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Saturday 1988-12-17 12:00:00 AM |
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Manchester, England, United Kingdom |
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G-Mex |
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N/A, Capacity: N/A |
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Order | Song | Notes |
1 | Touched by the Hand of God | |
2 | Ceremony | |
3 | True Faith | |
4 | Vanishing Point | |
5 | Every Little Counts | |
6 | Dream Attack | |
7 | Subculture | |
8 | Bizarre Love Triangle | |
9 | Age of Consent | |
10 | Temptation | |
11 | The Perfect Kiss | |
12 | Fine Time | |
From Paul Lester (Melody Maker 7/1/89)
"Ladies and gentlemen, Joy Division!" announces the compere. From restorative, prostrate desolation to unassailable dancendental alchemy, the Joy Division/New Order continuum is 12 years of mystical, blessed bliss and baffling, paradisial perfection. The substance of the critical vernacular is suspended in the faultless face of the New Order embrace. Songs, chorus, sound demonstrate the difficulty in communicating and expressing the ineffable, charged rapture experienced when exposed to the electric caress of New Order's sonic sorcery. Earthbound belief is swept aside in a collaboration between music and language that attempts to transcend the trammels of the two. "Touched By The Hand Of God" activates operations and liberates the senses with automatic intensity. Suddenly, we are in magical motion through the miracle of rock's most immaculate mystery maze, a stainless, steel-hard sequence of superior summits and Elysian peaks that is thrilling abandon, gorged on restless inspiration. New Order are three local lads and one lass who seem to have as little awareness of how in heaven they produce these phenomenally well-proportioned wonders as the rest of us plebeians. Bernard is the fabulous boy-angel that he was at ULU in 1981, the only man who actually suits that peculiar, Northern razorcut. Possessed of pop's most flawlessly pure voice-whisper, it makes a mockery of all those hideous belchers and grunters like Bono, Bruce, Bargeld or anyone who stupidly assumes that, to capture the candour and cancer of life's rich or wretched tapestry necessitates the wholesale evisceration of one's entrails. Start again, suckers. Albrecht's breathless vocal kiss says it all without even trying. His fragile, vulnerable intonation, set to New Order's supreme aural architecture, is a child playing with a nuclear reactor. Peter Hook switches to mad, axe maniac mould, his flailing pigtail bush a remarkable testament to the band's resolutely anti-fashion stance, and New Order heat our hearts with "Ceremony", reminding us that, approaching the third decade of their history, this is the single most consistent, constantly creative powerforce of the age. "True Faith" issues forth with the crystalline clarity of its vinyl counterpart, a svelte, lissom lovely. "1963" simply vies for the status, with precious few others, as the most gorgeous song in the English lexicon, Alrecht's pleading, yearning delivery burning a hole of honey in my head. New Order have the kind of unimpeachable pop sensibility that The Pet Shop Boys, for one of any million you may wish to hurl into the fray for argument's sake, would sell their slender souls for. Like Chic, the only other constellation to sculpt masterpieces from the stars with such controlled, classic grace, New Order realise that the most damagingly beautiful music must combine a European trance- disco bomb beat with mournful, melancholic chord formulations. This crying and dancing initiative has been pursued by Kraftwerk, Yello and countless American 12 inch imports. Tonight's two new sugar rushes exhibit the frightening facility with which New Order can elevate and excite. Miserable? you must be joking. This is the most uplifting, emotionally satisfying sound ever imagined. "Temptation" is a bolt of bright blue lightning streaking across the night sky. "Bizarre Love Triangle" is a waterfall-turned-treacle gushing from the galaxy into our lobes, while "Perfect Kiss" darts and dashes with fantastic finesse. "Fine Time" is the culmination that proves Acid House is something Bernard, Stephen, Gillian and Peter decided to invent one rainy teatime in Macclesfield when they had bugger-all else to do. A public celebration of Olympian proportions, New Order investigate private joy and personal sorrow more correctly, completely than any other group on the planet. They are the first and final word on all that funny, fiddly stuff between being born and keeling over for the last time. This is God's backing band, an indestructable collective sweeping through His Greatest Hits with quintessential, sensual delight. We can merely surrender unconditionally, stare up at them, struck dumb with awe at the almighty shadow that they continue to cast over Planet Rock as we career headlong into the Nineties. PAUL LESTER
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