Simply amazing. I grew up in a bland city in California, known for it's state-of-the-art sewage plant; being ethnic and a outside thinker, the Fall became my soundtrack. Thank you Mark E. Smith.
He says in Renegade that The Fall had an especially big Latinx following in San Francisco. Such an incredible band. We'll never see M.E.S's like again, that's for sure. I briefly spoke to him once during the later years (2012) and he was very nice, thanked him for the music, said "you and the band just keep getting better and better and keep putting out absolutely belting records, thanks so much, Mark!" He said: "Thanks very much cocker, that's really nice to 'ear". He looked like he was in a hurry to the bar so I didn't want to push it any more...plus they were great that night, it was in London and they did two nights, my Sis lives there so I decided whilst my ears were still ringing waiting on the last train that I was going to see the next gig! And do you know what?--I DID!
@@questionitall3053 Have you seen the "It's Not Medication, It's Perspiration" doco on here that was filmed from 2004-2013? It has the most banging version of "I Am Damo Suzuki", and this is with the Eleni, Ben, Spencer Birtwhistle and Jim Watts version of the band. Or the "Traitors, Liars, C**ts" band as they came to be known, lol! Except from Eleni, of course...Great stuff. EDIT: It's actually called "It's Not Repetition, It's Discipline", sorry! If you like the early-to-mid-2000's line up it's particularly gratifying. That version of "Damo Suzuki", though, damn
I grew up in the next town on from Prestwich , but my Dad’s from there. It’s been a bit run down, like the rest of this part of England since the 70’s . Coming from the provincial city of Manchester and being working class. Makes you feel a little bit of an outsider. I’m guessing this has something to do with people who grew up in your situation relating to Manchester music. It’s cool how are two countries have a mutual respect for each other’s music and culture.
His comment on morrisey is worth this docs weight in gold,,perfick! I hung in the same pubs, drank with his band mates in prestwich, red lion, church etc, saw him from afar, close but never met…didn’t even know him, what a missed chance,still kick me-self for not saying hello an takin me chance…am told we would have defo got along, see ya mark, cheers for the endless fun xox
I spent many mediocre nights in Vegas in my early 20s listening to the Fall. Just sitting in an apartment on a weekend night totally wired with nothing better to do.
Living in Los Angeles for almost 40 years I've been blessed to see The Fall more times than any other live band. They comprise the most volume of my music library. Why? Don't know. Don't care. Just is.
Lmao, they take up the bulk of my collection too, but I'm the type of nutter who wants every pressing of every LP...finally scored the white with black splatter edition of Fall Heads Roll! That is the Holy Grail of my collection! So I have both the Narnack pressings, thinking about getting the UK pressing, but it's all on one record, which seems silly. The bass on that LP will knock your damn head off! Also you're very lucky to have seen them so much! Good for you fellow Fall fiend!
I love how much John loved The Fall. He was absolutely adamant that they were the greatest band in Britain and deserved constant airplay. Without him, The Fall wouldn't be the critics darlings they are now, for sure.
@@terrypussypower ...can get that ..Hanleys ' chunky sound ' was much of the reason the Fall were great ( with Marc ,Karl etc)...Magazine bass /guitar + Keys were musically top quality...
Late reply but I'm reading it at the moment! I've had so much Fall stuff on CD-R/tape; I've started (re)-collecting my (sold) collection. Great Cherry Red reissues, I played the Hex tape I was given (a copy) so much that it was virtually unlistenable, and the tape of Dragnet from my mate's shit hi-fi....I listened to it three times, but knew there was something there...I just couldn't fucking hear it! Now I've got a decent vinyl reissue I'm playing the bastard 3 times a week at least, it's incredible! Getting into the late stuff too--Sub Lingual, Post-Reformation, New Facts Emerge...who else is left now from the @post-punk" generation who never stopped gigging and recording?! The Bad Seeds? Pere Ubu (though there seems to be a health problem with David Thomas)? They're the only ones who never split up and reformed 'cause they were skint years later, u2 don't fucking count, very, very few bands had the endurance and legacy of M.E.S and The Fall. Rest In Power Mark E.Smith
This is brilliant. Watched it a couple of times as the interviewer seemed a bit week initially but I have just got the humour of this entire fucking piece - more laughs and quality songs than I've ever enjoyed! Well thought out, I think even the background ambient music was deliberately chosen!
