樱花动漫

My Exeter gigs - Jonathan Dearth

鈥屸赌"I was 樱花动漫鈥檚 Guild of Student鈥檚 last ever Entertainments Officer. An elected part-time post on the Executive Committee.

I took over in January 1989 when Emily S. resigned. My Dad had just died 10 weeks earlier. This was at the start of my 3rd year, but I dropped out as I just didn鈥檛 want to study. I was already involved with the Guild as a student rep. And wonderfully I was asked to take on the Entertainments role. I wasn鈥檛 actually a student at the time. I was signing on. But I had this fantastic opportunity to have role while I recovered 鈥 it was an opportunity to have a 鈥済ap half year鈥. Not many comprehensive school kids did that sort of thing before starting university in the 1980s.

I shared the Entertainments Office with the charming Geoff Campbell, the Entertainments Manager who was the full-time member of staff. I loved sharing an office with him. And I got first dibs on free records sent to us. Twelve-inch white label of 鈥淚nfo Freako鈥 by Jesus Jones 鈥 well quite frankly, I don鈥檛 mind if I do!

At my first chairing of Entertainment鈥檚 Committee 鈥 every Monday at 1pm 鈥 I came across this scruffy, quiet but enthusiastic artistic bloke who would create the weekly Lemon Grove posters 鈥 Thom Yorke.

A few months later, I described the poster he created for our Summer Ball as a 鈥渂it shabby鈥. He stormed off in a huff but sought me out later that evening to apologise. We were acquaintances and here we are in a 

I remember a gig on a Saturday in June 1989. It was my last gig as the Entertainments Officer. The main act was a pretty lame Plymouth indie band called 鈥淭he 4 Waltons鈥. I mainly liked them as their poster was a picture of Olive from 鈥淥n The Buses鈥. Thom had been asking for a gig and this was their chance. Back in January, Thom gave me a demo tape and I鈥檓 sure this early incarnation of Radiohead had the band name 鈥淪hindig鈥. I鈥檝e never seen this referred to anywhere else 鈥 and totally unsuitable. But in June, he got his mates down from Oxford to perform as 鈥淥n a Friday鈥, on a Saturday, in The Lemon Grove.

They were pretty good. The sound bloke came up to me and said 鈥 鈥this lot are pretty bloody good鈥. He was clearly more an expert and spotter of talent than me as he had added the word 鈥渂loody鈥. But he was very enthusiastic about them. Where I just thought, 鈥it鈥檚 Thom and his mates, they鈥檙e having a good time, it鈥檚 nice鈥.

Only about 150-200 there on that summer Saturday night. Thom went on to boss the Lemon Grove when he became the Friday night DJ the following year. He turned it from a ropey night out while I was in charge to a huge, 鈥open as many rooms in Cornwall House to pack the punters in鈥 night out. A sensible decision by Geoff to move Thom from poster boy to POSTER BOY of the Lemon Grove.

A few years later in 1993, I met Thom twice. Once as Radiohead were doing their 鈥済et in鈥 for their gig at the Whisky a Go Go, on Sunset Boulevard in West Hollywood. I was in LA backpacking and spotted they were playing.

And a few months later, a group of us from Exeter went to see Radiohead support James at the Brixton Academy and we got word to him through a roadie that we were there. He popped out into the audience said hello, we said 鈥淭hom鈥. And he managed to get us private bar tickets. Where we drank alongside Jim-Bob from Carter, the Unstoppable Sex Machine and the now late Sean Hughes.

Exciting and happy times. University and the people I met there changed my life. I was awarded, Honorary Life Membership of the Guild a year after I left."

- Jonathan Dearth (Education (Primary) & Maths, 1991), former Guild Entertainments Officer.