Dogwood Tales
Thursday, January 29, 2026
Our Aim Is to Satisfy by Red Snapper
As I’ve said before, I think that any album on the Warp Records label is worth a spin. This one is mostly instrumental with some nice jazzy beats, mixing traditional instruments such as the double bass and trombone with danceable electronica. I really enjoyed this album, but to be honest I wasn’t quite prepared for just how filthy the track “The Rough and the Quick” was - definitely not safe for work!
Headphones-tastic!
https://album.link/gb/i/279889278
Wednesday, January 28, 2026
Don't Stand Me Down by Dexys Midnight Runners
For a brief moment in 1982 it seemed that you couldn’t move for roving bands of scruffy herberts dressed like tramps in ripped dungarees and neckerchiefs, playing fiddles and proclaiming (apparently completely seriously) that they were the only people who’d ever heard of Jackie Wilson. Anyhoo, after a couple of hits they vanished before resurfacing three years later with their third album.
On the plus side, they’ve managed to put on some smarter clothes and slimmed down the band to a more manageable four members. As a result the music is a little more laid back with less of the previous faux Irish too-ray-ay malarkey. On the negative side, we still get too much of Kevin Rowland’s peculiarly affected honking singing style and some left field snippets of conversation dropped in between the songs.
There’s also a very odd track complaining about everything on Radio One sounding the same (mate, other stations are available, and maybe you should have tried listening to John Peel instead of the Breakfast Show). This would have had more impact if it hadn’t just been a blatant copy of the riff from Werewolves of London by Warren Zevon (who had to be credited on later releases of the album).
Tramp-tastic!
https://album.link/gb/i/1442855292
Tuesday, January 27, 2026
Berlin by Lou Reed
Lou Reed’s previous album Transformer was a huge hit, but if anyone bought this expecting more cheerful songs about trans people hitchhiking across the USA they were in for a surprise. This album is the dark side of Perfect Day, examining the destructive spiral of drug addiction for a couple called Jim and Caroline living in Berlin.
We get one romantic song about them meeting by the wall and enjoying some Dubonnet on ice, and then we get despair, prostitution, violence and eventual death by suicide. Calling the last track Sad Song is underselling just how grim this is by a long chalk.
Do we really need to hear crying children being taken from their drug addict mother? Well, maybe. Drugs aren’t all just going to the zoo and drinking sangria in the park, kids.
https://album.link/gb/i/257563947