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Peter Paphides
Peter Paphides
from Wikipedia

Peter Paphides (born 1969[1] as Panayiotakis Paphides or Panayiotis Paphides) is a British journalist and broadcaster.

Key Information

Early life

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Paphides was born in Birmingham to a Greek Cypriot father, Chris, and a Greek mother, Victoria.[2] He has an elder brother, Aki.[2] His father ran the 'Great Western' fish bar in Acocks Green, and the family lived upstairs.[2] In 1979, the family moved to the suburb of Olton, where his father ran the 'King Fisher' (now 'George's Fish Bar').

The name Panayiotakis was shortened to "Takis", before he decided he preferred to be called Peter.[3] As a child, he had a lisp, and when he was three years old he developed selective mutism, wherein he would speak to no-one except his parents and brother.[3]

He read philosophy at the University of Wales, Lampeter.[2]

Career

[edit]

Between 2005 and 2010 he was employed as the chief rock critic of The Times and presented The Times' weekly music podcast for Sounds Music supplement.[4][5] Since then, he has worked freelance including for The Guardian,[6] Mojo and Q magazine.[7] He has also made various documentaries for BBC Radio 4 and made a pilot for BBC 6 Music show Vinyl Revival which was later commissioned for a seven-part series, and was broadcast from 4 December 2011.[citation needed]

In 2019, Paphides launched Needle Mythology, a record label aimed at reissues of old albums that had not previously been available on vinyl.[8] In October 2020, the label released its first album of new material, In Memory of My Feelings, an original collaboration between The Anchoress and Bernard Butler.

Paphides has also written for Melody Maker and Time Out.[9]

In 2020 his memoir, Broken Greek, was published by Quercus.[2] The book was reviewed positively by Alan Johnson in New Statesman, who wrote that he had "never read anything that tells the immigrant’s story with such clarity and tenderness".[10] It won the 2021 RSL Christopher Bland Prize.[11]

Personal life

[edit]

Paphides married writer and Times columnist Caitlin Moran on 27 December 1999; they met while both were working for Melody Maker.[12][13] The couple share a home in North London[12] and have two daughters.[13]

References

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from Grokipedia
Peter Paphides is a British music journalist, broadcaster, and author, renowned for his contributions to music criticism and his memoir exploring themes of family, identity, and music. Born on 18 July 1969 in Birmingham, West Midlands, England, Paphides began his career in music journalism at Melody Maker before contributing to prominent publications including Time Out, The Guardian, Mojo, Q, Observer Music Monthly, Uncut, Record Collector, and The Times, where he served as Chief Music Critic for five years. In broadcasting, he has produced acclaimed BBC Radio 4 documentaries such as Lost Albums, Follow-Up Albums, and The Songs of Molly Drake—the latter winning a Gold Award at the New York Radio Festival—and hosted Vinyl Revival across two series on BBC 6 Music, while also contributing to BBC Four music documentaries. Since 2015, Paphides has hosted a fortnightly music show on Soho Radio, focusing on records and the artists behind them. His 2020 memoir Broken Greek, published by Quercus, chronicles his Greek-Cypriot childhood and lifelong passion for , earning the Royal Society of Literature’s Christopher Bland Prize and the 2021 Penderyn Music Book Prize. Paphides has been married to author since December 1999, and they have two children.

Early life and education

Family background

Peter Paphides was born on July 18, 1969, in Birmingham, . His father, Chris (full name Chrystakis), hailed from the Greek-Cypriot village of Saint Ermolaos, while his mother, Victoria, was born and raised in the suburbs of . In the , the couple immigrated to Birmingham seeking better economic opportunities, arriving with limited English and financial resources. To support their family, Chris and Victoria operated fish and chip shops, including the Great Western Fish Bar in the suburb, where the family lived upstairs, and later another location in the nearby area. Paphides, originally named Panayiotakis, was known as during his early childhood before adopting the anglicized name Peter to better fit into British society. He has an elder brother named Aki. These immigrant experiences and family dynamics later informed Paphides' 2020 memoir Broken Greek, which explores his parents' journey and cultural heritage.