Nice to see a more natural Smithy in this doc; sardonic, mischievous, earthy and likeable. He puts all his drinks on the table but not all his cards. Ta for all the stuff and off you go x
Fabulous doc Mick Middles and big thanks to FRiB6890 for posting. I miss Mark so much. The band in it's various ways that I saw more than anyone else. People still don't get The Fall and that's their failure. No Bulbs is a go to tune for me. And The Man whose head expanded....
Couldnt get a word out of him myself---thanks for this---been transfixed by the Fall for thirty sum years now--find smiths stuff expanding and inspiring as ever.
they have 40 years of songs , im still wading through them to see which ones i haven't heard i might like , most of it i dont get at all , but there are some gems for sure. i wish i could get sloshed and talk like mark with that accent and the i dont give piss attitude , fucking priceless.
Is there anyone who still hasn't heard 'Cheap Space Chant' ? In UA-cam, search for 'Timekode, Mark E Smith' and listen to the strangest and best MES/Fall collaboration of them all...
hahaha he's so right on about LA, public transporatation becomes the shame train. many have lamented on it as a hell even kerouac called it the loneliest he's ever been.
For whatever reason, Manchester has always been the cultural heart of modern England. Biggest football teams in the world, best bands in the world...Its only a small place, too. Southern boys like me have watched Manchester intently for decades lol. Fucking great city.
Like Liverpool had a strong Catholic working class, though Smith is clearly of a Protestant background and is occasionally dismissive of his Catholic band mates. I met him before he formed the group and he was open and said I could join without having heard anything. I doubt it would have lasted long. Strangely saw him in a local pub in the area of London where I have lived since 1980 not long before he died. Stood outside.
@@Jlipnicki MES asked you to join the fall?! Lol, brilliant. Were you two mates or something? And yea, Liverpool was extremely influential, too. Bands from the north west captured British working class culture better than any other area. Northern bands did that much more successfully than southern bands. Partly because they were genuine, no pretention. They were factory workers, into football and pubs etc, proper working class lads. Whereas southern bands were more middle class. Very self aware. Art school types. But then punk was a cockney thing, wasn't it? So maybe I'm talking bollocks lol. But still, Manchester, and the north east, were the heart and soul of British culture for decades. Without a doubt
it's a wonderful bit of serendipity but the Enya song 'Sail Away' seems to take up a reasonable chunk of the background jukebox music (so too 'somethings gotten hold of my heart', another northerner)......strange that, but all the more wonderful and enigmatic
The bible is a magical library that spans centuries it consists of poetry prophecy various values and laws spaning a host of cultures and so on The Koran is unique in that there is nothing like it in all of Arabic literature but it feels and fits in perfectly. Very much like the fall!
Prestwich is in Manchester.. Not Salford.. it borders Salford, but then prestwich comes under Bury too.. All near by tho.. I was wondering if that interview was done in one of the local pubs in prestwich he'd go drinking in (woodthorpe), (red lion)?? Or one of his Salford haunts? Looked like vault in the friendship to me. Used to see him having a few in there in summer aswell as the woodthorpe. would say hello.. 😎🍻👍
***** I've just realised I'm talking an absolute load of piffle, it wasn't Hunter S Thompson at all, it was Philip K Dick! And it was MES who said it on Radio 4 some years ago.
Hard to take in what he was saying with T'pau and Fairground fucking Attraction playing in the background, but I remember this bit: 'That whole Madchester thing, you stayed sensibly aloof from it at the time, do you think anything positive came from it?' MES: No. 'But seriously, did you enjoy it at the time?' MES: No, I went to Scotland.
