This is a reupload of the original video with some minor changes. If you've already seen it, you're not missing out by not watching again! MADCHESTER SPOTIFY PLAYLIST is available free via my patreon: patreon.com/trashtheory Also Official Trash Theory playlist - Spotify: tinyurl.com/yxp32pjf Deezer: tinyurl.com/y2mdp8h2
there's something funny about the original video being hit with a copyright strike from the record company that didn't give A Guy Called Gerald any of his royalties for Voodoo Ray
But sadly a few of them are dead, and one of them (Jon the Postman) was a good mate of mine in my College Days. Introduced me to pub locks ins, Derek Bailey (in person) and Anthony Burgess (also in person). Top fella, Jon. I wouldn't have swapped being a teenager in 1980s Manchester for anywhere and when I left for America (scholarship to the University of Michigan) my send off party was at the Hacienda :)
The same thing at the screen on the green Islington, l think were up to 3/4 of million people who were there watching the sex pistols I definitely wasn't there
I believe Chicago and Manchester are sister cities. In Chicago we were not just producing Acid House/Deep House or other House Sub genres in the 80’s. We had the harder edge Industrial Post Punk sound of Wax Trax. What Manchester was listening to in regards to House Music. We were listening to Manchester what we called Indie Rock bands… Chicago was not part of a mainstream Top 40 musical aesthetic. We were not so into Hip Hop or what later became early 90’s Grunge. Unlike other cities in the US. I remember wanting to go to England as an 18 year old because the DJs that went to spin in Manchester would tell us something huge was happening there. We knew all about Acid House pre-Rave parties before anyone else. We had our own smaller scale Acid House scene, but musically there was so much going on. We couldn’t just take one genre at a time. We had Italo Disco, Freestyle, Post Punk, Industrial, Acid House, Deep House, Detroit Techno, Chicago House, New Wave all going on at the same time. It was all Underground and it was a mix and match of the best from those respective music genres.
@@coughingbabie Yes Chicago born and raised 70's/80's kid. Honored and blessed to have witnessed and partied from the somewhat beginning of House, Industrial, Post Punk, early Rave, and early 90's Underground scene on the Northside. Lots of history and met some amazing artists and DJ's throughout the years. Front 242 last Chicago concert and local meet & greet events plus a Medusa's night original DJ's & Wax Trax memorabilia event was this weekend.
Ian would have thought it was funny to call them dance music. Lol New Order, sure. They shifted to what would make them popular. But clumping both together under the danceable label isn't effective.
Screw copyright, you are really doing an informative job on music culture. I might not know most of the artists you post here, but I still enjoy watching your content a lot and find out about cool music.
Fantastic... Graham Massey's father, Derek, was a senior manager with a telecoms company I started out with in Wythenshawe back when 808 State had their first hit. I'll never forget Derek saying to me, "Did you see Our Graham on Top of the Pops last night?" Proud as punch he was. Happy days.. Great documentary.
Yorkshire Raver here started in the Indie / House scene as a 16 year old in 88 and in 89 first visit with the lads to the Hacienda, fucking mental and my life changed forever along with everyone i know, for the worse and better.
I love that movie, seen it quite a few times. got me into the Mondays. although their ian curtis looked nothing like him lol. here's a good vintage doc about factory, it's cool to see the real people after watching the movie th-cam.com/video/IfNtvaCyx58/w-d-xo.html there's also a good channel 4 doc on happy mondays.
Best scene in that was cut out because a bloody Metrolink was going by in the background: ‘New Order??? You do know that sounds even more Nazi than Joy Division, don’t you???’
great movie ... one of my favourites. it only really tells the story of factory though which while a huge part of it - is nt the whole madchester story. theres still another film there i think to tell the whole story ... or a decent tv series
I followed all these bands while in High School in Los Angeles and College in San Francisco. The soundtrack to the best years in my life. Luckily got to see many of these bands live.
The smiths Salford not Manchester The charlatans not Manchester Joy division not Manchester Stone roses not Manchester Happy Mondays not Manchester Ect ect...
I've watched this video about a dozen or so times. I'm just so facinated as an American about how this music came about. How disco gave way to house, punk into alternative dance, jangle & indie pop, and the rave and drug explosion. The Stone Roses debut and Screamadelica have blown me away and I absolutely love some hits and deep cuts from The Charlatans and the Happy Mondays.
Somebody interviewing Tony Wilson asked him "Why do you think Manchester produces such varied and inventive music?" "Because kids in Manchester have the best Record collections." Sums up a lot... Great video, brought back a lot of things I thought I'd forgotten! Also Paris angels, Chameleons, Squirrel and G-man, seeing the Stone Roses spray graffiti all around Central Manchester when they were still considered a 'Goth band' (!), buying import Japanese Hardcore Albums from 808 State's Massey at Eastern Bloc in Affleck's Palace, watching Pete Shelly playing a free-form guitar solo to an artist doing a Pollock style action painting on the studio floor on Tony Wilsons 'the Other Side of Midnight', Voodoo Ray constantly playing somewhere in the background, seeing assorted members of the Mondays in the Dry Bar of a weekend, Bez being a daft, friendly bugger as usual, just the...Variety! The atmosphere! The whole...THING! Of course it couldn't last long, what does? But, like Punk just before it, it casts a hell of a long shadow. CHEERS MATE, SORTED!
@@eugenemclemmont4045I'm not sure to be honest, Eastern Bloc got raided a couple of times that I know of, probably more times that I don't know of, usually on some flimsy pretext involving accusations of 'drug use' (A lot of that was true...but you dint 'ear it from me right?) Chaotic Dischords "Fuck Religion, fuck politics, fuck the lot of you" was also briefly stocked by Eastern Bloc but was eventually rejected as being "A load of old childish and deliberately offensive crap with nothing to say about anything... plus it's just Vice Squad having a laugh." (The above statement may not be a factually accurate quotation or representation from any spokesperson from Eastern Bloc, but it's still fundamentally true. Trust me on this, I've got it. Sigh.)
@@acrodave9287 It was" the fucking cunts treat us like pricks", and that was a load of shit as well compared to their Strive to Survive stuff. There was a lot of underground places for clothes , posters ect in them days. Oasis underground market was another good one for t-shirts. Bought my Motorbike jacket from there for £55 in `85.
Lived it. I was Martin Harnett's Sound Engineer. When the smith became known I was working with Maritain in Decibel Studios, 1 St. James street, Manchester. I was told we would be producing the Smiths. What happen, the man with the money 'Phillipe Del'clock' said it will all go ahead if they replace the singer. True.
@@AmysTrilogy Phillips was always drudged up with his girlfriend at the time. cont remember her name but they were forever on holiday. at that time i used to busk with johnny before the band became famous. out side aflex and shamble squares. Philipe wanted morrissy out of the band
Did you live anywhere near hulme? I grew up in 1970s Manchester and my most abiding memory is of the ripper billboards... 'we know what he sounds like and what his writing is like and he looks like a Somalian pirate' etc etc. Dark days however fondly we look back and distort it. When I grew up you were posh if you had a fitted carpet.
