Wednesday, 23 July 2025
Celebrity Jukebox #141: Ozzy Osborne
Thursday, 26 December 2024
My Top 24 of 2024 (#6 - 4)
6. Orville Peck - Stampede
He dresses like the Lone Ranger and has the singing chops of Johnny Cash and Chris Isaak. But who is that masked man?
South African (now living in the US) alt-country star Orville Peck is a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside a pair of cowboy boots. He's not afraid to push boundaries and buttons, sometimes using country music to champion gay rights (pretty ballsy considering America's current swing back to conservatism, as mentioned by John Grant earlier in this list), but he's equally good at playing it "straight" musically, in terms of genre. His third album is a collaborative duets effort, on which Orville manages to drag in an impressive array of confederates, from Willie Nelson, Margo Price and Beck to Elton and Kylie, making each artists' contribution true to their own musical background. Or, as he puts it...
"I wanted to make sure that every single song on the album felt like a true 50/50 collaboration of me and the other artists' style and sound and genre. I didn't want to just feel like a bunch of Orville Peck songs that feature verses from other artists. I wanted each one to be an actual collaboration. Every single song on the album is entirely its own thing, dependent on who the artist is. It's a really fun journey. It's definitely the most adventurous I've ever been in terms of genre. It's some of the most country songs I've ever done on this album and some of the least country songs I've ever done on this album."
A large number of these tracks have become essential companions this year (even the more obvious covers like Saturday Night's Alright For Fighting and Rhinestone Cowboy), but the record's so diverse I'm struggling to choose the best song... or even most representative.
This?
Orville Peck & Willie Nelson - Cowboys Are Frequently Secretly Fond Of Each Other
Or this?
Orville Peck & Kylie Minogue - Midnight Ride
Or this?
Look, I don't care if it was forty years ago
When you won high school spelling bee
What are you even talking about?
Not everybody can spell hippopotamus
And that's at least something you can hang on to
I can't even understand you with that thing on your face
Margo, you sure take the O out of country
And you put the L in stupid
Orville Peck & Margo Price - You're an Asshole, I Can't Stand You (and I Want a Divorce)
In the end, I'm settling for this purely on the basis of the video...
5. English Teacher - This Could Be Texas
The last time I included a Mercury Prize winner in my personal list of the year's best albums was way back in 2011 (PJ Harvey, to save you the googling). That's how unhip I am. And yet, for some strange reason, I was ahead of the curve when it came to English Teacher. Could be that I was simply taken by the band name? Or the fact that they hail from my neck of the woods (lead singer Lily Fontaine was born in Huddersfield and grew up just over the Pennines in Colne, and the record made waves for being the first Mercury winner in 9 years not to come from London)?
Musically, the indie-art-punk twanging isn't a million miles away from Florence Shaw and Dry Cleaning, but the lyrics are much more personal, dealing with questions of cultural identity in a touching, honest and humorous fashion.
I am the world's biggest paving slab
But no one can walk over me
I am the Pendle Witches, John Simm
And I am Lee Ingleby
I am the Bank of Dave, Golden Postbox
And the festival of R&B
I'm not the terrorist of Talbot Street
But I have apocalyptic dreams
You should see my armoury
4. Wolves Of Glendale - Wolves Of Glendale
From the sublime then, to the ridiculous. I challenge you to scour the whole of the blogosphere and find anyone else who has included Wolves of Glendale in their year end countdown.
I offer no defence except that this record made me grin like nothing else this year, and I listened to it for far longer than I probably should have...
Thursday, 12 October 2023
Self-Help For Cynics #9: Defusion
Defusion is a skill or technique that is primarily used to detach, separate, or get some distance from our thoughts and emotions.
"I see I'm having a thought about being a loser. Thanks for that, brain."
"Hey, don't be silly, Beck. You're not a loser. You've had hit records, you've got lovely hair... you even know some Spanish!"
Thursday, 28 September 2023
Neverending Top Ten #6.4: Modern Songs
What are you doing at the party, Sam?
Karaoke.
Yeah? What are you going to sing?
Some of my favourite songs that are modern and you won't know.
Huh. You want modern songs? I'll give you modern songs, son. Look, I made you a CD!
