Thursday, February 05, 2026

My Generation by The Who

This album is something of a mixed bag, opening with a mix of styles and genres, ranging from R&B to rock and even including a James Brown cover before the band finally found something that caught the energy of their live set with the explosive My Generation. Hearing this is still an electrifying experience, with Daltry’s stuttering, amphetamine fueled vocals, Moon’s pounding drums and Townshend’s blistering guitar handing off to Entwhistle’s bass solo. 

Flipping the album over leads into the jangly West Coast inspired Kids are Alright, another anthem for the young people of 1965. There are some more covers and R&B numbers, before the improvised freak out of The Ox, also featuring the great session musician Nicky Hopkins on piano. 

Is this a great album that must be heard? Maybe not, but it’s certainly a snapshot of The Who at a formative point in their career and a pointer to where they would be going.

https://album.link/gb/i/1443123252



Warmth

I long for the warmth
Of a breezy summer’s day
Under endless skies

Wednesday, February 04, 2026

Barley

We watch from afar
As the wind shakes the barley
Good folk take their stand

Pictures At an Exhibition by Emerson, Lake & Palmer

It’s impossible to listen to this without imagining a group of long haired musos sitting down with a besuited record exec and saying “Listen man - we’re PROPER musicians - we play CLASSICAL music now”.  

It’s ok, I guess, with some interesting use of early synthesisers, but it’s not that much more sophisticated than those novelty records with classical pieces played on a Bontempi organ with a disco beat. On the positive side it made me want to go back to listen to Mussorgsky with more conventional arrangements. 

https://album.link/gb/i/1528524485




Tuesday, February 03, 2026

Grove

A row of houses
Where once stood an ancient grove
Just the name remains


 

The Adventures of Luther Arkwright

Graphic novels written and drawn by a single author/artist are perhaps the truest vision of what the form can be. Brian Talbot is certainly one of the best creators working in this medium and this is an excellent example of what is possible.

The book was originally published as a 9 issue limited series between 1978 and 1989, and the slow pace is probably due to the phenomenal amount of detail on each page. The artwork is black ink over pencils in a variety of styles, with a substantial amount of text included, ranging from multiple panels slowing time to a crawl up to large splash pages with surreal and sometimes disturbing imagery. The overall effect is stunning, although occasionally difficult to read. I had the kindle edition which allowed me to zoom in on individual panels and pieces of text as needed.

The story is complex, dealing with parallel universes branching off from a prime original. Luther Arkwright is agent from universe Zero-Zero with powers to move between worlds at will. He has psychic powers and high tech weapons at his disposal to aid his fight against the mysterious Disruptors who are seeking an artefact called Firefrost with the power to destroy the entire multiverse. 

The opening chapters start with an assassination attempt on Arkwright and Rose Wylde, his constant companion across many realities, in a Neo-Victorian London by a Crystal Palace that hadn't been destroyed by fire in 1936. Flashback scenes establish more about Arkwright and his origins, as well as the unfolding plot, before the action moves to an Earth where Cromwell and his descendants had held power since the English Civil War opposed by a band of monarchist rebels.

There are many obvious references to the power of puritan religious fanaticism, but the cult like devotion to the royal cause is scarcely much better. There are many powerful images contrasting the Neo-Fascist Cromwellian rallies with the flag waving iconography of the royals, who evoke images of Boudica sweeping the Romans aside in a bloody swathe. Talbot also draws on multiple mythologies and symbols as Arkwright dies and is reborn with even greater powers before the breathless finale.

Comparisons have been drawn between Arkwright and Michael Moorcock's Champion Eternal character of Jerry Cornelius, and Moorcock himself provides an introduction to this edition where he explains the common roots of both their characters in their shared experience of England in the 60s and 70s. Talbot's work is very much grounded in the England that struggled to come to terms with the loss of Empire and the rise of the Thatcherite right in the 70s and 80s, with the inherent dangers of drifting into the incipient fascism that we see today. 

As well as a deep, metaphysical piece of art, this book also stands as a cracking bit of sci-fi adventure in the best traditions of 2000AD although of a considerably more adult nature (both sexual and violent content) than could have been published in those pages.


Highly recommended!


Imagine by John Lennon

Enough has been written about the irony of a millionaire singing about having no possessions, but a bigger issue is a violent bully (by his own admission) writing a song about being “just a jealous guy”. In the entry for this album Robert Dimery describes that track as being one of the greatest love songs written from a man to a woman, which I think is completely missing the point. Even the way it is sung sounds like the feeble self justification of an abusive man.

After some fun, bouncy rock and blues tracks we then get to “How Do You Sleep” which is another bitter and spiteful attack on Paul McCartney, showing that he had still not forgiven him for the breakup of the Beatles. The primal scream therapy obviously hadn’t worked. 

To be positive for a second, with the problematic tracks aside, George Harrison’s guitar adds a lot to the Beatles vibe on this album, compared to his previous solo release. It’s still not on the same level as it used to be though, which makes listening a bitter sweet experience, with the bitter definitely outweighing the sweet.

50%-of-the-Beatles-tastic!

https://album.link/gb/i/1440853752