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Tim Cooper

Tim Cooper

Tim Cooper has written for most national newspapers and many magazines on subjects from politics to pop culture, film, food and sport. His first published work was in his own punk fanzine, Cliché in 1976, followed by freelance stints writing reviews and features for Sounds, Record Mirror, Pop Star Weekly and Hot Press.

He created a music section in the Hackney Gazette and since then he has worked for most national newspapers, many magazines and selected websites on News, Features, Politics, Sport and Arts, particularly Music. His extensive portfolio of music interviews spans The Observer, The Sunday Times, The Independent, The Guardian, The Times, The Evening Standard, The Daily Mirror and more. His interviewees have included David Bowie, Neil Young, Shirley Manson, Jon Bon Jovi, Janet Jackson, Rod Stewart, Donny Osmond, Alanis Morissette, Dave Matthews and Macy Gray.

He has a passion for new music and has written online for The Quietus, Louder Than War, DIY, No Depression and Unrecorded (formerly ListenBeforeYouBuy). He has also co-directed a documentary film about the music of St Kilda. He lives in the London Borough of Hackney, indulging his hobbies of writing, reading, cooking, cinema, watching and playing football and cricket, and vegetable gardening – usually while listening to music.

75 articles

List of articles in the library

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The 5.6.7.8's: 5.6.7.8: Who do we appreciate?

Profile and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 11 August 2004

The 5.6.7.8's are coming to Britain and are drawing sell-out crowds. Tim Cooper meets the idiosyncratic Japanese all-girl rock trio with the Kill Bill connection. ...

Christina Aguilera: Christina stripped bare

Interview by Tim Cooper, The Evening Standard, 30 October 2003

The video for 'Dirrty' transformed Christina Aguilera overnight from girl next door to sex siren. As she plays Wembley, Tim Cooper talks to her about ...

Tara Angell: "I'm not just a chick singer-songwriter"

Profile and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 15 April 2005

A debut dripping in smoky-voiced pain... and "the darkest record since Black Sabbath". ...

David Arnold, Kaiser Chiefs: Kaiser Chiefs: This is the Modern Way

Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 26 October 2007

What happens when indie-rockers get together with a Grammy-winning composer? Kaiser Chiefs and David Arnold chat before their Electric Prom tonight. ...

Courtney Barnett: Tell Me How You Really Feel (Marathon Artists / Milk! Records)

Review by Tim Cooper, Louder Than War, 18 May 2018

Courtney Barnett releases her hugely anticipated sophomore solo album Tell Me How You Really Feel. Three years after the Australian's landmark debut attracted plaudits and awards, ...

Basement 5's 'The Last White Christmas' – still essential after 40 years

Retrospective by Tim Cooper, Louder Than War, 23 December 2020

Basement 5 belong on any post-punk playlist, if only for their timeless 1980 single 'Silicon Chip'. And their mostly-long-forgotten 'Last White Christmas' would liven up ...

Beach House: Shore thing for easy listening

Profile and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 15 January 2010

Baltimore's dream-pop duo Beach House are confounding classification to gain plaudits from Fleet Foxes, Grizzly Bear and the Strokes. Tim Cooper gets to grips with ...

James Blunt: Back from Bedlam

Profile and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 10 June 2005

How did ex-soldier James Blunt go from serving in Kosovo to playing gigs? Tim Cooper finds out. ...

James Blunt: Shepherds Bush Empire, London

Live Review by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 5 May 2005

IN THE FRENZY to find a new Damien Rice or David Gray, it suddenly seems as if there's a sensitive singer-songwriter on every street corner. ...

David Bowie: "I've beaten vices thanks to my daughter"

Interview by Tim Cooper, The Evening Standard, 20 November 2003

He is free from fags, booze and drugs. But clean-living David Bowie admits that staying that way will still be hard work in 30 years' ...

David Bowie: Star Man

Profile and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Observer, 9 June 2002

After 35 years in the business and endless ch-ch-ch-changes, David Bowie, rock'n'roll's archetypal chameleon, has finally found equilibrium as a clean-living family man. Tim Cooper ...

David Bowie: Meet Chas, he's been mad about Bowie since he was a lad

Report by Tim Cooper, The Evening Standard, 1 December 2017

From diehard to recent fans, Tim Cooper spends the night immersed in Bowie fanatics. ...

Boy George: Bush Hall, London

Live Review by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 12 June 2006

IF EVER A FALLEN idol was in need of reinvention, it's surely Boy George, whose last public appearance was in a New York courtroom. His ...

Ian Brown, The Stone Roses: Ian Brown: Coming up Roses

Interview by Tim Cooper, The Evening Standard, 14 October 2004

Now established as a successful solo artist, lan Brown finally feels comfortable revisiting the seminal songs of the Stone Roses. Tim Cooper meets an indie ...

