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Topic ClosedJohn Peel R.I.P.

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Man Erg View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: John Peel R.I.P.
    Posted: October 26 2004 at 09:31
Apologies to be the bearer of sad news but;
I'm sure that everybody on here will be saddened by the death of DJ John Peel.If it wasn't for him I wouldn't have heard a fraction of the wonderful music that I have.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2004 at 09:53

No!!!!!!

OMG, John Peel is dead. I'm SO sorry to hear that; he was the coolest of DJ's. I even forgave him for hating ELP.



Edited by sigod
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2004 at 10:07

Oh he only hated ELP, cause he was saddened over the loss of the Nice... but he will always have a place in the hearts of ELP fans... maybe not where he'd like to be... but he's there...

"Veteran BBC broadcaster John Peel has died at the age of 65, while on holiday in Peru.   Peel, whose radio career spanned 40 years, was on a working holiday in the city of Cuzco with his wife Sheila when he suffered a heart attack.

He was BBC Radio 1's longest-serving DJ and in recent years had also presented Home Truths on Radio 4.

Radio 1 controller Andy Parfitt said Peel's contribution to modern music and culture was "immeasurable".

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/tv_and_radio/395528 9.stm

THIS IS ELP
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2004 at 10:17

Thats truly tragic news, John contributed so much to the music scene and introduced us to many many new bands. He will be missed my millions of people.

Don't hate me
I'm not special like you
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2004 at 10:17
I never heard him as a DJ but I have a lot of "Peel Sessions" CDs from various bands that I can thank him for.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2004 at 11:02
I can well remember listening to punk on the radio as a fifteen year old and John Peel always played the best stuff.It was a shock (although not a surprise) when I discovered that he hated ELP but everyone is entitled to an opinion as long as it's honest.It's also worth mentioning that he was a great football fan and supported Liverpool FC keenly.RIP.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2004 at 11:10

Terrible news

I still have tapes of some of his shows from the early to mid 80's. I'll have to give them a listern tonight. He was a true supporter of alternative music and has been an inspiration to music lovers of all ages. He will be very sadly missed.

Apparently he was at the first ever Hawkwind show and pursuaded a reluctant Doug Smith, their manager to be, to sign them up. Well done John

RIP..

Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2004 at 11:55
Didn't he play mandolin on Rod Stewart's 'Maggie May'?
I must remind the right honourable gentleman that a monologue is not a decision.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2004 at 12:12
Originally posted by sigod sigod wrote:

Didn't he play mandolin on Rod Stewart's 'Maggie May'?


Apparently not.He mimed the part on Top of the Pops.
Don't tell the Musician's Union.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2004 at 12:40
From progressive rock, to punk, to Glastonbury, to Radio 4's 'Home Truths'......

One of the great sardonic wits of his generation will be very sadly missed by the many people whose musical outlook he had such an impact upon - in fact, to quote Mr Peart:

"suddenly you were gone, from all the lives you left your mark upon"

Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2004 at 13:02

That is really sad news, because he was the one dj who pointed me in the direction of the music that formed the basis of my record collection and in deed my musical tastes. For all his declared dislike of prog when he became a born -again punk fan - he most certainly did most for the movement in the late 60's and early seventies. As already stated it was more the demise of Nice (you can hear his voice on an ad for the band included on the 3 CD set Here Come The Nice), than the creation of ELP that annoyed him about prog.  And most of all he did a huge amount for independent musicians. Unfortunate none of the original Radio One dj now survives on that station, making it duller and less adventurous than ever.

 

On a lighter side, we will now not get to know how he bedded feminist Germaine Grear, as promised in his autobiography.....................................

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2004 at 13:06

Stolen from NME web page - a rare occasion the magazine makes some sense:

 

JOHN PEEL: 1939-2004



When John Peel’s sad, sudden death at the age of 65 was announced today (October 26) on BBC Radio 1, the station that had been his home for five decades, broke with programming and played Undertones ‘Teenage Kicks’ – his all-time favourite song.

It was a fitting tribute to a man whose dedication and unerring passion for all that was fresh and vital and youthful and vigorous about music saw him reject the dictats and mores of broadcasting to pursue a singular path launching the career of hundreds of bands, and soundtracking the youth of millions of music fans.

