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  • Alice Rawsthorn

    Design as an Attitude

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    Inscription

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    Ethnofuturismen

  • Owen Hatherley

    Trans-Europe Express: Tours of a Lost Continent

  • Markus Breitschmid

    Nicht-Referenzielle Architektur: Gedacht von Valerio Olgiati

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    Mars by 1980. The Story of Electronic Music

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    Dritte Natur: Technik Kapital Umwelt

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    Prompt: Socially Engaging Objects and Environments

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  • Jean Molitor

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  • Maura Reilly

    Curatorial Activism. Towards an Ethics of Curating

  • Vincent Meessen

    The Other Country. L'autre Pays

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    Flow. Interior, Landscape, and Architecture in the Era of…

  • Dexter Sinister

    A Short Account of the Library. (Everyday the Urge Gets…

  • Cassim Shephard

    Citymakers. The Culture and Craft of Practical Urbanism

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    The Artist As Producer, Quarry, Thread, Director, Writer,…

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    From Dwelling to Dwelling: Radical Housing Transformation

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    The Largest Art. A Measured Manifesto for a Plural Urbanism

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    Wars and Capital

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    New Commons for Europe

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    Automatic Architecture: Motivating Form After Modernism

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    Goodbye, World! Looking at Art in the Digital Age

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    The Outside can´t go Outside

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    Eco-Visionaries: Art, Architecture, and New Media after the…

  • Steven Shaviro

    Die Pinocchio Theorie

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    From Palaces to Pre-fabs: Pioneering Women Interior…

  • Bruno Giuliana

    Atlas of Emotion: Journeys in Art, Architecture, and Film

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    Unbuilding Walls: Vom Todesstreifen zum freien Raum/From…

  • Tom Dyckhoff

    The Age of Spectacle: The Rise and Fall of Iconic…

  • Isabelle Graw

    The Love of Painting: Genealogy of a Success Medium

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    European Art Book Fairs on the Shelf

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    Marcel Breuer: Building Global Institutions

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    When Artists Curate. Contemporary Art and the Exhibition as…

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  • Robert Barry

    Die Musik der Zukunft

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    Unruhig bleiben. Die Verwandtschaft der Arten im Chthuluzän

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    Feminist Spaces: Gender and Geography in a Global Context

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    Aber jetzt… denn Lieder bewirken viel. Smareazy 002

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    Marmor und Asphalt. Soziale Oberflächen im Berlin des 20.…

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    A Book About Colab (and Related Activities)

  • Giorgio Agamben

    The Adventure

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    All Gates Open: The Biography of Can

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    Grounds for Possible Music

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    Mies van der Rohe. Schlicht und ergreifend. Landhaus Lemke

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    Prose Poetry and the City

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    Ungehorsam der Probleme

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    Porous City: From Metaphor to Urban Agenda

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    Open Architecture: Migration, Citizenship and the Urban…

  • King ADZ, Wilma Stone

    This is Not Fashion: Streetwear Past, Present and Future

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    Planetary Echoes. Exploring the Implications of Human…

  • IDEA Magazine

    IDEA 381. Transboundary Design. Perspective of Yoshihisa…

  • William Davies (Ed.)

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    How to Love Brutalism

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    On Accident. Episodes in Architecture and Landscape

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    Das Design Thinking Playbook: Mit traditionellen, aktuellen…

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    The History of Animals. An Essay On Negativity, Immanence…

  • Roberto Simanowski

    Stumme Medien. Vom Verschwinden der Computer in Bildung und…

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    The Expulsion of the Other: Society, Perception and…

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    Russian Cosmism

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    Flintstone Modernism. Or the Crisis in Postwar American…

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    Machines and Robots (Edition Digital Culture 5)

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    Liquidation World: On the Art of Living Absently

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    Werkzeuge des Entwerfens

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    Generative Gestaltung: Creative Coding im Web Entwerfen,…

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    William Kentridge. Triumphs and Laments

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    Necessarily Eurometropolitan

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    The New Analog: Listening and Reconnecting in a Digital…

