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Word In Your Ear

Word In Your Ear

By: Mark Ellen David Hepworth and Alex Gold
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About this listen

Mark Ellen and David Hepworth have been talking about and writing about music together and individually for a collective eighty years in magazines like Smash Hits, Mojo and The Word and on radio and TV programmes like "Rock On", "Whistle Test" and VH-1.


Over thirteen years ago, when working on the late magazine The Word, they began producing podcasts. Some listeners have been kind enough to say these have been very special to them. When the magazine folded in 2012 they kept the spirit of those podcasts alive in regular Word In Your Ear evenings in which they spoke to musicians and authors in front of an audience.


Over these years they've produced hundreds of hours of material. As of the Current Unpleasantness of 2020, they've produced yet hundreds of hours more with a little help from guests kind enough to digitally show them around their attics such as Danny Baker, Andy Partridge, Sir Tim Rice and Mark Lewisohn. For the full span of the Word In Your Ear world, visit wiyelondon.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Word In Your Ear
Music
Episodes
  • No Sex Pistols in Manchester? ‘No Smiths, Nirvana, indie rock.’ Discuss!
    Apr 10 2026

    Howard Devoto and Pete Shelley read a review of the Sex Pistols in February 1976, borrowed a car, drove to London, asked the NME where they’d find the band and were told ‘try a sex shop in the King’s Road’. The events that followed changed both the culture of Manchester and the course of rock history, a story mapped out in David Nolan’s excellent ‘I Swear I Was There’, a book as much about the audience as the band. His theory: “If the Pistols hadn’t played the Lesser Free Trade Hall … no Buzzcocks, Joy Division, Factory Records, ‘indie’ scene, Smiths, Fall, Nirvana, Blur, Oasis, Radiohead or Prodigy.’ As the 50th anniversary looms, he talks to us here about …

    … those who claimed to be there and the ones who actually were

    … the contrast between myth and reality

    … the letter Morrissey sent the NME: “Maybe the Pistols will be able to afford some clothes which don't look as though they've been slept in”

    … punk metaphor: Howard Devoto asking a tailor to narrow his trouser legs and being told, “there’s no going back”

    … North/South crowd violence: “a battle with a gig breaking out in the middle”

    … the three reels of home-movie and the photos that turned up 36 years later

    … Sister Rosetta Tharpe, ‘Judas’ at the Free Trade Hall, Stones In The Park and other landmark Manchester moments

    ... the pioneering impact of Granada TV

    … “if you look at Manchester now, its media, its skyscrapers, its cultural prosperity, none of that would have been happened without those Pistols gigs”

    … “Sheffield would have admired them, Manchester thought: we can do better!”

    … and various bit-part players – Tony Wilson, Peter Hook, Paul Morley, Jordan and Jon the Postman.

    Order ‘I Swear I Was There’ here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Swear-Was-There-Pistols-Manchester/dp/1786060159

    Book promotions at Walthamstow Rock & Roll Book Club, London - 25 May (link below); Nudie, Manchester – 28 May; Central Library, Manchester - 11July: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/david-nolan-i-swear-i-was-there-tickets-1985356197832?utm_experiment=test_share_listing&aff=ebdsshios&sg=0713ff5cbb20ee739ec0a8803927c4228f74fda0c5bac9785b11548a1e5b7c04ba91c0af5267ba677dfafa61163636f97633016b86ba8be02a78ecdb7f234740f0be4f90136c5fd636905d294b


    Help us to keep the conversation going: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    38 mins
  • The Keith Moon story is a movie in waiting, both a comedy and a tragedy
    Apr 10 2026

    The life of Keith Moon can be seen as Animal from the Muppets or as a dark, psychological odyssey. And the two co-exist in Tony Fletcher’s magnificent ‘Dear Boy’, first published in 1998, never out of print and now ‘remastered’ with new pictures, updates, epilogues and a foreword by Mandy Moon who “has to keep reminding myself this person was my father”. Tony looks back here at events along the way, many of which now seem unimaginable. Among them …

    … fact versus fiction: his fudged birthdate, his hidden marriage, the Roller in the swimming-pool

    … Tony’s meeting with Moon two months before he died

    … the letters to his wife Kim when touring America

    … Mel Gibson, Mike Myers, Jason Schwartzman, all once in line to play Keith onscreen

    … “I killed a man”: the terrible incident with his chauffeur

    … the legs in the bath, the head in the bed, the loudspeaker in the bushes: the punchline of all his pranks was “someone’s going to suffer”

    … “working-class rock stars who conquered the world like pirates without a map”

    … would things have been different if he’d been hailed as a pioneering drummer?

    … the times he met Larry Hagman and Oliver Reed

    … do book publishers look down on drummers the way musicians do?

    … to Golders Green with Viv Stanshall in German uniforms and an open-topped car: #DifferentTimes

    … and a sad and telling moment on the Stardust film shoot.

    Order copies of ‘Dear Boy’ here: https://omnibuspress.com/products/dear-boy-the-life-of-keith-moon-omnibus-remastered?_pos=1&_psq=dear+boy&_ss=e&_v=1.0


    Help us to keep the conversation going: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    47 mins
  • The shameless age of Britpop in ‘the wildest year of the 90s’
    Apr 8 2026

    Dominic Mohan saw Britpop on the inside from the showbiz desk of the Sun in the days when it sold 4.5m copies, a series of heated memories recorded in ‘1996: My Backstage Pass to the Wildest Year of Britain’s Wildest Decade’, a lost age of hedonism, stupidity, drunkenness and creativity. He makes a compelling case in this very funny and colourful podcast which stumbles into …

    … the advice David Hepworth gave him when he was 16

    … Euro 96 and headlines you couldn’t run now

    … how the deaths of Kurt Cobain and John Smith changed the picture

    … doorstepping Phil Collins’ ex-wife

    … the wreath for Noel Gallagher “the fat dancer from Take That” sent to the Sun

    … Cool Britannia and that brief love affair between music and politics

    … on the dancefloor at the Labour Conference with Mo Mowlam, John Prescott and Chris Evans

    … Knebworth 1996, the perfect marriage of alternative music and club culture with a £250,000 bar bill

    … the debt Pulp, Oasis and Blur owe Ray Davies - “less the Godfather of Britpop, more a concerned uncle”

    … is it hard to identify a new zeitgeist when people don’t congregate as much?

    … the ‘reverse-ferret’ from American culture towards bespectacled blokes from Sheffield

    … the shameless age before people public apology

    … how the post-Spice Girls TV talent shows soaked up the budgets and column inches

    … and Madonna dancing with Dennis Hopper.

    Order copies of ‘1996’ here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/1996-Backstage-Wildest-Britains-Decade/dp/B0FZBZHPNR

    The Barbican Show curated by Dominic: https://www.barbican.org.uk/whats-on/2026/event/1996-a-celebration-of-the-wildest-year-of-britains-wildest


    Help us to keep the conversation going: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    1 hr and 7 mins
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David Hepworth and Mark Ellen have been hosting this podcast for many years. They have both been music journalists and David Hepworth has written many books about the subject, while Mark Ellen has also written one memoir. They are music journalists, have presented many music programmes, and what they don't know about rock and pop music is not worth knowing. If you like music from the Sixties, Seventies and Eighties, give this a listen. They are extremely enjoyable company and the two are both knowledgeable and funny. A great listen.

Word in Your Ear

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Dave, Mark & Alex have been plying the podcast furrow for a number of years - it never ceases to entertain!

A Must - Listen Every Week!

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