178. Peter Hook & The Light: FAC251 The Factory, Manchester [18.5.10]

177_Peter Hook [180510]

Artist: Peter Hook & The Light

Venue: FAC251: The Factory, Manchester

Date: 18.5.10

Unknown Pleasures [Live]: A poignant performance of Joy Division’s ‘Unknown Pleasures’ album, in its entirety – to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the death of Ian Curtis. Rowetta performed vocals on several songs, adding a stunning contemporary edge to timeless tracks.

The occasion was complemented by an exhibition of Joy Division memorabilia, displayed in the legendary Factory boardroom.

176. Peter Hook & The Light: FAC251 The Factory, Manchester [5.2.10]

175_Peter Hook [050210]

Artist: Peter Hook & The Light

Support: Freebass

Venue: FAC251: The Factory, Manchester [Opening Night]

Date: 5.2.10

Twenty years since the birth of ‘Madchester’, the evening saw the revamp and relaunch of the building that conceived the scene, and facilitated its demise.

FAC251 was the legendary head office of Factory Communications. Created by Tony Wilson, designed by Ben Kelly, endlessly funded by New Order (along with The Haçienda), and finally bankrupted by artistic ideology (expedited by Happy Mondays).

Nearly two decades later, the iconic building was rescued and resurrected by Peter Hook, Ben Kelly and Function One – and reborn as FAC251: The Factory.

In true Factory style, the building was barely completed on launch night. The freshly plastered walls were still damp and certain fittings and fixtures required finishing – but there was special sense of occasion, as those in the know mingled with Mancunian legends and celebrities.

Support act Freebass was a bass player ‘super group’ including Peter Hook (New Order), Mani (The Stone Roses) and Andy Rourke (The Smiths), with Gary Briggs on vocals.

Peter Hook & The Light performed a poignant set of Joy Division songs, with Rowetta (Happy Mondays) adding a beautiful and emotional twist to some of Ian Curtis’s haunting lyrics.

175b_Peter Hook [050210]

175b_Peter Hook [050210]

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150. Muse: Wembley Stadium, London [16.6.07]

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Artist: Muse

Support: The Streets

Venue: Wembley Stadium, London

Date: 16.6.07

Muse’s audiovisual spectacular was originally supposed to be the first concert at the new Wembley Stadium. However, George Michael snuck in there and stole the honour a couple of weeks beforehand.

The concert was recorded and released on CD/DVD entitled ‘HAARP’.

150b_Muse [Haarp]

137. Live 8: Hyde Park, London [2.7.05]

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Artists: Paul McCartney / U2 / Coldplay / Richard Ashcroft / Elton John / Pete Doherty / R.E.M. / Ms Dynamite / Keane / Bob Geldolf / UB40 / Snoop Dogg / Razorlight / Madonna / The Killers / Scissor Sisters / Velvet Revolver / Sting / Robbie Williams / The Who / Pink Floyd / Paul McCartney / George Michael

Venue: Hyde Park, London

Date: 2.7.05

Live 8 was a set of benefit/awareness concerts that took place on 2 July 2005, in the G8 countries and South Africa. The concerts were timed to precede the G8 conference. Live 8 organisers presented the ‘Live 8 List’ to world leaders, with the call for politicians to take action to ‘Make Poverty History’. Names from the list/petition were displayed on large screens at each concert during the worldwide broadcast.

A truly epic day featuring so many music legends, and including an emotional reunion of the founder members of Pink Floyd for the first time in over 24 years.

Free tickets were issued via a lottery, as the day was about famine awareness rather than making money. The concert ran nearly 3 hours over schedule but the crowd didn’t seem to care.

Many years later, the line-up is still hard to comprehend. Thankfully the event was captured on DVD, as there was simply too much to take-in on the day.

131. Kasabian: The Blank Canvas, Leeds [16.10.04]

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Artist: Kasabian

Support: Trap2

Venue: The Blank Canvas, Leeds

Date: 16.10.04

The Blank Canvas was a pop-up venue in the ‘Dark Arches’ at Granary Wharf, Leeds. The moody setting was well suited for Kasabian to promote their eponymous debut album. The band were relatively unknown at the time, but word was spreading fast and the arches were packed with those in the know.