Should you need relief after a long term, try a little hypnosis, Gregorian style. This chant is taken from a 1959 recording from the Abbey of Saint-Maurice and Saint-Maur, Clervaux in Luxembourg and is regarded as one of the gems of its type by the Gregorian cognoscenti. It was apparently recorded during Mass.
French electronic duo Daft Punk 'exploded' after 28 years last week via a farewell video showing them in their characteristic robot helmets and leather before one of them literally explodes. Dumb? Maybe, but they were anything but, mixing genres and record collections at will over 4 albums. Here is a 2013 track from the last album which, with its melancoly but uplifting dance, seems to come from almost any genre you want. Worth a listen whatever your taste.
You have to be a little suspicious of the 'died young, neglected in their lifetime' genius, but in the case of Nick Drake, Song of the Week would suggest the reputation is well-deserved. Despite reading English at Fitzwilliam College in Cambridge (he packed it in anyway), he went on to make 3 brilliant, largely acoustic, largely ignored, albums before his death in 1974, aged 26.
In the week we lost Mary Wilson, here are the Supremes (Mary on backing vocals) having a very good time with an audience who are also having a very good time. Stoned Love is from 1970, after Diana Ross had left, but is as good as anything they did. So put Teams on mute, turn off the camera and get dancing with Mary.
This song comes from the 1956 album Songs for Swingin' Lovers!, one of the albums Sinatra made with arranger Nelson Riddle which revived his musical career. The song was written much earlier, in 1923, but it was probably waiting for Frank to get hold of it. It's been said many times but just listen to Frank's phrasing as he tells you his story.
"Do I look for those millionaires like a Machiavellian girl would, when I could wear a sunset?" sings Kate, accompanied by a Macedonian bridal dance played on Uilleann pipes (I had to look that bit up, obviously).
If you don't know Kate Bush's music then there are worst ways of spending lockdown, from the teenage years of Wuthering Heights to the most recent (and pertinent) 50 Words for Snow. Yes, she does come up with 50.
Shaking off initial reputations is the curse of many artists (and mathematicians?). De La Soul found themselves labelled hip hop's hippies after the release of their first album and they have spent 30 years trying to shake it off. Mind you, they did claim they were transmitting live from Mars and rapped a lot about peace and harmony.
So in deference to their wish to be thought of as more than that first album, here is the biggest hit from that album. Peace and love.
As Konzertmeister in Weimar from 1714-1717, Bach was charged with providing a monthly diet of church cantatas. This one is from c1715. It was performed in Lecture Theatre 1 of the Andrew Wiles Building in October 2019 as part of our 'Sunday Service' collaborations with Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment. The Services will resume later in the year.
Your Song of the Week correspondent spent some of the holidays in a bubble with a mouse. Admittedly it was rather good at social distancing but for everyone who has had mouse issues in their house (or even their car, as a colleague has reported) here's Ronnie Hilton in the days before mice had heath and safety officers on site.