The Ballad of Mott the Hoople – TV review

Mott the Spinal Tap? Almost, says Tim Dowling of a wonderful Hoople rockumentary

We have grown used to documentaries where old men talk about the heyday of rock with a solemnity once reserved for memories of the Salonika campaign. The Ballad of Mott the Hoople (BBC4) was no different: this show was exuberant, sad and – occasionally – as funny as This Is Spinal Tap.

There is something reliably comic about the names of minor bands in any rock'n'roll family tree. The members of Mott the Hoople came principally from two Herefordshire groups, the Buddies and the Soulents. They were the musical clay from which the band was moulded by the notorious Guy Stevens of Island Records, whose choicier utterances were spelled out in captions. "There are only two Phil Spectors in the world," he once said, "and I'm one of them."

In true rock style, the singer was dismissed immediately: Stan Tippins was relegated to management. Ian Hunter answered a small ad and Mott the Hoople was born. They quickly established a following as a raucous live act. Mick Jones of the Clash was an obsessive fan, tracking them between towns with his schoolmates. Journalist and former fan club president Kris Needs endearingly described Mott as the approachable face of rock, transforming it "into a thing we could reach out and touch".

The band fared less well in the charts. In spite of Stevens's enthusiasm ("I could well die while making a record," he said. "It's that important"), their second album and third albums sold poorly. Recording their fourth, Brain Capers, strained the relationship with Stevens. "Guy was throwing chairs at the wall to inspire them," recalled an eyewitness. A terrible Swiss gig in a disused gasholder inspired them to give up. Then David Bowie gave them All the Young Dudes. Singer Hunter was grateful but bemused. "If I wrote All the Young Dudes," he said, "I wouldn'ta give it David."

How much you enjoyed this may well have depended on how much you already knew about Mott the Hoople. I knew precious little and loved it all.

Contributor

Tim Dowling

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
The Joy of the Guitar Riff – TV review
Sam Wollaston grabs his air guitar to play along as Johnny Marr, Joan Jett and others riff on rock'n'roll in this BBC4 documentary

Sam Wollaston

19, Jul, 2014 @6:00 AM

Article image
Play It Loud: The Story of the Marshall Amp review
Guitar geeks, you owe it all to a tap-dancing boy, writes Sam Wollaston

Sam Wollaston

29, Nov, 2014 @7:02 AM

Article image
Blondie's New York … and the Making of Parallel Lines – TV review
Blondie's hit album was broken down for the viewer in this show about the group's rise from out the grime of New York, writes Lucy Mangan

Lucy Mangan

30, Aug, 2014 @6:59 AM

Article image
When Pop Ruled My Life review – diaries, screams and wee in the story of fandom
Siouxsie Sioux and Alan Johnson, former Beatlemaniac and mod, contribute to an entertaining documentary about pop obsession

Sam Wollaston

30, May, 2015 @6:00 AM

Article image
Girl in a Band: Tales from the Rock'n'Roll Front Line review – alas, how strange to see women play guitars
A glittering parade of female musicians stepped up to bear witness in this shaming history of sexism in the music business

Lucy Mangan

31, Oct, 2015 @7:00 AM

Article image
Gregory Porter’s Popular Voices review – glorious survey of powerful pipes
From Prince and Whitney Houston to Mahalia Jackson, the first episode of the jazz star’s three-part series is a languid, loving celebration of vocal showstoppers

Lucy Mangan

18, Nov, 2017 @6:00 AM

Article image
Loretta Lynn: Still a Mountain Girl review – all hail the grand ole queen of Appalachia
She’s been a country music legend for more than 60 years. This documentary may not have delved too deep into her painful past or her low-down husband, but when a life story’s this good, it doesn’t matter how you tell it

Lucy Mangan

19, Mar, 2016 @6:00 AM

Article image
60 Years of Eurovision review – ghastly songs but good value
The songs are ghastly, but 90 minutes on the ‘most nerve-racking and trouser-cacking’ moments of Eurovision is laced with history and flashbacks – from Norton to Bardot to Gainsbourg

Sam Wollaston

23, May, 2015 @5:59 AM

Article image
Soft Cell: Say Hello, Wave Goodbye review – uh oh, tainted doc
This film about the unlikely pop stars’ big reunion had no Bros-style drama at all. Where was Marc Almond the flamboyant showman we adored in the 80s?

Jack Seale

01, Mar, 2019 @10:00 PM

Article image
I Can Go for That: The Smooth World of Yacht Rock review – lushly comforting
Katie Puckrik takes a leisurely voyage through the suave micro-genre of pop pioneered in the 70s by Hall and Oates and the Doobie Brothers

Jack Seale

14, Jun, 2019 @9:00 PM