23rd December 2024

Titus writes:

This is my final blog of 2024, as I shall be away for New Year, and I have chosen a pioneer of the guitar on the internet, Laura Cox, to write about.  Laura has led the way for many young guitarists, is a multi instrumentalist and is now at the forefront of the current landscape of guitarists in France and beyond.   “France?” I hear you say, “With a name like Laura Cox?”. Let me explain......Laura was born in France on 24 November 1990 to an English father and a French mother.  She first started playing the guitar at the age of 14, using a cheap classical guitar that her aunt gave to her, and her first electric guitar was a Squier Showmaster.  At the age of 16, she started her own channel on a well known site that displays videos & music, and this built her a large audience.  By 2008 she was not only posting cover versions and guitar solos, but also uploading self penned music. Until she was able to turn professional, she worked in a recording studio and a guitar shop.
 
Following her online success of gaining several million views, she formed her own rock band in Paris, giving her first hand experience of playing to a live audience.  Laura has used a variety of guitars, such as Gibson Les Paul, Fender Telecaster and Fender Stratocaster.  The Laura Cox Band released its first studio album ‘Hard Blues Shot’ in 2017, and followed this up with ‘Burning Bright’ in 2019.  Laura chose to release the third album, ‘Head Above Water, a year or so ago, in just her name.  She chose to re-invent herself, and recorded the album at the World famous ICP Studios in Brussels.  You will hear on this, that she plays precision guitar, blending traditional rock with blue grass with astonishing ease. She illustrates that she is a more than competent guitarist and that she is a driving force in a new generation of rock guitarists.  For her third studio album and from then onstage, she chose not to play as joint guitarist with Mathieu Albiac, and instead utilised a keyboard player.
 
For the ‘Head Above Water’ album, Laura chose not to work with the band in her native France, and holed up in Portugal by herself, to write and demo the record’s 11 tracks.  You can hear how she shines as a multi-instrumentalist, exploring outside her comfort zone, and integrates her banjo playing with the aid of lap steel into a few songs.  She apparently wanted the end result of the third album to be less heavy than the first two albums, with a decided ‘Southern’, blue grass and country influence.
 
She is unusual in that when she writes, she produces the guitar riff first, and then adds other instrumentation, at the same time deciding what type of vocals the track should have. All in all Laura has worked hard to become an accomplished guitarist and vocalist in what is still a very competitive sector within the rock music industry. Some would argue that it is an extremely male-dominated sector.  If you have never heard of her, then please give her a listen – I think you’ll be pleasantly surprised when you hear her perform her own material and cover versions.   Undoubtedly music journalists have proclaimed that she is heavily influenced by X, Y, and Z guitarists, but I reckon it’s pretty cool, in the track I’ve asked Lex to play, (as one commentator put it) to hear of a French musician, singing in English at the Pol’and’Rock Festival.  It not only proves that music is a universal language, but also in simpler terms, that Laura Cox rocks!  The track is ‘Going Down’ and can be found here. I wish you all a peaceful New Year and hope that 2025 is kind to you.

20th December 2024

Downloading & replaying is discontinued. However, tracks played on Friday evening were:

Laurice & Grudge - I'm Gonna Smash Your Face In
Malka - When You’re Here
Sir Starmer and the Granny Harmers - Freezing This Christmas (Parody)
MÃ¥neskin - Baby Said
Glen Hansard & Lisa O'Neill - Fairytale of New York
(at Shane MacGowan's Funeral)
Johnny Reggae - Don't Get Your Knickers In A Twist
The Libertines - Don't Look Back Into The Sun
Troy Redfern - Van Helsing
St. Christopher - Burnout
Shygirl ft. Yseult - F*Me
Cosmit - Hard Love
Jose Feliciano x Van Halen
[Mashup] - Ain't Talkin' 'bout Feliz Navidad
Marika Hackman - Driving Under Stars
FUZZRIDER - Dusk Till Dawn
AC/DC x Brenda Lee 
[Mashup] - Dirty Deeds Around the Christmas Tree
Thatchers Snatchers - Fcuk The Casualties
Sabrina Carpenter - Buy Me Presents
Kacey Musgraves - The Architect 

15th December 2024

Titus writes:

Rather than do my usual blog, where I tell you about a band or artist, I thought I’d do a review of the various blogs & happenings in 2024.  Remember, you can check all blogs and playlists out by going to the archive section on www.wtfisthis.ovh (or use the search box, bottom right).
 
