Nick Davies — “Swan Song Of Planet Earth”
A lyrically searing protest hymn that refuses cynicism — Davies maps the cracks in the world and still dares to hope.
Every modern rock/pop review on file, top to bottom.
A lyrically searing protest hymn that refuses cynicism — Davies maps the cracks in the world and still dares to hope.
A duet with Roger Joseph Manning that turns the post-show silence into a manifesto for the artist who works when the world sleeps.
A tender, gratitude-soaked tribute to a mother — and a promise that nothing important will go unsaid between them.
A nostalgia-soaked romp through the late '90s and early 2000s — flip phones, Smash Mouth, and MySpace top 8s, weaponised as romance.
An exhilarating, reference-packed tribute to John Williams that recreates the feeling of hearing him for the first time.
A masterclass in wordplay that turns lyrical virtuosity into emotional shrapnel — every syllable doing two jobs, and aching for both.
A theatrical, tongue-in-cheek tribute to the era of the legendary groupie — equal parts romp, roast, and quiet elegy.
A vicious, Bond-esque takedown of a social climber, delivered with British bite and zero appetite for redemption.
A quietly devastating ballad about loving someone you'll never be with — and choosing, instead, to be a friend.
A self-aware, vaudevillian romp about the unsung hero of every live show — written by someone clearly thrilled to be on the bill.
A vulnerable, autobiographical piano ballad in which Nick Davies thanks — by name — the music that saved him.