Anthêsis, Charleroi Danses, and LTM Recordings present

A FACTORY NIGHT
(and then again)

Plan K - Brussels - 12|12|2009

 

Factory Records, founded in 1978 Manchester by Tony Wilson, Peter Saville and Alan Erasmus, was one of the most important independent record labels.
With collaborators as talented as Rob Gretton, Martin Hannett and Mike Pickering, Factory Records launched bands as famous as Joy Division, The Durutti Column, A Certain Ratio or The Happy Mondays as well as many other influent acts.
The links between Factory and Brussels have always been close: Factory Benelux and Les Disques du Crépuscule, Brussels band The Names and the legendary Plan K all are connections between the label and the post-industrial city.
Although defunct since 1992, Factory Records is still very present. Its influence on present-day cultural landscape is huge, from rock to dance music, and also design aesthetics. Numerous books, films and documentaries underline its importance.
Among all the bands discovered by Factory Records, those that started the post-punk era, precursor of cold wave and new wave, are the most important ones.
In December 2007, an event called A Factory Night (once again) was organised as a reference to this period and the Factory Nights in Brussels in 1979-1982. Being sold out with about 1500 visitors, the event was a great success and was recorded for a DVD release by LTM Recordings.
A Factory Night (and then again) will go a step further with concerts, DJ sets, exhibitions, signing sessions and screenings of documents of the era. The concerts will be followed by an afterparty that will take you through the sounds of Factory. This event will take place at the legendary Plan K, now better known as La Raffinerie.

 

Concerts | DJ sets & afterparty | Exhibitions | Screenings | Tickets | Address | Links | Contact

 

Concerts

A Certain Ratio

Manchester, 1978. In the beginning there were four: Jeremy Kerr (bass), Martin Moscrop (guitar/trumpet), Peter Terrel (guitar/effects) and Simon Topping (vocals/trumpet). Four thin boys with a name borrowed from a Brian Eno record, the intense, drummerless quartet initially drew influence from Wire, Eno, the Velvets and Kraftwerk, and gained a manager in Anthony Wilson. May 1979 saw the release of their first single, the dark "All Night Party", although the sound and musicianship of the band would be transformed by the arrival of funky drummer Donald Johnson (DoJo). Over the next few months the band gigged widely, often with Joy Division as part of Factory packages, and recorded with Martin Hannett. Post-punk, ACR now reflected the influence of Funkadelic, George Clinton, Bootsy Collins, The Bar Kays and James Brown. The next proper ACR record was the epochal "Shack Up", released by Factory Benelux in July 1980. The debut album To Each… was recorded in East Orange, New Jersey. ACR's third single was the astonishing "Flight", released in October 1980. Hypnotic, transcendental funk produced by Martin Hannett, and all three tracks marking ACR as the artistic equals of Joy Division. Released in January 1982, the next album Sextet attracted rave reviews. The original ACR quintet made just one more album, I'd Like to See You Again, cut in February and March 1982. By now Martha Tilson had departed, and Kerr and Moscrop were already working on their latin and jazz chops as members of companion band Swamp Children, soon to be re-branded as Kalima. The new music offered dry, disciplined latin disco, inspired in part by Cameo. With Tilson gone, and Topping content to play trumpet, percussion, and keyboards, the band also now lacked a willing singer. The new look ACR - Connell, Johnson Kerr and Moscrop - now elected to try for mainstream commercial success. In July 1983 the single "I Need Someone Tonite" revealed this new approach. After a brace of singles at the end of 1984 ("Life's A Scream" and "Brazilia"), and now with sax player Tony Quigley on board, a revitalized ACR returned to form in June 1985 with a back-tobasics double-header, "Wild Party" and "Sounds Like Something Dirty". A US tour was captured and later released as Live In America, further proof that they were becoming a tighter, funkier and better live act. The next year saw a Factory singles comp The Old And the New and a new studio release, Force. It was their last record for Factory and the beginning of a major label period. Good Together, their first album for A&M, was arguably too polished, and bettered by raw remix album ACR:MCR. Here they embraced another movement, working with the likes of Shaun Ryder, Norman Cook and Bernard Sumner on hazy acid tracks as Manchester enjoyed another period as the music capital of the world.
A switch back to a smaller label, Rob's Records, saw the album Up In Downsville released in 1992. The 12" mixes became sought-after club classics, and Creation Records released a remix album, Looking For A Certain Ratio, featuring reworks from 808 State, Sub Sub and The Other Two. In 1996 Rob’s released a new full-length, Change The Station.
Without splitting up, they lay low for a few years until the musical landscape finally caught up with them. As the post-punk explosion in the early 21st century grew, the band found themselves appearing on compilations and recommendation lists and returned to gigging. They found themselves playing to a new audience as Soul Jazz and LTM took the opportunity to reissue their classic albums. In 2008, ACR returned with a new album released by Le Son du Maquis: Mind Made Up.

