Factory Records (Paperback) /anglais
M**T
Sandpaper, Floppy Discs and Envelopes
Factory Records began in the year 1978 with the unique idea that married both sound and vision. Bands such as Joy Division then later New Order, A Certain Ratio, Durutti Column, Section 25, and the Happy Mondays to name a few would receive a new brand of image treatment which could be called "non-image". There is a reason why New Order never made an album with a big photo of the band in goofy poses holding their instruments. The Factory Design idea was to give their artists a mystique which would allow artful images to decorate their cover thus moving the spotlight off the artists themselves and moving it onto the music.FAC 001-521. The Factory Catalog Numbering System. Everything that was Factory Records had a FAC Number. This book for example is FAC 421. New Order's "Power Corruption and Lies" is FAC 75. The Factory nightclub The Hacienda is FAC 51. A lawsuit against Factory Records was FAC 61. Stationary, every project and object was assigned a Factory Number. Even label owner Tony Wilson received the treatment when he passed away in 2007. His coffin and funeral were assigned FAC 521. This System of Numbers is a manifesto of organization and clear thinking that would influence not just the sleeves but art itself.My Favorite Sleeves: This book is beautiful unto itself! Slick, polished, uncluttered, and bright. Paragraphs give insight into cover art without being too verbose or occupying too much page room. Classic sleeve designs include the famous Durutti Column "The Return of..." which had a raw sandpaper sleeve so as to destroy other record album covers that sat with it in the bins! The simple non text die-cut floppy disc sleeve of the best selling 12" in history; New Order's "Blue Monday" which itself is a sacrifice to design since its sales didn't make up for the sleeve production! Section 25's "Always Now" which was packaged in a luxurious yellow envelope with purple marbling interior.Factory created irony with its images too. Just take New Order's "Power, Corruption and Lies" with Henri Fantin-Latour's beautifully rich painting "A Basket of Roses" which contained a small block of colors which was in fact a color code for FAC Numbers designed by Peter Saville. The FAC sleeves look like classic art (Joy Division's "Closer"), they look like commercial products (New Order's "Run 2"), they look like homespun ("Happy Monday's "Yes Please"), they look like land surveying (Section 25's "From the Hip"), they look modern, they look elegant, in fact....they look like nothing else on the shelves.The designers such as Peter Saville, 8VO, Ben Kelly, Trevor Johnson, etc. gave Factory artists a unique form of communication with their audience. They used mixed media such as art paper, sandpaper, cardboard, and plastic. Many of the albums and singles within the book have no text whatsoever. A brave move for the music industry. Replacing band photos (and bravado) with simple clean elegant art and typography, these designers helped craft a new frontier of art that which the music inspires.The Book 421 (Factory Records The Complete Graphic Album) isn't just for fans of the music. Take it as a textbook of graphic design. Take it as a thesis on minimalism. Take it as an example of modern art and form. If anything and like everything Factory designers made, it would look great on the coffee table!
K**P
A photographic catalog of sorts, of Factory's artwork.
Great photos in here, not just the vinyl/Cd related artwork, but other things that got Factory Catalog numbers, such as the Hacienda, and Factory HQ, Dry Bar, and posters. Found out a lot of fun, inside, facts.Not a ton of reading here -- mostly just the lush artwork, work every buck to me!
G**S
Factory design mattered
There really was something compelling about Factory when they started. I still have many of the original UK records on vinyl (Joy Division, Section 25, New Order). CDs don't do the designs justice - too small ! They were concieved as RECORD sleeves and worked as art objects that way. I remember my delight at figuring out the color coding on Power, Corrruption and Lies after staring at it for a while.Has any other label managed to build a design mystique like it (Blue Note perhaps ?). Their output got less interesting and less elaborate later on.This book is a great nostalgia trip for any original factory fans, and hopefuly conveys the same sense to younger readers. Nice coffee-table book.
L**L
recommended
recommended
B**N
Beautiful
I just received this book for Christmas and I can't put it down. Even if you have a passing knowledge of the label and its artists you will enjoy this work. The mythology of the company and its catalog system is represented by stunning images and impeccable design. One strange thing stands out however, in my copy some of the captions are in French. This is a little annoying because I can't read French. Oh well, c'est la vie.
M**Y
Great reference book, especially for Factory fans..
Being a fan of much of the Factory Records music and a Graphic Artist, this book is a must have.
J**R
Amazing book! You won't be disappointed.
Amazing book! Cool cool cool cover artwork by Saville and the other designers from Factory. If you dig Joy Division and New Order's albums covers, this is the book for you (plus many more bands from Manchester).
A**T
c:
Awesome book with a great collection of art
W**S
A very cool coffee table book!
Definitely a must for Factory record collectors and probably people with a keen interest in album art - although this is a paperback the cover is really good quality and obviously the New Order artwork is really eye catching. Each page features the numbered artwork and has interesting information about the designers. The print is excellent quality. A really good book to flick through with a cuppa
R**O
Lovely gift for vinyl enthusiast
I bought this gift for my boyfriend who has more vinyl than the average record store. Like, too much. It causes some friction because there is no space for actual living. But I'm getting off topic. He loved the book. Great quality images and nicely curated. Would recommend!
M**Y
Beautiful Product - Great Sleeves - Great Book
Beautifully put together - but hey it is a series of pictures and information about Factory Sleeves, so was always going to be the business. One thing it does highlight though is how much a loss the downsizing to CD and modern packaging is.
C**L
Impressive!
Big beautiful book. Will be giving as a gift it was described as paperback but it's the poshest paperback I've ever seen! Lovely.
P**O
Perfect album!
Perfect album, illustrating the Factory Records story and the launched records. Essential for music fans!
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