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.

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.

In 1960, during a concert in Berlin, Ella launched in to Kurt Weill and Bertolt Brecht's Mack the Knife, by now a jazz standard. Only Ella couldn't remember the words. Not that it made any difference. Check out the Louis Armstrong impersonation. And enjoy the voice.

In the week of the Nobel Prize presentation it is only appropriate that Song of the Week should come from a Nobel Prize winner. Unfortunately neither Einstein or Niels Bohr took to the recording studio (though Einstein loved Mozart and Bach) so here is the 2016 winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature, Bob Dylan. A controversial choice though Bob's Nobel lecture, taking in Buddy Holly, Dickens and Moby Dick, is well worth checking out.

The album cover said it all. Instead of the usual smiling Marvin getting ready to sing about love lost and found, here was a man uncertain in the rain. But then as he said, he had a lot to think about. War, enviromental disaster, police brutality, social and racial divisions. The record company (Motown) were nervous, but Marvin got his way. It will be 50 years old in 2021.

Minimalist American composer John Adams said of 'Short Ride:' "You know how it is when someone asks you to ride in a terrific sports car, and then you wish you hadn't?"

If you get chance go and see it live. Come to think of it, if you get chance go and see anything live.

This version is from the 2014 BBC Proms conducted by Marin Alsop.

Back in the 70s, even hard-bitten punks had a grudging respect for ABBA. After all it was clear that these guys could write songs. 'The Name of the Game' is a perfect example. Most bands would have squeezed 4 songs out of it, but Benny and Bjorn were on a roll. Agnetha and Anni-Frid each have solo parts. 'Dancing Queen', 'SOS' et al are great - as are lesser-known songs such as 'Angel Eyes' - but this, despite a silly if ironic video, might just be their masterpiece. 

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