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Tributes for Pete Shelley from UK punk band Buzzcocks

‘Pete’s music has inspired generation­s of musicians’

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LONDON: Tributes flooded in on Friday for “brilliant talent” Pete Shelley, the lead singer and songwriter with inluential British pop punk band the “Buzzcocks”, who died in Estonia aged 63.

Shelley helped found the Manchester band in 1976, and was responsibl­e the band’s catchy sound and best-known song “Ever Fallen In Love (With Someone You Shouldn’t’ve)” in 1978.

“It’s with great sadness that we conirm the death of Pete Shelley, one of the UK’S most inluential and proliic songwriter­s and co-founder of the seminal original punk band Buzzcocks,” the band wrote on Facebook.

“Pete’s music has inspired generation­s of musicians over a career that spanned ive decades and with his band and as a solo artist, he was held in the highest regard by the music industry and by his fans around the world.” Shelley is believed to have suffered a heart attack at his home in Estonia, where he lived with his wife.

The band helped create the New Wave genre, fusing punk’s energy with a more melodic sound.

Red Hot Chili Peppers bassist Flea said the band’s “Why Can’t I Touch It” was “one of my favourite rock songs ever. Absolutely stunning. God bless Pete Shelley”. Pearl Jam’s Jeff Ament said on Twitter that he was “Hollow Inside”, a reference to another of the band’s songs, adding that playing shows alongside Shelley was “one of the highlights of my life.”

“I listened to Singles and Tension as much as any records I’ve owned. Thank you, Pete,” he wrote. Shelley also wrote the theme for Channel 4’s coverage of the Tour de France, soundtrack­ing the event for a generation of British cycling fans throughout the 1980s and 1990s.

US rockers the Pixies tweeted “RIP Pete Shelley” while Simply Red frontman Mick Hucknall wrote “Thank you Buzzcocks’ punk pop icon Pete Shelley for changing my life for the better in 1976.”

British broadcaste­r and journalist Danny Baker, an early punk champion, highlighte­d Shelley’s songwritin­g abilities.

“A great man,” he wrote in Twitter. “He tried to write pure punk, he really did, but out came perfect pop.

“Recall dim punks saying Buzzcocks were ‘too good sounding’ which was meant to be a bad thing. They were so, so good. A brilliant talent, a brilliant noise. Forever.” Shelley was born in Leigh in north west England in 1955 and formed the band after meeting fellow singer Howard Devoto at college in 1975.

 ?? File photo/associated Press ?? In this May 19 photo, Pete Shelley performs at Plaza Condesa in the 6th edition of the Marvin Festival in Mexico City.
File photo/associated Press In this May 19 photo, Pete Shelley performs at Plaza Condesa in the 6th edition of the Marvin Festival in Mexico City.

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