Title
FACTUS 10 Blue Monday
Reference
2019-261/2/2/11
Production date
01-04-1983 - 30-04-1983
Creator
- New OrderBiographyBiography
New Order formed in 1980, following the death by suicide of Ian Curtis, singer in Joy Division. After Curtis’s death, the remaining members of Joy Division re-formed as New Order.
The band’s first live performance was as a trio on 29 July 1980 at the Beach Club, Manchester. At the time, they had not yet decided on a name. In rehearsals, Bernard Sumner, Peter Hook and Stephen Morris took turns on vocals until Sumner eventually took on the role of singer. Sumner, Hook and Morris wanted to complete the line-up with a fourth member, and keyboard player and guitarist Gillian Gilbert joined the band in October 1980. As Morris’s girlfriend, Gilbert was well known by the band, and had played live with Joy Division. Gilbert’s first live performance with New Order was on 25 October 1980 at The Squat venue in Manchester. Her first recorded appearance with the band was a re-recording of New Order’s first single, ‘Ceremony’, with Gilbert on guitar. The re-recorded version was released in September 1981.
New Order incorporated dance rhythms and electronic instruments into their new wave sound and were one of the most influential bands of the 1980s. They became the star band on Factory Records. Their 1983 track ‘Blue Monday’ was the best-selling 12-inch single of all time.
Between 1981 and 2015, New Order released ten studio albums and 42 singles. Initially, New Order continued in the vein of Joy Division by not releasing album tracks as singles. From 1985 and the release of Low-Life, however, the majority of the band’s singles have been tracks taken from albums.
New Order temporarily disbanded in 1993 following the release of the album Republic and the financial collapse of Factory Records. Individual band members worked on their own projects – Sumner formed Electronic with Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr, Hook formed Monaco, and Morris and Gilbert concentrated on The Other Two, the side project they started in 1990. New Order reunited in 1998 at the suggestion of their manager Rob Gretton, meeting up first to make sure that they all still got on.
Gilbert left the band in 2001 to look after her children with Stephen Morris, and was replaced by Phil Cunningham on keyboards and guitar. Hook left New Order in 2007, following artistic differences with Sumner. Sumner put the band on a second hiatus in 2009, forming Bad Lieutenant with Cunningham. The 2011 New Order reunion saw Gilbert return on keyboards and Tom Chapman of Bad Lieutenant on bass.
Hook sued New Order in November 2015 for a fair share in New Order’s royalties, a legal dispute that took almost two years to reach settlement.
The band’s most recent studio album, Music Complete, was released in 2015. A recording of their live performance with Liam Gillick for the Manchester International Festival in 2017 was released the same year. The band toured extensively between 2018 and 2020.
- Saville, PeterBiographyBiography
Peter Saville is a British graphic designer and art director. He attended Manchester Polytechnic (now Manchester Metropolitan University) from 1975-1978 where he studied graphic design. He met local broadcaster Tony Wilson in 1978. Wilson commissioned Saville to design a poster for his Factory night at the Russell Club, Hulme. The poster became the first item in the Factory Catalogue. Saville was a Parftner in Factory Records along with Wilson, Alan Erasmus, Martin Hannett and Rob Gretton. He designed the record sleeves for many of the artists on Factory Records as well as stationery and other brand items for the company. He moved to London in 1979 and joined Dindisc as artistic director. He established his own studio, Peter Saville Associates, in the mid-1980s, working with Brett Wickens. He closed this studio in 1990 to join Pentagram. He moved to Los Angeles in 1993 to work for the advertising agency Frankfurt Balkind, but quickly returned to London where he re-opened his studio with Howard Wakefield. His design consultancy clients include Selfridges, Yohji Yamamoto, Stella McCartney and EMI. He became Creative Director of the City of Manchester in 2004.
Scope and Content
Single by New Order. 12-inch vinyl in die-cut and printed card sleeve. Sleeve design by Peter Saville. The outer sleeve resembles a 5.25-inch floppy disk. The inner sleeve is silver. The design uses a colour based code to present information about the track titles and Factory catalogue number. The code on the front of the outer sleeve reads FAC 73 Blue Monday And The Beach New Order.
Language
English
Level of description
ITEM
Repository name
Science and Industry Museum
Associated people and organisations
- Factory USBiographyBiography
Factory US distributed releases by artists on the British independent record label Factory Records in the United States. Set up by Michael H. Shamberg in late 1980 in partnership with Factory Records, the label had its own Factory Records-style catalogue numbers. As well as distributing Factory Records releases in the US, the label occasionally released US-only recordings, including the ACR track Do the Du (casse) in 1981, and organised live events, which were often filmed by Shamberg.
Conditions governing access
Open access.
Conditions governing Reproduction
Copying of this material is not permitted as the museum does not have the rights or facilities to provide copies.