This is meant to be something of a conducted tour. I'm not a dictionary, neither am I a schoolmaster; whom you might find just a bit boring. Think of me as a sort of pointer. I'm going to guide you through the land of music, and to show you the way through its highways and byways; so that next time you go there, you'll be able to explore by yourself, without getting lost - Elfin, 1998 For Coventrians and Warwicksharians amongst you, click on the LOCAL tag and you will find homegrown talent!
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(DJ) Spoon’s Review of 2018
This year I haven’t listened to much music at all, at least not in comparison to previous years and I certainly haven’t been to many gigs. I’m sure this won’t last but this year I’ve been busier at work so less likely to plug in, I’ve stuck to the radio in the car just to keep up with how messy Brexit really is (ooer a bit of politics) and my runs have been 100% fueled by podcasts so music has just taken a backseat. However, I couldn’t let the year go past without some kind of list...so here is a pot pourri of my favourite discoveries of 2018.
1. Podcasts
Seeing as these have been so important this year I’ll start here...and cheat slightly by bigging up some oldies, but good enough to bang on about again.
Old favourites : Running Commentary (Comedians Paul Tonkinson and Rob Deering take you on their runs and chat sometimes about running, but always about life, kids, comedy and anything that pops into their heads), Adam Buxton (always entertaining ramble chat from Dr Buckles whoever is on, I’ve learnt stuff and I’ve laughed a lot), My Dad Wrote a Porno (Sheer filth as ever but genuinely caused me to LOL during my runs, wondering if people can hear that I’m listening to chat about vaginal lids).
New entries : Off Menu (Ed Gamble and James Acaster opened their genie run fantasy restaurant a month ago and it has quickly become one of my favourite podcasts ever. Eclectic guests pick their fantasy 3 course meals, simple premise and it works. The Scroobius Pip episode was a perfect clash of two excellent pods), Blank (another late entry into 2018 from Jim Daly and Giles Paley-Phillips ostensibly about blank moments in life but just rammed with infotaining chat from ‘non standard’ guests including a jaw dropping episode with Michael Rosen and fun with Gary Lineker and Susie Dent), Poddin’ on the Ritz (sadly now finished with maybe its only series) this pod recorded backstage at Young Frankenstein by Hadley Fraser and the sublime Ross Noble made me laugh more than any other in 2018, it might be about musicals but their search for Kenneth Branagh’s snowglobes and Lesley Joseph adoration was a joy.
2. Board games
They say a family that plays together, stays together. Well we are together more than you can imagine. We’ve played over 220 games this year! Here are our favourite new games into our collection:
The game of the year is Azul, a seemingly simple tile grab and place game, building up a mosaic prettier than anyone else, is full of strategy and a little (but not too much) shafting of others. If you really want to shaft your fellow players though then pick up Unstable Unicorns, a card game where you aim to grow your stable of unicorns, whilst stopping others filling theirs. SO many different cards, tactics and ways to mess it up, you will swear at some point. Discovered in the excellent new board game cafe The Dice Box in Leamington, we bought Meeple Circus before we left, it’s that much fun. Rehearse and perform the best tiny wooden meeple circus performance, accompanied by a bespoke playlist. Stack the acrobats, balance the lions and raise the bar. Another board game cafe, Chance & Counters in Bristol introduced us to the frantic game of Klask, a cross between air hockey, pool and table football. Slide the magnets around to flick a ball into your opponents hole, avoid the magnetic biscuits and don’t KLASK! When is a game not a game? another game of the year has been played a lot in our house, and it’s The Mind. 100 cards numbered 1-100, no words between players and a tense task to lay cards in ascending order. Simple? yes? possible? nope! but it’s sure to cause fun and arguments. The final two of MY favourite sadly aren’t quite as loved by my family, but I’ll get them there. Sagrada is a similar game to Azul with you attempting to build a beautiful stained glass window with coloured dice. More variations and thinking needed than Azul which adds to the challenge. And finally and lovely chess like 2 player game which transports you to the sun dappled Greek island of Santorini. Take the powers of a god and build the traditional blue domed white houses of the island whilst trying to stop your opponent climbing onto a roof. A lot of ‘aha, you’ve stopped me’ moments.
