
Dylan Jones has long been one of British journalism’s more discerning cultural archaeologists, whether digging into David Bowie’s legacy or chronicling the evolution of British style. In 1975: The Year the World Forgot, he turns his attention to what he sees as an unfairly overlooked moment in musical history, a year caught between the idealism of the 60s and the insurgency of punk. Jones speaks with Jason Barnard about rescuing 1975 from the “bowels of anonymity,” reflecting on a year where sophistication, soul, krautrock and the singer-songwriter tradition converged in rich and sometimes unfashionable ways. Together, they reassess forgotten classics, cocaine-fuelled creativity, and why Steely Dan may still be the guiltiest of pleasures.
Further information
Dylan Jones – 1975: The Year the World Forgot ()
Podcasts also available: Phil Manzanera – Revolución to Roxy () , Main Course: Bob Stanley on the Bee Gees’ Reinvention () , British Progressive Pop Sounds of 1974 () , Davey Johnstone – The Elton John Band ()
This podcast is also available on Apple Podcasts () , Spotify () , YouTube () and all usual platforms
If you like what I do please support me on Ko-fi ()
The post 1975: The Year the World Forgot () appeared first on The Strange Brew () .