Jump to content

Artists open up John Peel's historic vinyl collection.


Recommended Posts

Posted

Artists open up John Peel's historic vinyl collection.

By Kevin Core
6 Music

Published 29 Jan 22.      www.bbc.co.uk.        Entertainment and Arts.
Tom Ravenscroft at the family home in SuffolkIMAGE SOURCE, TRICIA YOURKEVICH
Tom Ravenscroft in the album section of his dad's collection

After John Peel's death in 2004, his family organised for an expert to catalogue the DJ's sprawling record collection. 

Following a week of trawling through more than 120,000 albums, 12 inches and seven inches, at the Suffolk home affectionately dubbed "Peel Acres", the job was done. 

Peel's son, BBC Radio 6 Music DJ Tom Ravenscroft, remembers the exhausted expert sitting in the family kitchen and offering a verdict: "You do realise this is the best record collection in the world?"

It's hard to argue.

While some collections may be bigger, or contain older records, John Peel's massive archive of vinyl comprises decades of UK music sent directly to him at the point of release by artists who viewed him as a unique tastemaker. 

Before streaming - from Radio Caroline to Radio 1, bands knew if they wanted it heard, a play on the air from Peel was a must.

John Peel pictured presenting on Radio 1 in 1972IMAGE SOURCE, GETTY IMAGES
 
John Peel pictured presenting his Radio 1 show in 1972

The album sleeves bulge with personal notes from Bowie, Marc Bolan, even long-time friend John Lennon sending a copy of Two Virgins with a hand-written explanation of the stereo mix. 

From unique seven-inch pressings of bands who released one record to rare gospel to rarities from the biggest names in music, the collection chronologically charts more than 50 years of music. 

It's a window not just into one man's taste, but an age of enormous radio influence. 

"Not only did he promote the music that shaped the playlists of the future, he also had a lasting impact on the way his listeners saw and heard the world," wrote The Guardian's David Cavanagh in 2015.

"Peel's influence on those generations of listeners - students, workers, dropouts, benefit claimants, even criminals detained at Her Majesty's pleasure - is incalculable. Talk to them today and they would probably say he represented an alternative to the bland confections dominating the commercial world."

Now, for the podcast Peel Acres, Ravenscroft is attempting to get to grips with a record collection that's so personal, it can be slightly overwhelming for his family. 

He said: "The collection hasn't been listened to apart from whenever other people come in. 

"The family don't play records from it partly because it feels impenetrable but also because there's so much emotion in it. A lot of it has just not been touched. The podcast is about getting it used again." 

Nubya GarciaIMAGE SOURCE, TRICIA YOURKEVICH
 
Jazz saxophonist Nubya Garcia was among the artists who travelled to Suffolk to dive into the collection

Spread across the house, the earliest LPs from the '60s are held in a long corridor of vinyl next to the DJ's studio, where he broadcast not only his Radio 1 shows, but hand-cut shows for British Forces in Germany using tape and a razor blade. 

Because these records were placed in chronological order as Peel bought or was given them, a walk along the shelves sees the bright-eyed pop of his pirate radio days morph into British psychedelia and the glam and soul of the 70s. 

In his study, were he worked at a standing desk with a typewriter, the album collection heads into the '90s and 2000s. These however don't include tens of thousands more 12 and seven inches stored elsewhere in the property. 

Here, Peel filled in tens of thousands of filing cards representing each album. The alphabetised filing card offered a linked album number so the record could be found on the shelves.

For broadcast purposes, the DJ didn't trust the timings offered on the sleeve by the record company. Almost unbelievably, he stood with a stopwatch personally timing each track of the albums and typing up the result on to the filing card. This is a level of dedication Tom refers to as "basically a form of madness".

Each record also has Peel's "star system" of preferred plays, with three stars signifying it was probably played on air. 

Tom RavenscroftIMAGE SOURCE, TRICIA YOURKEVICH
Tom Ravenscroft pictured in his late father's study

One of the podcast's guests, British jazz saxophonist Nubya Garcia, discovered the sheer depth of the collection, digging out not just a record she hadn't heard from free jazz legend Ornette Coleman, but finding a song she'd spent years searching for. Having heard it once on a tour bus, she couldn't remember the title of Al Campbell's Cherry Baby, but found the seven inch nestling in Peel's collection. 

