John Peel
 |
Autobiography |
John Robert Parker Ravenscroft,
OBE (
30 August,
1939 â€"
25 October 2004), known professionally as
John Peel, was a
British disc jockey,
radio presenter, and
journalist.
Known for his eclectic taste in music and his honest and warm broadcasting style, John Peel was a popular and respected DJ and broadcaster. He was one of the first to play
reggae and
punk on British radio. His significant influence on
alternative rock, pop,
British hip hop and dance music is acknowledged. He was one of the original DJs of
BBC Radio 1 in 1967 and the only original DJ remaining on that station at the time of his death.
Peel was born in
Heswall on
the Wirral Peninsula, near
Liverpool, and grew up in the nearby village of
Burton. His father was an
upper middle class cotton merchant, and he was sent away to be educated as a boarder at
Shrewsbury School. His housemaster, R H J Brooke, whom Peel described as "extraordinarily eccentric" and "amazingly perceptive", wrote on one of his school reports:
Perhaps it's possible that John can form some kind of nightmarish career out of his enthusiasm for unlistenable records and his delight in writing long and facetious essays.
In his posthumously published autobiography, Peel revealed that he had been subjected to sexual abuse by older pupils while at Shrewsbury. His decision to reveal this was praised by campaigners for children's rights. [
1]
After finishing his
National Service in 1959 in the
Royal Artillery as a B2
Radar Operator, he worked as a mill operative in
Rochdale.
In 1960, he went to the
United States to work for a cotton producer who had business dealings with his father. Once this job had finished he took a number of others, including working as a travelling insurance salesman, remaining in America until 1967. While in Dallas he spoke to
John F. Kennedy as the Presidential candidate and
Lyndon Johnson toured the city during the 1960 election campaign. Following Kennedy's assassination he passed himself off as a reporter for the
Liverpool Echo in order to attend the arraignment of
Lee Harvey Oswald and he and a friend can be seen in the footage of the press conference shortly before Oswald's assassination. He later phoned in the story to the
Liverpool Echo.
While working for a
Dallas,
Texas-based insurance company filing card programs for an early
IBM 1410 computer (which led to his entry in
Who's Who noting him as a former
computer programmer) he got his first radio job, albeit unpaid, working for
WRR Radio in Dallas. There he presented the second hour of the Monday night programme
Kat's Karavan. Following this, and as
Beatlemania hit the U.S.A, Peel got a job as the official
Beatles correspondent with the Dallas radio station
KLIF, due to his connection to Liverpool. He later worked for
KOMA in
Oklahoma City until 1965 when he moved to
KMEN in
San Bernardino,
California using the name John Ravencroft to present the breakfast show.
I had been working on radio in America since 1961, initially Dallas, Texas; then I got into it full time as a Beatle expert in Oklahoma City in '64/66. I was in California for a year and half in San Bernadino, came back here [to Britain] in '67 and was by and large unemployable at the time. I hadn't anything to come home to. Just luck really, being in the right place at the right time, music lovers might argue the wrong place at the wrong time.
While in Dallas he married his first wife, Shirley Anne Milburn, in what Peel later described as a "mutual defence pact". She was only 15 at the time, a fact she successfully concealed from Peel, and both her parents had recently died. The marriage was never happy and although Shirley accompanied Peel back to Britain in 1967 they were soon separated. The divorce became final in 1973. She later committed suicide.
He returned to England in early 1967 and found work with the offshore
pirate radio station
Radio London . He was offered the midnight-to-two shift, which gradually developed into a program called
The Perfumed Garden (some thought it was named after an erotic book famous at the time - which Peel claimed never to have read). It was on "Big L" that he first adopted the name John Peel (the name was suggested by a Radio London secretary) and established himself as a distinctive radio voice.
