Patrick Clarke
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The Yorkshire Vortex
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This chapter discusses the factors that made Leeds Polytechnic, the educational institution at which Almond and Ball were to meet while studying art, one of the most radical schools of the twentieth century, thanks to the influence of Basic Design and the installation of countercultural icon Jeff Nuttall as one of its most prominent tutors. It examines how Nuttall’s encouragement of the provocative and scandalous had a key effect on their development as the band evolved out of Almond’s performance art and film pieces and Ball’s experiments in electronic music under the tutelage of John Darling. It charts the wider Leeds music and art scene at the time, and why there were tensions developing between straightforward guitar bands and a growing crop of synth-based acts. It also contrasts the radicalism and flamboyance of these creatives, who centred around nightclubs such as the Warehouse and gigs held at nights such as the F Club, with overtly hostile forces in the city such as the National Front and the terror imbued by the string of murders committed by Peter Sutcliffe. It examines how all of this combined with the aforementioned influence of seaside towns to form what was to be Soft Cell’s defining aesthetic.

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Bedsit Land

The strange worlds of Soft Cell

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