A great doco. The emote that goes with wins my vote, much as the lyric may the mind have smote, and the underlying truth get your goat, all that mediaeval groat pales before the fact of the matter: a man with heart and soul does nor shatter nor sooth; rather, he does improve, like wine, with age, and may be enlightening at any stage. Time for some more revision.
being from the north west of england, i find a lot of humour in mark smiths work, musically and vocally, all be it dark humour. he`s an extraordinary wordsmith caught with four threads in the hollow wind of his stacks
Simply amazing. I grew up in a bland city in California, known for it's state-of-the-art sewage plant; being ethnic and a outside thinker, the Fall became my soundtrack. Thank you Mark E. Smith.
Sounds like u grew up in a sunny version of Manchester. Mark E Smith was fuckin real. No fake shit here. U have great taste in music.
He says in Renegade that The Fall had an especially big Latinx following in San Francisco.
Such an incredible band. We'll never see M.E.S's like again, that's for sure. I briefly spoke to him once during the later years (2012) and he was very nice, thanked him for the music, said "you and the band just keep getting better and better and keep putting out absolutely belting records, thanks so much, Mark!" He said: "Thanks very much cocker, that's really nice to 'ear". He looked like he was in a hurry to the bar so I didn't want to push it any more...plus they were great that night, it was in London and they did two nights, my Sis lives there so I decided whilst my ears were still ringing waiting on the last train that I was going to see the next gig! And do you know what?--I DID!
@@questionitall3053 Have you seen the "It's Not Medication, It's Perspiration" doco on here that was filmed from 2004-2013? It has the most banging version of "I Am Damo Suzuki", and this is with the Eleni, Ben, Spencer Birtwhistle and Jim Watts version of the band. Or the "Traitors, Liars, C**ts" band as they came to be known, lol! Except from Eleni, of course...Great stuff. EDIT: It's actually called "It's Not Repetition, It's Discipline", sorry! If you like the early-to-mid-2000's line up it's particularly gratifying. That version of "Damo Suzuki", though, damn
@@questionitall3053 I was thinking the same thing, but couldn’t work out how to say it. Ta
I grew up in the next town on from Prestwich , but my Dad’s from there. It’s been a bit run down, like the rest of this part of England since the 70’s . Coming from the provincial city of Manchester and being working class. Makes you feel a little bit of an outsider. I’m guessing this has something to do with people who grew up in your situation relating to Manchester music. It’s cool how are two countries have a mutual respect for each other’s music and culture.
His comment on morrisey is worth this docs weight in gold,,perfick! I hung in the same pubs, drank with his band mates in prestwich, red lion, church etc, saw him from afar, close but never met…didn’t even know him, what a missed chance,still kick me-self for not saying hello an takin me chance…am told we would have defo got along, see ya mark, cheers for the endless fun xox
I spent many mediocre nights in Vegas in my early 20s listening to the Fall. Just sitting in an apartment on a weekend night totally wired with nothing better to do.
Living in Los Angeles for almost 40 years I've been blessed to see The Fall more times than any other live band. They comprise the most volume of my music library. Why? Don't know. Don't care. Just is.
Lmao, they take up the bulk of my collection too, but I'm the type of nutter who wants every pressing of every LP...finally scored the white with black splatter edition of Fall Heads Roll! That is the Holy Grail of my collection! So I have both the Narnack pressings, thinking about getting the UK pressing, but it's all on one record, which seems silly. The bass on that LP will knock your damn head off! Also you're very lucky to have seen them so much! Good for you fellow Fall fiend!
what is indisputable is that you have very good taste
R.I.P Mark you were a true original and your music never gets old! Thank you for being part of my youth.
