Music world pays tribute to one of UK’s leading promoters

SJM has led the tributes to Chris York, who worked with some of the biggest artists on the planet, from Oasis and Foo Fighters to Massive Attack and Robert Plant.

Manchester promoter, SJM, announced that he had died, aged 55, following a long illness.

York joined Simon Moran at SJM in 1993 and worked to establish the company as one of the country’s leading promoters.

A director of the company, he formed a “solid and unshakeable partnership and friendship with Simon that would last the rest of his career.”

“Since 2006, working alongside The Who’s Roger Daltrey, live producer Des Murphy and fellow SJM Director Rob Ballantine, Chris was the lead talent booker for the annual Teenage Cancer Trust spring residency at London’s Royal Albert Hall,” said SJM’s tribute.

“To date the concerts have raised well over £30 million for the charity and has featured concerts by a who’s who of UK music including Take That, Ed Sheeran, Florence and the Machine, Arctic Monkeys, Pet Shop Boys, The Cure, New Order and Sir Paul McCartney.”

Funds from the concert have helped set up 28 specialist teenager cancer units in NHS hospitals.

He also helped launch and develop the Country to Country (C2C) Music festival which has been instrumental in finding a new and ever-increasing audience for country music in the UK. 

In 2021 he was awarded the prestigious Jo Walker Meador International Award by the Country Music Association. A year later at the International Live Music Conference, he was presented with its Bottle Award for Lifetime Achievement. 

“Chris is survived by a concert promoting company that has won the Music Week Promoter of the Year Award 10 times, holds the record for biggest selling UK concert tour in history, the biggest selling UK comedy tour in history, employs over 80 full time staff and a similar number of freelance staff, and currently has over 1000 shows on sale,” said SJM.

“It is a company shaped and forged by Chris, Simon and Rob over 3 decades that has helped define the UK’s live music scene.”

York was just 25 when he promoted Oasis’ Knebworth concert, where the band played to more than 250k people.

[image: SJM]

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