It's hard, at first, to see
how a story about a building could also be a story about memory, status,
nostalgia, money, madness (in)experience, simple greed (and saintly generosity),
youth, life, death and violence. Even music. Not really a story at all
then. More like a soap opera. As far as most people are concerned, the
story of a building which became a club, an idea and even a lifestyle
begins in the middle. And the end? Well, there isn't one yet. Because
this story is a cultural autopsy with the death certificate lost forever
in the post.
The Hacienda is 15 years
old. Five would be an achievement. Ten worth writing home about. But 15?
The founders seemed full of optimism about the club back in 1982, but
not many of them could have thought much about 15 years down the line,
or about the significance the place would come to have. After all, this
is only a building we're talking about. Just some bricks and mortar which
changed the course of British club culture, and more than a few lives.
It's 1981. You are Rob Gretton
and you have nowhere to go at night. Nowhere at least that suits you -
a no-nonsense Northerner with a few bob in your pocket - secretly too
arty for tatty pubs and too young for dinner parties. You or I might have
gone to night school or taken up crosswords. Rob instead decided to buttonhole
a few of his mates who, like him, had recently come into a few bob through
this pop music lark - rambling on about an idea he'd had about opening
a club.
The idea was not a new one.
Since 1978, Tony Wilson, television presenter and punk rock enthusiast,
had hosted The Factory at The Russell Club in Hulme, Manchester, putting
on local names and likely chancers - big national and even international
names for spitting kids in ill-fitting jackets. Tony had a record label
also called Factory, and Rob managed a local group called Joy Division
who had put out some records on Tony's label. Joy Division, after the
suicide of their singer Ian Curtis, had by late 1980 become New Order.
By this stage, with The Factory finished, Rob was thinking of a different
kind of club. A purpose-built place that you actually owned - not some
badly-lit basement that you borrowed off some thug in a camel coat. When
asked many years later why he had come up with the idea, Rob, typically
flip, would claim he wanted somewhere he could go to "ogle birds".
By then part of a successful
Factory Records via a loose and revolutionary verbal profit-sharing agreement
between New Order and the label, Rob knew his idea would take a great
deal more than his own money to complete. So he persisted. Going on about
it until Tony and former actor Alan Erasmus (also part of Factory and
later The Hacienda) consented and told him to get on with it.
By the summer of 19B1, things
were under way. Having promoted a New Order gig at the Manchester Students'
Union to the satisfaction of everyone concerned, Howard Jones (no, not
him) was hired to find a venue. He found the International Marine Centre,
housed in an 19905 building on Whitworth Street, in the middle of a then
grim-looking postindustrial cityscape. The place was huge, but its scale
matched the ambitions of the entrepreneurial dreamers who took it over.
Graphic artist Peter Saville,
a long-standing Factory associate, had added his distinctive style to
many Factory record sleeves. He mentioned his friend Ben Kelly as the
man who could turn an unassuming interior into a club environment to equal
the likes of New York's Danceteria, Fun House and Paradise Garage - places
that Rob and Tony, now touring with New Order, would enthuse about as
ultimate night-time spaces. Kelly saw the building and jumped at the chance.
Whitbread Breweries were persuaded to part with £140,000 to assist
in the project. This, given the size of the venue and Kelly's plans, would
just about pay for the paint. New Order contributed around £70 000
It is said that the lease on the building and the eventual conversion
cost around £340 000 The rest came from Factory itself.
Somewhere close to schedule,
with the walls still wet and planks covering areas of unfinished floor,
The Hacienda opened on May 21, 1982. With a retrospective significance,
Wigan Casino, the capital of Northern Soul, had closed its doors in December
1981. By the time the Hacienda reached warp speed in early 1989, the similarities
were clear - same tempo, same obsession with the obscure musical products
of black America. But the drug was new - new at least if you weren't big
on keeping abreast of pharmaceutical developments originating in Germany
at the start of the First World War. Had Wigan Casino survived it might
have passed on a few lessons about the obstacles this impressive new space
- christened with its own Factory catalogue number, 51 - would face. Had
the Casino survived, both clubs would have been places of worship at either
end of the East Lancashire Road - like the twin cathedrals spanning Liverpool's
Hope Street. Except that this time the religion would have been the same.
