Everything Flows
Named after the debut single by Teenage Fanclub. This blog is all about being a music lover in Glasgow; reviews, interviews, memories, old faves, new discoveries (past and present), playlists and more. Thanks for visiting - I hope you discover something amazing you have never heard before, or that you rediscover an old favourite. Regular features/playlists; Never Ending Mixtape / Cover Version of the Month/ Trust Me. Insta - @everythingflowsglasgow
Wednesday, 1 April 2026
Robyn at Assai Records
Wednesday, 25 March 2026
Never Ending Mixtape part 108
Welcome to part 108 of my Never Ending Mixtape!
The mixtape is hurtling towards the 5,000 landmark. I add songs regularly, with no thought to the flow or structure, unlike the mixtapes and CD's I would make in my younger days.
As a result, my Never Ending Mixtape jumps from 4,802 to 4,852 with the addition of Brittle by my friend Alan's band Broken by Rock.
Alan originally recorded it around 10-years ago, but it was only ever available on Soundlcoud. At the time, I described it as being like a fragile New Order. I've brought the song up with Alan a number of times over the years, as I really fell for the feel of the song and recording. I am delighted that Alan has (finally) decided to release Brittle to the wider world! I love the groove, the vocal melody and the delicious synth sounds, especially in the instrumental outro that I imagine being extended for a 12-inch version.
Alan; The whole thing was recorded using synths and ableton live. I lost all the tracking when my old Mac died suddenly, so only have the master. I did think about re-recording it with the band but thought 'fuck it', just stick with the original version and not try to mess with it.
Brittle is New Wave, DIY, bedroom synth pop. I love it and hope you check it out.
Thanks if you are one of the 379 who follow the playlist, or if you check in on it (and my blog) from time to time. And welcome if you have just discovered both.
As always, I hope you find something wonderful that you've never heard before, or that you rediscover an old favourite song. I personally play my Never Ending Mixtape on shuffle, but play from the start, the middle, or scroll down (could take a while!) to the latest additions.
You'll find a few of the additions listed below.
Search for Everything Flows Never Ending Mixtape on Spotify or CLICK
Recent discoveries
Fire By The River - Harumi
Christine by J>K & Co
Black Night Woman by F.J. McMahon
Get Out Of My Dream by The Clouds
Nervous Acid by Bobby Konders
What You Won't Do For Love by Bobby Caldwell
Love Love Love by Those Guys
All The Way In or All The Way Out by Bettye Swann
I Feel the Feeling by Bettye Swann
New releases
CCTV by wor_kspace
Orange County by Gorillaz
Love is A Life That Lasts Forever by Andrew Wasylk and Molly Linen
Brittle by Broken by Rock
Old favourites
Flame On by Eugenius
Everything Moves Towards the Sun by Cats Eyes
Rain Falls For Wind by The Sleepy Jackson
Come To This by The Sleepy Jackson
All Apologies (demo) by Nirvana
Fizzy by The Jesus and Mary Chain
Dear Prudence by The Beatles
Sunday, 22 March 2026
Geese at The Barrowland Ballroom
Thursday, 19 March 2026
Madra Salach at McChuills
Dublin six-piece Madra Salach blew my friend Joe and I away last year. We caught the band playing The Van Winkle in the Gallowgate as part of Tenement Trail. Singer Paul Banks was like a cross between Lydon and MacGowan, singing with his heart and soul.
In my blog, I highlighted Madra Salach's closing song The Man Who Seeks Pleasure (Is the Man Who Seeks Pain) stating that it was a genuine spine tingling moment. It will be interesting to see if they can capture this kind of intensity on record. This was beautifully raw, heartfelt and soulful. Banks gave it his all and his band played as if their lives depended on it.
Thursday, 12 March 2026
Good Dancers
Good Dancers by The Sleepy Jackson
Trust me #113
A recent conversation with my good friend Emma swiftly veered from Tom Gray of Gomez being a touring member of Luke Steele's Empire of the Sun, to Steele's old band, The Sleepy Jackson, their 2003 debut album Lovers, and their sublime psychedelic pop song Good Dancers.
Don't always dream for what you want
But I love to watch good dancers talk
What a song! The production is lush and layered, all kinds of dreamy cosmic goodness. Opening with melodic slide guitar, with clear echoes of George Harrison in his All Things Must Pass era, alongside a dash of Lennon's No.9 Dream, Good Dancers is a song that instantly demands attention and tugs on your heart strings. Listening back (a good few times in a row) it feels like waking up to blue skies, morning sunshine on your face, fresh air and you just breathe it all in.