3. TV
It’s been a long old year at work, and in the world of parenting so we’ve found ourselves flopped on the settee many evenings just soaking up great drama, comedy and chilling ;o)
We are very late to the party with Suits but that means we have 8 series to wade through! Really neat writing, bants and relationships between characters, a ‘don’t worry they will always win’ calmness about it and you get to see the Queen in her knickers...ish. Another Netflix treat this year was Magic for Humans with Justin Willman, a hugely likeable and funny magician pulling off tricks that constantly make me smirk with a huge dollop of WTF? amazing. A huge recommendation. A late entry to my TV highlights of 2018 is from the warped warped mind of Charlie Brooker...of course with Bandersnatch. An interactive choose your own adventure TV ‘event’ (I know) that had us hooked for the full 90 minutes (only if you want to see how much bloodshed you can invoke!). Completely on the other end of the spectrum was the sublime and minimalistic Mortimer and Whitehouse: Gone Fishing. I don’t like fishing and why would I find two old mates just teasing each other for half an hour entertaining? No idea but it was beautiful. Like Radio 4, comforting and perfect. Then a few suspenseful dramas that got us on the edge of the settee, Killing Eve (quirky AF), Bodyguard (did they really kill Keely Hawes that early?) and Informer (bleak bleak bleak) and sweaty bullocks in ‘should be in the next section really’ Bird Box (made Informer seem like a giggle fest).
4. Films
Really haven’t been to the cinema much in the last 12 months and only once to see a ‘grown up’ film I think but kid’s films are SO good at the moment that’s ok. A few stand out films for me were:
Ralph Breaks the Internet, much better than the first one, lots of #lolz internet jokes and more than a little heart. Wrap me up in a duvet and give me a hot cocoa and Paddington 2 any day, tears at the end. A little more sighing but just as much emotion in Christopher Robin, not sure why Eeyore had an American accent but the characters were spot on and nicely faithful to the original concepts. The one time I did venture out for an adult (it’s a 12 so almost ;o) and saw Ready Player One I was delighted, yeah it might not be a) as good as or b) anything like the book but a visual treat and an enjoyable romp.
5. Books
I read A LOT, until my Kindle donks me on the head in bed anyway...literally a tiny selection of books that have kept me awake.
The Secret Lives of Colour - Kassia St Clair. They say never judge a book by its cover. Well that didn’t work...I bought this purely because it is a beautiful package, the hardback a lot more pleasing imho. Simply 2 coloured pages about how each colour was discovered, invented and introduced throughout history. I never really gave it a thought that colours were...made. Weird and fascinating.
This Is Going to Hurt - Adam Kay. A hilarious ‘secret’ diary of a junior doctor that horrifies at the same time. I think we all knew it was a hard life but bloody hell, if you didn’t love the NHS before you will after this. A thoroughly enjoyable and insightful story of Adam’s journey through medicine. And that ending...wooof.
Moose Allain - I Wonder What I’m Thinking About. I love Moose, I love his colour-me-advent calendars, I love his tweet threads that show the best in Twitter, I love his cartoons and this book is all of those wrapped up in one. And a certain Mr Spoon is to thank for the publication, find me in the back of Unbound funders! An inspiring book for anyone who loves art, creativity and childish humour.
Factfulness : Ten Reasons We’re Wrong About the World - Hans Rosling. A brilliantly clever and educational book about why the world is NOT as shit as it might seem some times. It’s all backed up by real data and lovely lovely graphs!
Lee Child and Ian Rankin. A highlight of the year is the next Reacher and Rebus novels and these two didn’t disappoint. Rebus’ latest adventure Past Tense, is a self-contained story that could introduce anyone to the man machine that is Jack Reacher. Rebus however is back, retired but won’t lie down, in In A House of Lies, an old case comes back to haunt him and will this finally be his downfall? I doubt it!
6. Music
As mentioned, I haven’t ‘been into music’ as much in 2018 for various reasons but I’ve still enjoyed some great new discoveries:
Barns Courtney - The Attractions of Youth, discovered via the use of Glitter and Gold for the theme tune of Netflix’s Safe. An album of ‘cheesy, commercially viable blues and folk rock’ apparently. I just liked the visceral nature of some of the tracks and it always fired me up at work on slow days.
Isaac Gracie - Isaac Gracie, a rare listened to recommendation from my wife. Isaac is everything I claim to like, fragile thin sensitive boys with acoustic guitars....and I do very much with this. Painful screeched out tales of heartbreak. Sublime.
R.E.M. - Live at the BBC, 104 rare and live tracks from arguably one of the best bands ever. Some of the tracks I haven’t heard since my bootleg cassette buying days at Sheffield Uni, when the world was in black and white. Not all tracks are of the greatest audio quality but bliss for a fanboy like me.
