Fallen
181 pages
English

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181 pages
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Description

Ever been thrown off the bus in the middle of a Swedish forest or asked to play at one of the UK's biggest music festivals with musicians you've just met who are covered in blood? If so you've probably been in The Fall. Dave Simpson made it his mission to track down everyone who has ever played in Britain's most berserk, brilliant group. He uncovers a changing Britain, tales of madness and genius, and wreaks havoc on his own life.

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 18 septembre 2008
Nombre de lectures 2
EAN13 9781847676405
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0440€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

To my late parents, Reginald and Florence Olive Simpson. Thanks for the words, Dad.


There is variety in genius as there is talent and beauty. Some geniuses are innovators, some are deep thinkers and some are people of extraordinary skill; most are a volatile mixture of intellectual gifts and character traits. The intellectual gifts are an ability to see things from highly unusual angles, to overlook what is not essential, and to understand the true significance of the obvious. The character traits are persistence, obduracy, capacity for taking great pains, and indifference to ridicule.
A C Grayling, Professor of Philosophy, University of London, 2007


That’s my fucking aim in life, to keep it going as long as I can.
Mark E Smith, 1979
Contents
Title Page Dedication Epigraph In Loving Memory of The Fallen Prologue: Remembering The Fallen Chapter One: ‘It’s like football. Every so often you’ve got to replace the centre-forward.’ Chapter Two: ‘The night it all went apeshit.’ Chapter Three: ‘Sorry, boss … I am only a drummer.’ Chapter Four: ‘After a while in the fall you’re no longer normal.’ Chapter Five: ‘I’m losing my hair through stress!’ Chapter Six: ‘We were best friends who fell out.’ Chapter Seven: ‘I knew Mark got me in to fuck off friel.’ Chapter Eight: ‘I took a lot of drugs and was a bit of a nutcase!’ Chapter Nine: ‘There was an outbreak of fleas.’ Chapter Ten: ‘I was living this incredible double life!’ Chapter Eleven: ‘There are a lot of skeletons in the fall cupboard, stories that haven’t been told.’ Chapter Twelve: ‘I’m not an arsonist, I work for the BBC!’ Chapter Thirteen: ‘A whole different universe.’ Chapter Fourteen: ‘’Ello, luv. are you having a nice holiday?’ Chapter Fifteen: ‘It was like some kind of medieval Italian principality. Or a Chinese court, full of would-be sycophants and mandarins.’ Chapter Sixteen: ‘Dependency on the organisation … attack the self.’ Chapter Seventeen: ‘Creative management, cock!’ Chapter Eighteen: ‘He looks much the same as he ever did – short hair, glass eye.’ Chapter Nineteen: ‘I neither left nor got sacked.’ Chapter Twenty: ‘He smashed up my keyboards quite often. It was an occupational hazard.’ Chapter Twenty-One: ‘It was like your last tour of Vietnam, with appropriate flashbacks and nightmares.’ Chapter Twenty-Two: ‘He had a face like a mouse’s snout.’ Chapter Twenty-Three: ‘Dear Mark, you’re my hero. Maybe when I’m of legal drinking age we could go for adrink?’ Chapter Twenty-Four: ‘We’d had abuse and death threats!’ Chapter Twenty-Five: ‘I’m proud that I survived three years before the first punch-up.’ Chapter Twenty-Six: ‘He’d knock on the windows or sing through the letter-box!’ Chapter Twenty-Seven: ‘So what do you do? Are you in a group?’ Chapter Twenty-Eight: ‘It was like spontaneous combustion.’ Chapter Twenty-Nine: ‘I’m becoming a travelling minstrel.’ Chapter Thirty: ‘Come on, cock, you can do it. We’ll have a rehearsal before you go on.’ Chapter Thirty-One: ‘If you’re a mate, you can tell him to fuck off!’ Chapter Thirty-Two: ‘It was all done very quietly, so no one knew I’d gone.’ Chapter Thirty-Three: ‘I found him barking like a dog.’ Chapter Thirty-Four: ‘I thought I was going insane. The only way I got through it was by taking up meditation.’ Chapter Thirty-Five: ‘My job was to stop the musicians having fun.’ Chapter Thirty-Six: ‘You’ve got the curse of the Fall!’ Acknowledgments Photography Credits and Permissions Acknowledgments Copyright
IN LOVING MEMORY OF THE FALLEN

