Posts Tagged U2

24/06/26 – Counter Culture – Midweek Song List (154)

The Last Song List of June already. The month has vanished in a blur of heat, headlines and half‑finished to‑do lists. At this rate we’ll be carving pumpkins, then turkeys, before we’ve even caught our breath. Still — if the calendar insists on hurtling forward, we may as well soundtrack the journey.

This week’s dozen tracks span Glam, Punk, Rock, Soft Rock and a few glorious outliers. As ever, the joy is in the contrasts: theatrical glitter, snarling punk reportage, Celtic‑tinged rock, and a couple of songs that simply refuse to age.

THE ADVERTS – Gary Gilmore’s Eyes

Written in 1977 at the height of punk’s moral panic era, this remains one of the movement’s most unsettling and brilliant pieces of social commentary. TV Smith took the real‑life story of US murderer Gary Gilmore donating his organs after execution and flipped it into a first‑person shock narrative. The Adverts’ version is the definitive one: brittle, urgent, and utterly uninterested in subtlety. Punk doing what punk does best — forcing you to look.

ANONYMOUS ULSTER – I Can’t Breathe (A Song for Henry Nowak)

Anonymous Ulster has carved out a niche for songs rooted in place, politics and people. This track sits firmly in that tradition — a modern folk lament with a documentary instinct. Musically it draws on the long lineage of protest ballads; lyrically it’s very much of the present moment.

LARKIN POE – Black Betty

“Black Betty” began life as an African‑American work song, first recorded by Lead Belly in the 1930s. Larkin Poe’s version is a ferocious, slide‑driven reinvention — Southern Gothic blues filtered through modern swagger. They don’t just cover the song; they reclaim its rawness.

THE MONKEES – I’m A Believer

Neil Diamond wrote it, the Monkees turned it into a global pop phenomenon in 1966, and it remains one of the most perfect three‑minute singles ever recorded. This version captures the band at their peak: sunshine harmonies, jangling optimism, and a melody that refuses to leave your head.

DEATH IN ROME – Wrecking Ball

Death in Rome specialise in neo‑folk reinterpretations of modern pop, and their take on Miley Cyrus’s “Wrecking Ball” is one of their most striking. Stripped of its pop‑anthem sheen, the song becomes something darker, more fragile, almost liturgical. A reminder that a strong melody can survive any genre migration.

GARY GLITTER – The Wanderer

Originally recorded by Dion in 1961, “The Wanderer” is one of early rock ’n’ roll’s great swaggering struts. Glitter’s 1970s glam‑rock cover transforms it into a theatrical stomp — all glitter suits, platform boots and exaggerated bravado. Whatever one thinks of the man (and there is plenty to think), this version is a fascinating example of how glam repurposed 1950s rock tropes into something bigger, brasher and knowingly artificial.

KAISER CHIEFS – I Predict A Riot

A mid‑2000s indie anthem that captured the chaos, humour and low‑level menace of British nightlife. Released in 2004, it helped launch the Kaiser Chiefs into the mainstream. The version here shows why: sharp, punchy, and delivered with a wink.

REEF – Place Your Hands

Released in 1996, this is one of the great British rock singles of the decade. Reef fused grunge‑era heft with West Country warmth, and Gary Stringer’s voice — gravelly, elastic, instantly recognisable — remains the band’s secret weapon. A song built for festivals, car stereos and communal shouting.

ROXY MUSIC – Virginia Plain

Roxy Music’s 1972 debut single is a jolt of art‑rock electricity: no chorus, no repetition, just a glamorous sprint through Bryan Ferry’s pop‑surrealist imagination. The abrupt ending is part of its charm — a door slammed mid‑sentence. Few songs dare to stop so decisively.

THE SAW DOCTORS – I Useta Lover

A 1990 Irish classic that blends pub‑rock energy with wry storytelling. It became one of the biggest‑selling singles in Irish history. The Saw Doctors’ charm lies in their ability to make nostalgia feel rowdy rather than sentimental, and this track is Exhibit A.

SUTHERLAND BROTHERS & QUIVER – Arms of Mary

Soft Rock at its most tender. Released in 1976, the song became an international hit, though it never quite propelled the band to the fame they deserved. Its gentle harmonies and wistful melody have inspired multiple covers — but the original remains the gold standard.

U2 – Where The Streets Have No Name

The opening track of The Joshua Tree (1987) and one of U2’s defining statements. Built on The Edge’s cathedral‑like guitar delay, the song aimed for transcendence and — unusually for such ambition — achieved it. Live, it becomes a communal ritual.

YES – Owner of a Lonely Heart (Live)

The original 1983 studio version was Yes’s unexpected leap into synth‑rock modernity. This live performance shows how the band re‑engineered the track for the stage: sharper edges, more muscular instrumentation, and that unmistakable Trevor Rabin guitar tone.

AND OUR QUESTION OF THE WEEK

We adore the abrupt, almost mid‑air ending of Roxy Music’s Virginia Plain. What other tracks — in any genre — finish with that same sudden, glorious full‑stop?

Advert

 

Leave a Comment

13/05/26 – Counter Culture – Midweek Song List

A cheerful woman wearing stylish sunglasses is smiling and holding a mobile device with earbuds, promoting a midweek song list dated 13 May 2026.