At the time I was coming to the end of a fairly catastrophic marriage ... my wife was amazingly aggressive and she hit me a lot and so I was pleased to be on the ship for two weeks out of three. ... It wasn't until [the Beatles' manager] Brian Epstein phoned [the station manager in London] ... on having the foresight to put on this excellent programme late at night and ... thought 'we had better listen to this' ... they were all slightly horrified but it had gone too far for them to stop it ... There was a play list and commercials that had to be done ... but ... after midnight I virtually did away with them ... I didn't bother to do the news or the weather or anything. Just to do two hours of records and reading other people's poetry very badly.
Under the spell of the
Beatles' newly-released
Sergeant Pepper LP and the
underground/flower-power scene, John Peel brought 1967 hippy culture to a generation of young British listeners. He played classic
blues (
Howlin' Wolf,
Lightnin' Hopkins,
Elmore James) and
folk music (
Bob Dylan, the
Incredible String Band,
Donovan) and gently introduced the groundbreaking music of West Coast bands such as
Love, the
Doors,
The Mothers of Invention,
Country Joe and the Fish and
Jefferson Airplane, their British contemporaries like
Pink Floyd,
John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers and
Cream - and his special favourites,
The Misunderstood (whom he persuaded to move from California to London),
Marc Bolan (as a solo artist and with
T. Rex) and
Captain Beefheart (for whom he later acted as
chauffeur during the latter's 1969 UK tour).
As important as the musical content of the programme was the personaltone of Peel's presentation, and the listener participation it engendered. He would often wish his audience love and peace, but this seemed sincere and heartfelt, rather than a mere hippy cliché. Underground events he had attended during his periods of shore leave, like the
UFO Club and the "14 Hour Technicolor Dream", together with causes celebres like the drug "busts" of the
Rolling Stones and John "Hoppy" Hopkins, were discussed between records. All this was far removed from Radio London's daytime format.
Listeners, enthused by the Perfumed Garden's unique atmosphere, sent Peel letters, poems, even records from their own collections, so that the programme became a vehicle for two-way communication -- by the final week of Radio London he was receiving far more mail than any other DJ on the station.
After the closure of Radio London in 1967, the Perfumed Garden lived on in his column of that name in the underground newspaper
International Times (from autumn 1967 to mid-1969), in which he showed himself to be a committed, if critical, supporter of the ideals of the underground; and in the Perfumed Garden mailing list, a group formed by keen listeners, which facilitated contacts and gave rise to numerous small-scale, local arts projects typical of the time, including the poetry magazine "Sol". (Peel, supportive at first, distanced himself from this "community" as his career developed.)
BBC Radio 1
When Radio London closed down on August 14, 1967, John Peel joined the
BBC's new pop music station,
Radio 1, which began broadcasting the following month. Unlike Big L, Radio 1 was not a full-time station, but a hybrid of recorded music and live studio orchestras broadcast at the same time as the talk and light music of BBC Radio Two. The pirate stations had been successful partly because they played records continuously, but the BBC was gagged by the
Musicians' Union and record company restriction called
needle time. While
The Perfumed Garden had been spontaneously produced and introduced by John Peel, BBC regulations demanded that Peel introduce a show produced by Bernie Andrews called
Top Gear. Peel recalled:
I was one of the first lot on Radio 1 and I think it was mainly because ... Radio 1 had no real idea what they were doing so they had to take people off the pirate ships because there wasn't anybody else.
At first he was obliged to share presentation duties with other DJs (Pete Drummond and
Tommy Vance were among his co-hosts) but in February 1968 was given sole charge of "Top Gear" - a role which he held until the show ended in 1975. His subsequent programmes, known simply as John Peel shows, continued in the same vein, playing an eclectic mix of music that simply caught Peel's attention. According to his autobiography both the authorities at Radio 1 and his audience did not always appreciate the music he played, and he received complaints for playing music such as reggae, hip-hop, punk and
industrial music.