@@Darrenski I lived in Moston but before we worked a car would pick m up and take me to hulme to get his stuff. an other frend of mine had hulme dismataled "David Lunts"
I'm 33 years old Polish man that has been living in London for 8 years. I might be from Poland, but my musical soul is surely British. Love your videos. One can learn so much, so many more or less obscure bands, that deserves recognition. Thanks mate.
Yet another meticulously researched video. I'm always fascinated by the journey of musical influence. Thanks so much, your videos are truly valuable slices of music history
A brilliant documentary. An era that defined a generation. Good times, NO great times, Amazing times. We were blessed to be there in those moments. Moments we will never forget and we will never let go of
Have to say this is better than any documentary I have see on TV covering this era. Meticulous research and an actual understanding of the 80s Manc scene, Subscribed.
Greta video. As a huge fan of the Stone Roses, Happy Mondays, Inspirals, Charlatans etc, getting the back story on how it all came to be is a real treat for this Yank
Went to see The Stone Roses in 1989 at Rio's in Bradford (now sadly gone) and there were more people behind the bar than in the audience! Happy Daze.... 🍄
As a person who started clubbing in NYC in '88, I have to say this tale of the evolution and cross pollination of the post disco/ post punk dance scene is so spot on. Good job.
You got it right. All of it. Doing cultural history is hard and you are nailing it. Connecting all the dots is so important to provide the proper context. Thank you for this and hope it lives on for others to discover.
Heard "Shoot You Down" from Stone Roses on a college radio station in Cleveland OH USA in 1990; and it changed my world. Heard a million great songs before that and since; but none of them hit me like that one did then. It wasn't the turning of a page, it was a whole new book opening.
Every single song on that first Roses record has the ability to do what "Shoot You Down" did for you. It's hard to describe how great that album is from start to finish. An absolute masterpiece. It just oozes brilliance.
I always find with that album that when you're younger you like the singles, but when you're older you really appreciate the album tracks, my favourite one's Sugar Spun Sister 🍋
@@andrewconrad2859ya I really liked this song,and ran with this group..I personally didn't get down with a lot of these songs.Peter Hook, Johnny Marr always delivered.I was in SF during this silly mess,and any crappy song was a Brit hit.. I was 21 in 79.. SF was an epicenter for new music, The Stranglers, The Jam or The Attractions were definitely killing it,but Loaded or Fools Gold made $20 double stackers worth every beat.I really enjoyed B.A.D, Style Council,but Stone Roses kept it going..Then Brit Pop conquered the second half of the 90s. I had so much fun, I guess Liam and Noel really did shut er down.. I'm still dancing, but now I'm turning on my 22yr daughter. When I slapped on Fool's Gold remix at her Halloween party, we took it to the FREAK zone,and the shrooms kicked in! Sorry to ramble,glad someone is down with Stone Roses
That episode of Top of the Pops changed my life! Aged 14 I remember so vividly being blown away by Stone Roses and Happy Mondays. Wish I had the money I’ve spent on gigs and festivals chasing that baggy sound over the decades but I wouldn’t have the memories (I could be living in a massssssive house though 🤭)❤️
Happy old days for sure….probably a lot to do with the gold or red seal hash that we started smoking at youth club 😆. All chipped in for a little chunk from the Three Bridges pub in the meadows area of Nottingham, another pub that is long gone.
Am 60 now born in Wigan lived in Hulme on and off from 1979 graced the Hac until 1989 - tasted everything and no regrets - what a wonderful trip down memory lane.
I lived just south of Manchester and was into the bands in the mid-80s, I lived a lot of this, was going to the Mondays gigs in 88 and the Hac around the same time. I remember going to college in 89 and no-one having a clue who any of these bands I was into were or what this whole scene I was selling hard to them - until that TOTP in Nov 89. This is a really good piece & told me a lot of stuff I didn't know, and I've been scholarly on the start of the best years of my life
And so this proves Little League is Black Listed to keep U.K. fooled at Hiking to the East... that in U.S. Yall own all the lands to the Left, and WHATEVER that fd itself there is unregulated Arab abuse stealing paradise from England, no White in U.S. wants England without paradise, & that stretches to Yemen as a valid taking, because Rome poured Non-Native sympathy rejects all over Yalls LIBERTY with TV fooling Yalls Elders as magic, when Yall owe nothing to the Middle East or Italy, to Green Party rule of Law, which proved 20,000 years Roman paving is death only, unlearned from by colleges.
About the New Order: as far as I remember, some time before the release of "Technique" and "World In Motion", Bernard Sumner had a argument with the rest of the band about the future vision of the band's sound, so he decided to team up with Johnny Marr (formerly of The Smiths) to record an album, that later became the 1991's self-titled debut by Electronic. On this album there are tracks, that, in my humble opinion, also deserve the title of "Madchester hits", such as "Get The Message" (to which Denise Johnson, the singer known for collaborations with such bands as A Certain Ratio and Primal Scream, contributed) and "Feel Every Beat" (which, truth to be told, was the lowest charting single from that album, but still was in the Top 40 in UK Single Charts and, in my opinion, is the best track from the whole album). The album on its own peaked on number 2 in UK. Around the time of the "Electronic"'s release, Stephen Morris and Gillian Gilbert stearted to work on their own project, which resulted firstly with a single called "Tasty Fish" released by Factory Records in 1991. Its highest position in UK Singles Chart was number 40, as far as I remeber. Further recordings were made, but due to the Factory's collapse, the release of the debut album was delayed. However, it has arrived in 1993 through London Records as "The Other Two & You", promoted with "Selfish", the track that was remixed and released as a second single promoting this album. All in all, I would say, that both the Electronic's and The Other Two's albums and songs from these are a bit forgotten nowadays, but still they are worth checking out, in my opinion. I personally consider "Feel Every Beat" as one of the best songs of the Madchester era, especially when we consider the live versions of that song (for example, the one recorded during the 1991's festival called Cities In The Park, held in memory of Martin Hannett, former producer of Factory Records). Still, a great video about an extremely interesting topic. Cheers!
@@slowmo9642 I was at heaton park in August 91' Revenge & The Durutti C were much better than Electronic A certain ratio were a bit disappointing, but it was a great day out As I saw Rob Gretton, walk in front of me to 👏applause Cath Carroll ( England made me 🎤📀) new ✍️ to Factory
I loved the singles by Electronic (wasn't Neil Tennant involved somehow, along with producer Stephen Hague perhaps?) and the debut by The Other Two. With better promotion (and a title that reflected the lyrics, maybe), 'Tasty Fish' could have been a top 3 hit. It was every bit as commercial as New Order's catchiest tunes.
@@AutPen38 yeah, Neil Tennant sang on "Getting Away With It" (the debut single by Electronic), "The Patience Of Saint" from Electronic's debut album and "Disappointed", released as a non-album single. And I agree, that "Tasty Fish" could have been a hit, if it had been better promoted. But still, these were great acts, that brought fantastic songs to the public. Cheers!
