01Profile
A Phill Jupitus Photo
Comedian/Artist — Essex
A Phill Jupitus Photo
Phill Jupitus
Comedian/Artist
Essex
Functional, Layers, Badges.
Punk
Dundee singer-songwriter Michael Marra
Merchant Navy
The Specials at The Rainbow
Too many brilliant ones, so I’ll pick a personal one. I once opened for The Larks at the old Marquee in Wardour Street.
I think that the misnomer there, and the misapprehension that people have about music’s role, is that music is trying to change society, and what it is changing is individuals. It’s the influence it has on YOU. Bands like The Clash, Elvis Costello playing Rock Against Racism. Things like that changed me. It’s not about them changing society. I think it’s still vital that people are still doing this. This is something that I talk about on stage in my stand-up at the minute. In 1985 there were things we were trying to change and today the world is pathetically worse than it was in 1985. You just have to look at what’s going on in America now. Globally we live in a post-internet world now. The way people communicate is different, activism is different, but I still think that artists talking about ideas and sharing ideas and making people look at things differently still happens, and is still important.
Yes. It’s much much broader now. Myself and Tim Wells, we started doing poetry around 83-84, we were in Edinburgh and there was a poster advertising a gig, and on it, it said "the most-watched poet in the world" - and this was off the back of Youtube hits. We were quite interested but that notion that someone can now be the most watched poet by popping up on a screen. A lot of poets are making content now, they’re doing performance poetry online. They’re filming themselves and making videos. Part of what I like about poetry is being in the room. Seeing these ideas, these words come out of someone. That’s what you can’t get online. Once you change the grammar of poetry it compromises the medium that you’re now working in. I don’t begrudge anybody the right to use all platforms to do their work, but for me part of the beauty of poetry is being in a room, seeing it happen. I think that’s true of any human activity, of any performance, plays, film, stand-up comedy - small rooms to arenas. I just found it really funny - the most watched poet in the world - to put it on a poster as well! I would’ve been less annoyed if he’d just put "five million Youtube hits".
I think it’s the morning The Housemartins went to number one with ‘Caravan Of Love’. We just got drunk in the office that day. I remember the guvnor coming in with bottles of Prosecco Champagne or whatever it was then. I just remember us drinking all day because those four lads from Hull had got to number one.
'Hit' - The Wannadies
'Ball of Confusion' - The Temptations
Say ‘record’. It’s ‘records’. I bought the John Betjeman LP ‘Banana Blush’.
'Sandinista' - The Clash
'Mr Wendall' - Arrested Development
'Wind It Up' - Gwen Stefani
'Reasons To Be Cheerful (Part 3)' - Ian Dury and the Blockheads
'The Duster' - Eats Everything
A lot of people would go for something iconic like ‘Sex and Drugs and Rock and Roll’ or ‘Rhythm Stick’, but I think what said most about Ian as a man was his song ‘My Old Man’ from ‘New Boots and Panties!!’ which is about his dad. I find that incredibly moving, but incredibly informative.
“My old man wore three-piece whistles, He was never home for long, Drove a bus for London Transport, He knew where he belonged, Number 18 up to Euston, Double-decker move along, Double-decker move along, My old man".
The language of it, the emotion of it. When he sang it live, more often than not he’d start crying, while he was talking about his dad. There’s a couple of live recordings where he’s crying his eyes out while he’s singing it.
I got to sing that with The Blockheads. It was weird doing the sleeve notes for the 40th anniversary. For the 30th anniversary ten years ago I toured with The Blockheads and I sang the whole album. It was something I never in my life imagined I’d be doing, and I only did it because Mickey Gallagher and Chaz Jankel asked me to do it. They are big shoes to fill, and I never fill them. People took umbrage that I was up there, but the reason that I did it - The Blockheads can do it on their own - but singing and playing, they couldn’t give 100 percent to playing. It was only that one tour and a few other one-off gigs. A little after that anniversary tour we did Glastonbury, and I remember Michael Eavis saying it was one of the best things he ever saw at Glastonbury. An unbelievable honour and a kind of weird high-end karaoke. These were songs I knew inside out and loved. Mickey Gallagher said to me “you know the words better then Ian did, and he f*ckin wrote em".