Steele's voice is soaked in reverb and the whole song somehow manages to feel both big and bold, yet intimate and personal. The Sleepy Jackson definitely captured something quite special on the recording.
My heart is stronger than you all
But I love to watch good dancers talk
The Sleepy Jackson released 2 albums, Lovers in 2003 and the bonkers-ly named Personality - One Was a Spider, One Was a Bird in 2006. After their 3rd was heard and rejected by the bands label, Steele focused all of his attention on side project Empire of the Sun ... and they took off big time! In a 2013 interview, Steele stated that he intended to release the 3rd Sleep Jackson album in 2023, but that never happened and it possibly never will.
Empire of the Sun added a synth pop sheen to Steele's natural feel and taste for psychedelic pop and gained international success with 2008's debut album Walking On A Dream. They have released a further 3 and will be touring later this year.
Good Dancers is added to my Trust Me playlist; search for Everything Flows - Trust Me on Spotify or CLICK HERE. Check below for all previous blogs in my Trust Me series.
Previous Trust Me blogs
Monday, 9 March 2026
Fatale at McChuills - March 2026
Saturday nights in McChuills have been the source of much pleasure for me over the years. Old Nick DJ-ing behind the bar early on, DJ's taking to the decks later, playing (or attempting to play in a busy area!) pool, meeting friends, ending the night there after a gig at the Barrowland Ballroom ... It's a wonderful pub full of characters, behind the bar and on the other side. McChuills has soul and strong values. They know what is right and what is wrong. And they love music! Lots of old faces still regularly frequent the bar and the decks.
McChuills the kind of pub you fall for, dream of and pine for. These days, visiting is more of a treat, but every time I visit I think of my old flat in Dennistoun and times where I'd wander in for a pint after work and stay for a few, or ... wilder weekends.
It's great to see that McChuills still attracts a variety of subcultures of all ages. I mentioned Old Nick (who was DJ-ing before Andrew Divine last night) above and his son young Nick has done a grand job of changing things just ever so slightly, to put on bands and club nights in the side room ... or Acid Arch. Wet Leg (old blog here) and David Holmes are just 2 of the names to have graced the stage through there.
Fatale were back to the venue where they played their first gig in May 2025 - still less than a year ago! The band hang out in McChuills regularly and both are a perfect fit for each other. Fresh/recovered from 3-date tour of Aberdeen, Dundee and Inverness with The Cords and a show with Warren McIntyre and James Kirk in Edinburgh the previous night, the 5-piece were gig fit.
Taking to the stage at 10pm, Fatale blitzed straight into Moves You, their traditional set closer. It was a bold move and it worked a treat, the place was bouncing. This is a fuzzy punky pop gem with a glorious breakdown, before zipping back to full throttle. Exhilarating!
Fatale have improved every time I've caught them live since last summer; sound, performance and songs. New song Sugar Bowl was melodic with the duelling guitars sounding sublime. Own Embrace and Another Sunrise sound like old friends. I find myself half singing a-long, even though I've only ever heard them live.
A cover version of Buttermilk by Eugenius fitted like a glove. That guitar riff never got the credit it deserves. Winged Horse, By The Tide and September kept things going while allowing Fatale to show different sides to their natural instinct for melodies, guitar sounds and hooks.
The rhythm section of Oscar (bass) and James (drums) keep things tight, while also driving the sound along, while the guitars of Euan and Chris (also backing vocals) carry the joy of youthful enthusiasm through chords, riffs, solos and the effects they use. Ben Robertson was born to be a front man - conducting band mates and crowd with his on stage moves. All have fantastic hair!
Wired sounds like a potential single. While Jesus Christ most definitely will be at some point. Beginning with a warm Big Star-esque riff, the song then explodes into life and is like one big chorus, full of infectious energy.
Fatale seem to have a natural feel for songwriting. Their musical knowledge and taste comes across in the songs they have covered since I first caught them last summer. The confidence that comes from playing gigs and generating a buzz from them seems to be lifting them to new levels. Building on the solid foundation they had from the off with early songs like Moves You, Jesus Christ and Another Sunrise.
Coming on for an encore, Ben announced that this would be the last time they played their cover of The Velvets Femme Fatale, however given the reaction, I'd be surprised if that's the case! They should definitely keep it up their sleeves for their adventures outwith Glasgow.
The band ended as they began, with an even more super charged version of Moves You, starting with Ben crowd surfing, before their good friend Ben Brown took over and somehow managed to stay aloft! Great fun.
Keep an eye on Fatale's Instagram page for news of up coming shows.