From the start Peel had displayed a quirky, eclectic and avant-garde taste in music. He was largely responsible for introducing BBC listeners to
punk rock,
reggae and
hip-hop. In 1973 he played both sides of
Mike Oldfield's
Tubular Bells in full, the subsequent success of which helped establish
Richard Branson's
Virgin music label. His favourite song was "Teenage Kicks" by
The Undertones. Peel championed the long-running
Manchester band
The Fall, who played 24 sessions for the show, including one on Peel's 60th birthday. Once he liked a
Cocteau Twins album so much that he played a whole side, non-stop, without interruption. His avant-garde musical tastes brought him into conflict with other more conservative DJs at the BBC such as
Tony Blackburn and
Simon Bates. He remained a dominant force in independent music, both in the UK and across Europe, until his death.
During 1969, after hosting a trailer for a BBC programme on
VD on his Night Ride programme, Peel received significant media attention because of admitting on air to be suffering from a
sexually transmitted disease. This admission was later used in an attempt to discredit him when he appeared as a defence witness in the 1971
OZ obscenity trial. The
judge in that case even instructed that a glass of water he had drunk from be thrown out.
The Night Ride programme (on Wednesdays, between 12 midnight and 1 a.m.), advertised by the BBC as an exploration of words and music, seemed to take up from where the Perfumed Garden had left off. It featured a highly eclectic choice of music, from rock, folk (e.g., the
Incredible String Band, the
Young Tradition,
John Renbourn,
Davey Graham) and blues (
Fred McDowell,
Jo Ann Kelly) to classical (
Albeniz, Dvorak,
Penderecki, Messaien, Pachelbel's "Canon"). A unique feature of the programme was the inclusion of tracks, mostly of exotic non-Western music, drawn from the BBC Sound Archives; the most popular of these were gathered on a BBC Records LP, "John Peel's Archive Things" (1970). Night Ride also featured poetry readings from
Brian Patten, Carlyle Reedy,
Adrian Henri (and his band The Liverpool Scene),
Adrian Mitchell,
Christopher Logue and many other "beat" or "pop" poets. There were also numerous interviews with a wide range of guests, from his personal friends - Marc Bolan, journalist and musician
Mick Farren, poet Pete Roche, singer-songwriter Bridget St. John - to stars such as
the Byrds,
the Rolling Stones and
John Lennon and
Yoko Ono - and even Hans Keller, head of BBC Radio 3. A youthful
Richard Branson promoted his magazine "Student"; Tony Elliott publicised the new London listings magazine "Time Out". Peel interviewed a monk, Dom Robert Petit Pierre, and eulogised the night Robert Kennedy was killed.
The programme captured much of the creative activity of the underground scene. Its anti-establishment stance and unpredictability did not find approval with the BBC hierarchy, though, and after 18 months it ended in September 1969. In his sleevenotes to the "Archive Things" LP Peel calls the free-form nature of Night Ride his preferred radio format, but he was never again to present such an adventurous programme (although others, notably Radio Geronimo, attempted US-style hippy radio). The BBC's restrictive scheduling compelled him to return to the mixture of records and live sessions which was to characterise his Radio 1 programmes for the rest of his career.
Peel made his reputation in the late 1960s, but did not share the nostalgia of those who look back on it as a "golden era". Later, he would speak of being uncomfortable as a "minor princeling among the hippies" and uneasy with the guru-like status he was afforded at the height of his fashionability. It was easy to forget that he was ten years older than most of his listeners; also, his listeners knew little of the difficulties of his first marriage. (He did, however, believe very strongly in the hippy ideals, and was deeply disappointed when some of the leading lights of the underground scene proved to be careerists, opportunists or charlatans; his later, bitter comments about the late 60s should be seen in this light.)
After separation from his first wife, Peel's personal life began to stabilise, as he found friendship and support from new "Top Gear" producer
John Walters - and from a girlfriend whom he identified on-air as "the Pig". Eventually, on
31 August 1974, Peel married Sheila Gilhooly. The reception was in London's
Regent's Park, with Walters as best man. Peel wore Liverpool football colours (red) and walked down the aisle to the song "
You'll Never Walk Alone". Their
sheepdog, Woggle, served as a
bridesmaid. His relationship with Sheila was one of the most important things in his life.
