features in: Album Chart of 1980 ● Album Chart of the Decade: 1980s ● 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die |
For my money, there aren’t too many groups who’ve delivered back-to-back classic albums but I’ve filed Joy Division as elitists in this respect. Whilst not quite as stark as its’ predecessor musically, “Closer” retains the desolation, but in a somewhat more beautiful set, wrapped forever in a blanket of sadness. Recorded by the suicidal Ian Curtis in March, he never lived to see its release, having decided to hang himself in the early hours of May 18th,1980, just 2 months before the album was issued. I don’t think I’ve ever once listened to the record without having the ghostly spectre of the troubled front man in my head. Eccentric producer Martin Hannett was at the helm once again – he knew that he had something special on his hands with Ian Curtis, and once described him as “the lightning conductor”. It seems to me the producer consciously set out to frame the vocals first-and-foremost; Peter Hook for one was none-too-chuffed at his bass being so low-down, but it seems fine to me.
The overall sound is a bit bigger, a tad more epic if you will, with signs here and there of a group moving towards a more synthesized, dance-orientated future path. Early doors, “Isolation” would certainly come into this category – hooks, rhythm, melody, lifts – lyrics aside, it has all the hallmarks of the perfect New Wave record, hinting at a future beyond the gloomy shadows of Post-Punk. But those gloomy shadows seem permanently encoded within Joy Division’s DNA, completely at odds with their real-life lad-larks, and almost entirely down to the tortured-soul delivery from the front-man which, as we all now know, wasn’t an act. Suicide note follows suicide note from “A Means To An End” to “Twenty Four Hours” to “The Eternal”. Even the photograph on the cover is of the Appiani family tomb in the Cimitero Monumentale di Staglieno in Genoa, Italy. It was chosen by Ian Curtis; was ever a departure from this mortal coil so artful?
The Jukebox Rebel
13–Jul–2006
Tracklist |
A1 | [06:06] Joy Division - Atrocity Exhibition (Ian Curtis, Peter Hook, Stephen Morris, Bernard Sumner) Post-Punk |
A2 | [02:53] Joy Division - Isolation (Ian Curtis, Peter Hook, Stephen Morris, Bernard Sumner) New Wave |
A3 | [04:46] Joy Division - Passover (Ian Curtis, Peter Hook, Stephen Morris, Bernard Sumner) Post-Punk |
A4 | [03:55] Joy Division - Colony (Ian Curtis, Peter Hook, Stephen Morris, Bernard Sumner) Post-Punk |
A5 | [04:07] Joy Division - A Means To An End (Ian Curtis, Peter Hook, Stephen Morris, Bernard Sumner) Post-Punk |
B1 | [05:51] Joy Division - Heart And Soul (Ian Curtis, Peter Hook, Stephen Morris, Bernard Sumner) Trance Rock |
B2 | [04:26] Joy Division - Twenty Four Hours (Ian Curtis, Peter Hook, Stephen Morris, Bernard Sumner) Post-Punk |
B3 | [06:07] Joy Division - The Eternal (Ian Curtis, Peter Hook, Stephen Morris, Bernard Sumner) Moodcore |
B4 | [06:09] Joy Division - Decades (Ian Curtis, Peter Hook, Stephen Morris, Bernard Sumner) New Wave |