Peter Hook leads applause tribute to Andy Martin at emotional Star & Garter charity gig

Peter Hook and The Light on stage at The Star and Garter in Manchester -Credit:Dominic Simpson/www.ivoodoo.co.uk
Peter Hook and The Light on stage at The Star and Garter in Manchester -Credit:Dominic Simpson/www.ivoodoo.co.uk


Peter Hook led an emotional applause tribute at the Star and Garter to the pub's popular landlord Andy Martin, a fortnight since his untimely death. Manchester music legend Hook was performing a special Joy Division set at the historic pub as a fundraising gig for a mental healthy charity.

Andy had been excitedly helping to organise the gig alongside Hook and the charity before falling ill last month. He died on March 29 after the sudden illness aged 52, leading to heartfelt tributes from across the Manchester music and hospitality industry.

Hook and his band The Light performed a unique Joy Division set at the gig on Friday night - kicked off by playing the same setlist the band played at their very first Manchester gig as Joy Division at the Pips club in the city in 1978.

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But before the start of the music, Hook paused to ask fans to pay tribute to the Star & Garter's Andy who has been praised for his support of the grassroots music scene in Manchester over the past 20 years.

Hook said: "I was going to say let's hold a minute's silence, but he wasn't the kind of guy who liked silence.

"So, Andy," he said before leading a rousing round of applause and cheers from across the venue.

Hook also paid tribute at the gig to his bandmate Ian Curtis, who died on the eve of the band's first American tour in 1980, dedicating Love Will Tear Us Apart to the iconic singer at the finale of the night.

Andy Martin with Peter Hook earlier this year
Andy Martin with Peter Hook earlier this year -Credit:ABNM Photography

The pub, on Fairfield Street, had been chosen as the location for the special charity gig thanks to its place in the Manchester music scene, as well as the recently installed mural to Joy Division's frotman Curtis on its wall.

Fans enrolled in a charity ballot in a bid to win tickets for the gig organised by music and mental health social enterprise Headstock, which raised an incredible £18,500 for the free confidential Shout text service for those in need of mental health support.

Hook was also joined on the night by photographer Philippe Carly, who took the iconic image of Curtis at a Joy Division gig at the Plan K club in Belgium in 1979, and street artist Akse who created the mural using the image on the side of the Manchester pub.

Philippe joined Hook on a panel that also included Ian Curtis' best friend from childhood, Kelvin Briggs, as well as Joy Divsion's first roadie Carl "Twinny" Bellingham for a lively Q&A session at the start of the night. Reflecting on his friendship with Ian Curtis, Kelvin fondly recalled his passion for music from an early age selling him records from his "eclectic" collection, as well as his love of Speedway.

Peter Hook, Twinny, Kelvin Briggs and Philippe Carly in conversation at the start of the night -Credit:Dominic Simpson/www.ivoodoo.co.uk
Peter Hook, Twinny, Kelvin Briggs and Philippe Carly in conversation at the start of the night -Credit:Dominic Simpson/www.ivoodoo.co.uk

He also confirmed, to a mixture of boos and cheers from the crowds, that Ian had been a supporter of Manchester United in his youth, and not Man City, as many fans have speculated. Although he added: "Ian was never that much into football, it was more Speedway."

He told the audience about Ian taking him to watch The Sex Pistols at both of their legendary Manchester gigs. He said: "I remember having to go back into the Free Trade Hall as Ian had left his brand new Ramones album in the venue."

He also told of the distressing moment he first saw Ian suffer an epileptic fit on stage at a gig at Eric's in Liverpool. He said: "It really shakes you up, we didn't know what to do. It was a shock to the system and I think all of us when we look back, we didn't know about epilepsy, we didn't know a lot about mental health, we were just so inadequate in our knowledge, we didn't know how to help."

Hook said of Ian's epilepsy: "Every time he'd have a fit, he'd fight it. It was shocking to see it but it's something that we got used to dealing with and at the end of the gigs he didn't admit that he needed to stop or recuperate, he'd just say 'don't worry about me, we'll just carry on'."

Hook also reflected on the first ever Joy Division gig held in Manchester.

Peter Hook on stage at the Star & Garter -Credit:Dominic Simpson/www.ivoodoo.co.uk
Peter Hook on stage at the Star & Garter -Credit:Dominic Simpson/www.ivoodoo.co.uk

He recalled: "We booked a gig in Pips, it was by the Cathedral, and at that time we were called Warsaw, but there was this band in London called Warsaw Pakt and we didn't want people to confuse us, so that's when Ian decided we needed a name change. He was reading the House of Dolls at the time and he picked out the name Joy Division.

"So that's why we changed the name of the band - but it was half way through the advertising campaign which really pissed off the guy at Pips, but we were very excited as it was one of our first headline gigs.

"The material had been coming on really well in that past six months, you'll see from the setlist it's a really strange mix of punk stuff and what you'd consider to be Joy Division stuff.

"But the gig was very exciting, Ian brought along a record and said 'I'm going to play this before we go on, it's a German band', it was Kraftwerk. But while it was playing someone dropped a bottle on the floor and Ian went over and started kicking it off the dancefloor, being Mr Nice Guy, but this big bouncer came out and grabbed him by the scruff of the neck and dragged him out for kicking glass on the dancefloor!

"So then we had to go and beg this guy to let him back in for the gig." But it wasn't to be the end of the drama, for Hook added of the gig: "It ended in an almighty fight. We were playing this very important gig with our new name, we were so buzzing about it, and all the audience could do was roll from one side to the other which was all our mates, there was the Salford lot and all these guys from Liverpool started joining in. So yeah, we're hoping we don't get that tonight!"

The audience roared their approval at the Star and Garter -Credit:Dominic Simpson/www.ivoodoo.co.uk
The audience roared their approval at the Star and Garter -Credit:Dominic Simpson/www.ivoodoo.co.uk

Thankfully there was no such worries at the Manchester gig, with a rapturous reception to the Joy Division set. It started with the full setlist from the Pips gig, before heading into a greatest hits set of the band's classics, including Transmission, Shadowplay, Ceremony and the finale track of Love Will Tear Us Apart.

Setlist - Star & Garter, April 12, 2024

Exercise One

Leaders of Men

Warsaw

Failures

Reaction

Inside the Line

Ice Age

Day of the Lords

Novelty

No Love Lost

Disorder

New Dawn Fades

Colony

Means to an End

24 Hours

Wilderness

Interzone

Isolation

She's Lost Control

Shadowplay

Atmosphere

Digital

Transmission

Ceremony

Love Will Tear Us Apart