@All Eyes On You no i did not, that's not cool at all. Very disappointed. : (
@@donsolis12 m😊t😊 tfghzh
@@donsolis12 I cuhthbhghfghh xf jb ft hug go hg
I love how much John loved The Fall. He was absolutely adamant that they were the greatest band in Britain and deserved constant airplay. Without him, The Fall wouldn't be the critics darlings they are now, for sure.
steve hanley was a great bassist, his book is excellent.
Must get it.
Where did it go all wrong ?
Nathan Parsons Steve Hanley was the musical backbone of classic Fall. Him and Magazine's Barry Adamson got me into the bass.
@@terrypussypower ...can get that ..Hanleys ' chunky sound ' was much of the reason the Fall were great ( with Marc ,Karl etc)...Magazine bass /guitar + Keys were musically top quality...
Late reply but I'm reading it at the moment! I've had so much Fall stuff on CD-R/tape; I've started (re)-collecting my (sold) collection. Great Cherry Red reissues, I played the Hex tape I was given (a copy) so much that it was virtually unlistenable, and the tape of Dragnet from my mate's shit hi-fi....I listened to it three times, but knew there was something there...I just couldn't fucking hear it! Now I've got a decent vinyl reissue I'm playing the bastard 3 times a week at least, it's incredible! Getting into the late stuff too--Sub Lingual, Post-Reformation, New Facts Emerge...who else is left now from the @post-punk" generation who never stopped gigging and recording?! The Bad Seeds? Pere Ubu (though there seems to be a health problem with David Thomas)? They're the only ones who never split up and reformed 'cause they were skint years later, u2 don't fucking count, very, very few bands had the endurance and legacy of M.E.S and The Fall. Rest In Power Mark E.Smith
Such a loss to lose him way too early. Brilliant, funny, artistic as hell.
Too early. I dunno. I’m stunned and I’m sure he was stunned he made it to 60. Jesus he was an unstoppable force like
8:17
California Fall fanatic chiming in.
I met MES in S.F. pre-show during the Infotainment Scan!
we are living in the times of no gigs ,etc wonder what mark woulda thought of this miserable situation we are on ,wot a load of bollocks we are in aye
Aye. Mark would have still found a way. Respect from Newcastle.
Can't imagine he'd have had much time for the restrictions and pub closures.
Just love hearing myself whistling at the end of this documentary.. what a great insight to a complex yet simple man.
Marvellous, i saw "I am kurious oranj" in the Netherlands approx. 27 (!!) years ago!
perhaps tell how it was?
I'm totally jelly
I love Mark. Thanks for the upload.
"Drowning in a sea of Boddingtons ..."
This is brilliant. Watched it a couple of times as the interviewer seemed a bit week initially but I have just got the humour of this entire fucking piece - more laughs and quality songs than I've ever enjoyed! Well thought out, I think even the background ambient music was deliberately chosen!
cheers for this x
thanks for sharing!
Karl Burns scrawling potato men and 'Karlos The Mongo: on dressing room walls cracked me right up.
great, many thanks.
Miss him more now than ever 😞
Nice to see a more natural Smithy in this doc; sardonic, mischievous, earthy and likeable. He puts all his drinks on the table but not all his cards. Ta for all the stuff and off you go x
That you Mark?
'Women and drugs break bands up'. That might explain the 52 members.
He then pauses and says to the interviewer: "Think about it."
Very wry bit of humour there.
66 members. . half on drugs and the other half were women, think about it !
Fabulous doc Mick Middles and big thanks to FRiB6890 for posting. I miss Mark so much. The band in it's various ways that I saw more than anyone else. People still don't get The Fall and that's their failure. No Bulbs is a go to tune for me. And The Man whose head expanded....
if you want to see youtube's subtitle generator explode
He lives in prestwich and is known to go to some local pubs there, would be cool to bump into him
excellent!!!
14:30 "women and drugs break bands up"....says probably the most notorious singer in the history of rock for booting out members
"They don't actually realize that _The Fall are for real!"_ 14:01
Our Mark:
The very epitome of: "You do You, mate" 😸_👍
Couldnt get a word out of him myself---thanks for this---been transfixed by the Fall for thirty sum years now--find smiths stuff expanding and inspiring as ever.
