Funeral for Welsh musician Mike Peters âspot on perfectâ, longtime friend says
Mike Peters died at the age of 66 in April from blood cancer, more than 30 years after he was first diagnosed with hronic lymphocytic leukaemia.
The funeral for rock musician Mike Peters was âspot-on perfectâ, his friend and charity co-founder has said, as the singer was laid to rest in the village he lived in.
The rock star, who was the frontman of Welsh band The Alarm, died on April 29 from blood cancer at the age of 66 â more than 30 years after he was first diagnosed with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) at the age of 36.
Friends and fans travelled from around the world to celebrate Mike Petersâs life (Jules Peters/PA)
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Fans and friends travelled from all over the world to celebrate Petersâs life, with tears and laughter inside the Parish Church of St Bridget and St Cwyfan in Dyserth, north Wales, during the two-hour service.
Petersâs wife, Jules, 58, and their sons Dylan, 21, and Evan, 18, were applauded by hundreds of fans as they walked into the church, with his wife clutching a single red rose and his youngest son carrying his fatherâs ashes.
Around 150 guests attended the emotional funeral service, including James Chippendale, the co-founder of Petersâs charity, Love Hope Strength, which aims to raise awareness and funds for those fighting cancer.
Speaking to the PA News Agency after the service, Mr Chippendale said the celebration of his life was âvery, very Mike Petersâ.
He said: âA little bit grungy, a little bit long, a little bit funny, a little bit sad, great music, and it just couldnât have been a more perfect ending. I think I would have been laughing his ass off.â
Paying tribute to his friend of 18 years, Mr Chippendale, who travelled from Mexico for the funeral, said: âHereâs the thing about Mike â whether you were his great mate like me, or his fans, heâs always the same.
âWhat you saw on stage, what you saw when he was interacting with the fans was Mike.
âMike never faked it. Mike was always authentic, just amazingly authentic.
âI think thatâs why so many people gravitate towards him, and I think thatâs why so many people connect with him.
âIf you put yourself out there like he did and open yourself up like he did, thereâs no way of not loving him, honestly.â
He said the musician has changed the lives of people who did not even know him through his charity work, such as his Get On The List campaigns, often publicised at rock concerts, which have seen the charity add more than 250,000 people to stem cell registers worldwide.
He said: âI think that the legacy is not how he affected the fans or his family or his friends, but how he affected the people that never even knew he existed.
âThrough the charity work, thereâs people alive today because of the work that Mike did. And thatâs the real, true definition of when you know you changed the world.
âYou got the songs, you got the charity, youâve got his boys, youâve got Jules. Itâll all live on, but there are thousands and thousands of people that are also living on because of him.â
Mike Peters joined Big Country, playing with the band from 2011 to 2013 (Anthony Devlin/PA)
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Fans who gathered outside the church with ice creams, picnics and drinks to watch the funeral on a big screen wiped away tears, applauded and sang along throughout the ceremony, which featured tributes from friends and musicians including Petersâs bandmate Eddie Macdonald of The Alarm, as well as drummer Slim Jim Phantom of the Stray Cats and Billy Duffy of The Cult, who played Fade In, Fade Out, Fade Away.
Bruce and Jamie Watson of Big Country, a band Peters was a member of between 2011 and 2013, also played Fragile Thing.
There was also a âminute of noiseâ started by The Alarmâs tour manager Andy Labrow, which saw those inside and outside the church cheering, clapping and whooping in Petersâs memory.
Peters, who supported U2 and Status Quo on tour and played with Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen, underwent numerous drug treatments and rounds of chemotherapy, and had tried experimental therapy to keep his cancer at bay.
Mike Peters was made an MBE for voluntary services to cancer care in north Wales and abroad (Steve Parsons/PA)
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Last year, five days before he was due to fly to Chicago for a 50-date US tour, he noticed that a lump in his neck had appeared overnight and doctors quickly realised the star had developed Richterâs syndrome, where CLL changes into a much more aggressive lymphoma.
He had been undergoing treatment at the Christie NHS Foundation Trust in Manchester before his death.
The artist first rose to prominence in the early 1980s with The Alarm, with hits including 68 Guns and Strength.
He was made an MBE in 2019 for voluntary services to cancer care in north Wales and abroad.