The name - The Hacienda -
had come from some obscurantist Situationist text that Rob had been leafing
through. Quoted endlessly since then, the piece, written by Ivan Chtcheglov
in 1953, contains the phrase "The Hacienda must be built". Negotiating
the planks on the opening night, you might have amended Gretton's tag
line to "The Hacienda must be finished". On the 21st it was invite only
- and the new-wave hierarchy were out in force. Hewan Clark was the DJ.
He went on to DJ every single night the club was open for the next four
years, an impressive feat considering the initial madness of a decision
to open seven days a week.
Hewan, a funk and soul D at
black music club The Reno, had been a kind of support act on tours with
A Certain Ratio. Tony Wilson managed ACR and he and Hewan had clicked
- both enthusing over the same favourite DJ: Frankie Crocker at New York's
WBLS. Wilson told Hewan he was opening his own club and that he wanted
him to be the DJ. Every night.
"Of a strained directors' meeting
during the 1991 difficulties: 'I said to Barney [Sumner], 'I know it's
been one long saga of human hell, but if there's a button you could press
and the club never existed, you couldn't press it.' He replied: 'Where's
the fucking button?'"
Anthony Wilson [ Factory
'Supremo' ]
Northern irony being
no better back then than it is now, alleged comedian Bernard Manning was
hired to open the club. With people still gawping at the industrial majesty
of it all, Manning, evidently keen to secure Ben Kelly's services for
a refit at his own Embassy Club, grumbled into a troublesome mic: "I've
played some shit-holes in my time but this is really something." He later
disappeared, puzzled and waiving his usual fee.
The Architectural Review disagreed
with Manning's appraisal, declaring the club "a pioneering interior".
For people who only listen to records and just need a big space to do
it in, your first time at The Hacienda was (is) a breathtaking crash course
in the aesthetics of design. It's impossible to escape the idea that through
Ben Kelly, the club, like the labels, had realised a unique vision of
how things should be - changing overnight the expectations of UK club-goers
used to being treated like dirt.
At that stage we didn't really
have a language to deal with it. A review of the new venue in Manchester
Evening News that year was headlined PICK YOUR OWN LEVEL - a reference
to the then space-age concept of being able to dance, pose or watch from
the floor, the balcony or the basement Gay Traitor Bar. The striped road-bollards
on the dancefloor were a talking point. Ben Kelly had put them there at
a cost of £4.50 each to stop girls (and the occasional boy) getting
their high heels stuck in the road-marking cats' eyes that edged the floor.
The inspiration for the whole thing seems to have originated in discussions
between Peter Saville and Ben Kelly about their die-cut grille sleeve
for the original issue of the first Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark
LP (who were, of course, then considered quite cool) and some work Kelly
had done for a shop called Howie in London. He recently commented that
his inspiration really came "from the building itself, and my arrogance
in thinking I knew exactly what a club designed for Factory and New Order
should look like".
The real opening followed
the next evening. Seventy-five people looked for corners to hide in while
Cabaret Voltaire approximated the sound of several light aircraft colliding.
It was clear there were going to be problems. Getting people in, getting
people used to it all - a whole new way of going out and sorting out the
sound. Some £40,000 had already been spent, but in truth the building
had been chosen for its size and its design possibilities above its acoustic
properties. Hewan Clarke scribbled a note in 1983 asking for some way
of seeing out of his black box and "a pair of monitor speakers to aid
in the mixing of records". These days even footballers have monitor speakers
in their bedroom mixing dens.
By the end of the first year
a regular membership of post-punk trendies had claimed the space as their
own - though Tony Wilson's pioneering black dance policy for the club
was causing some controversy among the white hairdressers who saw an appealing
pretension in The Hacienda. "I object to the DJ's overplaying of funk,
jazz, disco or whatever it's called," one letter ranted. "After all, not
everyone wants to dance to Bauhaus and Patrice Rushen." DJ John Tracey,
now sharing Hewan's seven-day working week, started playing Gerry Anderson's
Thunderbirds theme so everyone could wheel about in circles with their
arms out at the end of the night. The music settled as a schizophrenic
mix of Simple Minds and Willie Hutch, Iggy Pop and Sharon Redd. Other
end-of-night favourites included Lulu's "Shout" and the theme from Zorba
The Greek. Obviously things were a long way from Ce Ce Rogers' "Someday"
and "Pacific State" at this point.