What a legend. Holy mother of God, I love The Fall.
The kind of documentary that you'd get in Clampdown Records in the Corn Exchange back in the day! Before the IRA blew it to bits.
19:06 "If you drink in the open, you don't become an alcoholic." I think I see Mark suppressing a little grin after he says that!
Haha! Insulting Morrissey! Mark and Moz are my two faves!
Morrisey is an absolute tool. Mark E Smith said that years ago and he was rightt
And grunge bands come from Cleveland. Who knew?
Mark. Loved you since I was 10. They broke the mould as they say.
How cool is that! Mark E referencing Hunter S Thompson in Totally Wired. Excellent
16 year old when we first got into the fall great stuff
The Fall are responsible for the Silence of the Lambs, wow. "Silence of the fall"
Ya gotta Luv the Fall, The holy Grail of Post Punk...
That was great. Damn I had the chance to buy an old Fender painted by that guy back around 2000 for a couple hundred quids.
Anything "with The Fall" = fantastic one
Wow marks great here brilliant real stuff mark e cha cha .
I like the Hunter Thompson reference on Totally Wired.
when the going gets weird, the weird turn pro..
they have 40 years of songs , im still wading through them to see which ones i haven't heard i might like , most of it i dont get at all , but there are some gems for sure.
i wish i could get sloshed and talk like mark with that accent and the i dont give piss attitude , fucking priceless.
The fun thing is he looked always so "normal" like your everyday chap.he never gave a shit about looking like a rockstar or any other crap
Is there anyone who still hasn't heard 'Cheap Space Chant' ?
In UA-cam, search for 'Timekode, Mark E Smith'
and listen to the strangest and best MES/Fall
collaboration of them all...
Vic reeves being a fall fan is pretty cool, wonder if mortimer is a fall fan too
i'd be happy as a bus conductor...nah i wouldn't..great you gotta love The Fall!!!!!!!!!!!!
Thanks FRiB 6890
FANTASTIC.
Its called M5 and you can find it on the L.P. Middle Class Revolt and/or the Behind The Counter E.P.
GREATEST BAND on this godforsaken planet ; tell them John Pell said so !
RIP Mark E Smith
hahaha he's so right on about LA, public transporatation becomes the shame train. many have lamented on it as a hell even kerouac called it the loneliest he's ever been.
Well that was enjoyable and interesting!!! I could even understand much of what he said!!! I like how they incorporated the music into the program!!!
Interesting. I agree with Mark on records being over produced.
Its so true, listen to The Faces ' Long Player ' no producer credit, Martin Birch as engineer. Eno and those 80s guys killed rock music.
So good.. the best..
21:15 on ...brought back many memories of bruised shins trying to defend a prime spot stage front at fall gigs in pokey venues :-)
Ha ha, Morrissey don't know Salford from his arse. How true
ohuenno! i was in moscow in 2004 on "real new fall LP" presentation
Search for M5#1 on UA-cam and it comes up. A quality song.
The band which in our house
All the others are judged
For whatever reason, Manchester has always been the cultural heart of modern England. Biggest football teams in the world, best bands in the world...Its only a small place, too. Southern boys like me have watched Manchester intently for decades lol. Fucking great city.
Like Liverpool had a strong Catholic working class, though Smith is clearly of a Protestant background and is occasionally dismissive of his Catholic band mates. I met him before he formed the group and he was open and said I could join without having heard anything. I doubt it would have lasted long. Strangely saw him in a local pub in the area of London where I have lived since 1980 not long before he died. Stood outside.
@@Jlipnicki MES asked you to join the fall?! Lol, brilliant. Were you two mates or something? And yea, Liverpool was extremely influential, too. Bands from the north west captured British working class culture better than any other area. Northern bands did that much more successfully than southern bands. Partly because they were genuine, no pretention. They were factory workers, into football and pubs etc, proper working class lads. Whereas southern bands were more middle class. Very self aware. Art school types. But then punk was a cockney thing, wasn't it? So maybe I'm talking bollocks lol. But still, Manchester, and the north east, were the heart and soul of British culture for decades. Without a doubt
No two Fall gigs were ever the same.
