Everett True(bornJeremy Andrew Thackrayon 21 April 1961) is an Englishmusic journalistand musician. He became interested in rock music after hearingThe Residents,and formed a band with school friends. He has written and recorded asThe Legend.

Everett True
Everett True in 2007
Background information
Birth nameJeremy Andrew Thackray
Also known asJerry Thackray
The Legend
Born(1961-04-21)21 April 1961(age 63)
Chelmsford,Essex,England
GenresRock
Years active1982–present
LabelsThick Syrup Records

Career

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In 1982, he went to a gig by The Laughing Apple and met the group's lead singerAlan McGee.According to McGee: "there used to be this guy who'd stand at the front of all the gigs and dance disjointedly". They became friends and when McGee started the Communication Blur club, he offered Thackray the role ofcompėre,stating that Thackray "was the most un- Enigma tic, boring, kindest, shyest person you could ever meet – and it just appealed to my sense of humour to make him compère."[1]He was originally billed as "the legendary Jerry Thackray", eventually shortened to simply "The Legend".[1]McGee also offered him a column in his newfanzine,also calledCommunication Blur,but Thackray left after two issues, because he objected to McGee's proposal to put aflexidiscofThe Smithson the front cover. He instead started his ownzine,The Legend!,under which name he recorded the single "73 in 83", the first to be released by McGee'sCreation Records.[2]In 1984, he released a second single, "Legend Destroys the Blues", but his performing career did not take off. He puts this down to that he "didn't like to perform a song more than once", although he has continued to make occasional appearances.[3]

In 1983, Thackray began working at theNew Musical Express.In 1988, he was sacked from the paper, and instead took a job at its rival,Melody Maker.He was told to adopt a new pseudonym, as the "Legend!" name was too closely associated with theNME.He chose "Everett True", from the early twentieth century cartoonThe Outbursts of Everett True.[4]

Within months, he was sent toSeattleto cover the emerginggrungescene. In 1989, as The Legend!, he performed guest vocals on a single withCalvin JohnsonandTobi Vail's bandThe Go Team.In 1991, he introducedKurt CobaintoCourtney Loveat aButthole SurfersandL7gig. The three became close friends, and, in 1992, True wheeled Cobain on stage at theReading Festival.[2]In 2006, True publishedNirvana: The True Story,a book about his personal relationship with the band and thegrungescene.[5][6][7]

In the early 1990s, True lived inBrighton,East Sussex, with members of the bandHuggy Bear.

Leaving MM in the late 1990s, he became editor ofVox,reverting on this occasion to his real name. It has been claimed that the bandtheaudiencewere formed after founder memberBilly Reevesbet True £100 that he could form a band and get it signed.[8]

In 1998, True returned to Seattle, where he worked for a year as music editor forThe Stranger,[9]before heading for Australia, where he freelanced at Melbourne broadsheet,The Age.He also recorded an album under the name The Legend!. Back again in the United Kingdom, he set up the magazineCareless Talk Costs Livesin 2002. Issues of this publication began at No. 12 and counted down, claiming that "we have set out to replace the decaying music press in Britain, so by issue zero we will either have achieved our objectives or given up trying".[10]By the twelfth issue (#1), it was clear that it would not achieve its ambitions, and True instead foundedPlan B.

Between 2004 and 2009, True has also written books, including ones on theRamones,The White Stripes,as well as an account of his time with Nirvana. In 2008, he relocated with his family toBrisbanein Australia. Up until the start of 2009, he wrote a weekly column for VillageVoice,[11]andThe Guardian– with the latter, entering into conflict with Australia's music street press.[12]There was also a fair amount of controversy over some unguarded remarks True made on Twitter with regard to the usage of Kurt Cobain's image inGuitar Hero 5.[13][14]These led to immediate furious denials fromDave GrohlandKrist Novoselic.[15]Later, Courtney Love denied that she had anything to do with the matter, but it was then revealed that Love had worked withActivisionon crafting Cobain's look for the game.[16]The family subsequently returned to the United Kingdom.

