Dogwood Tales
Tuesday, February 17, 2026
Sometimes I Wish We Were an Eagle by Bill Callahan
A 2009 album from an artist that I hadn’t previously heard of, so I wasn’t sure what to expect. It’s described as alt-country, which doesn’t feel quite right. His voice sounds a little like Leonard Cohen, but he’s accompanied by some nice strings that put me in mind of 70s style Glenn Campbell. Other tracks add some interesting bass lines and vaguely middle eastern sounding orchestration - perfectly pleasant listening, but nothing to frighten the metaphorical horses.
Lyrically, he’s in similar territory to Leonard Cohen but I’m not sure if the latter ever sang a song about death from the perspective of a horse though. I’m feeling charitable, so I’ll give this three stars but I think I might have preferred it if this was just him and a guitar in a more minimal arrangement.
https://album.link/gb/i/311310235
Monday, February 16, 2026
Modern Life Is Rubbish by Blur
The answer was firmly looking back to the 60s. At least they were being upfront in the album title and the nostalgic picture of a steam train puffing away. On this album, Blur are harking back to the sounds of the Kinks and early Bowie, who ironically enough were themselves harking back to even earlier traditions of music hall and singers like Anthony Newley.
I mean, I like the 60s, but this album feels almost apologetic for being unsure of itself and the sound they want to make. It’s fine as a whole, but their distinctive Britpop sound was yet to emerge.
https://album.link/gb/i/726407617
Sunday, February 15, 2026
Her
A rewatch for this 2013 film, about a man falling in love with his artificially intelligent operating system. The protagonist is a man called Theodore Twombly, making a living by writing heartfelt personalised letters on behalf of other people (beautifullyhandwrittenletters.com) and living on his own whilst going through a painful divorce. He installs a new operating system on his computer (that quaintly comes on a disc with an instruction leaflet) that promises to revolutionise his life by adapting and learning from him. After answering some personal questions and selecting the female voice, he finds himself in conversation with his new companion as she sorts through his old emails and organises his contacts.
He starts to form an attachment to Samantha (as the AI decides to call herself), which quickly grows into romance and even sexual feelings. I remember a great deal of scepticism at the time (and also expressed by some of the other characters) that someone would possibly have a meaningful relationship with an AI, but evidently many people are now doing exactly that.
Perhaps the most science fictional element is that his conversation is picked up perfectly by his wireless earbuds (did we have those in 2013?) without the usual palaver of "Alexa, switch the light on" "I'm sorry, I couldn't find a device or group called light". Director Spike Jonze also completely missed the obvious conclusion that the only reason a software company would release an AI operating system is so that they could hoover up as much personal data as possible to send targeted ads and political propaganda to the user as they can.