DPAS
FEATURE
Farewell
John Peel
It's a little
sad to see BBC Radio DJ John Peel's death being hijacked by some sections
of the media. BBC Three's crass idea of dedicating the evening's programmes
to the man on screen was particularly loathsome. Yet amongst the band-waggon
jumping the genuine response of musicians and fans has been more than
touching.
I wasn't sure whether to contribute anything to the out-pouring or not,
but I don't have many heroes, and he was certainly one.
It's
perhaps a little hard for younger music fans to understand how important
Peel was back in the dark days of radio when DJs were generally more
interested in presenting themselves than the music, and when hearing
progressive, underground or hard rock on national radio was such a rarity.
And to those many bands who have been telling us over the past day or
so that they cut their first session for Peel, Deep Purple's name needs
adding. Athough currently lost, the band's debut radio session, presented
by Peel, went out on his Top Gear show as early as June 1968, some weeks
before even their debut single was released. Based on their performance
on the show the verdict of Radio One's selection panel was "enthusiastic,
unanimous pass, polished commercial group," which ensured further,
important BBC airplay for the band in their early years.
It
would be stretching things to claim Peel was a huge fan after Mk 1 days,
and while he presented Mk 2 on their In Concert debut (his dulcet tones
can be enjoyed on the EMI CD), he and the band did exchange words through
the columns of the music press not long after. His occasional caustic
(but usually witty) remarks after discs he didn't like struck Rainbow
a few years later when he aired a lengthy cut off the Rainbow On-Stage
album and then said "Proof that the vinyl shortage is now over...".
But
while our opinions on Purple may have differed, there are an awful lot
of discs in my collection which I first heard on his show and then spent
time tracking down. I still recall the shivers down the spine when he
first aired The Sugercubes in particular. And that was the point of
his approach; nobody was going to like everything he played (and I've
never "got" The Fall!), but at least he gave it a chance, and it was
always interesting. It was sad not to be able to hear his show much
in recent years, as the Radio 1 controllers shoved it on later and later,
but for the many hours of interesting listening in the seventies in
particular; thank-you.
Simon Robinson
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