Boomtown Rats - She's So Modern
Idlewild - A Modern Way Of Letting Go
Neil Diamond -A Modern Day Version Of Love
Ben Kyle & Romantica - How to Live in a Modern World
Terry, Blair & Anouchka - Ultra Modern Nursery Rhyme
Jesse Malin - In The Modern World
Daryl Hall & John Oates - Method of Modern Love
Charm School – Excerpts from the Modern Song
The Humdrum Express - The Curse Of The Modern Musician
Belle and Sebastian - This Is Just A Modern Rock Song
Jefferson Starship - Modern Times
Actually, wait, seriously... here's a song that was only released last week. You don't get more modern than that, do you?
Bleachers are from New Jersey. They're the brainchild of guitarist and producer Jack Antanoff, who used to be in Fun. They have featured here before, but this is their latest single, and it's pretty damned good for a modern pop song... even though it does harken back to the 70s and 80s, like most of their stuff.
Sunday, 20 November 2022
Snapshots #267: A Top Ten Loser Songs
After Andrew Garfield yesterday, I had to look if there was a picture of Garfield the Cat holding a camera. The internet didn't let me down.
On a completed unrelated note, here are ten losers...
10. Environmentally friendly Piper.
Peter Piper picked a peck of green peppers.
9. Arrest Chuck.
Nick... (Chuck) Berry!
Shame? What's that?
8. How Elmore, Etta and Skip got around.
Elmore, Etta and Skip James used a car!
7. How much for Lois Lane's real name?
Lois Lane was played by Margot Kidder. How much?
Margo Price - World's Greatest Loser
6. Post-war Dublin tower blocks.
Google it.
Fatima Mansions - Only Losers Take The Bus
5. Richard is completely apathetic.
Dick couldn't care less.
Dick Curless - Loser's Cocktail
4. Empty Tot and the Berserk Eartha.
Anagrams!
Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - Even The Losers
3. Salutations.
Dear is a salutation used to start a letter.
The Dears - You And I Are A Gang Of Losers
2. Jolly Uni CDs play out of synch.
Another anagram!
Judy Collins - Hard Lovin' Loser
Love that.
1. Prominent member of Quebec Karate Club.
QueBEC Karate Club.
There was only ever going to be one Number One this week...
Tuesday, 31 August 2021
Conversations With Ben #18: Pronouns
Rol: I don't know if I've mentioned this before, but The Evil Workplace is now telling everyone to include their pronouns on their email signature. Tell me why this isn't utter bollocks and I promise not to argue... too much.
Ben: You have mentioned it before, and by forcing people to so it, they are grossly missing the point of it. As someone who is straight and identifying with the gender we were born with, I am in a position of luxury to really not give a shit what people label me as. However there are those for whom this is a big deal and the misgendering of them is a painful reminder of the structures that deny them their identity. By forcing everyone to do it, it brings it to the fore and highlights it as never before.
OK, but if the only people who do it are people who need to do it (i.e. transgender folk), then surely that just highlights their difference?
Well, that's the interesting thing: no.
There's landmark research on the history of sexuality and particularly anything that's not vanilla, lay back and think of England sex.
And the Victorians, despite being so prudish, were the ones that spread sexual deviance (deviance as in deviation from the vanilla) because of their strict approach to it.
It's no mistake that teen pregnancy rises during periods of proposed abstinence and lack of sex ed.
By forcing it, there is often a reaction that is negative which can have a drastically bad impact.
So you get the alt-right joke of "I associate as an attack helicopter".
And the false belief that "they are trying to take over and convert everyone" when the policies are introduced by what we'd term white knights.
Bloody do-gooders. Meddling!
But really, at the core of it is the fact that for the first time in history, this group of marginalised people are within reach of being recognised in a way that doesn't make them feel like an unnatural aberration. I don't give a shit what pronouns you use for me, I'm not precious, but I will defend to the end the right of my colleagues and fellow human beings to offer a simple way to say 'hey, in my heart of hearts, I'm not really a girl, so please don't call me those pronouns as it makes me feel uncomfortable' or 'hey, I'm kinda confused because I don't really feel like I'm male or female and we have to think about the world in such binary terms, can you just refer to me with ungendered pronouns?'
Fair enough. I don't disagree with any of that if it's coming from the individual in question. It becomes a matter of personal choice. But I still think there should be a better non-binary pronoun than they or them, because to me, that's akin to saying "that lot". I know they've tried to come up with alternatives, but none of them seem to catch on... possibly because they all sound a bit sci fi. (Xe, Ze)
And as an English teacher you should appreciate how unfathomable it is to be in a position with language where we're trying to force something new to accommodate this group. Language doesn't work like that, it naturally evolves. So a third person pronoun is the best we have without it sounding incredulous like you say.