Upbringing and early influences

Peter Paphides grew up in the Birmingham suburb of , living above the family's Great Western Fish Bar, which his parents operated after immigrating from and in the 1960s. In 1979, the family moved to the nearby suburb of , where his parents opened another . This immigrant household shaped a childhood marked by and identity struggles, including a period of from around age four to seven, during which he spoke little outside the family home. The bustling environment of the fish bar introduced him to British banter and everyday life, but also highlighted the contrasts between his parents' expectations rooted in their heritage and the realities of suburban . Navigating his Greek heritage amid a British setting brought cultural challenges, such as language barriers—his parents spoke limited English—and subtle prejudices faced by immigrant families in Birmingham. Paphides later changed his from Panayiotakis to Peter, reflecting efforts to while grappling with a sense of otherness. These experiences fostered a quiet , compounded by parental pressures to succeed in a new country, yet they also provided a backdrop for his emerging personal world. At age nine, Paphides bought his first record, marking the start of an obsession with that served as an emotional escape from his challenges. Influences like Roxy Music's innovative singles, such as "," and Chic's opulent tracks, including those evoking melancholy glamour, captivated him during exploratory visits to local record shops. Earlier exposures through television shows like had already drawn him to artists like and , whose songs offered solace and a way to process his feelings of displacement. He attended local schools, including Cottesbrooke Infants and Junior in , where these early passions quietly developed without notable academic highlights.

University studies

Paphides attended the —now part of the University of Wales Trinity Saint David—from the late 1980s to the early , where he pursued a in over three years in the rural Welsh countryside. This academic focus emphasized and analytical frameworks, skills that Paphides later credited with enhancing his ability to dissect and articulate complex ideas in , though he made no direct career shift toward during his studies.

Career

Paphides began his music journalism career in 1992 at , where he contributed features and reviews shortly after leaving university. It was during this time that he met his future wife, , who was freelancing for the publication. Following his stint at Melody Maker, Paphides spent eight years at Time Out, where he interviewed prominent artists and focused on album reviews and live music coverage. He later contributed freelance pieces to several major outlets, including , Mojo, , and Observer Music Monthly, often emphasizing in-depth features on pop and rock albums alongside critical assessments. From 2005 to 2010, Paphides served as chief rock critic for , a role in which he shaped the paper's music coverage through weekly columns and reviews. During this period, he also presented the newspaper's weekly music podcast for its Sounds Music supplement, discussing current releases and artist interviews. Paphides is known for his passionate and personal style of , which blends encyclopedic knowledge with emotional insight, particularly in championing unsung artists within pop and rock genres. His writing often highlights overlooked talents and historical contexts, drawing from his lifelong enthusiasm for music that began in his youth.

Broadcasting

Paphides has contributed to through a series of music documentaries and hosted shows, drawing on his background in music journalism to explore artists' stories and overlooked recordings. He produced several documentaries for , including the three-part series Follow-Up Albums in 2012, which examined the creation of sophomore records by acts such as , , and through interviews with the musicians involved. Other notable productions include Lost Albums, The Songs of —which won a Gold Award at the New York Radio Festival—and Good Grief: The Story of . These works often delved into the personal and cultural contexts behind recordings, blending archival audio with contemporary reflections. In 2011, Paphides hosted the first series of on , a seven-episode program that celebrated the format by visiting musicians' collections and playing selections that influenced their work, featuring guests like , , and . A second series aired in 2013. The show highlighted rare vinyl tracks and personal anecdotes, reviving interest in classic albums through conversational storytelling. During his tenure as chief rock critic at from 2005 to 2010, Paphides hosted a music featuring in-depth interviews with artists, such as a 2007 episode with and discussing their careers and influences. These audio pieces extended his print work into spoken formats, focusing on narrative-driven discussions of . Since 2015, Paphides has hosted a bi-weekly show on Radio, airing Mondays from 6 to 8 p.m., where he curates playlists of new releases, archival tracks, and interviews with musicians. Recent episodes in 2024 and 2025 have included discussions on and live chats, such as a 2025 studio session with band ahead of their performance. His broadcasting style consistently emphasizes storytelling and personal connections to music, tying songs to broader cultural narratives through enthusiastic, reflective commentary.

