Stuart John Maconie (born 13 August 1961) is an English disc jockey, writer, journalist, and critic working in the field of pop music and popular culture. He is a presenter on BBC Radio 6 Music where, alongside Mark Radcliffe, he hosts its weekend breakfast show (SaturdaySunday, 8am10am) Radcliffe and Maconie (BBC Radio 6 Music) which broadcasts from the BBC's MediaCityUK in Salford. The pair previously presented an evening show on BBC Radio 2 and the weekday afternoon show for BBC Radio 6 Music.
Maconie used to present his own solo show on Radio 2 on Saturday afternoons from April 2006 until 29 March 2008. He also hosts BBC Radio 6 Music programmes The Freak Zone, Stuart Maconie's Freak Zone (BBC Radio 6 Music) on Sundays from 8pm to 10pm and Freak Zone Playlist Freak Zone Playlist (BBC Radio 6 Music) (formerly known as The Freakier Zone) on Wednesday night/Thursday mornings from midnight to 1am.
While at St John Rigby College, Maconie formed a band named (after several iterations) Les Flirts, featuring Maconie on guitar/vocals, Nigel Power on bass and Jem Bretherton on drums.
Maconie is also the author of Cider with Roadies, an autobiography of his experiences as a music journalist. Pies and Prejudice: In Search of the North, a book that discusses the modern reality of Northern England (as opposed to the popular myths), was published in February 2007, with an audio version following in March 2009. Maconie, portraying himself as a "professional northerner", uses childhood experiences alongside anecdotes from later visits to illuminate the book. A third book, Adventures on the High Teas: In Search of Middle England was published in March 2009. Maconie's March 2012 book, Never Mind the Quantocks, is a collection of more than fifty essays from his monthly column in Country Walking magazine.
Maconie claims to be responsible for two : that Bob Holness, host of the game show Blockbusters, played the saxophone solo on Gerry Rafferty's hit single "Baker Street" and that David Bowie invented the board game Connect Four. The stories first appeared as blatant jokes in a spoof NMEs Believe It or Not feature, but have since been repeated elsewhere as factual.
Maconie also said he was the first to use the term "Britpop" for the British pop music movement of the mid-1990s. John Robb had earlier used the term in 1987 when writing for Sounds. Maconie later said, "I'm sure someone must have used the expression before me about the Hollies, or the Beatles, back in the '60s. But I was the first person to use it about bands like Oasis and Blur".
In February 2023, Roger Waters of Pink Floyd was highly critical of Maconie for an article in the New Statesman which he said misrepresented and misquoted his views on bandmate David Gilmour's musicianship, calling it "shit stirring, ill-informed nonsense."
From April 2006 to 29 March 2008, Maconie presented the Saturday afternoon show previously presented by Chris Evans.
In addition to his Saturday show, on 16 April 2007, Maconie joined forces with Mark Radcliffe to present a new show on Radio 2 which was broadcast between Monday and Wednesday (Monday to Thursday up to April 2010) from 8pm to 10pm. In spring 2011, this show was transferred to Radio 6 Music in the afternoon slot, 14pm weekdays, later moving to weekend mornings from 8am to 10am. In 2012, Maconie began presenting The People's Songs, a "story of modern Britain in 50 records". Described as "music as social history", 50 programmes in the series examine periods in Britain, the events that were occurring and how a particular song was the soundtrack of that period.
In February 2015 he was the guest of Sarah Walker on BBC Radio 3's Essential Classics. Since 2016 he has appeared on the North of England team on Radio 4's Round Britain Quiz.
In July 2011, he was awarded an honorary Doctor of Letters (DLitt) from the University of Bolton.
In January 2016 he became a patron of Warley Woods after a number of years being actively involved.
Career
Publications
Broadcasting
Radio 1
Radio 2
Radio 5 Live
BBC Radio 6 Music
Other broadcasting
Other projects
Personal life
Politics
External links
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