Phill Savidge

Jane Savidge (born in Derby), formerly known as Phill Savidge, is a British writer and PR agent.

Jane Savidge
Jane Savidge
Born
Derby, United Kingdom
OccupationWriter, public relations
Known forCo-founder of Savage & Best PR
Websitephillsavidge.com

As co-founder and head of public relations company Savage & Best,[1][2]:92Savidge is widely credited as being one of the main instigators of the Britpop musical movement that swept the UK in the mid 1990s.[3][4][5] During this time Savage and Best represented many of the artists associated with the scene including Suede, Pulp, The Verve, Elastica, Longpigs, Menswear, Marion, Ultrasound, Echobelly, The Auteurs, Black Box Recorder, 60 Ft. Dolls and Kula Shaker.[2]:112[6] Savage & Best also started a record label, Parkway Records,[7][8] in 1995 which released records by Powder (fronted by Pearl Lowe) and the all-girl punk band Fluffy.[9] Savidge's first book Lunch With The Wild Frontiers: A History Of Britpop And Excess in 13 and a 1/2 Chapters was published by Jawbone in May 2019.

Education and career

Jane Savidge was educated at Nottingham High School and Sherborne School, an independent school in the Market town of Sherborne, Dorset, before obtaining a degree in Philosophy at the University of Nottingham. In 1987 after leaving university, Savidge began her PR career working at Mel Bell Publicity where she represented Danielle Dax, The Wonder Stuff, Gaye Bykers on Acid, Green on Red, The Rhythm Sisters, Daniel Johnston, Soul Asylum, Thin White Rope and US record label Homestead Records. In June 1988 Savidge started work as a press officer at Virgin Records where she began representing Roy Orbison, Youssou N'Dour, Gary Moore, Jim Steinman, Suicidal Tendencies, Mary Margaret O'Hara and Peter Gabriel's Real World label amongst others. In 1990 Savidge left Virgin Records to join John Best at Best in Press[2]:73 and the company began managing publicity for bands such as Cocteau Twins, Pixies, Pale Saints, Dead Can Dance, The Farm, Moose, Lush, Curve, Suede and The Verve.[6] The company was situated in the Camden Town area of London and many of the bands on its books were part of the shoegazing scene which Melody Maker later dubbed "The Scene That Celebrates Itself". Some members of this scene (Blur, Lush, Suede) would go on to play a leading part in Britpop but it was Savidge's PR success with Suede – eighteen front covers of UK publications before their debut album was released[6] – that led to the acquisition of three Music Week PR Awards and the company morphing into its Savage & Best incarnation.[2]:72 Savage & Best are often acknowledged as launching Britpop[5] since the company represented many of the movement's protagonists at the time including Suede, Pulp, The Auteurs, Black Box Recorder, Echobelly, Menswear, Elastica, Dubstar, Space, Kula Shaker, 60 Ft. Dolls, Ultrasound, Longpigs, Marion and The Verve.[2]:123 The latter were managed by Savage & Best for their first two albums.[6]

Savidge was featured in the film Live Forever: The Rise and Fall of Brit Pop, a 2003 documentary film written and directed by John Dower.

Savage & Best represented many other artists and projects during the 1990s including Tank Girl (The Movie), The Jesus and Mary Chain, Spiritualized, Texas, The Fall, Nine Inch Nails, Erasure, The Charlatans, The Cranberries, Faithless. Fluke and Fat Les.[10][11] Savage & Best also founded a record label, Parkway Records, and released records by Powder (fronted by Pearl Lowe) and the all-girl punk outfit Fluffy.[5]

In December 1999 Savage & Best dissolved and Savidge formed Savidge & Savidge.[12] The following year Savidge again represented Damien Hirst (who she had befriended through Fat Les) for Hirst's Art Tube project and for Keith Allen's Glastonbury Play which featured Hirst's stage designs.[13] Savidge continued to represent Suede and Keith Allen amongst other artists but also diversified into club PR handling PR accounts for Soho House and Babington House as well as Home in Leicester Square. Around this time she also represented A.R. Rahman, multi-million selling composer of Andrew Lloyd Webber's Bombay Dreams.

Savidge began representing David A. Stewart in 2001, and helped launch Stewart and Paul Allen's £100 million Hospital Club project in Covent Garden. She also set up The Hospital Committee responsible for Club membership and in recent years Savidge has launched PR initiatives for Digital Animal and MOJN whilst continued to represent many of the artists she represented earlier in her career.[14][15] Savidge's recent representations include James, Prefab Sprout, Chris Rea, The Stranglers, Don Black, Michael Nyman, Tony Mortimer, Gang of Four, Unkle Bob, Gregory Darling, and Michael Des Barres.[16]

Writing

Savidge wrote sleeve notes to accompany all eight Eurythmics albums which were rereleased in 2005 and has written sleeve notes for other artists including Suede, James, Ride and Curve.

