts that show what a consistent and innovative artist she is. Over twenty-five years since she broke through, Britney Spears is still impacting the mainstream and fringes. I have been a fan since the very start and I follow her Instagram. She is someone who is thinking about her son and a possible music career, though she is also looking at where she heads next. This year could be a massive one. With many similar artists to Britney Spears releasing the boldest and best Pop of today, the original is very much in our midst! For that, we have to show love and salute…

A peerless superstar.

FEATURE: Becoming Kate Bush: Highlighting Two Events Where Fans Truly Get to Embrace the Beloved Queen

FEATURE:

 

 

Becoming Kate Bush

IN THIS PHOTO: Kate Bush in 1978/PHOTO CREDIT: Gered Mankowitz

 

Highlighting Two Events Where Fans Truly Get to Embrace the Beloved Queen

__________

I have been wondering…

IN THIS PHOTO: Fans of Kate Bush congregated at Folkestone Harbour Arm for The Most Wuthering Heights Day/PHOTO CREDIT: Andy Aitchison

whether there will be many opportunities this year for fans of Kate Bush to get together to celebrate her work. I might be involved with something towards the summer around one of her albums. I think a new documentary about her is out this month which I took part in. As I have said before, 2026 is a quieter year in terms of celebrating big anniversaries. None of her studios albums have a special anniversary. There are bits and pieces here and there. However, whilst I tend to look nationally and internationally to what is happening and whether there is anything huge coming along, I tend to ignore the local and smaller. There are communities, smaller venues and areas of the world where Kate Bush is being honoured. A lot of the time, events celebrating artists tend to be watching them live. Exhibitions or tribute concerts. These are great, though I find there is something appealing and very intriguing where fans get together and inhabit the artist. Rather than it being cosplay, it would be fans paying tribute and celebrating the artist in this very loving way. It is not even drag artistry. Kate Bush has tribute acts and there is the brilliant An Evening Without Kate Bush, where Sarah-Louise Young inhabits the icon. Rather than it being a tribute act or covers, this is a theatrical experience. It is a way of seeing Kate Bush without seeing Kate Bush if you see what I mean. That is great. I have not seen her show yet though I do need to at some point. I am looking around to see what events are out there where I and other Kate Bush fans can unite to celebrate her. Become her in a way!

There are two events that caught my eye. As this article highlights, the successful and hugely popular The Most Wuthering Heights Day Ever will be held against Folkestone Harbour Arm. Four days before Kate Bush’s sixty-eighth birthday, hundred and thousands of fans will don a red dress and dance in synchronicity – or as close as possible – to recreate the video for Wuthering Heights (1978) where Kate Bush danced on Salisbury Plain (Baden's Clump, near Sidbury Hill to be exact!). It is one of the most important moments in her career, and it is a rare occasion when fans get to come together and pay tribute to Kate Bush in this very special way:

Returning for its sixth year, a huge celebration of Kentish icon Kate Bush, The Most Wuthering Heights Day Ever (@mostwutheringheightsdayfolke), returns to Folkestone Harbour Arm on Sunday 26th of July for 2026.

Thousands of enthusiasts dressed in wigs and red playsuits, are set to head down to the town’s waterfront for an experience that is fast becoming one of the most recognised in the county.

Dancers of all abilities pay tribute to Kent-born (Bexleyheath) Kate Bush, with a mass choreographed performance to the soundtrack of the 1978 smash hit ‘Wuthering Heights’.

Some history… Started in 2013 by Brighton-based performance group Shambush, The Ultimate Kate Bush Experience was an attempt to set a world record of having the most people dressed as legendary musician Kate Bush in one location.

More than a decade on and the event has stretched across the world, with Kate Bush-themed events popping up in July across cities from Austin in Texas to Sydney in Australia, with many more (Berlin, Copenhagen, Dublin and Tel Aviv, to name but a few) between.

But one of the most successful has been one right here in Kent, down in Folkestone, who took to the Harbour Arm for the first time in 2018 with some trepidation. But with hundreds turning up to honour the star, a marker was set down and the attendance was doubled when it was recreated in 2019.

Having had a Covid hiatus, The Most Wuthering Heights Day Ever returned on July 30th 2023 due to popular demand, and has continued to grow ever since.

Bush is said to have been inspired to write the famous song after watching the 1967 BBC adaptation of Emily Bronte’s 1847 Wuthering Heights novel, producing the lyrics from the perspective of heroine Catherine Earnshaw”.

