Bananas, Jumpers & Red Herrings

The recent popularity of Scandinavian crime fiction and its various adaptations has brought characters such as Lisbeth Salander and Kurt Wallander to a wider audience outside of the (fictional) Swedish terrain they normally inhabit. Over the last few months, a detective called Sarah Lund has been added to that list. A schoolgirl has been murdered in Copenhagen and Lund has been put in charge of finding the killer. This forms the premise for a show that was originally titled Forbrydelsen (Crime) in its native land, but goes by the moniker of The Killing for its British screening. It was originally shown four years ago on Danish TV and has been making its way all over Europe before turning up on BBC Four ten weeks ago. It’s a 20-part series that’s set in and around Copenhagen over three consecutive weeks during November. Each hour-long episode covers a 24-hour period and begins in the afternoon and finishes in the darkness of the following evening. The characters and the viewers are kept in the dark for most of the series, with the occasional flicker of light peeping through from time to time

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Peeling in the Years

John Peel died on this day six years ago and Webbie over at Football & Music has decided to commemorate the great man by getting bloggers and users of social media to put up a track from a Peel session by one their favourite acts. You can read more about it and find out what other bloggers are up to over at Keeping It Peel. Peel started recording sessions in 1967 and these continued right up to his death in 2004. Unsurprisingly, The Fall recorded the most (24) with David Gedge matching that figure as part of The Wedding Present and also Cinerama. Some of the biggest acts from the British Isles such as The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, The Sex Pistols, The Clash, Radiohead and U2 never recorded a Peel session, while Lulu, The Shadows, Gerry & the Pacemakers and Terence Trent D’Arby actually did. Many Irish acts made the short trip across The Irish Sea to the BBC studios and today I present a session track from eight of these

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