True currently contributes columns to Sweden's Go Magazine, New York City's Bust magazine, the Something Awful website and writes for various Australian online publications including Mess And Noise and The Vine.[17]True also fronts two Brisbane bands: The Deadnotes andThe Thin Kids,[18]the latter of which caused some controversy when they picked up a plum support toKate Nashmidway through 2010.[19]For several years, he was the main editor and writer for the Brisbane-based online magazine, Collapse Board.[20]

His most recent project is Rejected Unknown, a media/publishing company set up in response to the33⅓series of music books; it takes its name from the album byDaniel Johnston.The first book came out in 2016, and is entitled101 Albums You Should Die Before You Hear,a critique of the sacred cows of the rock music canon.[21]This was followed in 2017 by his biographyThe Electrical Storm: Grunge, my Part In Its Downfall,[22]and in 2018 by the short story collectionEd Sheeran Is Shit.[23]

As Jerry Thackray, he is Course Leader in BA (Hons) Music Journalism at BIMM London.[24]He still performs on stage as The Legend!.[25]

Discography

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The Legend

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Albums

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  • Some of Us Still Burn(mini-LP) (1985), Vinyl Drip
  • Everett True Connection(2001), 3 Acre Floor

Singles and EPs

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  • "'73 in '83" (1983),Creation
  • "Destroys the Blues" (1984), Creation
  • "Talk Open (live)" (1984), Legend! (free flexi-disc given away withLegend!fanzine)
  • Everything's Coming Up RosesEP (1986), Vinyl Drip
  • "The Ballad" (1987), Constrictor
  • "Step Aside" (1988), Constrictor
  • "Breakfast in Bed" (1990), K Records (as guest vocalist with the Go Team)
  • "Do Nuts" (1991), Sub Pop
  • The Legend! Sings the Songs of Daniel Treacy(2005), Unpopular
  • The Thin Kids w/ Kate Nash - The Thin Kids theme b/w Kate Nash ft. Everett True - Warrior in Woolworths(2012), Have 10p Records
  • The Thin Kids ft. Kate Nash - Free Pussy Riot Now!(2013), Have 10p Records

References

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  1. ^abDee, Johnny (1988) "It's Different For Domeheads: Alan McGee recalls the most memorable Creation creations",Underground,April 1988 – issue 13, p. 28
  2. ^abCreation Records: The Legend!Archived20 November 2007 at theWayback Machine
  3. ^Matthew Fritch,Magnet Magazine: Everett TrueArchived17 June 2003 at theWayback Machine
  4. ^Poptones: Questions of Doom – Everett TrueArchived24 August 2006 at theWayback Machine
  5. ^Omnibus Press, 2006, reprinted asNirvana: The Biographyby Da Capo Press, 2007
  6. ^Jelbert, Steve (24 September 2006)."Nirvana: The true story by Everett True".The Independent.Retrieved19 June2024.
  7. ^Kunkel, Benjamin (6 May 2007)."Nirvana: The Biography - Everett True - Books - Review".The New York Times.Retrieved19 June2024.
  8. ^Soph-ology: a Sophie Ellis Bextor fansiteArchived23 May 2007 at theWayback Machine
  9. ^The Stranger Timeline
  10. ^Digital Hardcore: Careless Talk Costs Lives – BiographyArchived1 September 2006 at theWayback Machine
  11. ^Village Voice, Hugs and Kisses: The Continued Outbursts of Everett TrueArchived18 May 2008 at theWayback Machine
  12. ^Music That I Like: Everett True vs the Australian Street Press
  13. ^The Gawker: Twitter Crazed Courtney Love Wants Dave Grohl *** ***** By Everett TrueArchived1 March 2010 at theWayback Machine
  14. ^The Guardian: Guitar Hero upsets Nirvana Fans
  15. ^Music That I Like: Kurt Cobain vs Guitar Hero pt 2
  16. ^Cobain's Guitar Hero Cameo Brings Legal Threat.Shacknews. Retrieved on 2 April 2012.
  17. ^Unconvention Brisbane: Presenter Announcement – Everett TrueArchived24 May 2010 at theWayback Machine
  18. ^"Faster Louder: The Cribs + The Thin Kids".Archived fromthe originalon 4 April 2012.Retrieved22 May2010.
  19. ^Mess And Noise: True’s Thin Kids Land Kate Nash SupportsArchived17 October 2010 at theWayback Machine
  20. ^Collapse Board: Whatever Happened To The Music Press
  21. ^"Book Review: 101 Albums You Should Die Before You Hear".Saatchi Gallery. 13 June 2016.
  22. ^Adcock, Lee (6 February 2017).""Why Aren't These People My Friends?": DiS Meets Everett True ".Drowned in Sound.Archived fromthe originalon 13 September 2019.Retrieved15 September2019.
  23. ^"Ed Sheeran is shit, and other major musical malfunctions".
  24. ^"JERRY THACKRAY - HEAD OF MUSIC JOURNALISM".
  25. ^"Jerry Thackray".SoundCloud.