Yes, but I also know the power of inference. And "them" is the most inference-packed pronoun.
Maybe so, but it's also the rare ones in our language that isn't gendered. So it's functional rather than preferential.
Maybe all pronouns are inference-packed. "Who's she? The cat's mother?"
That's it. But they/them is more natural than forcing xe etc.
But returning to your original question: forcing everyone to put their preferred pronouns in their signature is akin to saying All Lives Matter, even if there's a more positive intention.
If people wish to ally and do want to put theirs in if they are cisgender, then cool. But making it the necessary base is wrong.
I think it's this sort of forced pc-ness that has led to the rise of Incels, the strengthening of the extreme right, and Tom Hanks's son.
The Incel thing is a massively complex thing. I think you're right in the sense that its a final break point for them, but a great deal of it is the loss of the traditional (I say traditional but really it's a 20th century invention) role of masculinity.
"I go get a stable 9-5 job. I quit Friday. I walk into a new one Monday morning. Sorted. I get a girl at 18 because it's what's done. House bought and paid for and settle down."
Now that world of work hasn't existed for a while. That, compounded with the ideology of the alpha male on the right, leads them to become very bitter and kick out.
But now they've got a label. I was involuntarily celibate for most of my 20s. I didn't self-identify as an incel. I was just a loser.
But the key thing with an Incel is that "it's everyone's fault but mine".
Oh. I wasn't an incel then. I knew it was my fault I was a loser. Still do.
I've had Eagle Rock by Daddy Cool in my head for about a week now.
Not Daddy Cool by Boney M?
Nah. I'm all disco'd out. I went on a massive Parliament and Funkadelic binge a few weeks ago. All I listened to from waking up til end of work. For about 8 days.
I wouldn't really class that as disco.
That funky jive stuff.
This week's quiz includes... John Grant, Saint Etienne, Hoodoo Gurus, Madness, Waterboys, Drive-By Truckers, Lady Gaga and the Eagles.
Link?
They're all fans of the song Eagle Rock by Daddy Cool.
Apart from that.
What's the Eagles song? I make a point of never listening to them. Just give me Jackson Browne instead.
James Dean
Ahh... Even their song titles are unimaginative.
I'll only allow you to diss the Eagles because the Dude hates them too.
The Eagles are very close to muzak.
Once again, you are displaying your ignorance.
Even when given great songs by Mr Waits and Browne, they somehow manage to make it less interesting than Dulux Vanilla Burst.
It's cool to dump on the Eagles in the same way it was cool to dump on Dire Straits. People hate them because they were successful.
Dire Straights are great. Knopfler is a brilliant guitarist.
Some joiners use an Eagles record as a spirit level due to how MoR it is.
That doesn't even make sense. Why would a spirit level be in the middle of the road?
The joke is in there somewhere.
Needs more work.
I'll give it to a comedian one day.
I won't have a word said against Don Henley.
And Joe Walsh ran for president, against Reagan. That alone makes the Eagles cool.
Still a shit band.
Philistine.
It's spelt Palestine.
I've told you. There are only two truly shit bands. Everyone else deserves a listen.
Coldplay
And Oasis.
OK, three.
Although to be fair, I saw Coldplay live, very early in their career, when they were supporting Muse (free tickets) and they were far more entertaining than the main act.
I broke up with a girl at uni because she said Coldplay were her favourite band. I'm not that fussed about music choices, but when you say that, it's either that you despise music or you have no interest in it. Either way, incompatible with me.
You still haven't identified my Number 1 irredeemable shit band.
Mr Blobby?
The Tweenies?
I'd rather listen to either of them than this lot.
Is it a band from the landfill indie era?
No. It's the biggest band in the world ever. (Not the Beatles.)
Are you sure it's not The Eagles?
I can't believe this is so difficult for you.
Well, I know Shakira is one of the best selling artists of all time...
Their lead singer is an *expletive deleted*.
The Smiths?
Jesus.
As in, he thinks he is.
The Jesus & Mary Chain?
You are doing this on purpose now to wind me up.
Am I?
You know perfectly well who I'm talking about.
...I sometimes have nightmares about that video where The Edge has feet in his face. And Bono leans in to whisper sweet nothings in his ear...
