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A melon ball cocktail is made up of two-parts Midori liquor and one-part vodka, and topped off with orange juice. Theyâre absolutely lethal, and are responsible for an infamous New Order gig at Ontario Theater in Washington in 1983, which was the subject of a legendary ‘on the road’ NME feature for the band’s second album âPower, Corruption & Liesâ.
There was a mad scramble to the airport the day before in New York, former bassist Peter Hook â aka Hooky â tells us today, clearly tickled when asked about the article. When they arrived for their flight, manager Rob Gretton suggested they spend their cash on a very affordable breakfast or take advantage of a two-for-one deal on departure lounge cocktails. Of course they went for the latter.
âWe laid into vodka cocktails, and by three oâclock in the afternoon I was seeing triple,â Hooky chuckles down the phone. âMe, Steve [Morris, drummer] and Rob were arsehole pissed. They ended up dragging me out of my seat and putting me in the toilet. As we came in to land, I fell down with my feet blocking the door. I couldnât move and it took them about an hour to drag me out.”
Drummer Stephen Morris remembers: âWeâre lucky he actually made the gig. Surprisingly, I can remember that one!â So can Hooky, who has been sober since 2005. On that fateful evening, he was shoved in a cab to the venue, had a nap, woke up baffled as to where he was and went for a burger, only for a confused fan to walk in to the restaurant and tell him that his band were playing on stage without him, with Gretton attempting to fill in on bass duties.
It was a messy night â but one of many, and emblematic of the colour, chaos and adventure that surrounded the band at the time. âThat tour was probably one of the best we ever had,â Hooky admits.
These arenât the antics that you might have expected from the doom-mongers seen in post-punk pioneers Joy Division a few years earlier, now forever frozen in those monochrome images by Anton Corbijn and Kevin Cummins. As Morris tells us: âYou never think of Joy Division as a band who had any fun â even though we did have a lot of fun. The 21st Century perspective of us is that we were four dour young men living in basements. New Order was the complete opposite of that.â
After Joy Division frontman Ian Curtis took his own life in 1980, surviving members Hooky, Morris and guitarist and new singer Bernard Sumner brought in Gillian Gilbert on synth and guitar, rechristened themselves New Order and vowed to carry on â taking each day as it came and fumbling for a sound and identity of their own. It didnât come quickly. Their early singles and 1981 debut album âMovementâ, made with Factory Records producer Martin Hannett, didnât land well with fans or critics for being neither here nor there, not quite satisfying Joy Division purists or those who wanted something truly fresh.
âAs much I enjoyed âMovementâ musically, the process was a bit harrowing,â says Hooky. âHalf of the stuff was left over from Joy Division and the other half was us desperately trying to learn how to be half as good as Ian Curtis. It was a fraught process, to say the least.â
This was made only more fraught by promoters putting their former band name on tour posters, with fans showing up and protesting as New Order jammed through new songs and new sounds in a bid to find themselves. âPeople didnât want us to forget about Joy Division. Thatâs what we were trying to do,â says Hooky. âWe could have grieved for Ian for six months â we could have grieved for a year â but we thought that we would lose everything. As you get older you realise that you didnât have to rush.â
âPeople didnât want us to forget about Joy Division. Thatâs what we were trying to do” â Peter Hook
Soon, the band struck gold. While the pulsing electronica of stand-alone single âEverythingâs Gone Greenâ in 1982 was the start of them coming out of their cocoon, 1982âs dizzying, synth-pop euphoria of âTemptationâ is where their promise really started to bloom and they really became the band we know today. The tell-tale sign of the new material working was that it pissed off all the right people. âIt was really when Joy Division fans didnât like what we were doing, like with âEverythingâs Gone Greenâ and âTemptationâ that we knew weâd hit on something,â says Morris.