She said: "You're sidelined by how many records there are. I had to pretty much stop myself screaming every time I entered each room full of records. It's an incredible collection."

The unusual chronological layout and the anarchic press handouts in the sleeves attracted Damon Albarn as he made his selection. 

Peering through the shelves, the former Blur singer found an original Kevin Ayers album Joy of a Toy he first listened to in his parents' collection, and also takes a punt on a record by '60s/'70s band The Idle Race. 

Listening to the track, he discovers it's an early project from The ELO songwriter and producer Jeff Lynne. 

Albarn said: "What this collection has is all the bits that have been edited out of people's legacies. It's interesting that they show how the artists perceived themselves, before all the reissues and the legends are set in stone."

For electronic musician Four Tet AKA Kieran Hebden the chance to get up close with a collection he heard about listening to Peel's show as a child was too good to miss. 

He said: "People say 'you could see the Mona Lisa' but for me that's being asked 'would you like to see John Peel's record collection?' I knew instantly 'I have to see this'."

The visit paid off for the self-confessed "vinyl nerd", he broke off an interview to point out a record so rare he called it "obscene". 

It was an original 1967 psychedelic seven-inch from session guitarist Caleb Quaye, Baby Your Phrasing is Bad, with valuations online estimated at £950.

Tom Ravenscroft and Nabihah IqbalIMAGE SOURCE, TRICIA YOURKEVICH
 
Hendrix fan Nabihah Iqbal was shown a very rare Jimi recording

But singles like that are worth a fraction of other finds - mint condition first editions of the first 13th Floor Elevators record, tiny runs of the early Nirvana cover Love Buzz and even a test pressing of The Sex Pistols' Anarchy in the UK. 

Tom said: "We know this collection is a really important thing and we don't know entirely what to do with it. That brings a certain sadness. 

"For me this was about bringing it alive again, but I'm one human being and it's 120,000 records so essentially I needed help."

Other exceptional rarities pulled from the collection include the Jimi Hendrix bootleg This Flyer. 

Guitarist and singer Nabihah Iqbal discovered that the rare release, although not sanctioned by Hendrix, was sold to raise funds for The Black Panthers. 

Tom added: "You basically get two kinds of people. People who stare at the amount of records and just don't know what to do, and people who completely ignore you and dive straight in.

"Hopefully we've gone for people who do the latter. All that we've asked people to do is go through the collection and pull out anything they like the look of. 

"We just wanted to get records off shelves and onto decks."

  • 3 months later...


Posted

Rare items from John Peel’s legendary archive to go up for auction 

Exclusive: Bonhams will sell items including an annotated test pressing of John Lennon and Yoko Ono's 'Two Lovers' 

By Nick Reilly 

www.rolling stone.co.uk. 17th May 2022.

John Peel's record collection at his home in Suffolk John Peel's record collection at his home in Suffolk (Picture: Bonhams)

Rare records and memorabilia from the likes of John Lennon and Marc Bolan will go under the hammer this summer as part of an auction of BBC DJ John Peel’s sprawling archive.

The legendary broadcaster amassed more than 120,000 albums, 12 inches and 7 inches at his Suffolk home prior to his death in 2004.

Now, renowned auction house Bonhams has confirmed that highlights from his personal archive, including radio-played test pressings from landmark musicians, rare records, personal correspondence, and memorabilia, will be offered at auction for the first time ever.

The sale will be held on the 14 June, the week before the long-awaited 50th anniversary of Glastonbury – the very same festival where one of the festival’s most popular stages is named in Peel’s honour.

An annotated copy of Lennon and Yoko Ono's 'Two Lovers' is up for sale An annotated copy of Lennon and Yoko Ono’s ‘Two Lovers’ is up for sale

Highlights of the sale include a Mono Pressing LP of ‘Unfinished Music No. 1: Two Virgins‘, the 1968 experimental album recorded by John Lennon and Yoko Ono. The pressing is annotated by the pair and has an estimate of £15,000-20,000.

Other items include Marc Bolan’s unreleased 1972 EP ‘Hard On Love‘ and a ‘Queen II‘ LP with hand-written letter from Freddie Mercury, 1974.

