/HIStoRY/

As FAC51 The Haçienda entered its first full year of operation, eight months on from the May opening, it closed for its first ever night on the first Monday of the year, marking an end to the seven day, open daily strategy. Yet the live scene at the club was flourishing as the vigour and dedication of booker Mike Pickering saw major gigs each week from many breakthrough and local acts, some set to become internationally famous throughout the decade.

Looking back it’s hard not to see a golden age of event gigs but frustratingly as ever, The Haçienda was ahead of its time booking artists before they became well known and though attracting decent crowds (numbers of 500 or so were common at most gigs), the spoils of the Haçienda’s effort was left to other Manc promoters to book the acts at The Poly or similar venues, six months down the line to crowds of over a thousand. With a policy of headlining Manchester bands announced early on in the year, this saw a remarkable run of James, Section 25, The Chameleons, the return of New Order and the Smiths making their debut at the club supporting 52nd Street in the first of three gigs at the club in 1983 on their rose to prominence as NME darlings and one of the year’s biggest acts.

On their their third appearance in November 1983, with “This Charming Man” high in the charts, they performed on Top Of The Pops earlier in day before jumping the train back north for a flower strewn, sold out gig that has since passed into history as one of their best ever. Notably the two later Smiths gigs of the year and the two New Order gigs were the only gigs to sell out at The Hacienda in its opening 18 months.

A mixture of older legends and then up and coming chart acts on the live circuit also performed at FAC51 including John Cale, Jah Wobble, The Undertones, The Fall twice in the year, Fun Boy 3, Divine, The Eurythmics and OMD who first released “Electricity” with Factory before signing to Virgin and returned with a hugely impressive lighting rig. Other memorable moments included the electricity going off during the Undertones “Teenage Kicks” and Feargal Sharkey conducting a singalong with the crowd, the Cocteau Twins Liz Frazer crying at soundcheck at the sound system, Nic Cave punching a pint glass thrown at the stage into a million shattered pieces and a certain horde called Happy Mondays becoming victorious at a rigged battle of the bands gig. We’ll be hearing from that lot later.

As The Haçienda began its much celebrated Birthday Party tradition with the first some 364 days later on Friday 20th December, not to be confused with Nic Cave’s The Birthday Party who had also returned for their second gig at the club in February, The Haçienda also turned its Ben Kelly designed interior into a theatre in with “Tales From The Newgate Calendar” in May.

Yet other, more substantial stylistic changes were afoot with some Haçienda management, Wilson, Gretton and Pickering in particular, became worried that the club was turning out far away from their vision of a New York style discotheque and dance venue. With this in mindy, they looked to shake up the DJing at the club, bringing in Greg Wilson, John Tracy and Andrew as residents alongside Hewan Clarke from August, a move that was to define later years at the club and put The Haçienda right at the forefront of developing DJ culture.

Yet if the sound system was perceived as a problem, more damaging was the chronic mismanagement of the club with consistent losses of around 10 grand a week, those losses being stemmed by Factory and New Order. Problems with the opening, the debts and deal to the brewery, endemic theft and a laissez faire, anything goes attitude to all aspects of club running made The Haçienda a money pit for the partners and management, despite it achieving their artistic ambitions for the venue.

As the year came to a close, Frankie Goes To Hollywood, capped their most successful year playing at the club (Sat 19th November). Gretton in his sense of largesse and generosity, treating visiting bands how he wished to be treated, decided that the club had to compete with the hospitality of the New York club Paradise Garage and decked out not only backstage with an array of fruit and flowers but front of house as well.  The following Thursday The Smiths appearance was to pass into history and as its second Christmas passed over FAC51, the year was only marred by the departure of Howard “Ginger” Jones as general manager, having confessed to Gretton he was at a loss as how to turn round the financial problems of the club.

Explore The Haçienda through the years

/TIMELINE/

Fri 21st –Opening Night with ESG. Compared by Bernard Manning
Thur 22nd - Cabaret Voltaire & Eric Random
Sat 27th - GTeardrop Explodes
Sat 29th - 23 Skidoo
Tues 1st - Vic Gordan; Subway Sect
Fri 4th - Funkapolitan
Tues 8th - John Cooper Clark & Group
Fri 11th - James King & The Lone Wolves
Tues 15th - Orange Juice
Sat 19th - Culture Club
Tues 22nd - Defunkt & Higsons
WEd 23rd - The Derutti Column
Sat 26th - New Order

Setlist

Dreams Never End
‘586′
Procession

Chosen Time

Truth

Senses

Ultraviolence

Everything’s Gone Green

Temptation

In a Lonely Place

Tues 29th - 52nd Street & Swamp Children
Thurs 1st - Vic Godard &Subway Sect
Sat 3rd - Funkapolitan
Wed 7th - LIaisons Dangereuses
Fri 9th - A Certain Ratio

Setlist

Saturn

Back to the Start

Show Case

I’d Like to See You Again

Tumba Rumba

Skipscada

Corco Vada

Andy’s Song

Sommadub

Who’s to Say?

Hot Knives

Guess Who?

Touch

Knife Slits Water

Wed 14th - Echo & the Bunnymen
Sat 17th - Simple Minds
Mon 19th - Blancmange
Thurs 22nd - The Birthday Party
Wed 28th - Buzzz
Fri 30th - Walter Negro & the Loose Joints
Wed 4th - The Three Courgettes
Wed 11th - Allex Allez
Fri 13th –Delta 5 & Secret Seven
Sat 14th - Bauhaus
Tues 17th - Rip, Rig & Panic
Thurs 19th - Bow Wow Wow
Sat 21st - Jazz Defectors
Weds 25th - The Associates
Thurs 2nd - Tik & Tok
Monday 6th - WB
Thurs 9th - The Pale Fountains
Mon 13th - Annette Peacock
Mon 20th - Yazoo
Tues 21st - Mark Stewarts' Mafia
Thurs 23rd - Durrutti Column + Stockholm Monsters
Mon 27th - Appollinaires
Wed 29th - Maximum Joy
Mon 4th - The Final Academy (William Burroughs Psycic TV)
Tues 5th - Jah Wobble
Wed 6th - Palais Schaumburg
Thurs 7th - The Psychedelic Furs; Sisters of Mercy
Tues 12th - Blue Zoo
Wed 13th - Brilliant
Fri 15th - Pulsallama
Sun 17th - Blancmange; Fiat Lux
Mon 18th - Gaspar Lawall
Fri 20th – Tompson Twins + Tears For Fears
Fri 22nd - Eddie and Sunshine
Mon 25th - Pere Ubu's David Thomas
Tues 26th - Cabaret Voltaire Video Shown
Wed 27th - The Members with J Walter Negro
Thurs 28th - Buzz
Fri 29th - The thompson Twins; Tears for Fears
Mon 1st - Video Evening featuring Dome
Fri 5th - Ludus
Tue 9th - Swans Away
Thurs 11th - The Higgsons
Fri 12th - The Honeymoon Killers & Hermine
Wed 17th - Big Country & James
Friday 19th - Hey! Elastica
Mon 22nd - Gregory Isaacs; Michael Smith
Thurs 25th - Orange Juice; Strawberry Switchblade
Fri 26th – Sandii & the Sunsetz
Mon 29th - Palais Schaumberg
Wed 1st - Marc & the Members
Mon 6th - Dillinger
Fri 10th - Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five
Fri 17th - Blancmange
Wed 22nd - A Certain Ratio

Explore The Haçienda through the years