Born John Robert Parker Ravenscoft in Heswall, near Liverpool, in 1939, Peel was the son of the wealthy owner of a cotton mill. He was sent away to boarding school in Shrewsbury, which he hated, an ordeal made bearable when he first heard Elvis Presley singing ‘Heartbreak Hotel’.

"Everything changed when I heard Elvis," he said. "Where there had been nothing there was suddenly something."

In 1959, after National Service, Peel moved to America where Beatlemania soon took hold. The Liverpool connection helped Peel land a spot as DJ on WRR radio in Dallas. He moved back to England in 1967, where he first joined Radio London, before moving to BBC Radio 1 for its launch. He was to remain with the station for the rest of his life, the only original DJ.

His style was immediately different to other presenters. He played the records from start to finish without interruption – which later became useful if you wanted to tape the tracks - providing an informative commentary for listeners. During his early period, Peel was a friend and supporter of some of the biggest names in rock. Marc Bolan, David Bowie and Jimi Hendrix all recorded Peel Sessions and Peel famously once showed up on Top Of The Pops miming mandolin for Rod Stewart on the chart-topping‘Maggie May’.

As the 70s progressed, Peel’s tastes evolved. He was in the vanguard of punk, pushing the sounds of The Ramones, The Clash, The Undertones, The Buzzcocks and the Sex Pistols, then latterly Joy Division. In the 80s, he kickstarted the careers of New Order, The Fall, Smiths and any number of other acts you care to name. We would never have heard the Pixies or Pulp or The White Stripes if it wasn’t for John Peel.

As the years rolled on, the scope of his radio show widened. He moved between gum-bleeding German techno, world music and the occasional Roy Orbison hit with ease – even if it was sometimes a little taxing for his legions of fans. Until recently, a place on his annual countdown of the best singles of the year – Peel’s Festive 50> – was a much sought-after berth for bands on independent labels.

In recent years, Peel built a new army of fans. His award winning ‘Home Truths’ programme on BBC Radio Four grew into a must-hear for middle-aged listeners in middle England. And his spots on the BBC’s ‘Grumpy Old Men’ – a series featuring irritated men of a certain age riling against the things they found most absurd about modern life – were frequently the funniest and most telling.

Balding, a little plump, a devoted father, grandfather and husband not to mention a big fan of genteel radio series The Archers, Peel kicked open the door for people like Steve Lamacq and Zane Lowe, letting the mainstream programmers see that an audience existed for music that was not always a chart fixture.

His influence is immeasurable.

John Peel often told the story hearing ‘Teenage Kicks’ for the first time. He was driving in his car listening to the song on a demo tape. He was so overcome by the tune that he pulled onto the side of the road to have a cry.

There are thousands of people across Britain today who will have had a similar experience on hearing of his untimely death.

Paul McNamee

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2004 at 13:21

>minute's silence<

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2004 at 13:54
From Sweden 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2004 at 18:33

Much before my time, however i know all about him and thank him for the smiths pixies and joy division, all 3 some of my favorite bands

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2004 at 18:36

I turned the radio on this afternoon to hear a snippet of discussion about John followed by the DJ playing Joy Division's Atmosphere. It was odd how I felt so sad without me hearing that John had passed away.

But celebrate his life. He said himself it couldnt have been better.

From one JP to another. Heres to you John!

Information is not knowledge
Knowledge is not wisdom
Wisdom is not truth
Truth is not beauty
Beauty is not love
Love is not music
Music is the best...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 27 2004 at 08:47

 

He died in Cusco, while vacationing as a tourist: a heart arrest. God rest his soul: he was a real protector of the arts in the avant-garde scenes. i have a copy of Peter Hammill's Peel Sessions -- one of these days I'll listen to it to Mr. Peel's honour.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 27 2004 at 08:47
One  pity about the NME obituary is  they could not come to mention the large number of prog bands - Nice was a favourite. Eno was on Radio 4 this morning's Today programme with Mr Thom of Radiohead, and both said it was Peel who gave them life as professional musicians  - Eno used the insightful term 'Midwife' . What a difference here and  with the interview with a literate member of the Undertone and the incoherent,  gnarled form of Mark E Smith of The Fall, on BBC 2's Newsnight last night.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 27 2004 at 08:52

It's sad to lose such an important rock influence and icon.Unhappy

R.I.P., Mr Peel. Thanks for all the great music!

"And, has thou slain the Jabberwock?
Come to my arms, my beamish boy!
O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!'
He chortled in his joy.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 27 2004 at 19:55

See!

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