Acklam
Hall, London (Thursday, 17May79): Factory Records contacted Final Solution to set up
Joy Divisions next London date, and Rob Gretton even had 100 or so special badges
made up by Better Badges London which read "Joy Division At The Acklam" (sic) (Fig.
19). Unfortunately, despite advertisements in the rock press and handbills passed out
at record shops, only about a hundred people (many of them rock journalists) turned out
for this Factory Night". Joy Division had been well-received in the small club
atmosphere of The Hope and Anchor and Marquee, but they were still not well enough known
to hope to fill a hall the size of the Acklam as headliner, especially with the support of
other Factory bands even more obscure than they were.
Bowdon Vale Youth Club,
Altrincham (Wednesday, 23 May 79):
Although this was part of
the Factory Tour, Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark did not show up at Bowdon Vale because
they thought that the stage really only a low platform in the cornerwould be
too small for a two-piece band, its equipment, and (in their case) fluorescent lights. At
one point during Joy Divisions set the stage lights went out, sending Ian into a
real flap. He had been hard at work learning to play the guitar and when it went dark he
could not see the chalk marks he had put on the neck to show him the chords. This gig was
one of the few times Joy Division played the Still version of "The Kill".
Royalty Theatre,
Holborn, London (Sunday, 17 Jun 79): With John Cooper-Clarke.
Unknown Pleasures (LP;
Fact 1 0/Factus 1; rec. Apr 79; rel. Jun 79):
1. Disorder 1. Shes Lost Control
2. Day of the Lords 2. Shadowplay
3. Candidate 3. Wilderness
4. Insight 4. Interzone
5. New Dawn Fades 5. I Remember Nothing
Joy Divisions debut was first issued
as FACT 10, and contained a message in the run-off groove which reads "This is the
way" (A) and "Step inside" (B) from the song "Atrocity
Exhibition". The American edition, FACTUS 1, reads "Ive been looking for a
guide" (B) (a variation on the lyric to "Disorder"). The sleeve of Unknown
Pleasures was Peter Savilles stark design (Fig. 20) which contradicted
many proper design principles and was the better for it. Everything on Factory is
designed, as opposed to decorated" (Saville, Sep 79). Record sleeves usually evolve
from ideas supplied by the band themselves the graphic on Unknown Pleasures being
suggested by Bernards discovery of the intergalactic scream of a dying star. The
group had originally suggested a white cover with a black inner sleeve but agreed with
Saville that the image would be stronger with a black cover. Having an "inside"
and an "outside" to the album "was a purely arbitrary design decision which
had to do with my having a black label on one side of the record and a white label on the
other side" (Saville, Sep 82). The photograph on the inner sleeve was given to
Saville by the band who had cut it from a book, and it wasnt until two years later
that Saville found that it was really a very famous picture by Ralph Gibson.
The Basement, Cologne, West Germany
(Tuesday, 15 Jan 80): The next stop on the tour more than made up for the
"disaster" at Antwerp the night before. The club in Cologne was situated in the
basement of an old church, and the stage on which Joy Division set up was between a set of
massive arches. The atmosphere of the concert was outstanding, the audience was made up of
crowds of German punks who were very enthusiastic about the bands music, and the
sound was greatly enhanced by the odd acoustics of the arched and vaulted crypt
Club Lantaren, Rotterdam, Holland
(Wednesday, 16 Jan 80).
Plan K, Brussels, Belgium (Thursday, 17
Jan 80) (Figs. 40-42).
Effenaar Eindhoven, Holland (Saturday,
18Jan80): During the end of "Ice Age", a group of English in the audience were
jeering Joy Division by chanting "One, two, three, four. Get them off and out the
door". Peter, not always known for massive under-reaction, quieted the boisterous
ones perfectly by playing the bass line from "Dead Souls", their next song, in
time with the shouts.
Club Vera, Groningen, Holland (Saturday,
19 Jan 80).
Kantkino Berlin (Monday, 21 Jan 80) (Fig.
43): "It was really strange when we went there with Joy Division.. . the
atmosphere.. strange.. . It was quite alot like Manchester... Berlin... It had a cold
atmosphere... Anonymous. . . an evil atmosphere. You could feel the evil... You could feel
it from the war" (Bernard, May 81). It is interesting to note that these European
gigs highlight the refusal of the band to play the same set every night. Often Steve made
up the proposed set list just prior to Joy Division going on stage, the group appears to
have freely transposed the playing order, and seems to have considered each song the equal
or near-equal to any other in their current catalogue. Returning to England on 23 Jan 80,
Joy Division took another short and well-deserved break from touring. Like the holiday
prior to the European jaunt, they used the time to write still more songs, including
"Incubation" plus "AsYou Said", "Heart and Soul", and
"Komakino" the last song being named in memory of the venue in Berlin (or for
the dance of the same name used by Japanese mediums to hypnotise their audience and cause
them to see visions). |