Friday, 1 December 2017
851 The Other Side of Midnight
First viewed : February 1988
Towards the end of 1987, 24 hour TV became a reality on ITV. Granada rejected the London-based Night Network and went its own way. One of its offerings was this late night arts magazine presented by, you guessed it, Tony Wilson ( did he ever leave the building ? )
He didn't have much of a budget but he was free to promote what he liked which of course meant a lot of Factory acts, something Paul Morley called him out on when he appeared on the programme. He also had the good luck that he got the gig just as his home city became the centre of a new music explosion and Stone Roses, Happy Mondays, Inspiral Carpets and A Guy Called Gerald all got early exposure on the programme.
I used to put it on when I'd got back from the pub so it's perhaps not too surprising that I don't recall too many specific features. I do recall him having Robert Elms on and haranguing him about his championing of Spandau Ballet and the New Romantics - "the most vapid era in music". Some might argue "vapid" was a pretty good word to describe the bulk of Factory's output that didn't involve anyone surnamed Hook or Ryder but we'll let that pass.
The show ran from 1988 to 1989.
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I'd have replaced "Hook" with "Sumner" there - Electronic were streets ahead of Revenge! (And I quite like some of the stuff he produced for Factory, like Marcel King's 'Reach for Love' and Section 25's second album)
ReplyDeleteFair point.
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