Isobel Campbell: Lone Star

Profile and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 28 September 2006

Since leaving the safety of Belle & Sebastian, Isobel Campbell has found her creative voice and produced her finest work. ...

Isobel Campbell and Mark Lanegan; When a twee pop beauty met a rock'n'roll beast

Profile and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 2 May 2008

Belle and Sebastian's Isobel Campbell is on to her second album with rocker Mark Lanegan. She tells Tim Cooper about an odd coupling. ...

Brandi Carlile: Borderline, London

Live Review by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 18 December 2007

"DO YOU MIND if we get a little bit country on ya?" inquires Brandi Carlile cheerfully, as her entourage of publicists, watching anxiously in the ...

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, The National, Cat Power, Patti Smith, St. Vincent, The War on Drugs: All Points East: Victoria Park, London

Live Review by Tim Cooper, Louder Than War, 4 June 2018

Saturday 2nd June: The National, The War On Drugs, Future Islands, Warpaint, Cat Power Sunday 3rd June: Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, Patti Smith, St ...

Cowboy Junkies: Royal Albert Hall, London

Live Review by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 17 October 2007

IT WOULD BE myth-making mischief to suggest that, upon its release 20 years ago, The Trinity Session was acclaimed as a landmark album. The best ...

The Cult, The Doors: Ian Astbury and the Doors: One door shuts... another door opens

Report and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 10 December 2003

When Jim Morrison died, in 1971, that was the end of the Doors. Or was it? Thirty years later, the remaining members have hired a ...

Daara J: The Real Old School

Profile and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 28 May 2004

Winners of a Radio 3 award, Senegal's top hip-hop trio Daara J are back on the road. Tim Cooper meets them in Paris. ...

Craig David: King of New York

Profile and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Observer, 3 November 2002

He has immaculate manners, he likes hugging his fans and his worst vice is cookie dough ice cream... Small wonder America loves Craig David. Tim ...

The Dears: A gloom of their own

Profile and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 18 August 2006

The leader of the Dears could brood for Canada. Tim Cooper meets a man for whom success has not in itself brought any visible happiness, ...

Domenique Dumont: People On Sunday

Review by Tim Cooper, Louder Than War, 27 November 2020

Domenique Dumont creates a hauntingly evoctative electronic soundtrack for People On Sunday, a landmark silent film from 1930. ...

Minnie Driver: Minnie adventure: Miss Driver turns her attention to country music and motherhood

Report and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 8 May 2008

She's conquered Hollywood, stars in a hit TV series, and is one of Britain's most successful acting exports. ...

Fat Freddy's Drop: Playing to the expats

Report and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, June 2006

They're massive in their home countries, and their London gigs sell out thanks to the multicultural populace. ...

Fun Lovin' Criminals: Huey Morgan: King of New York

Profile and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 26 August 2005

A walking, talking advertisement for the city, Huey Morgan of Fun Lovin' Criminals takes Tim Cooper downtown. ...

Gabrielle: The Obsession

Interview by Tim Cooper, The Evening Standard, 24 August 2004

Soul diva Gabrielle sold millions of records, before a serious throat condition — triggered by her obsessive compulsive disorder — threatened to wreck her career ...

Gang Of Four play Entertainment!: Barbican, London

Live Review by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 27 September 2005

FORMED AT LEEDS University in 1977, they dragged punk's three-chord trick into a radical and subversive new direction by marrying its guitar-driven rage to funk's ...

Garbage: Astoria, London

Live Review by Tim Cooper, The Evening Standard, 15 November 2001

New songs, new confidence ...

Garbage: Scala, London

Live Review by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 31 March 2005

IN RECENT WEEKS it has become de rigueur for big names to launch their new album with small dates in London. Last night, after club-sized ...

Garbage: White Trash: Shirley Manson

Interview by Tim Cooper, The Evening Standard, 8 November 2001

Shirley Manson, pop's most famous redhead, has suddenly gone blonde. A new look to match her new outlook. ...

Macy Gray: It's a Macy, Macy world

Profile and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Observer, 18 November 2001

"She's phat, she's tight, she's outta control..." It was supposed to be a routine celebrity interview, but it ended in a jet-ski chase across the ...

Emmylou Harris: Red hot and no sign of a cowboy

Interview by Tim Cooper, The Evening Standard, 11 October 2000

Forget all those whiney, lovesick singers. Emmylou Harris is the performer who makes country music respectable. Tim Cooper talks to her in New York as ...

Gwyneth Herbert: From bistro waitress to jazz festival star

Report and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Evening Standard, 13 July 2004

Pub gigs pay off as "Britain's Norah Jones" is chosen to open concert ...

