Record Club: Iconic outlaw Howard Marks shares his 8 favourite records

Share

0000

Share

0000

Howard Marks_main

Welcome to the Record Club, a monthly feature in collaboration with Lemonade Drinkers Logo where we invite pioneers of our time to play us a selection of eight tracks from their record collections and celebrate a shared love of music.

Joining the Record Club this month is outlaw icon, veteran raconteur and figurehead for counterculture Howard Marks. A former MI6 agent and ‘the most sophisticated drugs baron of all time,’ he once held over forty aliases and is best known as Mr Nice. More recent projects include his spoken word show ‘Scholar, Smuggler, Prisoner, Scribe’ which toured last year and his 2012 discussion in conversation with American activist and poet John Sinclair on his campaign for social justice. From a Welsh mining town to nuclear physics at Oxford University, to solitary confinement in one of America’s toughest federal penitentiaries, Howard shares his soundtrack to ‘the good times and the bad.’

‘Howard Marks has been everywhere, done everything, and seen almost everyone along the way.’ – The BBC

Lemonade Drinkers Logo is a music and ideas factory providing music compositions and soundscapes across media and the arts.


Wild Man Fischer

Wild Man Fischer
‘Merry Go Round’ from An Evening with Wild Man Fischer (Bizarre records, 1968)

 


The_Afro_Left__EP

Leftfield
‘Afro-Left’ from Leftism
(Hard Hands, 1995)

 


elvis_my boy

Elvis Presley
‘My Boy’ from Good Times
(RCA Victor, 1974)

 


hangin with howard marks

Super Furry Animals
‘Hangin’ With Howard Marks’ from Fuzzy Logic
(Creation Records, 1996)

 


stereophonics

Stereophonics
‘An Audience With Mr. Nice’ from Mr Writer EP
(V2, 2001)

 


shangri las

The Shangri-Las
‘I Can Never Go Home Anymore’ from Shanrgi-Las 65 (Red Bird, 1965)

 


johnny-kidd-and-the-pirates-please-dont-touch-his-masters-voice

Johnny Kidd & the Pirates
‘Restless’ from Shakin’ All Over
(His Master’s Voice, 1960)

 


Highwaymanalbum

The Highwaymen
‘Highwayman’ from Highwayman
(Columbia, 1985)