Wednesday, April 01, 2026

Pheasant, Crisp

Two pints of lager
The posh stuff, please, also a
Bag of Pheasant Crisps

Bitches Brew by Miles Davis


Miles Davis defined the sound of jazz for a decade with his effortlessly cool album Kind of Blue. In 1970 he evolved his sound again, adding electric instruments to the mix and moving from hard bop to the fusion sound that was revolutionise jazz in the 70s. He included some of the finest musicians of the time on this recording, giving them chords to improvise around a basic musical sketch and letting the music flow. 

In one memorable section Joe Zawinul, Larry Young and Chick Corea are all playing electric pianos and bouncing off each other in different parts of the sound stage (left, centre and right, respectively) - this really benefits from being heard on headphones and it feels like you are in the room with them. Nice!

The only thing that I really don’t like about this album is the title, but you can’t have everything

https://album.link/gb/i/168376392


Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Buds, Cold Rain

The last day of March
Despite the cold rain and wind
Vine buds are growing

The Holy Bible by Manic Street Preachers


Welcome to the world of the Manic Street Preachers. There is no room here for warmth or ambiguity. Every song is a meticulously crafted manifesto written with icy moral certainty, just in case you hadn’t realised that all right wing politicians, Nazis and serial killers are BAD PEOPLE, m’kay? To sweeten the pill, the music is generally banging rock but interspersed with on the nose sound bites about concentration camps and prostitution just in case you start enjoying it too much.

It’s impossible to listen to this without a profound sense of sadness. When this was recorded, guitarist Richey James was severely depressed and suffering from alcoholism, anorexia and self harm. It seems that the band were happy to put up with him starting drinking first thing in the morning as long as he wrote another song about pain and suffering. 

The music press also colluded with this. A notorious incident saw James cutting himself with a razor blade to prove that the band were ‘4 real’ and the response was just to write articles about how edgy the band were instead of getting the poor guy some professional help. 

It was not really a surprise that James disappeared after the recording, never to be seen again. Draw your own conclusions.

https://album.link/gb/i/942562485



Monday, March 30, 2026

Chore of Enchantment by Giant Sand

The first two tags on the word cloud of reviews for this album are ‘Interesting’ and ‘Boring’, and for once I think that sums it up pretty well. There were definitely moments when I thought it would pique my interest - I always like an album with an overture and there were some snatches of opera thrown in too, as well as some nice bits of glitchy noise. However, it would soon drift back into a sort of Lou Reed style pastiche.

Also, this album wasn’t in my edition of the book - always a worrying sign when a comparatively recent release (and yes, I’m old enough that 2000 does count as recent for me) is bumped for something else.

In the words of the Chernobyl plant manager - not great, not terrible.

https://album.link/gb/i/1668346488



Crocus

Submerged shoots surface
Slowly seeking spring sunshine
Surprising saffron

Sunday, March 29, 2026

Superman

Superman is the archetype for comic book superheroes. He has been brought to life in film and tv many times, but do we really need another version? This recent incarnation wisely skips the origin story and assumes a reasonable level of knowledge of the character and associated cast, starting the story in media res with Superman crashing to the ground, beaten and bloody after his first defeat in a fight. He is rescued by Krypto the Superdog which immediately sets the tone - this is not another grim dark take on the character, rather this one is the big Boy Scout with his pants on over his tights.

The plot of this film revolves around Superman becoming involved in geopolitics by stopping a war between rival nations somewhere on the other side of the world, purely to save lives. That the invading nation is a US ally and has been well supplied with arms by Lex Luthor is the thing that is going to get him into trouble.On top of this we have a supporting cast of all the usual suspects of a Superman story - Lois Line, Jimmy Olsen, Perry White, as well as Green Lantern, Mister Terrific and Hawkgirl as members of the "Justice Gang". 

Cue much mayhem with monsters to fight and evil schemes to thwart, played with a light touch and a satisfying number of twists to the story. Some parts don't entirely work - some of the cgi effects feel a little bit floaty and lightweight in places, and the subplot with Lex Luthor's social media influencer girlfriend and a somewhat unlikeable version of Jimmy Olsen is a bit reductive. 

On the whole, it's an enjoyable film for a bit of light hearted fun and a James Gunn's take is pleasant change from the previous brooding and dark version of the character from Zack Snyder.