These extracts are from the great piece on the 'Stuff The Superstars' event in July 1979 in Belle Vue by Paul Hanley of The Fall fame, in their recommended Reformation! Webzine site.
Stuff The Superstars
By Paul Hanley
Nominally top of the
bill were The Distractions, who I’d previously seen supporting The Fall at
Kelly’s, a tiny venue in Manchester, and who were earmarked (if only by City
Fun) as the next big thing, though of course they never were. We (naturally) were ostensibly there to see The Fall,
although Joy Division were also a major attraction. They’d also made significant
headway since I’d seen them earlier (at Bowdon Vale youth club) and they were
on the verge of next big thingdom themselves.
City Fun Fanzine
was definitely Manchester’s magazine-du-jour (if magazine is the right word).
Sold at virtually every gig (as well as Virgin and Piccadilly
records) it occupied a hallowed status among the concert goers of Manchester.
It wasn’t a bad read either. Admittedly it was as humourless as
The Passage playing at a Funeral, but in its defence, they were humourless
times. Bands these days are so
desperate to convey their wit and sense of fun you tend to forget that in 1979
most bands (or certainly most Manchester bands) were primarily anxious
to convey their solemnity. The Joy Division of the NME and the Joy Division in
the cafĂ© next to Davidson’s rehearsal room were two very different
beasts, believe me.
[there then follows
reviews of the Glass Animals, Hamsters, Armed Force, Frantic Elevators, Joy
Division, Ludus, The Liggers and The Fall…]
The Distractions could
only ever be a footnote, after that, though it’s a shame their lovingly-crafted
pop vignettes never reached a bigger audience. The big problem was they never looked like the
part, the singer and drummer especially (respectively the wrong side of 34”
waist and 34 years old. It’s a tough gig
this pop malarkey.) They had a male
guitarist and a female bass player who wore matching outfits, I remember. They should have formed a duo, they looked
great. Interesting side-note - Legend
has it that there was once a cash crisis at Island Records and a last minute
meeting was called to decide whether to drop The Distractions or U2.
(They went with Distractions, by the way).
The evening (from the
walk to the venue onwards) was imbued with the kind of tension and unease that
you don’t get at gigs these days (or at least I don’t). The venue was filthy in the way that only
Manchester clubs in 1979 could be. The
sound was muddy, and to describe the organisation as amateurish is to be over
generous. One of the best gigs I ever attended, in summation. The Mayflower no longer exists, of course. The last gig I ever saw there was ‘Nik Turners
Inner City Unit’. On that occasion me,
Steve, Marc and Craig, and Bob and Moey from The Hamsters were the entire
audience. Shame there’s nowhere to put
the blue plaque."
(c) Paul Hanley at Reformation! Webzine.
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