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Tuesday, 24 February 2026

Silver Heir - Hindenburg Variations



It gets rarer and rarer that I get surprised by a band or an album. This is one such band and album. A debut album from a New Jersey quartet that is wonderful Pop Rock that reminds me so much of prime time 10CC in the arrangements and the Eric Stewart like vocal.

Unusually, I let the band tell you about themselves as I was so taken with the wit that they offered up in their write up. Mainly melodic and mellow, it is when they break out that they excel even more. But first a song before their story.




"Many years ago, there was a band. They were a lot like your band, or your friend's band. There were four of them, they made music together in the mountains and they had a great time.

But they were kids and like many kids, they could not finish the assignment.The songs were never good enough (for them), the recordings were never good enough (for them), and frankly, they were not good live (for anyone). They heard the music in their heads, but when it came out the other end it was mangled, tortured, and self-conscious. It was a band only mothers and girlfriends could love."




"The years passed and the idealistic youngsters turned into "professionals." They married and were fruitful. They learned to finish assignments. But they did not hear the music anymore.

Then a great plague came over the land, and I don't mean to make light of it: it was a great plague, wasn't it? And one of the professionals thought: what am I doing here? And he heard the music again. And he brought the music to the other professionals, and they heard the music too. And they became as kids again, but kids with adult superpowers, like not letting the perfect be the enemy of the good, and holding each other accountable."




You can listen to and buy the album here.


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Monday, 23 February 2026

Listening To This Week Playlist 23 February

   


The maximum 30 songs this week. As ever, a mixture of what we are known for and some engaging surprises. We do go for depth, so I do urge all to listen to everything if you can. Listening back, it does feel a bit Power Pop heavy in the middle, but that allows you to listen before and after to the other delights.

The weekly playlist is largely for submissions, not just the usual stuff that we dig out ourselves. The song order is not about song preference, but how the playlist flows.  All embeds open in new windows to aid scrolling. Links to the artists will also appear on I Don't Hear A Single Social Media sites over the next 24 hours. This will help you to discover more about those who appear here. 


Weird Nightmare - Might See You There




Silver Heir - Big Storm




Prism Shores - Didn't Mean To Change My Mind




Pet Needs - Duckling




Mike Browning With Elena Rogers - Over And Under And All Around




Daily Worker - Anything Can Explode




Slip-Ons - Overtime




Shy Pit - Fuck




Sadlands - Bad Idea




The Blue Herons - Willow




Gunmoll - Gave My Love Away




Ex Norwegian - Don't Go Miles On Me




LOGRO - I Miss That Lousy Bus




Ryan Hamilton - The Come To Jesus Moment




Daniel Feinberg - Carry My Man




The Suncharms - Midnight Train




Richard Turgeon - Girl Like You




Holy Coves- Falling Down




Sorry Darling - Sorry Darling




The Foot & Leg Clinic - Where Did All The Fruit GO?




Mod Lang - In Advance




Mansfield - Much To Handle




SubPersona - Find Me A River Act II




Your Academy - Kind Of Love




The Smug Brothers - Interior Magnets




My Unicorn Dream - Room In The Oven




Wills Van Doorn - Ever Wonder Why




Special Friend - Clipping




The Needmores - Side X Side




Pom Femme - Sunny Side Up




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Captain Wilberforce - Another World. Another Life. Another Time

 


In a fair musical world Simon Bristoll's Captain Wilberforce would be massive. He seems to be destined to be another of those artists / bands that frustrate us when more don't seem to get them. Originally that was blamed on gatekeepers or labels who only wanted the fashionable.

The internet and ultimately Social Media were supposed to usher in an age were music could be picked up easily by all. Instead it provided a world where people believe music is free and therefore unless you are mega, it is now a second job,

Both didn't usher in a new world, they encouraged attention deficit, listeners like something and then a few listens onwards move onto the next without telling anyone else about what they've found. The only way forward may be for us to shout loudly as a group, ditto other great music places.



Captain Wilberforce has been with me forever. Now into the third decade, I've covered them on here and Anything Should Happen throughout. Bristoll's seemingly forever known as the English Neil Finn and that is apparent the slower songs here. When the pace picks up, the comparison becomes Squeeze, but there is far more here than just that.

Bristoll has a lyrical adeptness akin to Chris Difford, but a bit more worldly and the arrangements are out of this world. The Jangle Pop is present regularly, but usually mixed with something else such as Psych Pop on The Installation.



The arrangement on the UK New Wave of Christine, You're A Drag also has big hints of the 60s Beat.  Sonny even adds a great Brass arrangement and the closer, Lighter Shade Of Blue is Americana. Yet Four Words  And The Enter Key is rockier, with a killer riff and driving rhythm and a solo that catches you off guard.

It is Holding On that probably defines a base camp Bristoll song, great Pop Rock. The whole album is a testament to how great the Leeds scene is at the moment. These songs are largely stories, beautifully presented. I'll allow myself a cliche. This is the best album that Captain Wilberforce has ever made and with the best being so strong, that is some compliment. This album is magnificent. Go tell your friends.



