Monday, 16 February 2026
Homunculi
Sunday, 15 February 2026
XVI
At the start of 2010 I was looking to find a home for a thousand word piece on Ronnie Lane I'd recently written. Record Collector had commissioned me three months earlier but in the interrvening period the magazine had had a shake up at the top and the new editor no longer wanted it. Bastards. I rang round other mags/periodicals but nobody was biting. Fuck it, I thought, I'll put it out myself. So after a couple of conversations with my good friend Mondo (you can still find him & Piley at Ship Full of Bombs with their splendid radio show/podcast Podrophenia), he persuaded me to become a blogger.
Saturday, 14 February 2026
(Not) Saturday Snapshots #2
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| Polish Parish of Our Lady of Częstochowa, Nottingham |
It was too nice a day today not to go wandering. So, armed with nothing more than a camera and a spring in my step I ventured forth. Walking into town this morning was a joy, not a chore. The world looks different when the sun shines; just ask C over at Sun Dried Sparrows.
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| Nottingham Trent University |
I took dozens of photos but thought I'd share just a couple with you here; simply to prove to you (in case you were housebound today) that the sun really did shine all day and the sky really was as blue as it looks here. In stark contrast to the first six weeks of this year which appear to have been filmed in monochrome by mistake. Visage could have written a song about the first month and a half of 2026.
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I explained last time around that my Saturday snapshots are not to be confused with Saturday Snapshots; that's something else altogether.
Monday, 9 February 2026
Visibility: moderate to poor
Saturday, 7 February 2026
The last bus is long gone
It's hard to get your head around the fact that Phil Lynott left us 40 years ago. He was just 36. No age at all. But I guess when you're addicted to heroin you tear up any long term plans you may be carrying. In the relatively short time he was around he wrote and recorded some seminal songs - songs that have become part of the rock and roll firmament. Walk into any self respecting rock club on the planet and it's only a matter of time till you hear the strains of Jailbreak or The Boys Are Back in Town. Bankers both.
But I loved it when he dropped it down a gear.. Dancing in the Moonlight was sublime. And, funnily enough, was always destined to be a jazz standard! If you don't believe me, take a listen to what Loah's done with Lynott's mini masterpiece.
Loah: Dancing in the Moonlight (2026)
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Phil Lynott (1949-1986)






