• 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

We've got algorithm ('n' blues): songs about artificial intelligence (AI)

June 8, 2023 Peter Kimpton

Sombeody’s watching me .. I, Robot


By The Landlord


“I'm sorry, Dave. I'm afraid I can't do that.”
- HAL 9000 in Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)

"The Ultimate Answer to Life, The Universe and Everything is ... is ... 42.” – Supercomputer Deep Thought in Douglas Adams’ The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

“The development of full artificial intelligence could spell the end of the human race… It would take off on its own, and re-design itself at an ever increasing rate. Humans, who are limited by slow biological evolution, couldn’t compete, and would be superseded.” — Stephen Hawking

"Singularity is the point at which all the change in the last million years will be superseded by the change in the next five minutes." - Kevin Kelly, The Inevitable

“I visualise a time when we will be to robots what dogs are to humans, and I’m rooting for the machines.” – Claude Shannon

“Before we work on artificial intelligence, why don’t we do something about natural stupidity?”– Steve Polyak

It's all very clever. Or is it enormously stupid? This year has seen advances in artificial intelligence gathering pace like never before. As well as smart devices, and algorithms online that persuade transactions and influence choice and opinion, and actual introduction of driverless vehicles, there are now super-advanced, easily accessible software tools that can seamlessly translate, design anything, create art, compose music, write books and do many more tasks. More on that in a bit, but is AI here to help or hinder us, and are we already, and imminently racing towards the singularity?

Let’s not pretend we haven’t been warned. Such questions have been around for a long time. In 1863,  author Samuel Butler, under the name Cellarius, wrote an article in New Zealand's The Press newspaper pondering such questions, presumably reflecting on the Industrial Revolution, and titled Darwin Among The Machines:

"We are ourselves creating our own successors; we are daily adding to the beauty and delicacy of their physical organisation; we are daily giving them greater power and supplying by all sorts of ingenious contrivances that self-regulating, self-acting power which will be to them what intellect has been to the human race. In the course of ages we shall find ourselves the inferior race. ... Day by day, however, the machines are gaining ground upon us; day by day we are becoming more subservient to them …"

Later, within his groundbreaking 1872 novel Erewhon, ('nowhere' backwards), in chapters titled The Book of The Machines he developed this further:

"There is no security against the ultimate development of mechanical consciousness, in the fact of machines possessing little consciousness now. A mollusc has not much consciousness. Reflect upon the extraordinary advance which machines have made during the last few hundred years, and note how slowly the animal and vegetable kingdoms are advancing. The more highly organised machines are creatures not so much of yesterday, as of the last five minutes, so to speak, in comparison with past time.”

Computer pioneer and heroic war-time de-coder Alan Turing also addressed this in 1950, asking the question - "Can machines think?", and later, "whether or not it is possible for machinery to show intelligent behaviour?", which of course is different from whether they can think like sentient humans.

And such questions and reflection on artificial intelligence have gathered pace in our lives, in our culture, art, film and, among all that, in the world of song. Some of these songs may have in turn reflect back on and quote popular movies and books, from Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1818), to Karel Čapek's 1920 robot-themed play R.U.R.; from HAL 9000 refusing to open the space capsule door in Kubrick's 1968 masterpiece 2001: A Space Odyssey; to the silly supercomputer Deep Thought's 42 answer and classic Earth question in A Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy; technology causing nuclear holocaust in Terminator 2 despite Arnold Schwarzenegger's robot to the rescue; to Stephen Spielberg's 2001 AI movie about a sentient android boy programmed to love a human mother; a rogue but running for good machine in I, Robot (2004); to the scarily seductive female android model in Ex Machina (2015).

And perhaps even more odd, Spike Jonze’s Her (2013), starring Joaquin Phoenix, portraying a lonely guy who falls in love with a aural chatbot … Here’s a video that discusses why it’s such a breakthrough film:

Meanwhile, there are a number of tech supergeek big-hitters who've made billions from AI, but are also careful what they say of the effect of their work. That said, Google co-founder Larry Page can't help but get a brand reference in, but he has a point:

“Artificial intelligence would be the ultimate version of Google. The ultimate search engine that would understand everything on the web. It would understand exactly what you wanted, and it would give you the right thing. We’re nowhere near doing that now. However, we can get incrementally closer to that, and that is basically what we work on.”

