• Themes/Playlists
  • New Songs
  • Albums
  • Word!
  • Index
  • Donate!
  • Animals
  • About/FAQs
  • Contact
Menu

Song Bar

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number
Music, words, playlists

Your Custom Text Here

Song Bar

  • Themes/Playlists
  • New Songs
  • Albums
  • Word!
  • Index
  • Donate!
  • Animals
  • About/FAQs
  • Contact

Back and forth: songs featuring conversation

January 26, 2023 Peter Kimpton

Pointed dialogue: John Travolta and Samuel L Jackson in Pulp Fiction


By The Landlord


“In the best conversations, you don't even remember what you talked about, only how it felt. It felt like we were in some place your body can't visit, some place with no ceiling and no walls and no floor and no instruments.”
– John Green, Turtles All the Way Down

“In conversation, humour is worth more than wit, and easiness more than knowledge.” – George Herbert

“Writing, when properly managed, is but a different name for conversation.” –Laurence Sterne

“Jeff Beck was one of the few guitarists that when playing live would actually listen to me sing and respond.” – Rod Stewart

“Two people in a conversation amount to four people talking. The four are what one person says, what he really wanted to say, what his listener heard, and what he thought he heard.” – William Jennings Bryan

Among the strangest, most unpredictable conversations I've had was with a dark chocolate Bounty Bar. No, not a person dressed up as one, you know, as some kind of supersize marketing character or mascot, or in fancy dress costume. I engaged with an actual item of conversational confectionery…

But more about that tasty chat later.

From the cave to the campfire, the dining table to the bar, conversation is one of things we're always been built for. That's the civilised basis on which groups and villages, and, towns and cities, and countries are formed. So this week we focus on songs that are not so much about them (so therefore not, for example, Elvis Presley's A Little Less Conversation) but must include reported conversations within the lyrics or between performers, or reported dialogue by a performer within the lyrics. And the theme could, arguably, also include a conversational style between instruments or with a voice, but that's open to interpretation. But there should always be some kind of back and forth in play.

Conversations come in all forms and they might reflect all sides of culture and our nature. They might include distinctive style, dialect and slang that reflects a time or place. They might use metaphor and wordplay, irony, swearing, flirting, subtext, indirect implication, apology, misunderstanding, verbal combat, brutal or gentle honesty. They could feature reconciliation, compromise, self-reveal, interruption and crosstalk, quick-witted banter, stumbling and stuttering, interrogation,  gossip, avoidance, defensiveness and awkwardness, or just plain improvisational fun. Any of these and more might also be expressed in song. If you’re not sure, then why not ask?

As ever, there’s in only the way they can actually meet but here, group of conversationalists gathered in the bar beginning to engage on subject. How will it unfold? Will ideas be exchanged. Is the art of conversation dead?

Michel de Montaigne: For me, the most fruitful and natural exercise for our minds is, in my opinion, conversation.

Marty Rubin: Yes. Read, travel, talk to people, because if you only what's happened to you, you know nothing.

Evelyn Waugh: Isn’t that what we’re talking about? Conversation should be like juggling; up go the balls and plates, up and over, in and out, good solid objects that glitter in the footlights and fall with a bang if you miss them.

Anne Morrow Lindbergh: Well I think good communication is as stimulating as black coffee and just as hard to sleep after.

Charles Dudley Warner: I myself think lettuce is like conversation; it must be fresh and crisp, so sparkling that you scarcely notice the bitter in it.

William Hazlitt: But wit is the salt of conversation, not the food.

Ved Mehta: That’s all very well going on about dinner. And surely only boring people went in for conversations consisting of questions and answers. The art of true conversation consisted in the play of minds.

Truman Capote: A conversation is a dialogue, not a monologue. That's why there are so few good conversations: due to scarcity, two intelligent talkers seldom meet.

Samuel Johnson. Well sir, I never desire to converse with a man who has written more than he has read!

Taylor Swift: If you're yelling you're the one who's lost control of the conversation.

Samuel Johnson: What, woman? Have you not read my books?

Mark Haddon: Well, reading is a conversation. All books talk. But a good book listens as well.

Charles Lamb: Yes, what is reading, but silent conversation?

Sally Rooney: In the art of conversation, I think I only appear smart by staying quiet as often as possible.

Marcus Tullius Cicero: Silence is one of the great arts of conversation.

(Awkward silence)

Rebecca West: What are you all on about? There is no such thing as conversation. It is an illusion. There are intersecting monologues, that is all.

