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Linus Solanki  
#1 Posted : 29 October 2012 09:07:29(UTC)
Linus Solanki

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Hook believes Curtis's death robbed his bandmates of the "glue that held us together" and Rob Gretton's death in 1999 "left nobody" in that role. "Joy Division and then New Order were ships that needed captains, but our captains kept on dying on us," Hook writes. Now New Order sail on without him, leaving him alone to trawl through the wreckage of the past, searching for clues as to what went wrong.

Interesting Review.
http://www.guardian.co.u...ook-review?newsfeed=true




Q – Bernard’s notorious sleeping bag developed enormous friction between the band on numerous occasions. Tell us about these scenarios?

Barney was always very well prepared anytime we went anywhere, he had always thought ahead and planned things out, the rest of us in the group really were not like that so it was only natural that we gave him a load of stick for that bloody sleeping bag!


Q – Throughout the book you speak very highly of Bernard commending his talent despite your problems with him more recently. Will you always hold that level of respect for Bernard?

Of course I will, Barney is a wonderful musician, and there is absolutely no way I would let today’s playground spat tarnish what he brought to the music back in the days of Joy Division which I was focusing on in the book. Its bizarre really because they seemed sure that I was going to slag them off in the book, but I would like

http://charmingmanmusic....-joy-division-new-order/


Hooked on Hacienda: 30TH ANNIVERSARY CD EXPLAINED

http://thestar.ie/star/h...nniversary-cd-explained/

Edited by user 29 October 2012 09:19:07(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

I promise to make you so alive that the fall of dust on furniture will deafen you. Nina Cassian
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ROCKET MICK on 30/10/2012(UTC)
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World Domination: Complete  
#2 Posted : 29 October 2012 21:36:52(UTC)
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Sleep Sleep Sleep
Let's all wave our arms about !
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ROCKET MICK on 30/10/2012(UTC)
Eimi  
#3 Posted : 30 October 2012 00:10:45(UTC)
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Digi Mike wrote:
Sleep Sleep Sleep


Haha!
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ROCKET MICK on 30/10/2012(UTC)
Coops  
#4 Posted : 30 October 2012 01:53:15(UTC)
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Id agree with the sentiment regarding Gretton but they seemed to stumble on to some success in the 80s didnt they?
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Eimi on 30/10/2012(UTC), ROCKET MICK on 30/10/2012(UTC)
Isi  
#5 Posted : 30 October 2012 11:37:05(UTC)
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Tired subject but...

I'm pretty sick of Hooky going on about Gretton keeping JD/NO together. Though for once I sort of see what he means. It's probably true that the group needed Curtis and Gretton to rally around or keep them in shape. But a lot of the time wasn't JD/NO a triumph in the face of adversity or even in spite of factory/hacienda?

What really bothers me is how Hooky uses the absence of Gretton, Wilson and Curtis to excuse his and probably the rest of the band's inability to get on anymore. I usually side with Barney, and that's mainly because he's willing to say he doesn't get on with Hooky. No mystique that's all.

That's probably why I don't care for Hooky because almost everything he's done these past five years is sell the myth, whatever he feels that is, the hac, factory and now what a great group NO (his image of NO) was. I think it's funny that Barney, Steve and Gillian are plainly selling NO like a business but I actually find Hooky's reverential approach a lot more distasteful since it somehow feels dishonest.
"I haven't time to sympathise, with all this nonsense and your lies"
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ROCKET MICK on 30/10/2012(UTC), Eimi on 30/10/2012(UTC)
Bill  
#6 Posted : 30 October 2012 11:51:35(UTC)
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Maybe we all need a Gretton in our lives at times to stop us doing twattish things
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ROCKET MICK on 30/10/2012(UTC)
Coops  
#7 Posted : 31 October 2012 00:00:07(UTC)
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Thanks But No Thanks wrote:
Maybe we all need a Gretton in our lives at times to stop us doing twattish things

Personally I just try to take responsibility for my own actions. Its called growing up.
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ROCKET MICK on 31/10/2012(UTC), Eimi on 31/10/2012(UTC)
Eimi  
#8 Posted : 31 October 2012 05:44:03(UTC)
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Coops wrote:
Thanks But No Thanks wrote:
Maybe we all need a Gretton in our lives at times to stop us doing twattish things

Personally I just try to take responsibility for my own actions. Its called growing up.