I started the year telling you about a band that I really feel strongly about – in a nutshell I cannot understand why the Would Be’s never had any commercial success. To me, like The Undertones were to Peely, they were the perfect pop band, and whist they never ventured into any obtuse genre, they just played pop brilliantly.  I still play their records and always will – in fact not a lot of people know that I shall have the words ‘My radio sounds different in the dark’ embossed on my tombstone. I also wrote about the late, indefinable eccentric that was Ivor Cutler, and I was happy that this had good feedback from IRC (judging by the log). Young Ivor wrote some bizarre stuff, that John Peel once referred to as “An assault on the reason”.  As the Winter drew slowly to a close, I wrote about 70 Gwen Party, Skimmer, Biosphere, Aphex Twin, and Doctor John Cooper-Clark......the man who described his own appearance on ‘Desert Island Discs’ as “All the finality of a suicide note, without actually topping yourself”.  We looked at the career of The Fall, plus the Sex Clark Five, and the raucous punk band that are The Yeah Yeah Yeahs.  It was pleasing to read another blog – this time on Northern Soul – by Paul Mason.
 
Many people have said to me over the years that I am privileged to have been at the first ever Glastonbury Festival.  They are right – the music was magnificent, but please let me reiterate what I said in my blog, that there were few other  pleasantries about the event.  It was uncomfortable, not particularly well organised, had dreadful sanitary facilities, and a very limited choice of food.  However we did enjoy a glass of Worthy Farm milk, as part of the admission fee of £1.  Fast forward to 2024, and contrary to most thoughts in 1970, this is now perhaps the most Internationally known festival, and nowadays, tickets are sold online, selling out in a matter of minutes.  This year, I thought PJ Harvey put in an exceptional performance, and the Vaccines played an explosive session on the Woodsies stage.  Predictably the headline acts were Dua Lipa, Coldplay, Shania Twain, and Seasick Steve.  Talking of Dua Lipa, many of her adoring fans sat through Polly Jean’s set, in order to ‘reserve’ their place when their heroin eventually took to the same stage.  They surely must have wondered what on earth they had come to, listening to tracks from ‘Let England Shake’ and ‘The Hope Six Demolition Project’ !!!!
 
By this time we were well into the festivals season, both at home and abroad, and most festival goers really enjoy the open air and the feeling of togetherness & happiness.  I’m sure there are far less crimes committed at festivals than in some cities. I won’t painstakingly go through each festival, as there are so many.  Increasingly popular are the extended sets that DJ’s perform such as at “Tomorrowland”, where top DJ’s like Charlotte de Witte play sets in excess of five hours to a participative audience.  There is nearly always a fantastic light show and high energy dancing – oh how I wish I was young again!
 
I talked of favourable comments via the I.R.C. and these were well received when Lex “handed over the reins” to Anne & I in the Summer and we chose the playlist of some memorable tunes we have enjoyed.  I also did a blog on the duo Underworld, which also received good feedback. I’ve tried to cover all genres where I believe there is a hidden talent , such as in reggae, country music, African music (particularly soukous). I’m often asked which is my favourite and the truth is anything that’s good to my ageing ears.  Of all the blogs I have compiled this year, I enjoyed an Autumn offering I did, of the new band The Last Dinner Party most. Apart from the fact that ALL members of this band can really play, they have a lead singer in Abi, who is a genuine show person with great stage presence. 
 
I think the track title of the year must go to Katina, with ‘Don’t stick stickers on my paper knickers’ – and Lex played this track way back in March.  Bands / artists to look out for in 2025? I’d say The Last Dinner Party, The Castellows, Wet Leg, Japanese Breakfast and Pom Pom Squad to name but 5.  Album of the year? Well, it’s officially classed as an EP, but The Last Dinner Party’s ‘Prelude to Ecstasy’ gets my vote every time.  I’m sure many of you have different views – whatever they are, I respect them.
 