I have never attended The Most Wuthering Heights Day Ever and I have no dance ability. However, there is something very appealing about this moment of fun and fandom. Joining others in this congregation of love and fun! There are not that many moments or opportunities when fans can represent an artist like this. As I say, it is not cosplay or a drag act or anything like that. Instead, it is this unique event that continues to gather pace. Long may it reign! I do feel like there need to be more Kate Bush events where fans can assemble. It does not even have to be them dressing as Kate Bush. I have suggested before how there have not been conventions or anything huge for years. I pitch quite a few ideas relating to Bush’s work. Like an exhibition where we get to see her work and legacy brought to life through cutting-edge visuals, artefacts and memorabilia. However, she may not be on board with that. Kate Bush has always admired people that celebrate her work. Like when a Brisbane pub choir performed their rendition of Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) in 2022, Kate Bush sent an email saying how much she loved the rendition. With that song very much at they forefront and being covered, discussed and streamed, Bush cannot escape its legacy and importance. I am not sure what she feels about The Most Wuthering Heights Day Ever, though you feel she would be very touched and honoured! I am considering going up to Folkestone in July and either witnessing the event or being involved. There is another event coming before then that grabbed my attention. A bit more intimate, there is this wonderful event at Bethnal Green Working Men’s Club which you can get tickets for. This incredible discotheque that coincides with the release of Emerald Fennell’s Wuthering Heights (which is in cinemas from 13th February), it really sounds like a must-attend for any Kate Bush fans who live nearby:

To celebrate the release of Emerald Fennell’s “Wuthering Heights”, Bethnal Green Working Men’s Club is throwing the ultimate Kate Bush party. Get running up that hill all the way to Bethnal Green and prepare to do the jig of life on the dancefloor to all of Kate’s best tracks, plus music from the likes of Tori Amos, Florence + The Machine, David Bowie, Eurythmics, and Fleetwood Mac.

Dressing up is absolutely encouraged and there will be smoke machines along with free Kate face masks and capes for a fully authentic atmosphere. There’ll also be Bush-offs throughout the night, where you can lip sync for your life to the Bush back catalogue. And it wouldn’t be a Wuthering Nights party without plenty of ‘Wuthering Heights’ – the iconic single will be spun on the hour, every hour, so get ready to sing along”.

I do love how there is this great Kate Bush event in London. I guess there will be similar things happening because of the Wuthering Heights film. The fact that it comes out the day before Valentine’s Day and it seems to be this rather racy and erotic take on the novel. It has gained some backlash, though it is a progressive and bold take from a brilliant filmmaker. I have been thinking about Valentine’s Day and dating/matchmaking based around Kate Bush. Not an event that would see people dressed as Kate Bush or losing yourself in the music, this would be a chance for those who are single or looking for a relationship to find like-minded people. It may sound quite niche, though you would be surprised how many people are together because they love similar music. It can be this very strong bond! This compatibility. Not even dating. Maybe a social event where Kate Bush songs can be played and fans get together and talk about her. Some focus on Kate Bush’s debut single and her work in 1978. Whereas Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God) has dominated a lot of focus the past four years or so, this is a chance for us to go further back and mark other Kate Bush work. I like the idea of The Most Wuthering Heights Day Ever and becoming Kate Bush. Also, a discotheque and night celebrating her where you can dress up. Not necessarily dressing in a red or white dress. It can be, I guess, any Kate Bush-themed or appropriate outfit. These great local events that many people might not know about. Chances to salute one of music’s most enduring, important and influential artists. I wanted to shine a light on them, though I will keep my eyes open for any similar that come along. It is about community, connection and joyfulness. The power of her music. Last year, The Sensual World: A Kate Bush Celebration for Cabaret vs Cancer took place at The Royal Vauxhall Tavern (“Money raised via ticket sales and a raffle on the night will go to supporting Cabaret vs Cancer, to help people affected by cancer. You can find out more about CvC at https://www.cabaretvscancer.co.uk/”). I do hope there is fundraising events like this later in the year. These different ways in which Kate Bush’s work can bring people together and also raise money. If you are able to get to any of these events then do so. A wonderful and enriching…

JIG of life.

