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Welsh singer and songwriter (born 1984) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Joseph Talbot (born 23 August 1984) is a British[1] singer and songwriter. He has been the vocalist for British rock band Idles since their inception in 2009.[2]
Talbot was born in Newport[1] on 23 August 1984.[3] He moved to England as a child, where he grew up in Exeter. He met Idles bassist Adam Devonshire at sixth form college in Exeter before the two moved to Bristol, where they studied at the St Matthias Campus of the University of the West of England and decided to start a band.[4] Following university, they went on to start the now-defunct Bat-Cave night at their local pub in Bristol.[5]
Talbot has released five studio albums and many EPs and singles with Idles.[6] His music has been described as punk rock,[7] and post-punk,[8] especially due to its passionate nature and political lyrics, which have criticized right-wing news networks such as Fox News and The Sun,[6] (during the Joy tour, Talbot was known to shout "Don't read The Sun, it'll give you cancer" at shows before the closing song, Rottweiler) and outlined social issues such as depression, white privilege,[9] and toxic masculinity.[10] However, Talbot has rejected all of these genre labels. In 2017, he was quoted saying: "We're not a post-punk band. I guess we have that motorik, engine-like drive in the rhythm section that some post-punk bands have but we have plenty of songs that aren't like that at all."[11] At a 2018 concert in Manchester, he said: "for the last time, we're not a fucking punk band".[12]
On 28 June 2024, while performing a set at Glastonbury Festival, Talbot encouraged the crowd to chant "Fuck the King", which he called "the new British national anthem",[13] leading to viewers calling for a lifetime ban for his band.[14] He also described Nigel Farage as a "fascist".[15][16]
Talbot appears on the track Wish on Anna Calvi's fourth full-length album Hunted.[17] In 2020, he collaborated with Jehnny Beth for her debut solo album, To Love Is to Live, co-writing and recording vocals on the track "How Could You". Talbot also sang guest vocals for fellow Bristolians Turbowolf on the track Capital X from their 2018 album The Free Life. Talbot also appears on the Frank Carter and the Rattlesnakes Single My Town that was released 27 April 2021.
Additionally, he is the subject of the song Blood Brother, by Bristol-based band Heavy Lungs, whose vocalist Danny Nedelko is the namesake and subject of the fourth track on Idles' second record Joy as an Act of Resistance.[18]
He cites LCD Soundsystem, The Strokes, The Streets, Thom Yorke, Battles, The Walkmen, Joy Division, The Horrors, and The Fall as influences.[19][20]
When Talbot was 16, his mother had a stroke and was paralysed; after the death of his step-father, he became his mother's primary caretaker until her death in 2015. She became the primary subject of the Idles album Brutalism.
Talbot and his ex[citation needed] wife have had two daughters.[21] Their first daughter, Agatha, died in 2017.[10] This became a primary subject of the Idles album Joy as an Act of Resistance.[citation needed]
Talbot has stated he is not religious but "I appreciate faith, I've got a lot of time for it."[23]
During an interview with Apple Music regarding the band's 2020 album Ultra Mono, Talbot stated "I believe in socialism. Go fuck yourselves. I want to sleep at night knowing that my platform is the voice of reason and an egalitarian want for something beautiful - not the murder of Black people, homophobia at the workplace, racist front lines."[24]
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