12:00 "Moody" by ESG was massively influential on many later house tracks. One that really sticks in my mind is "Direct to You" by Zero the Hero. I really, really liked this. I lived through it and was amazed by how many bullseyes you got, telling the story. So many records, clubs, and characters that are all unforgettable but it's always nice to be reminded of such happy and everlastingly inspirational times :)
Great summary of one of my favorite eras. The music of my childhood was 1960s R&B, funk and pop, but my teens was a dreary time of '70s dinosaur rock and disco. New Wave and Power Pop morphing into Madchester by the time I was in my 30s was like being gifted with a second adolescence, in terms of a soundtrack for a memorable time of life. Now I'm a tired old dude jogging to Stone Roses, and that Groovy Train Farm Beat.
Well worth another watch. This channel realty is top tier, it should have millions of subscribers. The only reason it doesn't is probably video length, people don't have long enough attention spans anymore.
Great Video. I think you should make a whole video Covering Beggars Group (especially 4AD and XL Recordings). Between the different labels they helped not just shape Madchester, but goth, darkwave, house/acid, 90s/00s garage/indy and beyond.
The first time I heard the terms "Madchester" and "baggy" was in reference to My Bloody Valentine's "Soon", talking about the drum beat on that track as well as the fact that Andy Weatherall also made a remix of it. I had heard The Stone Roses before, but had no idea they were part of a whole scene of similar-sounding bands.
Great topic. I've long been seeking a clearer picture of just how Chicago house and Britain's dance music scene started cross-pollenating to produce so many divergent offspring in the world of electronic music.
It's kind of amazing how a bunch of pale white guys with acne and guitars took drugs and heard electronic music by Black gay Americans and ended up cooking up something that doesn't really sound like any of the ingredients. e.g. In their failure to make house music with "standard" instruments, the Madchester bands invented "baggy".
54 now born in ancoats city center Manchester. This is the music of my life. Still have every Manchester band I can get online. Great documentary Loved it.
Brilliant vid, was gutted when I saw it was initially pulled due to copywrite bollocks. That was pretty much my musical journey as a teenager in the mid 80's onwards. Loved the gigs, fanzines , free parties and general hedonism of that period, amazing time musically to grow up and experience in the UK .
i had no idea that "pump up the volume" was a track from the uk, nor that it came out as early as 1987. i took dance classes as a kid in the early 90s, and that song was used in one of my recitals. it's wild to me that it was so popular that it reached a small town in texas.
I was very big into 4AD bands in '87 and knew about Colourbox and A.R. Kane. When I first heard the song and was told that M/A/R/R/S was a collaboration between the two, I was astounded. I was even more astounded by "Pump Up The Volume".
That is so well put together it is like revisiting all the key moments of my life from a small kid in the 60's with a top 40 jukebox in the corner of our shop, through to living in Shoreditch in the 90"s when it was still peaceful. An excellent history of the whole period.
Living only 80 miles from Chicago, there were 2 radio channels that would play house music but, only on weekends and only during late night. It took sometime to catch on but, it did eventually. Some of the Northside clubs started booking some of the house DJs and boom, it was on...
Brilliant episode - clearly a serious amount of work went into this and I really appreciate it. Such an amazing era for music and had a huge impression on me and into the dance scene. Keep up the amazing work
Brilliant video. I don’t know if people are aware but Gary Whelan’s mesmerising drum beat on Bummed’s Wrote For Luck was him trying to play the beat to Running Up That Hill. He just did it in that 8th to 16th beat lop sided way that became the baggy beat.
Incredible deep dive, great work! 24 Hour Party People introduced me to this music almost 20 years ago and I immediately fell in love, but I'm happy that there's still much for me to learn and discover about this fascinating scene.
You're continually making the best rock documentaries out there - music that meant so much to me through the years. I was going to Uni in Tokyo in 1989/90 and at the club we hit all the time Soul 2 Soul's "Back to Life" was huge, and in my Sony CD player was the Stone Roses as probably my absolute favorite album of that time.
That Vince Clarke remix of ‘Wrote for luck’ was still being played every night of the week in the indie clubs of Manchester 20 years ago when I were a lad…it probably still is now…
Thanks for that, I enjoyed it. Some records you missed from the Madchester era, Paris Angels - Perfume, New FADS - Big (Baka) & World Of Twist - The Storm, all big in Manchester in 1990
Oh to be young again. I saw the mondays live during the pills n thrills tour in 1990. I was 12 or 13. My first ever gig. To this day the best gig I’ve ever been to. Every time I listen to the album it takes me straight back there.
Thank you, I think it's one your best videos at this point! It's thorough and highly entertaining, fascinating stuff. By the way, I managed to see the original upload, but I'm going to watch it again!
Fantastic video, important piece of cultural history. I hadn’t quite made the link until this there were so many bands from the Glasgow area making similar stuff back then. Absolute respect to our Mancunian brothers and sisters x
I think one "influencer" in Scotland made a mix-tape of the Velvet Underground and Nico that everyone on the scene up there shared, whereas in Manchester it was Bowie's Berlin trilogy and the Sex Pistols. Combine them together and add some drugs and you get "baggy" indie dance made by art school kids.
I'm from Manchester and was born in 1977 so I grew up hearing every one of these songs as they came out, from all of the 80's to the 90s, Iucky enough to be born at the perfect time to appreciate them era's, This was my Childhood & Teenage Sound, The best decades in Music History.
So glad to see this one reuploded! I think it's one of your finest yet, and that's saying something. I'd love to hear you talking a bit more about twee pop sometime in the future, I'm kind of a massive Pastels/Vaselines/Talulah Gosh/Juliana Hatfield fan. Sadly I wasn't around back when they were and I just know your insight and analysis on this movement would be priceless.
Great stuff...A track I remember from those crazy days was "Perfume" by The Paris Angels the Acid mix is still the nuts.. Great times. Glad I was around then.
The funk beats was Stone Roses' drummer, Reni's gift from God, and his family history steeped in northern soul - both parents being performers and central to the scene. His timing and sense of rhythm was astoundingly good
Bro, this really took me back to 1990-1991! South East Virginian here. When I was a freshman in high school, one of my marching/symphonic school band mates invited me to a band practice he had just started going to. (We were both in drumline/percussion section of the school band) I took my keyboard. I joined the band. I was on keys, he was on drums, we had a bassist, a rhythm guitarist, a lead guitarist, and a singer. We called ourselves Peny Dredfull. We played a lot of these tunes. It's crazy how many of those names I knew. Even the other genres, as I've always been very eclectic; loving hip hop since it's start to the Cure being my favourite band ever to knowing the 4AD scene. Decades later, I found Doves and even met them in DC. Tried to meet Jimmy to jam a bit when I was in Manchester... No dice. LOL Great doc.
