Saturday, 3 January 2026

brimful of horsemouth (on the 45)

so where is our boy kilvert on this day in 1872?

he's at the morning pantomime with his niece katie in drury lane. the day before he had been at an exhibition of paintings at burlington house (zurbaran/ probably this danby). tomorrow he's off to dulwich gallery and then back into town. 

meanwhile in millstone grit 

glyn hughes has mostly been concerned with painter and writer william holt (and his horse trigger) seen here in a film by sam hanna. that's chapter 3. in chapter 4 he is trapped in todmorden by an out of season snowstorm (and then sets off on his journey). chapter 5 is the brontes and sylvia plath. 

it is a bright neo-autumnal day before. horsemouth may well go up for a wander on the common (no snow here yet. if anything milder). snow (or frost at least) on the black mountains. 

horsemouth is checking out the world at one. later zoom beer with howard. a discussion of municipal art (two examples - concrete sculptures from manchester and ceramic panels from rochdale).

horsemouth (howard noted) was a bit quiet. howard has a new ending for theolonius (and very good it is too). 

he then watched a documentary on the joys of the 7" single (the 45) and a bit of the walls of malapaga (on the run jean gabin rocks up in post war genova). 

it's the morning. a light dusting of snow (looks like) and the outside taps are frozen. he has fed and watered the chickens. in the blue skies airplanes perform various vectors. 

Friday, 2 January 2026

'in praise of the written or spoken word...' (day2otrool)

'one may say what one likes in praise of the written or spoken word but there are very few occasions when it suffices.' 

- goethe, italian journey (ironically a bigger fan of drawing than the spoken or written word), 2nd january 1787.

things are already off to a good start. 

horsemouth usually praises the written word 

this is because he is not especially good 'on his feet'  with the spoken word (as a performer). but he fakes it well don't you think?

this is the usual debate. between the effects of the spoken word and the effects of the written word. drawing seldom gets a look in. 

horsemouth recognises the written word as a distraction from the present, as an offering to the skygods of language in a way that democratic face-to-face speech is not. the people will meet and debate, the message will reach the person it was intended for (and no other), assent or dissent will visibly occur. 

dates in 2026

friday, 13th of february 

friday the 13th march 

friday the 13th of november 

wolf moon visible from this evening. a strong and strange light. 

last night (well the night before last) he read (well re-read) the first two chapters of glyn hughes' millstone grit. 

'I am writing about, I am living in...' 

and he's off. his teachers, the interests that brought him there, he discovers its industrial history. in chapter two we get to the wrecked house he moves  into, the village and the strange plague of stray dogs, people of the village. he moves out of his house to go travelling (the bulk of the book) while it is being done up. 

time has gone on strangely this evening and it is time to pack up the laptop and to get back to reading chapter 3 (where hughes goes off travelling). 

Thursday, 1 January 2026

day one (of the rest of our lives)

fortunately the triple negative calendar has arrived (thanks TG) so horsemouth can start the year correctly. horsemouth can't seem to locate the images that match the tracks and the months so as to make an visual argument as to why you should buy their racket. 

do it anyway.

new years day 1872 

kilvert goes to london by the midday mail train and visits his nieces at 23 gloucester crescent (alan bennett will later live in the house). he spends a few days visiting museums and returns to langley burrell on twelfth night (not returning to clyro until the 13th). 

it's new years day 2026

it looks like the village shop will be shut so horsemouth will be unable to go and get the hereford times. perhaps his mum will remember about the egg deliveries and horsemouth will be sent off into the teeth of a gale. tonight/ tomorrow morning rain and snow possibly. 




Wednesday, 31 December 2025

this may be the last time (on a cold and frosty morning)

so sang pops staples (and later on the rolling stones sang something similar).

horsemouth shows you his 31st may 2021 mix (together with a pre-production photo from the fall of the house of fitzgerald) on this the 31st of december 2025. he has a further two golden glow mixes which he will 'share' with you again on successive weeks in january to echo his winter solstice garland of mixcloud mixes. 

the year ends

the year ends. horsemouth is tired. he's not sure he has enough vim and vigour to attempt a summary. he'll see how he feels in the morning. 

the morning 

so it's the last day of the year and a cold and frosty morning. 

horsemouth has his new calendars and diaries. as he noted he has in the last few years stopped many activities and started a handful of new ones. 

horsemouth has survived another year. huzzah!

what happened in 2020(5)? 

horsemouth continued his economic inactivity. (a 50plus  retirees destroying the economy). he is living (just) on his savings and on  his small works pension. he is spending hardly any money at all (especially now that he is no longer renting anywhere). he will have to check exactly how much he has left.

