In a career spanning over 30 years, Jah Wobble has shown continued creativity and invention. Born John Wardle in Stepney, East London in 1958, he was given the name Jah Wobble by a drunken Sid Vicious, who he met, along with John Lydon, at Kingsway College in 1973. Wobble s long-term obsession with dub reggae was fuelled when Vicious loaned him his first bass guitar; embracing both punk and reggae, Wobble created an original rock/reggae hybrid all of his own. Wobble joined Lydon in Public Image Limited (aka PiL) in the spring of 1978; his distinctive low-end bass providing the backbone, and heartbeat, of the band. The band's debut album, Public Image Limited - First Issue, included the eponymous top ten hit single. Following the release of PiL s second album, 1979 s mighty Metal Box, Wobble became increasingly disillusioned by the politics of the band and its reluctance to play live, and left mid-1980. Soon after, Wobble formed The Human Condition, featuring original PiL drummer Jim Walker, also collaborating with Can members Holger Czukay and Jaki Liebezeit. In 1983, he put together the multi-cultural dub-pop outfit Invaders of the Heart. Then, in 1986, after a long battle with alcohol, he unexpectedly walked away from the music scene to work for London Underground. He eventually returned with a revitalised line-up of the band, and Rising Above Bedlam, released in 1991, earned him a Mercury Music Prize nomination, chart success and critical acclaim. Wobble has collaborated with a wide variety of musicians, such as Brian Eno, Massive Attack, Bill Laswell, Harold Budd, Sinead O'Connor, Primal Scream, Natacha Atlas, and Bjork, and his output has spanned a number of musical genres including avant-garde jazz-rock, English folk, multi-cultural fusion, ambient, dance, and the writings of William Blake. In 1997 he set up his own independent label, 30 Hertz Records, and has since released a series of more experimental, non-commercial sounding records. Throughout July and August 2008, Jah Wobble toured the UK with a new project, Chinese Dub, a 22-piece Anglo-Chinese aural and visual spectacular. Combining his trademark dub with Chinese melodies and instrumentation, the maverick music-maker successfully married East and West sensibilities, proving once again that his creative adventurousness is far removed from others world music dilettantism. The tour culminated in an appearance on the BBC Radio 3 stage at WOMAD in what was, for many media commentators and punters alike, the highlight of the festival. Chinese Dub, the resulting studio album, won the Best Cross Cultural Collaboration category in Songlines magazine s inaugural awards in 2009. October 2009 saw Wobble s first release on key reggae/dub re-release label Pressure Sounds, two thunderous new cuts of the Get Carter theme from the seminal 1971 film of the same name. Produced and arranged by Wobble, recorded with tablas, and with additional music by Clive Bell and Sylvia Hallett, this version is a bass-heavy floor-shaker that will seriously disturb your speakers. Wobble s autobiography, Memoirs of a Geezer: Life, Music, Mayhem is out now on Serpent s Tail.