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SAOBA News 2004


Lonnie Donegan...gone but not forgotten - see below

peter saville
Peter Saville was born in Hale in 1955. After attending St Ambrose College and studying Art to A level with Mr Hancock, studied graphic design at Manchester Polytechnic from 1975-1978.
In 1979 he was a founding partner of the independent record label Factory Records for which he developed an identity and image that were to prove influential well beyond the music business.

Examples of his work can be seen at
http://www.imon.org/saville/
Saville Associates
Peter Saville Design
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Peter Saville was born in Manchester, England in 1955, he grew up in the affluent suburb of Hale and studied graphic design at Manchester Polytechnic from 1975 to 1978. His friend and former schoolmate Malcolm Garrett joined soon after his first year had commenced and quickly began to exert an influence on his ideas and approach to the course. Already by his second year Garrett had wrangled his way to designing for the Manchester punk group the Buzzcocks. This fueled Saville's own ambitions and influenced by a stolen library copy of Herbert Spencer's Pioneers of Modern Typography, he found inspiration in the elegantly ordered aesthetic of Jan Tschichold, the German born book and type designer who was to become the chief propagandist for the New Typography.
Tschichold initially favored sans serif typefaces and asymmetrical settings of type, but due to their later appropriation by fascist groups, he turned back to serif type and centered settings. Using Tschichold's style, Saville didn't differentiate between the two phases, a first sign of his laissez faire attitude to matters of orthodox design history.
Saville's entry into the music scene stemmed from a meeting with Tony Wilson a journalist and Granada TV presenter. After hearing Wilson was to launch a new club night, Saville anticipating he might require a designer, approached Wilson at a Pattie Smith gig at the Apollo in 1978. When they met later, instead of displaying examples of his own work, he showed pages from Tschichold's Die Neue Typographie (1927) and on that basis Wilson commissioned the first Factory poster - Fac 1. Using an industrial warning sign he found on a door at art college and a colour scheme derived from NCP (National Car Park's) signage. This poster was Saville's first Classical/Modernist work.

In July 1978 Saville graduated from Manchester with a first class degree. He then undertook Factory's next major project, the sleeve for a Factory Sample. Saville became a founding partner in Factory Records with Wilson, Joy Division's manager Rob Gretton and actor Alan Erasmus, this release heralded an assault on the post-punk burgeoning music scene in Manchester. The unqualified autonomy he enjoyed while working for the new label initiated a freedom from the overt constraints of marketing which further allowed him to experiment in the very semiotics of visual communications.

A compilation of unsigned acts Fac 2 was accorded a numbering system that referenced sitionationism and seriality. Made from industrial heat-sealed polythene, it continued the industrial look of Fac 1 but reworked in black and silver. The 5000 pressings sold out which enabled the first Factory album Joy Division's Unknown Pleasures (1979) to be released.The striking cover depicting a wave graph of a dying star against an inky black textured sleeve was startling in its minimalism.

