Being a Serpents Tail author I was given a copy of this. I certainly would not have bought it and am not sure why I read it - partly out of interest to see if Kershaw is as big a twat as he has appeared in recent years (he is) and partly to see if he has any interesting observations on musicians/industry figures that interest me (occasionally he does). Beyond that there's little to recommend, Andy being a middle class British blowhard who reminds me here of Jeremy Clarkson more than anyone else - I know this is autobiography but he goes on and on about himself, not just as the centre of attention but a bloke who everyone admires and comes to and praise and wants to shag (if you are female) and is constantly having adventures in dangerous places (when not hanging out with rock legends - who praise him - or African musicians - who tell him he is a white African). He appears to be unable to reflect on his failings, constantly blaming others for his misfortune - snide comments about John Peel abound due to Peel not supporting our hero when Radio 1 dumped him (this could have been cos Peel was sick to his back teeth of this blowhard) and the alcoholism and domestic violence issues that saw him jailed are barely dealt with.
I was never a fan of Kershaw's radio show - he seemed to love extended live recordings by the likes of Neil Young, the Who and Bruuuuuuucceee alongside Billy Bragg and other dreadful pub rock types while the African and Southern soul music I tuned in for rarely got much space. But I do realise that he helped popularize African music in the UK and he has much to say on this (although a little on the Bhundu Boys would suit me fine). He also writes well on entering Rwanda just as the genocide came to a close. His observations on Haiti and other impoverished states occasionally demonstrate a keen journalistic eye. But too often he falls into the "look at me, I'm somewhere really crazy!" Thus his three trips to North Korea are boasted about because that nation is simply so repressive and odd. But there is little attempt to understand the people there and how they have to live under such a pernicious regime.
Charlie does get a nice mention as he takes Andy to Sterns and introduces him to the staff there. But most everyone else is treated with contempt. Andy doesn't seem to realise that he got very, very lucky - a Radio 1 show, lots of TV presenting and Radio 4 reporting - without ever having displayed any real skills beyond enthusiasm and an ability to talk his way into situations. And now that his luck's soured and he's virtually unemployable he doesn't appear to be thinking of what he can do to reinvent himself. He is, like Clarkson, a British bloke who believes he's the centre of the universe. Well, Clarkson's awful TV shows have made him a fortune and an international star. But Kershaw is forgotten by all but us world music geeks. And I can't see this book helping to redeem him as a writer - only rarely does he display a gift of narrative and much insight.
If No Off Switch bombs - and considering a publisher at ST told me it had garnered the worst reviews of any book he had ever worked on - I wonder what is next for Andy? When you're a hot media property everyone loves you. But when you have cooled to the point of being left in a prison cell to chill out it's unlikely there's a lot of work offers flowing your way. His love of motorbikes and the Isle Of Man races suggests that, like Clarkson, he would be best suited presenting bloke TV. Who knows?
Anyone who wants to read No Off Switch drop me a line and I'll give it to you at the next Ritzy Gypsy night - August 25th with the wonderful MODESTE HUGHES (Madagascar) performing. No need to return it.