Creep Show - Mr Dynamite, a spin off project for Mr John Grant and even from the eclectic crooner this is an odd one. Glitchy electronica with vocoders all over the place. Weird and very Marmite.
Public Service Broadcasting - Every Valley and everything else. The latest offering from the other PSB was a trip through the miner’s crisis and Thatcher years. Bleak? yup but fascinating snippets of well, public service broadcasting and guest stars including the obligatory Welsh rockers the Manics. This album is perfect by itself but it ‘forced’ me to go back and really discover all the PSB albums. The Live at Brixton release is a huge recommendation, I wish I was there.
Rex Orange County - Apricot Princess, maybe I just added this in to seem cool as Rex, aka Alexander O’Conner, was ‘one to watch in 2018′ from the BBC. A multi-instrumentalist that dabbles with hippity hop, R&B and piano pop. The first track alone contains about three musical styles if you wait.
7. Food & Drink
I run, because I really like food. And thankfully I’ve run a lot in 2018 so I got to enjoy a lot.
I was introduced to the weird fermented tea monstrosity that is kombucha by my sister-in-law. Vinegar tasting drink that may or may not help your gut that grows in your living room. WTAF? However, health benefits aside the LA Brewery Strawberry and Black Pepper drink is something, alongside my pilgrimage to Leon, worth going to London for. I’ve heard it’s also for sale in Solihull but I don’t often travel that far beyond my class ;o) I’d say, try it...but I suspect 9/10 people with hate the flavour.
I suspect 10/10 people that try the Aldi Black Forest Mince Pies would love them, but you won’t get a chance as I’ve bought them ALL. Aldi are a bugger for getting you hooked then never restocking. I only managed 10 boxes in 2018 and we’ve rationed well so have 12 left to get us through the bleak January weather. Cherries, Dark Chocolate, Chocolate pastry and a smidge of mincemeat. Perfect!
There are many ingredient delivery services available and I’ve only tried Gousto but I don’t know why you’d go anywhere else. 33 recipes tried and 32 of them I’d have again, with the one not so good one was still far better than anything I’d cook by myself. So easy, so tasty and if you want to try it I can give you a big discount that will help us buy another box, a tad expensive without a discount but worth a treat every so often.
Genuinely I traveled to London just to visit Max’s Sandwich Shop...kinda. It was certainly the deciding factor in a day out at the Summer Exhibition (see below). I downloaded the Kindle version of this book when it was promoted in an email, I bought some Scampi Fries and made a Fish Finger sandwich, I crumbled up some Ginger Nuts into a Mascarpone and Jam sandwich and I made a Fried Egg, Shoestring Fried and Gammon sandwich then I NEEDED to go and see how it’s really done. Amazing over the top sandwiches in a rough little hipster cafe in Stroud Green (no me neither and it’s a long walk from the tube!). So good I had to a) buy the hard copy of the book and b) carry half the sandwich home as even I couldn’t manage it all...not with deep fried macaroni balls filling me up ;o)
8. Places
A family that plays together, stays together as a great man once said. And we don’t just play inside, we love adventures so adventures we had.
I’d never been to the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition, as it’s in that there London which often seems hundreds of miles away...but I’m so glad that I visited this year. A trip with a good friend with neither of us knowing quite what to expect. We saw, and laughed, and marveled at, paintings, sculptures, videos, photos, models, and weirdness by Banksy next to Joe Lycett next to Grayson Perry next to Harry Hill, next to me mate Lorsen Camps from Coventry. The SA allows ANYONE to submit artwork for consideration and anyone can be accepted. I think this has to become a yearly visit, awesome.
My parents have been wanting to take our kids, and their big kid, to The Forbidden Corner in North Yorkshire for a few years now...and I’m so happy we finally got round to going. Started as a folly to entertain his children this huge labyrinthine site is crammed with strange sculptures, mazes, tricks and squirting fountains. Many hours were spent squeezing through holes, getting lost and getting wet. Beautifully eccentric.
A family holiday to Brittany meant we could visit the loopy city (it’s their phrase!) of Nantes and more importantly Les Machines d’Ile. Ostensibly the workshop of a group of engineers and artists that make huge animatronic machines and animals...that you can ride on! Needs to be seen to be believed, the Elephant brings out the big kid in everyone...and we can’t wait to go back in a few years when they’ve built a huge forest over the river with ride on caterpillars and dragonfly. Incredible. The city itself is dotted with crazy art and interactive pieces encouraging play, I know a city closer to home that should be the UK Loopy City of Culture!
