The most gifted songwriters of our time are paying tribute to the Godfather of Gloom this weekend. Fiona Sturges celebrates his enduring appeal
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Thursday, 20 May 2004
Wednesday, 25 February 2004
Stephen Tompkinson: Made in Britain
Friday, 13 June 2003
The great rock chick con?
We all know that teenagers are a fickle lot, and no one understands this better than the record business...
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Friday, 2 May 2003
Chrissie Hynde: The Great Pretender
The expression 'rock chick' could have been coined to describe her. She has weathered drug deaths, punk, stormy relationships and stardom. Now 52, Chrissie Hynde tells Fiona Sturges why she no longer sees music as the be-all and end-all
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Friday, 25 April 2003
Alison Goldfrapp: After the gold rush
Alison Goldfrapp doesn't play safe, in life or in her music. Her band's first album won her critical acclaim and huge sales - so now she's changed her sound. She tells Fiona Sturges why
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Monday, 21 April 2003
Marilyn Manson: His satanic majesty
Friday, 10 January 2003
Marr's Attacks
Johnny Marr is the only member of The Smiths to have moved on from their bitter, infighting past. With a new group and new songs, he's back on the warpath, he tells Fiona Sturges
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Thursday, 12 September 2002
Morrissey: Still miserable now?
The former leader of the Smiths hasn't made a record in six years. He's been accused of arrogance, self-pity and even of racism. So how come he's still named regularly as the most important songwriter of our time? As Morrissey prepares to return to the London stage, Fiona Sturges explains why he remains such a potent cultural icon
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Wednesday, 14 August 2002
Bald ambition
Once upon a time, he was just another musician with strong views on God, politics and vegetarianism; then 'Play' quietly turned him into the voice of his generation. Now he's a global, multi-platinum-selling pop phenomenon - and even David Bowie plays in support when he tours. But Moby is still something of an enigma - as Fiona Sturges discovered when she joined him on the road in America
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Friday, 14 June 2002
Lee Hazlewood: Singular Lee
He discovered Duane Eddy and practically invented country rock, but Lee Hazlewood is best known for his collaboration with Nancy Sinatra. The secret of their success? Singing dirty songs, he tells Fiona Sturges
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Wednesday, 30 January 2002
Music review - Brian Wilson, Royal Festival Hall
It's not often that a musician gets a standing ovation before he has played a note. But Brian Wilson, erstwhile Beach Boy, composer, arranger, singer and living legend, gets just this as he arrives on stage...
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Friday, 30 November 2001
'Thingy out of Cold Feet'
Friday, 16 November 2001
Todd Solondz: Why's everybody always picking on me?
He may be a master of black comedy, but the director Todd Solondz - whose new film Storytelling is about to be released - finds it hard to laugh off criticism. Fiona Sturges meets a man wounded by the 'incredibly horrible things' people say
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Tuesday, 7 August 2001
Scott Capurro: The comic who makes people cry
He says he doesn't mean to offend, but the Holocaust and Aids are hardly laugh-a-minute subjects, so why does he insist on doing them? By Fiona Sturges
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Saturday, 26 May 2001
Hotel review: Europa, Belfast
One month after the official opening, events commenced that would eventually earn the hotel the reputation as 'the most bombed hotel in Europe'." The official history of the Europa does not shy away from the Troubles.
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