My Splatoon-obsessed son recommends In Filtration from Splatoon 3.
My Splatoon-obsessed son recommends In Filtration from Splatoon 3.
From Streets of Rage 2: Slow Moon by Yuzo Koshiro and Motohiro Kawashima.
Great choice. I’ve got this album on vinyl and it’s excellent from start to finish.
I’m enjoying Control. It’s pretty good fun to play, but the story has really grabbed me.
Cwtch is the most obviously Welsh word there.
Talk of the Devils (Manchester United podcast) The Athletic FC (general football) Kino Kingdom (movie podcast by two of my friends) By Far The Greatest Team (football history, my uncle is one of the hosts) The Rest is History (er, history) Doom Tomb (doom metal) Page 94 (UK politics)
The first Roman fort on the site of the castle was likely built around 55AD.
Exquisite Corpse by Poppy Z. Brite is an experience.
What Does Your Soul Look Like, Pt. 2, by DJ Shadow. On a weekend away, drinking wine with a Spotify playlist on.
There’s an excellent greentext with that as the punchline.
I’d play the hell out of that.
I work from home a lot so I can use my record player, and I’ve got all kinds of stuff ranging from Taylor Swift and Lana Del Rey to Electric Wizard and Monolord. I write for a gaming website on the side and often get sent soundtracks to review, so I can spend ages on that as well. It’s mostly what I’m in the mood for, although if I need to concentrate it has to be something without lyrics or I lose focus.
My 10-year-old son was hopelessly addicted to this for months.
Record collector here too. I can tell you exactly when I started, and it was when I saw a copy of Beggar’s Banquet by the Rolling Stones for 50p in a charity shop. Didn’t even have a record player at the time. Now I’ve got 471 records and counting and spend far too much money on the hobby.
“Schrödinger’s Jew”, as David Baddiel puts it.
I have to tell you that I’ve been compelled to listen to the Tiny Toon Adventures theme song on Spotify, because your username has been stuck in my head all evening.
That’s mesothelioma. You’re thinking of what happens when the doctor tells you you’ve got a different disease to the one you actually have.
It’s the OST - really nice edition.