If you don't know who Tony Wilson is, what place have you in this city? Call yourself a true Mancunian?!? Wait, wait now, I needn't be so fascistic about it. How about I teach you. Well, apart from being a guy my mum used to knock about in Liverpool with when they were young adults (yes, that's my claim to fame, as well as the fact that she used to be mates with Bill Nighy and Paul McCartney's brother), he was the founder of one of Manchester's most important musical eras.
Madchester was the product of Factory Records, Tony's label. Just watch the film 24 Hour Party People and you'll get the gist of everything that went on. He was a reporter for Granada before branching out into the music biz, and as Ian Curtis of Joy Division delicately put it when introducing himself to the man in 1978, "You bastard. You put Buzzcocks and Sex Pistols and Magazine and all those others on the telly, what about us then?" Yes, Tony was a very important man who we lost far too soon. He was responsible for New Order and The Happy Mondays and launched the nightclub which played host to The Smiths, Oasis and The Stone Roses. Whitworth Street was rockin'.
Before he left us, as well as presenting great radio shows, being one of the best talking heads on a Channel 4 range of 'Top 10' programmes about various genres of music (on the Stadium Rock edition, Tony spoke of his love for Kiss's marketing trick where a competition winner would obtain a photo of their real faces, but when exposed to the air the picture faded and disappeared) and getting involved in local politics, he gave us the first In The City in 1992, an event still going strong to this day. It's known as 'the UK's premier music convention and new music event' allowing us Brits to get involved in the machinations of the music industry on our own turf as opposed to having to hop the pond for MIDEM or the New Music Seminar. The A&R bods gather, topics are offered for some heated debate, the creative cogs are whirring, and rounded up is some of the freshest talent to perform for them, not just Manchester bands but artists hailing from all four corners of the globe. Partnered in the past by the likes of Manchester City Council, NME, XFM and the BBC, 2010 shapes up to be even better than before.
Keep an eye on the website for details. Tony Wilson was rather like John Peel in the sense that he always gave young upstarts and unusual new music a chance, and festivals like this are part of his legacy. Try and get yourself to some of the live performances, they're always stunning. read more