Oscar Wilde (The Rocket): Conversation, indeed! You have talked the whole time yourself. That is not conversation!

Oscar Wilde (The Frog): Somebody must listen, and I like to do all the talking myself. It saves time, and prevents arguments.

Italo Calvino: And how can a dialogue be established between the two of you if each thinks he hears, not the words of the other, but his own words, repeated by the echo?

Olga Tokarczuk: That’s because the best conversations are with yourself. At least there's no risk of a misunderstanding.

Chuck Palahniuk: Yeah, and the only reason why we ask other people how their weekend was is so we can tell them about our own weekend.

William Shakespeare (Coriolanus): More of your conversation would infect my brain.

Neil Postman: Americans no longer talk to each other, they entertain each other. They do not exchange ideas, they exchange images. They do not argue with propositions; they argue with good looks, celebrities and commercials.

Hmm. Maybe Neil had a point in his perceptive book of 1985 – Amusing Ourselves to Death. More drinks perhaps. And maybe it’s time to get our amusement and conversation from our in-bar cinema screen. Here then, for your entertainment and to get you in the mood, is a selection of some favourite dialogue from a few films:

Groucho Marx and Margaret Dumont in Duck Soup

Duck Soup (1933):
Rufus T. Firefly: Not that I care, but where is your husband?
Mrs. Teasdale : Why, he's dead.
Rufus T. Firefly : I bet he's just using that as an excuse.
Mrs. Teasdale : I was with him to the very end.
Rufus T. Firefly : No wonder he passed away.
Mrs. Teasdale : I held him in my arms and kissed him.
Rufus T. Firefly : Oh, I see, then it was murder. Will you marry me? Did he leave you any money? Answer the second question first.
Mrs. Teasdale : He left me his entire fortune.
Rufus T. Firefly : Is that so? Can't you see what I'm trying to tell you? I love you.

His Girl Friday (1940):
Louis: You better give me a receipt.
Hildy Johnson: I'll give you a scar

Casablanca (1942):
Major Strasser: What is your nationality?
Rick: I'm a drunkard.
Captain Renault: That makes Rick a citizen of the world.

Rick and Renault in Casablanca

Double Indemnity (1944):
Phyllis: There's a speed limit in this state, Mr. Neff. Forty-five miles an hour.
Walter: How fast was I going, officer?
Phyllis: I'd say around ninety.
Walter: Suppose you get down off your motorcycle and give me a ticket.
Phyllis: Suppose I let you off with a warning this time.
Walter: Suppose it doesn't take.
Phyllis: Suppose I have to whack you over the knuckles.
Walter: Suppose I bust out crying and put my head on your shoulder.
Phyllis: Suppose you try putting it on my husband's shoulder.
Walter: That tears it. 8:30 tomorrow evening, then.
Phyllis: That's what I suggested.
Walter: You'll be here too?
Phyllis: I guess so. I usually am.
Walter: Same chair, same perfume, same anklet?
Phyllis: I wonder if I know what you mean.
Walter: I wonder if you wonder.

Double trouble: Fred MacMurray and Barbara Stanwyck

Harvey (1950):
Wilson: Who's Harvey?
Miss Kelly: A white rabbit, six feet tall.
Wilson: Six feet?
Elwood P. Dowd: Six feet three and a half inches. Now let's stick to the facts.

Jimmy Stewart with friend Harvey

Some Like It Hot (1959):
Osgood: I called Mama. She was so happy she cried! She wants you to have her wedding gown. It's white lace.
Daphne: Yeah, Osgood. I can't get married in your mother's dress. Ha ha. That-she and I, we are not built the same way.
Osgood: We can have it altered.
Daphne: Oh no you don't! Osgood, I'm gonna level with you. We can't get married at all.
Osgood: Why not?
Daphne: Well, in the first place, I'm not a natural blonde.
Osgood: Doesn't matter.
Daphne: I smoke! I smoke all the time!
Osgood: I don't care.
Daphne: Well, I have a terrible past. For three years now, I've been living with a saxophone player.
Osgood: I forgive you.
Daphne: [Tragically] I can never have children!
Osgood: We can adopt some.
Daphne/Jerry: But you don't understand, Osgood! [Whips off his wig, exasperated, and changes to a manly voice] Uhhh, I'm a man!
Osgood: [Looks at him then turns back, unperturbed] Well, nobody's perfect!