After moving to London in 1979 he became art director of the Virgin offshoot Din Disc. Between 1978 and 1983, Saville created a body of work which furthered his refined take on Moderinism, the work he did for Joy Division and their later incarnation New Order may have formed the crux, but additional work for everyone from Roxy Music to OMD highlighted his considerable talent.
After the dissolution of Din Disc in 1982, Saville, along with his collaborators, the photographer Trevor Key and Brett Wickens (a Canadian design student), formed Peter Saville Associates (PSA). During these years, music industry clients were joined by institutions like the Whitechapel Art Gallery, London, the Pompidou Center, Paris, and the French Ministry of Culture, as well as fashion clients such as Yohji Yamamoto, Martin Sitbon and Jill Sander.
His use of historical appropriation in the early 80's paralleled a broader demarcation in the fine arts with the work's of artists, such as Sherrie Levine, but Saville pushed these ideas the furthest in graphic design. The sleeve for New Order's Power Corruption and Lies for example, reproduces a detail of a Fantin-Latour painting, the only difference being the right edge of the cover bears a colour check guide in the form of a printer's 4-colour registration code. This code is also allocated letters which spell the name of the group. Here Tschichold's theories of mechanical reproduction (designing for such processes) are collided with Walter Benjamin's (the delusions involved in such actions).
Although Saville moved on from the more overt forms of postmodern appropriation, he was never shy to discuss his sources and influences, as well as the 'gloriously parasitic elements of graphic design'.
By 1990, PSA, after the recent meltdown in the world financial markets, couldn't sustain the studio and closed. Saville was invited by John McConnell to become a partner in Pentagram's London office. This involved heading a team made up of Wickens and most of PSA. His new salary meant he avoided bankruptcy, unfortunately he never fitted the more orthodox business constraints of working for a design practice like Pentagram, and failed to meet earning targets.
Wickens and Saville decided to move on at the end of their probationary period in Feb 93. In 1992 after designing a station identity for Channel 1 in Los Angeles, their enthusiasm for the city while residing there, convinced them to return as soon as possible.
They joined Frankfurt Balkind's Los Angeles office as creative directors in 1993. Again it failed to materialize the way Saville hoped. The overt commercialisation of Hollywood, coupled with his antithetical way of working, created a schism that the joys of shopping (his clothes and furniture were impounded by US customs) failed to stem.
This division also grew with Wickens who decided to stay when Saville left in the summer of 94, their thirteen year partnership was at an end (poignantly matched in the sleeve for 'A Means to an End' - an album compilation of Joy Division covers, the photograph shot from Saville's own house in LA).
On his return to London in 1994, he had missed the dawn of Brit-art and Brit-pop. It wasn't long though before he found his feet and became saturated in this new milieu. Reacquainted with his former assistant, Howard Wakenfield he began to work as a freelance for British and European clients including London Records, and to review the Mandarina Duck (the Italian bag and luggage retailer) identity. He was even offered a place at Tomato, the new design firm at the heart of 'Brit-pop', both he and Wakenfield, never felt comfortable at Tomato and left after 6 months.
In 1995 he met Mike Meire, the co-founder of a young German advertising agency, Meire and Meire, who wanted a London base. Saville due to his unorthodox living arrangements since returning to England, had previously been shown an apartment in London, a run down Mayfair pad, decorated in 'seventies coke-dealer style'. Between them Meire and Saville contemplated a glamorous live/work space. Meire signed a three-year lease on Audley Court and Saville had the renowned interior architect Ben Kelly refurbish it. Hence 'The Apartment' was born, soon numerous lifestyle magazines were queuing up to feature the blue suede bedroom walls and louche leather sofas. Groups such as Suede and Pulp saw these images and were attracted to the vicarious representation they embodied. Young British artists also visited, which reawakened his own ideas to produce art.
He was paid a salary by Meire and Meire, which enabled him, like his time with Factory to spend as long as he needed on the work - good for Saville but in the end not so good for the finances of Meire and Meire. At the end of two and a half years Meire regretfully pulled out. Saville spent the remainder of the lease working with Wakenfield and Paul Hetherington, on what he labeled 'Waste Paintings'. These works derive from filters used in Photoshop (the graphics software program).
While Saville, a self-confessed illiterate when it comes to computers, was drawn to the possibilities of the internet as a medium to distribute work; removing the need as he saw it, for a secondary agent to act as a conduit. So along with his long-term collaborator the photographer Nick Knight, they set up the web site SHOWstudio.com. It's purpose like many other dot.com ventures not entirely clear-cut. His work for the site remained marginal after it went online early in 2001, and since then he has been working with a fluid team of independent designers and creative consultants to do work for a client list that includes Alexander McQueen, E M I, Stella McCartney and Givenchy.
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october 2004: Peter Saville appointed Creative Director for Manchester
"Manchester's competition now is not Liverpool, is not Nottingham, is not Bristol. Manchester's competition is Barcelona, Lyon, Rotterdam, Bilbao, that's what it has to take on. The sights need to be raised. It needs to look outside, look at the rest of the world. I did my work by looking at the rest of the world. The spirit was made here, but the standards were set by looking at the rest of the world. Manchester United set their standards on the rest of the world, and they're up there competing and that's what the city needs to do."
Designer Look For A New Manchester
By Rumyana Vakarelska, London Press Service

MANCHESTER has opened a new chapter in its long history by becoming the first English city to appoint its own creative director, graphic designer Peter Saville.
Saville's brief is to bring to life the creative expression of Manchester's image - and to help to unify it, according to Manchester City Council.
Many, especially some born-and-bred Mancunians, would say that the city does not need an image-maker. But in a fast-moving world, with competition from nearby Liverpool - which is gearing up for major celebrations over the next few years to mark its 800th anniversary in 2007 and its role as European City of Culture 2008 - Saville's appointment could prove to be a welcome development.
"We want to attract the best jobs and investment for the people of Manchester and that means the best marketing. Peter Saville's creativity is consistent in its excellence. His work contains a range of techniques and we want to put that excellence to work for our city and for our residents," said Manchester City Council Leader Richard Leese.
The move is designed to help the city attract international investment and high-profile, world-class jobs, the council said. "We are not after just a logo or a strapline. We want an all-encompassing creativity that communicates to people who might live, learn, work and invest here that Manchester is on track to become a world-class city."
It was the first industrial city in Europe, was home to the first programmable computer and the birthplace of John Dalton's atomic theory. Today, the town is best known as the home of one of the best-known soccer teams in the world, Manchester United, and is well remembered as a successful host of the Commonwealth Games in 2002. It is also a focal point for film-production and music industries and enjoys a long-standing multicultural spirit where Asian communities play an active part in its social and cultural life.

