John Earls
Childhood and early career[edit]
Born on 25 August 1972, Earls grew up in Milton Keynes.[1][2] His writings were published by Doctor Who Magazine, and ORACLE's Blue Suede Views music magazine, during his teens.[3][4] Earls started writing professionally following a 1991 work experience placement at football magazine When Saturday Comes, continuing to cover the sport on an infrequent basis as he moved into the realm of entertainment journalism.[2][5] During the 1990s Earls worked as a showbiz reporter for The Sunday People; he left the newspaper in 1999, becoming a teen entertainment writer for Teletext (the successor to ORACLE).[4][5]
Earls became a critic for Teletext's music magazine, Planet Sound, some 18 months after joining the company.[4] He was named editor in 2001 and held this post until Teletext ceased broadcasting in December 2009.[2][6] Earls became synonymous with Planet Sound and his work was often cited by other outlets.[7] He gave early exposure to chart bands such as The Twilight Sad, Maxïmo Park and Hope of the States, by featuring their demo tapes in the magazine's review section. The Twilight Sad frontman James Graham expressed his affection for Earls: "I used to read Planet Sound every day... He's a nice guy and I really appreciate the support he gave us."[6][8]
Earls has interviewed many musicians throughout his career, and has regularly written for magazines such as the NME, Record Collector and Classic Pop.[2][9] His music and football commentary has also appeared in outlets including Newsweek, The Guardian, Drowned in Sound and the Daily Star.[9][10][11] Earls wrote the sleeve notes for the 40th anniversary edition of A Flock of Seagulls' 1982 self-titled debut album, as well as for the Fun Boy Three box set, The Complete Fun Boy Three (2023).[12][13] Record Collector identifies the 1980s as his specialist era.[14]
Spiked noted the "critical wisdom of John Earls", while remarking upon his "evident knowledge and enthusiasm" for music journalism.[15] He was recognised by Music Week as a "specialist media tastemaker",[16] and was listed by BBC News as an "influential and impartial UK-based music critic".[17] In 2022, Earls won "Best Writer – Specialist" at the BSME Talent Awards, receiving praise for his communication and interview skills.[18] Aside from his writing career, Earls lectures in journalism, and co-founded a record label, WET, in 2009.[4][5]
In 2009 Earls listed the following albums as ones that music fans should own, besides "the obvious great ones they'd already own":[4]