Ahh - that difficult second album. Flawed, but mostly worth the pocket money.
I became familiar with Danny’s work through his All Day Breakfast Show podcasts, which I found enormously enjoyable and got me through some months of a commute that otherwise threatened to do for me, both physically and mentally. As with volume 1, some of the anecdotes were already familiar, although some weren’t. All are told with some panache – the Zappa and Dylan being for me great examples, but I do wonder about the process for deciding what went in to the book and what didn’t. I can’t help but recall a Baker and Kelly podcast where they talked with some amusement about how familiar they both were with stretching limited material gossamer thin on Radio 5 Live, and I get a sense something a little similar is happening here. Compare the limited insight we get into Chris Evans to the chapter long account of the exploits of DB’s dog Twizzle.
Danny makes it clear at the very start of the book that he prefers to accentuate the positive, and his brother’s death is related with little comment beyond the facts of what happened and no insight in terms of the impact on him or his father who is otherwise very visible throughout the book. Much of his career is described in a jaunty mildly depreciating tone swaddled in lashings of “how could this keep happening to me”. And yet there is a different Danny Baker that is only occasionally evidenced here.
The other Danny surfaces when he tackles a couple of subjects that he clearly feels passionately about and he takes at least one glove off. Whether it’s education, the state of radio or his relationship with Paul Gascoigne, it’s a welcome break from the cheery banter that dominates the book elsewhere. DB is an eloquent and powerful speaker when roused, and it’s a shame that it’s rarely allowed to show.
In terms of the “other” Danny what strikes me is that the easy come easy go happy go lucky approach he describes in the book is at odds with the public hissy fits he had about the end of the All Day Breakfast Show and his BBC London gig. Maybe the next volume will set the record straight on what the ins and outs of the end of the All Day Breakfast Show, and maybe it just proves Danny is human after. It would be interesting to hear how he reconciles the slating he gave Aunty at the time with all the work he’s picked up from them since.