Peel was the first to play the
Sex Pistols' "God Save the Queen", in December 1976, having played "
Anarchy in the UK", which was banned from the BBC's daytime playlist, a month earlier. In 1976 he was also the first to play
Bob Dylan's Desire in the UK, despite
Capital Radio having exclusive permission from
CBS to be the first to do so. Peel got hold of a copy of the record and, to beat Capital, played it in full, separated by a reggae track while he changed the record over.Peel was to show this disregard for record company rules again when in 2003 he played three tracks from
The White Stripes album
Elephant before its official release date, resulting in him being threatened by lawyers for the record company
V2.
His radio show was latterly sometimes broadcast from his home in
Suffolk,
England, nicknamed "Peel Acres", and had a homely air, with his wife, Sheila, whom he affectionately referred to as "The Pig" (because of her laugh), and his children, William, Tom, Alexandra (Danda) and Florence (Flossie) often being involved or at least mentioned.
Latterly the show also regularly featured live performances, mostly from
Maida Vale in London, but occasionally in the Peel Acres living room.
Peel also played many older records on his show, specifically in two sections he introduced:
* "The Pig's Big 78": Sheila, John Peel's wife, chose a
78 rpm record, which he played.
* "The Peelennium": broadcast over his last 100 shows of 1999, this covered the music of the 20th century. Each show covered a different year in turn—four records from the year would be played and main news stories covered.
Besides the countless bands he championed, Peel also supported the rare and the unusual, often in the form of the spoken word. If not for John Walters and John Peel, it's possible that
Vivian Stanshall's
Sir Henry at Rawlinson End might never have been heard.
An annual tradition of the show was the
Festive Fifty—a countdown of the best tracks of the year as voted for by the listeners. Despite Peel's eclectic playlist, the Festive Fifty tended to be composed largely of "
white boys with guitars," in Peel's words. This frustrated Peel somewhat, and in 1991 he went so far as to cancel the rundown. Topped inevitably by
Nirvana's "
Smells Like Teen Spirit", this Phantom Fifty was eventually broadcast at the rate of one track per programme, some years later. The 1997 chart was, unusually, a Festive Thirty-One. Peel wrote that
Peel's show was the only place on Radio 1 where listeners could hear
happy hardcore, which Peel's children had introduced him to - indeed, there is a happy hardcore track entitled "John Peel is Not Enough" by the artist
CLSM, reflecting the hardcore's hopes for wider broadcast exposure. Peel was so impressed by this that not only did he play it on his show several times, but dedicated an entire show to the genre, in hopes that it could spawn its own show. Peel also championed a wealth of other musical genres from
reggae to
death metal. However, his much vaunted eclecticism had its limits; he rarely if ever gave airtime to
industrial music, nor did he show any interest in or sympathy for
free jazz and
improvisation.
Nevertheless, many bands and artists of many different musical styles from different decades credit Peel as a major boost to their careers. The list includes
T-Rex,
David Bowie,
The Faces,
Bolt Thrower,
The Sex Pistols,
The Slits,
Siouxsie and the Banshees,
Fairport Convention,
Pink Floyd,
The Clash,
Napalm Death,
Carcass,
Extreme Noise Terror,
The Undertones,
Buzzcocks,
Gary Numan,
The Cure,
Joy Division,
The Wedding Present,
Six By Seven,
Def Leppard,
Pulp,
Ash,
Orbital,
The Smiths,
FSK and
The White Stripes. Peel's reputation as the most important DJ breaking unsigned acts into the mainstream was such that in 1983 unsigned artist
Billy Bragg drove to the Radio 1 studios with a mushroom
biryani and a copy of his record after hearing Peel mention that he was hungry, the subsequent airplay launching his career.
