VitaminQ - a temple of trivia lists and curious words
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~ Friday, March 19, 2004
BYGONES Things you don’t often see any more: 1 horse troughs 2 brushed nylon sheets 3 bellows 4 cakestands 5 football pools coupons 6 milk floats 7 inkwells 8 nightcaps 9 three-wheeled cars 10 Black Maria policevans 11 savings stamps 12 mangles and wringers 13 pocket watches 14 milk bottles 15 jew’s harps 16 carbolic soap 17 tank tops 18 flat irons 19 powdered orange juice 20 hairnets 21 starting handles 22 combination underwear 23 solid toothpaste 24 snake belts 25 pawn shops 26 half-time scoreboards 27 leather school satchels 28 basques 29 scrubbing boards 30 car running boards 31 shorthand 32 shaving strops 33 school belts for punishment 34 cassette personal stereos 35 twin tub washers 36 lace-up footballs 37 radio shops 38 toasting forks 39 shuffleboard 40 tea cosies and egg cosies I’d like VitQ readers to send more ideas for this list. Please, no brand names, short-lived fads (eg hula hoop) or people (eg milkmaids). Apologies again to regular readers for the infrequency of new posts. This is due to requiring lots of new material for the forthcoming book version and also since I am off to the US on a reading tour next weekend and will be moving house on my return. Normal trivial service should resume in a few weeks and I’ll try to post new lists when I can. Do browse the huge archive if you’re new to all this. Roddy ~ Friday, March 12, 2004
LOAD OF CRAP 20 meanings of the word crap from old Scots: 1 a fir-cone 2 the throat 3 the luck-giving first water drawn from a well on New Year’s Day 4 to pick flowers 5 the horizon 6 to crop 7 the top leaves of a plant 8 thick part of whey 9 the stomach 10 a harvest of produce 11 part of a plough 12 the topmost part of something 13 a short haircut 14 an amount of grain being dried 15 the place where wall and ceiling meet 16 crept 17 a bird’s crop 18 to moan or ask awkward questions 19 to stuff 20 a wild mustard seed-pod ~ Friday, March 05, 2004
ECLECTIC PLECTRUM The tracks for a perfect male singer-songwriter CD: 1 Bob Dylan - Dirge (so hard to pick a Dylan but, of my favourites, this is the most singer-songwritery; a dark start to a dark selection) 2 Jon Brion - Hook Line and Sinker (achingly fine recent song from the musician better known as a producer and power-pop maven) 3 Cat Stevens - The First Cut is the Deepest (much-covered, but never bettered; an exemplary piece of pop music) 4 Van Morrison - Sweet Thing (some prefer the wilder moments of Astral Weeks, but I’ve always admired Van pop skills and his way with the love song) 5 Nick Drake - Joey (from forgotten cult folk singer to tired music hack’s yardstick, Nick’s posthumous years have been trying; why he never released this early song - perhaps his best - we’ll never know) 6 Cathal Coughlan - Dark Parlour (fine and moody moment from the multi-talented Irish songwriter) 7 Thomas Dolby - Airwaves (one of the finest songs ever written about New York) 8 James Taylor - Sweet Baby James (upbeat piece of Americana from the star known for too few of his many good numbers) 9 Kevin Tihista - Sucker (a great simple but catchy song, Elliott Smith-like, but with a lighter touch) 10 Leonard Cohen - Stories of the Street (his finest moment happened early on; one of the few songs where the lyrics stand up as good poetry) 11 Joe Jackson - It’s Different For Girls (this may have the most faultless first 30 seconds around) 12 Elliott Smith - Waltz # 2 (XO) (poor Elliott; this song obsessed me for a while - it eats your brain; it still gets me every time, from those first 1-2-3 drumbeats on) 13 John Cale - Ship of Fools (it has one of the loveliest refrains in rock music) 14 Alex Chilton - The EMI Song (a beautiful track from the turbulent solo years of the former Big Star star) 15 Ron Sexsmith - In a Flash (a highlight from the consistent Canadian troubador) 16 Gordon Grahame - Campfire Song (a favourite number by former Lost Soul Band leader and the UK music business’s most overlooked talent) 17 Jackie Leven - Wrapped Up in Blue (sad, but spot-on closer from one of the under-rated Scots soul / folk singer’s recent LPs) 18 Steve Harley - Nothing is Sacred (moody strumalong number with drug-addled lyrics about a dark night of the soul in mid-Europe) 19 Elvis Costello - Alison (one of the century’s best ballads) 20 Martin Stephenson - Rain (atmospheric piece of Cohenesque from the mid 80s by the warm-hearted Northern English songwriter) 21 Bob Mould - Sinners and Their Repentances (moving and mournful last track from his solo masterpiece Workbook) |