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"This Year"
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"title": "March 12 - Raid on Entebbe",
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"plaintext": "There's a strange moment at this start of this song where for just a moment I hear a very familiar guitar part, only... it's not familiar yet. It's inevitable for a songwriter who has written (as can be seen in this project) 366 songs, but for just a few bars I heard Amy, AKA Spent Gladiator. She won't be back for quite a while, which made this a bit like seeing a childhood photo of a friend you didn't meet until their thirties."
},
{
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"plaintext": "Anyway, this actual song rather than my brainfarts: I enjoyed the frantic energy of this, with the lyrical content and urgent staccato strumming adding up to a feeling of change happening now whether someone wants it to or not. There is a wonderful and honestly quite scary combination of the immediately domestic and the fear of a collapsing world, and that's a deeply fruitful narrative tension. It's also very much a young man's song, about someone coming back to a family home, not a marital home. But if war is coming in then that makes it less likely that the young survive."
},
{
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"plaintext": "Wow, what a cheerful note to end this on."
},
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"updatedAt": "2026-03-13T22:21:24+00:00",
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"description": "There's a strange moment at this start of this song where for just a moment I hear a very familiar guitar part, only... it's not familiar yet. It's inevitable for a songwriter who has written (as can be seen in this project) 366 songs, but for just a few bars I heard Amy, AKA Spent Gladiator. She won't be back for quite a while, which made this a bit like seeing a childhood photo of a friend you didn't meet until their thirties. Anyway, this actual song rather than my brainfarts: I enjoyed the f...",
"publishedAt": "2026-03-12T23:34:51+00:00",
"textContent": "There's a strange moment at this start of this song where for just a moment I hear a very familiar guitar part, only... it's not familiar yet. It's inevitable for a songwriter who has written (as can be seen in this project) 366 songs, but for just a few bars I heard Amy, AKA Spent Gladiator. She won't be back for quite a while, which made this a bit like seeing a childhood photo of a friend you didn't meet until their thirties.\nAnyway, this actual song rather than my brainfarts: I enjoyed the frantic energy of this, with the lyrical content and urgent staccato strumming adding up to a feeling of change happening now whether someone wants it to or not. There is a wonderful and honestly quite scary combination of the immediately domestic and the fear of a collapsing world, and that's a deeply fruitful narrative tension. It's also very much a young man's song, about someone coming back to a family home, not a marital home. But if war is coming in then that makes it less likely that the young survive.\nWow, what a cheerful note to end this on."
}