Agreed. I don't need a manager to stop me from doing stupid things.
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ROCKET MICK on 31/10/2012(UTC), NotAMod on 01/11/2012(UTC)
Big Mouth Julio  
#9 Posted : 01 November 2012 17:51:07(UTC)
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leather-girl wrote:
Coops wrote:
Thanks But No Thanks wrote:
Maybe we all need a Gretton in our lives at times to stop us doing twattish things

Personally I just try to take responsibility for my own actions. Its called growing up.


Agreed. I don't need a manager to stop me from doing stupid things.


But they always needed!
Finsbury Park 2002
Brasilia 2006
Sao Paulo 2006 1st Night
Sao Paulo 2006 2nd Night
Sao Paulo 2011
Lima 2013
Bogota 2013
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ROCKET MICK on 04/11/2012(UTC)
Jul  
#10 Posted : 05 November 2012 02:11:15(UTC)
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Perpetual adolescence has always been a key part of rock stardom (barney's acknowledged it too), as were myths, although in their making not milking. Also you can never ever ever overestimate the importance of a good sleeping bag, it's like a towel in Hitchiker's guide to the galaxy, only much more important.
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ROCKET MICK on 05/11/2012(UTC), Baggie Boiler on 07/11/2012(UTC)
Linus Solanki  
#11 Posted : 07 November 2012 07:50:48(UTC)
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Peter Hook slams New Order before Coventry Kasbah gig

http://www.coventryobser...ry-Kasbah-gig-54919.html

PETER HOOK has used the build-up to a Coventry gig to admit his squabble with ex-band mate and childhood friend Bernard Sumner is more suited to the playground than the press.

But that did not stop the legendary bassist from hitting out at the New Order front man, labelling him a 'spoilt and selfish fool'.

The two are embroiled in a legal battle and a war of words over the reunion of New Order without Hook's involvement.

And speaking to the Observer ahead of his Kasbah gig next week with The Light, Hook blasted Sumner for comments made about his band's plan to play the iconic record Unknown Pleasures by Joy Division - Hook and Sumner's first band - in full.

It follows Sumner recently accusing Hook of 'opening the gates of hell' and only performing for cash.

"I'm surprised Bernard feels the need to speak publicly about it, and to say I'm only doing it for the money is very odd," Hook told us.

"He's just done a new tour and earned himself a load of money.

"I haven't seen any articles about him giving the money to charity and that's what I hate about Bernard - the contradictions.

"It's do as I say, not do as I do. It's despicable and a ridiculous thing to say.

"This is an awful position for me to be in. At our age to be having a playground squabble - 'he did it first' - get a life.

"In my opinion he is a spoilt, selfish fool."

The row between the two comes as both the Brit music heroes focus on separate projects to relive former glories.

While Sumner has reunited New Order - something Hook described as a tribute band - the Manc bass man is touring with The Light, playing iconic album Unknown Pleasures in full. The first night of their UK tour sees them at Kasbah.

The record is widely regarded as one of the top ten albums of all time in British music.

Hook described it as 'ballsy rock and roll' and a different style to the band's - and tragic lead singer Ian Curtis' - later music.

The Light is a family affair, with son Jack on bass, but where does the motivation come from to keep going at the age of 54?

"I've got legal bills to pay!" he joked. "But I love my job - I still enjoy it.

"My son Jack is the nearest thing to me in the world and it makes it all worthwhile.

"It's a great compliment to see young people at the gigs as well. It's very humbling.

"They come over and said 'my dad played your stuff' - even when I'm DJing I'll have 18 and 19-year-olds come over and say hello.

"I've not had too many bottles over the head, put it that way!"

I promise to make you so alive that the fall of dust on furniture will deafen you. Nina Cassian
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ROCKET MICK on 07/11/2012(UTC)
Coops  
#12 Posted : 07 November 2012 23:40:41(UTC)
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Quote:
I'm surprised Bernard feels the need to speak publicly about it
.

