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Radio Head

Radio Head
Radio Head
Up and Down the Dial of British Radio  
This edition: Mass Market Paperback, 304 pages
List Price: £7.99
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Description

John Osborne has long been a fan of radio - from late night sessions of John Peel to Test Match Special at dawn, he has always enjoyed tuning in to the riches of our best broadcasts. When his dull temporary job became drearier than ever, John decided to remain attached to his headphones all day to listen to some of Britain's more unknown stations as well as revisiting the mainstream to fully experience the breadth of our radio output. The result is a funny, disarming ride through aspects of Britain that are uplifting, informative and sometimes plain bizarre.
Throughout his month of intensive radio listening, John flits through talk radio, sports shows, dips into the mainstream and the minority, exalts in specialist music shows, comedy and local radio before expanding his mind with an experimental arts channel. It seems there is something for everyone at the turn of a dial, whether that is the ranting of the permanently enraged, the gentle tinkle of a string quartet, West Indian stomp or the sound of frozen peas being thrown around Elephant and Castle underground station. John also gets under the skin of the radio business by interviewing presenters such as Mark Radcliffe and Nicholas Parsons as well as industry insiders.
John's daily life is directly affected by his radio habit as he finds himself organising a poker night during exposure to The Jazz, and Zane Lowe's energy on Radio One goads him into cooking his stir fry at the same speed as Morecambe and Wise prepared their breakfast. Finally, John decides to turn his life around and radio becomes his saviour.

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    1. Radio aficionado John Osborne becomes a RADIO HEAD
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Londonist, October 22, 2010
...In 2002 John Osborne won a competition on John Peel's Radio One show. His prize was a box of records from Peel's shed, which took eight years to listen to. Not ...
Telegraph, May 16, 2010
...No, not that John Osborne rather than an acerbic lost piece of theatre from a long-dead dramatist weve got a gentler piece of work from a young writer and poet whose debut work, Radio ...
Telegraph, May 22, 2009
...Gillian Reynolds delights in memoirs by Mark Radcliffe and John Osborne Theres a whole wall of books about radio in our house. There are biographies, autobiographies, memoirs of moguls, jaunty disc jockey reminiscences, histories long and ...
The Scotsman, May 9, 2009
...never been greater. Unfortunately, even before reading eager young 'I've got a great idea for a book' John Osborne's account of moving up and down the dial of British radio, interspersed with details of his boring job, lack of female ...
Guardian Unlimited, April 18, 2009
...Each day, all day, for 30 days, the author listens to a different British radio station. Scarcely revelatory - Ken Bruce is not very funny; Resonance FM is simply very strange - the result none the less gently entertains. ...