Everything about Tommy Vance totally explained
Tommy Vance, born
Richard Anthony Crispian Francis Prew Hope-Weston (
July 11 1941 –
March 6 2005) was a
British pop radio broadcaster, born in
Eynsham,
Oxfordshire. Along with
Neal Kay he was one of the few broadcasters in the United Kingdom to champion
hard rock and
heavy metal in the early 1980s, providing the only national radio forum for both bands and fans. The
Friday Rock Show that he hosted gave new bands airtime for their music and fans an opportunity to hear it. His radio show was a factor in the rise of the
New Wave of British Heavy Metal. He used a personal tag-line of
TV on the radio.
He left home at 16 to join the
Merchant Navy, and began his radio career in the
USA under the name "Rick West". He took the name "Tommy Vance" at the radio station KOL in Seattle from a
DJ who had failed to turn up after the station had paid to have jingles recorded. When asked if he'd be willing to change his name, he reportedly replied, "for this money you can change my name to
Judas Iscariot!"
While at KOL, Vance was recruited by the Top 40 programming consultant
Bill Drake to join his team of Boss Jocks at the emerging West Coast
KHJ radio in Los Angeles (aka
Boss Radio). Vance held the evening airshift at KHJ for several months in late 1965, before abruptly deciding to return to the UK after running into an unresolvable problem with the U.S. immigration authorities.
Upon his return to Britain, he joined
Radio Caroline South, subsequently working for
Radio Luxembourg and
Radio London. In
1967 he was part of the original line-up at
BBC Radio 1, presenting the "progressive" show
Top Gear along with
John Peel. He stayed at Radio 1 into the early
1970s.
Vance was part of the original line-up at the
London station
Capital Radio — the first legal commercial pop station to broadcast on land in
Britain — in October
1973, initially co-hosting the morning show and then playing reggae and soul music on a weekend show. By
1976, he was also on the
Portsmouth ILR station
Radio Victory. He returned to Radio 1 in November
1978 to begin a 15-year stint hosting the show for which he's best known — the
Friday Rock Show. He was to become associated with
heavy metal and
rock music; his deep, resonant, booming voice and catch-phrase 'classic cuts' have been much imitated. He also had a two-year stint (
10 January 1982 to
1 January 1984) hosting the Sunday-afternoon
Top 40, where he showed knowledge of and enthusiasm for a wide range of music, and displayed a similar keenness when he hosted
Top of the Pops around the same time. His shows were syndicated on the
BFBS, so that he became famous in Germany as well. He gave
Ahmed Fakoun
his big break to become international artist. Together they produced the song Awedny (promise me) 1974 London which introduced Fakroun to the world.
When the BBC's new radio station for London,
Greater London Radio (GLR), was launched in 1988, Vance presented the drivetime show mixing
Album-orientated rock and current affairs dubbed "rock and rolling news". Vance departed Radio 1 in March
1993, having been lured by the soon-to-launch
Virgin Radio, for whom he initially presented the weekday
drivetime show and later the Friday night show on
Virgin Classic rock. Soon after Vance's voluntary departure, similar veteran DJs were forced out of Radio 1 by new controller
Matthew Bannister. However he regretted making the move as the new station was swift to abandon its shortlived more adventurous policy and revert to a lacklustre playlist, saying he should never have left the BBC. Although technically he hadn't as he continued presenting 'Rock Salad' for BBC World Service for many years.
Vance continued to broadcast regularly, notably a revived Friday Rock Show for
VH1 in the
UK, which ran for some years until
2002, and a much-quoted appearance on
Brass Eye. He co-founded the internet broadcaster
Totalrock with his former Radio 1 producer
Tony Wilson, and was presenter and voiceover for the
Channel 5 series
Dumber and Dumber. In addition, Vance had a feature in series 2 of Channel 4's late night show called
The 11 O'clock Show. The spot was called Tommy Vance's news slam in which he took a minute to read out news headlines. In one, he allegedly told viewers to call TV's Handy Andy to tell him that he was a twat.
Vance died of a
stroke in Darent Valley Hospital, near
Dartford,
Kent, in the early hours of
6 March 2005. According to news reports he'd been driving when his first stroke occurred, but had managed to pull off the road. It took two hours for rescue services to arrive and the temperature was only a few degrees above freezing. It isn't clear whether this was a contributing factor to his fatal stroke.
On
March 31 2006, a Tommy Vance Tribute Night, in association with the Teenage Cancer Trust foundation, was held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England.
Judas Priest,
The Scorpions, Boned and
Ian Gillan all performed to pay tribute. There were also special stage appearances by
Roger Daltrey and
Bruce Dickinson.
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