Profile
Name:
Tom
Channel Views:
5,191
Style:
Pop
Joined:
June 16, 2006
Last Sign In:
3 days ago
Videos Watched:
1,163
Subscribers:
124
Website:
About Me:
There at Finchden Manor, Tom was inspired by John Peels Perfumed Garden on pirate Radio London, and a visit from old boy Alexis Korner. The legendary bluesman and broadcaster transfixed a roomful of people with nothing but his voice and an acoustic guitar. The whole direction of Toms future life and career became suddenly clear.
In the early seventies he joined the acoustic trio Café Society with two friends in London. They impressed Ray Davies of The Kinks enough for him to produce their debut album, though it sold only 600 copies. Meantime he discovered Londons emerging gay scene and embraced the politics of gay liberation, which linked queer rights to wider issues of equality and social justice.
Inspired by an early Sex Pistols gig, Tom left Cafe Society and formed the more overtly political Tom Robinson Band (TRB) in 1977, aged 26. His band had a hit with 2-4-6-8 Motorway, quickly followed into the Top 20 by a live EP despite a BBC ban on the controversial lead track Glad To Be Gay. Swept along by a tide of music press hysteria TRBs debut album Power In The Darkness went gold. But the band fell from favour equally quickly and broke up - demoralised and squabbling - in 1979.
As the 80s arrived, Tom ploughed his remaining earnings into a new band, Sector 27. They recorded a critically acclaimed album with Steve Lillywhite and took New York by storm (playing Madison Square Garden with The Police) before they too split up and left Tom technically bankrupt.
Fleeing the taxman, he packed his few possessions into his Austin A40 and headed for Hamburg. Living in a friends spare room - Tom began writing again and ended up working in East Berlin with local band NO55. He returned home with fluent German and a song that became his Top 10 comeback, 1983s War Baby.
Toms continental exile had given him a fresh perspective on pop, and his return to the charts was marked by with a string of shows - not at regular rock venues - but performing late night cabaret at the Edinburgh Fringe. His career enjoyed a resurgence in the mid 90s with a trio of albums for the respected folk/roots label Cooking Vinyl.
He has become an advocate for a wider sexuality than his earlier reputation as a gay rights campaigner might have suggested - marrying a woman and starting a family. Having kickstarted his musical career with the notoriety of Glad To Be Gay, Tom rounded it off twenty years later with an album cheerfully titled Having It Both Ways (Cooking Vinyl, 1996). In 1998 his bisexual epic Blood Brother won in three categories at the Gay & Lesbian American Music Awards in New York.
Over the past two decades Robinson has gradually become better known as a broadcaster than as a musician. In 1986 a radio producer offered Tom him his own series on the BBC World Service. Just like his heroes Peel and Korner, he soon found himself broadcasting his favourite music to a worldwide radio audience.
Unusually, Tom has presented programmes on all the BBCs national stations: Radios 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 Live, 6 Music and BBC 7. He fronted The Locker Room, a series about men and masculinity, for Radio 4 in the early nineties and later hosted the Home Truths tribute programme to John Peel a year after the latters untimely death in 2004.
With producer by Matthew Linfoot he won a Sony Radio Award in 1997 with the gay music documentary Youve Got To Hide Your Love Away, and currently hosts 6 Musics BBC Introducing shows every weekend, while freelancing on Radio 2 (The Joe Meek Story, Jailhouse Rock) and Radio 4 (Something Understood, Saturday Live, Pick Of The Week).
Tom remains an active supporter of campaigns such as Amnesty International, Hope Not Hate, Samaritans, Outrage and the Featured Artists Coalition, and is a member of the Ivor Novello Awards committe of The Birtish Academy of Composers & Songwriters.
Label Type:
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Hometown:
Cambridge
Country:
United Kingdom
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