Peel remained on Radio 1 for 37 years, until his death in 2004. During that time over 4000 sessions were recorded for him by over 2000 artists [
2]. The last track he played on his final show was "Time 4 Change" from the album
No One's Listening Anymore (by
Klute).
Peel Sessions
A feature of Peel's Radio 1 shows were the famous John Peel Sessions, which usually consisted of four tracks pre-recorded at the BBC's studios. The sessions originally came about due to restrictions imposed on the BBC by the
Musicians' Union and
Phonographic Performances Limited which represented the record companies dominated by the
EMI cartel, the BBC had been forced to hire bands and orchestras to render
cover versions of recorded music. The theory behind this device was that it would create employment and force people to buy records and not listen to them free of charge on the air. One of the reasons why all of the offshore broadcasting stations of the 1960s were called "pirates" was because they operated outside of British laws and were not bound by the
needle time restriction on the number of records they could play on the air. However,
Don Pierson who created Wonderful Radio London, stated in an interview that EMI used to send runners to the station's offices in
London to deliver the latest batches of records free of charge, while denouncing the stations in the press. Pierson said in the interview that he finally told EMI to cut out the hypocrisy or he would expose their activities in the press. (For more information about the relationship between the record industry, "pirate radio" and "needle time", see
IFPI.)
The BBC employed its own house bands and orchestras and it also engaged outside bands to record exclusive tracks for its programs in BBC studios. This was the reason why Peel was able to use "session men" in his own programs. Sessions were usually four tracks recorded and mixed in a single day; as such they often had a rough and ready, demo-like feel, somewhere between a live performance and a finished recording. Many classic Peel Sessions have been released on record, particularly by the
Strange Fruit label.
See also:
*
:Category:Peel Sessions artists*
:Category:Peel Sessions recordings (regardless of album/EP title)
BBC World Service and foreign radio
In addition to his Radio 1 show, he broadcast as a disc jockey on the
BBC World Service, 30 years on the British Forces Broadcasting Service
BFBS (John Peel´s Music on BFBS),
VPRO Radio3 in the
Netherlands, YLE Radio Mafia in
Finland, Ö3 in Austria (Nachtexpress), and on Radio 4U,
Radio Eins (Peel ...),
Radio Bremen (Ritz) and some independent radio stations around FSK Hamburg in
Germany. His audience also broadened to include listeners around the world listening to
internet audio broadcasts.As a result of his BFBS programme he was voted, in Germany, 'Top DJ in Europe'.
BBC Television
He was an occasional presenter of
Top of the Pops on
BBC1 from the late 1960s until the 1990s, and in particular from 1982 to 1987 when he appeared regularly. Unlike other presenters of the show he was noted for his caustic remarks about the acts and songs appearing, for example saying of
George Michael and
Aretha Franklin's "I Knew You Were Waiting For Me":
"You know, Aretha Franklin can make any old rubbish sound good, and I think she just has."In 1971 he appeared not as presenter but performer, alongside
Rod Stewart and
The Faces, pretending to play
mandolin on "
Maggie May."
Peel, as the most senior and well known "alternative" DJ often presented the
BBC's television coverage of music events, notably
Glastonbury Festival.
In 1996 he was the subject of the BBC's "
This Is Your Life".
In spite of all of these appearances he never particularly liked appearing on television and disdained those Radio 1 DJs who he felt were using their radio careers as a stepping stone on the way to TV stardom.
In 1969 Peel founded
Dandelion Records (named after his pet hamster) so he could release the debut album by
Bridget St John, which he also produced. The label released 27 albums by 18 different artists before folding in 1972. Dandelion was never a great success with only two releases charting -
Medicine Head in the UK with "(And The) Pictures In The Sky" and
Beau in the Lebanon(!) with "1917 Revolution". As Peel stated,
It was never a success financially. In fact, we lost money, if I remember correctly, on every single release bar one. I did quite like it but it was terribly indulgent. Not as indulgent as it would have been had I not had a business partner, admittedly... I liked having a label. It enabled you to put out stuff that you liked without, in those days, having to worry about whether it was going to work commercially. I've never been a good business man.