Authorship

Peter Paphides' primary literary contribution is his memoir Broken Greek: A Story of Chip Shops and Pop Songs, published in 2020 by Quercus Books. The book chronicles his parents' from to Birmingham in the 1960s, where they ran a fish-and-chip shop, and his childhood growing up above the amid cultural and personal shyness. It interweaves these experiences with his discovery of as a lifeline for identity and emotional expression during the 1970s and 1980s. The memoir blends family history, Greek Cypriot heritage, and an obsession with chart-topping songs, exploring themes of assimilation, belonging, and the redemptive power of . Reviewers praised its layered storytelling and emotional depth; , in the (March 2020), described it as a "beautifully layered" work told with "clarity and tenderness," likening its structure to a good and highlighting its vivid portrayal of immigrant life. Broken Greek received the 2021 RSL Christopher Bland Prize for nonfiction, awarded by the Royal Society of Literature to recognize outstanding debuts by writers over 50, and the 2021 Penderyn Book Prize. Paphides has also contributed forewords and essays to music-related publications, though Broken Greek remains his sole major book-length work.

Record label ventures

In 2019, Peter Paphides founded the independent Needle Mythology, aiming to overlooked albums from British music's post-1960s era, particularly those that had never received proper vinyl treatments due to the format's decline in the late . The label emphasizes high-quality physical releases, including 180g vinyl pressings mastered by engineers like Guy Davie at Electric Mastering and produced at The Vinyl Factory, often accompanied by new artwork, bonus material, and detailed to provide context and storytelling. This initiative draws directly from Paphides' background in music criticism, seeking to revive "unsung" acts and albums that deserved greater recognition but slipped through the cracks of commercial history. The label's debut releases arrived in April 2019 with remastered editions of Ian Broudie's solo album Tales Told (originally 2004), Stephen Duffy's I Love My Friends (1997), and the Finn Brothers' collaborative Finn (1995), marking the first vinyl outings for these works and setting a tone for excavating hidden gems from the 1970s through 1990s indie and alternative scenes. Subsequent releases expanded this scope, incorporating both reissues and new recordings while maintaining a focus on narrative depth—such as extensive oral histories and artist interviews—to honor the cultural significance of the music. Needle Mythology has sustained its operations with steady output through 2024 and into 2025, prioritizing physical formats amid a digital-dominated market and fostering connections between past and present artists. Notable recent efforts include the February 2024 reissue of Robert Forster's Beautiful Hearts (a 2008 collection of Go-Betweens rarities) and the November 2024 expanded triple-LP edition of The Lilac Time's Astronauts (1990), complete with an 11,000-word oral history. In 2025, the label released Sensitive: An Indie Pop Anthology, a double-LP compilation of 30 tracks from 1980s indie pop pioneers like The Sea Urchins and The Pooh Sticks, celebrated with a launch event at The Social in London on February 12, which featured live performances and archival discussions. Further projects, such as the June 2025 anthology Think Once More: A Journey With The Montgolfier Brothers, continue this commitment to remastering and contextualizing underrepresented British acts from the era.

Personal life

Marriage

Peter Paphides met while both were working as music journalists at in the early 1990s, specifically in 1992. Their shared professional environment in music journalism fostered an immediate connection, leading to a long-term relationship. The couple married on 27 December 1999, when Moran was 24 years old. Since then, Paphides and Moran have maintained creative lives as writers and broadcasters, supporting each other's careers. Moran, a prominent and recognized for her feminist and cultural commentary, has complemented Paphides' career in music writing throughout their partnership.

Family

Paphides and his wife have two daughters, Dora and Evie, born following their marriage in 1999. Evie is a who performs under the stage name Wilder. The family resides in a home in , where they maintain a routine centered on domestic life. Paphides has described their family life as very normal, emphasizing duties alongside their respective careers in writing and journalism. He takes an active role in everyday responsibilities, such as school-related tasks, while prioritizing time together at home.

References

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