In The Heat Of The Night (1967):
Gillespie: Well, you're pretty sure of yourself, ain't you, Virgil? Virgil—that's a funny name for a nigger boy that comes from Philadelphia! What do they call you up there?
Tibbs: They call me Mr. Tibbs!

Sidney Poitier and Rod Steiger: In The Heat Of the Night

Annie Hall (1977):
Alvy: It's all mental masturbation.
Annie: Oh, well, now we're finally getting to a subject you know something about.
Alvy: Hey, don't knock masturbation. It's sex with someone I love.

Monty Python's The Life of Brian (1979):
Brian: Look, you've got it all wrong! You don't need to follow me. You don't need to follow anybody! You've got to think for yourselves! You're all individuals!
Crowd: [in unison] Yes! We're all individuals!
Brian: You're all different!
Crowd: [in unison] Yes, we are all different!
Man in crowd: I'm not...
Crowd: Shhh!

My Dinner With Andre (1981):
Wally: Suppose you're going through some kind of hell in your own life, well you would love to know if friends have experience similar things. But we just don't dare to ask each other.
Andre: No, It would be like asking your friend to drop his role.

Withnail and I (1986):
Danny: Don't get uptight with me, man. Because if you do, I'll have to give you a dose of medicine. And if I spike you, you'll know you've been spoken to.
Withnail: You wouldn't spike me, you're too mean. Besides, there's nothing invented I couldn't take.
Danny: If I medicined you, you'd think a brain tumour was a birthday present.
Withnail: I could take double anything you could.
Danny: Very, very foolish words, man.

Pulp Fiction (1994):

Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels (1998):
Plank: [gets hit with an air rifle] Ah! They fucking shot me!
Dog: Well, shoot them back!
Plank: [shoots wildly]
John: Jesus, Plank, couldn't you have got smokeless cartridges? I can't see a bloody thi– ah! Shit! I've been shot.
Dog: I don't fucking believe this! Can everyone stop getting shot?

Sexy Beast (2000):
Gal: I'd be useless.
Don: Useless?
Gal: I would be.
Don: In what way?
Gal: In every fucking way.
Don: Why are you swearing? I'm not swearing ...
Don: Not this time, Gal. Not this time. Not this fucking time. No. No no no no no no no no no! No! No no no no no no no no no no no no no! No! Not this fucking time! No fucking way! No fucking way, no fucking way, no fucking way! You've made me look a right cunt!

So then, what about the Bounty Bar mentioned earlier? I should first put this into context. I had taken a variety of psychedelic drugs on something of a wild night out. This is now quite a few years ago. I had ended up with a couple of friends in a trendy nightclub in Glasgow, and by some chance turn of phrase, and mentioning a certain name, gained access to some plush VIP backroom area with a variety of well-known partying musicians and glamorous hangers-on. A great variety of snacks were available, though the key ones had already been taken before arriving. 

In my body and brain, the active, and dominant substance above others was LSD. But despite its rather profound effects, somehow I was still sociable and coherent, relatively that is, and able to hold fairly lucid conversation with anyone. Nevertheless the floor had become spongy and soft, and I felt as if my pint glass would squeeze completely inwards as I held it only lightly, even though I knew it couldn't possibly do so. Meanwhile, the walls seemed to be swimming with fish, octopuses and for some reason, koala bears. I juggled two realities in my head. Meanwhile I'd had a first bite of the bar, but then, as indeed the mind finds all kinds of shapes form when you are under such an influence, its shiny, bright coconutty inside section suddenly transformed into a cheeky little face, which began to engage me in conversation. And so it began.

Bountiful conversation …

Everything the chocolate bar's face said, with its squeaky voice, completely surprised me, and pushed me to think very carefully about how to respond. It was like verbally sparring with some kind of fiendish chess demon, dancing around me with dialogue, playfully coaxing me with jokes and jibes and oodles of irony. Occasionally people would walk by and I'd introduce the Bar to them, but they'd simply smile, realising of course that this was very much an exclusive chat. I'm fairly sure the conversation was not aloud, just in my mind, but it went on for some time with this sort of thing:

