![]() ![]() ![]() Even if they had just produced Abba and then stopped that would have been enough, but there has been so much more. Of course my knowledge of Swedish electronic music is scant, but it has been noticeable over the last 50 years or so, that Sweden has punched above it’s weight in terms of its musical contribution to the world. Like my moon series, it seems to be a song that just keeps on giving. How bizarre then that just as we are back together again as a family, my daughter is discovering something for the first time that could possibly have been listened to both by her parents and her grandparents in its different guises. He apparently wrote it whilst recovering from an attack by a gang and was trying to “envision an alternate reality, the dream of a peaceful and joyful celebration of life”. The song was written in 1969 by Sherman Kelly who was the brother of the King Harvest drummer. NEIMY).Īlthough the version I am most familiar with is the one by Toploader from 1999, this time last year I had just discovered the original from 1972 by King Harvest which we all agreed at the time had the edge. Since DD returned home a month ago, I can’t help but take heed of what she is currently listening to, and this song has been regularly played on her various devices over the last couple of weeks – Dancing In The Moonlight by Swedish electronic duo Jubël (feat. The sturgeon is not the most attractive looking fish, it must be said, and not the most attractive sounding name either (I feel for our First Minister), but the moon always lends itself to some very attractive sounding songs, and by sheer coincidence I’m going to share a different version of the song featured this same weekend last year. August was when these huge freshwater fish could be found in lakes and rivers ![]() #DANCING IN THE MOONLIGHT SONG FULL#Regulars around here know that throughout 2018 I became immersed in all things moon-related, and after discovering that all full moons have a name (given to them by the Native Americans who kept track of the months by the lunar calendar), I managed to find an appropriate song for each one, which in turn led to an interesting new series. Last weekend I did return to the topic none of us seem to be able to avoid at the moment, but won’t go down that route again today, so my old friend the moon is going to be my saviour, as a full moon (the Sturgeon Moon) is due to put in an appearance on Monday night. (Sadly none of these are fit for the role of “guest post” over at one of my fellow blogger’s places, but I do have a few ideas up my sleeve for those too, promise.) A Moon Shaped Pool is named after an ellipse, but it's Radiohead's least elliptical album in many, many years, and that emotional leap, in its way, represents as significant a step forward as any of the vaunted musical reinventions the band has pulled off before now.Having just looked back at my blog post from this same weekend last year, I seem to be faced with exactly the same dilemma – Not a lack of inspiration, but instead just too many ideas to choose from, and I currently have five drafts on the go. "I'm doing no harm / As my world comes crashing down / I'll be dancing, freaking out." After so many albums teeming with charmingly cryptic poetry, it's a shock to hear Yorke speak so frankly about his inner life here - comparable at times to the radical shift his friend Björk made for last year's masterful Vulnicura. He finds some solace in the forward momentum of "Present Tense": "Keep it light and keep it moving," he sighs over a lightly loping acoustic guitar figure. "Broken hearts make it rain," he repeats until it becomes a mantra of acceptance on "Identikit," a seductive spectral-funk groove laced with that same sadness. "I feel this love turn cold," Yorke sings on the pretty, mournful vignette "Glass Eyes," the album's shortest and most plainspoken song. But you don't have to play anything backward to detect signs that A Moon Shaped Pool is a breakup album. ![]()
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