I really liked 808 State and A Guy called Gerald between 1986-1994 when I was a teenager with traxx I listened to like Magical Dream, Ancodia, In yer face, I won't give in, I am Somebody, Voodoo Ray, Automanikk, Pacific, Olympic, Oops, Control ( 1989 ), Deepville, Let yourself go, Disco State, State Ritual, Timebomb, Azure, Qmart, Lambrusco Cowboy, Nefatiti, Open your mind and Lift plus Tranquillity on Phobos, K9, Muzik zweet music, Arcade Fantasy, Rhythm of life, Subscape, Fx, Emotions Electric and Eyes of Sorrow etcetera. I thought those Musical Compositions were absolutely fantastica and they were amazing to listen to plus they were very melodic with lush chords and nice strings including deep resonant funky Basslines and excellent percussion. Antonio Futura Tiani3574 and Jacqui n Lucia in Ancoats/Milesplatting Manchester Northern Quarter Little Italia.
Fantastic doco mate. I was a little young for the peak of the scene but definitely appreciated the Madchester sound from Australia as a teenager in the late 80s and early 90s. These sounds definitely spread around the world
I love this channel. I've watched every Trash Theory video...they're just fascinating. One suggestion...could you include the songs you talk about in the description? There's so much screenshotting going on in my world ❤ thank you!!!
Thanks for that ! Really enjoyed watching through a lot of the music of my youth, and it was really well put together. Sadly, a lot of the formative stuff happened before I was old enough to be aware of music. But that's the thing, you can always discover music from the past, and 'Thank God' that's the way it works! They really don't make them like they used to, and I consider myself very lucky to have experienced the music that I have, when I have. I saw my 21'st birthday in at the Hacienda, now it's flats. Life goes on !
Thank you for this video. I clicked on it thinking that I’d just watch a few minutes. And all of a sudden it was over. Great job. Some things I knew. But way more I didn’t know and so much more I want to explore. Keep up the good work. And thanks again!
Great comments on here. Nice to see the New FADS and Paris Angels - Perfume in the missing list. One band I haven’t seen mentioned is the unjustly neglected King of the Slums particularly for their compilation debut Barbarous English Fayre (1989) which is full of blistering Northern rage. They too got carried along into the Madchester sound but, strangely, their anger was ill fitting however they softened it.
You make the best musical documentaries possible. I’m a yankee and it’s awesome to see the UK vibe I was previously oblivious to. On top of that your USA videos are spot on. CHEERS
An awesome video. I was so into these bands (saw the charlatans in Tokyo in 1992)…..Australia has/had a couple of bands that fit into this rock/disco crossover: Tame Impala of course, but one band which I can recommend to anyone into this scene is from Melbourne: The Underground Lovers
Nice one - will check them out. I had a mate called Steve who was an Aussie back when I was a young Mancunian student. He was a roadie and lighting sound engineer who got me into LOADS of concerts and events at Manchester Academy during that era, posing as his roadie apprentice ;) The Shamen, the Sugarcubes, The Orb, Northside. And later Sasha and Digweed at Melbourne Docks. Oh, and I saw the Charlatans in Tokyo as well. All the best from Yokohama :)
Wow, what a great documentary ! Funny how emotional I got at times while watching it, but it does hark back to a great era in music and to my life as a student in Liverpool. I feel so lucky to have lived through those days.
This is a reupload of the original video with some minor changes. If you've already seen it, you're not missing out by not watching again!
MADCHESTER SPOTIFY PLAYLIST is available free via my patreon: patreon.com/trashtheory
Also Official Trash Theory playlist - Spotify: tinyurl.com/yxp32pjf Deezer: tinyurl.com/y2mdp8h2
But it's worth a re-watch ...
Nooo, no, no my man... You deserve *at least* the 'view' and the 'like' !!
Is there a TH-cam music playlist???
oh hush, I gotta give this one a watch too, so it counts for your views :D
Gotta watch it again for them youtube stats.
there's something funny about the original video being hit with a copyright strike from the record company that didn't give A Guy Called Gerald any of his royalties for Voodoo Ray
that wasn't factory was it?
Sweet irony.
Hmmm. He’s said in other interviews that he bought a big house in Manchester with the money from Voodoo Ray. He’s often casual with the facts.
That’s exactly what I was thinking g when I looked up the label who filed the strike. Smdh 🤦♂️
@@m0b5pawn94 I must have missed that, what label?
Only 40 people were there to witness the Sex Pistols playing in Manchester, and 40,000 of them are still alive 🙂
Who just happened to be the same 40,000,000 that were dancing their onions off at Spike Island.
But sadly a few of them are dead, and one of them (Jon the Postman) was a good mate of mine in my College Days. Introduced me to pub locks ins, Derek Bailey (in person) and Anthony Burgess (also in person). Top fella, Jon. I wouldn't have swapped being a teenager in 1980s Manchester for anywhere and when I left for America (scholarship to the University of Michigan) my send off party was at the Hacienda :)
The same thing at the screen on the green Islington, l think were up to 3/4 of million people who were there watching the sex pistols I definitely wasn't there
Unjfortunatly Mick Hucknall is one of them.
@@AndrewLakeUK and Morrissey
I believe Chicago and Manchester are sister cities. In Chicago we were not just producing Acid House/Deep House or other House Sub genres in the 80’s. We had the harder edge Industrial Post Punk sound of Wax Trax. What Manchester was listening to in regards to House Music. We were listening to Manchester what we called Indie Rock bands… Chicago was not part of a mainstream Top 40 musical aesthetic. We were not so into Hip Hop or what later became early 90’s Grunge. Unlike other cities in the US. I remember wanting to go to England as an 18 year old because the DJs that went to spin in Manchester would tell us something huge was happening there. We knew all about Acid House pre-Rave parties before anyone else. We had our own smaller scale Acid House scene, but musically there was so much going on. We couldn’t just take one genre at a time. We had Italo Disco, Freestyle, Post Punk, Industrial, Acid House, Deep House, Detroit Techno, Chicago House, New Wave all going on at the same time. It was all Underground and it was a mix and match of the best from those respective music genres.
I know time has moved on but you are more than welcome to join us for a 50's rave (they exist) or come and watch hacienda classical at jodrell bank :)
Wax had an amazing number industrial bands, but most weren't from Chicago.
idk if you’re from either city, but as a house and new wave/post punk/alternative lover from Chicago, i’m glad someone else sees it!!
@@coughingbabie Yes Chicago born and raised 70's/80's kid. Honored and blessed to have witnessed and partied from the somewhat beginning of House, Industrial, Post Punk, early Rave, and early 90's Underground scene on the Northside. Lots of history and met some amazing artists and DJ's throughout the years. Front 242 last Chicago concert and local meet & greet events plus a Medusa's night original DJ's & Wax Trax memorabilia event was this weekend.
I love how it’s wrapped up with joy divisions transmission “dance dance dance dance to the radio” great job of tying it all up
Ian would have thought it was funny to call them dance music. Lol
New Order, sure. They shifted to what would make them popular.
But clumping both together under the danceable label isn't effective.
Screw copyright, you are really doing an informative job on music culture. I might not know most of the artists you post here, but I still enjoy watching your content a lot and find out about cool music.
