Peter Powell (DJ)

Peter Powell
Birth name Peter James Barnard-Powell
Born (1951-03-24) March 24, 1951
Stourbridge, England
Genres Pop
Occupation(s) Disc jockey
Years active 1970–present

Peter James Barnard-Powell (born 24 March 1951 in Stourbridge, England) is an English former disc jockey, popular on BBC Radio 1 in the late 1970s and 1980s, who has a second career in talent management.

Early career

Powell was educated at Uppingham School, a boys' Independent school in Rutland in England. Powell began his broadcasting career as the first voice on air when BBC Radio Birmingham launched in 1970, and then had a brief spell on Radio 1 in 1972.

He then went to Radio Luxembourg before rejoining Radio 1 in 1977. Almost immediately after his arrival at the station he made his debut as a Top of the Pops presenter, joining Radio 1 colleagues on the roster.

Radio 1 career

Powell began as a weekend presenter on the station, presenting a Sunday show from 10am-1pm, before a move to Saturdays in October 1978, again from 10am-1pm.[1]

In 1980 he took over the weekday afternoon show running from 3.30-5.30pm, before taking over the weekday teatime slot in 1981 from 5-7pm. The show went out from 4.30-7pm in 1982.

His best remembered features are 5 45s at 5.45, where Powell played five new singles, and the Record Race, in which listeners had to identify songs purely from their intros. Every Tuesday he ran through the new singles chart which had been revealed at lunchtime (until 1987) - the first chance many young listeners got to hear the new Top 40. He also featured the album chart on Wednesday evenings.

Pete Tong - now one of Radio 1's longest-serving DJs - made his first appearance on the network on Powell's show in the early 1980s, presenting a dance music feature.[2] Powell was an early champion of a number of successful mainstream 1980s acts, including Spandau Ballet, Culture Club and Duran Duran as well as Australian new wave band The Church. He compered Duran Duran`s charity concert at Aston Villa football ground 1983 as well as the Birmingham Heart Beat Charity Concert 1986 three years later, which featured George Harrison.

From 1984 until his departure from the station on 25 September 1988 Powell presented the weekend breakfast show from 8-10am. Throughout his 11-year stay at Radio 1 he became strongly associated with the Radio 1 Roadshow, which he presented each summer, and other outside broadcasts. He was also known for hosting the TV coverage of the annual Montreux Rock Festival and for his high-profile relationship with fellow Radio 1 DJ Janice Long between October 1984 and July 1985.[3]

Powell was coaxed back into the limelight in 2006 to host a six-part show on Garrison FM called Peter Powell's Popsicle. The series charted the history of British pop music and included a quiz called Pull Peter's Plonker.

Management

Since leaving the station he has not returned to radio and has concentrated on building his management company (James Grant Media Group)[4] with his business partner Russ Lindsay and other financial activities, which have proved successful.

In 1990 Powell married Anthea Turner, a TV host who was previously in a relationship with Powell's successor on the teatime show, Bruno Brookes. He was also her manager. Their marriage broke up in 1998.[5]=

References

  1. "BBC Radio 1 People - Peter Powell - "Hello, Mate!"". Radio Rewind. 21 August 1988. Retrieved 23 April 2012.
  2. "Pete Tong". The DJ List. Retrieved 23 April 2012.
  3. Rosemary Long (26 October 1984). "Did You See?". Evening Times. Edinburgh, Scotland. Retrieved 27 August 2012.
  4. "Peter Powell". The Guardian. 14 July 2008. Retrieved 23 April 2012.
  5. "Anthea Turner named in divorce papers". BBC News. 19 May 1999. Retrieved 23 April 2012.
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