I have asked Lex to play something rather different this week.  It’s seasonal in that it’s about Christmas, and it’s a song that The Pogues very narrowly missed out on, by not achieving the coveted ‘Christmas No. 1’ way back in 1987.(It reached No. 2, missing out to the Pet Shop Boys’ ‘Always on my mind’).  This was when Christmas number one’s weren’t arguably so predictable as they are today.  I refer of course to ‘Fairy Tale of New York’, but this is a different version, performed by Glen Hansard, Lisa O’Neill and the remaining Pogues, at the funeral of Shane McGowan, held at St Mary’s of the Rosary Church, Nenagh, County Tipperary.   It can be found here - all the very best for the Festive Season.

14th December 2024

Downloading & replaying is discontinued. However, tracks played on Friday evening were:

The Distillers - Drain the Blood
Anna B Savage - Lighthouse
Boygenius - $20
The Castellows (Live Oct-2024) - No. 7 Road
(See "Titus writes" below)
Lost Society - Awake
Eric Clapton - The Call
Breeze - She's Got It
Lonely Tourist - Always the Way
The Wendy Darlings - Don't Flirt
The Waifs  - The Waitress [Live]
Buckcharpenters (Buckcherry v Carpenters Mashup) - Sleigh Bitch
R.M.F.C. - The Trap
Porij - Marmite (Fcukers Remix)
Lonely Tourist - This Place Takes a Lot of Beating
The XX - Crystalised
The Reds, Pinks & Purples - What's Going on with Ordinary People
Man/Woman/Chainsaw - The Boss

8th December 2024

Titus writes:

I’m sure that all of you statisticians out there will remember that on 14 April this year, I wrote about Country Music and specifically about Laura Cantrell.  Well, I’ve covered many genres before & since, but this blog returns to Country Music now, and I’m greatly enthusiastic about a new band called The Castellows, who I have been listening to a great deal this week.  As I said in the Spring, Country Music has really encountered a twenty first century upsurge, yet has always been true to its roots, and none more so than with The Castellows.  The membership is made up of Eleanor and Powell Balkom, who are two of triplets, and younger sister Lily.  Interestingly, Powell plays banjo, which has always been a feature of Country Music.  They originate from Georgetown, Quitman County, Georgia, and grew up on a cattle farm.  However, since signing a record deal with Warner Brothers and  Warner Music collectively, they decided to move to Nashville around a year ago.
 
How do you come up with a band name like The Castellows? Well, not a lot of people know that Castellow was the sisters’ great grandmother’s maiden name.  The surname came to Ireland, and specifically County Mayo via the Anglo-Norman invasion of 1172.  As I’m sure you know, Ireland experienced a dramatic decrease in its population during the nineteenth century, with many problems such as famine and disease.  Many Irish folk emigrated to North America, with a promise of work & freedom, and this Castellow family followed this trend.  The Castellow motto was ‘Ne te quaesiviris extra’ meaning ‘Seek nothing beyond your sphere’ – I’m sure most of us will not have come across that motto before!
 
The Castellows released their first EP in February 2024 and called it ’A little goes a long way’. This record was released on CD, streaming and digital download. The track ‘I know it will never end’  was nominated for Country Music Television’s digital-first performance of the year at the CMT Music Awards.   Prior to that, after posting cover songs to their Instagram and Tik Tok accounts, they released their debut single ‘No. 7 Road’ which, along with five other tunes  on the EP was penned by the sisters.  Ironically, the one tune that the band recorded as a cover version (‘Hurricane’)  was the most successful single released from the EP.  Going back even further, the trio had never considered a career in music, but decided to give it a go following considerable interest from the music media and industry. 
 
I think you’ll find that The Castellows music is traditional but modern, and when on tour they employ various touring session musicians such as Justin Maynard on backing fiddle and guitar,..  The common thread (apart from their DNA) is their three part harmonies which IMO tend to blend, in order to create one voice, if that doesn’t sound too crazy!  The band are currently touring their own country, and next year will venture further afield into Canada, Panama, Berlin, London, Rotterdam & Belfast amongst other places.   Being a new group, they haven’t yet made an album, but on the previously mentioned EP, there are as many as seven tracks, and the one that I have requested Lex to play this week is a live version of  ‘No. 7 Road’, recorded via Red Bull Jukebox, Nashville.  This can be found here.