FEATURE: First Band on the Moon: Why a New U.K. Show from The Cardigans Is Especially Pleasing

FEATURE:

 

 

First Band on the Moon

 

Why a New U.K. Show from The Cardigans Is Especially Pleasing

__________

EVEN if there have been…

a couple of departures from the original line-up of 1992, The Cardigans are a band that I feel have a lot more life in them. This ties in to an announcement that they will play their first U.K. show in eight years. Lars-Olof Johansson, Bengt Lagerberg, Nina Persson and Magnus Sveningsson could well record another album. That is the hope at least. Their most recent album is 2005’s Super Extra Gravity. Nina Persson has recorded solo and collaborative music since then, but it has been more than twenty years since we received an album from the band. Their amazing debut, Emmerdale, was released in 1994. This year is a big anniversary year. Their 1996 album, First Band on the Moon, was released on 6th September that year. I will focus on it closer to the time. On 6th August, it will be thirty years since Lovefool was released. The best-known and adored song from The Cardigans, it was one that scored high school days. One of those songs that sticks in the mind and brings back happy memories. I shall end with a mixtape of The Cardigans’ best tracks and some deep cuts. However, NME reported on some very pleasing news for fans of the Swedish band:

The Cardigans have announced their first UK show in eight years will take place this summer in London.

The Swedish pop veterans last played in the country in December 2018 when they performed a string of shows to mark the 20th anniversary of their landmark fourth album ‘Gran Turismo’.

That run of dates concluded with a show at London’s Eventim Apollo, and now the band have confirmed that they will be playing a one-off show at the same venue on June 27. It will be their only UK show of 2026.

The special early doors show will have a 9pm curfew and a pre-sale for tickets begins at 10am on Wednesday (January 28) for fans who sign up here. They will then go on general sale at the same time on Friday (January 30) and you will be able to find yours here.

The band formed in 1992 and made their debut with 1994’s ‘Emmerdale’. The single ‘Lovefool’ served as a major international breakthrough in 1996, reaching Number Two in the UK and being included in Baz Luhrmann’s Romeo + Juliet.

Further hits followed, including ‘My Favourite Game’, ‘Erase/Rewind’ and ‘Hanging Around’, but they went on hiatus after the release of their sixth studio album ‘Super Extra Gravity’ in 2005.

Since then, frontwoman Nina Persson has released albums under her solo side project A Camp and memorably provided guest vocals on Manic Street Preachers’ ‘Your Love Alone Is Not Enough’, from 2007’s ‘Send Away The Tigers’.

The Cardigans have continued to tour in recent years, after ending their hiatus in 2012, and have played sporadically around Europe and Japan, including a pair of shows in the latter country last October.

As for the possibility of new music, Persson said in 2014 that “if we continue having this much fun [on tour] we would like to make another record, because we like to create new things.”

The closest we have come to that happening, however, was a clip of the band playing apparently new music that was posted on social media in 2022”.

It is a perfect year for the band to come back to the stage. I think they are following bands like Oasis and tying touring and live work to a big anniversary. Oasis reformed last year when (What’s the Story) Morning Glory? turned thirty. Not the only reason they reunited for live work. However, it did seem like a perfect moment. The same with Cardigans and thirty years of Last Band on the Moon. Maybe them playing Lovefool thirty years after it was released and became this huge chart success.

I am not sure whether we will get many other incredible bands from the 1990s doing a reunion or, in the case of The Cardigans, coming out of hibernation. The band have not broken up, so it is more to do with them embarking on this new stage of their career. You wonder whether Spice Girls will come back to the stage to mark thirty years of Wannabe in the summer. Celebrate the same anniversary for their debut album, Spice. That would be something fans would love to see! I did not know that The Cardigans were in communication and there were any plans, so this announcement was quite a surprise! However, you wonder whether there will be new material or it is just this sort of brief moment of reunion. However, I do feel like there could be some new material. Nina Persson is one of the greatest band leads ever. One of the coolest women of the 1990s, I was a huge fan of The Cardigans. I remember when Lovefool came out and it was played all over the radio. I think the song still sound completely wonderful and unique. Its video is so charming and utterly spellbinding! I bought Gran Turismo in 1998 and that was off of the strength of its leads single, My Favourite Game. It is a terrific album that I hope gets an outing when The Cardigans come to London. The band will bring together fans who have been following them since the start and those new to their music. This year more than ever is depressing and bleak. Live music cannot banish that blackness, through great news like The Cardigans performing live is a welcome relief and treat! Nearly thirty years after their released their third studio album, they will be gracing the stage. There will be a lot of demand, as the 27th June gig at the Eventim Apollo is their only performance here. Tickets will sell out very quickly. I would like to think that their first album in over two decades will come. Given the love still out there for them, many would embrace a follow-up to Super Extra Gravity. Rather than this show being a celebration of Lovefool/First Band on the Moon turning thirty, it might be more than that. At the moment nothing is confirmed though, given the huge anniversaries later in the year and the excitement around that, who knows…

WHAT could happen!