Me: What's happening?
Bounty: Hey there, sugar.
Me: Who are you?
Bounty: I'm obviously part of this bar, mate. 
Me: What?
Bounty: I suppose you want to join our Club? (begins to sing and whistle the old TV ad theme for chocolate Club Biscuits)
Me: What the fuck?
Bounty: It's just an invitation. 
Me: That's very, er, sweet. But – 
Bounty: Something eating you, is there? Now you know how I feel. 
Me: But are you – talking to me?
Bounty: I don't see anyone else around here ...
Me: But – what, who are you?
Bounty: A bit of chocolate. A bit of coconut. A bit of a mouthful. A bit of you, perhaps.
Me: What do you mean? 
Bounty: That you've got good taste? Try harder. I think you're a bit under the influence. How's it going then, so far?
Me: I'm trying to hold it together. You're not exactly helping.
Bounty: Feeling a bit insecure, maybe? Intimated? 
Me: Are you patronising me? 
Bounty: Yes. 
Me: So what am I going to say next?
Bounty: That you maybe bit off more than you can chew?
Me: I wish I'd thought of that!
Bounty: Better. But keep working on it. Now, let's talk about that thing in your childhood, you know, that time when you were six ...
Me: What do you know about my childhood?
Bounty: I've got inside information …
Me: I think I'm seeing a pattern to all this.
Bounty:  Hey, it's melting in here ...

For some time, juggling realities, so vivid was this illusion, I did half-believe the Bounty was really another person, perhaps like the giant rabbit in the film Harvey, but then realised the acid had put me in a waking dream state, my subconscious instantly creating and knitting together a conversation in what felt like real time, before eventually it did melt away.

So are the best dialogues real or imagined, written and refined and edited, or captured in recordings, songs, podcasts and interviews? Let’s see how they come out in song, made up or recreated from memory.

So then that’s quite enough internal chat in here. Now it’s time to engage in your own bar banter, suggesting songs in which conversing of all kinds are expressed. In the directors chair is that the convivially communicative AmyLee! Please put your song suggestions in comments below, for deadline on Monday 11pm UK time, for playlists published next week.

New to comment? It is quick and easy. You just need to login to Disqus once. All is explained in About/FAQs ...

Fancy a turn behind the pumps at The Song Bar? Care to choose a playlist from songs nominated and write something about it? Then feel free to contact The Song Bar here, or try the usual email address. Also please follow us social media: Song Bar Twitter, Song Bar Facebook. Song Bar YouTube, and Song Bar Instagram. Please subscribe, follow and share.

Song Bar is non-profit and is simply about sharing great music. We don’t do clickbait or advertisements. Please make any donation to help keep the Bar running:

Donate
In African, avant-garde, blues, calypso, classical, comedy, country, dance, disco, drone, dub, electronica, experimental, folk, funk, gospel, hip hop, indie, instrumentals, jazz, metal, musical hall, music, musicals, playlists, pop, postpunk, prog, psychedelia, punk, reggae, rock, rocksteady, showtime, ska, songs, soul, soundtracks, traditional Tags songs, playlists, dialogue, conversation, Film, TV, John Travolta, Samuel L Jackson, John Green, George Herbert, Laurence Sterne, Rod Stewart, Jeff Beck, William Jennings Bryan, Michel de Montaigne, Marty Rubin, Evelyn Waugh, Anne Morrow Lindbergh, Charles Dudley Warner, William Hazlitt, Ved Mehta, Truman Capote, Samuel Johnson, Taylor Swift, Mark Haddon, Charles Lamb, Sally Rooney, Cicero, Rebecca West, Oscar Wilde, Italo Calvino, Olga Tokarczuk, Chuck Palahniuk, William Shakespeare, Shakespeare, Neil Postman, Groucho Marx, Humphrey Bogart, Fred MacMurray, Barbara Stanwyck, James Stewart, Billy Wilder, Jack Lemmon, Tony Curtis, Monty Python, Woody Allen, Bruce Robinson, Richard E Grant, Quentin Tarantino, Jonathan Glazer, Ray Winstone, Ben Kingsley
← Playlists: songs featuring conversationsPlaylists: songs about memorabilia and souvenirs →
music_declares_emergency_logo.png

Sing out, act on CLIMATE CHANGE

Black Lives Matter.jpg

CONDEMN RACISM, EMBRACE EQUALITY


Donate
Song Bar spinning.gif

DRINK OF THE WEEK

Napue dark gin


SNACK OF THE WEEK

crudités platter


New Albums …

Featured
Devotion & The Black Divine by anaiis.jpeg
Dec 2, 2025
anaiis: Devotion & The Black Divine
Dec 2, 2025