As I just posted in the other thread I have to presume Hookys taking the piss with ironic comments like this.
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ROCKET MICK on 08/11/2012(UTC)
Big Mouth Julio  
#13 Posted : 11 November 2012 05:58:30(UTC)
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New Order Now is a very nice cover band Clown
Finsbury Park 2002
Brasilia 2006
Sao Paulo 2006 1st Night
Sao Paulo 2006 2nd Night
Sao Paulo 2011
Lima 2013
Bogota 2013
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ROCKET MICK on 12/11/2012(UTC)
Linus Solanki  
#14 Posted : 27 November 2012 04:26:03(UTC)
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http://www.list.co.uk/ar...wn-pleasures-and-closer/


Uber-fan of Joy Division Allan Brown gets a chat with one of his musical heroes, Peter Hook
Peter Hook is one of the most gratifyingly paradoxical figures in all of heritage indie-rock, if that’s a thing. The man and the music just don’t match. The latter, as represented by New Order and particularly by Joy Division, is by turns intense, vexed, haunted, darkly neurotic: a journey into urban night and emotional collapse. The man, meanwhile, gives the impression he’ll fix your dodgy boiler by lunchtime.

Hooky is one of the most fondly regarded musical cartoons ever sketched: a no-nonsense, two-fisted, plain-speaking northener; a long-haired rock Viking; the man who has conducted the longest stag night in history. Yet also the co-creator of some of the most exquisitely maudlin music in the annals of heritage indie-rock. If that’s a thing. Having cherished his work since 1978, I tell him I attended a signing he held in Glasgow last month, for his recent Joy Division memoir Unknown Pleasures: 'That’s right,' he says. 'You were the tall blonde in fishnets, weren’t you?' And then we laughed.

Renowned primarily for his fluid, melodic bass style and his low-slung playing stance, Hook is back next month, in Aberdeen, Dundee and Edinburgh, with his band The Light. He is soundly, but happily, in nostalgia mode these days. The Light play the albums of Joy Division - the New Wave nervous breakdown of Unknown Pleasures; the funereal majesty of Closer - complete and in the proper order; even the 1981 rarities collection Still. Next year they move onto the corpus of New Order: 'At their last gig New Order played 23 songs,' he notes. 'We do 26!' Around this, he has built up a portfolio of associated pursuits: as globetrotting DJ, consultant at the university of Lancashire, chronicler of the Madchester and Hacienda scene; author, curator and raconteur now approaching the status of a post-punk Peter Ustinov; he’s a tribute act to himself, effectively, and to the others with whom he played: Ian Curtis, Joy Division’s late vocalist; Bernard Sumner and Steven Morris, his now-estranged confreres in both groups.

Does he worry that he’ll run out of yesterdays, that his back story will prove finite? 'I’m not really bothered, and I’m not bothered that it’s all nostalgic,' he says. 'I just like keeping busy and having ten things on the go. Usually, if someone asks me I’ll do it, and worry about it later. The bands were brilliant, Factory Records and Manchester were filled with the most amazing characters and I was in the middle of it all - why would I turn my back on that?'

There’s no shortage, though, of those who wish he had. The split between him, Sumner and Morris is vicious and irreparable, expressed in scandalised aggression on Hook’s part and theatrical disappointment from the others. The latter can’t forgive the bassist for buying rights to the Hacienda name and for setting up a full-time Joy Division covers band. The ghost of Ian Curtis needs considering too. The troubled vocalist hung himself in 1980; inducing some need, Sumner and Morris argue, for taste and sanctity around any exploitation of the brand.

Hook’s response is flinty and Anglo-Saxon. The others were content to let Joy Division’s heritage fall into disrepair and expressed interest in their pasts only when Hook revisited it to acclaim: 'The thing is, Bernard’s a twat and always has been,' he says. 'It’s all just business to them. This is the way their minds work. If a band splits each member walks away with their share. If you leave, you walk away with nothing. So it’s always been in their interests to say, well, Hooky is volatile, he walked out, he wanted to do this rip-off Joy Division thing and we wouldn’t let him. No, we split up over a long time because we grew apart.