By 1985 proper new dance music
from various schools was starting to make a real mark on nights like Mike
Pickering's long-running Nude, which began that year. Looking back for
the roots of the seismic revolution in club culture that occurred in the
Eighties, some place huge emphasis on 1988 - on acid house and the drugs
that undoubtedly helped make mass sense of the music. But in real terms,
none of that could have happened without the slow - and painful - process
of DJs playing Trouble Funk to those who would have preferred Prefab Sprout
in the wilderness years between 1982 and 1985. A whole generation of NME
readers, completely unaware of jazz funk and Northern Soul, their own
rules already written in stone, slowly picked up the idea that you could
listen to The Smiths in the daytime while trying to get your head (and
your feet) around George Clinton's "Atomic Dog" at night. The Hacienda,
trusted because of its impeccable indie associations (the thinking being,
these people brought us Joy Division, how could they be wrong about Cameo?),
almost single-handedly took white Manchester beyond the Poly bop mentality
and slowly into the black technological futures of electro, funk and disco.
The club created a space where new cultural responses to this musical
cross-pollination could grow at their own pace. The success of Factory's
own A Certain Ratio in this period, from pale young men to whistle-blowing
funkateers, convincingly showed how things changed. At first the music
acted as a kind of sonic seasoning - tolerated, often grudgingly accepted,
then, with increasing enthusiasm, requested. The Hacienda's progressive
attitude at this time ensured that when pre-movement house music began
to appear, those seeing the rhythmic holes in funk-lite white pop were
ready.
"The Hacienda
didn't change us - we changed The Hacienda. It all went off under the
balcony in the left-hand corner"
Bez [ Vibes Controller,
Happy Mondays ]
- John Tracey's The End:
A No Funk Night died a natural death at the end of 1984. By 1986 electro
legend Greg Wilson had a night at the club, playing the solidly black
percussive New York sound to a set of new faces. For the princely sum
of £3.50 you could have seen Grandmaster Flash And The Furious
Five dressed like The Glitter Band. A real eye-opener for some who still
thought a party was listening to Throbbing Gristle records doing hot
knives round your mate's house. A great many people, myself included,
had their lives, or at least their taste in music, changed by the pre-house
Hacienda. We were all learning together. As the summer of 1986 arrived,
The Hacienda was full with what is quaintly described in its own records
as "a band-less disco"; it was starting to make money too, and Paul
Mason became manager of the club, poached from a successful Rock City
in Nottingham, to keep it that way. Paul remembers his induction during
a Factory-style board meeting where Rob Gretton - in a heated discussion
with Tony Wilson - threw his chips at him. Tony and Rob ended up grappling
on the floor. Sadly, there are no pictures.
- And then the bomb
dropped - with no warning that I can remember, apart, perhaps, from
DJ Jon Da Silva's siren sound effects. People always use the phrase
Acid House. To me that has never made any sense. In the beginning, as
somebody with a deep voice used to say, there was house. Records with
singing in them, almost like gospel with big, pushy rhythms and vaguely
spaced dubs. House certainly sounded new back then (obviously we weren't
as clever as we are now in spotting the disco roots of the sound), but
it was still polite. Acid was a different sound altogether - menacing,
growling, ungrateful and volatile, at its best like a starved dog prowling
in circles. The Chicago House Party Tour which stopped at the club in
March 1987 with Frankie Knuckles, Marshall and the rest of them getting
their first taste of gullible limeys paying through the nose for their
instinctive magic, showed that house, now a big part of nights like
Nude and Wide, was here to stay. At least for a while. But Acid sounded
like coded radio sig- nals, a kind of dance instruction from another
planet. At least until some wayward holidaymakers brought us all a present
back.
"I went to the opening night
at The Hacienda. We used to laugh at the black-and-white `Factory' types
that filled it - so serious, so Dada, so Eighties. I remember being there
one night looking at thousands of boys and girls E-ing out of their minds,
all in sync, possessing a kind of energy that rose and swelled and then
totally let go. Here's to another 15 years"
- According to Shaun
and Bez, interviewed some time after the event and not usually known
for being good with dates, some of their mates had been away on holiday
in Valencia and Ibiza and had brought back some Ecstasy tablets. People
tried them out and they seemed to fit the music perfectly. Many lost
their inhibitions overnight - feeling comfortable enough to get on stages
and podiums and wave their arms about in a state of, well, ecstasy -
hearing things in the music that they couldn't hear before. A new low-rent
crowd started mixing with the converted hairdressers and Factory obsessives
of old. It was, at times, a volatile mix. But the drugs turned an often
socially confused crowd into one sweaty nation, under the influence
of a groove twisted out of a small silver box (the Roland 303) invented
by Japanese technicians to provide a kind of karaoke backing for social-club
country and western singers.
