Housey wrote:I can't decide which is worse: jokes about Stephen beating Gillian (and yes, I know he was referring to Brotherdale but I read that as 'lol, I saw the paper and for a second thought that...') or jokes about Gillian 'shagging' her way into New Order. Ugh. PLEASE STOP TALKING.
I didn't see it that way at all.
tarbox23 wrote:
No, you are implying that Hook insinuated Gillian sought out New Order and slept with them to get into the band....
Hook said, "If she hadn’t been shagging the drummer, I don’t think she would have got the gig, to be honest."
And, come on, it IS pretty much true, and I bet Gillian would laugh about it. It was totally New Order to have the drummer's girlfriend join the band. Probably involving some Rob Gretton fiendish smile.
You guys have gone off the deep end of over-sensitivity, and Housey is purposefully misconstruing crap to paint Hooky as evil.
I thought the most interesting bit in the interview was when he said he would stop at Regret. I was curious which LP would be the last one he toured.
Also, that Sumner was the one to recommend the chorus pedal.
I agree completely, it's not insulting and it didn't really matter, but it's clear she didn't get in for writing great tunes or anything.
People are extremely sensitive about Hooky's views and jokes, so it's no wonder some here will think even worse of him now.
As for Regret, I do believe Hooky likes most of Get Ready and knows much of it is still New Order, but I guess he doesn't see it worthwhile to play the whole record.
leather-girl wrote:I still disagree with Hooky that Bernard allegedly was 'happiest' when she left. And nobody was a classically trained musician, so there was no need to single out Gillian for allegedly not being the best musician.
How could we know if he was happy or not? There isn't much info about backstage NO 2001-2002.
tarbox23 wrote:I am starting to come around more to Hooky's side of things tho.
I really didn't like all the Ian Curtis imagery at the New Order Now show I saw in NYC last autumn. Felt really cultish. All the cheers and lighters in some silly reverence of the holy icon of Ian when Atmosphere was played was just juvenile.
Hook doesn't do any of that crap, he just plays the music.
And, he IS more daring to play all these non-hits, learning all these old songs that they never or rarely played live. Especially in contrast to New Order Now who tread it safe with the hits, which is clearly a more 'selling-out' type deal. Sure, they are all making money off this, but certainly New Order Now are making more, so it is pretty silly of them to accuse Hook of cashing in.
I guess I am just starting to see Hook as the underdog here, and I think New Order have been too hard on him -- we all know Hooky has a big mouth, but that is what you get with him, it has been that way for decades, it is Hooky - I picture him strutting around the stage in 1988 all clad in leather with his bass down to the floor, and wouldn't expect anything less.
Neither side is right, or wrong, but I am finding myself becoming more loyal to the black sheep lately...
It is obviously challenging and a lot more passionate than what NewOrderNow is doing. I doubt it is that hard to play I'll Stay With You, for instance, since me and my amateur group could play it really close to the original after few rehearsals.
I used to think Hooky was simply pissed because they didn't bother talking with him about getting back after he left, then decided to make it his mission to "fuck NO over" for no reason. Then he revealed the drinking prolem, rehab, the legal maneuvers and all that.
Also the money bit is non-sense, they're making millions in a world tour playing "Singles" versus Hooky playing dozens of intimate gigs. There was a NOOLer that posted a thread saying NONow already had a world tour in mind and the charity thing was just a test; he ended up completely right, you don't get that many gigs right off the bat without some actual planning.
What was most surprising IMO was the attempt at suing for libel. I'd get absolutely furious if it was me. It's not a book about their privacy, it's about a period in Peter Hook's life that he shared with them. I found it absurd, really.