FEATURE: At the Chime of a City Clock: Nick Drake's Bryter Layter at Fifty-Five

FEATURE:

 

 

At the Chime of a City Clock

 

Nick Drake's Bryter Layter at Fifty-Five

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ONE of the most beautiful…

IN THIS PHOTO: Nick Drake in 1971/PHOTO CREDIT: Tony Evans/Timelapse Library Ltd/Getty Images (via The Guardian)

albums ever turns fifty-five on 5th March. Bryter Layter was the second studio album from Nick Drake. I don’t think it gets as much attention as his debut, Five Leaves Left, or his third (and final) album, Pink Moon. The latter album was Drake unaccompanied and it was this more sparse and stripped work. Like Five Leaves Left, Bryter Layter is different in terms of its sound. String and brass arrangements. Flute, saxophone, celeste and harpsichord are among the instruments that help score these wonderful songs. Perhaps best known for tracks like Northern Sky and Poor Boy, I feel every track on the album is a work of wonder. At the Chime of a City Clock and Hazey Jane I are among my favourites. I do want to get to some reviews of Bryter Layter. I am not sure how many people will mark its fifty-fifth anniversary. It is a pity, as this is a really remarkable artist whose career was short but remains hugely influential. In terms of musicians who have been affected by Nick Drake. In 2000, Q placed Bryter Layter at number twenty-three in its list of the 100 Greatest British Albums Ever. I want to start out with Golden Plec and their assessment and reflection on 1971’s Bryter Layter. Reappraising this masterpiece in 2016 – forty-five years after its release -, I would like to feel people will write new words about Bryter Layter close to 5th March:

Cambridge, 1969. Cyclists throng the roads, college scarves flying; the bells of Great St. Mary’s clang out, whilst the River Cam meanders slowly by. Nick Drake is submerged in all of this, ostensibly studying for a degree in English literature. A product of colonial Britain (he lived in Burma as a child), public schooling, and now the stifling traditions of Oxbridge, Drake finds release in the dual pleasures of guitar and smoke - his debut album, ‘Five Leaves Left’, is named after the preemptive warning near the end of a Rizla packet. After playing a supporting slot at the Camden Roundhouse, he strolls into a record deal and accordingly strolls out of Cambridge, though the influence of that city remains plain to hear in his music.

At the time, East Anglia was a haven for aspiring troubadours. The annual Cambridge Folk Festival was inaugurated in 1965, welcoming acts including Pentangle, Martin Carthy and Dave Swarbrick. Pink Floyd’s 1969 album ‘Ummagumma’ included a seven minute paean to Grantchester Meadows, an area of pastureland just south of the city. Likewise, Nick Drake’s music is shaped by the topography of bleak fenland, river weed and fresh ploughed fields. He sings of the River Man, fallen leaves, the day dawning from the ground - depicting the English countryside through chords alone. Unfortunately for Drake, what is popular in rural England is not necessarily popular elsewhere - and so to 1971, ‘Bryter Layter’, and the ensuing tensions between musical self expression and thirst for public acclaim.

Put simply, ‘Bryter Layter’ is a beautiful album. It is suffused with warmth, excitement, a sense of promise. It’s the early 1970s, London’s calling: Nick Drake has escaped the rigours of academia for a leafy suburb of Camden Town, and his sense of optimism is palpable.

The opening track, instrumental Introduction, evokes the smell of cut grass warmed by slightly tipsy afternoon sun, its lush string arrangements drawn out over rippling fretwork. Everything speaks of a bright future - as Drake insists in Hazey Jane II, “Now that you’re lifting/ Your feet from the ground/ Weigh up your anchor/ And never look round”, upbeat lyrics leaping effortlessly over bobbing bassline and offbeat horns. You get the sense that he is perfectly happy making music purely for his own enjoyment, relishing the collaboration with folk luminaries such as Fairport Convention’s Dave Mattacks and Dave Pegg, and John Cale, formerly of The Velvet Underground, all of whom feature on the record.

