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Authors: Peter Hook

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‘But I’m prepared to put up with the music for the dead-genuine people,’ she enthused. ‘I just love it so much.’

The club put the Broken Glass Crew on the road as part of a Haçienda-sponsored tour, along with Quando Quango and Greg himself: our attempt to bring the experience of being at the club to the rest of England. I’ve no idea how well it did, but I can imagine it didn’t work. Change comes slowly; you have to seduce people. Look at the club nights during the early years – very few people attended because nobody knew the music.

As a money-making venture the club was still a failure, but little did we know that we were helping to create today’s whole bloody DJ culture by paying the DJs to be exclusive to our club.

I myself have always been cynical about DJs. I thought they were overpaid, arrogant twats. So when I became one I fitted in perfectly. These days someone like Carl Cox can charge a fortune to appear. One New Year’s Eve he earned a million for performing at one party, then flew over the dateline and headlined somewhere else for another million. That culture would never have occurred without the Haçienda. We’re responsible for it. We got people into the mindset of appreciating DJs as stars /entertainers in their own right,which was mainly down to Rob, who was very forward-thinking that way. He always talked about opening a Haçienda DJ agency because very early on he realized the power that a good one could wield. ‘DJs are the next big thing, the next superstars who we should nurture,’ he’d say, and he was putting on house-music nights way before the dance-music explosion. He just couldn’t get people into it at the time, was too far ahead of the curve. Along with Mike Pickering, he was always on to something new well before it went mainstream.

As a band our biggest education came from the record producer Arthur Baker.Michael Shamberg,who produced our videos and ran the Factory USA office in Manhattan, said to Rob, ‘This Arthur Baker is great. Get New Order hooked up with him’, so we flew to New York to record in his Shakedown Studios.

Arthur Baker was the
crème de la crème
of New York producers. He was like a cuddly, fun version of Martin Hannett. Through Arthur, we discovered hip hop and dance music: Freeze’s ‘A.E.I.O.U.’, Grandmaster Flash, Afrika Bambaata. Arthur was right on it. He was an electronic punk and at first it was terrifying working with him. It was the first recording session we’d ever done without writing anything beforehand. But ‘Confusion’ turned out great. He taught me to love making electronic music.

This was the year in which the Happy Mondays first played at the Haçienda, in one of the regular Battle of the Bands competitions organized by Pickering. It was their second-ever performance, it was a complete shambles, and they came last in the competition. However, the bassist, Paul Ryder, was Peter Hook’s postman, and according to Hooky, ‘He always slipped demo tapes through my door. It was when I got a tape of ‘The Egg’ that I passed one along to Tony Wilson. The Mondays came from Little Hulton (like me), I was really up for giving them a chance so I was livid with Tony
when he gave the job of producing them to Barney. They ended up being the only other successful act on Factory.’

This was the year the Smiths broke, and they played the Haçienda three times, the first supporting 52nd Street in February. They were back, headlining, in July, when the stage was strewn with flowers – the beginning of what would come to be a vital part of the Smiths’ image and identity. ‘They’re symbolic for at least three reasons,’ Morrissey told
Sounds
.‘We introduced them as an antidote to the Haçienda when we played there; it was so sterile and inhuman. We wanted some harmony with nature. Also, to show some kind of optimism in Manchester, which the flowers represent. Manchester is semi-paralysed still. The paralysis just zips through the whole of Factory.’

By the time the Smiths returned to the Haçienda in November the place was full of customers (this and the New Order gigs were the only times the Haçienda sold out during its first two years) and full of flowers, producing a memorable atmosphere for what would later be regarded as one of the club’s best-ever gigs. Not least among those who considered it so was Tony Wilson, who told writer Johnny Rogan: ‘It was one of the great moments in the Haçienda’s history. I was proud. There have been certain great gigs in Manchester’s history:the Eagles at the Palace,Lou Reed at the Free Trade Hall, Joy Division at the Derby Hall, Bury. These are concerts you always remember, and the Smiths at the Haçienda was one of the great gigs.’

It might have become part of music history but I didn’t see the Smiths at the Haçienda, though I did catch them by accident when they supported Richard Hell at Rafters. I wasn’t impressed, but I’m too competitive so I’ve always been very anti-Smiths right from the word go – probably because I thought that musically they sounded very twelve-bar rock ’n’ roll, the antithesis of what I liked. For that reason I wouldn’t go and see them. That said, if I’m honest, it was obvious how good they were, and how big they were going to be.

