Some stories in music you hear retold so often you wonder if there could possibly be anything left to tell. Take the legend of cult Mancunian post-punk quartet Joy Division, for example, and their phoenix-like reincarnation as hedonistic electronic art-rock trailblazers New Order. A tragi-comic chronicle recounted so many times so many different ways over the last 40 or so years it has ascended into the larger-than life stratosphere of music mythology.
Two biographical films – Michael Winterbottom’s 24 Hour Party People (2002) and Anton Corbijn’s Control (2007) – each put their own spin on the fable of how four lads from Manchester became inspired by a Sex Pistols concert in 1976 to form a band whose steely, gloomy sound would echo forever.
Both films go on to show how, following the suicide of singer Ian Curtis in 1980, the three surviving Joy Division members – guitarist Bernard Sumner, bassist Peter Hook and drummer Stephen Morris – reassembled together with keyboardist Gillian Gilbert to begin again as a group arguably even more groundbreaking.
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There have been books by all from Hook to Curtis’s widow Deborah Curtis and journalist Paul Morley, as well as innumerable TV and radio documentaries. Because I can’t seem to get enough of this kind of thing, I recently finished listening to the podcast Transmissions: The Definitive Story of Joy Division and New Order. Deeply researched and lovingly constructed by production company Cup & Nuzzle, it gave me more fresh insight than I could have anticipated.
A lot tends to get lost in all the merry mythmaking around two of Manchester’s finest bands – much of it seeded by the silver-tongued devilry of their storied label boss, Factory Records’ Tony Wilson. Chiefly, the specifics of New Order’s rise to briefly becoming one of the most important bands on the planet. A tale so outlandish, wonderful and hilarious it scarcely needs creative embellishment.