In 1980, I and a couple of friends formed a
band and we wrote to John Peel to tell him
about it. I don't really know what made us
think he'd be at all interested, but, at the
time, it seemed the natural thing to do. We
didn't have a tape, we'd never played live,
we barely had any songs - in fact we were
barely a band at all. We just wrote and told
him how much we enjoyed his show, that we'd
formed a band and to look out for a
tape....... sometime in the future! Amazingly,
he wrote back. In a handwritten letter of
encouragement he said that he looked forward
to hearing our 'fab teen combo' and signed it
'music lovin' Johnny P'. We were all
astonished that he took the time to
personally write to us and the letter took
pride of place on the wall in the drummer's
house, where we regularly met to practice.
The band, unfortunately, didn't last. We
played three local gigs, never committed
anything to tape and, within a matter of months,
ground to a permanent halt. It was great
fun while it lasted though. Our drummer,
Andrew, won custody of Peel's letter. Andrew
went on to create experimental electronic
music of some note, which he continues to do
to this day, and yes, his music was
eventually played on John Peel's show.
Our short-lived little group was massively
influenced by the music Peel was playing at
the time, specifically Joy Division, to the extent that we covered 'Wilderness' from 'Unknown Pleasures'
in our set. Here's the original, for Andrew
and Chris (the boys in the band) and, of
course, for music lovin' Johnny P, who
would've turned 75 this weekend.