Priest : Brethren, we are called upon to pay the last tributes of respect to brothers and sisters who have now gone. Places once filled are now vacant. Chairs once occupied are now empty. Hands, whose helpful clasp cheered us in days gone by, are folding in everlasting rest. It is fitting, therefore, that we should pause, no matter how engrossing our duties, and pay to our departed brothers and sisters the tribute due their memory.
Suggested music : ‘Hey! Luciani’ by The Fall
Brother scribe, the roll call.
Steve aka Dave (‘the unknown drummer’, 1976) ‘No longer with us’
Tony Friel (bass, 1976 – December 1977) ‘No longer with us’
Una Baines (keyboards, 1976 – March 1978) ‘No longer with us’
Martin Bramah (guitar/backing vocals, 1976 – April 1979; July 1989 – July 1990) ‘No longer with us’
Karl Burns (drums/guitar/bass/keyboards) (May 1977 – December 1978; October 1981 – June 1986; January 1993 – December 1996; May 1997 – April 1998) ‘No longer with us’
Kay Carroll (backing vocals, management 1977 – April 1983) ‘No longer with us’
Jonnie Brown (bass, January – March 1978) ‘No longer with us’
Eric McGann aka Rick Goldstraw aka Eric Echo aka Eric the Ferret (bass, March – June 1978) ‘No longer with us’
Yvonne Pawlett (keyboards, May 1978 – June 1979) ‘No longer with us’
Steve Davies (percussion/drums, 30 May 1978 and again in June 1980) ‘No longer with us’
Marc Riley (guitar, then bass, June 1978 – December 1982) ‘No longer with us’
Steve Hanley (bass, April 1979 – April 1998) ‘No longer with us’
Craig Scanlon (guitar, April 1979 – December 1995) ‘No longer with us’
Mike Leigh (drums, January 1979 – March 1980) ‘No longer with us’
Dave Tucker (clarinet, 1980–1) ‘No longer with us’
Paul Hanley (drums, March 1980 – March 1985) ‘No longer with us’
Brix Smith (guitar/backing vocals, September 1983 – July 1989; August 1994 – October 1996) ‘No longer with us’
Simon Rogers (bass/keyboards/guitar, March 1985 – October 1986) ‘No longer with us’
Simon Wolstencroft (drums/keyboards, June 1986 – August 1997) ‘No longer with us’
Marcia Schofield (keyboards, October 1986 – July 1990) ‘No longer with us’
Charlotte Bill (flute/oboe, 1990) ‘No longer with us’
Kenny Brady (violin/keyboards, July 1990 – June 1991) ‘No longer with us’
Dave Bush (keyboards, August 1991 – November 1995) ‘No longer with us’
Julia Nagle (keyboards/guitar, November 1995 – August 2001) ‘No longer with us’
Adrian Flanagan (guitar, December 1996 – February 1997) ‘No longer with us’
Keir Stewart (guitar, early 1997) ‘No longer with us’
Tommy Crooks (guitar, August 1997 – April 1998) ‘No longer with us’
Kate Themen (drums, April – May 1998) ‘No longer with us’
Stuart Estell (guitar, 30 April 1998) ‘No longer with us’
Karen Leatham (bass, August 1998 – December 1998) ‘No longer with us’
Tom Head aka Thomas Patrick Murphy (drums, August 1998 – November 2000) ‘No longer with us’
Neville Wilding (guitar, November 1998 – February 2001) ‘No longer with us’
Adam Helal (bass, December 1998 – February 2001) ‘No longer with us’
Nick Dewey (drums, 27 August 1999) ‘No longer with us’
Steve Evets (backing vocals/bass, 2000–2) ‘No longer with us’
Ed Blaney (guitar/backing vocals/management/’brokering’, 2000–4) ‘No longer with us’
Spencer Birtwistle (drums, November 2000 – November 2001; July 2004 – May 2006) ‘No longer with us’
Ben Pritchard (guitar, February 2001 – May 2006) ‘No longer with us’
Jim Watts (guitar/bass/keyboards/computers, February 2001 – March 2003; July – December 2004) ‘No longer with us’
Brian Fanning (guitar, mid to late 2001) ‘No longer with us’
Dave Milner (drums/backing vocals, November 2001 – June 2004) ‘No longer with us’
Ruth Daniel (keyboards, 22 September 2002) ‘No longer with us’
Simon Archer (bass, April 2003 – April 2004) ‘No longer with us’
Steven Trafford (bass, April 2004 – May 2006) ‘No longer with us’
Chris Evans (drums, 3 December 2004) ‘No longer with us’
Mark Edward Smith (vocals, 1976 to date) ‘Still with us. ALWAYS with us.’


This book documents a two-year period (2005–7) which I spent tracking down the dozens of people who had once played in The Fall. By the time the journey was over, what I refer to as ‘the current line-up’ had also departed, joining the ranks of The Fallen.
PROLOGUE: REMEMBERING THE FALLEN
I t was a Tuesday morning in December, and I was ringing people in Rotherham, all of them called Brown.
‘Hello,’ I began, for the fifth time that day, ‘I’m trying to trace Jonnie Brown who used to play in The Fall. I know he came from Rotherham and wondered if you might be a relative.’
‘The Who?’ asked the latest Mr Brown on the end of the line.
‘No. The Fall … the band from Salford. Jonnie played bass for three weeks in 1978.’
‘Is this some kind of joke?’
First I had become an internet stalker, now I was a telephone pest, all because of The Fall. Why was I doing this?
It started on 4 September 2005 when I drove to Manchester to interview Mark E Smith. I am a journalist and I’ve been interviewing pop stars for years but this encounter was different. Before the interview, even casual observers seemed to have a cautioning word. ‘You’d better take a crash helmet,’ joked one mate, aware of Smith’s colourful reputation – in particular, stubbing a cigarette out on a pesky journalist’s forehead. Days before my interview, I received a call from the paper’s photographer, who found the singer so ‘blotto’ at the photo session he’d come away with hundreds of shots of the venerable vocalist having to be held upright by bewildered passers-by.
I’d met Smith years before, in 1981. I had approached the notoriously opinionated frontman on the steps of Leeds University, where The Fall were about to play. Considering that even then he had a spiky public image, Smith was surprisingly polite, but I didn’t get the autograph I craved. Neither of us could produce a pen – instead the singer rather charmingly took a bite mark out of my ticket, leaving a lasting impression of his 1981 dental work and a DNA sample which remains in my possession in case any Fall-mad scientists ever wish to make a clone of Mark E Smith.
As I drove the 70 miles along the M62 to the interview, passing signs for Smith’s beloved Prestwich and Salford, something nagged at me all the way. What had happened in the interve

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