I like the Fall. Always have, and they played at the club loads of times. I think Mark E. Smith is a twat, though. A right obnoxious bastard. And he’s proud of it. One of his ex-girlfriends told me that he sometimes has for breakfast Guinness and cornflakes with his favourite stimulant sprinkled on them. He denies this, which is quite funny. Must be why you’ve got such great teeth, Mark. We’re great friends.

I remember when OMD played; they sounded great because they
had a huge PA and blasted the bad acoustics out of the place. Their lights were stunning,too.Must have cost a fortune,but it added up to a great show.

If the Haçienda filled up you’d get an excellent gig, despite the bad sound, because of the atmosphere; the crowd worked as a sound baffle, cutting down the echoes, improving the acoustics a lot. But at poorly attended shows you had few people and thus bad sound, one compounding the other. It was an awful predicament.

Some of the most interesting concerts were largely ignored by the Manchester population and turnouts for some gigs could be really bad.

John Cale comes to mind. One of my heroes. I love his work with the Velvet Underground and the record he produced for Nico,
Chelsea Girls
, and his solo stuff.

I got into his solo material before I discovered the Velvets, whereas for most people it’s the other way around. It happened when I was working at the docks in the 1970s.I worked in the canteen part-time during dinner, selling meal tickets. I ate free because of it; I was skint at the time so this was a great incentive. Anyway, the guy who worked during the lunch hour loved John Cale, weirdly a massive fan. Through talking to him on our five-minute changeover between shifts, I ended up borrowing all his LPs. From then on I was a massive Cale fan too. That’s why the evening at the Haçienda pissed me off so much: it was a fantastic performance, but just forty people turned up.
And
most of them talked all the way through the show. Cale played piano and acoustic guitar,and the music was very quiet.All the chatter drove me insane. Marc Riley from the Fall – a radio presenter now – was as incensed as I was and we walked through the crowd, poking them telling them to shut up.

Cale lived in Manchester with Nico for a while in the 1990s. I never met him but he’d been suggested to produce New Order a couple of times, though nothing came of it.

Nico herself played her last gig at the Haçienda, in 1986. Another Factory band,Stockholm Monsters,were on tour with her at the time. At this point she was living in Manchester with the promoter Alan Wise. She used to say – in her flat, German accent – ‘Hello, Peter, how are you?’

‘I’m fine. Are you all right, love?

‘Yes. But I hate Alan. He’s a cunt.’

She forever went on about how she despised Alan for always trying to fuck her up the arse. He loved her, but Nico was a long-term drug addict and addicts are just not interested in sex. The drugs rob you of your libido.

She was a very grumpy and miserable lady.Hardly surprising,really – she’d gone from Jim Morrison in LA to a bedsit in Prestwich.

Whenever New Order weren’t in the studio or on the road I worked as a humper at the Haçienda – looking after the visiting band’s gear and PA – for a tenner a night to supplement my income. Ironic, really, considering how much of my money the club was losing every night. Then I got put in charge of backstage security, aided by members of the Stockholm Monsters: Slim, Chop, Ged, Shan and Tony.

I did live sound for the Monsters – I toured with them for two or three years – and I produced their records, so it was easy for us to work together and we were a great team.

We had a right laugh. I enjoyed doing the shows and I liked lording it over the bands. Naughty, I know. Like the time I threw out Pete Murphy of Bauhaus for saying those six immortal words to Slim when he’d forgotten his backstage pass: ‘Don’t you know who I am?’

‘Ha, ha, yeah, I do,’ I said. ‘You’re out, arsehole.’

The tour manager begged us to let him back in, so we relented. Pete Murphy still remembers it – he mentioned it to me when I DJed for him at an aftershow in 2008. How embarrassing. The Bauhaus gig was a good one, though. After we let Pete back in, that is. I remember pissing myself laughing because the bass player left his shades on during the show to look cool. Then, pissed up, he played ‘Bela Lugosi’s Dead’ on the wrong string on a fretless. I’m glad it wasn’t just me that sort of thing happened to.

Working security was great because I got to watch the bands from the stage.The fact that I was part-owner of the club meant nothing to me – what I was really thrilled about was being on stage with the bands.

The Birthday Party,in particular,ranked among my favourite groups of all time. One of the few bands I wished I had been in. Tracy Pew was my hero. They had a great image and the music was wonderful. They were my type of musicians, to be honest.

When they split in 1984, Nick Cave went on to form Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds (although they were called Nick Cave and the Cavemen
for a while). They played the Haçienda that year. I worked on that night, too. I’ll always remember that somebody rolled a dimpled pint pot onstage, Nick Cave punched it and smashed it into pieces. I was well impressed.It must’ve hurt,but he didn’t show it.Pure class.