Phill Jupitus
Comedian/Artist
Essex
Functional, Layers, Badges.
Punk
Dundee singer-songwriter Michael Marra
Merchant Navy
The Specials at The Rainbow
Too many brilliant ones, so I’ll pick a personal one. I once opened for The Larks at the old Marquee in Wardour Street.
I think that the misnomer there, and the misapprehension that people have about music’s role, is that music is trying to change society, and what it is changing is individuals. It’s the influence it has on YOU. Bands like The Clash, Elvis Costello playing Rock Against Racism. Things like that changed me. It’s not about them changing society. I think it’s still vital that people are still doing this. This is something that I talk about on stage in my stand-up at the minute. In 1985 there were things we were trying to change and today the world is pathetically worse than it was in 1985. You just have to look at what’s going on in America now. Globally we live in a post-internet world now. The way people communicate is different, activism is different, but I still think that artists talking about ideas and sharing ideas and making people look at things differently still happens, and is still important.
Yes. It’s much much broader now. Myself and Tim Wells, we started doing poetry around 83-84, we were in Edinburgh and there was a poster advertising a gig, and on it, it said "the most-watched poet in the world" - and this was off the back of Youtube hits. We were quite interested but that notion that someone can now be the most watched poet by popping up on a screen. A lot of poets are making content now, they’re doing performance poetry online. They’re filming themselves and making videos. Part of what I like about poetry is being in the room. Seeing these ideas, these words come out of someone. That’s what you can’t get online. Once you change the grammar of poetry it compromises the medium that you’re now working in. I don’t begrudge anybody the right to use all platforms to do their work, but for me part of the beauty of poetry is being in a room, seeing it happen. I think that’s true of any human activity, of any performance, plays, film, stand-up comedy - small rooms to arenas. I just found it really funny - the most watched poet in the world - to put it on a poster as well! I would’ve been less annoyed if he’d just put "five million Youtube hits".
I think it’s the morning The Housemartins went to number one with ‘Caravan Of Love’. We just got drunk in the office that day. I remember the guvnor coming in with bottles of Prosecco Champagne or whatever it was then. I just remember us drinking all day because those four lads from Hull had got to number one.
'Hit' - The Wannadies
'Ball of Confusion' - The Temptations
Say ‘record’. It’s ‘records’. I bought the John Betjeman LP ‘Banana Blush’.
'Sandinista' - The Clash
'Mr Wendall' - Arrested Development
'Wind It Up' - Gwen Stefani
'Reasons To Be Cheerful (Part 3)' - Ian Dury and the Blockheads
'The Duster' - Eats Everything
A lot of people would go for something iconic like ‘Sex and Drugs and Rock and Roll’ or ‘Rhythm Stick’, but I think what said most about Ian as a man was his song ‘My Old Man’ from ‘New Boots and Panties!!’ which is about his dad. I find that incredibly moving, but incredibly informative.
“My old man wore three-piece whistles, He was never home for long, Drove a bus for London Transport, He knew where he belonged, Number 18 up to Euston, Double-decker move along, Double-decker move along, My old man".
The language of it, the emotion of it. When he sang it live, more often than not he’d start crying, while he was talking about his dad. There’s a couple of live recordings where he’s crying his eyes out while he’s singing it.
I got to sing that with The Blockheads. It was weird doing the sleeve notes for the 40th anniversary. For the 30th anniversary ten years ago I toured with The Blockheads and I sang the whole album. It was something I never in my life imagined I’d be doing, and I only did it because Mickey Gallagher and Chaz Jankel asked me to do it. They are big shoes to fill, and I never fill them. People took umbrage that I was up there, but the reason that I did it - The Blockheads can do it on their own - but singing and playing, they couldn’t give 100 percent to playing. It was only that one tour and a few other one-off gigs. A little after that anniversary tour we did Glastonbury, and I remember Michael Eavis saying it was one of the best things he ever saw at Glastonbury. An unbelievable honour and a kind of weird high-end karaoke. These were songs I knew inside out and loved. Mickey Gallagher said to me “you know the words better then Ian did, and he f*ckin wrote em".