The Jazz Butcher: The Violent Years

Review by Tim Cooper, Louder Than War, 21 February 2018

The Jazz Butcher has been one of Britain's most prolific and unique talents for more than 35 years. Now, as a re-release programme continues with ...

Daniel Johnston: The Devil and Daniel Johnston: Barbican, London

Live Review by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 18 April 2006

IT HAS TAKEN 25 years, almost as many albums and a lifetime of loneliness and pain, but Daniel Johnston is finally emerging from underground cult ...

Ronan Keating: Mad about the boy

Profile and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Observer, 8 April 2001

Ronan Keating is the blue-eyed blond who stole the heart of every schoolgirl in the country with Boyzone. Now, he's going it alone and is ...

Kula Shaker: Crispian Mills: Big Mouth Strikes Again

Profile and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 24 September 2007

Ten years ago, Kula Shaker's Crispian Mills revealed an admiration for the swastika, and the band imploded. Now they're back, and the lead singer is ...

Avril Lavigne: O Sister, What Art Thou?

Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 11 March 2005

Teenage girls can't resist Avril Lavigne's sulky-teen pose. So Tim Cooper decides to let his daughter interrogate the pop princess. ...

Jenny Lewis: Poor little rich girl

Profile and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 20 January 2006

Jenny Lewis has gone from child star to singing with Rilo Kiley to solo act. It's been a bittersweet experience, hears Tim Cooper. ...

The Low Anthem: Evolutionary Twists

Profile and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 24 July 2009

The Low Anthem aren't like other US folk-rock bands. Tim Cooper discusses influence and innovation with the trio. ...

Madonna: Another view: My night with Madonna (and Sean Hughes)

Memoir by Tim Cooper, The Evening Standard, 20 October 2017

BACK IN THE LATE 1990s I used to run into Sean Hughes all the time at parties. He was a Perrier Award-winning stand-up comedian and ...

Madrugada: Islington Assembly Rooms, London

Live Review by Tim Cooper, Louder Than War, 31 October 2019

Back together after 10 years and the death of a key member, Norway's finest band make a triumphant return to the London stage. Tim Cooper ...

Madrugada: Northern exposure

Profile and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 9 April 2004

As you might expect, there isn't a big rock scene in the farthest reaches of rural Norway. But Madrugada are more than making up for ...

Matchbox 20, Rob Thomas: Rob Thomas: Anonymity in the UK

Report and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 6 July 2005

Rob Thomas can claim 75 million album sales. So who is he? ...

Dave Matthews Band: Dave Matthews: Gospel according to Matthews

Profile and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 20 January 2006

He's the biggest music star in the USA, but probably couldn't get arrested here. Tim Cooper meets a man for whom success means having the ...

John Murry: A Short History Of Decay

Review by Tim Cooper, The Quietus, 19 July 2017

EVERYTHING ABOUT John Murry is blurred. From the Southern Gothic backstory to the near-death drug overdose to the recurring cycle of tragedy and redemption, right ...

Nada Surf: The Sunshine Boys: Brooklyn's Nada Surf have bounced back with an album of upbeat pop

Profile and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 5 May 2008

THEIR LATEST ALBUM might be called Lucky but Nada Surf's 15-year career has been anything but. Even their name causes misconceptions: it's so redolent of ...

Donny Osmond: Big Brother

Profile and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Observer, 25 March 2001

He was on stage by five, on tour by eight and receiving 50,000 fan letters a week by 13. But behind his success lay loneliness, ...

Jimmy Page: The Godfather of Rock

Profile and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 27 August 2004

As Led Zeppelin's Jimmy Page is honoured in London's Rock'n'Roll Walk of Fame, Tim Cooper meets the legend who inspired an entire generation of air ...

Brigid Mae Power: Servant Jazz Quarters, London

Live Review by Tim Cooper, Louder Than War, 8 April 2018

After two acclaimed albums and a harrowing #metoo contribution, Brigid Mae Power performed her first sell-out date in East London. Tim Cooper went along for an ...

Primal Scream: Eden Project, St Austell, Cornwall

Live Review by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 13 August 2004

THERE'S AN immutable law of rock'n'roll dictating that the longer a rock band stays together, the more its creative energy will dissipate under the parallel ...

The Quarrymen: The Beatles? No, thanks

Retrospective and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 20 January 2005

The Quarrymen managed to let Lennon, McCartney and Harrison slip through their fingers. Nearly five decades after that mistake, they are releasing their first album. ...

Racine: Islington Academy, London

Live Review by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 11 April 2005

IT WAS ALWAYS hard to take Wendy James seriously, but even so her reinvention after a decade in the pop wilderness is hilarious. ...