2025 was his fourth full year of retirement. (following on from his redundancy nearly four and a half years ago). he continues to be a lazy, morally compromised, lacto-vegetarian. 

the music 

horsemouth played no gigs in 2025. horsemouth did no filming or recording in 2025 (some recordings from 2022 languish unfinished on soundcloud). he bought (or found) no new musical instruments (that he can remember).

horsemouth was involved in no golden glow (or similar) mixes in 2025. 

he saw alula down play in malvern, jazz jamaica play the festival hall (soundtracking babylon), he saw the blue oyster cult play for the first time ever (and that was awesome).

he kept on writing this blog (that's the main thing). he expanded out onto substack..  

he bought far fewer second hand books and fewer CDs (because he was out of town).  

he has endeavoured to get himself photographed whenever possible and to share these with you. 

he read more this year (in an effort to recover the concentrated effort that he has managed in previous years). he watched a lot of clips on youtube. he didn't listen to much recorded music. he listened to webb david's techno-dub show on new river radio, and the music of  robert lawson. 

he thanks howard and all who have read, watched, listened to him, or liked or commented on the things he has produced (thank you people, horsemouth is very grateful). 

he did a fair amount of walking. over to ewyas harold, up on the common. down by the abbey, over to sylvia's, up along the dulas valley with his brother and family (and also around generally during his visits to the wen).  

meanwhile back in the wilds he is trying to learn bell-ringing and has enjoyed meeting the bell-ringers. he chats to the local bus driver about guitar playing (blues and rockabilly). at the bell-ringing he chats to paul about prog. 

he grew some vegetables (too many marrows) and undertook some repairs. 

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 'at five minutes to midnight the bells of chippenham church pealed out loud and clear in the frosty air. we opened a shutter and stood round the window listening. it was a glorious moonlit night.

and here is the end of another year. how much to be thankful for. how much to be mourned over. god pardon the past and give grace to the future, and make the new year better than the old.' 

- kilvert, kilvert's diary, 31st december 1871.

and 2020(6) comes in

what will happen then? find out tomorrow. 

Tuesday, 30 December 2025

books, films, gigs, events december 2025

 

books of the year 2025

a veritable pile 

how many can you identify?



books

- henry james, sir edmund orme, owen wingrave, friends of friends from the turn of a screw and other stories

- lafcadio hearn. the story of mimi-nashi-soichi from kwaidan (oriental ghost stories)

- werner herzog, on walking in ice, as much as was available on jstor

-  j. sheridan le fanu, wylder's hand  (finished)

-  david grubb, under the visiting moon  

-  guardian, ancient lake reappears in death valley, the land trap, developers v. people... housing and net zero stuff 

 andrew rossabi, a peculiarly english genius: a biography of richard jefferies volume one 1848-1867 

- an apocalypse for every epoch, LA review of books, 13th december 2025

- various things on substack

- the usual diaries (kilvert, goethe, pessoa)

- LRB, nlr

- writing about marguerite duras, marguerite duras : apocalyptic desires and a smidgen of a translation of  les parleuses  an interviewed by xavière gauthier  conducted 17th may 1973

- WIRE review of triple negative december 2023

- artforum, diedrich diederichsen, the war on bohemia


films 

 - hayden pedigo (young fingerpicker and interesting dude) a list of his favourite fahey albums and buck curran in bergamo italy playing robbie basho's 12 string (winter solstice 1)

- the omega factor (1979)

plur1bus (as much as was available on youtube and a few discussion shows)

- bookpilled, outlaw bookseller, andy edwards (less than usual)

-  winter solstice: the english heritage livefeed from stonehenge,  the livefeed from newgrange

- tales from the former cambodian embassy squat in maida vale 

= BBC's 2025 ghost story for christmas, mark gatiss's adaptation of ef benson's 'the room in the tower' and archive on 4 a ghost story for christmas overview

- R4 the politicisation of young women

- anticon live

- john gray on after trump

- CAN interviewed 

gigs none (well the wave debb show online)

events

30th anniversary of the death of philosopher gillian rose, the winter solstice garland of horsemouth mixcloud mixes, 

an entirely written in the morning blogpost (the road to serfdom)

this is an entirely written in the morning blogpost

the 'family' have been over visiting and (in a little while) they must go. 

horsemouth has been over to feed the chickens. he has taken the milk over to the garage. 

yesterday a walk over the common to ewyas harold then up along the dulas valley to where the trout was then up the hill past viking games  and back onto the common (something like 5 miles all round). after this horsemouth was distinctly knackered.

horsemouth is up a diary (a thumping great A4 sized thing). he's down a copy of f.a.hayek's the road to serfdom. 

Monday, 29 December 2025

the feeding of the 5000 (in the morning when nobody is at their best)

that would seem to be the problem.

the coughing has begun. (that means people are rising to the day). 

round about this time next year horsemouth should be writing his 3000 blogpost (assuming he keeps it going). 

random book off the shelves 

the seasons - ralph wightman (country bookclub1954 - probably from horsemouth's father's parent's collection, it's the sort of book they'd have had) decorated by s.r. badmin (mostly known for his work upon the shell guides). 

wightman was a well enough known radio commentator on agricultural matters to have been lampooned at the time by kenneth williams (as arthur fallowfield with a catch-phrase of 'the answer lies in the soil'). 

there's a note in pencil on the end pages of the book 'jany 1967 worth a further reading' possibly horsemouth's dad or horsemouth's granny. 


horsemouth has forfeited his walk on the mountains to wait in for the TESCO delivery.  TESCO have delivered. 

first broadcast yesterday in 1966 jonathan miller's awesome version of alice in wonderland with an amazing soundtrack by ravi shankar.