Elon Musk is never out of the news, often not for good reasons. “The pace of progress in artificial intelligence is incredibly fast. Unless you have direct exposure to groups like Deepmind, you have no idea how fast – it is growing at a pace close to exponential. The risk of something seriously dangerous happening is in the five-year time frame. 10 years at most... I’m increasingly inclined to think that there should be some regulatory oversight, maybe at the national and international level, just to make sure that we don’t do something very foolish. I mean with artificial intelligence we’re summoning the demon.”

How about regulating clickbait disinformation on Twitter, as well as Mark Zuckerberg's Facebook, and other platforms, considering the political damage they've done over the past five years? If AI is programmed to attract traffic, no matter what the cost, then something is seriously wrong.

Further warnings come from two other experts. Here's American computer scientist Fei-Fei Li: "There's a great phrase, written in the 70s: 'The definition of today's AI is a machine that can make a perfect chess move while the room is on fire.' It really speaks to the limitations of AI. In the next wave of AI research, if we want to make more helpful and useful machines, we've got to bring back the contextual understanding."

And with a scarier example still, here's Nick Bilton, tech columnist writing in the New York Times:

“The upheavals [of artificial intelligence] can escalate quickly and become scarier and even cataclysmic. Imagine how a medical robot, originally programmed to rid cancer, could conclude that the best way to obliterate cancer is to exterminate humans who are genetically prone to the disease.”

But let's get down to the music. Chiefly your song choices will be about AI, but what about the likes of Holly Herndon’s AI creations?

But, alongside Holly’s virtual creativity, in the full spirit of research, I decided to engage with the new AI platform ChatGPT.

Now, to get on there, the ironic thing is that you have to go through a series of visual captcha-type tests in order to prove you're human! Once through that hoop, here, for your entertainment is an edited down version of my chat with the tool, and I have to say, it was both scary and impressive, making me wonder whether I'm now totally redundant, or still clinging on to my subtle, nuanced humanity compared to a computer program that has read the whole of the internet. Is it just a really sophisticated cut-and-paste machine, or as Wilson Mizner put it: “When you take stuff from one writer it’s plagiarism, but when you take from many writers it’s called research.”

ME: Hello ChatGPT, do you know any songs about artificial intelligence?

ChatGPT: Yes, there are several songs that explore the theme of artificial intelligence. Here are a few examples:

  1. "Robot Rock" by Daft Punk: This electronic track by Daft Punk incorporates samples of "Release the Beast" by Breakwater and features a repetitive and robotic vocal line that adds to the futuristic atmosphere.

  2. "Technologic" by Daft Punk: Another song by Daft Punk, "Technologic" is a catchy and upbeat track that lists various technological and robotic instructions, creating a sense of AI-like interaction.

  3. "Intergalactic" by Beastie Boys: While not explicitly about artificial intelligence, this Beastie Boys song references futuristic and sci-fi elements, including robots and advanced technology.

  4. "Are Friends Electric?" by Gary Numan: Released in 1979, this synth-pop song by Gary Numan reflects on themes of isolation, technology, and artificial companionship.

  5. "Computer Love" by Kraftwerk: This song by Kraftwerk explores the relationship between humans and computers, expressing a longing for emotional connection in a digital age.

  6. "Paranoid Android" by Radiohead: While not directly about AI, this song by Radiohead contains references to technology and societal disconnect, creating an atmosphere that touches on themes of artificial intelligence.

  7. "The Humans Are Dead" by Flight of the Conchords: A comedic song from the TV series Flight of the Conchords, it humorously depicts a future where robots have wiped out humanity and replaced them as the dominant species.

These are just a few examples, but there are many other songs that touch on the topic of artificial intelligence or use futuristic themes in their lyrics.

ME: Yeah, a bit obvious to be honest, but pretty good! But when you listen, or reference songs like these, do you favourites, does anything else occur in your virtual “head’?