Links: A Certain Ratio - Myspace

Section 25

Founded in Blackpool, Lancashire, UK in 1977 by brothers Larry (bass guitar, vocals) and Vincent Cassidy (drums, electronica), Section 25 gave their first concert in June 1978. Their first single, "Girls Don't Count", produced by Ian Curtis and Rob Gretton, was released in July 1980, followed by "Charnel Ground" (Factory Benelux) and, in August 1981, the album Always Now, produced by Martin Hannett. The band toured Great Britain and Europe together with other Factory bands like Joy Division, A Certain Ratio, The Durutti Column, Crispy Ambulance and New Order. Their second album, The Key of Dreams, was released in 1982, containing improvised, hypnotic or even psychedelic tracks. The album was well received and in 1982 the group undertook their first American tour.
While the post-punk movement drew to an end, Section 25, like New Order, began to explore new directions and recruited Jenny Ross on keyboards and vocals. This new orientation gave birth to the album From the Hip, produced by Bernard Summer of New Order. The single "Looking from a Hilltop" became a club hit worldwide, and in the USA had an important influence on the acid techno scene, as did their second US tour in 1985.
In 1986, the band fell apart, leaving only Larry Cassidy and Jenny Ross, who recorded the album Love & Hate. Due to a series of problems, the album was released only discreetly in 1988, and marked a pause in the band's career.
Core members Larry, Vin and Jenny regrouped in 2001, joined by guitarist Ian Butterworth (formerly with Tunnelvision) and Roger Wikeley. Although work on the new album was set back by the untimely death of Jenny Cassidy from cancer in November 2004, the group began gigging again in May 2006 and have since visited France, Belgium, Italy, Greece, Dublin, London and Poulton-le-Fylde. A new studio album, Part-Primitiv, was released in 2007, together with a live DVD, Communicants, filmed at various shows, including their large homecoming gig with New Order at Blackpool Winter Gardens on 16 October 2006.
On 20 June 2008 the group performed a 30th anniversary show in their Blackpool hometown, supported by Tunnelvision, and gifted an exclusive CD to the first fifty punters in attendance. This event was followed in November by a short European tour with Peter Hook of Joy Division/New Order, performing in Paris, Brussels, Oss and Krefeld. As well as playing a set of Section 25 songs (with new bassist Steve Stringer), the group were joined by Hook for a set of early Joy Division/New Order songs. Section 25 finished 2008 with a Christmas show in Blackpool on 19 December, with guest DJ Peter Hook, and three tracks of the deluxe Factory: Communications 1978-92 box set released through Rhino/Warner.
In June 2009 Section 25 released their sixth studio album, Nature + Degree, featuring new bassist Stuart Hill and with guest vocals on four tracks by Bethany Cassidy, daughter of Larry and Jenny. Self-produced, this excellent set again combined electro, postpunk and post-rock styles, and was launched with an appearance at the WGT festival in Leipzig. Future plans for 2009 includes dates in Italy and the US West Coast.

Links: Section 25 (I) - Section 25 (II) - Myspace (I) - Myspace (II)

Biting Tongues

Emerging out of the grey dawn of post-punk Manchester, Biting Tongues represented an uncompromising attempt to blend electronics, text and dance beats to harsh and overwhelming effect. Renowned for their unique high-energy performances and experimental video projects, the band’s original line-up featured writer Ken Hollings on vocals, multi-instrumentalist Graham Massey, filmmaker and saxophonist Howard Walmsley working together over the fiendish rhythm engine made up of Colin Seddon on bass and Eddie Sherwood on drums.
The band first performed together at one of Tony Wilson's Factory nights at the Russell Club in Hulme, providing a live soundtrack for a 16 mm silent epic called Biting Tongues. The film itself, a flashing series of negative images, became a memory; the name – and the band – remained. One of Manchester's most adventurous groups, Biting Tongues combined aggressive funk rhythms with musique concrete, incorporating film and slide projections into their performances. They would never play the same set twice, constantly adding new material and unafraid of experimenting with new ideas in front of a live audience. For an eighties band they clearly had a lot of nineties musical language going on: Northern industrial psychedelia at its hardcore best. In close collaboration with premier Manchester labels New Hormones and Factory Records, Biting Tongues went on to record five albums, including Don't Heal (1981), Live It (1981), Libreville (1982), Feverhouse (1985) and Recharge (1989), as well as producing Feverhouse, their ambitious independent film project released on video by Factory Ikon in 1985.
In 2003 the original Biting Tongues reformed to perform selected shows at the ICA and Islington Mills, with Hollings, Massey and Walmsley also working together on new audiovisual presentations such as "Dr X" at the Royal Institution in London as well "Ego In Exotica" and the "Lonely Creatures" series of short films at the Green Room Theatre in Manchester. With their back catalogue available on CD, the band is currently enjoying some long overdue credit for their innovative pre-digital slicing and dicing of sound, text and vision. "Effortless ferocity", The Wire remarked of Biting Tongues' return to live performance, "as exhilarating and as urgent as ever."

