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Joy! The Ian Curtis bio-pic has begun shooting!

Ian Curtis, lead singer of seminal British band Joy Division, hung himself on the eve of the band’s first American tour, and, as history records, his bandmates went on to form New Order and live happily ever after (even if poor old Ian didn’t).

Now, however, the life of Curtis is coming to the silver screen – entitled “Control” – and what better person to create a dark mood than famed photographer / Depeche Mode video director Anton Corbijn? (Indeed, he’s the photographer of the above shot.) “If I only ever make one movie,” said Corbijn in a press release, “‘Control’ would have to be that. I simply feel that as Joy Division and Ian Curtis played a big part in my life, I cannot think of a better combination of subject and director.”

The film is based upon and expands on the 1995 book Touching From a Distance written by Curtis’ widow, Deborah, as a personal account of her life with the singer; she serves as a co-producer on the film as well, along with Factory Records founder Tony Wilson. Matt Greenhalgh wrote the script for “Control,” talking to those closest to Curtis, including Honore, who previously remained silent on her relationship with him. Ian will be played by Sam Riley, who has some experience playing alternative rock legends; he portrayed Fall frontman Mark E. Smith in “24 Hour Party People.”

Bob Marley: “Time Will Tell”

Many casual fans of Bob Marley know exactly 14 of his songs – that was the number of tracks on his multi-platinum greatest hits compilation, Legend. Left off that disc, “Time Will Tell” features a great bass line that will have your head swaying in no time. It was later covered by the Black Crowes on Southern Harmony and Musical Companion, with mixed results.

Listen to a clip of Marley’s version here, and the Crowes’ version here.

It’s raining men. Very, very gay men.

The Game Show Network’s revival of the ’50s staple, “I’ve Got A Secret,” has – for no discernable reason – gone with a theme of having a completely gay panel. Fair enough. But, apparently, the executive producers of the show are as straight as an arrow, because, according to the website Scott-O-Rama, they didn’t think the panel would need to be blindfolded because they wouldn’t recognize Martha Wash, lead singer of the Weather Girls and of their enormous hit, “It’s Raining Men.” Producer Gary Green assured them that, swear to God, they needed the blindfolds. At the 3:05 mark of this video on YouTube, you’ll see he was unquestionably right.

The Madcap laughs no more.

Syd Barrett, original lead singer of Pink Floyd and inspiration to dozens – maybe even hundreds – of British eccentrics dreaming of being pop musicians, has died.

Barrett, who had retired from music in the early ’70s and lived an anonymous life in his home town of Cambridge, had suffered from diabetes for many years. His work on Pink Floyd’s debut album, The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, remains a touchstone for British psychedelia, and his solo albums – The Madcap Laughs, Barrett, and rarities/outtakes collection Opel – are sadly brilliant (if occasionally shambling) documents of a man who spent the late ’60s and early ’70s on the brink of madness, occasionally teetered onto the wrong side of dementia. His fellow members of Pink Floyd never forgot their founder; in addition to being paid tribute to in many of the band’s songs, most famously in “Shine On You Crazy Diamond” (but almost certainly on “Brain Damage” as well), David Gilmour made a point of including Barrett’s “Astronomy Domine” on the group’s mid-’90s live album, Pulse.

Farewell, Syd. On “Dark Globe,” you posed the questions, “Won’t you miss me? Wouldn’t you miss me at all?” The answer is utterly unqualified: yes, we will.

A brief discography of Barrett follows after the jump.

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