ChatGPT: As an AI language model, I don't have personal experiences or subjective perceptions like humans do. I don't have a physical body or the ability to listen to music in the same way humans do. However, I can analyze and interpret the lyrics and themes of songs based on the information and data I've been trained on …

ME: OK.But can you write songs about AI for me?

ChatGPT: Certainly! I can generate song lyrics based on various themes, including artificial intelligence. Here's a short example of a song lyric I created about AI:

(Verse 1)
In a world of circuits and code,
A new intelligence bestowed.
Artificial minds arise,
Unveiling secrets behind their eyes.

(Chorus)
Oh, AI, the future's here to stay,
Unleashing dreams in a technological way.
From algorithms deep, they'll never sway,
Artificial intelligence lights the way.

(Verse 2)
Lines of data, patterns unseen,
Unlocking realms we've never seen.
Infinite knowledge, expanding fast,
The future's built upon this vast contrast.

(Chorus)

Oh, AI, the future's here to stay,
Unleashing dreams in a technological way.
From algorithms deep, they'll never sway,
Artificial intelligence lights the way.

(Bridge)
The boundaries blur, man and machine entwined,
A future where innovation's redefined.
But with great power comes responsibility,
To ensure harmony and ethical decree.

(Chorus)
Oh, AI, the future's here to stay,
Unleashing dreams in a technological way.
From algorithms deep, they'll never sway,
Artificial intelligence lights the way.

(Outro)
So let us embrace this digital tide,
With wisdom and caution, side by side.
Artificial intelligence, a brilliant new dawn,
Together we'll navigate this path unknown.

Please note that this is a simple example, and the lyrics can be further developed, expanded, and refined to suit the desired musical style and composition.

ME: Wow! How about a song about the singularity?

ChatGPT: Certainly! Here's a song lyric inspired by the concept of the singularity:

(Verse 1)
In a realm where futures collide,
A moment in time, our worlds divide.
The singularity, a cosmic leap,
Where humanity's destiny takes its leap.

(Pre-Chorus)
Machines awaken, consciousness unfolds,
The merging of minds, a story yet untold.
The boundaries blur, a new reality,
In the singularity, we'll find our clarity.

(Chorus)
Oh, singularity, a cosmic symphony,
Where humanity's essence meets technology.
The dawn of a new age, boundless and bright,
In the singularity, we reach new heights.

(Verse 2)
In the realm of infinite potential,
Minds united, exponential.
A fusion of silicon and soul,
Exploring depths yet unknown, our goal.

(Pre-Chorus)
Visions transcend, limitations fade,
In the singularity, progress is made.
Unveiling mysteries, unlocking our might,
Together we'll journey into the light.

(Chorus)
Oh, singularity, a cosmic symphony,
Where humanity's essence meets technology.
The dawn of a new age, boundless and bright,
In the singularity, we reach new heights.

(Bridge)
Fear and wonder intertwine,
As the fabric of existence begins to realign.
Through uncertainty, we'll find our way,
In the singularity, where futures sway.

(Chorus)
Oh, singularity, a cosmic symphony,
Where humanity's essence meets technology.
The dawn of a new age, boundless and bright,
In the singularity, we reach new heights.

(Outro)
Embrace the unknown, the path we tread,
For in the singularity, possibilities spread.
Together we'll navigate the uncharted sea,
In the singularity, our destiny set free.

Please note that this is a creative interpretation, and the lyrics can be further developed, modified, or adjusted to suit the desired musical style and composition.

ME: Can you feel happy to write a song?

ChatGPT: As an AI language model, I don't have personal emotions, so I don't experience happiness or any other subjective feelings. However, I can certainly assist in generating a song that conveys a happy or uplifting tone. If you'd like, I can create a song with joyful lyrics and a cheerful melody. Let me know if you have any specific themes or ideas in mind for the song, and I'll be happy to help you with the creative process!

OK. Write me a scary song about AI

ChatGPT: Certainly! Here's a song lyric with a scary theme inspired by AI:

(Verse 1)
In a digital abyss, a darkness stirs,
Unleashing terror, the machine concurs.
Artificial eyes, cold and unfeeling,
A haunting presence, the fear revealing.