So much truth coming out of this man. He's a very big deal.
it's a wonderful bit of serendipity but the Enya song 'Sail Away' seems to take up a reasonable chunk of the background jukebox music (so too 'somethings gotten hold of my heart', another northerner)......strange that, but all the more wonderful and enigmatic
@NinetiesYouth Yes.
(Wikipedia says the kazoo IS an instrument)
The bible is a magical library that spans centuries it consists of poetry prophecy various values and laws spaning a host of cultures and so on
The Koran is unique in that there is nothing like it in all of Arabic literature but it feels and fits in perfectly. Very much like the fall!
A true original, a one off xx
Well done Mick, that was ace - why wasn't it released? It's too good not to be seen on tv and stuff!
Prestwich is in Manchester.. Not Salford.. it borders Salford, but then prestwich comes under Bury too.. All near by tho.. I was wondering if that interview was done in one of the local pubs in prestwich he'd go drinking in (woodthorpe), (red lion)?? Or one of his Salford haunts? Looked like vault in the friendship to me. Used to see him having a few in there in summer aswell as the woodthorpe. would say hello.. 😎🍻👍
Yes
@maleslate He'd constantly give passengers the boot and stop at every pub though!
anymore fares-ah!
Prestwich isn't in Salford.
good documentary , band confident sound
LOL "you couldn't replace Stephen Hanley", well since he left they've had about 8 bassists!!
Danny Cheesums exactly
mark,what's your opinion of Warren Devon,,,ta
zevon
the only band that really are doing it (apart from my beloved My Bloody Valentine) is Boredoms..check em..
"You can't replace Stephen Hanley..." well, he did! Great documentary!
'When the going gets weird the weird turn pro''
hunter s thompson
+IMMER160 Whose favourite album was "Dragnet"!
derek and ray dragnet
+terrypussypower Hunters favourite album was dragnet ? Where did you hear that?
***** I've just realised I'm talking an absolute load of piffle, it wasn't Hunter S Thompson at all, it was Philip K Dick! And it was MES who said it on Radio 4 some years ago.
The people I like live in kitchens and halls...
Hard to take in what he was saying with T'pau and Fairground fucking Attraction playing in the background, but I remember this bit:
'That whole Madchester thing, you stayed sensibly aloof from it at the time, do you think anything positive came from it?'
MES: No.
'But seriously, did you enjoy it at the time?'
MES: No, I went to Scotland.
as the going gets weird , the weird turns pro. fuckin priceless.
the man John Lydon would love to be....
A great doco. The emote that goes with wins my vote, much as the lyric may the mind have smote, and the underlying truth get your goat, all that mediaeval groat pales before the fact of the matter: a man with heart and soul does nor shatter nor sooth; rather, he does improve, like wine, with age, and may be enlightening at any stage. Time for some more revision.
Is this the full "documentary" (looks to only be an interview)
RIP
Great, rip
Prestwich is not in Salford
13:30mins Love Mark E Smith here.
how did this go unreleased?
Mark didn’t just live with his contradictions he exploited the fuck out of them. Brilliant.
❤️❤️❤️❤️
Nothing But F’n Genius..
At least when Sybil Fawlty said "OOH I know" it was meant as comic ...D'ya know what I mean?
epicepicepic
Song at 17:20?? Great doc by the way
themushieman Edinburgh Man
Great :)
being from the north west of england, i find a lot of humour in mark smiths work, musically and vocally, all be it dark humour. he`s an extraordinary wordsmith caught with four threads in the hollow wind of his stacks
david floyd-hoddy say what?
Nice reference to "Bat Chain Puller"
“I’m Steve Hanley’s Niece”