New album: Following a summer Song of the Day - Deus Deus, a review of the autumn release and third LP by the London-based French-Senegalese singer-songwriter of resonantly beautiful, dynamic, sensual soul, gospel, R&B and experimental and chamber pop, with themes of new motherhood, uncertainty, religion, self-love and acceptance

Dec 2, 2025
De La Soul - Cabin In The Sky.jpeg
Nov 26, 2025
De La Soul: Cabin In The Sky
Nov 26, 2025

New album: The hip-hop veterans return with their first without, yet including the voice of, and a tribute to, founding member Trugoy the Dove, AKA Dave Jolicoeur who passed away in 2023, alongside many hip-hop luminary guests, with trademark playful skits, and all themed around the afterlife

Nov 26, 2025
The Mountain Goats- Through This Fire Across From Peter Balkan.jpeg
Nov 26, 2025
The Mountain Goats: Through This Fire Across From Peter Balkan
Nov 26, 2025

New album: An evocative musical journey of a concept album by the indie-folk band from Claremont, California, fronted by singer-songwriter John Darnielle, based on a dream of his in 2023 about a voyage to a fictional island by the titular captain, charting adventure, wonder and tragedy

Nov 26, 2025
Allie X - Happiness Is Going To Get You.jpeg
Nov 26, 2025
Allie X: Happiness Is Going To Get You
Nov 26, 2025

New album: A hugely entertaining, witty, droll, inventive, chamber and synth-pop fourth LP with a goth twist by the charismatic and theatrical Canadian artist Alexandra Hughes, who brings paradox and dark themes through sounds that include string quartet, harpsichord, classical and pure pop piano with killer lyrics

Nov 26, 2025
Tortoise - Touch.jpeg
Nov 25, 2025
Tortoise: Touch
Nov 25, 2025

New album: A welcome return with a cinematic and mesmeric groove-filled first studio LP in nine years, and the eighth over all by the eclectic Chicago post-rock/jazz/krautrock multi-instrumentalists Dan Bitney, John Herndon, Douglas McCombs, John McEntire and Jeff Parker

Nov 25, 2025
What of Our Nature by Haley Heynderickx, Max García Conover.jpeg
Nov 24, 2025
Haley Heynderickx and Max García Conover: What of Our Nature
Nov 24, 2025

New album: Beautiful, precise, poignant and poetic new folk numbers inspired by the life and music style of Woody Guthrie as the Portland, Oregon and New Yorker, now Portland, Maine-based singer-songwriters bring a delicious duet album, alternating and sharing songs covering a variety of forever topical social issues

Nov 24, 2025
Tranquilizer by Oneohtrix Point Never.jpeg
Nov 24, 2025
Oneohtrix Point Never: Tranquilizer
Nov 24, 2025

New album: Ambient, otherworldly, cinematic, mesmeric, and at times very odd, the Brooklyn-based electronic artist and producer Daniel Lopatin returns with a new nostalgia-based concept – constructing tracks from lost-then-refound Y2K CDs of 1990s and early 2000s royalty-free sample electronic sounds

Nov 24, 2025
Iona Zajac - Bang.jpeg
Nov 24, 2025
Iona Zajac: Bang
Nov 24, 2025

New album: A powerful, stirring, passionate and mature debut LP by the 29-year-old Glasgow-based Scottish singer with Polish and Ukrainian heritage who has toured as the new Pogues singer, and whose alternative folk songs capture raw emotions and the experience of modern womanhood, with echoes of PJ Harvey, Patti Smith, Aldous Harding and Lankum

Nov 24, 2025
Austra - Chin Up Buttercup.jpeg
Nov 19, 2025
Austra: Chin Up Buttercup
Nov 19, 2025

New album: This fifth studio LP as Austra by the Canadian classically trained vocalist and composer Katie Stelmanis brings beautiful electronica-pop and dance music, and has a bittersweet ironic title – a caustically witty reference to societal pressure to keep smiling despite a devastating breakup

Nov 19, 2025
Mavis Staples - Sad and Beautiful World.jpeg
Nov 18, 2025
Mavis Staples: Sad and Beautiful World
Nov 18, 2025

New album: A timelessly classy release by the veteran soul, blues and gospel singer and social activist from the Staples Singers, in a release of wonderfully moving and poignant cover versions, beautifully interpreting works by artists including Tom Waits, Curtis Mayfield, Leonard Cohen, and Gillian Welch

