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A quietly spoken, true English eccentric with something of a
rebellious streak, Tony Stratton Smith initially charmed and
blustered his way into the music business as a manager during the
early 1960s and a few years later, when the record labels stopped
playing by what he believed to be the rules, he simply went and
formed his own -The Famous Charisma Label - and set about spinning
the record business on its head. An independent label like no
other, it is fair to say that without Strat's total belief and
unwavering long-term support there would be no Genesis - Phil
Collins has said as much - and a long line of artists owe Tony a
similar debt of gratitude, from Monty Python to Malcolm McLaren,
Lindisfarne to Sir John Betjeman, Vivian Stanshall to Julian
Lennon. A former sports journalist and close friend to Jimmy
Greaves and Sir Matt Busby (Strat narrowly missed a seat in the
Munich Air crash) he later became a popular figure in the horse
racing world. But making money was never very high on Tony's
agenda, simply a means to an end that enabled him to fund the music
and mayhem that brought him so much enjoyment. Strat was never
happier than when the artists that he had so carefully nurtured
were fulfilling their creative potential, delighting in working
with the talents of Peter Gabriel, Alan Hull, Clifford T. Ward,
Howard Werth and Peter Hammill. Ultimately, what he really cared
about were the people, the creativity, about imagination,
inspiration and risk, and the sheer joy to be had in bringing all
those elements together, lighting the Charisma-pink touch paper and
standing back, glass in hand, to watch what might happen when the
sparks began to fly.
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