Lonnie Donegan tribute on new Knopfler album

Dire Straits guitarist Mark Knopfler, who played with St Ambrose Old Boy Lonnie Donegan in London shortly before his death in 2003, called him one of his greatest musical influences. On his new studio CD, "Shangri-La" (released 27 September 2004), Knopfler has included a song written to commemorate Donegan. We have reproduced the Lyrics below. Mark Knopfler plays the MEN arena on 26 May 2005.
Donegan's gone, Lonnie Donegan
Donegan's gone
Gone, Lonnie Donegan
Donegan's gone
Play that big grand coulee dam
Nobody loves like an irishman
Gone, Lonnie Donegan
Donegan's gone
Donegan's gone, Lonnie Donegan
Donegan's gone
Gone, Lonnie Donegan
Donegan's gone
Lord, I'm just a rolling stone
Rock my soul I wanna go home
Gone, Lonnie Donegan
Donegan's gone
Donegan's gone, Lonnie Donegan
Donegan's gone
Gone, Lonnie Donegan
Donegan's gone
Stackalee and a gamblin' man
Rock my soul in the bosom of abraham
Gone, Lonnie Donegan
Donegan's gone
Donegan's gone, Lonnie Donegan
Donegan's gone
Gone, Lonnie Donegan
Donegan's gone
Time just goes on rolling by
Lord, I feel like I could cry
Gone, Lonnie Donegan
Donegan's gone.
Lonnie Donegan: Rock Island Line Tribute Concert

Royal Albert Hall, London.
Monday 21 June 2004, 7.30pm
Lonnie was among the first to bring American Jazz, Folk and Blues into England and with a touch of the Donegan magic, he turned them all into Skiffle. This music influenced many British musicians during the 60's.
Many of these great musicians, including Brian May, Van Morrison, Joe Cocker, Mark Knopfler, Roger Daltrey, Gerry Marsden, Joe Brown, Rolf Harris, Chas & Dave, Bruce Welch, Billy Bragg, Chris Farlow, Rick Wakeman, Chris Barber, Arlo Guthrie, Ralph Mctell, Peter Wingfield, Albert Lee, The Baron Nights, plus his son Peter and many more will contribute to this performance. A tribute to a man who will be greatly missed, not only a great musician, but a great friend and father to many people.
This performance is in aid of a charity that was very close to Lonnie: The Coronary Bypass Research Foundation & The Harefield Heart Research Foundation.
As Lonnie Used To Say: 'Book Early To Avoid Disappointment.'

http://www.lonniedoneganinc.com
Forthcoming Musical to celebrate Lonnie's life

Full details from
http://www.lonniedoneganinc.com
Paul McCartney on Lonnie Donegan:
"When we were kids in Liverpool in the late '50s, we loved 'Rock-n-Roll", and we loved American artists, but the man who really started the craze for the guitars as far as I am concerned was Lonnie Donegan. Me and my mates followed his gigs with interest.
Lonnie was the first person we heard of from England to get the coveted number one in the charts with 'Rock Island Line' and we studied his records avidly and even did a few of his numbers.
We all bought guitars in order to be in a Skiffle group and it was this craze which swept the country.
Lonnie's great vocal style was, and still is, highly original, and his love of the blues and early folk music is something we all could relate to very easily.
So for those of us there, in those early days, he was the man. In later years I grew to know him as a friend and was not in any way let down. He is a great guy with a true love of good music and many of us owe him a huge debt of gratitude".
"Long live Lonnie!"

the peter saville show

urbis
23 January 2004 – 18 April 2004
Manchester's design legend returns home as Urbis hosts the first large scale Peter Saville exhibition in the city which launched his legendary career. Saville, one of the most influential graphic designers of our time returns to Manchester with The Peter Saville Show, a retrospective of his life's work.
Spanning three decades to present day, this landmark exhibition contains over 500 items documenting his inspirations and tracing his thought processes, from conception through to finished work. Keep coming back for news on the show or sign up for updates by registering.
The Exhibition The Peter Saville Show was organised by the Design Museum, London and curated by Libby Sellers. The Exhibition Tour has been organised by the Design Museum, London.
the peter saville show events

made in manchester
As part of The Peter Saville Show, Urbis hosted a programme of graphic design masterclasses from two of Manchester's most prolific design consultants.
David Crow (Head of School of Design, Manchester Metropolitan University) and Trevor Johnson (Via Communications), creator of Urbis identitiy and former Saville collaborator explored Saville's influence on Manchester's infamous design and music culture.
These exclusive sessions also provided an insight into the unique style of Manchester's design community and its commitment to sustaining good graphic design in this great city.

an audience with peter saville
Wednesday 24 & Thursday 25 March 2004
On two exclusive dates Urbis gave Saville fans the chance to find out what inspires and motivates a design legend, as he discussed his work with Factory records to the state of graphic design today. The evenings were informal discussions, based on conversation and questions from the audience.
Thanks to the Urbis website, © 2002 Urban Experience Limited
http://www.urbis.org.uk

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