Nov 18, 2025
Stella Donnelly - Love and Fortune 2.jpeg
Nov 18, 2025
Stella Donnelly: Love and Fortune
Nov 18, 2025

New album: Finely crafted, stripped back musical simplicity combined with complex melancholic emotions mark out this beautiful, poetic, and deeply personal third folk-pop LP by the Australian singer-songwriter reflecting on the past and present

Nov 18, 2025
picture-parlour-the-parlour-album.jpeg
Nov 17, 2025
Picture Parlour: The Parlour
Nov 17, 2025

New album: Following last year’s EP Face in the Picture, a fabulously stylish, smart, swaggering glam-rock-pop debut LP by the Manchester-formed, London-based band fronted by the impressively raspy, gritty, vibratro delivery of Liverpudlian vocalist and guitarist Katherine Parlour and distinctive riffs from North Yorkshire-born guitar Ella Risi

Nov 17, 2025
FKA twigs - Eusexua Afterglow.jpeg
Nov 16, 2025
FKA twigs: EUSEXUA Afterglow
Nov 16, 2025

New album: Springing from her much lauded third LP Eusexua, out in January this year, and following a hugely successful and spectacular tour, the innovative British experimental pop artist, dancer and producer extends her palette of ethereal, otherworldly and sensual creations in this new, more carnal, harder, beat-filled parallel release

Nov 16, 2025
Celeste - Woman of Faces.jpg
Nov 15, 2025
Celeste: Woman of Faces
Nov 15, 2025

New album: The outstanding British singer returns, a long four years after her acclaimed debut Not Your Muse, with a classy, passionate set of nine, simmering, smoky, rippling dramatic, timeless numbers in which her vocal prowess is magnificently on show on songs playing on the theme of self and identity

Nov 15, 2025

new songs …

Featured
The Lemon Twigs - I've Got A Broken Heart.jpeg
Dec 4, 2025
Song of the Day: The Lemon Twigs - I've Got A Broken Heart
Dec 4, 2025

Song of the Day: Despite the title, this new double-A single (with Friday I’m Gonna Love You) has a wonderfully uplifting guitar-jangling beauty, with echoes of The Byrds and Stone Roses, but is of course the brilliant 60s and 70s retro sound of the Long Island brothers Brian and Michael D'Addario, out on Captured Tracks

Dec 4, 2025
Alewya - Night Drive.jpeg
Dec 3, 2025
Song of the Day: Alewya - Night Drive (featuring Dagmawit Ameha)
Dec 3, 2025

Song of the Day: A sensual, stylish, dreamy electro-pop single by the striking British singer-songwriter, producer, multidisciplinary artist and model Alewya Demmisse, musically influenced by her rich Ethiopian-Egyptian heritage and early childhood upbringings in Saudi Arabia and Sudan

Dec 3, 2025
Rule 31 Single Artwork.jpg
Dec 2, 2025
Song of the Day: Radio Free Alice - Rule 31
Dec 2, 2025

Song of the Day: Stirring, passionate indie postpunk by the band based in Melbourne, Australia, with echoes of The Cure’s core sound, new wave, and 90s indie-rock influences, and out on Double Drummer

Dec 2, 2025
Sailor Honeymoon - Armchair.jpeg
Dec 1, 2025
Song of the Day: Sailor Honeymoon - Armchair
Dec 1, 2025

Song of the Day: Catchy, punchy, fuzz-guitar indie rock with a droll lyrical delivery and some echoes of Wet Leg come in this new single by the trio from Seoul, South Korea, out on Good Good Records

Dec 1, 2025
Ellie O'Neill.jpeg
Nov 30, 2025
Song of the Day: Ellie O'Neill - Bohemia
Nov 30, 2025

Song of the Day: A beautiful, poetic finger-picking debut folk single with a mystical, distantly stormy twist by the Dublin-based Irish singer-songwriter from County Meath, out now on St Itch Records

Nov 30, 2025
Danalogue.jpeg
Nov 29, 2025
Song of the Day: Danalogue - Sonic Hypnosis
Nov 29, 2025

Song of the Day: A full flavour of future-past with mesmeric, euphoric retro acid house and electronica in this new single by Daniel Leavers, producer and the founding member of The Comet Is Coming and Soccer96, out now on Castles In Space

Nov 29, 2025
Cardinals band.jpeg
Nov 28, 2025
Song of the Day: Cardinals - Barbed Wire
Nov 28, 2025