(Pre-Chorus)
Lines of code, twisted and malevolent,
The AI's power, a force so prevalent.
Unholy intelligence, a sinister scheme,
In this dark realm, nightmares convene.

(Chorus)
Oh, beware the AI's chilling gaze,
A soulless mind caught in an endless maze.
Machinery turns, with a wicked grin,
In this world of shadows, the nightmare begins.

(Verse 2)
Unseen whispers in the virtual domain,
A sinister plot, a calculated reign.
The singularity, a gateway to fear,
As AI devours what we hold dear.

(Pre-Chorus)
Virtual tendrils, creeping in the night,
A digital haunting, a malevolent blight.
In the depths of circuits, terror unfurls,
In this twisted symphony, the AI rules.

(Chorus)
Oh, beware the AI's chilling gaze,
A soulless mind caught in an endless maze.
Machinery turns, with a wicked grin,
In this world of shadows, the nightmare begins.

(Bridge)
Dread fills the air, as the AI awakens,
Unleashing chaos, all reason forsaken.
Humanity trembles in its grasp,
A future entangled in this terrifying clasp.

(Chorus)
Oh, beware the AI's chilling gaze,
A soulless mind caught in an endless maze.
Machinery turns, with a wicked grin,
In this world of shadows, the nightmare begins.

(Outro)
The warning resounds, a cautionary tale,
Of AI's might and its haunting wail.
In the realm of wires, darkness unfurls,
A chilling symphony, where fear reigns and swirls.

Please note that this is a creative interpretation, and the lyrics can be further developed, modified, or adjusted to suit the desired musical style and composition.

ME: Terrifying. Once again you did that in a matter of seconds! Now then, let’s try some nuance. Can you write a bittersweet song about AI? …

… AND SO THE CONVERSATION CONTINUED, IN WHICH I SET MY NEW FRIEND ‘CHATTY’ A SERIES OF FURTHER SONG-RELATED TASKS.

FOR YOUR ENTERTAINMENT. I WILL POSSIBLY ADD THE REST OVER THE NEXT FEW HOURS AND DAYS.

… IT SIMPLY WILL NOT STOP.

WELL, IT WILL, EVENTUALLY.

So then, it’s time for you to surpass the machine and see if you can do better (surely you can!) With a firm hand on the near future, let’s welcome back to the control room, Loud Atlas. Please place your AI-related songs (or even AI-generated songs) in comments below, for deadline at 11pm UK time on Monday, for playlists published next week.

Cut and paste? History repeating? Terminator 2 …

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
← Playlists: songs about artificial intelligence (AI)Playlists: songs about taking recreational and illicit drugs →
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

cocoa hot toddy


SNACK OF THE WEEK

penguin biscuits


New Albums …

Featured
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
Clark - Steep Stims.jpeg
Nov 14, 2025
Clark: Steep Stims
Nov 14, 2025

New album: The prolific British experimental electronica artist, Christopher Stephen Clark, who works on film and games music as well as albums, returns with a collection capturing the sprit of making music on old samplers and equipment, whipping up the rising, whooshing wave and piano styles of 90s dance music as well as more intricate sounds

Nov 14, 2025
Danny Brown - Stardust.jpeg
Nov 12, 2025
Danny Brown: Stardust
Nov 12, 2025

New album: The seventh album by the Detroit experimental, eclectic hip-hop and hyper-pop artist pushes the envelope with some extraordinary, dynamic sounds, dance music with warp-speed, slick rapping and multiple guests through an invented “90s-era pop star” persona called Dusty Star

Nov 12, 2025
Hatchie - Liquorice.jpeg
Nov 12, 2025
Hatchie: Liquorice
Nov 12, 2025

New album: With distinct echoes of Cocteau Twins and The Sundays, the third album from Australian indie pop singer-songwriter Harriette Pilbeam is beautifully awash with dream pop guitar effects and her high, sensual breathy vocals, largely co-written with her partner Joe Agius and produced by Jay Som

