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Curtis' bandmates Bernard Sumner, Peter Hook, and Stephen Morris provided incidental music for the soundtrack via their post-Joy Division incarnation New Order. Control was filmed partly on location in Nottingham , Manchester , and Macclesfield , including areas where Curtis lived, and was shot in colour and then printed to black-and-white .
The New Order: Live in Glasgow DVD was recorded at the Glasgow Academy in 2006 and features 18 tracks, including 4 Joy Division songs. [45] Next to that, the release also contains a bonus disc of footage from the band's personal archive including 1980s footage from Glastonbury (June 1981), Rome, Cork, Rotterdam and Toronto.
Set to the song's 1987 re-recording the film features a young woman in Paris who steals a vinyl copy of the song's original 12-inch release from a vintage record shop (the now defunct Bimbo Tower), along with a bouquet from a flower shop, before returning to her apartment. On arrival home she puts the flowers in a vase and the record on to a ...
New Order's debut single, "Ceremony" (1981), was formed from the last two songs written with Curtis. [74] New Order struggled in their early years to escape the shadow of Joy Division, but went on to achieve far greater commercial success with a different, more upbeat and dance-oriented sound. [6]
New Order Stephen Hague ‡ Non-album single B-side to "True Faith" 1987 [1] "5 8 6" New Order Power, Corruption & Lies: 1983 [2] "60 Miles an Hour" New Order Get Ready: 2001 [3] "Academic" New Order [a] Music Complete: 2015 [4] "Age of Consent" New Order Power, Corruption & Lies: 1983 [2] "All Day Long" New Order Brotherhood: 1986 [5] "All the ...
Because of this, Joy Division officially ceased later that year. [3] Morris, Sumner and Hook subsequently teamed with Morris' then-girlfriend Gillian Gilbert and formed New Order. [3] Their debut single, "Ceremony" and its B-side, "In a Lonely Place", were two of the final songs written by Joy Division before their break-up. [10]
Total: From Joy Division to New Order is a compilation album of material from the British bands Joy Division and New Order.It was released in the United Kingdom on 6 June 2011 by Rhino Entertainment and is the first album to feature songs from both bands in one album.
Elegia is an instrumental tribute to Joy Division frontman Ian Curtis, whom some of the members of New Order previously played in. [2] Due to its sombre mood, it has been used in a variety of media, including Pretty in Pink, Stranger Things and The Crown. "Elegia" is Greek for elegy.