I try to never watch their videos. Or listen to their songs.
It was during the Zooropa period, which was a low, even for them.
Sunday, 22 August 2021
Snapshots #203: A Top Ten Songs Covered By Johnny Cash
A slightly different link this week, though I'm sure you had no trouble working it out.
All the artists below wrote songs that were covered by The Man In Black...
10. MOT failed over trivialities.
The MOT failed because it went backwards = TOM.
Trivialities are petty things.
Johnny Cash - I Won't Back Down
Or you could have had...
Johnny Cash - Southern Accents
9. A good Manchester lawn.
That would be a sound garden. Sound as a pound.
8. Old devil from the underworlde.
Old Nick was the devil, down low(e) in the underworld.
7. Bequest of past-its-sell-by-date pork.
A bequest is a will, the out of date pork would be old ham.
Will Oldham (Bonnie "Prince" Billy) - I See A Darkness
Johnny Cash - I See A Darkness
6. Welsh seaside resort declares itself female, with pride.
The resort would be Rhyl, which is proud to declare itself a She. To the point that it crows about it.
Sheryl Crow & Johnny Cash - Redemption Day
5. Guevara goes in deep - that's just how he travels.
Add Che (Guevara) to deep and to might get Depeche. The way he travels is his mode of transport.
4. Embryo lab.
Anagram!
3. Forever Young?
Diamonds are forever, of course. With Neil Young.
And here's Johnny and Neil together.
2. Swedish detective.
This one...
1. Lenin in chains.
Anagram!
Nine Inch Nails - Hurt
Monday, 9 November 2020
Positive Songs For Negative Times #32: Loser!
Apparently this van's been driving past the White House all weekend. (Not that The Donald will have seen it: he's been on the golf course.)
Search "Loser" on Twitter, and Donald Trump is the top account you'll see.
And then there's this...
Thursday, 4 June 2020
Guest Post Thursday #1: Top Ten Haircut Songs
I've never run guest posts on this blog before - in fact, I've actively resisted them in the past, preferring to keep this place as my own personal record.
So why change that now?
Well, sometimes the opportunities present themselves and they're too good to resist. Which is why I already have three weeks' worth of Guest Posts, all because of a couple of half-joking comments I left here and elsewhere.
Our first guest poster is JC, The Vinyl Villain. Now I've guested over a JC's place on a number of occasions, being a semi-regular contributor to his Imaginary Compilation Album series. But I never for the life of me expected him to return the favour. So you can imagine how shocked and awed I was when the post below landed in my in-box as the result of a flippant bon mot I left him last week.
I've been blogging for coming up on 14 years now. My Top Ten started in 2012, but prior to that my original blog, Sunset Over Slawit, had been running for almost six years until I packed it in. When I started blogging, I had no idea what I was doing. Sunset Over Slawit wasn't a music blog - it was all over the place, so I was rather surprised when I ended up with readers from elsewhere in the blogosphere (rather than people I'd known beforehand and invited to drop in). One of the first "professional" bloggers who began to leave comments was JC, and it was probably his original Vinyl Villain blog which steered my own blogging increasingly towards talking about music... and, I guess, led me to carry on with My Top Ten once I'd packed in all the other aspects of blogging that were beginning to bore me.
So it's a great honour that he would find the time to write me a Top Ten (the irony being that I rarely get time to write those things myself these days, and that was the very raison d'etre of this blog in the first place!) Take it away, JC...
THE VINYL VILLAIN'S TOP TEN HAIRCUT SONGS
I've been long amazed at Rol's ability to come up with these lists, especially now that I've got the task currently of compiling a list of 5 songs for a column called 'Music for Our Times' which appears in a digital version of a weekly publication by my favourite football team, Raith Rovers. The publication is designed to keep our small but dedicated fanbase informed of developments at the club during the extended lockdown - my column tries to bring a bit of fun and is related to the fact that I'm the matchday announcer at the club, responsible for selecting and playing the pre-match and half-time tunes.
A couple of weeks back I mentioned that a quick glance across any form of social media will demonstrate that the burning issue of the day for many a person is hair. Barbers and hairdressers have been closed since the lockdown began. Blokes have two options - letting their hair get to a length not seen since the 70s glam rock era or taking the risk of asking a household member to run riot with a set of clippers. I've taken the first option, to the extent that I now look as if I'm an extra in Starsky & Hutch - and with the fashion sense to match.