Another favourite were Bow Wow Wow. Rob and I had seen them at the Red Parrot in New York in September 1980 (this was during New Order’s first tour of America and was the night after our first gig at Maxwell’s, New Jersey, where we had all our gear stolen) and liked them a lot. As a group, they were very, very impressive: the bassist, drummer and guitarist were fantastic,and everybody loved the singer, Annabella Lwin. But they had the most obnoxious road crew I have ever met, a right bunch of bigmouth cockney bastards, and I don’t know how we kept our tempers that night. They kept stage manager Terry Mason very busy.

Those gigs were well attended, but other times it was patchy. We fell foul of the usual attitude promoters have, which is, ‘If we put one band on tonight, we’ll attract 400 punters. If we put three on, we’ll get 1200.’ But it never worked like that. The same 400 people liked all three bands so we could never pull a bigger crowd – it was always the same people. We lost a lot more on the less popular gigs than we made on the successful ones.

We had a few rap concerts;and,despite the reputation they’ve got, none of them were ever heavy. I don’t recall every having trouble with rap shows – or any shows – at the Haçienda, except a shitty Jesus & Mary Chain gig in 1985 I’ll tell you about later. By the mid-1980s, though, rap shows didn’t work. We’d haemorrhage money on them, so Rob stopped booking them, and they’d find deals elsewhere.

 
 
