Carol Elizabeth Clerk (15 October 1954 – 13 March 2010) was a British music journalist and author.[1][2]
Clerk was from Belfast,[3] the daughter of a geography teacher. She moved to London as a young woman, and had an album review column in the Hammersmith and Shepherds Bush Gazette in the late 1970s.[4][5] She joined the staff of Melody Maker in 1980. She was the news editor of Melody Maker until the newspaper ceased publication in 1999.[1][2] She was remembered as "tiny, tireless, straight-up, no-bullshit, no-backstabbing Carol; flaming hair, permanent fag and loud laughing Northern Irish rattle and rasp."[6]
In 1985, Clerk won journalist of the year from the Professional Publishers Association for her coverage of the Live Aid benefit concert at Wembley Stadium.[1] She had a reputation for toughness and hard-drinking, but also for being a good reporter and writer.[6] "The worst band I ever had to deal with was Wham!" she told a newspaper in 1988. "They were uncooperative, awkward and very arrogant and I never want to set eyes on those two again."[7]
Clerk walked with a cane, because her gait was affected by a congenital hip problem. She married graphic designer Nigel O'Brien in 1993; they had a daughter, Eve, and moved to Kent in 2005. Clerk died from breast cancer in 2010, at the age of 55.[2] In 2015, 215 letters sent to Clerk by Reggie Kray were sold at auction.[19] In 2022, The Carol Clerk Bursary was founded to support emerging music journalists with connections to Northern Ireland.[20]