Tony Wilson—the slightly off-kilter, irrepressibly passionate man affectionately portrayed/parodied in the 2002 film 24 Hour Party People who was known to rock fans everywhere as the founder of Manchester's Factory Records—died from complications due to kidney cancer today. He had been struggling with the disease for over a year, including having one of his kidneys removed in January, undergoing chemotherapy, and various forms of drug treatment. First coming to the public's attention as a gregarious television reporter in the 1970s, a job he continued to do on and off for the next three decades, Wilson formed Factory after being blindsided by punk rock, particularly an epochal visit to Manchester by the Sex Pistols in 1976. Factory was his attempt to tap into and channel the youth energy punk had unleashed, and it certainly helped that one of his first signings would turn out to be one of the most famous bands Manchester has yet produced:
Factory was, of course, the label that shepherded four young Manchester boys with a scrappy punk band named Warsaw—quickly changed to Joy Division, and later, New Order—earning it a somewhat deserved reputation for dour, serious rock (and later forward-thinking dance music) that came wrapped in high-end sleeve design. But it also championed bands as diverse as the Durutti Column, A Certain Ratio, and the Stockholm Monsters, bands that were nonetheless tied together by a certain Factory atmosphere and which never achieved JD/NO's cultural/chart omnipresence but helped to cement Manchester as one of postpunk's prime outposts. As the label's fortunes wobbled somewhat precariously during the mid-'80s, Factory was given both a cash and an artistic tranfusion thanks New Order taking over club dancefloors from New York to New Delhi—and also thanks to rave culture when the newly signed Happy Mondays and Wilson's club the Hacienda (which Wilson, ever the conceptualist, infamously gave its own Factory catalog number that many music geeks can recite from memory) became the day-glo, ecstasy-fueled epicenter of the Madchester phenomenon of rockers turning on to house and techno.
Thanks to financial mismanagement on the kind of epic scale that a label would never get the chance to try out these days, Factory folded in 1992 and the Hacienda shut down in 1997. Wilson continued to work in TV and radio, but his Factory days had left him cash-strapped; when he was diagnosed with cancer, doctors recommended a pricey drug as a last-ditch effort, a drug that the NHS refused to pay for. Friends and former associates chipped in to defray costs, but even in the face of this charity, Wilson was dour about his prospects for the future, telling the BBC, ""This is my only real option. It is not a cure but can hold the cancer back, so I will probably be on it until I die." That was almost exactly one month ago, and despite being "the one person in this industry who famously has never made any money," you can only hope Wilson took some small comfort in knowing that Factory's aesthetic legacy would long outlast the lives of anyone involved in the label. He was only 57.









Comments
dude, the durutti column. so good.
RIP, Tony.
RIP Tony. The rest of us should bring so much to the world...
Wow, I'd forgotten he was ill.
Here's hoping he brings the party to that big Hacienda in the sky.
So sad, RIP Tony...
If anybody reading this hasn't seen 24 Hour Party People, I suggest you do that this weekend. Or right now. If that wasn't a document of how well loved he was, I don't know what is.
if each person reading this could bring one-tenth of one percent of what tony brought into this world, the chance for good music to prevail may yet exist. RIP.
This makes me far more sad than I expected it to.
@CloudCarrier: That very film is on the schedule for this evening at the Gibson household.
Yeah, I'm going to watch it as well -- but with his own commentary running, since that seems more appropriate, listening to him wrestle with his own image.
I'd also recommend LTM's excellent Shadowplayers DVD documentary -- not knowing what might have already been written or recorded for the eventual Control DVD, Shadowplayers might contain the final formal recorded remembrances by Wilson about the early Factory days now.
There's a really good exhibit at the URBIS in Manchester on the Hacienda and the Manchester music scene. I had to rush through because it was close to closing, but what I enjoyed what I got to see of it.
[www.24hourmuseum.org.uk]
Alan McGee is a multi-millionaire and Tone couldn't pay for his meds.
So It Goes.
RIP Tony
RIP Tony. You will be missed.
love will tear us apart.
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