In truth, the ‘green and pleasant’ vision of England and its music was fading fast. By 1971, Drake sat slightly uncomfortably between Haight-Ashbury psychedelia, and the slow onslaught of prog and folk rock. The Rolling Stones’ ‘Sticky Fingers’, was released a month after ‘Bryter Layter’, and the dropped T, working class vibe of Jagger and Richards resonated with the public far more than the middle class accent of a sensitive songster could. Despite the defiance of Hazey Jane I (“Try to be true/ Even if it’s only in your hazey way”), the cold hard facts of album sales were hard to ignore. Though ‘Bryter Layter’ was a critical success, Drake’s aversion to performing, compounded by worsening depression, saw him refuse to tour the album. It sold fewer than 5000 copies.

Hindsight is a wonderful thing. Listening to ‘Bryter Layter’ 45 years after its release, it is possible to take the album entirely out of context and treat it as a stand alone work - an atmospheric blend of metaphysical lyrics, quasi-orchestral arrangement and virtuosic guitar.

Indeed it’s arguably more relevant today than it was back then - in this era of instant celebrity and stifling PR, the underlying bitterness of songs dealing candidly with fame, or the lack of it, is particularly pertinent. And of course the tragic circumstances of Drake’s suicide at the age of 26 colour modern perceptions of his work, and interpretation of his lyrics. But whether ‘Bryter Layter’ is a product of its time, or a product of its legacy, it is an album well deserving of its cult status. Time to dust off that vinyl - and let Nick Drake brighten your Northern Sky”.

I will end with a review of Bryter Layter from Rolling Stone. Next, I am going to come to Klof Mag and their take on Bryter Layter. Reviewing it in 2021, they write how the album offers these magical qualities. Something that is there “ to allow us to glimpse the fleeting intangible parts of us, act as a vessel to this visceral realm – forever slipping through our fingers in the vice-like grip of the modern world”. Critics in 1971 were not fond of an album they felt was boring and did not like the tone and timbre of Nick Drake’s voice. The fact he did not tour the album didn’t help. However, Bryter Layter is more influential today than it ever was, so it is getting overdue affection:

Folk music was at the heart of the tumultuous late 60s and early 70s: troubadours created elaborate progressive folk; Al Stewart and Roy Harper employed diverse instrumentation; explorative basslines became ever more common; John Martyn and the Pentangle fused jazz rhythms and harmonies into hardwired folk, whilst Fairport convention produced angular, electric albums. Drake’s producer Joe Boyd was notably present, signing the prolific Incredible String Band, who along with the likes of the Third Ear Band and Quintessence developed another 70s folk direction. It was in this world of experimentation and musical fervency that Nick Drake recorded Bryter Layter.

Drake’s producers, friends and labelmates pushed at the forefront of experimentation as his iconic sound matured. But it’s easy to see him as apart or distant from this world. Even on the cover of Bryter Layter, his most collaborative work, he’s shrouded in shadow – a promise of the quiet, dark place we enter through his songs. Drake was described by his close, protective friend John Martyn as the most withdrawn person he’d ever met, whilst Nick’s long-time producers Wood and Boyd recall his hesitation to stamp his authority when recording ‘Five Leaves Left’ and his despondent frailty in the ‘Pink Moon’ sessions. Bryter Layter, however, is distinct, and with the benefit of distance that time provides, it is, I think, Drake at his most ambitious and coherent – proactively responding to the vibrant musical world around him.

A clear example of Drake’s control and steel-mindedness on Bryter Layter can be seen in his choice of musicians. Even against the influential personalities of his producers, Drake was driven by his own vision, dismissing their string arrangements. As Wood told Arthur Lubow, ‘He said he’d got his friend, Robert Kirby, who had never done anything in a recording studio.’

This personal stamp of decision making is seen as the album opens. Drake’s overture, the first of three instrumentals Nick insisted on against Boyd’s wishes, features lilting, delicate guitar swirls throughout – drawing attention among the sombre sweep of Kirby’s strings. It’s gentle crafting of a mournful yet playful veil of sound hints at mortality and loss as it scatters around.  Hazey Jane II whisks the veil back into the air, lacing it with layers of Richard Thompson’s intricate guitar. A rhythmic skip is provided by Dave Mattack and Dave Pegg, also of Fairport Convention, who appear throughout the record, enriching the albums rhythm section with the dulcet backbeat of their well-honed dialogue, evidence of Drake’s relish of the ever-expanding folk pallet. Drake later delves into what were prominent contemporary tropes (perhaps dating the album somewhat for the modern listener), with the use of Lyn Dobson’s flute on the title track and John Cale’s viola, celeste and harpsichord contributions to sprawling folk jams, Fly and Northern Sky.

