Review
`Familiar Manchester music saga retold in epic detail' 4 STARS -- Q Magazine
`...detailed history unfolds the tangled tale of how Factory produced music that helped to shape the scene way beyond Manchester's Hacienda' -- Waterstone's Books Quarterly
'...a very good way to immerse in its strange and inspirational story' 4 STARS
-- Mojo
"Shadowplayers is an immaculately researched history of a label born in 1978 with Joy Division and whose later peaks- New Order, the Hacienda's acid house hedonism and Happy Mondays- are as interesting as the famous, financially induced troughs" - Ben East -- Metro Scotland
"Shadowplayers offers a meticulously researched year-by-year account of the label's beginnings, its triumphs and eventual dissolution. Nice brings an encyclopaedic zeal to his recollections of such fleeting musical oddities as Crawling Chaos, Swamp Children, Biting Tongues and The Wendys, alongside Factory's more famous players." --The Independent
Factory was no Motown, you're reminded of the distictly patchy nature of much of their musical output but this is an extraordinary story, well told.
-- Word Magazine
Shadowplayers is an immaculately researched history of a label born in 1978 with Joy Division
-- Metro Scotland
`Knockout Read' --The Coventry Telegraph, 8th June 2011
`...detailed history unfolds the tangled tale of how Factory produced music that helped to shape the scene way beyond Manchester's Hacienda' -- Waterstone's Books Quarterly
'...a very good way to immerse in its strange and inspirational story' 4 STARS
-- Mojo
"Shadowplayers is an immaculately researched history of a label born in 1978 with Joy Division and whose later peaks- New Order, the Hacienda's acid house hedonism and Happy Mondays- are as interesting as the famous, financially induced troughs" - Ben East -- Metro Scotland
"Shadowplayers offers a meticulously researched year-by-year account of the label's beginnings, its triumphs and eventual dissolution. Nice brings an encyclopaedic zeal to his recollections of such fleeting musical oddities as Crawling Chaos, Swamp Children, Biting Tongues and The Wendys, alongside Factory's more famous players." --The Independent
Factory was no Motown, you're reminded of the distictly patchy nature of much of their musical output but this is an extraordinary story, well told.
-- Word Magazine
Shadowplayers is an immaculately researched history of a label born in 1978 with Joy Division
-- Metro Scotland
`Knockout Read' --The Coventry Telegraph, 8th June 2011
Product Description
In 1978, a 'Factory for Sale' sign gave Alan Erasmus and Tony Wilson a name for their fledgling Manchester club night. Though they couldn't have known it at the time this was the launch of one of the most significant musical and cultural legacies of the late twentieth century. The club's electrifying live scene soon translated to vinyl, and Factory Records went on to become the most innovative and celebrated record labels of the next thrity years.
Always breaking new ground, Factory introduced the listening public to bands such as Joy Division, whose Unknown Pleasures was the label's first album release, New Order, Durutti Column and Happy Mondays. Propelled onwards by the inspirational cultural entrepreneur, Tony Wilson, Factory always sought new ways to energise popular consciousness, such as the infamous Hacienda nightclub, which enjoyed a chequered 15-year history after opening in 1982. Factory's reputation as a cultural hub was also bolstered by its fierce commitment to its own visual identity, achieved through the iconic sleeve designs and compaigning artwork of Peter Savelle.
However, the lofty reputation of Factory's musical and artistic ventures were only sporadically converted into commercial success, and when London Records pulled out of a takeoever bid in 1992 because of the absence of contracts, the fate of Factory Communications Ltd was sealed. But the label's downfall has done nothing to quell interest in the Factory legend, as films such as 24-Hour Party People and Control attest. Yet despite the perennial interest, the definitive and authentic story of Factory Records has never been told -- until now.
Shadowplayers is the most complete, authoritative and thoroughly researched account of how a group of provincial anarchists and entrepreneurs saw off bankers, journalists and gun-toting gangsters to create the most influential record label of modern times. Based on both archive and contemporary sources, the book tells the full story of Factory's inventive, idiosyncratic and tragic personalities, and ultimately, the acclaimed and much-loved music it produced.
Always breaking new ground, Factory introduced the listening public to bands such as Joy Division, whose Unknown Pleasures was the label's first album release, New Order, Durutti Column and Happy Mondays. Propelled onwards by the inspirational cultural entrepreneur, Tony Wilson, Factory always sought new ways to energise popular consciousness, such as the infamous Hacienda nightclub, which enjoyed a chequered 15-year history after opening in 1982. Factory's reputation as a cultural hub was also bolstered by its fierce commitment to its own visual identity, achieved through the iconic sleeve designs and compaigning artwork of Peter Savelle.
However, the lofty reputation of Factory's musical and artistic ventures were only sporadically converted into commercial success, and when London Records pulled out of a takeoever bid in 1992 because of the absence of contracts, the fate of Factory Communications Ltd was sealed. But the label's downfall has done nothing to quell interest in the Factory legend, as films such as 24-Hour Party People and Control attest. Yet despite the perennial interest, the definitive and authentic story of Factory Records has never been told -- until now.
Shadowplayers is the most complete, authoritative and thoroughly researched account of how a group of provincial anarchists and entrepreneurs saw off bankers, journalists and gun-toting gangsters to create the most influential record label of modern times. Based on both archive and contemporary sources, the book tells the full story of Factory's inventive, idiosyncratic and tragic personalities, and ultimately, the acclaimed and much-loved music it produced.
