El Jarvo wrote: Certainly my favourite member of New Order, had forgotten how much I genuinely liked the bloke. Shame it's all come to this.
Precisely. It's funny, back in the 80s I didn't like him all that much, didn't much like the onstage persona and he often came across as a dick in interviews. Got to say though, that opinion changed in the 90s and he went above and beyond with the interviews he gave me for this site in 2005/6, plus giving his services free for NOOL Day in 2006. We also had lots of correspondence about a range of things from JD history snippets to up and coming local bands, and he seemed genuinely pleased to see me on the nostalgia talk tour pre-Light.
However, some of the stuff he's come out with post-schism has been difficult to reconcile, and he hasn't spoken to me since I suggested he could have found a better way of resolving the differences than fuelling Bernard's self-righteous indignation with rent-a-quote dissing. A shame.
That said, the new book is a great read, even if it does suffer from a lack of historical accuracy in various places (we have enough recordings proving they did play Closer songs live, we have the setlist that shows they didn't open with Exercise One at the first JD gig, we know that Bournemouth 79 was a full show that Ian sang all of before his fit etc etc). He's also effusive in his praise of Bernard as a musician, which is a major positive. I will look forward to seeing the Light in a few weeks again, and can't wait for the Movement/PCL gigs, even if it will be as much for the settings and company as the performers. What's more, I really hope he writes the New Order book next!
Is there any way back? You can never say never, though there needs to be quite a few apologies.