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Added 5th June 2007 by cody

Artefact

Press
The Stone Roses, Ian Tilton
The Hacienda
27th February 1989

Review from Sounds of The Stone Roses gig at The Hacienda on Monday (The Monday Club) 27th February 1989.

It reads
Arms erect, limbs surging, hair flicking left to right in one single fringe of transient excitement.
The Stone Roses begin with a callous disregard. Cruelly rocking, manic guitar, bass so low slung, and a gleaming blur of white monkey faces, stoned and immaculate.

Dangerous, desperate, and riding a crazy, spunout guitar, they're like Vini Reillys Durutti Column in overdrive.
The initial 'I Wanna Be Adored' is not only their anthem but their ambition. A major burnout, it ranks with the best of the new American guitar wave. Fuzzbox battles phaser while singer Ian Brown's glorious, easy voice travels over the top as though it were gravel on ice.

The Roses genius lies in their easy blending of summery, blissful energetic pop with a hard psychedlic edge. 'Made Of Stone' their latest single, is a prime example, merging the wired intensity of Dukes Of The Stratosphere's 25 o'clock with the prime time pop of 'All Mod Cons'.

Live they display an arrogance and brutality that's conspicuously absent on vinyl. ' Shoot You Down' with it's whispered hookline of "I'd love to do it and you know you've always had it coming" takes on a chillingly sinister aspect as brushed drums and subdued guitars build to an inexorable climax. The Roses seem capable of altering the dimensions of their songs, and make tunes like 'Resurrection' last longer than seems bearble.

Like fellow Mancunians Happy Mondays, The Stone Roses develop an atmosphere that's both enticing and frightening. Brown's head rollicks back and forward, a demented, empty expression weaving its way across his face as he sings of his obsessions. It's his continued reference to adoration, resurrection and sexual confusion that defines the very heart of the band.

The Stone Roses are a compulsive feeling, a post-adolescent love trauma put through a psychedelic mangle and shot out at full volume. Massive.


Footage of 'I Wanna Be Adored' and 'Sugar Spun Sister' from the gig was aired on the BBC's SNUB TV in 1989.
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Latest Discussion

“Who was the writer?”
“Sam King, the article is from the 11th March issue of Sounds, pic of Ian Brown is by Ian Tilton.”
“i was working at that gig- somewhere there's a video of it and you can see me walking in the background carrying a tower of plastic pots! (or was it just a photo...? i can't remember!)”
“The Snub Tv footage can be found on YouTube at www.youtube.com/watch?v=jYmRsaF4gAE

There is also a very early clip which claims to be at the Hacienda in 85 at www.youtube.com/watch?v=GViUdD0pOvY

A pre-Mani Roses did play there in August 85.”
“That 1985 clip is indeed the Hacienda and is currently in circulation on DVD along with another 1985 show ('The Manchester Flower Show' - as it was called). Both are fascinating.”
“You can also pick the Snub footage up on The Stone Roses DVD set that came out a few years back.
Suprised more of the gig wasnt filmed?

The other footage is at the Hacienda from August 1985, grainy footage but as jsz says - fascinating!
Worth a watch just to see Ian dive into the crowd at the start of Tell Me, start slamming into as many groups of lads as he can, goes for a walkabout, then jumps back on stage unscathed to close the set... great!”
“The Flower Show at Warehouse 1 was on 7th July '85 a month earlier than the Hac gig.”
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