In the 1980s Peel set up the
Strange Fruit record label with Clive Selwood to release material recorded by the BBC for Peel Sessions.
In the 1970s John Peel and his wife Sheila moved to a
thatched cottage in the village of
Great Finborough near
Stowmarket in
Suffolk, starting a family of four children. In the eight-acre (32,000 m²) garden, referred to on the radio as Peel Acres, he housed his record collection, estimated by then to be in the hundreds of thousands, in a number of barns and stables. In his later years Peel introduced many of his radio shows from a studio at Peel Acres.
Peel and Sheila had four children: William, Alexandra, Thomas and Florence. His passion for Liverpool FC was reflected in their names, giving all four middle names related to the team:
Shankly,
Anfield and
Dalglish.
In his later years Peel appeared to mellow somewhat. Between 1995 and 1997 he presented a show about children, called
Offspring, on
Radio 4. In 1998
Offspring grew into the magazine-style documentary show
Home Truths. When he took on the job presenting the programme, which is about everyday life in British families, Peel requested that it be free from celebrities, as he found real life stories more entertaining.
Home Truths was described by occasional stand-in presenter
John Walters as being "about people who had fridges called Renfrewshire". He also made regular contributions to
BBC Two's humorous look at the irritations of modern life
Grumpy Old Men.
He was also in demand as a voice-over artist for television documentaries, such as
BBC One's
A Life of Grime, and advertisements, though he reportedly refused to work on adverts for products that he didn't use himself. He once said that he hoped his voice-over for
Andrex toilet tissue would "make people want to wipe their bottom".
Awards and honorary degrees
Peel was 11 times
Melody Maker's DJ of the year,
Sony Broadcaster of the Year in 1993, winner of the Godlike Genius Award from the
NME in 1994,
Sony Gold Award winner in 2002 and is a member of the
Radio Academy Hall of Fame. At the NME awards in 2005 he was Hero of the Year and was posthumously given a special award for "Lifelong Service To Music". At the same event the "John Peel Award For Musical Innovation" was awarded to
The Others.
He was awarded many
honorary degrees including an MA from the
University of East Anglia, doctorates (
Anglia Polytechnic University and
Sheffield Hallam University), various honorary degrees (
University of Liverpool,
Open University,
University of Portsmouth,
University of Bradford) and a fellowship of
Liverpool John Moores University.
He was appointed an
OBE in 1998, for his services to British music. In that year he was also voted 47th in a
Cosmopolitan readers' poll.
In 2002, the BBC conducted a
vote to discover the
100 Greatest Britons of all time. Peel was voted 43rd.
In April 2003 the publishers
Transworld successfully wooed Peel with a package worth up to £1.6 million for his autobiography, having placed an advert in a national newspaper aimed only at Peel. Unfinished at the time of his death it has since been completed by Sheila and journalist Ryan Gilbey. It is called
Margrave Of The Marshes and was published on
October 17,
2005.
Health in later years and death
Peel was diagnosed with
diabetes in 2001 and two weeks before his death he told friend and colleague
Andy Kershaw that the move of his show, in summer 2004, back an hour from a 10pm start to 11pm, caused him a lot of stress and that he felt marginalised and unappreciated.
Peel died suddenly at the age of 65 from a
heart attack on
October 25,
2004, on a working holiday in the
Inca city of
Cuzco in
Peru. Shortly after the announcement of his death, tributes began to arrive from fans and supporters both in and out of public life. Among the first to pay their respects were such seminal
British artists as
Blur,
Oasis, and
New Order.
On
October 26, 2004 Radio 1 cleared its schedules to broadcast a day of tributes, while
BBC Three added an additional caption to its on-screen logo: "Dedicated to John Peel". A stage for new bands at the
Glastonbury Festival, previously known simply as 'The New Tent' has been renamed 'The John Peel Stage'.