'I much preferred it when we did everything for love, because it’s shit being a grown-up and dealing with all this petty penny-pinching. It’s just a fact of life, bands make their best records when money isn’t an issue, because no fucker has any.'

The legacy of Hook’s past confronts him in hauntingly, typically Joy Division ways too. His son Jack (has there been a name more piratical than Jack Hook?) plays bass in The Light; as does Hook, though he concentrates on the vocals. 'Because no other bastard can do them right. It was Rowetta from the Happy Mondays said to me, they’re all shit, Hooky, do them yourself.' Jack is currently 23, Hook’s age when Joy Division made Unknown Pleasures. 'He’s got the same kind of stance as me, the same aggression,' Hook says. 'I look over at him when we’re playing sometimes, he’ll be doing a riff I wrote way back then. Let me tell you, until you’ve experienced that you don’t fucking know what spooky means…'

I promise to make you so alive that the fall of dust on furniture will deafen you. Nina Cassian
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ROCKET MICK on 27/11/2012(UTC)
Andy  
#15 Posted : 27 November 2012 06:50:49(UTC)
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He actually referred to the current incarnation as "New Order". Progress.
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ROCKET MICK on 27/11/2012(UTC), Eimi on 27/11/2012(UTC)
effect returned  
#16 Posted : 27 November 2012 13:50:09(UTC)
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Quote:
If a band splits each member walks away with their share. If you leave, you walk away with nothing.


a slip here im sure.

Quote:
No, we split up over a long time because we grew apart.


So essentially its a split because hooky decided on his own that they grew apart (nothing in writing id say) and that they all happen to be playing together now without him and happy doing so, writing new material to be petty?

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ROCKET MICK on 28/11/2012(UTC)
UpDownTurnAround  
#17 Posted : 27 November 2012 23:19:59(UTC)
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effect returned wrote:
Quote:
If a band splits each member walks away with their share. If you leave, you walk away with nothing.


a slip here im sure.

Quote:
No, we split up over a long time because we grew apart.


So essentially its a split because hooky decided on his own that they grew apart (nothing in writing id say) and that they all happen to be playing together now without him and happy doing so, writing new material to be petty?



Helpful for the what im presuming is a court case though in a FFs let new order release the sirens kind of way...

P.s. anyone considered an application under the freedom of information act to find out what is going on ~allegedly- in the courts?

...on 2nd thoughts, don't bother, god knows how many more new interviews that could spawn.
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ROCKET MICK on 28/11/2012(UTC)
El Jarvo  
#18 Posted : 28 November 2012 01:02:24(UTC)
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Linus Solanki wrote:
Next year they move onto the corpus of New Order: 'At their last gig New Order played 23 songs,' he notes. 'We do 26!'


Think he's got his facts wrong here - New Order haven't done 23 songs in any gig, they haven't even played 23 different New Order songs across all their gigs in the past year!! Laugh Frown

Wonder what his 26 are? All of Movement and PC&L ... still needs another 10 though?

Ceremony, IALP, Procession, EGG, Temptation, Hurt, Mesh, Cries & Whispers, Blue Monday, Confusion?

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ROCKET MICK on 28/11/2012(UTC)
tapebias  
#19 Posted : 28 November 2012 01:56:03(UTC)
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No one's mentioned the shirt that he's wearing in that interview. I suppose it's suitable for someone in the cabaret biz.

He sounds like a bitter old dinosaur. Nurse!
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ROCKET MICK on 28/11/2012(UTC)
Linus Solanki  
#20 Posted : 28 November 2012 04:56:10(UTC)
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http://www.nme.com/nme-v...y-division/1990415188001

Peter Hook tells the stories behind some of Joy Division's greatest songs, including 'Love Will Tear Us Apart', 'Transmission' and 'Atmosphere'.
I promise to make you so alive that the fall of dust on furniture will deafen you. Nina Cassian
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ROCKET MICK on 28/11/2012(UTC), 79order on 28/11/2012(UTC)
Linus Solanki  
#21 Posted : 28 November 2012 06:29:30(UTC)
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http://www.theargus.co.u...eter_Hook_And_The_Light/

Former Joy Division and New Order bass player Peter Hook has spoken about one of the great unanswered questions in rock music history.

