As the name suggests, our Spotify Sunday posts normally run on a Sunday. But let’s make an exception for this round-up of all the Spotify Sundays that have featured on the Arts Blog in 2011.
You’re probably familiar with them already — but if you’re not, then they’re the Spectator website’s equivalent of Desert Island Discs. One of our writers or friends selects ten songs, often with a unifying theme, and writes a sentence or two about each. Provided you’ve downloaded Spotify (for free!) onto your computer then you can listen to those songs (for free!) by following the link at the end of each Spotify Sunday post. The selection will automatically start playing within your own Spotify program.
We’re particularly pleased with our Spotify Sunday series. And full credit for it must go to the co-editors of the Arts Blog, Simon Mason and Scott Jordan Harris, along with the creators of Spotify itself. About a year-and-a-half ago, Fraser wrote a post in praise of the service, calling it ‘the most lifestyle-chaging innovation since Sky Plus.’ Many more exhaltations have been, and will be, flung in its direction too.
So, anyway, here’s a chronological index of the Spotify Sunday posts from this year. There aren’t 52 of them, but there’s still enough variety — from string quartets to modern electronica — that you’ll surely find something to tune into as 2012 wafts into being:
Salvation song — Archbishop Cranmer
Legal downloads — David Allen Green
From Savile Row — Rohan Daft
A very political playlist — Harry Cole
Middle-class dub — Sly and Reggie
Fill your ears — Alex Massie
When guitars get fuzzy — David Arnold
Talkin’ ’bout a revolution — Omar Khairy
As covered by goths — Rob Manuel
Calmly magnificent — Nik Darlington
By another name — Sebastian Scotney
Democracy is overrated — Crispian Jago
The Stones in the Sixties — Will Mount
Shuffle… — Ian Birrell
Music to birth babies by — Christina Hopkinson
Live free or die — Sam Bowman
The Fallen — Dave Simpson
Made in Chelsea — Mina Zaher
Some pieces of a man — DJ Wrongtom
I love this, what is it? — Oliver Coates
Happy Birthday, David Rodigan — Count Skylarkin
Don’t make me write a track list — Betty Herbert
Murdochalypse — Simon Mason
The folk heard ’round the world — Katie Caroll
Spotify’s top ten strange recordings — Jonny Trunk
Commemorating September 11th — Salvatore
Bono
Celebrating 50 years of Songs of Praise — Caroline
Farrow
Cambodian rock, Part 1 — The Cambodian Space Project
Cambodian rock, Part 2 — The Cambodian Space Project
Going underground with the Jam — Patrick O’Flynn
Our inspirations — The Belcea Quartet
Cover Stars — Fraser Nelson
My personal soundtrack — Giles Dilnot
The new Christmas classics — Peter Hoskin
Joy to the World — Adrian Hilton
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