It would all be covered by fair use.
Fantastic... Graham Massey's father, Derek, was a senior manager with a telecoms company I started out with in Wythenshawe back when 808 State had their first hit. I'll never forget Derek saying to me, "Did you see Our Graham on Top of the Pops last night?" Proud as punch he was. Happy days..
Great documentary.
Seriously... nice story
@@Ste2023 Derek really was a lovely fella, never met Graham but when I've watched him being interviewed you can instantly tell who his Dad is!
As someone who lived through the acid house/rave years and was an indie kid, this was a great way to relive some of those times. Well done.
Jealous!
yer I was there//.. and this was good
Absolutely agree, like a trip down memory lane...... the good ol days. Proud to have been a part of it.
Agree with that. Great period to be a young teenager
Yorkshire Raver here started in the Indie / House scene as a 16 year old in 88 and in 89 first visit with the lads to the Hacienda, fucking mental and my life changed forever along with everyone i know, for the worse and better.
I just watched 24 Hour Party People a few months back. It’s great to get hear your more academic treatment of the Madchester scene.
I love that movie, seen it quite a few times. got me into the Mondays. although their ian curtis looked nothing like him lol. here's a good vintage doc about factory, it's cool to see the real people after watching the movie
th-cam.com/video/IfNtvaCyx58/w-d-xo.html
there's also a good channel 4 doc on happy mondays.
Best scene in that was cut out because a bloody Metrolink was going by in the background: ‘New Order??? You do know that sounds even more Nazi than Joy Division, don’t you???’
I watch this movie several times a year.
Best movie ever...Period!
Although Pulp Fiction is pretty cool!
great movie ... one of my favourites. it only really tells the story of factory though which while a huge part of it - is nt the whole madchester story. theres still another film there i think to tell the whole story ... or a decent tv series
808 State, what a track and what an amazing time for music. Great upload!
I can put Stone Roses Fool's Gold on repeat all day, been able to since 1989 when I picked it up. What a great tune.
Extended mix is a must in the US
I followed all these bands while in High School in Los Angeles and College in San Francisco. The soundtrack to the best years in my life. Luckily got to see many of these bands live.
The Manchester bands?
The smiths Salford not Manchester
The charlatans not Manchester
Joy division not Manchester
Stone roses not Manchester
Happy Mondays not Manchester
Ect ect...
...not West coast USA either...
@@sorryrocco
@@noneck3099 your missing the point, the so called Manchester bands were never actually from Manchester
The smiths aren’t from Salford, even so that’s a part of Manchester, along with the places these other bands are from - get your facts straight.
It’s a fucking disgrace that you have to fight this hard to keep these wonderful educational videos online.
Modern copyright is anti-humanity
Great documentary, The Durutti Column deserves to be mentioned for creating early dream-pop
Truth.
I've watched this video about a dozen or so times. I'm just so facinated as an American about how this music came about. How disco gave way to house, punk into alternative dance, jangle & indie pop, and the rave and drug explosion. The Stone Roses debut and Screamadelica have blown me away and I absolutely love some hits and deep cuts from The Charlatans and the Happy Mondays.
Try New Fast Automatic Daffodils
Somebody interviewing Tony Wilson asked him "Why do you think Manchester produces such varied and inventive music?"
"Because kids in Manchester have the best Record collections."
Sums up a lot...
Great video, brought back a lot of things I thought I'd forgotten!
Also Paris angels, Chameleons, Squirrel and G-man, seeing the Stone Roses spray graffiti all around Central Manchester when they were still considered a 'Goth band' (!), buying import Japanese Hardcore Albums from 808 State's Massey at Eastern Bloc in Affleck's Palace, watching Pete Shelly playing a free-form guitar solo to an artist doing a Pollock style action painting on the studio floor on Tony Wilsons 'the Other Side of Midnight', Voodoo Ray constantly playing somewhere in the background, seeing assorted members of the Mondays in the Dry Bar of a weekend, Bez being a daft, friendly bugger as usual, just the...Variety! The atmosphere! The whole...THING!
Of course it couldn't last long, what does? But, like Punk just before it, it casts a hell of a long shadow. CHEERS MATE, SORTED!
What year did the Eastern Bloc get raided for Flux of Pink Indians record, was it before 90? It was a good shop that, got many punk vinyl from there.
@@eugenemclemmont4045I'm not sure to be honest, Eastern Bloc got raided a couple of times that I know of, probably more times that I don't know of, usually on some flimsy pretext involving accusations of 'drug use' (A lot of that was true...but you dint 'ear it from me right?)
Chaotic Dischords "Fuck Religion, fuck politics, fuck the lot of you" was also briefly stocked by Eastern Bloc but was eventually rejected as being "A load of old childish and deliberately offensive crap with nothing to say about anything... plus it's just Vice Squad having a laugh."
(The above statement may not be a factually accurate quotation or representation from any spokesperson from Eastern Bloc, but it's still fundamentally true. Trust me on this, I've got it. Sigh.)
@@acrodave9287 It was" the fucking cunts treat us like pricks", and that was a load of shit as well compared to their Strive to Survive stuff. There was a lot of underground places for clothes , posters ect in them days. Oasis underground market was another good one for t-shirts. Bought my Motorbike jacket from there for £55 in `85.
Lived it. I was Martin Harnett's Sound Engineer. When the smith became known I was working with Maritain in Decibel Studios, 1 St. James street, Manchester. I was told we would be producing the Smiths. What happen, the man with the money 'Phillipe Del'clock' said it will all go ahead if they replace the singer. True.
As far as I recall, Hanett was never at decibelle, the smiths first demo was recorded there, Phillipe knew nothing about it till quite a time after.
@@AmysTrilogy Phillips was always drudged up with his girlfriend at the time. cont remember her name but they were forever on holiday. at that time i used to busk with johnny before the band became famous. out side aflex and shamble squares. Philipe wanted morrissy out of the band
Did you live anywhere near hulme? I grew up in 1970s Manchester and my most abiding memory is of the ripper billboards... 'we know what he sounds like and what his writing is like and he looks like a Somalian pirate' etc etc. Dark days however fondly we look back and distort it. When I grew up you were posh if you had a fitted carpet.
@@Darrenski I lived in Moston but before we worked a car would pick m up and take me to hulme to get his stuff. an other frend of mine had hulme dismataled "David Lunts"
I'm 33 years old Polish man that has been living in London for 8 years. I might be from Poland, but my musical soul is surely British. Love your videos. One can learn so much, so many more or less obscure bands, that deserves recognition. Thanks mate.
What a treasure on TH-cam. Thanks for this masterclass of Madchester sound and also a masterclass for music producers. ❤️🎶🎶💥
Excellent work. Your historical videos always introduce me to new artists I hadn't heard of or thought about much.
Yet another meticulously researched video. I'm always fascinated by the journey of musical influence. Thanks so much, your videos are truly valuable slices of music history
A brilliant documentary. An era that defined a generation. Good times, NO great times, Amazing times. We were blessed to be there in those moments. Moments we will never forget and we will never let go of
Have to say this is better than any documentary I have see on TV covering this era. Meticulous research and an actual understanding of the 80s Manc scene, Subscribed.