Gillian Gilbert agrees: âThatâs when we knew what we really wanted it to sound like. We then wanted to move it along in our own way rather than how a producer might want to. We were left alone and came up with our own sound. We went to live in London to record, which weâd never done before and meant we could concentrate more because we were in our own little world.â
With total control, the band toyed with synths and keyboards, experimenting with abandon to see where it would lead. Hot Chip frontman Alexis Taylor witnessed this approach up close and personal some decades later. âHaving worked with them, I can tell you that their fascination with synthesizers is really intense and amazing,â he tells NME. âThey were coming towards dance music as a post-punk band and they bridged that gap quite beautifully.â
At the time, it was daring. âIt was actually quite shocking to realise what these new machines could do â you were always in awe of them,â Hooky says, with Morris explaining how the whole process was an education: âWe got all this new musical equipment and just learned how it worked. Writing âBlue Mondayâ was an exercise in learning what we could do with it all.â
The stand-alone single âBlue Mondayâ may have started as a playful experiment, but it became the best-selling 12-inch single of all time and is now regarded as an all-time classic. Gatecrashing the charts upon release and earning the band a shambolic performance on Top Of The Pops (they opted to play live rather than mime to their âpunk credentials,â Hooky tells us), it preceded âPower, Corruption & Liesâ by a few months, introducing the planet to the band’s new Technicolour world. âIt was great, because âPower, Corruption & Liesâ was basically the first real New Order record,â says Morris. âItâs when we stopped being Joy Division and found a new direction through the means of technology and dance music.â
The record was met with universal acclaim. NMEâs Paul Du Noyer wrote that âthe music makes no pretentious claims for itself, nor does it labour after an impression of profundity. New Order are just getting on with it, simply, efficiently and enjoyablyâ. He wasnât wrong. From the kinetic post-punk of âAge Of Consentâ to the sci-fi atmospherics of âWe All Standâ and âThe Villageâ, via the Kraftwerk-indebted âEcstasyâ and elegiac masterpiece âYour Silent Faceâ, it marries a human warmth and energy with the polished shimmer of machines.
“If anyone saw a band like us, it might make them do something” â Gillian Gilbert
The words also feel direct and organic. âIt was the first time that Bernard wrote all the lyrics and found himself as a singer,â says Morris. âOn âMovementâ weâd all sweated blood and tried to write meaningful lyrics together and failed miserably. On âPower, Corruption & Liesâ… Bernard had found a way of singing and a style that really suited him. Who else would put “You caught me at a bad time / So why donât you piss offâ at the end of a song like âYour Silent Faceâ? You can tell weâre not being terribly serious.â
Itâs a balance that certainly captured the heart of Welsh electro-pop don Kelly Lee Owens, a superfan who declares it âan amazing fucking record” and adds: “everything about it is wonderful.
âGrowing up in North Wales, Manchester was the closest big city to me,â she tells NME. âI was only born in â88 myself, so I was a late-comer â but itâs one of those albums that gets played continuously no matter what. I was in Manchester when I was 17, slightly under-age and probably shouldnât have been in some clubs, but you do what youâve got to do, and I just remember dancing with my friends to these tracks before discovering the album.
âWorking in record stores after, I noticed that this was a record that would consistently sell. Weâd always be ordering it in every two weeks.â
Joining the dots between âPower, Corruption & Liesâ and her own acclaimed new album âInner Songâ, which received the full five-star treatment from NME, Owens explains how âit relates to connecting the dancier elements with the more indie nuancesâ as well as marrying âjoy and melancholyâ to really create a sense of space. âIt really spoke to me because they werenât afraid to go into those slightly more emotionally tense places sonically, but then make you move your body through that,â she says. âThatâs so fucking exciting.