You can check all the items on offer below: 

Records

  • John Lennon/Yoko Ono: A Mono Pressing LP ‘Two Virgins’ Annotated by John Lennon and Yoko Ono, 1968. Estimate: £15,000-20,000.
  • The Rolling Stones: A Promotional Album LP Signed by the Band, 1969. Estimate: £6,000-8,000.
  • Marc Bolan: An Unreleased LP ‘Hard On Love’, 1972. Estimate: £5,000-6,000.
  • Queen: A ‘Queen II’ LP with hand-written letter from Freddie Mercury, 1974. Estimate: £1,000-1,500.
  • The Damned: An LP ‘Damned Damned Damned’ Signed by the Band, 1977. Estimate: £1,500-2,000.
John Peel's home studio in Suffolk John Peel’s home studio in Suffolk

Singles

 
  • Joy Division: A 7″ ‘An Ideal For Living’, 1978, with Letter from Stephen Morris. Estimate: £4,000-6,000.
  • Sex Pistols: An Acetate ‘Nevermind Buzzcocks’. Estimate: £5,000-7,000.
  • Nirvana: A 7″ Single ‘Love Buzz/Big Cheese’, 1988. Estimate: £3,000-4,000.
  • The Clash: An 8″ Single ‘London Calling’, 1979. Estimate: £2,500-3,000.
  • U2: A 7″ Single ‘Joshua Tree Collection’, 1987. Estimate: £1,500-2,000.

    Posters
  • Joy Division: A ‘Unknown Pleasures’ Poster. Estimate: £3,000-4,000.
  • The Jimi Hendrix Experience: A ‘Christmas On Earth’ Poster for Olympia, 1967. Estimate: £1,000-1,500. 

    Memorabilia
  • David Bowie: An Early Five-Sided Handwritten Letter With Stage Sketches, Signed. Estimate: £3,000-4,000.
  • Yoko Ono: A Note Regarding Forthcoming Demos. Estimate: £1,000-2,000.
  • John Peel Handwritten programme running orders. Estimate: £300-500
  • An NME Award for Godlike Genius, presented to John Peel in1993. Estimate: £800- 1,200.
  • A Horn Gramophone, First Half 20th Century. From John Peel’s desk in his studio at his home in Suffolk. Estimate: £800-1,200.

John Peel’s family commented: “By virtue of the role he played in it, John/Dad was in a position to have access to many of the most celebrated people and events in the history of popular music. This is reflected in a wealth of souvenirs he collected throughout his life. He had not only a voracious appetite for vinyl, but a keen sense of what memorabilia, ephemera and correspondence might find an interested audience in decades to come (though it could be argued that this was achieved by a strategy of keeping almost everything that crossed his path).

“In going through the accumulation of 40 years of pop music moments, we decided that some of the most interesting items might find a home, with fans of his programme or of the artists whose music he played. Bonhams have assisted us to carefully select what is being offered for sale, and we hope these items find the attention and appreciation that we’re sure John/Dad would feel they warranted. We had no desire to split up his beloved record collection but have included in the sale a selection of particularly rare or unique records that do not take away from the integrity of his archive.”

John Peel’s Horn Gramophone, First Half 20th Century. John Peel’s Horn Gramophone, First Half 20th Century.

Katherine Schofield, Director of Bonhams Popular Culture department, added: “John Peel had an incredible impact on the new music landscape. Without his passionate advocacy of emerging talent, generations of music lovers may never have heard the sounds of The Fall, The Undertones, The Sex Pistols, and countless others. 

“This collection, offered directly by the family, comprises some of Peel’s most collectible and rare records, spanning decades in music – many of which are accompanied by letters from the artists or their management. A number of the test-pressings in this collection were the source of the first airplay for landmark songs. This sale offers a chance to own highlights from Peel’s unbeatable personal archive for the first time, and to share in Peel’s passion for music.”

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...
Please Sign In or Sign Up

Well, this is awkward!

Happy Sunny Days GIF by Atlassian

The Shed End Forum relies on revenue to pay for hosting and upgrades. While we try to keep adverts as unobtrusive as possible, we need to show these to make sure we can stay online and continue to keep the forum running. Over the years costs have become very high.

Could you please allow adverts on this domain by switching it off and whitelisting the website? Some of the advert banners can actually be closed to avoid interference with your experience on The Shed End.

If you don't want to view any adverts while logged in and using your account, consider using the Ad-Free Subscription which is renewable every year. To buy a subscription, log in to your account and click the link under the Newbies forum on the home page.

Cheers now!

Sure, let me in!