Pubdate: 8 Mar 1998 Source: Scotland On Sunday Author: Dani Garavelli Contact: MUSIC MOGUL SOUNDS OUT CANNABIS CAMPAIGN ALBUM The record label boss who discovered Oasis is compiling a Band Aid-type album as part of an on-going campaign for the decriminilisation of cannabis. Scots-born Alan McGee, founder of Creation Records, has already approached top British acts, including Paul Weller, Cast, Super Furry Animals and Asian Dub Foundation, to take part. All profits are to go to the Stapleford Trust, a London-based charity which carries out research into addiction. McGee, a former addict, was himself treated by Dr Colin Brewer, medical director at the private Stapleford Addiction Unit. The news of the new album emerged as a poll by Radio One, whose audience is mostly under 25, found that 84% of its listeners believed that drug-taking should be made legal. McGee told Scotland on Sunday: "Dr Brewer guided me back from the brink of addiction to the verge of sobriety. I wholeheartedly approve of his addiction treatments. In retrospect, I probably owe him my life, although the campaign for the decriminilisation of cannabis LP will probably have to do." McGee, who sits on the government's creative industries task force, says he has only smoked cannabis on four or five occasions. Yet, despite almost dying as a result of his cocaine and alcohol habit, he believes all drugs should be legalised in an attempt to control the industry. If the move was made, he argues, it would mean fewer deaths from contamination and an end to the dangerous drugs underworld. The inspiration for the compilation album came from Rosie Boycott, the editor of the Independent and the Indpendent on Sunday, whose campaign for the decriminilisation of cannabis has attracted the support of scores of famous people, including Anita Roddick, Richard Branson and Sir Paul McCartney. Yesterday, Brewer, who is himself in favour of the decriminilisation of cannabis, said the money raised by the album would be used for research projects. "We are interested primarily in medical treatments for addiction. For example, we would like to undertake a controlled study of a group of patients at a NHS hospital using various methods to achieve withdrawal from opiates. This can be done using sedation or under anaesthesia." Brewer said he was also interested in the potential of Naltrexone, a drug which is used to take addicts off heroin. The drug has the opposite effect from methadone, in that it stops users gaining any effect from heroin. Brewer would like to carry out a study in which the drug was made a condition of probation orders. "Similar projects have taken place in Singapore and the US with good results, but we would like to see if it could prove successful in the British context," he said. A spokeswoman for Creation Records said the compilation album was still in the early stages, but the company was hoping for a summer release.