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Ian Peel (born 1972) is a British music journalist. He is founder of the magazines Classic Pop and Long Live Vinyl and is a writer with special interests in Eighties pop music, ZTT Records, and Paul McCartney's experimental works.

Ian Peel
Born1972 (age 51–52)
United Kingdom
Occupation(s)Magazine journalist, music author
Known forFounder of Classic Pop Magazine, ZTT Records

He was label manager of ZTT Records - and its sister label Stiff Records - and has consulted to the label since 1991.[1]

He has been a regular columnist for The Guardian, DJ Mag, Record Collector, net and Music Business International (sister publication of Music Week). His work has also appeared in The Times, BlackBook and Sound on Sound.

ZTT Records

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Since 1991, Ian Peel has worked for ZTT Records, the record label founded in 1983 by Trevor Horn, Paul Morley and Jill Sinclair. DJ Food described Peel as "keyholder to the ZTT vaults and curator of the label's reissue series for the last 30 years or more... Ian knows the catalogue and the archive inside out, having spent years cataloguing it from the master tapes, along the way discovering all manner of hidden, lost or unreleased treasures."[2]

He began by writing about the label for Record Collector magazine in 1987, and then penned and produced three issues of a ZTT fanzine in the early 1990s. This led to first working for the label on Frankie Goes To Hollywood's Bang! and Reload! compilations released in 1993.

He then went on to create further releases for Frankie Goes to Hollywood (including Sexmix and Inside the Pleasuredome) and all of the label's artists, notably 808 State, ACT, Adamski, All Saints, Art of Noise, The Buggles, The Frames, Kirsty MacColl, MC Tunes, Propaganda, Shades of Rhythm and Lisa Stansfield. For 808 State's Blueprint he elicited input from Moby, Aphex Twin and Orbital.

Of his work curating the Propaganda back catalogue, co-founder Ralf Dörper said "the curator Ian Peel did a very good job. Respect."[3] while The Quietus explained how "curator Ian Peel's exhaustive research match the care and attention he has lavished on other ZTT re-releases, and the wealth of material he has accumulated shed fascinating light on the working methods of both the band and the label."[4]

Peel has worked on several live events celebrating the label's history including the Produced By Trevor Horn concert at Wembley Arena in London in 2008, an aborted "ZTT takeover of Trafalgar Square" with the Institute of Contemporary Arts the following year, and The Buggles' 'The Lost Gig' at which he arranged for Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark to perform as opening act, and for Horn to sing backing vocals on a performance of Duel by Claudia Brücken and Paul Humphreys.[5]

His curation of the visual style and ethos of the label has included exhibitions of cover art in London and Tokyo called The Art of ZTT and a DVD titled The Television is Watching You featuring videos directed by Johnny Depp, Anton Corbijn, Brian De Palma, Godley & Creme, Wayne Hemingway, Zbigniew Rybczyński, Andy Morahan and Bernard Rose.

His compilation album series for the label have included three double-album volumes of The Art of the 12" and a set of three double albums for the label's thirtieth anniversary: the London, Tokyo and New York editions of The Organisation of Pop. As Craig Haggis wrote of The Organisation of Pop:

"I guess squeezing as much as possible in was always going to be an enormous task for Peel and his cohorts, and it's gratifying to see Grace Jones’ sleek Slave to the Rhythm included and other, bigger, hits from Seal, Tom Jones and a beautiful ballad by Shane MacGowan and Sinead O’Connor.[6]

A label notable for its use of catalogue numbering, Peel continued Paul Morley's Action Series and Incidental Series at the behest of Jill Sinclair and started several of his own: the Definition Series includes more than 100 digital editions, while the Element Series ran for 50 physical releases across 10 years. In 2013 he signed FEMME and Aaron Horn's A Theory to the label, assigning the former to the Action Series and the latter to the Incidental Series. That year, Terra listed FEMME as one of "the most interesting women in music right now" alongside such artists as Grimes and MIA.[7]

In 2023 he devised and issued 40 weekly digital singles and albums to mark the label's 40th anniversary. These included previously unreleased works by All Saints, Apollo 440, Art of Noise, Aurora, Das Psych-Oh! Rangers, Davids Daughters, Thomas Fehlmann, Inga Humpe, Instinct, Thomas Leer, Leilani Sen (which reached No. 13 on the Amazon Pop Chart), Nasty Rox Inc., Tara Newley, The Orb, Anne Pigalle, Andrew Poppy, Propaganda, Sexus, Shades of Rhythm, Sun Electric and Time Unlimted.

In an article titled Ian Peel's One-Man Campaign Takes Another Brilliant Twist, Kris Needs wrote:[8]

"Considering that everything which ZTT touched during their early 80s purple patch immediately seemed to swell to widescreen proportions, it's fortuitous that Ian Peel, though only a teenage record-buyer at the time, shares their panoramic visions when it comes to the reissue programme he's been lovingly masterminding. It seems he won't rest until every reel from production supremo Trevor Horn's archives has been distilled into one of his lavish double-disc sets, his accompanying sleevenotes always an invaluable source of facts and memorabilia."

