Marc Riley

Marc Riley

Riley (centre) with Ty Segall and band in November 2014
Born (1961-07-10) 10 July 1961
Manchester, Lancashire, England
Station(s) BBC Radio 6 Music
Time slot Monday to Thursday 7 pm – 9pm
Country United Kingdom

Marc Riley (born 10 July 1961 in Manchester)[1] is an English radio DJ, alternative rock critic and musician. He currently presents on BBC Radio 6 Music.

Formerly a member of the Fall, he had his own record label, In-Tape, and also worked as a record plugger for bands such as Massive Attack, the Pixies, the Cocteau Twins and the Happy Mondays.[2] Marc has worked in radio since about 1990 and for 14 years of that he worked with Mark Radcliffe on BBC Radio 5 and BBC Radio 1, during which time he was known as Lard. He joined 6 Music in April 2004.

Musical career

Born and raised in Manchester, Riley was in a band at school called the Sirens with Craig Scanlon and Steve Hanley (both of whom were later members of the Fall). Riley was an early fan of the Fall and worked for the group as a roadie.[3] He was added to the line-up, playing bass, in May 1978.[2] Riley's recording debut was The Fall's second single, "It's the New Thing" and their debut album Live at the Witch Trials.

Riley switched to guitar and keyboards in 1979 and held this position with The Fall, until he fell out with Mark E. Smith in 1982, during the group's first tour of Australia and New Zealand. Riley was sacked by Smith – according to Smith this occurred on Riley's wedding day.[4] According to Riley, however, he was married on Christmas Eve, 1982 and remained in The Fall until January 1983, when Smith had sacked him by telephone, telling Riley that the group was undertaking a tour without him.

Later in 1983 Riley begain to record under the name Marc Riley and The Creepers (later The Creepers).[5] Steve Hanley, Paul Hanley and Craig Scanlon, while they remained members of The Fall, played on Riley's first solo single, "Favourite Sister". Riley released several albums during the following years.

Animosity between Smith and Riley continued to influence both bands' material.[6] This included The Fall's "Hey Marc Riley" (a rewritten version of Bo Diddley's "Hey Bo Diddley"), which has only been available on live bootlegs. Riley responded in kind with his 1984 single "Jumper Clown" – a reference to Smith's then affection for 1970s jumpers – as well as "Snipe" on the 1985 EP Shadow Figure and his own rewrite of a Bo Diddley song: "Marc Riley is a Gunslinger". Riley co-owned the In-Tape label with Jim Khambatta, until it went bust in 1991, managing the label between 1983 and 1986.[7][8]

Between 1986 and 1989, Riley drew and wrote the comic strips Harry the Head and Doctor Mooney for the comic Oink!, as well as recording a flexidisc single for the comic as a giveaway.[8] These have become collector items.

The Creepers disbanded in 1987. Riley then formed a band that included ex-members of Pere Ubu and Captain Beefheart's Magic Band called the Lost Soul Crusaders (named after a fictional group in an episode of the detective series Columbo whose lead singer was played by one of Riley's heroes, Johnny Cash). However, the record company funding the band became bankrupt before any material could be recorded.

In 1988, Riley co-produced (with Jon Langford) a Johnny Cash tribute album, Til Things are Brighter, to raise funds for the Terrence Higgins Trust.[9] The album was endorsed and admired by Cash himself who is featured alongside Riley and Langford on its cover.

Radio career

Riley is perhaps best known as one half of the duo Mark and Lard with fellow DJ Mark Radcliffe, who together presented "Hit the North" on BBC Radio 5, then a children's, comedy, and drama network, with Radcliffe also fronting a weekly show called Out on Blue Six on BBC Radio 1 around the same time. During this period Riley also presented a programme on Radio 5 called "Cult Radio", and wrote and produced a Radio1 series presented by Noddy Holder called "Glitter and Twisted". The duo moved to Radio One's 10 pm slot in 1993, followed by an unsuccessful move to the breakfast show in February 1997, and finally to the 1 pm to 3 pm slot in October that year.[10] Their final show on the station was in March 2004. After leaving Radio 1, the duo cordially went their separate ways; Riley moving to BBC Radio 6 Music and Radcliffe to BBC Radio 2.[10] In 2009 Mark and Lard reformed to front radio adverts for Manchester City in North West England (Riley is a long-time fan of the club).

He currently presents the Sony Radio Academy Award-nominated 7-9pm show, Monday to Thursday on Radio 6 Music.[11] The show features almost daily sessions from artists chosen by Riley himself. Among the bands championed by Riley are Metronomy, Field Music, Everything Everything, Wild Beasts, Sweet Baboo and King Creosote. He previously presented Mint with Rob Hughes on Sunday evenings. Hughes joins Riley's current show on Tuesdays and Thursdays, usually talking about Americana music.

February 2015 saw the first episode of All Shook Up, a made for Iplayer 'TV' programme featuring live music presented and curated by Riley. Episode 1 featured performances from The Wave Pictures, Slug and Lonelady. Series 1 is made up of 4 episodes all filmed in the University Of Salford studio. Episode 2 features Wire, Monotony and Jane Weaver, Episode 3 Teleman, Sara Lowes and Sauna Youth and Episode 4 Jesca Hoop, The Wytches and Richard Dawson.

Riley and Radcliffe formed the parody group Shirehorses, once appearing at the Glastonbury Festival in 1997 in what they called the headline slot, going on as they did at 10.00am. They also did shows in various parts of the country including three dates supporting Blur. They released two comedy/parody albums under the guise of the Shirehorses: The worst...album in the world...ever...EVER! (which reached number 22 in the UK Albums Chart)[12] and Our Kid Eh, the latter an affectionate parody of Radiohead's album Kid A (which reached number 20).[13]

Awards

References

  1. "Mark Radcliffe & Lard Chronology", scrawnandlard.co.uk, retrieved 12 December 2010
  2. 1 2 Smith, Mark E. & Middles, Mick (2003) The Fall, Omnibus Press, ISBN 978-0-7119-9762-2, p. 261
  3. Cumming, Tim (2004) "Wild Thing", The Guardian, 19 January 2004, retrieved 12 December 2010
  4. The Guardian, Monday 14 April 2008, p6
  5. Strong, Martin C. (2003) The Great Indie Discography, Canongate, ISBN 1-84195-335-0, p. 483-4
  6. "Marc Riley - Reformation!".
  7. Buckley, Peter (2003) The Rough Guide to Rock, Rough Guides, ISBN 978-1-84353-105-0
  8. 1 2 "Marc Riley, Esq", debretts.com, retrieved 12 December 2010
  9. Popson, Tom (1988) "Johnny Cash Meets The Hip Britons: English Acts Record a Tribute to a 'Cool Dude'", Chicago Tribune, 29 July 1988, p. H
  10. 1 2 "Mark and Lard leave BBC Radio 1", BBC, 19 February 2004, retrieved 12 December 2010
  11. The Sony Radio Academy Awards Winners 2008
  12. Walters, Jamie "Marc Riley aka Lard", Metro, retrieved 12 December 2010
  13. "Shirehorses", Chart Stats, retrieved 12 December 2010

External links

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