Sunday, July 9, 2023

Deborah Curtis - Touching from a Distance (Ian Curtis and Joy Division)


Publisher: Faber and Faber Limited; Year: 1995; Format: Softcover book

Very recently when reviewing the Warsaw "An Ideal For Killing" LP I had mentioned that I was reading Deborah Curtis' book about her life with Ian and of course Joy Division. Since it's a short read I thought I better review it immediately before my memory lets me down and my brain's hard drive gets too overloaded with information nobody really needs to know, including myself. Back in 2007 when I moved to London from Switzerland I remember that the movie 'Control' was just about to come out and was highly anticipated by the movie and music press alike. It was then when I became more intrigued about Joy Division's history and music alike as I have to be honest but throughout the decades somehow I never caught on the hype about the band which in retrospect is a shame but then again it's never too late and it's not like I have missed some great re-union show because of the laziness on my part. A good while ago I read Jon Savage's "This Searing Light..." book about Joy Division and highly enjoyed it hence I can recommend that one if you want to get a good feel about those particular times in Manchester's music history. Deborah's book is much older than the Savage one and was recently given to me by my favorite local record store proprietor (Cheers Jerid!). In all fairness it's a great short read if you are interested in the relationship between husband and wife and really how conflicted it was from the very beginning. Of course one could say that with Ian having died the reader gets to hear just one side, but I have no doubt that Deborah did not see any reason to lie or exaggerate. To be very fair to her I did not find her tone to be condescending or unfair in any shape or form. Actually it is quite the opposite where Deborah clearly has a feeling that she and others could have helped to prevent the tragic death of Ian. What I found most fascinating about the book is Deborah's very detail oriented memory where she would remember exactly what happened on a certain day or night or what record Ian would be crazy about in the year 1975 for instance. If time travel was possible then going back to '70s Manchester would be a highly fascinating trip, albeit a depressing one in many ways. Judging from the book and how serious Ian was about music and the bands he adored it all makes sense why Joy Division sounded the way they did. One thing must be said and that is that Ian knew very early on that the band he was to front will stand apart from others and I think we all agree that Joy Division achieved that. Something I can read about over and over are those very early days of punk where a handful of people were in the know and aware that something was bubbling under the surface waiting to explode and Deborah's book gives you a really good idea as to how everything evolved in and around Manchester. Of course you also get Deborah's view about how Ian connected with Annik and eventually destroyed their marriage, and even there Deborah takes a very fair and distant approach. If you are interested in the history of Ian Curtis and Joy Division than this is a must-read, but even from an outsider point of view this is a great read about a very unique time period in music history. 

Hated - 4 Song EP and Pressure/Stereotyped 7" Single Reissues

Label: Meat House Productions; Year: 2021; Format: 45RPM 7" EP

If you are like me and love the early Southern California sound of bands like T.S.O.L, Agent Orange, Adolescents, Shattered Faith et al then you are in for a treat with Hated who hailed from Huntington Beach and released three 7"s in the very early '80s. As it goes with those records they cost in the hundreds and are collector items and unfortunately not to be heard by the vast majority of us punk record nerds. Luckily Meat House Productions has finally made these gems available again for everyone to be able to buy for a few bucks and that's just what the world needed. I sure as hell have come across Hated, but whether it was this Hated or another one, I really don't recall. The band really doesn't get much mentioned in all the books and documentaries on Southern California punk history that are out there now while they really should be up there with the likes I name dropped earlier on. Originally released on the band's own Stress Records in 1982 the four songs are nothing short of superb and had they been produced better and especially louder the record would be even better as it already is. Angst-ridden vocals combined with the typical surf music influenced punk guitar sound of Southern California and an equally aggressive yet melodic bass and drum sound are all the ingredients a perfect record needs and they are to be found in abundance on all four songs. My personal favorite is "Enemy", but in all fairness I could pick any of them. Brilliant EP!


Label: Meat House Productions; Year: 2021; Format: 45RPM Single

I don't know which of these two records came out first in 1982 but just like the 4 Song EP this two song single containing 'Pressure' and 'Stereotyped' is an absolute scorcher. Interestingly across the front cover from left to right the letters read in German "ich kann ihn nicht leiden", meaning I cannot stand him. Who the band was referring to is unknown to me but considering Hated were part of the early '80s hardcore punk contingent from Huntington Beach I imagine they had lots of enemies in the general population by just looking somewhat different from the rest. Hard to think that these days just about anyone walking down the Huntington Beach pier looks somewhat punky, well slightly exaggerated but not that far off from the truth me thinks. In comparison to the 4 song EP the two songs on this single are better produced and while they are stylistically very similar I cannot help to hear a bit more of an Angry Samoans vibe in both songs. Maybe I should mention that bass player Chalmer Lumary went on to join Vandals and I am not one hundred percent sure whether another member, Joe Wood, is the same person that would go on to front the second incarnation of T.S.O.L and married Jack Grisham's sister. Maybe someone out there knows? Hopefully I can find a copy of the reissue of the band's first record from 1981 and from what I saw on the Hated official FB page a new record is to come out on Puke'N'Vomit as well. Unfortunately Hated's singer Steve Reehl aka Steve Real passed away last year, RIP. Get these reissues while they last!

Cuckoos Nest Poster and Live Shot stolen from the band's FB page.