Luckily Tilly is a Harry Potter obsessive AND it was her birthday last year so it gave us the excuse we didn’t need to visit the Warner Brothers Harry Potter Studio Tour. Wow, just wow. The incredible detail in everything made for the film, the engineering, the amount of artists involved and the presentation of the exhibition blew us away. I’ve enjoyed everything in this list but this maybe was the most magical in the best way.
Many many amazing experiences warrant a mention, but I just don’t have enough words, include Talking Birds - Walk with Me, Print Manufactory Darkroom Workshop, Ludic Rooms Random String Festival, Go Karting with Tilly, some dancing balloons in Broadgate, Godiva Festival with Tony Christie et al, Bristol Gromit trail, Disc Golfing with my girls, Edinburgh Fringe with Dick and Dom and with another wonderful dick from Coventry starring in Bon Jovi musical We’ve Got Each Other, Pandas! at Edinburgh Zoo, Matilda the Musical with Tilly at last, running the Coventry Mile with the girls’ school, Dippy the Dinosaur in Brum, Wicksteed Park (amazing family fun theme park like what they used to be), Cycling on Stratford Greenway in the sun, Autotesting at MotoFest, Bourton-on-the-Water (it’s just a shame 3 million other people know about this gorgeous village), Giant Pac Man in the city centre, Pork Pie making with a good friend, CET several times, Novelty Automation in London and being on The One Show, a couple of Hope & Social gigs and much much much more fun with my wonderful fam and friends. Roll on 2019!
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DJ Spoon’s Top 10 Albums of 2017
It’s been a difficult year for music...for some reason. A bundle of crackers but not as many to choose for this list from than previously. Why? Maybe because my Spotify playlists have become filled with Trolls, Sheeran and Now That’s What I Call Purile Pop more than ever. Anyway, let’s dive straight in...in no particular order except roughly starting with the best.
1. The National - Sleep Well Beast
Typically dark, bleak and deep (the voice if nothing else) with splashs of distorted guitar and strained lyrics about getting old and struggling with marriage, with a later R.E.M. twanging rock song in Turtleneck before you plummet back into subdued reflective dirge. LOVE IT!
2. Sam Airey - In Darkened Rooms
The Welsh singer songwriter so devoted to his craft that he moved to Leeds just to be near the river of his moniker ;o) Sam’s album is a pot pourri of songs written over years, some crafted from poems written as a teenager. Beautiful piano, minimal guitar, loud gutteral indie folk and Americana...my heaven.
3. Public Service Broadcasting - Every Valley
Another concept album by PSB, this time about the unlikely demise of the Welsh coal mining industry. Incredible moving and passionate beats interweaved with archive news footage and interviews. With a guest vocal from James Dean Bradfield this album drips Welsh optimism and bleakness.
4. The xx - I See You
Basically more of the same, and that’s just what I wanted. Despite the lead singer being a slightly wonky version of my sister another great album by The xx. More of the same it might be, the same fragility and sparseness but there is a more polished and fuller sound to this third outing. Well done Jamie!
5. Allman Brown - 1000 Years
After waiting 4 years since the awesome Sons and Daughters single, the album by Allman Brown was worth waiting for. Rich acoustic folk ballads that edge towards being easily confused with Bon Iver at times, what a comparison!
6. Elbow - Little Fictions
Another uplifting, reliable album by Guy and the boys. Looped piano, full phat choirs and the Halle Orchestra pack this 7th outing with honey smooth songs to warm your cockles.
7. Blue Rose Code - The Water of Leith
An ‘old’ favourite of the Big Comfy Sessions, we need Ross back in 2018 hint hint, sees the celebration of the fella returning home to his native Scotland. Oozing with jazz, folk and poetry, it’s not hard to see why Ian Rankin was so happy to write the liner notes to accompany this accomplished album.
8. David C Clements - The Sounds of the Forest Choir (Live)
I didn’t think I’d be featuring an album that appeared in 2016′s Top 10 Albums but I had to make an exception for David C Clements’ live version of ‘The Longest Day in History’. Again it’s the powerful yet emotional cracking vocals and the anthemic songs that fill my heart with joy at another outing for these songs.
