Jude Rogers
Welsh journalist
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jude Rogers (born 1978)[1] is a Welsh[2] journalist, lecturer, arts critic and broadcaster. She is a music critic for The Guardian[3] and also regularly writes features and articles for The Observer,[4] New Statesman[5] and women's magazines such as Red.[6] Her articles have also been published by The Times and by BBC Music[7] and she broadcasts on BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 4 and BBC 6 Music.[4] She is a senior lecturer in journalism at London Metropolitan University.[4][8]
Royal Holloway
Jude Rogers | |
|---|---|
Jude Rogers at 2025 Hay Festival | |
| Born | 1978 (age 47–48) Swansea, Wales |
| Occupation | Editor, critic, writer, lecturer |
| Education | Wadham College, Oxford Royal Holloway |
| Subject | Music |
| Website | |
| www | |
Early life and education
Rogers was born and bred in two villages near Swansea,[9][10] where she went to comprehensive school.[11] In 1997 Rogers became president of the students' union at Wadham College, Oxford.[11] She has a degree in English from the University of Oxford and an MA from Royal Holloway.[8]
Professional career
In 2003, Rogers co-founded the magazine Smoke: a London Peculiar.[12][13] After working as reviews editor on The Word, she became a full-time freelancer in 2007.[8]
She has been a judge on several music prize panels,[4] including the Welsh Music Prize[10][14] and the Mercury Prize,[10] and was one of ten experts chosen to write for the University of Westminster's MusicTank 10:10 project, writing about the future of music journalism.[4][15]
In 2017 she scripted an audio guided tour, narrated by Jarvis Cocker, for ABBA: Super Troupers, an exhibition at the Southbank Centre, London, about the Swedish pop group ABBA.[16]
In 2022, Rogers published The Sound of Being Human: How Music Shapes Our Lives, an account of the emotional and psychological impact of music. Reviewing the book, Ian Rankin wrote "Too often we treat popular music as wallpaper surrounding us as we live our lives. Jude Rogers shows the emotional and cerebral heft such music can have. It's a personal journey which becomes universal. Fascinating."[17][18]
Personal life
Publications
- Matt Haynes (editor) and Jude Rogers (editor): From the Slopes of Olympus to the Banks of the Lea, Smoke: a London Peculiar, 2013 ISBN 978-0957568006
- Jude Rogers and Alex Farebrother-Naylor: Pop!, Fisherton Press, 2016 ISBN 978-0993077333
- Jude Rogers: The Sound of Being Human: How Music Shapes Our Lives, White Rabbit Books (2022) ISBN 9781474622929