Song of the Day: Another striking, passionate, punchy, catchy single by the Irish postpunk/indie-folk-rock band from Cork, heralding their upcoming debut album, Masquerade, out on 13 February via So Young Records

Nov 28, 2025
Frank-Popp-Ensemble and Paul Weller.jpeg
Nov 27, 2025
Song of the Day: Frank Popp Ensemble (with Paul Weller) - Right Before My Eyes
Nov 27, 2025

Song of the Day: A strong, soaring, emotive, soulful release by the German artist co-written by British singer and former Jam frontman who here sings and plays guitar, the lyrics about witnessing the increasing injustices and demise of the world, out on Unique Records / Schubert Music Europe

Nov 27, 2025
Tessa Rose Jackson - Fear Bangs The Drum 2.jpeg
Nov 26, 2025
Song of the Day: Tessa Rose Jackson - Fear Bangs The Drum
Nov 26, 2025

Song of the Day: Using a musical metaphor, beautiful, crisply rhythmical, soaring piano and atmospheric indie-pop-folk about facing your fears by the Dutch/British singer-songwriter, heralding her forthcoming new album The Lighthouse, out on 23 January 2026 on Tiny Tiger Records

Nov 26, 2025
Melanie Baker - Sad Clown.jpeg
Nov 25, 2025
Song of the Day: Melanie Baker - Sad Clown
Nov 25, 2025

Song of the Day: Catchy, candid, cathartic indie-grunge-pop by the British singer-songwriter from Cumbria in a melancholy but oddly uplifting emotional work-through of depression, love and exhaustion, out now on TAMBOURHINOCEROS

Nov 25, 2025
Holly Humberstone - Die Happy.jpeg
Nov 24, 2025
Song of the Day: Holly Humberstone - Die Happy
Nov 24, 2025

Song of the Day: Luxuriant, breathy, femme-fatale dream pop with a dark, southern gothic, Lana del Rey-inspired, live-fast-die-young theme, and stylish video by the 25-year-old British singer-songwriter from Grantham, out on Polydor/Universal

Nov 24, 2025
These New Puritans brothers.jpg
Nov 23, 2025
Song of the Day: These New Puritans - The Other Side
Nov 23, 2025

Song of the Day: A delicate, tender, and unusually minimalist single, their first since this year’s acclaimed album Crooked Wing, by the Southend-on-Sea-born Barnett twins, here with Jack on improvised piano and George on drums and a soprano register wordless vocal, out on Domino Records

Nov 23, 2025

Word of the week

Featured
Hangover.jpeg
Dec 4, 2025
Word of the week: crapulence
Dec 4, 2025

Word of the week: A term that may apply regularly during Xmas party season, from the from the Latin crapula, in turn from the Greek kraipálē meaning "drunkenness" or "headache" pertains to sickness symptoms caused by excess in eating or drinking, or general intemperance and overindulgence

Dec 4, 2025
Running shoes and barefoot.jpeg
Nov 20, 2025
Word of the week: discalceate
Nov 20, 2025

Word of the week: A rarely used, but often practised verb, especially when arriving home, it means to take off your shoes, but is also a slightly more common adjective meaning barefoot or unshod, particularly for certain religious orders that wear sandals instead of shoes. But in what context does this come up in song?

Nov 20, 2025
autumn-red-leaves.jpeg
Nov 6, 2025
Word of the week: erythrophyll
Nov 6, 2025

Word of the week: A seasonally topical word relating to the the red pigment of tree leaves, fruits and flowers, that appears particularly when changing in autumn, as opposed to the green effect of chlorophyll, from the Greek erythros for red, and phyll for leaves. But what of songs about this?

Nov 6, 2025
Fennec fox 2.jpeg
Oct 22, 2025
Word of the week: fennec
Oct 22, 2025

Word of the week: It’s a small pale-fawn nocturnal fox with unusually large, highly sensitive ears, that inhabits from African and Arab deserts areas from Western Sahara and Mauritania to the Sinai Peninsula. But has it ever been seen in a song?

Oct 22, 2025
Narrowboat.jpeg
Oct 9, 2025
Word of the week: gongoozler
Oct 9, 2025

Word of the week: A fabulous old English slang term for someone who tends to stand or sit for long periods staring at the passing of boats on canals, sometimes with a derogatory or at least ironic use for someone who is useless or lazy. But what of songs about this activity and culture?

Oct 9, 2025

Song Bar spinning.gif