I Can See You - by Paddy Summerfield c. 1986

Friday, November 07, 2025

Robyn Hitchcock & The Venus 3 "Olé! Tarantula” 2006 | TWILIGHTZONE

 Robyn Hitchcock & The Venus 3 "Olé! Tarantula" 2006

In 2004, Robyn Hitchcock's loose and folky Spooked saw the insect- and crustacean-loving eccentric enlisting the unlikely help of NPR darlings David Rawlings and Gillian Welch...
...This time around he's backed by "3/4s of the Minus 5 and half of R.E.M." (Peter Buck, Scott McCaughey, and Bill Rieflin) as well as ex-Soft Boys Kimberley Rew and Morris Windsor, Faces keyboardist Ian McLagan, Harvey Danger's Sean Nelson, and ex-President of the United States of America Chris Ballew. A small army indeed, but a tasteful one. Olé! Tarantula sounds like a trip back to the iconic singer/songwriter's early A&M days. Long, Byrds-inspired harmonies, jangly electric guitars, and random bursts of piano, harmonica, and saxophone pepper the collection in fits, seasoning Hitchcock's already delicious wordplay with exactly the right amount of spice. Opener "Adventure Rocket Ship" sounds like a lost track from Underwater Moonlight, the kind of confident psychedelic rocker that used to spill from the anti-bard's leafy pen like battery acid in the early to mid-'80s. That confidence coupled with the tight, road-ready band vibe permeates Tarantula's swollen belly, allowing only one or two forays into the esoteric balladry that has become the norm for the artist's post-Egyptians catalog. With the jaunty "'Cause It's Love (Saint Parallelogram)," co-written by XTC's Andy Partridge, the creepy and dissonant "Red Locust Frenzy," and the impossibly ridiculous title cut, the former "Man with the Light Bulb Head" has distilled the best of each of his eras into one big shambling creature. Lyrically, he's still obsessed with crabs, eggs, tomatoes, and things that are fleshy, furry, and spindly, but his greatest strength has always been his ability to toss a clear nugget of profundity into his most surrealist rants. In the warm, weird, and nostalgic "Belltown Ramble," he manages to rope an Uzbek warlord, email and R.E.M. into a motor-mouthed stroll through town and time that's bolstered by the wisdom that "It's an independent life/And you want to see your eyes/Reflected in the world" and the notion that "The burning train is back in your hometown." It's that perfect balance of sadness, vitriol, and absurdity that makes Hitchcock (when he's on) such a legendary social commentator. He's the jester, the king, the convict, and the executioner all wrapped up into one. - 

And still the Robyn Hitchcock keep on coming . . . . . remembering RYP said he didn’t have everything! How we doing?

MUSIC FOR BIG EARS | Butterboy

 

VA - music for big ears (a butterboy compilation) (6 x CDs)

now here’s an interesting idea (more of a thesis really!)

as Butterboy explains:


 

LISTENING BEYOND THE SURFACE


VA - music for big ears (a butterboy compilation) (6 x CDs)

Music for Big Ears isn’t about volume, it’s about depth. It’s a phrase that honors the kind of listening that goes beyond hooks and choruses, into the emotional marrow of a song. This 6 CD set invites that kind of attention: cinematic, poetic, and quietly radical. These aren’t songs that shout, they unfold, whisper, and linger.

Across this sprawling collection, we hear artists who treat sound as storytelling. Gene Clark’s The Same One opens with spectral grace, while Judee Sill’s The Archetypal Man and The Kiss blend theological metaphor with baroque pop precision. Tim Buckley’s Love from Room 109 stretches time itself, a 10-minute meditation on longing and memory. Fred Neil, Laura Nyro, and David Ackles offer songs that feel like letters never sent intimate, unresolved, deeply human.

The term Big Ears also speaks to emotional openness. It’s about sitting with ambiguity, hearing the ache in Wendy & Bonnie’s Endless Pathway, the surreal shimmer of Julia Holter’s In the Green Wild, or the quiet devastation in Mark Hollis’s A Life (1895-1915). These tracks reward patience. They ask you to lean in.

There’s cinematic texture throughout. David Axelrod’s Mental Traveler, Max Richter’s On the Nature of Daylight, and Harold Budd/Brian Eno’s The Pearl evoke landscapes more than scenes, you don’t just hear them, you inhabit them. Even folk-rooted cuts like Karen Dalton’s Something on Your Mind or Townes Van Zandt’s Quicksilver Daydreams of Maria carry visual weight, as if the lyrics were painted in brushstrokes.

And then there’s abstraction. Lucrecia Dalt, Arve Henriksen, Matana Roberts, and Meredith Monk push the boundaries of form, inviting us to hear music as philosophy, as ritual, as breath. These are songs for listeners who crave nuance, who find beauty in imperfection and meaning in silence.

Music for Big Ears reflects emotional intelligence, sonic curiosity, and cultural preservation. It’s a listening practice, a way of honoring the overlooked, the fragile, the profound.

I’m not sure who first used that phrase in response to one of my posts, but it stirred something. It reminded me of a particular way we listen, not just with our ears, but with attention, emotion, and curiosity. So, thank you, whoever you were, for sparking that memory. Here are 121 tracks that ask you to use your big ears. (Butterboy)


Check link for track listing but you are going to want to check this out! Honest!

Suffice to say it includes many favourites from Brian Eno, Wayne Coyne, Nick Drake, Joan Baez and Andy Fairweather-Low to Richard & Linda Thompson, Jim Croce, Joanna Newsom to Anne Briggs, John Cale , Kevin Ayers, Scott Walker to Terry Reid and Vashti Bunyon to Bridget St. John to Townes Van Zandt

Noddy | Hello yoshi Wiki | Fandom


You might as well dance . . . . .

Friday you say?!


You dancin’?

Jitterbugging engineers at Fort Bragg 1942


SQUEEZE DRUMMER DIES

 BREAKING: Gilson Lavis dead: Squeeze star and Jools Holland drummer dies as icon pays tribute

Gilson Lavis, who was the drummer in Squeeze in the 1970s and 1980s died at his home last night, the news was announced by Jools Holland.



Now we have, courtesy of Jobe and the gang over at HQ (Floppy Boot Stomp and The Voodoo Wagon) been posting some lovely Squeeze lately and it is sad timing but we should mention Jools' long time drummer for his Big Band and Squeeze earlier on


He was simply a legend


Jools Holland and Gilson Lavis ‘ So Long’ 1997

Jools “A band is only as good as it’s drummer"

FILM NEWS! MUPPET FILM RUMOURED! (who you callin’ a muppet?)


Muppet Fact #1605


Jennifer Lawrence and Emma Stone are set to produce a new film in the works at Disney about Miss Piggy. Cole Escola is said to be writing the screenplay. 

Lawrence also said when asked on Las Culturistas  that there's a chance she and Stone will co-star in the film. 



 

The Bowling Balls - You don’t know (what it’s like to be alone in the house)

 You don’t know (what it’s like to be alone in the house)

The Bowling Ballsimage



HERBERG DE KELDER

Have we had the Bowling Balls before? Can’t recall don’t think so but this is great

Sueperman’s Big Sister - Ian Dury and The Blockheads TopPop 11/11/1980

 Another visit with the Guvnor . . . . . again someone posted (A CLIP!?) from this a TopPop appearance on TV from the Netherlands and I post here especially as the strings caught my eardrobes!

Sueperman's Big Sister
Ian Dury & The Blockheads
Laughter 11/11/1980

well it IS Friday!