Steve Guattery
Steve Guattery
originally posted by VLM:
Dollar to doughnuts she loves Air.
Somehow I don't think you mean the Threadgill/Hopkins/McCall trio - those guys were great.
originally posted by VLM:
Dollar to doughnuts she loves Air.
Putnam, please, please, please, please, please. Everything else was good. The Cure! Echo & the Bunnymen! XTC! Depeche Mode! etc. Video Killed the Radio Star!
originally posted by Todd Abrams:
As a fifteen-year-old I knew New Order before Joy Division. Thomas Manor at the corner of 8 Mile and Gratiot, a big swoop of hair in my eyes, dancing with the rich girls that rode up from Grosse Pointe for a little danger on a Sunday night.
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
Putnam, please, please, please,
originally posted by SFJoe:
It's the harmonic convergence with High Fidelity!
originally posted by Marshall Manning:
How many people would have even cared if Curtis hadn't committed suicide?
originally posted by Marshall Manning:
How many people would have even cared if Curtis hadn't committed suicide?
originally posted by Todd Abrams:
If you're suggesting that the appeal of Joy Division is the tragedy of their lead singer you only need to reference Mark Lipton's insightful post regarding the musical influence still showing up nearly three decades later.
originally posted by Marshall Manning:
I'm not going to pretend to know Mark's (or Lars') musical history, but not that many people listened to Joy Division when Curtis was alive. Like Jim Morrison, I think much of the attention was brought on after his death. While he may have been an "inspiration" for depressed goth bands since (is there really such a thing as inspiring depression?), I can't help but believe that a lot of the people who listened to Joy Division (whether musicians or not) were introduced to them after the bad was done.
Marshall, who had "Never Mind the Bollocks" on 8-track.