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Ever Friday, we give away a voucher worth TWENTY FIVE euros to spend at any of the many Golden Discs stores nationwide.
All we ask from you is a tune we can play at an unspecified time next week.
This week’s theme: Pet Shop Boys
What song from the three-decade career of enigmatic synth pop duo Neil Tennant (above right) and Chris Lowe (left) remains always on your mind, forcing you to ask, quite reasonably: what have I done to deserve them?
To enter, please complete this sentence.
‘Pet Shop Boys’ greatest moment would have to be ___________________________________owing to its_______________________’
Lines MUST close at 2.45pm EXTENDED until 6.15pm MIDNIGHT!
Thanks Bertie
Housekeeping
atLast week, with a voucher worth TWENTY FIVE euros to spend at any of the many Golden Discs stores nationwide on offer, we asked you: Name the finest song in the Elvis Costello canon?
You answered in your dozens.
But there could be only one winner
In reverse order then…
Scottser writes:
The stand out track from the Elvis Costello songbook would have to be Oliver’s Army owing to its relentlessly catchy chorus, it’s infectious motown-inspired backbeat and it’s edgy use of the term ‘white n1gger’. it was also the stand out track on 10 year old Scottser’s first hits compliation tape.
Dub Spot writes:
The stand out track from the Elvis Costello songbook would have to be “Watching the Detectives” owing to its super wry lyrics and dry delivery over a killer rhythm track.’ Lyrics so good even the Duran Duran cover was awesome!
Cool_Hand_Lucan writes:
The stand out track from the Elvis Costello songbook would have to be (I Don’t Want to Go to) Chelsea owing to its sinister baseline, sneering vocals, street poet lyrics and the fact that it’s a damn sexy track in spite of the fact that it’s sung by a fella named Declan MacManus.
Brother Barnabas writes:
You won’t ever hear it on the radioand it won’t make it onto any greatest hits compilation but the stand out elvis costello track, for me, is ‘battered old bird’. it’s probably not the best song on Blood & Chocolate, but it holds its own (and more) – no small feat when you’re talking about one of the most sublimely beautiful albums ever made.
What makes it stand out, though, is that with zero fuss it announced MacManus as a master storyteller-songwriter. He’d already shown that he could do punk, rock, folk, 3-minute pop, new wave, whatever else, but never that kind of linear-sequence story-song thing. that was more associated with Bob Dylan, Tom Waits, Nick Cave. but, with this one song, he showed he could do the structure, progression, lyricism, tempo and gradual unraveling as well as anyone.
Actually, Dylan played it fairly regularly when he had his radio show on sirius. introducing it once, he compared the span of characters in it to his own ‘Desolation Row’ and the sense of despair and absurdity in it to Tom Waits’ ‘Murder in the Red Barn’. it’s the story of the boarding house in Birkenhead where MacManus lived as a child with his mother. it’s worth a few listens….
Scary Lady writes:
Veronica – because it reminds me of my grandmother and it’s a really moving reminder that behind the facade of old age still lies a carefree, cheeky young woman. It’s about the only portrayal of dementia in song and the combination of the lyrics and music make you like and admire, rather than pity, the subject. It’s perhaps not his greatest work (Imperial Bedroom is) but it’s the song that means the most to me.
Winner…
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=esjrHxpiet0
Friscondo writes:
Shipbuilding, owing to its innate, subtle, bitter sadness, about the futile ordinariness of war. The shambles that Britain finds itself in today, could arguably be traced back to the resurgence of English nationalism that the Malvinas war evoked. The last gasp of an already dead empire.
“A new winter coat and shoes for the wife, and a bicycle on the boys birthday,” is a beautiful line in a beautiful song. It’s Costello’s masterpiece, and as if to emphasise that, you only have to listen to Robert Wyatt’s hauntingly magnificent cover of it, to hear the reverence other artists treat his work with.
It’s theme is universal, yet its expression is on a deeply human scale. The sons and daughters of those who take their countries to war, almost never die in these conflicts. As relevant today, as the day it was written.
Thanks all
Last week: Pump It Up
‘Of Land & Sea’ is a series of festive pop up dinners in the Royal Hibernian Gallery, Ely Square, Dublin 2 organised by Native Spaces, a culinary collective working with small scale producers.
‘Of Land & Sea’ promises a feast of “gastronomy and mixology fit for Dublin’s food lovers and craft beverage enthusiasts” over two nights this Xmas.
Fancy going for NOTHING?
Michael Reddy, of Native Spaces, writes:
The core theme of ‘Of Land & Sea’ is to support local, craft and artisan producers by presenting their produce in new and exciting pairings.
The menu will be designed by chef Kevin Murphy (Idas Dingle) and Pieter Reid (Native Blenders).
This intimate dining experience will be presented over two evenings from December 14-15th.
Tickets can be purchased individually or as a group (30 people max).
Tickets are priced at €50 (excluding ticket service charge) each which includes a complimentary welcome drink in addition to the 3 course meal with 3 craft beverages paired to each course.
Native Spaces have a pair of FREE tickets for a Broadsheet reader and a guest to dine on either night.
Do you know someone who could use a night out?
To enter, please complete this sentence.
‘I will be taking____________________________[name of friend/relative], who richly deserves a slap-up meal, particularly this year owing to__________________________________’
Lines MUST close at 9.45pm MIDNIGHT!
‘Of Land & Sea’- A Christmas Series @ Coppa Cafe in the RHA Gallery (*EventBrite)
Irish-made stocking fillers to broadsheet@broadsheet.ie marked ‘Irish-made Stocking Fillers’. NO fee.
‘sup?
A report from accountants PwC has revealed Dublin is now the third-most attractive city in Europe for investors in property, up from seventh a year earlier.
The growth of big tech companies such as Facebook and Google is adding to the demand for housing.
The report said this was behind the growth of so-called “build-to-rent” housing, in which developers build whole apartment blocks to be sold off to big landlords.
Joanne Kelly, real estate leader at PwC Ireland, said big investors had shifted towards residential property in recent years.
Foreign investors rush to cash in on our housing crisis (Independent.ie)
David Chabily writes:
Why is nothing being discussed about, at the least temporarily, banning foreign investors from sucking up Irish property?
New Zealand have already done this, and likely Berlin will too.
Anyone?
Pic: Shutterstock









