9. Luke Sital-Singh - Time is a Riddle
The 2nd album by another musician in my earworm collection that is often likened to Bon Iver, but on this outing maybe a little less. Not a bad thing as Luke has taken this opportunity for a follow up album that certainly nods to the predecessor but wanders off in tangents too. Playing around with instrumentation from intricate guitar work to swelling organ anthems it’s clear Luke is really finding his sound, roll on album #3!
10. LCD Soundsystem - American Dream
I finally discovered this outfit late in the year on the trusted source of surprising artists, Later with Jools Holland, and their performances were enough to stop me in my tracks. Clearly an intense album full of emotion I look forward to falling more in love with this album. Songs full of mumbling rants, building looping sounds and a middle aged man passionate about his music. My kind of discovery.
I really struggled to find my 10th album of the year tbh, there have been a few I should have loved, Duke Special, Benjamin Clementine, John Smith to name a few...and some of them I do like (JS), some need more attention (DS) and some are just too weird even for me (BC...a concept album about the relationship between two flies?!!?). Let’s see what 2018 brings....
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DJ Spoon’s Alternative Musical Advent Calendar - Day 24
All we really want for Christmas is a journey into Retro 8 bit Christmas chintz. Enjoy and HAPPY CHRISTMAS!
It's Christmas Time! IV: The Quest For Peace by Retro Promenade
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DJ Spoon’s Alternative Musical Advent Calendar - Day 23
I’m sure Mariah and Lily had fun recording this.
All I Want For Christmas Is To Fuck You by Lily Allen, Mariah Carey
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DJ Spoon’s Alternative Musical Advent Calendar - Day 22
A holiday needs a guitar album, so Luke Brindley delivers. ho ho ho.
Holiday Guitar by Luke Brindley
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DJ Spoon’s Alternative Musical Advent Calendar - Day 21
Have Yourself a very Ukelele Christmas with Cynthia Lin.
Cozy Christmas by Cynthia Lin
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DJ Spoon’s Alternative Musical Advent Calendar - Day 20
Raising money to support mothers in Ghana, an interesting 5 track EP from Winter Is On My Head.
Winter Is On My Head, Vol. 9 by Winter Is On My Head
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DJ Spoon’s Alternative Musical Advent Calendar - Day 19
Another Big Comfy alumna, the wonderfully crazy Daria Kulesh has released Eternal Child with more winter cheer than you can handle.
Eternal Child - Daria Kulesh by Folkstock Records
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DJ Spoon’s Alternative Musical Advent Calendar - Day 18
The Best of the annual It’s Coming on Christmas album is out, featuring Lucy Rose, Luke Sital-Singh and many more great artists. Listen and buy now on iTunes https://itunes.apple.com/gb/album/its-coming-on-christmas-best-of/1324182887
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DJ Spoon’s Alternative Musical Advent Calendar - Day 17
Tom Mitchell streamed a version of my favourite Xmas song...Stop that cavalry! Listen again here https://twitter.com/therealtommitch/status/943223869703426054
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DJ Spoon’s Alternative Musical Advent Calendar - Day 16
Technically recorded in 2014 on the Adam Buxton show, Gaz Coombes has finally released his version of I Believe in Father Christmas as a gift to the world. Listen here https://open.spotify.com/album/6pEV3Eiq3xCYih0k4T9SnB
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DJ Spoon’s Alternative Musical Advent Calendar - Day 16
This is truly horrible, a Truckers’ Christmas...VOL 3!!!
Merry Truckin' Christmas 3: Santa Claus is a Christmas Trucker by Andrew Kovaleski
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DJ Spoon’s Alternative Musical Advent Calendar - Day 15
One Christmas song each year...a fuzzy offering from Sinclair Polar Bear.
Here Come The Warm Sweats by Sinclair Polar Bear
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DJ Spoon’s Alternative Musical Advent Calendar - Day 14
How could I miss a Christmas EP by Jazzyspoon?
The White Elephant by Jazzyspoon
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DJ Spoon’s Alternative Musical Advent Calendar - Day 13
Have yourself a Bryde little Christmas! Another melancholy version of a classic ;o) Listen hear https://www.bbc.co.uk/music/tracks/n4jwg3
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DJ Spoon’s Alternative Musical Advent Calendar - Day 12
Have yourself a Savage little Christmas. Happy Christmas Josh Savage!
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DJ Spoon’s Alternative Musical Advent Calendar - Day 11
Christmassy song? no. A song to remember all the amazing people that will be working on Christmas Day? hell yeah. Thank you NHS.
"Thank U NHS" by The General Public ft Johnny Vegas & Shaun Ryder
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