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Recent Posts
- Paying attention to Detail – in conversation with Claire Mahoney, author, magazine editor, and modernist
- Forever seems a long time – back in touch with Nicky Weller
- Darkening Sky lightens up your day – in praise of The Suncharms
- Discovering The Lost Boys of Carbis Bay – in conversation with cinematographer Daniel Simpkins
- Billy Bragg – a personal appreciation
- Up and rock ‘n’ rollin’ with the rest – back in touch with Slade’s Dave Hill
- Holding on for tomorrow… and all our yesterdays – talking Blur with Dave Rowntree
- Praise if you wanna – talking Paul Weller with Dan Jennings
- Stone Foundation – The Cornish Bank, Falmouth
- Hello? Is that the second greatest songwriter this world will ever know? – in praise of Vinny Peculiar’s Things Too Long Left Unsaid
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Tag Archives: Homegrown
Fill in the pages of tomorrows yet to be – talking Dodgy with Nigel Clark
What is it about dogs that they get vocal the moment interviews start? It’s normally my rescue lab-cross, Millie, but in this case Dodgy frontman Nigel Clark’s Bedlington whippet-cross is doing all the barking. “As soon as I say hello … Continue reading →
Posted in Books Films, TV & Radio, Music
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Tagged Andy Miller, Beck, Bromsgrove, Ceredigion, Chris Helme, Dodgy, Fela Kuti, Free Peace Sweet, Good Enough, Hollow Horse, Homegrown, Ian Broudie, John Bonham, Longbridge, Mathew Priest, Nigel Clark, Ray Davies, Redditch, Ribchester, Sly and the Family Stone, Smithers-Jones, Stand Upright in a Cool Place, Staying Out For The Summer, Stuart Thoy, Supernaturals, The Dodgy Album, The Kinks, The Who, What Are We Fighting For
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Dodgy / David John Jaggs – Ribchester Village Hall
There haven’t been a right lot of opportunities to stay out for the summer in my adopted Lancashire of late, but it all clicked right last Friday evening. It was as if Hollow Horse Events’ Carl Barrow had specially laid … Continue reading →
Holding Dodgy to the Light – the Mathew Priest interview
It’s been four years since festival favourites Dodgy returned to the fold, and 15 years since their double-platinum selling third album, Free Peace Sweet saw them at the peak of their commercial success. But don’t for one moment think their best days … Continue reading →