Tom Watkins

(1949-09-21)21 September 1949

24 February 2020(2020-02-24) (aged 70)

  • Music manager
  • music producer
  • designer
  • composer

Early life[edit]

Watkins was born Thomas Frederick Watkins on 21 September 1949 at St. Alfege's Hospital, Greenwich, London,[3] the son of Patricia Daphne Diett and Frederick Joseph Watkins.[3] He lived in Blackheath, London[4] and was educated at Invicta Road School, Sherrington Road School and Raine's Foundation School in Tower Hamlets, London.[3] Watkins later attended Sir John Cass School of Art, Architecture and Design[3] and went on to study art and design at London College of Furniture, London Metropolitan University.[3]

Early career[edit]

In the early 1970s after graduating from the London College of Furniture, Watkins worked as a designer for Terence Conran and Rodney Fitch as part of the team that designed Heathrow Terminal 3 and the London Stock Exchange.[5][6]


In 1981, Watkins and business partner Royston Edwards set up the graphics design company XL Design with an office in Welbeck Street, London,[7] initially designing music graphics and marketing campaigns, then later record sleeves.[8] In 1982, XL designed the record sleeve for Wham!'s debut single "Wham Rap! (Enjoy What You Do)"[9]


When the British record label ZTT became clients in 1983, XL designed record sleeves for Art of Noise[10][11] and for "Relax", the 1983 debut single of Frankie Goes to Hollywood.[12] XL designed many of the Frankie Goes to Hollywood ads, promo posters and graphics[12] including the record sleeves for their next three singles "Two Tribes", "The Power of Love" (both 1984) and "Welcome to the Pleasuredome" (1985).[13] In 1984, XL designed the sleeve for their debut album Welcome to the Pleasuredome.[14]


In 1983, Trevor Horn and Jill Sinclair of ZTT Records commissioned Watkins to design the interior of their new recording studios, Sarm West Studios in Notting Hill.[15][11]


The XL Design agency was responsible for creating iconic logos, music advertising graphics and record sleeve art of the 1980s including those of Frankie Goes to Hollywood,[12] Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark (OMD),[16] Art of Noise,[11] Wham!,[9] Kim Wilde,[17] Nik Kershaw,[18] Duran Duran[18] and the Pet Shop Boys.[1]

Design[edit]

Watkins was a fine art collector, specialising in works from the Memphis Group which was an influential Italian design and architecture movement of the 1980s.[6] In 2001, Watkins loaned much of his Memphis collection to the Design Museum, London for their Memphis Remembered exhibition[42] held to mark the 20th anniversary of the debut of the Memphis movement.[43] An admirer of Bauhaus-inspired architecture he designed and built The Big White House in Pett Level, East Sussex in 2004, which was featured in the Channel 4 Grand Designs television series.[44] In 2006 Watkins received the Sussex Heritage Trust Award for The Big White House project.[45]

Author[edit]

Published in July 2016, Watkins co-wrote with Matthew Lindsay his autobiography titled Let's Make Lots of Money: Secrets of a Rich, Fat, Gay, Lucky Bastard.[4] In December 2016, the book was longlisted for the Penderyn Music Book Prize[46] and in July 2017 the book was released in paperback under the title Let's Make Lots of Money: My Life as the Biggest Man in Pop.[47]

Death[edit]

Watkins suffered from poor health in his later years. He had type 2 diabetes and in 2013, had a liver transplant. He died on 24 February 2020, and his funeral was held on 10 March.[48]