
A series for Saturdays in 2026 inspired by Brian Eno and Peter Schmidt’s set of cards, Oblique Strategies (Over One Hundred Worthwhile Dilemmas). Eno and Schmidt created them to be used to unblock creative impasses and approach problems from unexpected angles. Each week I’ll turn over an Oblique Strategy card and post a song or songs inspired by the suggestion.
Last week’s Oblique Strategy suggestion was You can only make one dot at a time.
This made me start joining the dots between One Dove and Dot Allison, Arab Strap, Wire and Dot Dash, Ry Lichtenstein, The Jam and Pete Wylie and Ariadne’s Labyrinth. From the wider Bagging Area community came these dots- C with Angines de Poitrine, Ernie with The Blue Aeroplanes …And Stones, Al G and Jonathan Richman and Vincent van Gogh, Craig with Hot Chip’s Over And Over, Noone and Les Rallizes Denudes, Rol and The Teardrop Explodes, the Swede with The Beat and Ranking Full Stop, Walter with !!! and Chris ZenArcade with some lysergic dots and E.D. 209’s Metre and that Robocop sample…
This week’s Oblique Strategy card is this- A very small object. It’s centre.
My knowledge of physics is fairly limited. Last year a friend lent me Carlo Rovelli’s Helgoland,a very readable account of the story of quantum physics. I still couldn’t explain even in the simplest terms much about quantum physics but I enjoyed the ride.
I do know that atoms are extremely small and are the basic particles that make up everything. At the centre of an atom is the nucleus (which must therefore be smaller than an atom- right?). Atoms are so small we cannot see them, a million times smaller than the breadth of a hair. Coincidentally (and I’m rapidly coming to the conclusion that nothing about this series is coincidental, it all seems to be connected), earlier this week I was wandering around the campus at Manchester University where I photographed the Humanities building, a rectangle of concrete opened in 1970. It is the picture at the top of this post. It is just round the corner from the Rutherford Building, which contains the room in which in 1917 Ernest Rutherford split the atom* and so created the modern field of nuclear physics (I once went on a course in the exact room where Rutherford made his discovery).
Sixty seven years later, also in Manchester, Factory Records released FAC 102, Atom Rock by Quando Quango.
Quando Quango were a dance act somewhat ahead of their time, Mike Pickering channeling electronic music from New York and Chicago into mid- 80s Manchester along with Gonnie and Reinier Rietveld. They formed in Rotterdam in 1980 and then relocated to Manchester in ’82 when the Hacienda opened. Mike Pickering’s role in modern Manchester and Factory cannot be overplayed.
Atom Rock is a light on its feet slice of 1984, pioneering dance music with jazz and Latin influences worn on its sleeves, produced by Be Music (Bernard Sumner and Donald Johnson of ACR). That jangly, funky guitar riff is a moonlighting Johnny Marr (the birth of Electronic, Marr and Sumner’s late 80s band, is this record). It’s one of those songs that made Factory such an interesting record label in the mid- 80s. ‘Fela Kuti meets Kraftwerk somewhere between Rotterdam and Manchester’, said Gonnie of the band’s sound.
A year later there was a Mark Kamins remix, Kamins putting his Roland 808 through its paces (Kamins was the man who launched Madonna)…
Atom Rock (Mark Kamins New York Remix)
Juan Moreno’s Atomism Theory came out in 2024, an eight minute ambient piece that actually sounds like it could be the sound of atomic particles and nuclear fission.
And in a nice link to Carlo Rovelli’s Helgoland, in 2009 Massive Attack released Heligoland (both named after the same piece of land, an archipelago in Germany). The first single from the album was Splitting The Atom, with Horace Andy on co- vocals and Damon Albarn on keys.
I have several other atom/ atomic songs but I’ll stop there. Feel free to split your own atoms in the comments box or make any other responses to the Oblique Strategy card- A very small object. It’s centre.
* Apparently ‘splitting the atom’ is a poor choice of words for what Rutherford actually did. The University of Manchester’s website says that Rutherford was ”the first person to create an artificial nuclear reaction… now described as ‘splitting the atom’ in popular accounts”
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tagged: be music, brian eno, carlo rovelli, damon albarn, ED 209, ernest rutherford, Fac 102, factory records, horace andy, johnny marr, juan moreno, mark kamins, massive attack, mike pickering, oblique strategies, peter schmidt, Quando Quango | Leave a comment »












