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Fletcher denies involvement with controversial group MMS (Modern Mystery School)

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Roots Manuva has had his Mercury Prize trophy returned after moving house and accidentally leaving it behind.

Manuva – whose real name is Rodney Hylton Smith – took home the award at the 2002 Mercury Prize for his album ‘Run Come Save Me’.

Now, 22 years since he took home the award, Roots Manuva has confirmed that he has had the trophy returned to him after he moved house and accidentally left it behind.

 

He shared the news on his X/Twitter page earlier today (March 26), thanking the two new inhabitants of his home for finding the award and getting in touch. “Massive shout out to Anna and Alex who found my Mercury Prize in their shed in Sheffield and have sent it back to me,” he wrote.

He also responded to a user who asked about how it got left behind, confirming that he accidentally forgot to pack it up with the rest of his belongings.

Arriving in 2001 via Big Dada Records, the album remains the musician’s most commercially successful album to date – having peaked at Number 33 on the UK albums charts and entering the Billboard 200 in France.

It has gone on to be certified Gold, and was nominated alongside David Bowie’s ‘Heathen’, The Coral’s self-titled album, Beverley Knight’s ‘Who I Am’, Ms. Dynamite’s ‘A Little Deeper’ and more.

Since then, Roots Manuva has shared numerous other albums, including ‘Awfully Deep’ (2005), ‘Slime & Reason’ (2008), ‘Duppy Writer’ (2010) and ‘4everevolution’, which arrived in 2011.

His latest studio album was ‘Bleeds’, which he shared back in 2015.

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  • The Libertines have bought the bathtub that Jim Morrison died in for Margate hotel The Albion Rooms

The Libertines have bought the bathtub that Jim Morrison died in for Margate hotel The Albion Rooms

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The Libertines have revealed that they’ve bought the bathtub that Jim Morrison died in for their Margate hotel, The Albion Rooms.

The band released their fourth album ‘All Quiet On The Eastern Esplanade’ last Friday (April 5), marking their first full-length record in almost a decade. It is currently on course to hit Number One in the UK.

During a new interview with Matt Wilkinson on Apple Music 1Pete Doherty and Carl Barât talked about achieving their “dream” of opening their own Libertines hotel and studio space in 2020.

“We’ve also got the bathtub that Jim Morrison died in, which we’re going to be putting in one of the rooms,” Doherty explained at one point in the chat.

The frontman of The Doors passed away in Paris in 1971 aged 27. He was found dead in the bathtub of the apartment he was staying in, with the official cause of death being ruled as heart failure. Due to French law, however, no autopsy was carried out as no foul play was suspected at the time.

Doherty continued: “There’s a fellow who my wife’s cousin knows, and his cousin was basically the landlord. And he’s not interested in music, and even less interested in music mythology, and so he’s just been going on about this bathtub which people have been trying to buy off him.

“He doesn’t want it. He thinks it’s morbid to make money off it. So I said, ‘Well, we’ll take it for the hotel’.”

He added: “And so I said to Carl – and obviously, Carl’s known me for years, knows I do have a tendency to exaggerate and… well, lie – but this one is the bang honest truth and it’s actually there.”

The revelation came after Barât explained that he had purchased another piece of rock memorabilia: Jimi Hendrix‘s coat. “Someone convinced me to buy it in an auction. It was going cheap,” the musician said.

“It was because there was about to be a movie come out and André 3000 was playing Jimi Hendrix [in 2013’s Jimi: All Is By My Side], and it was going to really revitalise the Hendrix estate and all of the sort of bric-a-brac…”

Elsewhere in the conversation, Barât explained: “We set up this hotel with grand ambitions and a lot of objectives of which we achieved.

“Now, personally, being very close to it and having to deal with a lot more of the runnings and whatnot, I think we’ve done that. And I think what we really need is a studio where the artists can stay there. We don’t have to shove them down the road.”

The Libertines
The Libertines. CREDIT: Ed Cooke

Barât gave NME a tour of The Albion Rooms in Margate when it first opened its doors. “The band live in three different countries, and the only thing that really binds us without something like this is tour schedules,” he said at the time.

“To have a place that’s our own HQ and that we all have equal ownership of and equal input in – that was the dream.” You can revisit the video tour and interview above.

The Libertines would go on to record ‘All Quiet On The Eastern Esplanade’ at The Albion Rooms.

Doherty told NME last October: “The other albums were basically written before we went in the studio. This time it was a case of people presenting really strong ideas, and then everyone else just tucking in, putting their bibs on, rolling up their sleeves and chewing the fat.

“There were so many times on this album where I thought I knew what the song was, and then it became completely different for the best.”

In a four-star review of ‘…Eastern Esplanade’NME praised the band for “find[ing] their voice again”, adding: “For the first time in over 20 years, The Libertines feel like a band with a viable future.”

The Libertines recently added more shows to their 2024 UK and Ireland headline tourFind any remaining tickets here.

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