Peel often spoke wryly of his eventual death. He once said on the show
Room 101,
I've always imagined I'd die by driving into the back of a truck while trying to read the name on a cassette, and people would say, 'He would have wanted to go that way.' Well, I want them to know that I wouldn't.
At one point, he said that if he died before his producer John Walters, he wanted the latter to play
Roy Harper's "
When an Old Cricketer Leaves the Crease." In the event Walters predeceased Peel (Walters died in 2001), and it was left to Andy Kershaw to end his tribute programme to Peel on BBC Radio 3 with the song. Another time, Peel said he'd like to be remembered with a gospel song.
His funeral, on
November 12,
2004, in
Bury St Edmunds,
Suffolk, was attended by over a thousand people including many of the artists he had championed. Eulogies were read by his brother, Alan Ravenscroft, and DJ
Paul Gambaccini. The service ended with clips of him talking about his life and his
coffin was carried out to the accompaniment of his favourite song:
The Undertones'
Teenage Kicks. (In 2001 Peel had told
The Guardian that apart from his name all he wanted on his gravestone were the words, "Teenage dreams, so hard to beat," from the track's lyrics [
3].) A private family service was held after the public funeral.
On
October 13 2005, the first "John Peel Day" took place in the UK and as far away as
Canada and
New Zealand. The BBC encouraged as many bands as possible to stage gigs on the 13th, and over 500 gigs from bands ranging from Peel favourites
New Order (who were introduced by
Feargal Sharkey of
The Undertones) and
The Fall, to many new and unsigned bands, took place.
The day had been announced in August, and Andy Parfitt, the head of
BBC Radio 1 said, "John Peel Day is about celebrating John's legacy and his unrivalled passion for music."
The BBC plans to make John Peel Day an annual event. It has attracted some criticism from those who feel that the mass press coverage is slightly cynical given the relative popularity of his niche slot while alive. Equally there were some criticisms of the organisation of the day and the later charity single in that it focused on established artists while he was always interested in new and upcoming sounds.
October 17, 2005 saw the release of a double CD tribute album.
* Peel was a devoted fan of
Liverpool Football Club. After the
Hillsborough disaster he started his show with Aretha Franklin's gospel version of "
You'll Never Walk Alone". But since his move down to
Suffolk he admitted live on air he followed
Ipswich Town results as his children sometimes saw them play.
* Peel once auctioned a
kidney stone for charity minutes after passing it while DJing at a student party.
* Peel used aliases when checking in his laundry, including "Eddie Lee Beppaux" and "Jack Frobisher". When checking into hotels in the 1990s Peel used a series of names from Channel Nine News section of the BBC television comedy series
The Fast Show including
Boutros Boutros-Ghali and
Chris Waddle.
* The last band to record a Peel session was
Hot Snakes, at
Maida Vale Studios on
October 14,
2004. The recording was later released as a 7-inch.
* In his 1990 appearance on
Desert Island Discs, Peel chose the following:
**
Handel's
Zadok the Priest as recorded at the coronation of George VI
**
Roy Orbison â€" "It's Over"
**
Jimmy Reed â€" "Too Much"
**
Misty in Roots â€" "Mankind"
**
The Undertones â€" "
Teenage Kicks" (choice if only allowed one record)
**
Rachmaninoff's
2nd piano concerto**
The Fall â€" "Eat Y'self Fitter"
**
The Four Brothers â€" "Pasi pano pane zviedzo"
** Book:
A Dance to the Music of Time by
Anthony Powell** Luxury: A football, and a wall to kick it against.
* Of these, only the Undertones "
Teenage Kicks" was in the box of 142 singles [
4] that he reportedly would have carried with him if his house were to have burned down.[
5]
* As if to prove his uniquely eclectic musical tastes, Peel was apparently a considerable fan and supporter of the much-derided
Eurovision Song Contest. He also liked
Sheena Easton and frequently played her hit
"9 to 5" at his roadshows.
* Peel only released one mix album, entitled
Fabric Live 07.