Why did Ian Curtis take his own life?

“I wish I bloody knew. I really do,” he tells The Guide. “I was looking for the answer when I wrote the Hacienda [How Not To Run A Club] book. I thought everyone else was to blame for the cock-ups there that cost me my pension fund, but I realised when I wrote it that I was as much to blame as anybody.”

Buoyed by the success of that book, which has sold 85,000 copies, he penned another biography, Unknown Pleasures: Inside Joy Division, which takes in his life from birth up until Joy Division and Curtis’s death.

Again Hooky found himself asking the elusive question.

“Unfortunately, I didn’t find the answer to that question. I never found out and I still have to suffer the guilt I felt first time round.”

And the searching had him looking inwards once more.

“I should have stopped him. I should have been able to step back. But I wasn’t the oldest there, I wasn’t the most experienced and I certainly wasn’t the wisest. So you realise it was a combination of us all being stupid and not being worldly enough to take his illness more seriously.”
Curtis was 23 when he hanged himself with a washing line. The singer was plagued by epilepsy and struggled to balance his musical ambitions after his marriage to Deborah Woodruff and subsequent fatherhood – especially after he had become close to journalist Annik Honoré.

That so much is written about Joy Division and they are so well-loved given they only released two studio albums (one of which, Closer, was released after Curtis’s death) is testament to the enduring appeal of the songs and story.

But Hooky reveals he became sick of reading the tale written by people who weren’t there.

“It’s got quite a rock and roll ending but it is a unique story. Joy Division only existed for two and a half years and we were only professional for six months – if you can call being professional being on seven quid a week.”

Hooky and Joy Division guitarist Bernard Sumner plus drummer Stephen Morris formed New Order from the band’s ashes to keep the Joy Division flame alive. Keyboardist Gillian Gilbert completed the line-up.

“Joy Division’s music has grown and grown in popularity and there are more Joy Division fans now, a million times more than when Ian died, and that enduring legacy and heritage needs celebrating.”

Another prompt to write his side of the story developed when a celebrity gig in Macclesfield to commemorate 30 years of Curtis’s death fell through.

“Before New Order split up it was alright to ignore Joy Division. But once I was outside of it I kept thinking, why did we ignore it? When the planned celebrity gig in Macclesfield came along I thought f*** it, I’ll do it myself.

“I got so frustrated that it fell through and we’d never done anything for Ian in Macclesfield. I thought right, I’m not going to let it go.”

The idea was to do one show and play Unknown Pleasures, Joy Division’s debut, in its entirety.

Hooky was inspired by Bobby Gillespie deciding to do a run of dates playing Primal Scream’s Screamadelica but was well aware it’s easy to become a tribute band to yourself, “which somehow seems distasteful”.

Other national treasures have gone down that road, including the biggest of them all, Paul McCartney.

“To me, New Order seem like a tribute band. Because you are playing a set of the greatest hits it seems a bit weird. Really, I was thankful when Bobby gave me the idea to play the LP in full because it feels a bit more artistic and diligent and exciting because you are taking a chance doing it.”

The rows with New Order’s Bernard Sumner continue and Hooky compares their relationship to a divorce.

“The friends always run about for a bit then decide who they are going to go to, and Stephen [Morris] went with Bernard. He stayed with the goose that laid the golden egg, if you like.”

The conflicts contrast with his experience in Joy Division.

“Joy Division was a fantastic group and we always played well and never had any problems playing as group. We only had problems being in New Order, it was like a table with a wonky leg.”

The reputation for being unpredictable was because they lost Curtis.

“Gillian tried to fill the gap but it took a long time before the three of us got used to being a group again.”

There were similar nerves when he decided to do Unknown Pleasures in full. But one show became two and the offers soon rolled in from abroad. Now, with his band The Light, there is an extensive UK tour.

Hooky is frontman and singer and his son plays bass.

“He’s the nearest anyone can get. There is a certain purity having him on bass and me singing – it keeps it in-house.”

The 56-year-old credits Mancunian super-producer Martin Hannett with turning him into a bass- playing version of a lead guitarist.