Savidge's first book Lunch With The Wild Frontiers: A History Of Britpop And Excess in 13 and a 1/2 Chapters was published by Jawbone in May 2019 to much critical acclaim. The Mail On Sunday called Savidge "a decidedly unshrunk violet" and "good company – candid, irreverent, wryly amused, capturing the innocence of Britpop, the frazzled nights and chemical dawns"[17] whilst the Glasgow Herald hailed the book as a "20th century glitterball take on Machiavelli's The Prince".[18] Q magazine also praised the book as "an eye-opening, read in one sitting autobiography",[19] whilst Classic Pop magazine awarded it five stars and heralded it is "an exhilarating and hilarious expose of the scene, recounted in a gloriously gossipy style with a vibrancy that sees it begging to be adapted for the screen, an addictive read which lifts the lid on the stories that hit the headlines as well as a fair few that were deliberately concealed. By far the finest book on Britpop to date."[20] Record Collector went further, suggesting that "If Savidge acts as if he could get away with anything, thats because he probably did" calling her book "a rum old blast from a wonderfully ridiculous past whilst the fun lasts” [21], whilst Stylist magazine saw it as "a tale of the messy, exciting and truly invigorating whirl that created an unparalleled moment in British music. It's also a fascinating and funny step back in time to a world where demo cassettes and weekly music papers ruled Britain."[22]

Awards

Savidge has won several awards for PR in music. In 1991 Savidge won a Music Week award for Curve. In 1992 the Music Week Best PR Campaign went to Savage & Best for Suede. In 1995 and 1997 Savidge received 2nd place Music Week PR Campaign awards for Suede.[23]

Transition

For much of her career in the music business – and for the publication of her first book, Lunch With The Wild Frontiers: A History Of Britpop And Excess in 13 and a 1/2 Chapters – Jane Savidge was best known under the name Phill Savidge. In April 2019, Savidge announced she had transitioned to female and she is now known as Jane Savidge.

References

  1. :169:203 Scanion, Ann (9 October 1997). The Rock n roll guide to Camden. Tristia. ISBN 09531029 04.
  2. :92:112:73:72:123Barnett, David (1 November 2003). Love & Poison: The Official Biography. Andre Deutch. ISBN 978 0 340 93319 0.
  3. Perry, Andrew (10 April 2003). "Britpop: the great rock'n'roll swindle". MOJO. Archived from the original on 24 February 2015. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
  4. Pattenden, Sian (9 August 2007). How to make it in the music business. Virgin Publishing. ISBN 978 0 7535 1243 2.
  5. :13:12 Spillius, Alex (2 February 1996). "Put that in your hype". The Guardian.
  6. :42:44:46:59 Baker, Trevor (21 August 2008). Richard Ashcroft: The Verve, Burning Money & The Human Condition. INDEPENDENT MUSIC PRESS. ISBN 1-906191-02-6.
  7. :203
  8. Pride, Dominique (29 November 1997). "Camden Town: Hot Spot For U.K. Up-And-Comers". Billboard: 76. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
  9. Lowe, Pearl (20 March 2008). All That Glitters: Living On The Dark Side Of Rock ’n’ Roll. Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 978 0 340 93319 0.
  10. Gittins, ian (25 October 2007). Top of the Pops: Mishaps, Miming and Music. BBC Books, Ebury Publishing. p. 130. ISBN 978 1 846 07327 4.
  11. James, Alex (3 July 2007). Bit of a Blur. Little Brown. p. 181. ISBN 978 0 340 93319 0.
  12. Barton, Phil (19 May 1999). "Seven-year partnership ends for Savage & Best". Music Week.
  13. James, Alex (22 June 2007). An Autobiography: Grow Up: Written by Keith Allen. Ebury Press. p. 358. ISBN 9780091910709.
  14. Barton, Phil (2 August 2012). "Killer idea: why is a music industry stalwart targeting the insurance sector?". Post Magazine: 3.
  15. Evans, Jeremy (3 February 2014). "Mojn raises $4m, expands London presence". Tech City news. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
  16. "Phill Savidge PR". Retrieved 24 February 2015.
  17. Thomson, Graeme (26 May 2019). "Living it up with the Britpop wild ones". The Mail On Sunday.
  18. Jamieson, Teddy (18 May 2019). "Phill Savidge: My Life In Britpop". The Herald.
  19. Kessler, Ted (10 July 2019). "Britpop's Svengali spills his beans". Q.
  20. Lindores, Mark (12 May 2019). Classic Pop. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  21. Harley, Kevin (24 May 2019). Record Collector. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  22. Brown, Francesca (6 May 2019). "Top Ten Books for May". Stylist.
  23. "The PR Awards". Music Week PR Awards. 1997.

Further reading

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