âObviously a lot of people were influenced by Kraftwerk, but then New Order brought their northern, Mancunian energy to it. Itâs like dancing in the rain. Thatâs what I think about when I think of Manchester and New Order â those places shape you.â
âto have a woman like Gillian be a part of something like this was really inspiring” â Kelly Lee Owens
Owens is also keen to point how she wouldnât be where she is today without the shining light of one Gillian Gillbert: âHaving Gillian as the synth queen was fucking amazing, speaking as a woman in music. You canât be what you canât see, so to have a woman be a part of something like this and own her part was really inspiring. Women are often underrated, or their part is dismissed. She needs to be celebrated as the synth queen that she is.â
When NME puts this to Gillbert herself, she replies: âItâs weird â you never think of your work as part of history or influencing people. It was weird when I joined because nobody expected a girl to be brought into the band. They expected another singer. It got better in the â90s, but going to Japan in the â80s for a photo shoot was a real shock because they didnât want to talk to me. Theyâd say to the male members, âCan you tell her to move?â That was how they treated women in them days. I was just there in the background a lot of the time.
âIt always felt like you were doing special because not many women were playing keyboards or any instruments. If anyone saw a band like us, it might make them do something.â
Blending raw emotion with a danceable beat and futuristic sounds, New Order fired off a strand of DNA that can be heard through the fabric of electronica and pop into LCD Soundsystem, Daft Punk, Robyn, Lorde and beyond. Says Hooky: âThat marriage of rock and sequencers, acoustic instruments and electronic instruments â thatâs what makes up 90% of the music on the radio today, from rap to dance and any kind of music that youâd care to name. A lot of the bands who donât sound like Joy Division sound like New Order.â
Hot Chipâs Alexis Taylor adds: âItâs such an innovative and unusual record from an innovative and unusual band,â he says. âWhen you go back to it, you realise that they were very pioneering in combining melancholic, thoughtful, lyrics with the alien sound of synthesizers and the pulse of dance music and the darkness of where theyâd come from with Joy Division.
âItâs a strange hybrid, which then becomes the norm after a while. Lots of bands bridge those moods… I remember listening to it and being quite taken aback by how much LCD owed a debt to it 20 years later, so itâs still having an impact on future generations. Itâs a deep record.â
âPower, Corruption & Liesâ was New Orderâs first real taste of success. Now, 37 years and eight albums later, they remain an arena-filling household name with their influence immeasurable. The turn of the century and a post-punk revival saw Joy Division come back in vogue like never before, which led this album to eventually get the full appreciation it deserved.
âWhen you look at Joy Division now, weâre epitomised by black and white landscapes. âPower, Corruption & Liesâ has got colour in it” â Stephen Morris
Relations soon soured in the band sadly, with Hooky leaving New Order in 2007 before over a decade of legal battles. He now tours the back catalogue of his former bands with The Light, while New Order â having just shared the single âBe A Rebel’Â â are awaiting the COVID lockdown to lift so they can head out on an arena tour next year and start work on a new record. Still, their fondness of the memories from this game-changing record remain intact.
âThey were really heady days,â says Hooky. âYou felt like you were changing the world. Looking back on it, I think that Joy Division and New Order did change the world â culturally and musically. âPower, Corruption & Liesâ was our honeymoon period. Itâs quite heartwarming to realise what youâve achieved together. It makes the shit worthwhile.
âMy relationship with the others is so difficult, even today, that it makes you think that maybe someone should sit us all down in a room and play us this album together and go, âWhy the fuck are you arguing like this when you did this?â It was a wonderful achievement and it makes me feel immensely proud.â
Kelly Lee Owens sums up the record’s legacy: âIn the wider sphere, I think the album inspired people to be bolder and do what they wanted to do. Go and create something thatâs timeless in its own sense that mixes genres and mixes worlds. Weirdly, youâre still not really supposed to do that. People like to put you in boxes. Iâm not interested in that, and it didnât seem like they were either.â
Therein is the real lesson from âPower, Corruption & Liesâ: open up, let go and live a little.
â New Order release âPower, Corruption & Lies: The 2020 Definitive Editionâ on Friday October 2
The post âIt felt like we were changing the worldâ: inside New Order’s seminal âPower, Corruption & Liesâ appeared first on NME Music News, Reviews, Videos, Galleries, Tickets and Blogs | NME.COM.