- But this madness needed
a name and a night if it was to really make an impact. Paul Cons, installed
as part of the management team since 1986, and struck by the fact that
you couldn't breathe in the club on a good night, came up with the Hot
concept: water, ice pops, a swimming pool in the middle of the dancefloor
- all fairly standard in the Balearic Islands at the time, but unusual
nonetheless for northern England. Hot didn't last long - from the summer
until Christmas `88 - but is perhaps the best-remembered night in the
club's history. Jon Da Silva (who had recently taken Dean Johnson's
place alongside Dave Haslam at the Saturday Wide night after Dean had
left, fed up with being pestered for house during his famed Latin break)
and Mike Pickering soundtracked the madness. A Guy Called Gerald and
Graham Massey of 808 State would turn up, banging on the DJ booth door
with tapes of deranged 20-minute acid tracks which were gratefully played
in full. Sound effects of thunderstorms and rain were played to underline
the insanity. People threw water about and nobody got upset. Minus the
tales of pharmaceutical excess, these were times you might want to tell
your grandchildren about.
- Paul Cons insisted
Hot should end on a high and jacked it in with spirits still hovering
ten feet above the ground in anticipation. But there was still Zumbar,
a retarded cabaret night with fire-eaters and a Wheel Of Fortune. DJ
Dave Haslam's Temperance Club continued too, breaking new ground with
an idiosyncratic and open-minded mix of music from James to Mantronix,
James Brown to The Smiths, which had much to do with a wide-trousered
revolution subsequently called baggy and the fact that, from the great
Happy Mondays down, all Manchester bands began sounding like "Funky
Drummer" played by The Velvet Underground. As a direct result of all
this Manchester in general and The Hacienda in particular became under-age
tourist attractions.
- It was at this time
that, during a London photo-shoot lining up the main house offenders
for yet another What The Fuck's Going On? piece, Mike Pickering met
Graeme Park - one of the very few DJs outside London who, like Pickering,
had become obsessed. The two got on like an acid house on fire, and
a few weeks later Mike called the Scots refugee in Nottingham to ask
if he could fill in for him while he was away. Graeme jumped at the
chance. By the time Mike got back, things had gone so well with Graeme
playing on Fridays that it was decided the two would share the night
from then on. Graeme, like Jon Da Silva, was a superb and inventive
mixer who made his mark on the club.
- Relying on what was
written at the time, from 1989 onwards, you might have thought The Hacienda
did little more than fend off the attentions of the police, watch people
get stabbed or die from taking Ecstasy, close, reopen and close again.
But we're talking about eight years to date. And in that time The Hacienda
has hosted the ultra-successful gay night Flesh (all the madness of
Hot in high heels), let a former fan called Sasha play a few times (queues
around the block and then around again), ripped up a well-used dancefloor
and sold it (ten quid a piece, you planks), let RoIf Harris perform
a can-you-tell-what-it-is-yet painting class, and allowed a proper wedding
to take place on stage - giving journalists like me the chance to go
on about The Hacienda as a church at great and pretentious length. In
a coals-to-Newcastle sensation the club even toured the US, to enthusiastic
response from Americans who had techno explained to them in thick north
Manchester accents.
- All of this, however,
is still overshadowed by the death in July 1989 of teenager Clare Leighton,
the victim of an extreme reaction to Ecstasy. Drugs had helped the club
plot its peaks and, during the post `88 period, they would shadow its
worst times. The comparatively innocent and embarrassingly titled Summer
Of Love, a kind of blissful narcotic honeymoon, was soon spoiled by
greedy dealers fighting for control of a drug-taking frenzy on a scale
none of them had witnessed before. These people didn't give a shit about
acid house - the music was simply a soundtrack to a steep and sudden
upturn in their personal fortunes. The Hacienda became the backdrop
to their struggle for control and supremacy. During 1990, with Clare
Leighton's death obviously in mind, the police had, under Operation
Clubwatch, infiltrated The Hacienda, and seemed to conclude that the
dealers, the problem and the club were one and the same. In May 1990
they informed manager Paul Mason of their intention to oppose an upcoming
licence renewal. At a hearing on July 23, 1990, having secured the assistance
of George Carman DC, the club was granted six months to sort out the
problems.