You can listen to and buy the album here. It is available on CD and as a download.


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Where Have You Been?


 

This is a fair question. I haven't published as many reviews this month, but looking back, this happens most Februarys. The Best Of Year takes a lot of work and relistening. Whilst compiling it means nothing else is done or listened to during that fortnight. A big backlog is created and I always feel a bit tired. I do have to admit that it is great to see 2026 stuff knocking the Best Of Posts down the most viewed things.

The Listening To This Week Playlist continues and that takes up a fair bit of time, real life work is busy this month and the weather doesn't help motivation. You just want to get home and do nothing. So I felt that last week was a time that I wanted to just take a break from it all and so I did.

Normal Service is now resumed and two Album Reviews will follow this post, both extraordinarily good, and the new Listening To This Week will go up this evening. There will be Reviews during the rest of February. But remember that there is an onslaught in March with the regular 31 Reviews In 31 Days. 


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Daily Worker - Prefab Maverick.


Harold Whit Williams is some talent, a well known poet, ex guitarist of Cotton Mather and then we have the delight that is Daily Worker. Whereas, musically, Robert Harrison took one direction, this fellow went into a world of inventiveness left field. A world where he could take any direction he pleased and he does.

He can be incredibly off the scale, but also at ease with the mainstream. Psych Pop is never far away. Daily Worker's last album in 2025, Field Holler, was really well received here and appeared in our Best Albums Of 2025. You can read our review here.



As well as the constant originality on show, people forget what an incredible guitarist he is. Riffs that can be Power Pop or Fripp-esque. There is always room for a great Guitar Pop song and here, The New Insincerity is one such example and adds a great Jangle.

Elsewhere, Western Wear even has hints of 60s Pop and the title track is even jaunty, it fairly bops along with a shuffle and even has a vocal that sounds early Bolan. All of this is a complete opposite of the lyrical content.



Pop Knock Offs is a real punt at song retreads and Daily Worker are the best example of not doing this. There is a sense here, lyrically, of someone aging looking at the younger generation with a big sigh, not with anger, but weariness. You won't hear this kind of quality elsewhere.



You can listen to and buy the album here. It is available on Vinyl or as a download.



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Tuesday, 17 February 2026

Vocabularies - For The Hundredth Time

 


I think many of you know how much of a sucker I am for Angular Guitar albums. Such affairs offer such clarity whilst dispensing with all those massive arrangements getting in the way. They get straight to the point built around beguiling riffs.

This is one such album. New Jersey's Ryan Young and Scott Radway are Vocabularies. Getting the comparisons out of the way, there's a mixture of early XTC, The Sugarplatic, Field Music and The Futureheads with a slightly more aggressive tone.




Young is vocalist, Guitarist and Bass Player, Radway, the drummer. Radway also mixes the album. The main difference to other such albums, is how locked in the pair are as a rhythm section. The Bass and Drums are completely locked in.

At times that linking sounds positively UK New Wave at others, it could be Tony Levin and Robert Fripp Discipline Era. There is variety too. Plank II mixes Post Punk with Funk, but also adds a Prog interlude. Method Actor mixes Psych with Indie inventiveness.




They are at their best though when the Angular takes hold, a Power Trio vibe kicks in wonderfully.The Ruling Class and Same Stone are the best examples. However special mention must be given to Conspiracies and Theories Thereof which closes the album. Built on a killer riff with an unexpected hypnotic chorus. It rounds off an album of extraordinary quality.




You can listen to and buy the album here. An absolute bargain at 5 dollars.


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My Son The Doctor - Glamours


 

Slacker Rock excellence from the Brooklyn quartet that nails the genre beautifully, yet also gets close to the current noisier breed of Power Pop. This is a cracking listen, such a fun experience, surprisingly lyrically adept, which is not a norm for this type of stuff.

A wonderfully arranged affair with songs that take surprise directions, riffs that explode, quieter songs that get noisy. There's a real wit in the writing that you spot early on. Incredibly melodic joy, but an ability to switch to a rock out.



Throughout, there's a sort of Weezer feel, but a much heavier version. A Shonda is real intelligent Indie, left field and angular, a little Talking Heads, with a killer guitar workout matched by a driving rhythm section. It is magnificent.

Drunk Kids gets more Pop Punk without losing any of the variance. Greatest On VHS is pacier, more Noo Yawk, a little Punkier, almost Garage Rock. Pink Banana is everything that you could want in an Indie song, urgent, but all over the place but completely engrossing.



The two singles are top notch. Barry Bonds initially broods before becoming an anthem and a sing along, wonderful storytelling. You've heard Lawrence Bigando on the current LTTW Playlist, a corking effort that at times gets a little Sugarplastic until the chorus.

Then there is Julie, a song that sounds so UK 80s Guitar Indie, another great song, as all 10 songs here are. An album that tells stories and yet Rocks at will. Inventive, Slacker Rock at its very very best. What an absolute joy this is.



You can listen to and buy the album here. It is available on Vinyl and as a download.


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