Links: Biting Tongues - Myspace

The Wake

The Wake formed in Glasgow (Scotland) in April 1981, after singer/guitarist Caesar joined forces with drummer Steven Allen and a keyboards player Carolyn Allen. The new group financed a single on their own Scan 45 label, "On Our Honeymoon", a copy of which New Order manager Rob Gretton admired, and invited The Wake to record for Factory. The group went into Strawberry Studio to record a seven-track mini album. Harmony, released on Factory in December 1982, which in some respects represents the missing link between the sound of Postcard and early Factory. 1983 saw the release of a new single for Factory Benelux, their last recording with bassist Bobby Gillespie (who went on to Primal Scream), followed by sprightly single "Talk About the Past" in 1984, featuring Vini Reilly (of Durutti Column) on piano.
The second album, Here Comes Everybody appeared in November 1985, featuring excellent songs such as "Torn Calender", "All I Asked You to Do" and "O Pamela" (covered by Nouvelle Vague in 2006), as well as a smooth studio production by Oz. It's undoubtedly a pop album, but a sombre one. Two further non-album singles would appear through Factory: "Of the Matter" (7" only, 1985) and a swansong 12" ep, "Something That No-One Else Could Bring" (1987). In 1989 The Wake transferred to Sarah records with a well-regarded single, "Crush the Flowers". 1991 saw a new album, Make it Loud, followed by another single, "Major John". After another period of relative silence, in 1994 Caesar and Carolyn returned with a fourth studio album, Tidal Wave of Hype. After Sarah shut up shop in 1995 The Wake found no suitable outlet for new material, and elected to call it a day. However, after two album collaborations with Bobby Wratten (The Field Mice, Trembling Blue Stars) as The Occasional Keepers, a new Wake album will be released on LTM in December 2009.

Links: The Wake @ LTM - Myspace

The Names (with strings)

Brussels, 1977: Marc Deprez, Michel Sordinia and Christophe Den Tandt form The Passengers. After a few concerts opening for Simple Minds and Magazine in 1979, the band lands a record deal at WEA and releases the single "Spectators of Life", just after changing their name to The Names. On January 17, 1980, contact is made with Factory Records during a Joy Division concert at the Plan K. A few months later, the band is joined by Luc Capelle and records the single "Nightshift" with producer Martin Hannett. Released in November, the first pressing is rapidly sold out. In May 1981, the second single, "Calcutta", is recorded, and released on Factory Benelux. It is followed by the album Swimming, again recorded with Martin Hannett and released through Les Disques du Crepuscule. After recording a final single, "The Astronaut", The Names disband.
The four original members, joined by Eric De Bruyne, reunite in 1994 under the name Jazz and they record the album Nightvision, released in 1997. The Names then returned on 15 December 2007, performing at the A Factory Night (Once Again) event at Plan K ahead of recording a new studio album, Monsters Next Door, released in 2009 via French label Str8line Records.
At A Factory Night (and then again), The Names will play a short special set accompanied by a string quartet.

Links: The Names - Myspace

 

DJ Sets & Afterparty

In between concerts, short DJ-sets will revisit the sound of Factory and its influence on past and present music. An afterparty will follow after the last concert with dj sets and a concert of Re:Order, a great tribute to New Order.

Graham Massey (808 State)

Graham Massey of Biting Tongues and founding member of legendary UK electronica pioneer 808 State will perform a special DJ set, pearl diving the depths of his extensive record collection and up to the sunlight with brand new remixes and personal hard drive filth.

Links: Graham Massey - The Sisters Transistors -Tooshed - Biting Tongues - 808 State

Tom Moderne (LTM/Crépuscule)

Tom Moderne plays a selection of electro, cold wave, post-punk and European sides (always tuneful), and is a director of LTM Recordings.

