Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption The Fall singer Mark E Smith performing Big New Prinz with the Michael Clark Company in 1988

Mark E Smith, the distinctive frontman of Manchester post-punk band The Fall, has died aged 60.

Pam Van Damned, the band's manager, said he died at home on Wednesday morning and a more detailed statement would follow "in the next few days".

Paying tribute, Smith's former bandmate Marc Riley said the singer "taught me a lot about life and he taught me a lot about music".

Smith famously hired and fired more than 60 bandmates.

Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption Watch what happened when BBC Sport asked Mark E Smith read the football scores.

Riley, now a radio DJ, was on air on BBC 6 Music when the news broke. The pair had a tumultuous relationship - as was the case with Smith and many of the musicians who passed through The Fall's ranks.

"Aged 16 he really did teach me so much," Riley told listeners.

"The Fall were my favourite band when I joined and they were still my favourite band when I got kicked out."

The band's manager added that Smith's family had requested "privacy at this sad time".

Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption What was it like meeting Mark E Smith?

His ex-wife Brix Smith Smart also wrote a tribute, saying "Mark defied convention and definition - he was a true artist. He was my music mentor, my cultural anchor, and my first love."

Championed by BBC Radio 1's John Peel, The Fall had 27 songs in the top 100 of the UK singles chart between 1984 and 2004.

There's a Ghost in My House was their highest entry at number 30 in 1987.

Smith's distinctive Mancunian drawl, which featured in his music, also took centre stage when he read out the football scores on the BBC in 2005, after one of his tracks was used to introduce them.

BBC 6 Music will pay tribute to Smith in by broadcasting a classic Fall concert at 02:00 GMT on Saturday; and repeating the documentary The Totally Wired World of The Fall at 13:00 GMT on Sunday.

The latter, which features Smith in conversation with Elizabeth Alker, has already been re-published on iPlayer Radio.

British rock's cult hero

By Ian Youngs, arts and entertainment reporter

Mark E Smith, the snarling singer and single-minded leader of Manchester post-punk group The Fall, was a rock hero whose drinking and fighting - as well as his ragged but rare musical artistry - became the stuff of legend.

Over the past 40 years, great bands have come and gone. Musical trends have waxed and waned.

But The Fall - basically Mark E Smith and whoever he hadn't fallen out with at the time - remained belligerently immoveable as the unfashionable but unshrinking mob in the shadows of the music scene.

In that time, he hired and fired more than 60 bandmates and released 30 albums of music that normally featured frayed, repetitive guitars and Smith's caustic stream of semi-consciousness.

His pronounced sing-slur made him unlike any other frontman, and he inspired devotion among fans who were drawn to his singular presence and rambling poetry.

Read more

Born into a working-class family in Broughton, Salford, Smith grew up in Prestwich, and worked first in a meat factory and then as a shipping clerk on the Manchester docks.

In 1976, inspired by a Sex Pistols gig, he quit the docks for The Fall.

Simon Wolstencroft, who was the band's drummer for 11 years, told the BBC Smith was a "funny guy" and "very intelligent".

Smith's ex-wife and former band member Brix Smith Start thanked well-wishers for their messages and said she was just "taking the news in".

Singers Lisa Stansfield and Billy Bragg paid tribute to Smith saying a "cultural icon" had died.

BBC 6 Music's Lauren Laverne said Smith was "untouchably cool" and Charlatans singer Tim Burgess said he was "a true uncompromising musical maverick".

BBC Radio 2 presenter Jeremy Vine tweeted: "Mark E Smith - one of the greatest rock stars ever produced by this country.

"The last time I saw The Fall, in 2017, he felt unwell on stage and sang all the songs from inside his dressing room."

Shaun Of The Dead director Edgar Wright said: "Not merely a legend of indie music, but someone who, for me, was a gateway into that very genre."

Last year, Smith reacted to the news the BBC had mistakenly announced his death. In a Guardian interview, he said: "It was stopped in minutes by Fall fans. I was still ill around that time but was starting to feel better and somebody comes in and says, 'By the way, you're dead.'"