GLAM ROCK HAS BEEN getting a bit of a re‑evaluation lately, and rightly so. We’ve already spotlighted T. Rex’s ‘Ride A White Swan’ and ‘Hot Love’—two records that didn’t just chart well, but changed the temperature of British pop. They were the spark that lit the fuse.

This week we turn to another band who helped define the era: The Sweet, a group who combined bubblegum pop, heavy riffs, and a theatricality that pushed at the edges of what the Establishment thought acceptable. Steve Priest, in particular, delighted in winding up the moral guardians of the day. Their 1973 hit ‘The Ballroom Blitz’ is pure adrenaline—born from a real incident in which the band were bottled offstage in Scotland. They turned chaos into art, as glam bands so often did.

We’ve also been marking the centenary of the 1926 UK General Strike, and last time featured Billy Bragg’s take on ‘Which Side Are You On?’—a song originally written by Florence Reece during the brutal 1931 Harlan County coal wars. Bragg connected the American struggle to the UK miners’ strike of 1984–85, showing how these battles echo across generations.

Since then we’ve come across Natalie Merchant’s version. Merchant—best known from 10,000 Maniacs—approaches the song with a slow‑burn intensity. It starts almost as a whisper and builds into something resolute and defiant. It’s a reminder that protest songs don’t need to shout to hit hard.

There’s also something for the Bowie devotees. ‘Sorrow’, released in 1973, comes from Bowie’s Pin Ups album—a collection of covers paying tribute to the bands he loved as a teenager. The song itself began life with The McCoys in 1965 before being picked up by The Merseys. Bowie’s version is the definitive one: a lush, soulful vocal with that unmistakable sax weaving through it. Glam Rock may have been his aesthetic at the time, but this track shows how deep his musical vocabulary already was.

If you want to explore Bowie further, we’ve gathered reviews of his work here:
https://countercultureuk.com/?s=david+bowie

And as always, we end with a question. The final track this week is U2’s ‘With Or Without You’. Without looking it up, which album did it originally appear on?


THIS WEEK’S TRACKLIST

David Bowie – ‘Sorrow’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5nTmPFtJS4c
Bowie takes a mid‑60s pop tune and transforms it into a smoky, melancholic masterclass. The arrangement is deceptively simple, but the vocal phrasing is pure Bowie—elegant, yearning, and unmistakably his.

Emma Bunton – ‘What Took You So Long’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yX1Df_sjdzY
A bright, early‑2000s slice of pop with a Motown‑tinged bounce. Bunton leans into a warm, melodic vocal that shows why she was always the most quietly versatile of the Spice Girls.

Johnny Cash & Joe Strummer – ‘Redemption Song’

https://youtu.be/C7nFi2Lbq24?si=sUVuzEqIyl-SDwpG
Two giants of music—country and punk—meeting on common ground. Their version of Marley’s classic is stripped back, raw, and deeply human. A late‑career highlight for both men.

Dave Edmunds – ‘Girls Talk’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7uEXJNS1llg
Written by Elvis Costello, Edmunds’ version is punchier and more polished. A perfect example of the late‑70s moment when pub rock, new wave, and power pop all overlapped.

Eurythmics – ‘Here Comes The Rain Again’ (Live)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ko8Ec7ojahU
Annie Lennox at her most commanding. The song blends synth melancholy with orchestral drama, and in live form it becomes even more atmospheric.

Led Zeppelin – ‘Immigrant Song’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8XO9RAkURQw...
A thunderous two‑minute blast inspired by the band’s tour of Iceland. Robert Plant’s Viking‑war‑cry vocal and Jimmy Page’s relentless riffing make it one of rock’s most recognisable openers.

Natalie Merchant – ‘Which Side Are You On?’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HcaPvCLue7g...
Merchant’s interpretation honours the song’s roots while giving it a haunting, contemporary edge. A reminder that the labour struggles of the past are never as distant as we think.

The Sabrejets – ‘Lightnin’’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cU6x4oFDt0g...
Belfast rockabilly with bite. The Sabrejets channel the spirit of 1950s rebel music but with a modern ferocity that keeps it from ever feeling nostalgic.

The Smashing Pumpkins – ‘Tonight, Tonight’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NOG3eus4ZSo
A sweeping, orchestral anthem from the Mellon Collie era. The strings elevate it into something cinematic, while Billy Corgan’s vocal gives it emotional weight.

The Sweet – ‘The Ballroom Blitz’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7lTwA5xMeTM...
A glam classic born from real‑life mayhem. The Sweet turn a hostile gig into a high‑energy, tongue‑in‑cheek celebration of rock‑and‑roll chaos.

The Tourists – ‘So Good to Be Back Home Again’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MWaFcZGp-2c...
Before Eurythmics, Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart were part of The Tourists. This track is pure new‑wave sunshine—jangly guitars, bright harmonies, and a melody that sticks.

U2 – ‘With Or Without You’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GXL2nYTNvyc
One of U2’s defining songs. Built around the then‑new Infinite Guitar, it’s a slow, atmospheric build that captures longing, tension, and release.

Leave a Comment