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(This page covers both Mick Farren and the Deviants)
Farren

Michael Anthony Farren (3 September 1943 – 27 July 2013) was an English journalist, author and singer associated with counterculture and the UK underground. Farren was the singer with the proto-punk band The Deviants between 1967 and 1969, releasing three albums. During 1970 he released the solo album Mona – The Carnivorous Circus which also featured Steve Peregrin Took, John Gustafson and Paul Buckmaster, before a taking a break from music to concentrate on writing.

During the early 1970s he contributed to the UK underground press such as the International Times, also establishing Nasty Tales which he successfully defended from an obscenity charge. He later wrote for the mainstream New Musical Express, for which he wrote the article The Titanic Sails At Dawn,[1] an analysis of what he considered the malaise afflicting then-contemporary rock music and which described the conditions that subsequently resulted in punk.

Farren died at the age of 69 in 2013, after collapsing while performing with the Deviants at the Borderline Club in London. (Read more at Wikipedia)

Links to Peel[]

In his autobiography Give The Anarchist A Cigarette (London, 2002), Mick Farren writes: (p. 90)

The disc jockey John Peel proved an important early input. His overnight slot on the pirate station Radio London, entitled the Perfumed Garden, came as close to magic as a radio show can, and mercifully required no brain surgery. You simply lay in bed and listened, while Peel decorated the darkness with both the new-and-emergent and the tried-and-trusted....

He also notes that:

Peel was also prone to complain between records of the deadly boredom of life on a pirate radio ship in the middle of the cold North Sea. He seemed to like receiving letters, so I started writing to him, commencing a correspondence which would reveal, among other things, that we both had a love for heavy-duty Fifties rock, especially Gene Vincent and Jerry Lee Lewis; a retro taste frowned upon by the trendsetters of the day as being too fundamental, but what the hell? It was our secret.

Peel mentions Mick Farren frequently in his early journalism and on his radio programmes of 1967-68, especially the Perfumed Garden. Of the editorial group which founded International Times, Farren was the only member with a close connection to, and knowledge of, pop music. He formed a band, the Social Deviants (later the Deviants) who failed to impress audiences at the time but have been seen as pioneers of punk music. At the same time he contributed reviews to International Times before Peel began to write for the paper, and was also doorman at the UFO Club, where Peel may well have met him during his periods of shore leave from Radio London. He was certainly one of the first music business contacts Peel made on the London scene of 1967.

Peel and Farren seemed to become friends for a while, sharing sympathies for the underground culture as well as a love of classic rock and roll. The DJ interviewed him for Dutch TV in autumn 1967, and again when Farren was a studio guest on the Night Ride show of 03 April 1968. According to Robert Chapman (Selling the Sixties, pp.268-9):

Mick Farren, the International Times journalist and member of the Social Deviants politico-rock group, ponderously informed listeners on an early programme that “pop music as such is ceasing to exist”, that rock was making politics obsolete, and that Pete Townshend propelling his arms while playing his guitar had a definitive dialectical meaning which “the kids” instinctively understood.

The Deviants' first LP Ptooff! was released in 1968 and Peel wrote the sleevenotes. He praised it in his IT column, in somewhat lukewarm fashion ("I've listened several times to the Deviants LP and it really is quite good....."[2])  According to Farren's autobiography (p.188). Peel "loathed" Disposable, the band's second LP - but he still played the single taken from the album at least twice, in November 1968 (see below). 

Mick Farren continued to perform with the band until it broke up during a US tour, but was far more successful as a journalist and underground spokesman. In his book Give The Anarchist A Cigarette he describes (pp.218-20) a brief affair with Germaine Greer, and says this was "all John Peel's fault". Apparently the three of them went to Birmingham at Peel's invitation to see the Who at Mothers club, and instead of returning to London with Peel after the gig, Farren decided to remain with Greer. The DJ was intending to drop her off at her flat near Warwick University, where she worked as a lecturer in English literature, and according to Farren's account, Peel "looked a bit miffed that he'd have to make the drive back on his own".

