Surf Monday has, quite unapologetically, packed its little surfboard and toddled off elsewhere this week. No crashing waves, no sun-bleached guitars—just a polite note left on the door: “Back soon (perhaps).”
Instead, we’re wandering down a different beach entirely—one where the sand sparkles a bit oddly, the tide hums in orchestral tones, and genres politely ignore the dress code. Surf Monday, it seems, has traded its flip-flops for velvet boots and a mischievous grin.
And honestly…who’s to say Monday can’t have an identity crisis now and then? So Roy Wood—ringmaster of The Move and early ELO—isn’t exactly
riding the surf? Pish-posh! Who needs waves when you’ve got swagger this tidal?
This cheeky little B-side struts in like it owns the saloon, and—oh!—the label
whispers (with a conspiratorial wink) that every single instrument is Roy
himself. One man, an entire orchestra. A musical octopus in platform boots.
Honestly, rather dazzling.
And the title? Oh, it practically twirls its mustache and declares, “That
everyday James Bond theme? How quaint. For the masses!” No, no—Roy is brewing
up the deluxe edition, the velvet-rope version, the one served with a sparkling
umbrella and a knowing smirk.
It conjures a most peculiar daydream: James Bond wandering into the Old
West, spurs jangling, martini mysteriously intact…perhaps rubbing shoulders
with Robert Conrad in The Wild Wild West. Honestly, I half expect Roy to
leap from behind a cactus and take over that theme song too. Why stop at Bond
when there are so many melodies begging for a proper Roy-ing?
Imagine it: Roy Wood and the Great Theme Songs (yes, yes, not the
most original title—but heavens, who would complain?). Picture him gleefully
dismantling The Good, The Bad and The Ugly—of which the movie- the gloriously
long extended version—is one of the greatest films ever to tip its hat at the
sun.
But alas, until I acquire Roy’s secret contact scroll and pitch this
grand scheme, we must content ourselves with this particular
interpretation…which, to be fair, is already twirling a baton in its own
marvelous little universe.






















