Dogwood Tales
Tuesday, June 02, 2026
Grievous Angel by Gram Parsons
He played music from an early age, formed several successful bands and joined The Byrds in 1968 aged just 22 and then quit on principle over a planned tour of apartheid South Africa. He got to know Keith Richards, formed yet another band (The Flying Burrito Brothers) before meeting the then unknown Emmylou Harris who he recruited for his two solo albums.
At this time he was struggling with a crippling drug addiction and alcoholism, but somehow managed to make a solid country rock album greatly elevated by Harris’ vocals, especially on the duets Love Hurts and In My Hour of Darkness.
By rights Harris should have been co-credited for this album, but when Parsons died of an inevitable overdose, his jealous estranged wife removed her from the cover. Her 1975 song Boulder to Birmingham shows how much he meant to her.
Another tragic member of the rockstars die young club.
Monday, June 01, 2026
This Year's Model by Elvis Costello & The Attractions
He combined sneering punk cynicism with the sensibilities of a 50s Buddy Holly lookalike with killer tunes. Some of the lyrics don’t quite hold up in retrospect - he did have a habit of throwing in lines like ‘They call her Natasha when she looks like Elsie’ which come across as misogynistic and stop this from being a five star album for me. Pump it Up and Radio, Radio are the real bangers here with a special mention to the utterly thrilling keyboards of Steve Nieve.
Sunday, May 31, 2026
UK Games Expo Fringe 2026
Escaping from weekend activity centres is no longer a sport! Any prisoner found sneaking out for a curry or a pint of overpriced beer will be shot on sight!
After last year's inaugural Expo Fringe there was little doubt that once more we would be spending a weekend behind the barbed wire of Stalag Luft Ackers. It really is a gem of a place, once you get past the spartan nature of the accommodation. Now that we knew what to expect we were mentally prepared for the bunk beds, harsh lighting and bracing showers, and the place felt quite homely, with an upgraded kitchen and new tables and chairs for the inmates.
The drive down on Friday morning wasn't too bad, roadworks notwithstanding, and after unpacking my gear I set up for the game of Cörk Børd that I was running. This is a an adaption of the Mörk Borg rules from Paul Baldowski of Cthulhu Hack and Dee Sanction fame and I was looking forward to seeing how the rules played out at the table.
The theme of the game is Nordic Noir detective fiction, with a team of variously damaged investigators unpicking gruesome crimes in a harsh landscape through dogged police work and the occasional lucky break. The scenario is broken down into scenes comprising sites, suspects and situations that have to have their complexity whittled down by the team applying their skills and using their fibre. This is roughly equivalent to the hit points, attributes and damage rolls of a traditional fantasy game, but the fun here is in the narrative that comes from the dice rolls. An investigator might make a good roll only to be thwarted by a delay (aka armour) leading to the case stalling.
Scenes are linked as the case is solved and I used a physical cork board with pictures for each scene and red tape to link them using pins. We tracked the remaining complexity on a scene with dice so the team could see where they needed to focus their efforts and added evidence with extra post it notes. The delays on certain scenes caused frustration (as intended) but I think when I write some more scenarios I'd build in keys to clear the delays and speed things up (such as splitting up suspects to interrogate them separately). The players did manage to get to the tragic conclusion with only one of them cracking under the pressure. Excellent fun!