If anything, it's even worse for women given that a regular trip to the salon tends to form an essential part of social engagement with a friend or confidante, as well as the opportunity to change the natural colour of their hair. Mathematicians are still trying to come up with an accurate formula for doing the calculation, but the number of blondes in the UK over the past two and bit months has dropped by at least 66%.
I offered up five suitable songs, which I'm now doubling in size in the hope it's of use to Rol.
1. Goldblade - Hairstyle
The first line of the chorus of a single by Goldblade, a punk band from Manchester. Lead singer John Robb's hairstyle of choice over the past three decades has been the mohican. He still wears it well, even at the age of 59. Worth also mentioning that the two remixes on the CD single come courtesy of Black Box Recorder, with Sarah Nixey's sultry delivery of 'Why Don't You Rub It In My Face' being every bit as filthy as it sounds.
(Searching for that as I type. - Rol.)
2. Super Furry Animals - Ice Hockey Hair
Nope, I have no idea what the meaning is of the opening lines of this typically bonkers number by the Cardiff-based indie-rockers. But that won't stop me dedicating it to female fans of the Fife Flyers (the ice-hockey team who are based in the town of Kirkcaldy, which is also where Raith Rovers FC are based - a lot of folk in the town follow the fortunes of both sides).
3. The Goon Sax - Home Haircuts
The Goon Sax are one of the most wonderful indie-pop acts to emerge in recent years. The trio's debut album, Up to Anything, was full of great, quirky and memorable tunes that were accompanied by lyrics which focussed on the most important songs facing the modern-era teenager such as the shame of being on the wrong end of a bad haircut. It must be the only song in existence which manages to namecheck Shane Warne, Roger McGuinn and Edwyn Collins, all of whose haircuts are much desired.
(That is excellent - Rol.)
4. Willow Smith - Whip My Hair
Bit of a cheat this one as it's nothing to do with haircuts as such. This #2 smash hit single by Willow Smith back in 2010 is an anthem celebrating being young and carefree, which is kind of impossible to be just now under the lockdown restrictions. All my articles for the club publication really have to include at least one song that folk will have heard of!
5. Beck - Devil's Haircut
The on-line urban dictionary states that a devil's haircut can be anything that makes someone feel bad, depressed, stressed out, or indeed any sort of mental or physical anguish. As such, COVID-19 = a devil's haircut.
6. Pavement - Cut Your Hair
One of the joys of going to an old fashioned barbershop is the likelihood of some old music/sport/lifestyle magazines lying around that you can read while waiting your turn to be shorn. If you happened to come across the NME from 3 May 2007, you would find that this song was listed as Number 28 in a list of the 50 Greatest Indie Anthems Ever.
7. Happy Mondays - Kinky Afro
OK, it's not technically about a haircut, but I'm guessing that Shawn Ryder's dad, who was the subject matter of the lyric, had got himself a very dodgy perm in the mid-late 70s. Have a look at a photograph of the Scotland World Cup squad of 1978 for an illustration - it was very briefly the fashion and it looked ridiculous.
8. Beastie Boys - Mullethead
The b-side to the vinyl release of the single Sure Shot back in 1994 but later included on the bonus disc of Ill Communication when it was reissued in 2009. It's not a hip-hop or rap number, instead harking back to the hardcore, superfast and noisy stuff that the Beastie Boys were doing when they first formed.
9. Billy Bragg - Greetings To The New Brunette
The re-opening of salons still seems to be a few weeks away. This one goes out to everyone, male or female, who is suffering and possibly even going into hiding for fear of anyone seeing that the colour on top of their head is not natural.
10. The Rakes - The World Was A Mess But His Hair Was Perfect
This closed off the original article in the football publication and I dedicated it Ian Davidson, who it could be said is a cut-price version of the famous basketball player, Dennis Rodman, in that throughout his career he has taken to the field with all sorts of strange haircuts and colourings, never caring one ounce what stick he would take from his teammates, opponents or fans on the terraces and in the stands. Indeed, he seemed to encourage it...
So, there you have it. Ten songs associated with haircuts. And, just in case you were wondering, a handful of tunes by Scissors Sisters narrowly missed the cut for inclusion.
Without gushing any further, I'll just say thank you to JC for providing this blog with its first ever guest post. And if you enjoyed that, you'll be glad to know he'll be back in two weeks' time with ANOTHER top ten. Truly I am blessed.