The North Will Rise Again. Manchester Music City 1976-1996

The Buzzcocks. Joy Division. The Fall. The Smiths. The Stone Roses. The Happy Mondays. Oasis. Manchester has proved to be an endlessly rich seam of pop-music talent over the last 30 years. Highly opinionated and usually controversial, stars such as Mark E. Smith, Morrissey, Ian Brown and the Gallagher brothers have always had plenty to say for themselves. Here, in John Robb's new compilation, Manchester's gobbiest musicians tell the story of the city's thriving music scene in their own words. When the Buzzcocks put on the Sex Pistols at Lester Free Hall in 1976, they kickstarted a musical revolution and a fervent punk scene exploded. In 1979 the legendary Tony Wilson founded Factory Records, the home of Joy Division/New Order and later the Happy Mondays. The Hacienda, the Factory nightclub, became notorious in the late 1980s as a centre of the influential Madchester scene, led by the Mondays and the Stone Roses, with a unique style and sound of its own. Then, from the ashes of Madchester rose uber-lads Oasis, the kings of Britpop and the biggest UK band of the 1990s. Full of great characters, fierce conflicts, untold stories and seething controversies, Manchester In Its Own Words is indispensable reading for any music fan. John Robb is a leading music journalist and the author of the bestselling biography of the Stone Roses. His other books include Punk: An Oral History, The Charlatans ...We Are Rock and The Nineties: What the F**k Was That All About?
Highly opinionated and usually controversial, stars such as Morrissey, Ian Brown and the Gallagher brothers have always had plenty to say for themselves. Here, in dozens of new interviews conducted especially for John Robb’s compelling new book, Manchester’s gobbiest musicians tell the story of the city’s thriving music scene in their own words. Full of great characters, fierce conflicts, surprising stories and seething controversies, The North Will Rise Again is indispensable reading for any music fan.
Armed with the sharpest hair and biggest brothel creepers in rock, John Robb crashed his way into music journalism firing off Robb’s Reports for Sounds while gigging with The Membranes in the late Eighties. Having always been a musician himself – he currently fronts Gold Blade – and being possessed of a rapid-fire wit and a thirst for pop culture, he made the ideal frontline reporter, picking up every new movement as it happened and coining phrases for them that have passed into the lexicon. At the London launch for this book at The Boogaloo on 13 May, interviewer Ann Scanlon, a former Sounds staffer herself, pointed out that it was John who not only invented ‘Britpop’ (“For the La’s,” John explained, “it was a play on the Britcore cover we’d had the week before, but it was where I thought we were headed next…”) but also ‘Grunge’ (“I used that word so much you kept having to sub it out of my copy…”).
A Blackpool native, John came of age in the Manchester of Buzzcocks and Joy Division, and his love for his adopted home city shines forth in this tome with a passion to rival Peter Ackroyd’s for London. “If Johnny Marr was wearing a certain coloured sock in a certain year,” he told the Boogaloo audience, “I want to know why.” This is his second oral history, the first being a blockbuster tome on punk to rival Legs McNeil and Gillian McCain’s classic US odyssey Please Kill Me, but charting the sonic progress of Manchester has done nothing to narrow his vision. Here is a book as brimming with enthusiasm and knowledge as the man himself – not to mention all the names you’d hope to hear from and plenty more who were crucial players but never got to have their say before.
Although the book is titled 1976-1996, John begins his journey in the coffee bars of the Sixties, when The Beatles were into Oasis – which was, at the time, the biggest venue for bands in Manchester – and DJ Roger Eagle began spinning the sounds of Black America that would come to be known as Northern Soul. The contents of his record collection would resonate down the years, firing “the city’s prime movers for decades”.
Indeed, obsessive collectors provide the wellspring of Manchester’s musical fecundity. “I… flicked back to a squat in Hulme in the early Eighties,” Tony Wilson reminisces. “ACR’s place or somewhere similar, and there on this floor with no carpet and little furniture were 200 albums. And in those albums will be the entire Parliament/Funkadelic catalogue, and 20 Brazilian samba albums, and German metal noise albums. That’s the key to all of this.”
Manchester’s architecture gives rise to further possibilities. “Tony Wilson and friends took over the old WISS, a West Indian bus driver’s club in Hulme, in the shadow of a crescent, and renamed it the Factory,” explains Gina Sobers. “We weren’t hip enough to link it with Andy Warhol’s organisation. It just sounded like an apt name for a club in an industrial wasteland…” As does its willingness to embrace the outsider, give succour to the freaks – and search for new ideas to devour. Pete Shelley and Howard Devoto’s epic journey to London to find The Sex Pistols and bring them back home is a magical confluence of coincidence and chutzpah that results in a rapid bloom of creativity not just in Manchester but throughout the whole of the North.
The trajectory may be familiar from the films 24 Hour Party People and Control, but Robb achieves some major scoops from his interviewees in this telling of the tale, perhaps the most important being the constant voices of Morrissey and Johnny Marr, describing their first teenage meetings at Slaughter and the Dogs gigs and their actual relationships to that overlooked band, and, with great poignancy, the moment of revelation that began The Smiths.
“…with Johnny it was instantly right and we were instantly ready,” says Morrissey of their first rehearsal. “I had no doubt that Johnny was the moment, and I was grateful that nothing had ever happened for me earlier on.”
“…my life and his just became unstoppable,” concurs Marr. “I had more than I hoped for and so did he, and our hopes were fucking high… but I still got more than I bargained for, and so did he.”
Smiths fans will find this book invaluable for reason alone that Robb has got more insight from this dynamic duo than any available biography of the band, a reflection of both his insider status and the depth of insight into of his subject. Aficionados of Buzzcocks, Magazine, Joy Division/New Order, Happy Mondays, Stone Roses and Oasis will likewise be delighted with the quality and quantity of the anecdotes evinced and documented here.


John Robb
The North Will Rise Again. Manchester Music City 1976-1996
Aurum Press, 2009, 978-1845134174