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Memories that snap, crackle and pop | Brief letters

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Analogue music | Football songs | Money matters | Medical mysteries | Vintage comedy The communications lecturer ARE Taylor believes old media formats are “presented as the remedy for our digital ailment” (Editorial, 11 June). As a 65-year-old whose journey in music began with a transistor radio, moved on to a radio cassette player and eventually to a record player, I can testify that these old technologies were just as “addictive, unnatural, unhealthy and harmful” as today’s, but in...

Analogue music | Football songs | Money matters | Medical mysteries | Vintage comedy

The communications lecturer ARE Taylor believes old media formats are “presented as the remedy for our digital ailment” (Editorial, 11 June). As a 65-year-old whose journey in music began with a transistor radio, moved on to a radio cassette player and eventually to a record player, I can testify that these old technologies were just as “addictive, unnatural, unhealthy and harmful” as today’s, but in a beautiful, exciting, memory-filled, crackly sort of a way.
Alex Dickie
Edinburgh

• Your list (Sing when you’re winning: the 20 greatest songs about football – ranked!, 4 June) surprised me by not including Fitba’ Crazy, written in the 1880s by James Curran. Sung by Jimmie MacGregor and Robin Hall with a strong Scottish brogue, it was released as a single in the 1960s. Surely it is the oldest football song, and ought to be the Scotland anthem in the World Cup.
Richard Gosnell
Royal Wootton Bassett, Wiltshire

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Analogue (ORG) ARE Taylor (ORG) Alex Dickie Edinburgh• (PERSON) Fitba’ Crazy (ORG) James Curran (PERSON) Jimmie MacGregor (PERSON) Robin Hall (PERSON) Scottish (ORG) Scotland (LOCATION) World Cup (EVENT) Richard GosnellRoyal Wootton Bassett (PERSON) Wiltshire (LOCATION)
Originally published by The Guardian UK Read original →