Next up is a gig at The Art School as part of the multi-venue House Guest festival on 4th April. The festival also takes in Sleazys and The 1990 (formerly Broadcast).
Wednesday, 4 March 2026
Femme Fatale
Cover version of the month #111
Big Star cover The Velvet Underground
The Velvet Underground and Big Star are two majestical, mythical and magical bands that have influenced (and have been consistently highlighted by) Scottish bands like Orange Juice and Teenage Fanclub through to bands bursting on to the scene at present.
Art-rock NYC cool, melodic vulnerability, quintessential guitar power pop and vocal harmonies. You could easily argue that the two bands stand as the ultimate patron saints to the Glasgow independent guitar pop scene. Throw in Love, The Byrds, punk bands like Buzzcocks, The Clash and Subway Sect and that's the bones of your top 10.
One song that links both of these legendary bands is Femme Fatale, written by Lou Reed and inspired by a throwaway Andy Warhol comment about Factory 'it-girl' Edie Sedgwick. New info for me - I always thought it was about (and for) Nico!
"Oh, don't you think she's a Femme Fatale, Lou?"
The Velvets recorded the song in 1966 and it was released as the b-side to Sunday Morning in December of that year and then as the third track on their debut album, the mind blowing The Velvet Underground & Nico in March 1967. It's an album that everyone with a vested interest in the history of guitar music seems to be magnetically drawn to as a teenager.
It's well documented that the album was a flop, entering the charts at number 199 upon release and then leaving the month afterwards. Check this excellent feature article by Scottish writer Grant McPhee for Into Creative.
McPhee takes a deep dive into the myth of The Velvet Underground and Nico, particularly around the sales figures, stemming from a famous quote by Brian Eno about the album only selling 30,000 copies in its first five years.
... everyone who bought one of those 30,000 copies started a band. Brian Eno
Enjoy Grant's blog. But back to Femme Fatale. Listening again, I can't help but wonder who (if anyone) Nico was thinking of whilst singing the song. Edie? Or herself?
Here she comes
You'd better watch your step
She's going to break your heart in two
It's true
The Velvets recording is icy cool. Nico’s vocals are famously flat, off-key and the way she pronounces clown as clun at the end of the second verse is quite funny. Funny, but ridiculously cool!
She'll build you up just to put you down
What a clown
Almost 60-years on and The Velvet Underground remain a blueprint for independent guitar music. Femme Fatale is a prime example why. Short (2-minutes 39 seconds), seemingly simple, impossibly cool and utterly beautiful. Pop music can be both a hook and a heartbreak simultaneously.
Lou Reed's NYC drawl in response to Nico's rise for the chorus is sublime.
Cause everybody knows, (She's a femme fatale)
The things she does to me, (She's a femme fatale)
She's just a little tease, (She's a femme fatale)
The closing two lines of the chorus are left to Nico, over the chiming guitar riff. They are, for me, the two coolest lines of the song, sung as if Nico is in admiration of the girl she is singing of.
See the way she walks
Hear the way she talks
In the next verses, Nico (using Lou's words of course) is clearer about her warning. The guy is merely number thirty-seven in her book. She's from the street, so already has all the guys beat and is going to play you for a fool.
Alex Chilton recorded his version for the legendary Third/Sister Lovers album sessions. The Big Star version is stripped back and fragile. Chilton sounds like he is singing from the experience of having his heart broken by the femme fatale, warning others, yet still infatuated.
Big Star are in no rush here, everything is slow, the intro longer, it all feels darker, as if Chilton is barely holding it together. It's beautiful.
Others have covered this gem of a song too. Among them - I've just found the Duran Duran version ... and ... I'm not a fan! Teenage Fanclub covered it with tender care on the b-side of Ain't That Enough. And Fatale, who I have written about a number of times over the last 6-months or so, took their name from the song and recorded it as their first demo. The way the crowd sing-a-long with Lou's she's a femme fatale line at the Fatale gigs is incredible - like they are breathing new life into the song and turning it into an anthem.
The Velvet Underground & Nico original and the Big Star cover of Femme Fatale are added to my Everything Flows Cool Cover Versions playlist on Spotify which also features all of the songs listed below. Search for the title or CLICK HERE
Previous covers of the month blogs
40. Jumpin' Jack Flash
44. Witchi Tai To
45. Our Lips Are Sealed
46. Sunshine Of Your Love
47. Here Comes The Sun
48. I Think We're Alone Now
49. Don't Let Me Down
50. It's Oh So Quiet
51. Alcoholiday
52. Summer Holiday
53. Who Do You Think You Are?
54. Head On
55. Nothing Compares 2 U





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