JANUARY
Friday 14th
The Kray Twins; Dog Musicians
Friday 21st
James; Discobolisk
Monday 24th
Kurtis Blow
Wednesday 26th
New Order
Set-list: ‘Your Silent Face’, ‘Temptation’, ‘Ceremony’, ‘Leave Me Alone’, ‘Denial’, ‘586’, ‘Age of Consent’, ‘Blue Monday’
Friday 28th
Chameleons; Foreign Press
FEBRUARY
Thursday 3rd
Section 25
Friday 4th
52nd Street; the Smiths
Set-list (the Smiths): ‘These Things Take Time’, ‘What Difference Does it Make?’, ‘The Hand that Rocks the Cradle’, ‘Handsome Devil’, ‘Jeane’, ‘What Do You See in Him?’, ‘Hand in Glove’, ‘Miserable Lie’
Thursday 10th
Fad Gadget
Friday 11th
Jo Boxers
Wednesday 16th
Divine
Friday 18th
Animal Nightlife
Wednesday 23rd
Pigbag
Thursday 24th
The Birthday Party
(Most of this show, plus the show the previous year, was released on video as Pleasure Heads Must Burn.)
MARCH
Wednesday 2nd
The Virgin Prunes
Thursday 3rd
Eurythmics
Wednesday 9th
The Pale Fountains
Thursday 10th
John Cale
Tuesday 15th
Spear of Destiny
Wednesday 23rd
The D Notes
Wednesday 30th
The Undertones
APRIL
Monday 4th
Orange Juice
Thursday 7th
Big Country
Wednesday 13th
Clock DVA
Thursday 14th
The Durutti Column
Wednesday 20th
The Gun Club; Sisters of Mercy
Thursday 21st
Klaus Schulze
MAY
Wednesday 4th
Little Steven & the Disciples of Soul
Thursday 5th
Vicious Pink
Wednesday 11th
The Box
Friday 13th
Prince Charles & the City Beat Band
Wednesday 18th
Secret Seven
Friday 20th
FIRST YEAR ANNIVERSARY PARTY
Saturday 21st
SURPRISE SATURDAY
Tuesday 24th
Tales from the Newgate Calendar (play)
Wednesday 25th
Tales from the Newgate Calendar
Thursday 26th
Robert Palmer
JUNE
Wednesday 1st
Tales from the Newgate Calendar
Thursday 2nd
The Bat Cave
Monday 6th
Tales from the Newgate Calendar
Wednesday 8th
Shriekback; Howard Devoto
Thursday 9th
Hey Elastica
Thursday 16th
Fun Boy Three
Friday 17th
Hunters and Collectors
Wednesday 22nd
Curtis Mayfield
Thursday 23rd
Set the Tone
Friday 24th
SAS
Wednesday 19th
A Certain Ratio; Quando Quango
JULY
Friday 1st
Matt Fretton; Porch Party
Wednesday 6th
The Smiths
Set-list: ‘You’ve Got Everything Now’, ‘Handsome Devil’, ‘Reel Around the Fountain’, ‘What Difference Does it Make?’, ‘Wonderful Woman’, ‘These Things Take Time’, ‘Hand in Glove’, ‘I Don’t Owe You Anything’, ‘Miserable Lie’, ‘Accept Yourself’
Friday 8th
FUNK Hewan Clarke; Colin Curtis
Tuesday 12th
Defunkt
Wednesday 13th
The Alarm
Thursday 14th
Howard Devoto; the Wake
Sunday 17th
Newgate 2
Wednesday 20th
New Order
Set-list: ‘Blue Monday’, ‘Age of Consent’, ‘Lonesome Tonight’, ‘Your Silent Face’, ‘Leave Me Alone’, ‘586’, ‘Denial’, ‘Confusion’, ‘Temptation’, ‘Thieves Like Us’, ‘In a Lonely Place’, ‘Everything’s Gone Green’
Friday 22nd
Jah Wobble
Wednesday 27th
The Fall
Thursday 28th
Animal Nightlife
AUGUST
Wednesday 3rd
Roman Holiday
Friday 5th
Lydia Lunch
Thursday 11th
Cabaret Voltaire
Friday 12th
The Peech Boys
Sunday 14th
SUNDAY BODEGA Andrew Berry
Wednesday 17th
Einstürzende Neubauten
Fri 19th
TRANSATLANTIC Greg Wilson
Saturday 20th
John Tracey; Greg Wilson
Thursday 25th
King; Gary Crowley
Sunday 28th
FUNK ALL-DAYER Mike Shaft; Colin Curtis; Greg Wilson; Jonathan; Clement Anderson; Paul Dixon; Carlos
Tuesday 30th
THE END: A NO-FUNK NIGHT John Tracey
SEPTEMBER
Thursday 1st
CLUB NIGHT Hewan Clarke
Friday 2nd
FUNK NIGHT Greg Wilson; Neutriment
Sunday 4th
Marc Berry
Tuesday 6th
THE END: A NO-FUNK NIGHT John Tracey
Wednesday 7th
Violent Femmes
Friday 9th
Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark
Sunday 11th
Marc Berry
Tuesday 13th
THE END: A NO-FUNK NIGHT John Tracey
Wednesday 14th
Brilliant
Sunday 18th
Marc Berry
Tuesday 20th
THE END: A NO-FUNK NIGHT John Tracey
Thursday 22nd
Sisters of Mercy
Sunday 25th
Marc Berry
Wednesday 28th
Beast
OCTOBER
Thursday 6th
Eddie and Sunshine
Friday 7th
Elvis Costello
Wednesday 12th
The Respond Package
Thursday 13th
John Foxx
Wednesday 19th
Alan Vega
Thursday 20th
Fad Gadget
Wednesday 26th
S.P.K.
Friday 28th
FUNK NIGHT Greg Wilson
NOVEMBER
Wednesday 2nd
Test Department
Sunday 6th
Sheer Image
Wednesday 16th
S.P.K.
Thursday 17th
Icicle Works
Saturday 19th
Frankie Goes to Hollywood
Wednesday 23rd
Divine
Thursday 24th
The Smiths; James
Set-list (the Smiths): ‘Handsome Devil’, ‘Still Ill’, ‘This Charming Man’, ‘Pretty Girls Make Graves’, ‘Reel Around the Fountain’, ‘Miserable Lie’, ‘This Night has Opened My Eyes’, ‘What Difference Does it Make?’, ‘Hand in Glove’, ‘You’ve Got Everything Now’, ‘These Things Take Time’, ‘This Charming Man’, ‘Accept Yourself’, ‘Hand in Glove’
Wednesday 30th
The Virgin Prunes
DECEMBER
Thursday 1st
China Crisis
Wednesday 7th
The Gun Club
Thursday 8th
Cocteau Twins
Set-list: ‘When Mama was Moth’, ‘The Tinderbox’, ‘Glass Candle Grenades’, ‘In Our Angelhood’, ‘From the Flagstones’, ‘My Love Paramour’, ‘Sugar Hiccup’, ‘Hitherto’, ‘Musette and Drums’
Wednesday 14th
Killing Joke
Thursday 15th
Spear of Destiny
Friday 16th
The Fall
Tuesday 20th
THE END: A NO-FUNK NIGHT John Tracey
Friday 23rd
ALAN WISE PARTY
Wednesday 28th
The Durutti Column
Thursday 29th
The Durutti Column
(unconfirmed)
Friday 30th
GINGER’S GOODBYE PARTY
BOOK: The Haçienda
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