Here's one that would have fit quite nicely in the list above...
Gorky's Zygotic Mynci - Poodle Rockin'
But that's not all, because next week we have ANOTHER guest contributor. I'll keep their identity as a surprise for now, but regular readers will be very familiar with my attempts to get this particular contributor to join the blogging world.
In the meantime, as I seem to have cracked open this particular Pandora's Box... if anyone else fancies trying their hand at a Top Ten... or a Mid-Life Crisis post... or any of the other long-running features this blog squanders so jubilantly... well, you know where I am.
The door is now open...
Tuesday, 31 March 2020
Hot 100 #14
Thank you to C for suggesting this week's band... 14 Iced Bears. She says...
I couldn't tell you any of their songs any more unfortunately, although have vivid memories of ordering in their singles for some devoted indie fans at the time of their release and (in my head at least) being very disparaging about their chosen name. Now I think it's rather lovely!
Indeed. And here's what they sound like...
14 Iced Bears - Come Get Me
Brian added:
I would like to back up C and proclaim that the 14 Iced Bears were awesome. Unfortunately, their sleeves were nothing to write home about. Perhaps the cover for The Importance Of Being Frank EP would suffice for art.
I'm not sure what that is above, Brian, but it was the one with the clearest 14 I could find.
Another relatively quiet week on the countdown, compared to the excesses of 16 and 17, although we're all just girding our loins in preparation for the Top Ten.
Here's what you had for me this wee, starting with Martin, who's still smarting from forgetting two Gene tracks last week...
The White Stripes - Red Death at 6.14
...is all I have for this week. Unless I've missed something else by one of my most beloved bands...
Next up is Alyson...
Hats off to you Rol for putting this together as my brain is incapable of concentrating on anything at the moment. Yes, my choices above not really my thing, but fitted the brief.
From the same source I have just found something called:
Tomski - 14 Hours To Save The Earth
Television Personalities - 14th Floor
Rigid Digit, meanwhile, is waiting for an Ocado delivery slot so he found plenty this week...
Aphex Twin - Avril 14th
I can honestly say that's the best thing I've ever heard from Aphex Twin.
Peter Gabriel - 14 Black Paintings
Palma Violets - 14
Rufus Wainwright - 14th Street
Beck - 14 Rivers, 14 Floods
Those last two are definitely worth a click. I'll let you get back to your virtual queue now, RD... because I bet you're still stuck in it, 7 days after you left that xomment.
Lynchie appeared equally stuck for inspiration this week...
I couldn't think of any songs with 14 in the title but then I discovered...
Tiny Tim - Fourteen
...on which is voice sounds nothing like it did on "Tiptoe Through The Tulips". It's a pretty deep voice which led me to believe it might be an imposter.
The lyrics kick off with:
...and just get weirder.
I'm only guessing here, but I don't think that's the same Tiny Tim. But thank you anyway.
Thankfully, the Swede is here to restore us to sanity...
Soft Machine - Fourteen Hour Dream
Don Bailey - Fourteen Stories Down
That is one top suicide ballad, Swede. Thank you for that.
Back to C for one final moment of inspiration...
I can't believe I didn't think of this before but having indulged in '60s psychedelia in a big way in the '80s I really should have remembered...
The Syn - 14 Hour Technicolour Dream
And, last but not least, Brian...
Kind of quiet on the 14 front. I'll add...
Nick Lowe - 14 Days
...from The Impossible Bird. I think this is his best album, and that's saying something.
I seem to remember there was some discussion about this over at your place recently, Brian. I'd still always plump for Jesus of Cool, but those later albums are pretty special.
OK, time to scrape the dregs from my own hard-drive...
Manic Street Preachers - 1404
Sylvain Sylvain - 14th Street Beat
Revenge - 14K
Ralph McTell - England 1914
Scott Walker + Sunn O - Herod 2014
Counting Crows - 1492
Drive-By Truckers - Feb 14
Love - Number 14
Mull Historical Society - 14 Year Old Boy
Midland - Fourteen Gears
All of which brings us to this week's winner... and to be honest with you, I pretty much thought that Rigid Digit had walked away with it. I was all set to crown this the champion...
Guns n Roses - 14 Years
Take it away, Billy...
Unlucky for all of us, next week is 13. Not that we need any more bad luck at the moment. Suggestions, please...