Greta video. As a huge fan of the Stone Roses, Happy Mondays, Inspirals, Charlatans etc, getting the back story on how it all came to be is a real treat for this Yank
A great period in music..glad to be a part of it. .
Fantastic! Easily one of best music doc's I've ever seen. Honestly the amount of great bands I've discovered from this is incredible.
Went to see The Stone Roses in 1989 at Rio's in Bradford (now sadly gone) and there were more people behind the bar than in the audience!
Happy Daze....
🍄
As a person who started clubbing in NYC in '88, I have to say this tale of the evolution and cross pollination of the post disco/ post punk dance scene is so spot on. Good job.
You got it right. All of it. Doing cultural history is hard and you are nailing it. Connecting all the dots is so important to provide the proper context. Thank you for this and hope it lives on for others to discover.
Well, Nirvana ended the use of these products & reacted ti chainsaw... evolving why Yall can't swim
Heard "Shoot You Down" from Stone Roses on a college radio station in Cleveland OH USA in 1990; and it changed my world. Heard a million great songs before that and since; but none of them hit me like that one did then. It wasn't the turning of a page, it was a whole new book opening.
Every single song on that first Roses record has the ability to do what "Shoot You Down" did for you. It's hard to describe how great that album is from start to finish. An absolute masterpiece. It just oozes brilliance.
I always find with that album that when you're younger you like the singles, but when you're older you really appreciate the album tracks, my favourite one's Sugar Spun Sister 🍋
@@andrewconrad2859ya I really liked this song,and ran with this group..I personally didn't get down with a lot of these songs.Peter Hook, Johnny Marr always delivered.I was in SF during this silly mess,and any crappy song was a Brit hit.. I was 21 in 79.. SF was an epicenter for new music, The Stranglers, The Jam or The Attractions were definitely killing it,but Loaded or Fools Gold made $20 double stackers worth every beat.I really enjoyed B.A.D, Style Council,but Stone Roses kept it going..Then Brit Pop conquered the second half of the 90s. I had so much fun, I guess Liam and Noel really did shut er down.. I'm still dancing, but now I'm turning on my 22yr daughter. When I slapped on Fool's Gold remix at her Halloween party, we took it to the FREAK zone,and the shrooms kicked in! Sorry to ramble,glad someone is down with Stone Roses
That episode of Top of the Pops changed my life! Aged 14 I remember so vividly being blown away by Stone Roses and Happy Mondays. Wish I had the money I’ve spent on gigs and festivals chasing that baggy sound over the decades but I wouldn’t have the memories (I could be living in a massssssive house though 🤭)❤️
Happy old days for sure….probably a lot to do with the gold or red seal hash that we started smoking at youth club 😆. All chipped in for a little chunk from the Three Bridges pub in the meadows area of Nottingham, another pub that is long gone.
@@davetherave9222 aw everyone has a mate Dave the Rave our age 🤭
Am 60 now born in Wigan lived in Hulme on and off from 1979 graced the Hac until 1989 - tasted everything and no regrets - what a wonderful trip down memory lane.
I lived just south of Manchester and was into the bands in the mid-80s, I lived a lot of this, was going to the Mondays gigs in 88 and the Hac around the same time. I remember going to college in 89 and no-one having a clue who any of these bands I was into were or what this whole scene I was selling hard to them - until that TOTP in Nov 89. This is a really good piece & told me a lot of stuff I didn't know, and I've been scholarly on the start of the best years of my life
And so this proves Little League is Black Listed to keep U.K. fooled at Hiking to the East... that in U.S. Yall own all the lands to the Left, and WHATEVER that fd itself there is unregulated Arab abuse stealing paradise from England, no White in U.S. wants England without paradise, & that stretches to Yemen as a valid taking, because Rome poured Non-Native sympathy rejects all over Yalls LIBERTY with TV fooling Yalls Elders as magic, when Yall owe nothing to the Middle East or Italy, to Green Party rule of Law, which proved 20,000 years Roman paving is death only, unlearned from by colleges.
Lawd a'mighty, that was a journey! You always impress me with breadth and depth.
About the New Order: as far as I remember, some time before the release of "Technique" and "World In Motion", Bernard Sumner had a argument with the rest of the band about the future vision of the band's sound, so he decided to team up with Johnny Marr (formerly of The Smiths) to record an album, that later became the 1991's self-titled debut by Electronic. On this album there are tracks, that, in my humble opinion, also deserve the title of "Madchester hits", such as "Get The Message" (to which Denise Johnson, the singer known for collaborations with such bands as A Certain Ratio and Primal Scream, contributed) and "Feel Every Beat" (which, truth to be told, was the lowest charting single from that album, but still was in the Top 40 in UK Single Charts and, in my opinion, is the best track from the whole album). The album on its own peaked on number 2 in UK. Around the time of the "Electronic"'s release, Stephen Morris and Gillian Gilbert stearted to work on their own project, which resulted firstly with a single called "Tasty Fish" released by Factory Records in 1991. Its highest position in UK Singles Chart was number 40, as far as I remeber. Further recordings were made, but due to the Factory's collapse, the release of the debut album was delayed. However, it has arrived in 1993 through London Records as "The Other Two & You", promoted with "Selfish", the track that was remixed and released as a second single promoting this album. All in all, I would say, that both the Electronic's and The Other Two's albums and songs from these are a bit forgotten nowadays, but still they are worth checking out, in my opinion. I personally consider "Feel Every Beat" as one of the best songs of the Madchester era, especially when we consider the live versions of that song (for example, the one recorded during the 1991's festival called Cities In The Park, held in memory of Martin Hannett, former producer of Factory Records). Still, a great video about an extremely interesting topic. Cheers!
Absolutely love electronic. Seen them around 91 at the barrowlands. My 2nd gig. Apologies for the reminiscing.
Hannett was a musical genius
@@slowmo9642 I was at heaton park in August 91'
Revenge & The Durutti C were much better than Electronic
A certain ratio were a bit disappointing, but it was a great day out
As I saw Rob Gretton, walk in front of me to 👏applause Cath Carroll ( England made me 🎤📀) new ✍️ to Factory
I loved the singles by Electronic (wasn't Neil Tennant involved somehow, along with producer Stephen Hague perhaps?) and the debut by The Other Two. With better promotion (and a title that reflected the lyrics, maybe), 'Tasty Fish' could have been a top 3 hit. It was every bit as commercial as New Order's catchiest tunes.
@@AutPen38 yeah, Neil Tennant sang on "Getting Away With It" (the debut single by Electronic), "The Patience Of Saint" from Electronic's debut album and "Disappointed", released as a non-album single. And I agree, that "Tasty Fish" could have been a hit, if it had been better promoted. But still, these were great acts, that brought fantastic songs to the public. Cheers!
