Billy Idol: The Punk Rock Icon who "Should Be Dead"
3/13/202657 min
From suburban England to the front lines of the punk revolution and the stadium stages of MTV era rock, Billy Idol has spent a lifetime reinventing what rebellion looks like.
In this episode of Full Disclosure, James O’Brien sits down with the singer to trace an extraordinary life that began in a childhood split between England and the United States, moving between places and possibilities before music gave him a sense of direction. Idol reflects on growing up in a close knit family, the influence of his parents, and the early restlessness that would eventually pull him towards London at the moment punk was beginning to erupt.
They discuss the raw energy of the mid seventies scene and the formation of Generation X, when a group of young musicians with little formal training suddenly found themselves at the centre of a cultural explosion. Idol recalls the excitement of those early days, when punk felt less like a genre and more like a declaration that a new generation had something to say.
From there the conversation moves to New York, reinvention and the birth of the unmistakable Billy Idol persona that would come to dominate the early years of MTV. He reflects on fame, excess and survival, the uneasy balance between punk credibility and global success, and how rock and roll changed as the movement he came from entered the mainstream.
Frank, reflective and full of energy, this is a conversation about rebellion, reinvention and the enduring power of rock and roll.
Billy Idol Should Be Dead documentary, coming to Sky Arts on 26th March
EXCLUSIVE NordVPN Deal -> https://nordvpn.com/fulldisclosure Try it risk-free now with a 30-day money-back guarantee
Clips
Transcript preview
First 90 secondsBilly Idol· Guest0:01
[upbeat jingle] This is a Global Player original podcast.
James O'Brien· Host0:07
[upbeat music] Hello, and welcome to Full Disclosure, a podcast project designed to let me spend more time with interesting people than I would ever get on the radio show. Billy Idol, welcome.
Billy Idol· Guest0:21
Yeah, thank you.
James O'Brien· Host0:23
It, it's, um- Hi, everybody. I, I, I was trying to w- work out how I would introduce you to, to younger listeners, um, who, who may not be familiar with your heyday, and it's such a cliché, but all I can think of is, is th- this is what rock stars were always supposed to be like.
Billy Idol· Guest0:39
[laughs] Great.
James O'Brien· Host0:42
[laughs] But we will, we'll, we'll, we'll begin at the beginning, um, which is, I, I mean, a slightly unlikely beginnings for somebody who ended up scaling the, scaling the heights that, that you scaled. Um, born in Middlesex in Stanmore in, into, into quite a, a, um, uh, well, quite a normal family really.
Billy Idol· Guest1:01
Yes, yes, really. They, yes, I was lucky really. I had, uh, a lot of other people in punk rock, I mean, they, they came from broken homes.
James O'Brien· Host1:08
Exactly.
Billy Idol· Guest1:09
Uh, I was really lucky. I had, uh, I had a very sort of, uh, yeah, nor- normal upbringing really. But that doesn't mean to say [laughs] that you don't want to do something interesting with your life or that you- Of course ... or it necessarily means everything's, you know, hunky dory or whatever it is, you know.
James O'Brien· Host1:27
No, of course not. I mean, you've got inner- [laughs] ... inner,