Links: LTM Recordings - Myspace - Les Disques du Crépuscule

Re:Order

A tribute to New Order ? Yes. Why not ? Putting aside the longevity of the iconic hit singles, New Order cut an inspirational swathe through the 1980's and influenced countless musicians and fans, including Re:Order, who first picked up their instruments to play along to the deceptively sophisticated melodies and rhythms of Joy Division... Then put them down again. As New Order and Factory Records moved through the 80's, the formative elements of Re:Order followed behind - trying to get their head around a new, layered world of music, technology and oblique home-made cassette design. Now, just like salmon returning to spawn, it feels only natural to be re:playing the songs that inspired them in the first place.
Re:Order have been playing live since 2004 and their setlists include material from: all the studio albums, the hit singles and the not-hit singles. Over the last 5 years they've played verbatim gigs, entire albums in order, peel sessions, songs that were never played live before and even ill-advised re:mixes... because they love it.
They say "you are what you eat"... Well, Re:Order must have eaten something that sounds and smells just like a New Order tribute band.

Links: Re:Order - Myspace

Other DJ's will also participate to the afterparty:
Gore (Cruise CTRL, Fantastique.Nights) - Muffin (Club Terror, :Codes) - X-Pulsiv (Pilgrimage, Fantastique.Nights).

 

Exhibitions & signing sessions

Kevin Cummins

Kevin Cummins is the man behind many iconic rock photographs. For twenty years he worked as a photographer for the NME and you could find his pictures on album covers and bedroom walls; today his work is exhibited in the National Portrait Gallery and the Victoria and Albert Museum. September has seen the release of Manchester. Looking for the Light through the Pouring Rain, his ode to his hometown of Manchester and its musicians, who dominated British pop culture for a long period of time: Joy Division, The Fall, Buzzcocks, New Order, The Smiths, Happy Mondays, Stone Roses, Oasis...
The book features writings of Paul Morley among others and interviews with Johnny Marr, Peter Hook and Mark E. Smith, but at the focal point are without a doubt the beautiful pictures by Cummins, still vibrant with the anarchic energy the portrayed artists had back in the days.

Links: Kevin Cummins

Philippe Carly

Philippe Carly is a firmly established Belgian photographer. In the late seventies and early eighties, he photographed all major artists of the alternative scene. His photographs were abundantly used in numerous publications and his website New Wave Photos is very famous. Phililippe Carly will sign his new book of photos taken at the Plan K during the late 70's - early 80's. A few photographs will also be on display.

Links: Philippe Carly - New Wave Photos

Daniel Oeyen

February 12, 1986, Paradox Antwerp. Being a young Art School student at St. Lukas Brussels at the time, I needed images for a school work. Bringing along my Pentax Spotmatic Camera of the 1960's and my one and only lens (a 50 mm.) I went to the A Certain Ratio concert. My only motivation to make pictures there, was to get a few good shots of a musician for that school work poster. Concentrating on getting the framing and the timing right it was not really the idea to shoot every member of the band. Most pictures were taken from the front row. In fact, at the time I hardly knew the music of ACR, and probably even less that they were on Factory Records. And how little could I know that the pictures I was making than would later surpass their original intention as much as they are doing now. It were also my very first concert pictures ever, taken long ago, 5 days after my 19th birthday. But seeing them again after 23 years, in the best way and the biggest size they were ever printed, they instantly bring me back to the atmosphere and the music of that gig. And it feels wonderful!

 

 

Projections

All night long, rare and unreleased documents (concert excerpts, videos, interviews…) will be screened.

 

Tickets

Presale: 25€ (+ costs) (afterparty included)

At the door: 30€ (afterparty included)
Afterparty only: 10€ (after 0:00)

 

Informations

Time Schedule

18:00

doors

Muffin (dj set)


19:00

The Names (with strings)

X-Pulsiv (dj set)


19:50

The Wake

Muffin (dj set)


20:50

Biting Tongues

Gore (dj set)

 

21:30

Screening:
Looking for the Light through the Pouring Rain
(Kevin Cummins & Graham Massey)


21:50

Section 25

Gore (dj set)

 

23:10

A Certain Ratio

 

0:10

Graham Massey (dj set)

 

1:00

Re:Order

 

2:00

Tom Moderne (dj set)

 

3:00

Muffin (dj set)
Gore (dj set)
X-Pulsiv (dj set)

 

6:00

curfew

 

Address

Plan K / La Raffinerie
Rue de Manchester 21 - 1080 Brussels
Link: www.charleroi-danses.be

Transport

Train: Midi station (Eurostar, Thalys)
Metro: "Gare L'Ouest" station
Tram: 82
Bus: 88, 89

 

Hotels & Tourism

Some addresses and links we recommend:

 

Links

A Factory Night 2007

Factory Records

Partenaires

 

Contact

For all information, please write to:

Press page: click here.

 

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