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Mott The Hoople

Mott The Hoople

Mott The Hoople has been played on NTS over 10 times, featured on 12 episodes and was first played on 19 April 2013.

Mott the Hoople was a British rock band that was formed in 1968 in Herefordshire, England, near the Welsh border. They were led by Ian Hunter until his departure in 1974. The band itself broke up in 1976. The group is best known for the international hit single "All the Young Dudes", written by David Bowie and featured in films such as 'Clueless' and 'Juno'. The band's name came from a novel, authored by Willard Manus, about a freak-show worker named Norman Mott.

Mott the Hoople formed when Silence, a not-too-successful group from the Welsh borders, was joined by session pianist and rock and roll hopeful Ian Hunter along with musicians Mick Ralphs, Verden Allen, Pete Overend Watts, and Dale Griffin . They developed from Dylan obsessives to their own character over the course of four albums for Island. They were a very popular live act but only achieved brief commercial success.

In 1971, the band was close to splitting up but continued to record track "All the Young Dudes", a song written for them by up and coming pop star and fan David Bowie. Three more albums and several pop hits later, the group fell apart after Ian Hunter left in 1974. The remaining members mutated into Mott, an 'also-ran' band which released two albums before disbanding in 1976. Original guitarist Ralphs had a massive boost in his fortunes as a member of rockers Bad Company.

Griffin died in his sleep on 17 January 2016 at the age of 67 and Watts died, almost exactly a year later, on 22 January 2017, from throat cancer.

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Mott The Hoople

Mott The Hoople has been played on NTS over 10 times, featured on 12 episodes and was first played on 19 April 2013.

Mott the Hoople was a British rock band that was formed in 1968 in Herefordshire, England, near the Welsh border. They were led by Ian Hunter until his departure in 1974. The band itself broke up in 1976. The group is best known for the international hit single "All the Young Dudes", written by David Bowie and featured in films such as 'Clueless' and 'Juno'. The band's name came from a novel, authored by Willard Manus, about a freak-show worker named Norman Mott.

Mott the Hoople formed when Silence, a not-too-successful group from the Welsh borders, was joined by session pianist and rock and roll hopeful Ian Hunter along with musicians Mick Ralphs, Verden Allen, Pete Overend Watts, and Dale Griffin . They developed from Dylan obsessives to their own character over the course of four albums for Island. They were a very popular live act but only achieved brief commercial success.

In 1971, the band was close to splitting up but continued to record track "All the Young Dudes", a song written for them by up and coming pop star and fan David Bowie. Three more albums and several pop hits later, the group fell apart after Ian Hunter left in 1974. The remaining members mutated into Mott, an 'also-ran' band which released two albums before disbanding in 1976. Original guitarist Ralphs had a massive boost in his fortunes as a member of rockers Bad Company.

Griffin died in his sleep on 17 January 2016 at the age of 67 and Watts died, almost exactly a year later, on 22 January 2017, from throat cancer.

Original source: Last.fm

Tracks featured on

Most played tracks

All The Young Dudes
Mott The Hoople
CBS1972
All The Way From Memphis
Mott The Hoople
CBS1973
At The Crossroads
Mott The Hoople
Island Records1969
One Of The Boys
Mott The Hoople
Columbia1972
Whiskey Women
Mott The Hoople
Windsong1996
Rock And Roll Queen
Mott The Hoople
Island Records1972
Through The Looking Glass
Mott The Hoople (Bill Price, Gary Edwards, Peter Swettenham, Sean Milligan mix)
CBS1974
Home Is Where I Want To Be
Mott The Hoople
Island Records1971
Roll Away The Stone
Mott The Hoople
CBS1973
Walkin' With A Mountain
Mott The Hoople
Island Masters1990