12:00 "Moody" by ESG was massively influential on many later house tracks. One that really sticks in my mind is "Direct to You" by Zero the Hero. I really, really liked this. I lived through it and was amazed by how many bullseyes you got, telling the story. So many records, clubs, and characters that are all unforgettable but it's always nice to be reminded of such happy and everlastingly inspirational times :)
ESG are very underrated
God I LOVE this channel. Please never stop doing what you're doing. Cheers, from the USA!
Great summary of one of my favorite eras. The music of my childhood was 1960s R&B, funk and pop, but my teens was a dreary time of '70s dinosaur rock and disco. New Wave and Power Pop morphing into Madchester by the time I was in my 30s was like being gifted with a second adolescence, in terms of a soundtrack for a memorable time of life. Now I'm a tired old dude jogging to Stone Roses, and that Groovy Train Farm Beat.
Well worth another watch. This channel realty is top tier, it should have millions of subscribers. The only reason it doesn't is probably video length, people don't have long enough attention spans anymore.
Once again, killer job on this video. The amount of effort put in is unreal. Keep it up, my friend ✊
15 years old in 1989. Best years of my life. Madchester blew my mind away.
Great Video.
I think you should make a whole video Covering Beggars Group (especially 4AD and XL Recordings). Between the different labels they helped not just shape Madchester, but goth, darkwave, house/acid, 90s/00s garage/indy and beyond.
This would be fantastic. Are there any TH-cam channels that focus on the story of individual record labels?
@@Alfred_English maybe, but I haven't had time to look/assess what is crap/what isn't.
The first time I heard the terms "Madchester" and "baggy" was in reference to My Bloody Valentine's "Soon", talking about the drum beat on that track as well as the fact that Andy Weatherall also made a remix of it. I had heard The Stone Roses before, but had no idea they were part of a whole scene of similar-sounding bands.
I would love to see a video going over The Stranglers as I think their story is so interesting and so unappreciated. Love your videos.
I from Brazil...and this is a excelent documentary...congratulations
Great topic. I've long been seeking a clearer picture of just how Chicago house and Britain's dance music scene started cross-pollenating to produce so many divergent offspring in the world of electronic music.
Northern soul was another scene what started with discarded American records
It's kind of amazing how a bunch of pale white guys with acne and guitars took drugs and heard electronic music by Black gay Americans and ended up cooking up something that doesn't really sound like any of the ingredients. e.g. In their failure to make house music with "standard" instruments, the Madchester bands invented "baggy".
54 now born in ancoats city center Manchester. This is the music of my life. Still have every Manchester band I can get online. Great documentary Loved it.
Outstanding docu. Whenever I hear 'Loaded' or 'Fools Gold', I'm transported back to being an 18 year old again. Great days.
Brilliant vid, was gutted when I saw it was initially pulled due to copywrite bollocks. That was pretty much my musical journey as a teenager in the mid 80's onwards. Loved the gigs, fanzines , free parties and general hedonism of that period, amazing time musically to grow up and experience in the UK .
i had no idea that "pump up the volume" was a track from the uk, nor that it came out as early as 1987. i took dance classes as a kid in the early 90s, and that song was used in one of my recitals. it's wild to me that it was so popular that it reached a small town in texas.
That song's as old as I am but I remember listening to it around 1991 or so here in Mexico. It transcended it's UK life
@TUbIuyola I know. That's kinda my point. I didn't know its origins and had assumed it was made closer to home bc of its popularity.
I was very big into 4AD bands in '87 and knew about Colourbox and A.R. Kane. When I first heard the song and was told that M/A/R/R/S was a collaboration between the two, I was astounded. I was even more astounded by "Pump Up The Volume".
Thanks for the beautiful analysis!!! I was following the scene after 1989 in a real time
That is so well put together it is like revisiting all the key moments of my life from a small kid in the 60's with a top 40 jukebox in the corner of our shop, through to living in Shoreditch in the 90"s when it was still peaceful. An excellent history of the whole period.
Living only 80 miles from Chicago, there were 2 radio channels that would play house music but, only on weekends and only during late night. It took sometime to catch on but, it did eventually. Some of the Northside clubs started booking some of the house DJs and boom, it was on...
Brilliant episode - clearly a serious amount of work went into this and I really appreciate it. Such an amazing era for music and had a huge impression on me and into the dance scene. Keep up the amazing work
I can't believe it took years for the stone roses to break through they are my favourite band
Brilliant video. I don’t know if people are aware but Gary Whelan’s mesmerising drum beat on Bummed’s Wrote For Luck was him trying to play the beat to Running Up That Hill. He just did it in that 8th to 16th beat lop sided way that became the baggy beat.
While Rasta holds the Plant beats
🎶 Oh Manchester , So much to answer for ! 🎶
Somehow this american 20 year old (at the time) found this Manchester scene thanks to college radio. It is my musical base. Love it so much.
You're a legend, these videos are incredible. Thank you and keep it up!
Hugely entertaining, impressively researched with an academic level grasp of the subtleties. This is an important cultural document.
Incredible deep dive, great work! 24 Hour Party People introduced me to this music almost 20 years ago and I immediately fell in love, but I'm happy that there's still much for me to learn and discover about this fascinating scene.
What a brilliant documentary! Thank you so much for this! 💜🎵🎶
This was fascinating! I never realised how each sound evolved until now. You are brilliant!
Can I just say the house music section around 23 min mark is STUNNING! Almost sobbing hearing Love Can’t Turn Around!
This is by far my favorite channel now, great insight into the different genres of music and artists, keep up the great work 👍🏴
You're continually making the best rock documentaries out there - music that meant so much to me through the years. I was going to Uni in Tokyo in 1989/90 and at the club we hit all the time Soul 2 Soul's "Back to Life" was huge, and in my Sony CD player was the Stone Roses as probably my absolute favorite album of that time.
That Vince Clarke remix of ‘Wrote for luck’ was still being played every night of the week in the indie clubs of Manchester 20 years ago when I were a lad…it probably still is now…
Preferred the Oakenfold remix personally
Was in The Venue not that long back ... and you're right! It still is!
@@stuartdavidson2128 I worked there for three years…I worked at the old venue as well, and 5th Ave, 42’s and Mutz Nutz…
Thanks for that, I enjoyed it. Some records you missed from the Madchester era, Paris Angels - Perfume, New FADS - Big (Baka) & World Of Twist - The Storm, all big in Manchester in 1990
So glad you were able to re-upload this, it's absolutely wonderful stuff!
Oh to be young again.
I saw the mondays live during the pills n thrills tour in 1990. I was 12 or 13. My first ever gig. To this day the best gig I’ve ever been to. Every time I listen to the album it takes me straight back there.
A walk through musical history, great video and learned a few things
Or evolution
Thank you, I think it's one your best videos at this point! It's thorough and highly entertaining, fascinating stuff. By the way, I managed to see the original upload, but I'm going to watch it again!
Finnally back! I loved it, wachted it like 5 times.
Can you please do a video on Noise rock like Before Sonic Youth: How noise rock became noise rock.
That's a great suggestion.
