
He gave my band our first major review in the NME.
Didn't understand a word of it (I always suspected he hadn't actually seen us), but fuck I was excited. Collaborated on several articles - mostly on comics and fanzines - with me for the same paper during the 80s, at a time when most his peers were making un-subtle digs at how crap I was. Had a knack for being simultaneously infuriating and hilarious: recall one genuis punch-up that occured in the offices after he'd been flicking paper clips at everyone all day, and one hit Neil Taylor in the eye.
Earlier on, I recall seeing him on stage in squats and pubs, mostly anarcho or Rock Against Racism-stype events, where he stunned me with his force of delivery. One time, while NME was still in Carnaby St, I recall a journalist coming over to sit at the table where me, Swells and Dele Fedele were huddled and making a great play of how he'd been moved to "the angry corner". "I'm not fucking angry," Dele immediately exclaimed.
Swells and Quantick were always great buddies: I was always somewhat intimidated by the rapidity of their banter and easy confidence, but - as I say Swells went out his way to support me, perhaps feeling we were fanzine comrades, or had a similar enthusiasm, ex-performers each...Christ knows, I was never up to his standard. His writing was genius, provocative, annoying, crap, hyperbolic - often in the same sentence, all stuff I thoroughly appreciated from a music critic. He had a heart as big as...well fuck, I don't know...a very big heart. His politics helped give music journalism a conscience, his writing kept NME from floundering above the mire for too long a time. The fanzine cover story me, him and James Brown did in '86 is still one of my favourites ever.
I recall one time, down that Brixton pub round the corner from the police station, I was at Melody Maker by then, we'd both gone down to write about a trio of fiery, politicised noise bands - God, Godflesh and Terminal Cheesecake I think it was. I was rampaging hard at that point: he'd turned up early, and settled down in a cosy corner with a book. That impressed me so much, I can't begin to say. He followed his own path -and that, to me, is more important than most anything.
Fuck it. He was so one of the good guys I knew I didn't even need to be in contact with him: it made me happy that he was still somewhere out there, pricking away at the pompous, belligerent, challenging, argumentative, passionate and above all funny as all hell. And now he's not.
Steven Wells says goodbye.

What a touching tribute. Such a great loss, work don't understand why I've been teary all morning.
ReplyDeleteYes, one of the good guys. Glad to find your take, I was looking for the more personal insights into Swells. I've put my own quick tribute up to him on my blog (linked from my name here). People thought of him having a lot of enemies, but actually he had a lot of friends, coz if he liked you he went out of his way to support you!
ReplyDeleteHorrible news, a bad day for good words. He'll be sadly missed.
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ReplyDeleteAdele Nozedar at 9:32pm June 25
this is SUCH sad news :-(
Debbie Smith at 9:32pm June 25
Fuck. I didn't know Swells had died. Fuck.
Emma Pollard at 9:33pm June 25
I am crying as I read this. Great job.
(From Facebook)
ReplyDeleteSimon Price at 6:14pm June 25
Massive respect. The music press needs someone like him now more than ever.
Peter Robert Byrchmore at 6:24pm June 25
this is a fuckin' tragedy. Swells was one of the good guys
Ady Vpop at 6:25pm June 25
very sad news.
Sarah Datblygu at 6:26pm June 25
What?? NO!!!!
Ed Vice at 6:37pm June 25
Sorry to hear such bad news Everett!
Steven R.I.P.
Simon Bridger at 6:39pm June 25
Great journo back in the day, rallied fabulously against misery, complaints, self pity & injustice, some would say he had a chip on his shoulder, i would say he did a fantastic job of entertaining me & you, apologies for all the Soft Cell references but i'm listening to them as i type. RIP Steven.
Warren Dermody at 6:48pm June 25
RIP Steven
Andy Hart at 7:09pm June 25
compared to most of the gutless clueless pricks who pose as music journalists these days he's like Aristotle or someone... in print he was simultaneously infuriating, brilliant, funny, furious and right
very sad
Karren Ablaze at 8:03pm June 25
No way. So sad.
Gary Walker at 8:23pm June 25
i commented on john robb's link about how he was an important supporter for cornershop and huggy bear back in the day, and his energy and intelligence, even when critical, was righteous and incomparable. we sat on a music and politics debate with him at the Marxism conference one year, and he tore everyone to shreds! r.i.p. steven.
Andrew Hitchcock at 8:52pm June 25
lifes become more boring
Chris Estey at 9:28pm June 25
Thanks, Everett, though the news is so sad.
I didn't think it possible that Steven Wells could die.
ReplyDeleteI always imagined he would shit death on a daily basis.
Then write a great piece about it.
It's a big, big shame that he has gone so young.
Nice piece Jerry. I chatted a little with Swells last year, round about the time of his blunderbuss broadsides against Los Campesinos! - I know he'd been battling with cancer but at the time he described himself as "terribly well" so this rather came out of the blue. He offered to write some media stuff for us, actually, and I did consider it - his pitches were good - but seemed like a bit of a weird fit for us, and I was quite up for getting in new writers at the time.
ReplyDeleteI feel like he was a bit wasted writing about music in recent years, would have liked to have seen more Swells the reporter. Imagine him on TV!
Is the fanzine cover story online anywhere? Would love to read it.
ReplyDeleteI'm really saddened by this news, I didn't even know he was ill...
ReplyDeleteSwells inspired me to get into music journalism. When I was trying to get in on the inkies in the early 90s I sent him some stuff, having met him at a gig. He sent back a three-page critique of some reviews I'd done, and soon after I got in on Melody Maker thanks to Jim Irwin...
Always enjoyed reading his stuff - being provoked by him kicking against the pricks. What a great character - the world or words will miss him badly ;(
Don't know, Gillian. I'd love to see it again myself. Maybe our friends over at Archived Music Press might know?
ReplyDeleteI will never forget Swells kindness to me back when I was a dumb teenager. He was a giant among men and I will never forget him.
ReplyDeleteThanks Jerry. Swells was some kind of genius and you weren't the angry corner just the originals corner. DQ x
ReplyDeleteThe only writer from my time reading the NME I remember the name of, because it seemed like he really meant it. I was thrilled and surprised in unequal measures to see him writing about american sport in the guardian, with a typical swells spin, in the last year or two. RIP, a true soldier.
ReplyDeleteReally awful news - and a terrible shock. Swells was so much more than what he wrote, but what he wrote was so much more than most other things.
ReplyDeleteHe'd have hated to be adored by us all face-to-face but god how I wish we could send a belated farewell flare up into Valhalla, just so he could tootle off knowing how special we all thought he was.
Of course, he'd probably just tell it to fuck off.
A very sad day indeed. He's the reason I walked into my first university newspaper music department meeting and asked them to give me whatever CDs nobody else wanted so I could review them. Nobody else I've ever read could engage me and make me laugh while at the same time ripping into musicians I adored. His recent stuff in the Guardian has also been a goldmine, and we're a worse-off place without him.
ReplyDelete[...] Steven Wells R.I.P. He gave my band our first major review in the NME. [...] [...]
ReplyDelete[...] Trust me, I wouldn’t be sending you to the NME site if there wasn’t a good reason, but some very sweet reminisces here about my former colleague and peer, Swells. [...]
ReplyDelete[...] Trust me, I wouldn’t be sending you to the NME site if there wasn’t a good reason, but some very sweet reminisces here about my former colleague and peer, Swells. [...]
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