By the end of the 1960s different factions had emerged in the underground scene and Mick Farren became a prominent figure, as "Minister of Information" of the British branch of the White Panther Party which, like the US party, advocated street-level revolutionary anarchism. Peel wasn't unduly impressed, telling Jonathan Green (Days In The Life, p 328):

There were only two White Panthers and Mick Farren was the leader. I went round to his flat one day and Mick was always telling me about all this ‘property is theft’ stuff. He had some Gene Vincent LPs that I was rather keen to own, so I said, ‘I don’t feel as strongly about it as you do, but I’ll take these Gene Vincent LPs,' but it turned out that property was theft except for Gene Vincent LPs.

The DJ also voiced criticism of one of the disruptive activities organised by Farren, when the premises of Release, the charity which provided support and legal aid to young people who had been arrested on drug charges, were smashed up, with the slogan "Give Release back to the people"[1]:

It’s a bit like the whole Release business where people I used to know, like Mick Farren, don’t seem to be acting in the way that their ethic could lead them, for example by blowing up police stations, because they’re frightened to do that or anything else which might land them inside. There may obviously be many things wrong with the way Release is run, but it seems a bit pathetic that the new pop revolutionaries can only find a place like that to pick on. They go and attack it because they know no-one will punch them on the nose.[2]

Despite Peel's differences with Mick Farren, he continued to play tracks by the singer and his various bands, long after the underground era had ended. Peel was an avid reader of the music press and would have been aware of Farren's articles for the NME and of the singer's comeback in the late 1970s, when some new wave artists acclaimed him as a punk pioneer and kindred spirit. Indeed, in 1978 Peel played tracks from the LP Vampires Stole My Lunch Money, which featured a number of well-known guests (see below). Despite this, the DJ does not seem to have had any contact with Farren in later years; the singer emigrated to the US in 1979, began to concentrate more on his writing, and only returned to Britain in 2010..

In 1970 there was a Top Gear session by the Pink Fairies, the band which succeeded the Deviants after Farren left.

On 14 June 2022, Elvis: The Complete Illustrated Record (Eel Pie, 1982), co-written by Roy Carr and Mick Farren, was among a lot of "American Music" books from John Peel's library in an auction of rare records and other items from the Peel archive.[3]

Festive Fifty Entries[]

  • None

Sessions[]

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Shows Played / Mentioned[]

Mick Farren
  • Perfumed Garden (July/August): (Letter from Mick Farren, who says he's heard from Allen Ginsberg that Dylan is fully fit again.)
  • 22 July 1967: (JP refers to a letter from Mick Farren mentioning the appeal against the prison sentence of underground catalyst John "Hoppy" Hopkins.)
  • 14 August 1967: (JP: “Here are the Velvet Underground and this is called Venus In Furs – a special request for Mick Farren and the Social Deviants. He explained it to me, you see. Filthy.”)
  • 03 April 1968; studio guest on Night Ride, interviewed by Peel.
  • 07 March 1970: unknown (LP - Mona – The Carnivorous Circus) Transatlantic
  • 25 October 1977: Play With Fire (7") ORK 81980
  • 03 November 1977: To Know Him Is To Love Him (v/a album - Bionic Gold) Big Sound BSLP-001
  • 03 August 1978: (albums heavily featured include the latest by Mick Farren, whose LP featured guest appearances from fellow NME journalist Chrissie Hynde, Curved Air singer Sonja Kristina and former Dr. Feelgood guitarist Wilko Johnson)
    - Trouble Coming Every Day (LP - Vampires Stole My Lunch Money) Logo
    - Half Price Drinks (LP - Vampires Stole My Lunch Money) Logo
    - Son Of A Millionaire (LP - Vampires Stole My Lunch Money) Logo
  • 10 August 1978: Zombie Line / Bela Lugosi (LP – Vampires Stole My Dinner Money) Logo
  • 15 August 1978: Bela Lugosi (LP-Vampires Stole My Lunch Money) Logo)
  • 11 September 1978: Let Me In, Damn You (LP-Vampires Stole My Lunch Money) Logo
Deviants

See Also[]

References[]

  1. See the account of the episode in chapter 16 of Richard Neville's Hippie Hippie Shake (London 2010).
  2. In Friends 26, March 22 1971, p. 20 .

External Links[]

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