- By January 3, 1991,
at the postponed hearing, the magistrates decided there had been a "positive
change in direction" and renewed the club's licence. The management
themselves decided to reintroduce the original membership scheme to
try and keep troublemakers out. Within just a few weeks, on January
30, Tony Wilson announced that the club was closing voluntarily after
door staff had been threatened with a gun.
- The Hacienda took
the time out to apply a new Ben Kelly colour-scheme and install airport-style
security measures. It reopened on May 10. By this stage, though, the
long-running Saturday with Park and Wainwright, the phenomenal success
of Flesh and even RoIf Harris weren't news enough for the papers, which
circled like vultures waiting for stabbings and drug stories. During
all of this support came from some strange quarters. One news piece
in the Sun called The Hacienda "the most important venue since the Cavern".
New Order, who were never that visible in their financial association
with the club, wheeled themselves out to talk and have their pictures
taken on the hallowed dancefloor. "Basically," said Peter Hook, "this
place has got to stay. It's the only place in Manchester that'll let
me in with my jackboots on."
"The defining moment for
me was hearing Rhythm Is Rhythm's `The Dance' in about 1987. That was the
start of acid house for me - a moment I'll never forget. I remain eternally
grateful to The Hac's sweaty podiums"
Justin Robertson [ Hac DJ
1990-91, 1994-95 ]
- In 1997, those that
took their cues from The Hacienda (step forward, Cream and Hard Times
among many, many others) enjoy the ride on the cultural rollercoaster
the club helped to create. The Hacienda plays on for ever, like in that
Sterling Void song. There's Pleasure on Fridays (real house and adult
techno upstairs, downbeat experiments in the basement), the return of
Paul Cons with Freak on Saturdays (fire-eaters, contortionists, Haslam
back downstairs and those familiar queues again in a handbag-free zone),
and Stone Love (son of Temperance, plenty of under-age snogging in the
shadows) to be getting on with.
- I asked Tony Wilson
a stupid question: can it all happen again? He replied: "Of course it
can. Somewhere around 1999 to 2001. And it probably won't have a thing
to do with house music." And of course he's right. And the music will
change (I'm sure you'll join me in hoping we're not diving in swimming
pools to trip hop come the millennium), but the building will be there
for it - heading for a twentieth birthday - still fighting, still breathing,
still giving a damn.
- And Rob Gretton will
be perched in his favourite ogling spot ("the upstairs lighting booth",
if you must know), confirmed as a bona fide house hero alongside Farley,
Marshall, Frankie and the rest of them if you want to start adding it
all up.
Musical history tour:
Five certified Hacienda
classics
Klein and MBO"Dirty
Talk" Released pre-house, this Italian electro-disco curio only really
made sense after the Chicago invasion. It is impossible to tire of this
record and its handclap crazy charm.
Mantronix"Bassline"
In spite of MC Tee - probably the worst rapper in history - "Bassline"
is a truly groundbreaking record, which signalled a whole era of hip hop
tracks (Eric B, Roxanne Shante etc, etc) designed primarily as dance aids.
Dee-Lite "Wild
Times (Derrick May Mix)" This Dee-Lite are not the bri-nylon funkateers
from New York but some pony combo whose cliche-filled house record was
dragged into the future by Derrick May. This is now rightly regarded as
a Rhythim Is Rhythim record Gwen Guthrie "Seventh Heaven" At the time
this just seemed like something made by aliens sent down to earth to have
a vocal added. A truly startling record.
Salt City Orchestra"The
Book" Miles Hollway and Eliot Eastwick used to work behind the bar
at The Hacienda. Then they put together this hero-eclipsing, fundamentalist,
spooked-out classic which takes the American idea and puts its fingers
in a wall socket.
|
Manchester's
Paper Recordings
links to other pages........
- Patrick
Adams
- Bluffers
Guide to Dub
- Bristol
Rising
- Beats
International
- Depeche
Mode
- Enter
The Acid House
- Bruce Forrest
- Frankie
Goes To Hollywood - Mad Bastards
- Guide
to 808,909,303
- Working
On A Building Of Love - Hacienda
- Madness:
Utter Madness
- Marshall Jefferson
- Michael
Jackson - Bad
- Chaka
Kahn
- Kingbee
Records
- KLF
- Tales From The White Room
- Kraftwerk
- Massive
Attack
- Miami
Bass
- Moog
Synthesizer
- Northern
Heroes
- The Pet Shop Boys
- Staying
Mute
- The
Stone Roses
- Luther
Vandross
- The
Verve - Urban Hymns
- Welcome
To The Phuture: Techno
|