@@jessop- you're right. Would love that also..
You mean shoegaze?
@@davidsanderson2960 I can't speak for the original guy, but I was thinking of Glenn Branca, Lydia Lunch & the whole no wave scene of the early 80's.
@@jessop- yeah more of that
That was an awesome exploration of Madchester, very well edited and narrated. Thoroughly enjoyable.
Fantastic video, important piece of cultural history. I hadn’t quite made the link until this there were so many bands from the Glasgow area making similar stuff back then. Absolute respect to our Mancunian brothers and sisters x
I think one "influencer" in Scotland made a mix-tape of the Velvet Underground and Nico that everyone on the scene up there shared, whereas in Manchester it was Bowie's Berlin trilogy and the Sex Pistols. Combine them together and add some drugs and you get "baggy" indie dance made by art school kids.
I'm from Manchester and was born in 1977 so I grew up hearing every one of these songs as they came out, from all of the 80's to the 90s, Iucky enough to be born at the perfect time to appreciate them era's, This was my Childhood & Teenage Sound, The best decades in Music History.
not quite the generation then
@@yoooohooooo No, Exactly the generation.
Man, I love this channel! Thank you so much for what you do!
So glad to see this one reuploded! I think it's one of your finest yet, and that's saying something. I'd love to hear you talking a bit more about twee pop sometime in the future, I'm kind of a massive Pastels/Vaselines/Talulah Gosh/Juliana Hatfield fan. Sadly I wasn't around back when they were and I just know your insight and analysis on this movement would be priceless.
Great stuff...A track I remember from those crazy days was "Perfume" by The Paris Angels the Acid mix is still the nuts..
Great times. Glad I was around then.
The funk beats was Stone Roses' drummer, Reni's gift from God, and his family history steeped in northern soul - both parents being performers and central to the scene. His timing and sense of rhythm was astoundingly good
Seen him and met him doing a northern soul dj set in my town
Bro, this really took me back to 1990-1991! South East Virginian here. When I was a freshman in high school, one of my marching/symphonic school band mates invited me to a band practice he had just started going to. (We were both in drumline/percussion section of the school band) I took my keyboard. I joined the band. I was on keys, he was on drums, we had a bassist, a rhythm guitarist, a lead guitarist, and a singer. We called ourselves Peny Dredfull. We played a lot of these tunes. It's crazy how many of those names I knew. Even the other genres, as I've always been very eclectic; loving hip hop since it's start to the Cure being my favourite band ever to knowing the 4AD scene.
Decades later, I found Doves and even met them in DC. Tried to meet Jimmy to jam a bit when I was in Manchester... No dice. LOL
Great doc.
I really liked 808 State and A Guy called Gerald between 1986-1994 when I was a teenager with traxx I listened to like Magical Dream, Ancodia, In yer face, I won't give in, I am Somebody, Voodoo Ray, Automanikk, Pacific, Olympic, Oops, Control ( 1989 ), Deepville, Let yourself go, Disco State, State Ritual, Timebomb, Azure, Qmart, Lambrusco Cowboy, Nefatiti, Open your mind and Lift plus Tranquillity on Phobos, K9, Muzik zweet music, Arcade Fantasy, Rhythm of life, Subscape, Fx, Emotions Electric and Eyes of Sorrow etcetera. I thought those Musical Compositions were absolutely fantastica and they were amazing to listen to plus they were very melodic with lush chords and nice strings including deep resonant funky Basslines and excellent percussion. Antonio Futura Tiani3574 and Jacqui n Lucia in Ancoats/Milesplatting Manchester Northern Quarter Little Italia.
An amazing and completely true to life recount of an amazing era. Massive nostalgia trip.
My favorite video you’ve ever done, from my favorite creator on the platform. Thank you!
Fantastic doco mate. I was a little young for the peak of the scene but definitely appreciated the Madchester sound from Australia as a teenager in the late 80s and early 90s. These sounds definitely spread around the world
I love this channel. I've watched every Trash Theory video...they're just fascinating. One suggestion...could you include the songs you talk about in the description? There's so much screenshotting going on in my world ❤ thank you!!!
That or a Spotify playlist would be awesome
@@rocknrollrulesu2 there is a spotify playlist free on their patron page (no long in required) and they commented a direct link
Thanks for that !
Really enjoyed watching through a lot of the music of my youth, and it was really well put together.
Sadly, a lot of the formative stuff happened before I was old enough to be aware of music. But that's the thing, you can always discover music from the past, and 'Thank God' that's the way it works!
They really don't make them like they used to, and I consider myself very lucky to have experienced the music that I have, when I have.
I saw my 21'st birthday in at the Hacienda, now it's flats. Life goes on !
I’m so glad I was the right age to enjoy those times!!
Thank you for this video. I clicked on it thinking that I’d just watch a few minutes. And all of a sudden it was over. Great job. Some things I knew. But way more I didn’t know and so much more I want to explore. Keep up the good work. And thanks again!
Great comments on here. Nice to see the New FADS and Paris Angels - Perfume in the missing list.
One band I haven’t seen mentioned is the unjustly neglected King of the Slums particularly for their compilation debut Barbarous English Fayre (1989) which is full of blistering Northern rage. They too got carried along into the Madchester sound but, strangely, their anger was ill fitting however they softened it.
Thanks uploader for your time and effort, it definitely paid off! Much love ❤
"Moody" By ESG is why Martin Hannett was a genius. It solidified his hand in house music.
ESG were amazing
Martin Hannett didn't produce any house music as far as I'm aware and he died in 91.
He produced music that progressed into house. That's my point.
You make the best musical documentaries possible. I’m a yankee and it’s awesome to see the UK vibe I was previously oblivious to. On top of that your USA videos are spot on. CHEERS
Giving my view and my like again to this great video
just got finished binging the entire Before ___ playlist just to see this unlisted gem, great time!
Transmission is one of the Greatest songs ever written, ever
Thanks fot all these great mini-documentaries! I've learned about bands I never would have learned of if not for these.
An awesome video. I was so into these bands (saw the charlatans in Tokyo in 1992)…..Australia has/had a couple of bands that fit into this rock/disco crossover: Tame Impala of course, but one band which I can recommend to anyone into this scene is from Melbourne: The Underground Lovers
Nice one - will check them out. I had a mate called Steve who was an Aussie back when I was a young Mancunian student. He was a roadie and lighting sound engineer who got me into LOADS of concerts and events at Manchester Academy during that era, posing as his roadie apprentice ;) The Shamen, the Sugarcubes, The Orb, Northside. And later Sasha and Digweed at Melbourne Docks. Oh, and I saw the Charlatans in Tokyo as well. All the best from Yokohama :)
Wow, what a great documentary ! Funny how emotional I got at times while watching it, but it does hark back to a great era in music and to my life as a student in Liverpool. I feel so lucky to have lived through those days.
You should do one of these on Pop Will Eat Itself, an often overlooked originator of indie dance
Well said that man
They are part of the grebo scene, that existed at the same time as Madchester and was really great