Peel's ZTT recordings archive was profiled by The Word in 2010:[9]

"What Ian inherited was a ton of rotting cardboard boxes and a cataloguing nightmare," reported Andrew Harrison. "What he found, though, is dazzling to anyone who loves the work of Trevor Horn and the profligate madness of ZTT. With its antiquated floppies and hard discs the size and weight of lorry tyres, (Peel's tape archive) crystallises a pause between the old world of Take 1 and Take 2 and the future in which everything would be infinitely malleable."

Classic Pop magazine

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Peel devised and founded Classic Pop magazine in 2011, before its launch in 2012. In an article titled Classic Pop Magazine Bravely Charts A Course In Ebbing Waters, one music blog wrote of the magazine's launch, "In the case of Classic Pop, at least it comes by its pedigree honestly since it's edited by Mr. Ian Peel."[10]

He was Editor for the first 19 issues when he moved to the role of Founder & Editor-at-Large. He also devised and was Editor of the magazine's first eight spin-off special editions, which covered Kate Bush, David Bowie, Madonna, Paul McCartney, Prince, George Michael and Elton John.

Peel's interviews for Classic Pop have included The Human League, Annie Lennox and Spandau Ballet. He has also interviewed contemporary pop artists for the magazine including Sophie Ellis-Bextor, Gorillaz and Ellie Goulding.[11]

His features have included The Complete Guide to The KLF, Lost & Found: Soul Mining by The The, and Classic Album: The Lexicon Of Love – ABC while articles on the more esoteric reaches of pop music have spotlighted Frazier Chorus, It's Immaterial and the world of James Bond music.[12]

As well as devising most of Classic Pop's sections or 'departments', Peel started the magazine's annual awards, ran its Synthpop Summit ("reuniting Howard Jones, Blancmange, Heaven 17 and Thomas Dolby for a think-tank") and its ongoing list editions, such as Top 100 Albums of the Eighties, and Top 50 12"s of the Eighties.[13]

Cover art was given a regular section in the magazine from early on, Peel - having previously written for The Guardian newspaper on the subject - interviewing designers such as Peter Saville and Neville Brody.[14]

Peel was the author of Classic Pop's Live Aid anniversary publication, compiling a detailed timeline of the event. As he wrote in the preface, "Live Aid's effect on pop music was immeasurable. For some performers, it became a swansong, for others a fresh start. Either way, the world stopped what it was doing and listened to pop music: Sade and The Style Council went from sultry to iconic. U2 and Queen, from the music papers to the tabloid papers. And life was never the same again."[15]

In 2013, The Independent newspaper described how "Ian Peel juggles being label manager of ZTT Records, the imprint associated with Eighties über-producer Trevor Horn, and Stiff Records, with editing Classic Pop, the 'Eighties, Electronic, Eclectic' magazine. Classic Pop broke away from the music monthlies routinely and regularly doing cover stories on Bob Dylan, Pink Floyd or the Rolling Stones."

Interviewed by The Independent, Peel described his motives for starting the magazine:[16]

The gap in the market was very clear to me because I was falling through it. Not all Eighties music was great but for too long, classic pop music has been sidelined and mistreated by the mainstream media. Every now and then, a TV or radio station does an Eighties night and it turns out to be a total disappointment – just a crude re-run of people joking about mullets and leg-warmers. The media has completely misread the public's interest in Eighties pop,” he says. “The kids who were into pop music then are now adults, with appropriately sophisticated tastes. They want to celebrate and see how the music of their youth has developed, not feel forced to cringe about it. Pop stars in the Eighties had an individual sense of style and substance.

The challenges of working as Founder and Editor-at-Large he described as "more theoretical and philosophical, compared to the logistical and practical challenges the Editor has. By that I mean thinking about the balance of content, the attitude, the tone, and the style of the magazine".[17]

Paul McCartney's experimental works

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Peel is a commentator on Paul McCartney's experimental oeuvre, as author of the 2002 biography The Unknown Paul McCartney: McCartney and the Avant-Garde and having participated in TV and radio documentaries.[18]

The Unknown Paul McCartney: McCartney and the Avant-Garde was described by BBC Music as an "engrossing round-up of the numerous side projects which have distracted Paul McCartney's active imagination over the last 35 years"[19] and as "an odd and interesting re-framing of McCartney as experimentalist".[20]

It is the only book to offer an in-depth history and analysis of McCartney's work in the field of experimental and avant-garde music, notably under the pseudonyms Thrillington and The Fireman, on projects such as Liverpool Sound Collage and Carnival of Light (with The Beatles), and as occasional collaborator with Allen Ginsberg, Brian Wilson and Yoko Ono.[citation needed] The foreword was written by David Toop.

