There’s a modest campaign on Facebook to have the bridge in the photo renamed as some variant of “The Ian Curtis Memorial Bridge”. It was used in some publicity photographs for a band which didn’t sell very many records in the late 1970s and whose most famous modern acolytes are the Editors, more popularly known as “the bloody awful Editors”.
Even the architect who designed wouldn’t be likely to call it a thing of beauty. The marriage of Curtis’ musical legacy and the sheer ugliness of the thing would be certain to prompt a rash of suicides among the vulnerable and impressionable if
it were ever to bear his name.
It’s an all round bad idea and it might even upset some of the Joy Division purists who’d argue that with a musical legacy like that he doesn’t really need to be commemorated by a brutal piece of municipal infrastructure.
The other photo shows a statue of dead comedian Eric Morecambe who was, in his time, one of the most popular entertainers in Britain attracting TV audiences of 18 million people. With an appeal like that you can appreciate why the town council thought it worth shelling out a few quid for a beachfront effigy. If you can ignore the 1970s racism in the video, there’s a glimpse of why he was so popular.
Curtis wasn’t really in the same ballpark.





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