A GUEST POSTING by WEBBIE

It will be the last time I will commemorate the passing of Peelie with the thing I created all those years ago – #keepingitpeel. A day to remember Peel and to play that artist you discovered when he played their music on his programme.
It was a couple of years after the BBC commemorations for John Peel day that I noticed there wasn’t one planned for that year. The mentions and memories about him were slowly disappearing and as a listener, wanted to make sure we remembered the impact he had on our musical lives. If the BBC were going to do nothing, we would. Thus the hashtag (remember when Twitter was the place to be back then) #keepingitpeel emerged and on the 25th of October we posted on our blogs (remember when everybody used to…etc), on Twitter and everywhere else with our favourite music first played on the John Peel show.
It was 7 years after his passing that it really peaked. As well as everyone joining in by posting online, there were a few articles in the press, I was interviewed on Irish radio and most importantly – there were promoters in various venues who put on new bands under the John Peel day banner. And a few years later, there was even a night in Aberdeen for local unsigned bands that took place on 25th October 2014. I have a copy of the promo poster. (JC adds……see above!!)
But now it is time to raise a glass for one last time.
Please mention your favourite music that you discovered via Peelie in the comments below. I want to just mention one – a song which wasn’t actually played on his show but was scheduled to be part of a Peel Session, aired in memoriam.
mp3: Shellac – The End Of Radio (live at Maida Vale) – 2nd December 2004
Webbie – Keeping It Peel
JC adds………
Webbie is someone who dates back to what many of us refer to as ‘the golden age’ of blogging. By that, I mean it was a time, dating from the mid-2000s for about a period of a decade or so, prior to the increasing use of podcasts and the growth of streaming services, when enthusiastic music fans were kind of omnipresent and offering up thoughts, views and opinions on music to what was a decent sized community of like-minded enthusiasts. There aren’t anything like the same number of us as before, and certainly the ‘audience numbers’ are much smaller (not that this matters, as none of us do this to earn any money from our efforts), but I’d like to think the quality has remained high.
Football and Music is Webbie’s unique creation, and it’s quite unlike any other blogs. It was through the blog that he came up with the idea of keeping the legacy of John Peel at the forefront of people’s minds, and for that I think many of us owe him a huge thanks. He is asking today that we use the comments to mention our favourite music that we discovered through John Peel. I am taking that a stage further.
mp3: The Smiths – What Difference Does It Make? (Peel Session)
mp3: The Smiths – Handsome Devil (Peel Session)
mp3: The Smiths – Miserable Lie (Peel Session)
mp3: The Smiths – Reel Around The Fountain (Peel Session)
Recorded on 18 May 1983 and first broadcast on 1 June 1983. It was so popular it was repeated just three weeks later and then again on 24 August and 29 December. The requests continued to come in, and it was repeated further on 28 May 1984, 27 May 1985 and 3 November 1986.
I had a cassette copy of the session, taped from the first repeat on 21 June 1983. The quality wasn’t great, but that was irrelevant. It was the only way to hear the band’s songs, as all that had been released at this point in time was the debut 7″ single.
The Smiths used to feature on this blog a great deal, but not in recent times. I stopped knowingly listening to the band a long time ago, but there have been occasions when a song has come on when I’ve been somewhere else, and I’ve found myself enjoying it.
I couldn’t deny that I missed them, but I remained determined not to put any records on the turntable, far less on the blog. The thing that has changed my mind?? It’s all down to enjoying the fact the that increasing numbers of people have recognised Johnny Marr as being the true creative genius. The music of The Smiths is very much part of Johnny’s legacy and doesn’t deserve to be ignored.
The decision to go with this particular session was also inspired by some words Webbie wrote in the email which accompanied this guest posting. But I’m keeping that to myself, if you don’t mind.