He encouraged Hooky to buy some decent amps once he’d decided on the bass, on the basis that Bernard already had a guitar and you didn’t have two guitars in a punk band.

Hannett also had the brainwave of sticking the bass upfront in the sound and used subtle tricks with delay to conjure Unknown Pleasures’ ominous atmosphere and ambience.

“I just wanted to sound like the f***ing Sex Pistols, I wanted to rip everybody’s head off ’cos that’s what I was. I was an angry young man. And Martin turned us into wonderful music – I suppose you’d have to call it AOR – but I just wanted to last for five minutes and rip your head off.”

Despite Hooky’s youthful attitude, the band wrote the songs and Hannett did the sound.

“He really did have a master plan but at the time I didn’t get it. Listening back to Unknown Pleasures in depth, I was blown away. He gave us a gift. He led that record and gave it the power to last for ever and we can’t thank him enough.”

I promise to make you so alive that the fall of dust on furniture will deafen you. Nina Cassian
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79order on 28/11/2012(UTC), ROCKET MICK on 28/11/2012(UTC)
Andy  
#22 Posted : 28 November 2012 07:16:23(UTC)
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El Jarvo wrote:
Linus Solanki wrote:
Next year they move onto the corpus of New Order: 'At their last gig New Order played 23 songs,' he notes. 'We do 26!'


Think he's got his facts wrong here - New Order haven't done 23 songs in any gig, they haven't even played 23 different New Order songs across all their gigs in the past year!! Laugh Frown

Wonder what his 26 are? All of Movement and PC&L ... still needs another 10 though?

Ceremony, IALP, Procession, EGG, Temptation, Hurt, Mesh, Cries & Whispers, Blue Monday, Confusion?



Hooky seems to be stating (incorrectly) the total quantity of songs played without differentiating between Joy Division & New Order tracks. While The Light gigs are clearly longer, the average length of New Order tracks exceeds that of Joy Division's so track quantity isn't as relevant.

At the last gig in Toronto, they played 14 New Order tracks, and 4 Joy Division tracks.

Since 2011, New Order have performed 19 different New Order and 7 different Joy Division tracks.

Edited by user 29 November 2012 18:03:46(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

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ROCKET MICK on 28/11/2012(UTC)
El Jarvo  
#23 Posted : 28 November 2012 09:18:08(UTC)
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Andy wrote:
At the last gig in Toronto, they played 14 New Order tracks, and 4 Joy Division tracks.

Since 2011, New Order have performed 19 different New Order and 7 different Joy Division tracks.


Is this gonna be one of those debates over Ceremony? Laugh

Toronto - 15 & 3

2011/12 - 20 & 6






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Andy on 28/11/2012(UTC), ROCKET MICK on 29/11/2012(UTC)
Andy  
#24 Posted : 28 November 2012 10:05:59(UTC)
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El Jarvo wrote:
Andy wrote:
At the last gig in Toronto, they played 14 New Order tracks, and 4 Joy Division tracks.

Since 2011, New Order have performed 19 different New Order and 7 different Joy Division tracks.


Is this gonna be one of those debates over Ceremony? Laugh

Toronto - 15 & 3

2011/12 - 20 & 6



I expect so...
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ROCKET MICK on 29/11/2012(UTC)
effect returned  
#25 Posted : 28 November 2012 10:37:57(UTC)
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UpDownTurnAround wrote:
effect returned wrote:
Quote:
If a band splits each member walks away with their share. If you leave, you walk away with nothing.


a slip here im sure.

Quote:
No, we split up over a long time because we grew apart.


So essentially its a split because hooky decided on his own that they grew apart (nothing in writing id say) and that they all happen to be playing together now without him and happy doing so, writing new material to be petty?



Helpful for the what im presuming is a court case though in a FFs let new order release the sirens kind of way...

P.s. anyone considered an application under the freedom of information act to find out what is going on ~allegedly- in the courts?

...on 2nd thoughts, don't bother, god knows how many more new interviews that could spawn.


court transcripts are availible as a paid subscription based podcast on nostalgia fm with the added bonus of being remixed by hooky himself.
thanks 1 user thanked effect returned for this useful post.
ROCKET MICK on 29/11/2012(UTC)
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