Music in a Time of Covid…

 With a nod to Gabriel Garcia Marquez – I want to talk about listening to music without which, I for one would find the world a grey place indeed! I do not lightly recommend Apps but as we sojourn in Crete, we are only able to enjoy BBC Radio 4 without which my beloved Barbara cannot get to sleep, by virtue of Radio Garden! This clever facility allows you to rotate a globe and zoom in to any internet radio station anywhere in the world and tune in to their offerings. This includes BBC stations despite the corporation’s determination that nobody, anywhere in the world shall listen to them because they do not pay a licence fee!!!

So in this time of renewed lockdowns – take a trip, tune in drop-out, take a slow boat to China, or see what they listen to in the Aleutian Isles or see what everybody does in Hawaii. Local news and international music – it can be enlightening as to the nature of our global village. For sure, the pandemic has made us – if we were not already – more aware of the fact that we are living in a global village with all the consequences as such. My partner and I have escaped lockdown (and the weather) in England and there may have been very few cases of Covid 19 here in Crete, but the cases in Greece are on the rise as they are everywhere… all the more reason to lose yourself in music.

Of course, not all musical discoveries have been via Radio Garden, my sister-in-law, our new neighbour, recommended an Athens based station which we now also tune into all day on our televisions – KOSMOS. (Our television is rather alarmingly named F&U). KOSMOS is an extraordinarily eclectic mix of music blues, pop, rap, world music, Italian, Spanish, Brazilian, North African – it’s all there and if we can’t understand the DJs – it matters not as they don’t talk too much. Another app which I like to use quite frequently is Shazam, in a quest to either identify music I recognize but cannot always remember who it is by or to add new artists to my Spotify lists. KOSMOS has offered lots of new tracks or interesting covers yet the usually infallible and fast to identify, Shazam, has frequently drawn blanks. I can only assume that these (mainly European covers are too obscure to have been added to Shazam’s database. Anyway, eclecticism is always the sign of a good radio station for me – I understand that in America, stations are totally specialized which I absolutely hate…

In other matters, today is the day of the US Presidential Election – the result of which we await with bated breath. If Trump falls, perhaps other right-wing abominations around the world may follow…

U is for UB40

This post is part of the A to Z 2020 Challenge. I have decided to theme the posts around personal and societal responses to the Covid 19 crisis, including my resumption of Blogging!


Two days ago I said how important music was to me (and it’s still not too late to join the game ) – not only listening to the music itself, but the musicology – the story of where the music came from, the influences, the writers, composers, and even the producers and my relationship to the music of UB40 typifies how music has changed for me and I suspect lots of others.

When I met my partner back in the mid 80’s, I did not like spending money on myself, so she made up for that on birthdays and Christmas by buying me lots of music! UB40’s “Labour of Love” was one such (vinyl) album and featured the chart-topping “Red, Red Wine” – a cover of the 1967 Neil Diamond song but in the 1968 reggae styled version by Tony Tribe. This album gave rise to the idea that all UB40’s songs were covers but this is not the case yet the band with a very mixed ethnicity make-up, was very influenced by Ska, early Reggae and Lovers Rock. By the time they hit the big time and went to Jamaica, they were looking forward to meeting their musical roots who in turn were looking forward to the band which had given their careers a much-needed boost!


Named for the form issued to unemployed people applying for the dole, the members of UB40 hailed from Birmingham and were all unemployed when they formed up and indeed – their first album was called “Signing Off” to signify that they no longer needed to claim unemployment benefit. But all of these details had to wait for the internet to develop before I could become aware of them.

Meanwhile, CD’s came and went and now we have Spotify as my default way to listen to music. Now I have more musicology on the internet than I know what to do with, concerts on TV, access to many groups whole back catalogues yet I still have that first UB40 vinyl album given to me by my beloved – and hey! Guess what? Vinyl records are back and we can again dream of affording a bigger and better hi-fi system,  maybe with exposed valve amplifier – nah! Just play me UB40 on any tinny device and you will find me singing along.

S is for Sugar – A music game for our times…

This post is part of the A to Z 2020 Challenge. I have decided to theme the posts around personal and societal responses to the Covid 19 crisis, including my resumption of Blogging!


If this blog is to reflect its creator, then there has not been enough Music present! The following is a game I invented for long car journeys but it could be played in the present social isolation, by text, on Zoom or even in the comments of a blog…


The game is really word association but in the form of song titles, lines from songs or the names of bands. you go round the circle sparking off the last person’s offering, no repetition though you could have a line from a song whose title has previously been used. For me, it’s not about keeping score, but if you are really competitive, then it’s negative scoring – you lose a point for getting stuck or for an incorrect challenge so it is the one who has the least negative score who wins! Yes, you can challenge if you cannot see the association of another’s song with the previous one. Enjoy! I will start with The Archies classic hit…

A:- Sugar, Sugar
B:- Brown Sugar
C:- Brown Girl in the Ring
A:- Hurricane
C:- What! How does that follow?
A:- It’s Dylans song about a boxing champion who performs in the ring!
B:- Okay so then I’ll go with Blow the Winds Southerly
C:- Weather Report 
A:- A Change Is Gonna Come
B:-Better be home soon… 
C:- I don’t know if that’s tenuous or very clever! Home Sweet Home
A:- My sweet little Alice Blue Gown
B:- Tupelo Honey
C:- Honey Child
A:-Sweet Child of Mine
B:- You must have had the cutest little baby face
C:- Baby Love
A:-Love to Love you Baby
B:- Love is the Drug
C:- Cocaine
A:-I’m Waiting for My Man
B:- Brotherhood of Man
C:- He Aint Heavy He’s My Brother!


And so it goes! Please comment starting with your response to the last song above or following that, the comment before yours…