It’s Wednesday so you know what that means! Time for more ears to talk us through their years, the songs you can never forget, the ones you wish you could, and everything in between.
This week, we’re joined by BAFTA-winning creative, producer and writer, Matt Nida! Matt is the founder of the Wild Ambitions creative studio, and has made television and radio shows, podcasts, branded content, stunts and live events for Channel 4, the BBC, Red Bull and many more, including Joe Lycett’s infamous money-shredding stunt in 2022. With so much creativity between his ears, we can’t help but wonder what music Matt’s been filling them with over the years. Let’s find out.
Matt> This would almost certainly have been a TV theme (the first records I owned were all TV theme compilations). Blue Peter, Wacaday, Count Duckula, possibly Casualty are all strong candidates.
Matt> 2 Unlimited, ‘No Limit’, on a cassingle in a French supermarket on holiday. It had a France-only radio edit that I only recently found on Youtube, which to me is the ‘proper’ version.
Matt> Pet Shop Boys, Wembley, 1999 - the Nightlife tour. They wore bacofoil samurai suits and blonde punk wigs. They’ve always been light years ahead.
Matt> Bill Evans’ ‘Bill’s Hit Tune’. We wrote some lyrics to this about our dog, which I now sing almost entirely reflexively whenever he walks into the room.
Matt> Almost certainly Take That’s ‘Babe’, but this might just be the only non-Eurodance number I have clear memories of from that period.
Matt> Robert Miles – ‘Children’. I remember hearing this almost omnipresently in adverts, shops, in trails for upcoming TV shows, wondering what it was - a problem that Shazam has almost completely eradicated from society.
Matt> Dave Brubeck – ‘Take Five’. The only records we had in the house were my Dad’s classical collection which was all a bit beyond me back then, but he made occasional forays into jazz and this is something he played that I’d ask for a lot.
Matt> ‘Tachikawa’, the opening track from Yasuaki Shimizu’s Music For Commercials. Had I known about the album back then, I’d have played this at my wedding.
Matt> Neneh Cherry - Buffalo Stance. Bomb the Bass! Rock this place!
Matt> I won a karaoke competition at a pub in Sevenoaks singing ‘Tainted Love’. This was in 2001, but a win’s still a win right?
Matt> I generally say I don’t believe in guilty pleasures, but I find a lot of worldbeat music nostalgic but also ethically indefensible. So let’s go with Enigma’s Return To Innocence.
Matt> Talking Heads – ‘City of Dreams’. The end credits to some very special moments with some very special friends.
Matt> I managed to avoid listening to The Beatles until last year. Turns out they’re really good, hot tip there.
Matt> Depeche Mode – ‘Enjoy The Silence’. Imagine coming up with that riff.
Matt> I’ve never been able to get onboard with The Pretenders. I think some of the songs might be quite good, but they’re all played 15-20 bpm too slow.
Matt> ‘Drip Dry Eyes’ by Yukihiro Takahashi. A massive hit in Japan so not exactly obscure, but at some point the rest of the world will realise that it’s the best ballad of the '80s. More people should pay attention to Steve Roach too.
Matt> Brian Eno - Music For Airports. A lovely record, but also something designed to be played on a loop.
Matt> ‘That’s Us / Wild Combination’ by Arthur Russell.
Matt> The Miles Davis needle-drop in Lee Chang-Dong’s Burning (2018). It’s the perfect track for the scene, but an awareness that Davis improvised it to picture for another film sixty years earlier only adds to the time-collapsing eeriness of the film.
Matt> 'Flat Beat’ by Mr Oizo for Levis.
Matt> Doctor Who. The show has been recast and reinvented so many times, to the point where I think the only essential elements you need to make the show identifiable as Doctor Who are the TARDIS and the theme tune.
Matt> Ryuichi Sakamoto - Merry Christmas Mr Lawrence (also my favourite ever film).
Matt> Mark Isham & Art Lande – ‘The Melancholy of Departure’. This precedes Isham’s career as a film composer, but it sounds like it was written for some sort of neo-noir or political thriller.