New on RBPIt’s a Manchester special this week – with a bit of Krautrock and Celtic t
New on RBPIt’s a Manchester special this week – with a bit of Krautrock and Celtic tradition added for good measure. To celebrate the imminent publication of his epic Tony Wilson biography From Manchester With Love, we’ve made Paul Morley writer of the week and made three of his classic NME pieces free on the home page. All touch on the triumph and tragedy of Joy Division… and the endurance of New Order, whose Bernard Sumner & Stephen Morris are (from 1986) the week’s featured audio interviewees.The act featured in the Free On RBP section is the radical German kollectiv that was early ‘70s Faust. Interviews by Ian MacDonald (1973) and Andy Gill (1997) tell the wild and crazy story of Uwe Nettelbeck and friends, while Krautrock chronicler David Stubbs describes his teenage Faustian pact.We’re saying goodbye to chief Chieftain and beloved Irish rover Paddy Moloney via interviews from 1998 and 2010, plus we’ve also lost three of RBP’s veteran specialists on rhythm 'n’ blues and soul: Bob Fisher, Pete Grendysa & Roger St. Pierre, pieces by all of whom we’re spotlighting on the home page.RBP subscribers can enjoy almost 60 new additions to the library, including:Dusty Springfield getting personal with Penny Valentine in 1967;Rob Partridge visiting Atlantic’s London offices in 1974;Bill Holdship bidding farewell to Del Shannon after the latter’s 1990 suicide;Andrew Smith talking to techno magus the Aphex Twin in 1992;Former MC5 manager John Sinclair taking The Wire’s invisible jukebox test;Kandia Crazy Horse questioning the New Afrophilia of Vampire Weekend et al.;and Nick Cave bearing his soul to GQ’s Chris Heath in 2017.If you could just see the beauty,These things I could never describe,These pleasures a wayward distraction,This is my one lucky prize… -- source link
#music journalism#manchester music#joy division#ian curtis#factory records#tony wilson#paul morley#krautrock#new order#audio interviews#paddy moloney#the chieftains