6th December 2024

Downloading & replaying is discontinued. However, tracks played on Friday evening were:

Fat Dog - Peace Song
Jarabe De Palo - La Flaca
Status Quo - Fakin' The Blues
Chloe Slater - Fig Tree
Duncan Dhu - En Algun Lugar
Sum 41 - Over The Edge
Michelle Gurevich - Shower
Sinner (Live) - The Last Dinner Party
(See "Titus writes" below)
Starcrawler - She Said
Porridge Radio - God Of Everything Else
Baton Rouge - True Love
You Say Party! We Say Die! - Monster
Red Hot Chili Peppers - Under the Bridge
The Unknowns - Heart in Two
Midland - Old Fashioned Feeling
Water From Your Eyes - Warm Storm

1st December 2024

Titus writes:

This blog is a first for me, in that I am featuring an all girl band for the second week running, having spent hours and hours researching.  The Last Dinner Party are a British Indie Rock Band formed in London in 2021.  I say 2021 because the members actually met in 2020 during Freshers’ week at King’s College, London, and decided to form a band, having attended gigs together at The Windmill. They apparently felt inspired by being a part of the scene around the venue, and were at first called The Dinner Party. The name was “inspired by the idea of a huge debauched dinner party where people came together to celebrate with a hedonistic banquet”.  Like in many instances, the covid pandemic put the skids on any live performances, and to a certain extent, rehearsing, so the band didn’t perform live until their first gig at The George, London in November 2021.  The group took a major step forward by supporting the Rolling Stones at the Hyde Park gig in July 2022.
 
The band renamed themselves The Last Dinner Party when they signed to Island Records, to avoid confusion with the jazz band Dinner Party, and their debut and hugely successful single ‘Nothing Matters’ was released in April 2023.  That year the band played at Glastonbury and Latitude, plus a live session for the BBC Radio 6 Music Show ‘New Music Fix Friday’. They were popular in media circles and  were arguably lucky enough to appear on Jools Holland’s TV programme in the Autumn of 2023.  They released their first (and so far only) studio album ‘Prelude to Ecstasy’ in February 2024, and they were not only nominated for, but also won the coveted ‘Rising Star’ award at the Brits this year.  In October 2024 they released a compilation LP ‘Prelude to Ecstasy: Acoustics and Covers’ which included IMO a superb cover of the Sparks classic ‘This town ain’t big enough for both of us’ (more about that later).
 
Their style was described by ‘Rolling Stone’ magazine as “art-rock bombast’, whatever that means.  Lead vocalist Abi has been compared to the late Freddie Mercury in that she seems onstage to be a natural extrovert & show person.  Just in case you were wondering that I had omitted to list the current  band members......well, I hadn’t forgotten. They are Abigail Morris, lead vocals; Lizzie Mayland, vocals, guitar and flute; Emily Roberts, lead guitar, mandolin, flute, vocals; Georgia Davies, bass and vocals; Aurora Nishevci, keyboards and vocals.  For live touring performances they use Casper Miles on drums.  The Last Dinner Party have also toured, and (not a lot of people know this) their first gig of their 2023 UK tour was at Blackpool Central  Library, as part of the ‘Get it loud in Libraries’ week. This tour was followed by a U.S. one, and this year they have been touring Europe, the U.K and Australia, supporting amongst others Florence and the Machine. 
 
I mentioned ‘This town ain’t big enough for both of us’ earlier on. Of the many blogs I’ve written over the last fourteen months or so, I’ve picked a request track for Lex to play on his programme. Sometimes it’s been close! On this occasion however, my decision was the closest yet, and ‘This town’ just missed out.  However, despite not being a cover versions person, this rendition of the 1974 Sparks’ song is in my opinion, quite superb and worth a listen or two. It can be found by clicking here, if you’d like to do that. I have been spoilt for choice by this extremely talented new band and my choice of track for Lex to play on ‘WTF is this’ this week is a live version of ‘Sinner’ which can be found here.