Revolutionary Army Of The Infant Jesus: Mirror

Review by Tim Cooper, The Quietus, 9 May 2017

LISTENING TODAY to Mirror, the second album by Revolutionary Army of the Infant Jesus that's about to receive its first vinyl release from Occultation Recordings ...

Cliff Richard: Cliff reveals the secret of youth... his face is injected with botulism

Report by Tim Cooper, The Evening Standard, 13 October 2000

CLIFF RICHARD, the apparently ageless Peter Pan of Pop, has finally revealed the secret of his eternal youth — he has had toxins injected into ...

Rilo Kiley: Koko, London

Live Review by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 8 July 2005

FORMED IN Los Angeles around the former child actors Jenny Lewis and Blake Sennett in 1998, Rilo Kiley are hard to pigeonhole. Their first two, ...

Josh Ritter: The Ritter Stuff

Profile and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 12 November 2007

His parents are neuroscientists who read him Huxley at bedtime. No wonder Josh Ritter has a way with words, says Tim Cooper. ...

Patti Smith's Horses at Meltdown: Royal Festival Hall, London

Live Review by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 27 June 2005

PATTI SMITH IS standing alone on the stage reciting the poem that describes her teenage dream to escape a blue-collar production line ("Inspecting pipe, 40 ...

Sparks: Forum, London

Live Review by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 5 October 2006

MORE THAN three decades after their child-scaring Top of the Pops debut with 'This Town Ain't Big Enough For Both Of Us', Sparks remain one ...

Suicide, Alan Vega: A King Has Passed: Alan Vega Remembered

Retrospective by Tim Cooper, The Quietus, 18 July 2016

BY THE SUMMER of 1978, punk rock had lost the power to shock. The revolution that had shot an amphetamine rush into a moribund music ...

Taraf de Haïdouks: Johnny and the outlaws take Hackney by storm

Report by Tim Cooper, The Evening Standard, 29 January 2002

IT IS not every day you find a Hollywood superstar slumming it in the East End. But last night Johnny Depp came to deepest Hackney ...

Pete Townshend, The Who: Pete Townshend: "Music has always suffered from being tied to politics or religion"

Report and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Guardian, 2 July 2015

As he releases a version of Quadrophenia performed by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, the Who's guitarist explains that his band were never really anti-establishment. ...

U2: Another view: The thing with Bono and Apple...

Comment by Tim Cooper, The Evening Standard, 24 November 2017

I HEAR THAT U2 have a new album coming out. I know this not because I have received a press release (though I have) but ...

Keith Urban: Hammersmith Apollo, London

Live Review by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 19 October 2005

URBAN BY NAME but country rock by nature, raised in Australia but resident in Nashville, Urban has sold millions of records in America and fills ...

Martha Wainwright: Bloomsbury Theatre, London

Live Review by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 1 June 2006

THIS WAS AN evening that lent fresh meaning to the term "intimate" – and, for that matter, "spontaneous". It made you feel like you'd been ...

Wilco: Troubled troubadours

Interview by Tim Cooper, The Evening Standard, 9 July 2004

After a decade of crises that would have finished off most bands, Wilco are back ...

Lucinda Williams: Shepherds Bush Empire, London

Live Review by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 15 November 2006

EVEN BY THE tardy timekeeping standards of rock'n'roll, 16 months is a little long to keep your audience waiting. Originally scheduled to play here in ...

Pete Wylie: Islington Academy, London

Live Review by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 31 December 2004

FOR SIX WEEKS back in 1977, Pete Wylie was at the epicentre of the music world as one of the semi-legendary Liverpool trio the Crucial ...

James Yorkston: Luminaire, London

Live Review by Tim Cooper, The Independent, 28 December 2005

"HERE'S THE NEXT number," announces James Yorkston, studying a piece of paper: "Three hundred and fifty-eight." Few singers would draw the raffle mid-set, but it's ...

Neil Young's anti-war documentary

Report and Interview by Tim Cooper, The Sunday Times, 29 June 2008

The singer has fire in his belly — with a film about his antiwar tour — but his passion is a hybrid car he thinks ...

List of genre pieces

David and Goliath: a tale of two festival organisers

Interview by Tim Cooper, Lisa Verrico, The Sunday Times, 16 May 2010

On one hand, veteran Vince Power, the man behind Reading and Leeds; on the other, the Webster-Joneses launching Deer Shed for the first time. ...

When Eurovision came to town

Report and Interview by Tim Cooper, Little Atoms, 12 July 2018

In 1993, as war raged in the Balkans, the Eurovision circus descended on the tiny Irish town of Millstreet. It was with the emergence of ...

Why I made a 15,000-mile trip to a jazz festival when I don't even like jazz

Report by Tim Cooper, The Evening Standard, 10 March 2017

THIS WEEK I made a round trip of 15,000 miles to go to a jazz festival on the other side of the world.  ...

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