Drake was an admirer of the Beach Boys, and drummer Mike Kowalski brings a crucial element to Bryter Layter, his contributions offering poignant moments of fragility. Poor boy offers another twist and change of pace; uneasiness subtly imbued with the offbeat stabs of Drake’s guitar, referencing the 60s New York jazz of Jimmy Smith. Accompanying this is a deftly frantic drumming and gospel undertow bolstered by melodic Bossa Nova phrasing. Tension heightens as Drake floats ‘where will I stay tonight,’ leading into the rhythmic solo of Chris McGregor, a force in both jazz and African music, bringing with him echoes of the harmonic inventiveness of McCoy Tyner shimmying through the piano.

The veil sweetly draped from note one remains throughout, as hints of Dylan and Van Morrison’s lilting, ethereal lyrical influences adorn the album in half-rhymes. Other American influences can perhaps be seen in some of Drake’s guitar work, the sparser arpeggiated moments, often indulged with chromatic changes and major to minor shifts, such as in One of These Things First, evoking the American musicians he became enamoured with: Peter, Paul and Mary, Joni Mitchell on Song to a Seagull, and the older folk masters such as Josh White.

This is an album brimming with influences, stripped down and reeled together in a sequence of dreams, helping Bryter Layter stand out not just among Drake’s haunting discography, but against the whole era. It is an album of contemporary decision, led by Drake.

Conversely, Drake was rarely cited as an influence in his time, adding all the more fuel to his image of doomed inertia. However, the closing song on the album, Sunday bears a startling resemblance to Bowie’s Kooks released the following year, perhaps the first of many debtors – an impact unknown by Drake himself”.

I am ending with a 1977 review from Rolling Stone. They wrote about this majestic album that contains “enchanting melodies, stirring empathy, and authenticity”. You can argue which of Nick Drake’s three albums is his finest moment. I feel Bryter Layter is his most underappreciated, so I was keen to spotlight it ahead of its fifty-fifth anniversary:

Nick Drake may be the most ethereal recording artist I’ve ever heard. His fleeting career — the moody, mysterious music, the remote relationship with his record company — seemed calculated to distance him from reality. Yet his hushed songs touch a rare tranquillity that approaches poetry, and when he died in 1974 at the age of 26, he left behind three albums which are gradually making him a posthumous legend. Bryter Layter is the second of these LPs to be rereleased by Island Records through its remarkable budget label, Antilles.

Drake’s melodies are seldom less than enchanting. Built around acoustic folk-jazz guitar figures and muffled percussion, they become emotionally charged when shaded by arranger Robert Kirby’s poignant, eddying strings. Drake’s impressionistic lyrics are vivid but provocatively sketchy, making them as curiously personal as phrases mumbled in sleep. They’re delivered in an airy, nearly unconscious whisper that blends as naturally into the arrangements as a breeze rippling through tall grass.

Compared to the gloomy, vinegary, autumnal Five Leaves Left and the reportedly stark Pink Moon, Drake’s second album is a relatively pleasant collection. “Bryter Layter” and “Sunday” are light, carefree flute instrumental, and the cantering “Hazey Jane II” is positively brisk (though qualified by some disturbing lyrics). “Northern Sky” gently details how a loved one has enhanced his appreciation of life.

Even in his best moods, though, Drake seems to be reaching out from a position of isolation to a like soul, as in “Hazey Jane I”: “Do you feel like a remnant of something that’s past?” More characteristic is the intensely considered solitude of “Poor Boy,” “One of These Things First,” (a light waltz about possibilities dismissed) and “Fly,” which features John Cale’s moaning viola.

Whether obscurely introspective or groping outward, Drake seems to be communing with a pantheistic spirit; he consistently charts this communion with stirring empathy and authenticity — but not clarity. It’s a measure of his instinct for maintaining a sense of mystery that Bryter Layter’s reflections are as ephemeral as a man’s breath on a mirror”.

Nick Drake would follow Bryter Layter a year later with Pink Moon. He sadly died on 25th November, 1974 at the age of twenty-six. One of these artists you wonder where he could have headed had he lived. However, Drake left behind these wonderful and transcendent albums. Bryter Layter among the most beautiful albums ever recorded. One that people should listen to ahead of 5th March. If this is an album that you have not heard in a while (or ever), then do make sure that you…

PLAY it now.