The first song I remember hearing
Round The Horne theme (1960s BBC Radio comedy programme)
âIt was always on, somehow, in the car. I think thatâs where my love of theme tunes comes from, being indoctrinated at an early age. My mum and dad still loved it when they were 40 and they had old tapes of it. As a kid I loved the silly voices, I just thought, âOh my god, this is so fun. What a ridiculous thingâ.â
The first album I owned
Manic Street Preachers â âGeneration Terroristsâ
âThe first album I ever asked my mum to buy me when she was out doing the big shop, I wanted – I canât remember what Red Hot Chili Peppers album it was but there was a Chili Peppers album Iâd heard about and I wanted to be cool so I asked her âcould you get me the Chili Peppers album?â And I think she got confused and brought home a Manic Street Preachers album. Which, to be fair, really good. It was the one with âMotorcycle Emptinessâ on it â I liked it. It was guitars and I quite liked guitars.â
The first gig I went to
The Corrs at Wembley Arena, London, 1996
âI went with my dad. I later realised that we both fancied Andrea Corr. I had a crush on her â I think she might have been my first crush â and he had an inappropriate age difference dad crush on Andrea Corr. I hope you appreciate the honesty here, I could lie and sound much cooler. What can I remember? Literally nothing. I would have been 10 or 11. I think I quite liked âRunawayâ. I only worked it out in hindsight, like, âDad, why did we go and see The Corrs?â âWell, you wanted to goâ. âDid you want to go?â âYeahâŠââ
The song that reminds me of home
Van Morrison â ‘Have I Told You Latelyâ
âMy dad was in a band and he was quite a good singer. He used to sing a lot of Van Morrison. He used to sing âHave I Told You Latelyâ which is one of my favourite songs. That song would always remind me of growing up in Bromley in the 1990s.â
The song I wish Iâd written
The Maccabees â âHappinessâ
âThatâs a very beautiful song. Itâs off their triumphant final â for now â album [‘Marks To Prove It’]. I think itâs a real showcase of a band who know exactly who they are and they donât mind doing a sweet, poppier kind of song thatâs still got a load of layers to it. Itâs a beautiful message, itâs really lovely. Itâs the sweet spot of The Maccabees where they did really expansive, arena-filling songs but doesnât lose any of their sentimentality. Itâs quite melancholic but with a triumphant chorus, itâs so smart.â
The song I do at karaoke
Natasha Bedingfield â âUnwrittenâ
âItâs a crowd-pleaser and (if you can nail the high notes) thereâs a choir bit you can get everyone singing along to. Itâs one of the most amazing pop songs ever. And believe me, it goes down well.â
The song I canât get out of my head
The Proclaimers â âIâm Gonna Be (500 Miles)â
âThat is the Tailenders [Jamesâ cricketing podcast, with ex-Maccabee Felix White and England cricketer James Anderson] song that we sing. We sing âTailenders!â and that has stuck really. Someone texted that in early on in Tailenders and said âin The Proclaimersâ âIâm gonna Be (500 Miles)â you can sing âTailenders!ââ and thatâs sort of become our theme tune. Iâm a man of simple pleasures and theyâre normally theme tune-based. If it comes on anywhere I canât not sing âTailendersâ and I know thatâs tragic but Iâm okay with that.â
The song I can no longer listen to
Calum Scott â âDancing On My Ownâ
âNo offence to Calum Scott because I have nothing against him personally and I do wish him well, but I do think that cover is the worst thing in the world. Covers are very difficult anyway but Robyn is one of the all-time great artists and thatâs one of the most incredible songs ever written. It doesnât need anything doing to it. I donât think even Kings Of Leon nailed it when they tried to do it…â
The song that makes me want to dance
Lou Bega â âMambo No.5 (A Little Bit OfâŠ)â
âThat was also a huge part of my childhood. It wonât surprise you that, again, itâs the theme tune to Channel 4âs cricket coverage. I used to dance around to that when I was very excitedly waiting for the cricket to start on the telly. Iâm not really a good dancer, but I am spirited.â
The song that makes me cry
Bon Iver â â8 (circle)’
âI discovered it at a time when Iâd just come out of a rubbish break-up and I was suddenly feeling a lot more myself again and it always reminds me of that time. So itâs sort of happy tears. I donât cry that often, not in an âIâm a legendâ way but I catch myself before I start crying and then do some things to make myself feel better before that happens. That song takes me to that place where I was finally over something awful and this lovely, gentle Bon Iver song came along. Itâs in Bon Iverâs more optimistic canon.â
The song I want played at my funeral
David Guetta feat. Nicki Minaj and Flo Rida â âWhere Them Girls Atâ
âWeâd need to pierce the tension or the sadness somehow. Iâve thought about it a lot and over the years Iâve thought, âWhatâs the funniest song Iâve ever played on Radio 1â and I think itâs this. They didnât mean it to be funny, walking into the club and proclaiming, âSo many girls in here, where do I begin?â â but it’s absolutely hilarious and at a funeral, I donât think itâd go off but I think people would find it funny.â
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