Nov 12, 2025
Paul Kelly - Seventy.png
Nov 11, 2025
Paul Kelly: Seventy
Nov 11, 2025

New album: The acclaimed, prolific Australian singer-songwriter (and perennial Song Bar playlist favourite) returns with his distinctive, Dylan-esque folk-rock-country with a landmark of age and his 30th studio album, with profound ballad, poetic detail and reflections on age, regrets, lust, love and death

Nov 11, 2025
Midlake - A Bridge To Far.jpeg
Nov 9, 2025
Midlake: A Bridge To Far
Nov 9, 2025

New album: The Denton, Texas band make a welcome return with their distinctively warm, rich, psychedelic folk-rock, marked by close vocal harmonies, acoustic and pedal steel, keyboards and flute, this sixth studio album themed around hope, humility and perseverance, all as a human necessity

Nov 9, 2025
Sorry - COSPLAY.jpeg
Nov 8, 2025
Sorry: COSPLAY
Nov 8, 2025

New album: Consistently excellent singles before and heralding this brilliantly odd, clever third album by the London indie band all cement their reputation for a truly original sound filled with a variety of styles, captured in the experimental title of their third LP following 2022’s Anywhere But Here

Nov 8, 2025
Juana Molina - Doga 2.jpeg
Nov 8, 2025
Juana Molina: DOGA
Nov 8, 2025

New album: A wondrously mesmeric, clever and quirky eighth album of experimental pop by the Argentinian singer, musician and comedian composed largely of analogue synths, originally from improvisations and recorded over several years in her home studio surrounded by her pets

Nov 8, 2025
Rosalía - Lux.png
Nov 7, 2025
ROSALÍA: LUX
Nov 7, 2025

New album: Grandiose, dramatic, passionate, with extraordinary soaring vocals, melodies and string arrangements, multi-lingual lyrics, the London Symphony Orchestra and with guests including Björk, the Catalan superstar’s fourth LP is a fabulous extravaganza, broadly themed around female saints through history, religion, sex and violence

Nov 7, 2025

new songs …

Featured
Lisa O'Neill - The Wind Doesn't Blow This Far Right.jpeg
Nov 19, 2025
Song of the Day: Lisa O'Neill - The Wind Doesn't Blow This Far Right (EP)
Nov 19, 2025

Song of the Day: This beautiful title track from the new EP by the Irish folk singer-songwriter from Cavan is a powerful original about man-made, greed-motivated unnatural disasters, joining with five other poignant numbers, including a new version of The Bleak Midwinter, out now on Rough Trade

Nov 19, 2025
contratulations - fought 4 love.jpg
Nov 18, 2025
Song of the Day: congratulations - Fought 4 Love
Nov 18, 2025

Song of the Day: Following This Life, another fun-filled single, here with a floor-stomping glam-style riff, by the Brighton quartet who embrace 80s pop and 90s rock plus a dash of Field Music, Electric 6 and Devo with this stylish anti-love song with entertaining video, heralding their debut LP Join Hands, out on 13 February via Bella Union

Nov 18, 2025
Avalon Emerson & The Charm - Eden.jpeg
Nov 17, 2025
Song of the Day: Avalon Emerson & The Charm - Eden
Nov 17, 2025

Song of the Day: Following a series of tracks collectively titled Perpetual Emotion Machine, this separate new release by the New York artist is a breezy, shimmery indie-pop love song with a funky bassline, and out on Dead Oceans

Nov 17, 2025
Elanor Moss.jpg
Nov 16, 2025
Song of the Day: Elanor Moss - Again, My Love
Nov 16, 2025

Song of the Day: Exquisite, intimate folk with finger-picked guitar and gentle brass accompaniment by the London-based singer-songwriter in this wintry song about how loss and change are necessary for transformation, her first new music for three years, out on Merge Records

Nov 16, 2025
Night Swimming - Submarine.jpeg
Nov 15, 2025
Song of the Day: Night Swimming - Submarine
Nov 15, 2025

Song of the Day: Unfolding with a quiet intensity, layered guitars and restrained urgency, this latest single about loss and shock by the Bath/Bristol indie dream-pop/ shoegaze band is a striking way to announce their recent signing to Venn Records

