NEW ORDER ![]()
In the summer of 1980, Joy Division finally began to find commercial success find commercial success when the re-release of their magnificent signature song “Love Will Tear Us Apart” went to #13 on the U.K. charts. Just two days before Joy Division was to begin its U.S. tour, Ian Curtis was found dead.
When a long overdue retrospective of the band called Substance finally came out in 1988, one of the songs, “Atmosphere” got to #34 on the British charts, and the Spartan music video that played on the MTV program 120 Minutes made a deep impression on me as well. The moment when I found Substance at Schoolkids Records – located on Hillsborough Street across from the North Carolina State University campus – is one that is indelibly imprinted on my mind.
* * *
When its lead vocalist, Ian Curtis.was found dead, and after adding a keyboard player, the remaining three bandmembers in Joy Division dubbed themselves New Order and became a highly successful alternative rock band by combining the post-punk sound that they pioneered in their earlier band with elements of electronic dance music. Their 1983 hit, “Blue Monday” is the best-selling 12” single of all time. After a hiatus in the mid-1990’s and another about five years ago, New Order is still active and released an album last year, Lost Sirens.
(June 2014)
|