* Peel appeared on the BBC show
Room 101 (TV series) in 2002 and selected men with
beards,
colds, shopping for clothes, driving through
Essex and death. He had mixed success in trying to get items banished, and was forced to wear an
Everton shirt - the local rivals to his beloved Liverpool - by the host
Paul Merton in order to get one item in.
* A tulip was named in Peel's honour (with a donation from each purchase going to help fund musical performances by children and youth groups in the
Spalding Flower Parade. [
6]. There will also be a float in the parade named in his honour, run by
Tulip Radio, a local station in the town.
* The teenager at the centre of
Iain Banks' The Wasp Factory is an avid fan of John Peel.
* The radio version of his autobiography
Margrave of the Marshes was read by
Michael Angelis, whose voice is fairly similar to Peel's.
* Peel had the same housemaster, R. H. J. Brooke, at the
Shrewsbury School as
Michael Palin. Both speak fondly of Brooke; Peel in his autobiography
Margrave of the Marshes and Palin in the
Monty Python's Flying Circus biography
The Python's on The Pythons.
* Most quotations by Peel cited above come from an extensive article written by him about his own life up until 1984. It was published in 1984 as part of an anthology and diary about
pirate radio history called
Pirate Radio: Then and Now by Stuart Henry and Mike von Joel. Blandford Press, Dorset, UK. ISBN 0-7137-1497-2
* Information on Radio London, the Perfumed Garden, Top Gear, Night Ride and early Radio One can be found in Robert Chapman, "Selling the Sixties" (Routledge, 1991)
* Don Pierson's explanation about the part played by EMI in "
needle time" while supplying records free of charge to the offshore stations such as
Wonderful Radio London is covered in
Mass Media Moments in the United Kingdom, the USSR and the USA, by Eric Gilder - "Lucian Blaga" University of Sibiu Press, Romania. 2003 - ISBN 973-651-596-6
Margrave of the Marshes, John Peel & Sheila Ravenscroft, Bantam Press, 2005. ISBN 0593052528
Official sites
*
John Peel Radio 1 minisite*
BBC Radio 4 biography*
John Peel Biography by BBC Radio 1 (
PDF)
*
Home Truths*
John Peel Day 2005Interviews
*
2001: BBC Online, about Home Truths*
DJ History*
2004: Get Ready To Rock*
B92.net*
2002: OverloadedObituaries
*
BBC News Online*
The Guardian*
The Independent (requires paid subscription)
*
New Musical Express*
The TimesTributes
*
DJ Andy Kershaw (requires paid subscription)
*
DJ Mark Radcliffe*
Readers of BBC News Online*
Readers of the Daily Telegraph*
Colleagues and public figures (Guardian)*
The Guardian Special Report including
announcement of Peel's deathOther
*
BBC News : BBC news report on Peel's huge impact on music.
*
Radio Plus : Legal MP3s contributed by bands that have appeared on Peel's Radio programmes.
*
John Peel Music : Unpredictable Porridge - Peel's son Tom Ravenscroft site for burgeoning talent.
*
Offshore Radio : John Peel airchecks from 1967 on 'pirate' station Radio London - located at the Pirate Radio Hall of Fame.
*
Radio London : Perfumed Garden articles from International Times, 1967-68.
*[
7]Sol Magazine and the Perfumed Garden group.
*[
8] Peel as influence and inspiration for Radio Geronimo, 1969-70.
*
Rock List : Archive listing of the annual Festive Fifty chart as voted for by listeners.
*
John Peel Scrapbook : A comprehensive and sorted directory of links referencing Peel's working life.
*
The Guardian : John Peel's 60th birthday feature.
*
The Guardian : John Peel, 1939-2004 - A life in pictures.
*
The Guardian : 'The Peel Detective' reprints a list of twenty albums formerly chosen by Peel as being his favourite with comment from some of those chosen.
*
Favourite John Peel Quotes : Famous and favourite quotes recalled by listeners.