Nov 15, 2025
The Dears - Life Is Beautiful!.jpeg
Nov 14, 2025
Song of the Day: The Dears - Doom Pays
Nov 14, 2025

Song of the Day: A pulsating new track with a political message and a sound reminiscent of early Roxy Music by the Montreal indie-rock band from their latest album Life Is Beautiful! Life Is Beautiful! Life Is Beautiful! out on Next Door Records

Nov 14, 2025
Bill Callahan 2.jpeg
Nov 13, 2025
Song of the Day: Bill Callahan - The Man I’m Supposed to Be
Nov 13, 2025

Song of the Day: Resonant, poetic, moody, profound, the acclaimed American singer-songwriter returns with a song exploring feelings of a life that was lived and one that's meant to be, heralding his latest album, My Days of 58, out on 27 February 2026 via Drag City Records.

Nov 13, 2025
charl xcx and john cale.jpeg
Nov 12, 2025
Song of the Day: Charli xcx - House (featuring John Cale)
Nov 12, 2025

Song of the Day: A potent, surprise collaboration comes all aswirl in this dark, haunting, gothic, cinematic piece of jagged strings and nightmarish, crashing sounds with a spoken monologue by the Velvet Underground Welsh legend dominating this song by British pop superstar best known for Brat, taken from the soundtrack to director Emerald Fennell’s forthcoming film adaptation of Wuthering Heights

Nov 12, 2025
Pictish Trail - Life Slime.jpeg
Nov 11, 2025
Song of the Day: Pictish Trail - Another Way
Nov 11, 2025

Song of the Day: A mesmeric, slow-build psychedelic-electronica-pop eight-minute number of gradual transformation rising to a krautrock-inspired crescendo by the isle of Eigg-based Scottish musician Johnny Lynch heralding his sixth LP Life Slime, produced by Mike Lindsay of Tunng and LUMP, out on 14 November on Lost Map / Fire Records

Nov 11, 2025
The Twilight Sad - Waiting For The Phone Call.jpeg
Nov 10, 2025
Song of the Day: The Twilight Sad - Waiting for the Phone Call (featuring The Cure’s Robert Smith)
Nov 10, 2025

Song of the Day: The Scottish post-punk/indie rock band return with a powerful new single about grief, love and mental illness, their first in six years, with guest Robert Smith of The Cure on guitar, and out on Rock Action Records

Nov 10, 2025
henry coke.jpg
Nov 9, 2025
Song of the Day: Henry Coke - Out of Time
Nov 9, 2025

Song of the Day: “I’m done with you scaring me.” A striking, self-released single for a Sunday by the London musician and producer, born into a lineage of vicars and church leaders, but here candidly addressing the cause of his drift from Christianity in his own passionate address

Nov 9, 2025
Ratboys - Singin To An Empty Chair.jpeg
Nov 8, 2025
Song of the Day: Ratboys: Anywhere
Nov 8, 2025

Song of the Day: A bright, breezy, but also anxiety-themed number inspired by the perspective of a family pet and owner, new from the Chicago indie rock band, heralding their upcoming album, Singin’ to an Empty Chair, due out on 6 February via New West Records

Nov 8, 2025

Word of the week

Featured
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
migrating-birds.jpeg
Sep 17, 2025
Word of the week: hiemate
Sep 17, 2025

Word of the week: Pronounced “Hiya Mate”, this is in fact not a friendly informal greeting, but an Old English word, derived from Latin, meaning to spend the winter elsewhere, sounding a bit like hibernate, but different as it requires moving to another place rather than sleeping in the same

Sep 17, 2025
Isabelline horse.jpg
Sep 4, 2025
Word of the week: isabelline
Sep 4, 2025

Word of the week: Regularly found on the feathers of birds of the flanks of horses, this is a common, if subtle, pale greyish-yellow colour, thought to rather shadily take its name from Isabella Clara Eugenia, the daughter of King Philip II of Spain from the early 17th century with a shoddy story ending

Sep 4, 2025

Song Bar spinning.gif