One review commented that "Peel goes to lengths to put forward the argument that though the seemingly 'constantly cheerful one' may have been responsible for the MOR apocalypse of Wings, experimentation in other genres was never far away."[21] Another noted that "Although Peel spends much of the book setting stages, discussing Cage, Eno, IDM and so on, who else would even have dreamt up such a thesis?"[22]

While McCartney was not directly involved in the biography, The Guardian remarked in 2007 that "His implicit approval... suggested an attempt to correct a misperception."[23]

The book received additional attention when, in 2012, Ian Peel discovered and released a previously unheard collaboration between Paul McCartney and Art of Noise issuing it on his compilation series for ZTT Records, The Art of the 12".[24]

On the occasion of the artist's 80th birthday, Liverpool University Press praised the book's "description of McCartney's profound engagement with ambient music."[25]

And on the release of The Beatles' Now and Then, The Telegraph quoted the book in its appraisal of the group's last remaining unreleased work, Carnival of Light.[26]

Bibliography

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As author:

As contributor:

  • Is That The 12" Remix? (afterword), Bank House, 2016
  • The Virgin Encyclopedia Of Popular Music, Virgin Books, 2002
  • The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, Oxford University Press, 2001
  • The Rough Guide To Rock, Penguin Random House, 1998
  • The Complete Introduction to Record Collecting, Verulam Publishing, 1995
  • Microsoft Music Central, Microsoft, 1995
  • Guinness Encyclopedia Of Popular Music, Guinness Publishing, 1992

Liner notes discography

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References

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  1. ^ DJ Food (2 January 2024). "Forty Releases for 40 Years of ZTT". djfood.com. Retrieved 17 April 2024.
  2. ^ DJ Food (2 January 2024). "Forty Releases for 40 Years of ZTT". DJFood.org. Retrieved 17 April 2024.
  3. ^ Orac (23 March 2016). "Ralf Dörper of Propaganda - a Q&A by Electronically Yours". Electronically Yours. Retrieved 17 April 2024.
  4. ^ Wyndham Wallace (5 August 2010). "The Power Of Propaganda: A Secret Wish 35 Years On..." The Quietus. Retrieved 17 April 2024.
  5. ^ Ian Peel (1 October 2019). "Ian Peel's A to Z of Pop: L is for… The Lost Gig". Classic Pop. Archived from the original on 18 April 2024. Retrieved 18 April 2024.
  6. ^ Craig Haggis (8 March 2014). "ZTT and the influence of the Sparks". Porky Prime Cuts. Retrieved 17 April 2024.
  7. ^ "The most interesting women in music right now". Terra. 22 January 2013. Retrieved 19 June 2013.
  8. ^ Needs, Kris (March 2011). "Ian Peel's one-man campaign takes another brilliant twist". Record Collector. Retrieved 27 June 2016.
  9. ^ Harrison, Andrew (May 2010). "Tuum Raider". The Word. Retrieved 27 June 2016.
  10. ^ postpunkmonk (10 October 2024). "Classic Pop Magazine Bravely Charts A Course In Ebbing Waters". Post-Punk Monk. Retrieved 17 April 2024.
  11. ^ "Meet the Founder and Editor-at-Large of Classic Pop magazine". iSubscribe.co.uk. 8 April 2016. Retrieved 10 July 2016.
  12. ^ Classic Pop (17 April 2024). "Ian Peel". Anthem Publishing. Retrieved 17 April 2024.
  13. ^ Classic Pop (31 July 2013). "Classic Pop Issue 6 Is On Sale Now!". Anthem Publishing. Retrieved 17 April 2024.
  14. ^ Ian Peel (16 September 2008). "The record sleeve reborn". Guardian Newspapers. Retrieved 17 April 2024.
  15. ^ Classic Pop (1 August 2015). "Full text of "Classic Pop September 2015"". Internet Archive. Retrieved 17 April 2024.
  16. ^ Pierre Perrone (3 October 2013). "Now that's what I call music..." The Independent. Retrieved 17 April 2024.
  17. ^ "Meet the Founder and Editor-at-Large of Classic Pop magazine". iSubscribe.co.uk. 8 April 2016. Retrieved 10 July 2016.
  18. ^ Corcelli, John (27 December 2012). "The other side of Paul McCartney". CBC/Radio-Canada. Archived from the original on 1 March 2016. Retrieved 27 June 2016.
  19. ^ Webb, Robert (6 May 2003). "Ian Peel The Unknown Paul McCartney (book)". BBC Music. Archived from the original on 6 January 2009. Retrieved 28 June 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  20. ^ Gottschalk, Kurt (17 November 2013). "Review of The Unknown Paul McCartney: McCartney and the Avant-Garde". Goodreads. Retrieved 27 June 2016.
  21. ^ Mattinson, Peter (17 November 2013). "Review of The Unknown Paul McCartney: McCartney and the Avant-Garde". No Ripcord. Retrieved 27 June 2016.
  22. ^ Gottschalk, Kurt (17 November 2013). "Review of The Unknown Paul McCartney: McCartney and the Avant-Garde". Goodreads. Retrieved 27 June 2016.
  23. ^ Bennun, David (21 May 2007). "The solo Paul McCartney is a major lightweight". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 June 2016.
  24. ^ Joe Marchese (21 February 2012). "The Art of the 12-Inch, Part Deux". The Second Disc. Retrieved 19 April 2024.
  25. ^ Richard Mills (2 November 2022). "80 at 80". Liverpool University Press. Retrieved 19 April 2024.
  26. ^ Ian Winwood (2 November 2023). "Carnival of Light". The Telegraph. Retrieved 19 April 2024.