NEW ORDER
Rising from the ashes of the legendary British post-punk unit
Joy Division, the enigmatic New Order triumphed over tragedy to
emerge as one of the most influential and acclaimed bands of the
1980s; embracing the electronic textures and disco rhythms of
the underground club culture many years in advance of their contemporaries,
the group's pioneering fusion of new wave aesthetics and dance
music successfully bridged the gap between the two worlds, creating
a distinctively thoughtful and oblique brand of synth-pop appealing
equally to the mind, body and soul. New Order's origins officially
date back to mid-1976, when guitarist Bernard Sumner (formerly
Albrecht) and bassist Peter Hook -- inspired by a recent Sex Pistols
performance -- announced their intentions to form a band of their
own. Recruiting singer Ian Curtis and drummer Stephen Morris,
they eventually settled on the name Joy Division, and in 1979
issued their landmark debut LP, Unknown Pleasures.
After completing sessions for Joy Division's sophomore effort,
Closer, Curtis hanged himself on May 18, 1980; devastated, the
remaining trio immediately disbanded, only to re-form a few months
later as New Order with the addition of keyboardist Gillian Gilbert.
With Sumner assuming vocal duties, the new group debuted in March
1981 with the single "Ceremony," a darkly melodic effort
originally composed for use by Joy Division. The LP Movement followed
a few months later, and when it too mined territory similar to
New Order's previous incarnation, many observers were quick to
dismiss the band for reliving former glories. However, with their
next single, "Everything's Gone Green," the quartet
first began adorning their sound with synthesizers and sequencers,
inspired by the music of Kraftwerk as well as the electro beats
coming up from the New York underground; 1982's "Temptation"
continued the trend, and like its predecessor was a major favorite
among clubgoers.
After a year-long hiatus, New Order resurfaced in 1983 with their
breakthrough hit "Blue Monday"; packaged in a provocative
sleeve designed to recall a computer disk, with virtually no information
about the band itself -- a hallmark of their mysterious, distant
image -- it perfectly married Sumner's plaintive yet cold vocals
and abstract lyrics with cutting-edge drum-machine rhythms ideal
for club consumption. "Blue Monday" went on to become
the best-selling 12-inch release of all time, moving over three
million copies worldwide. After releasing their brilliant 1983
sophomore album Power, Corruption and Lies, New Order teamed with
the then-unknown producer Arthur Baker to record "Confusion,"
another state-of-the-art dance classic which even scraped into
the American R&B charts. The group's success soon won them
a Stateside contract with Quincy Jones' Qwest label; however,
apart from a pair of singles, "Thieves Like Us" and
"Murder," they remained out of the spotlight throughout
1984.
Heralded by the superb single "The Perfect Kiss," New
Order resurfaced in 1985 with Low-life, their most fully realized
effort to date; breaking with longstanding tradition, it actually
included photos of the individual members, suggesting an increasing
proximity with their growing audience. Brotherhood followed in
1986, with the single "Bizarre Love Triangle" making
significant inroads among mainstream pop audiences. A year later
the group issued Substance, a much-needed collection of singles
and remixes; it was New Order's American breakthrough, cracking
the Top 40 on the strength of the newly recorded single "True
Faith," which itself reached number 32 on the U.S. pop charts.
The remixed "Blue Monday 1988" followed, and in 1989
-- inspired by the Ecstasy-fueled house music which their work
had clearly predated and influenced -- New Order issued Technique;
their most club-focused outing to date, it launched the hits "Fine
Time" and "Round and Round."
After recording the 1990 British World Cup Soccer anthem "World
in Motion," New Order went on an extended hiatus to pursue
solo projects; Hook formed the band Revenge, longtime companions
Morris and Gilbert recorded a series of television themes as the
Other Two, and, most notably, Sumner teamed with ex-Smiths guitarist
Johnny Marr and Pet Shop Boys frontman Neil Tennant in Electronic,
which scored a Top 40 hit with the single "Getting Away With
It." Finally, New Order reconvened in 1993; Republic was
their biggest hit to date, falling just shy of the U.S. Top Ten
despite charges from longtime fans that the band had lost its
edge. A major tour followed, although rumors of escalating creative
conflicts plagued the group; refusing to either confirm or deny
word of a breakup, New Order simply spent the mid-1990s in a state
of limbo, with Sumner eventually recording a long-awaited second
Electronic LP and Hook mounting another new project, Monaco. Finally,
in 1998, the group announced their intentions to reform and by
2000 had recorded a track for "The Beach" film starring
Leonardo DiCaprio.