With The Cure gearing up to release a new album on November 1, their first in 16 years, it seems only right to revisit some of frontman Robert Smith’s iconic moments. There was one in particular where he got under the skin of New Order/Joy Division bassist Peter Hook for reasons unknown, even after Joy Division supported The Cure in 1980.
Smith has never shied away from speaking his mind, and he gave Hook what-for in a 2013 interview. Before that, The Cure and Joy Division/New Order were close contemporaries and even friends. They supported each other at shows, and The Cure even covered Joy Division’s “Love Will Tear Us Apart” at the time.
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However, in 2012, former Joy Division and New Order bassist Peter Hook released the book Unknown Pleasures: Inside Joy Division. In the book, he chose to shade The Cure, claiming that they had “sold out a bit.” Robert Smith didn’t take kindly to this, and who would? In a 2013 interview with Radio Urbana, Smith fired back at Hook for the jab.
โPeter Hook always had a real big problem with us because our bassist Simon Gallup was so much better looking and the better bass playerโฆI think Peter was so jealous he could never get over it, and he stopped the rest of them from being friendlyโฆโ he said.
[RELATED: LISTEN: The Cure Teases Fans With Snippet of First New Music in 16 Years]
Robert Smith of The Cure Claimed Peter Hook of Joy Division was “Jealous” of Their Bass Player After Sell-Out Jab
However, Smith later shared praise for New Order, who continued without Peter Hook in 2007. Seemingly, New Order as a whole had no problem with The Cure, but Hook, for some reason, did.
โWeโve bumped into them over the years, and since [Hook] left, weโve played with New Order a few times in the last summer, and itโs so nice to be able to chat with them, you know, to talk with them because Iโve always loved New Order I think theyโre one of the best bands โ they also have a fantastic back catalog, and they like us, itโs so nice to say to Bernard [Sumner] โI like your bandโ, and he says โI like yours as well,’” he said in 2013.
He continued, “[and] itโs taken an awful long time to say hello again to them. Theyโre a good example of a band that gets better as they get older. They were fantastic when we played with them last year, and weโre playing again with them this year at a couple of festivals.โ
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English rock and pop group The Hollies perform the song 'Sorry Suzanne' on the set of the BBC Television pop music television show Top Of The Pops at Lime Grove Studios in London on 27th March 1969. Members of the band are, from left, Tony Hicks, Bobby Elliott, Allan Clarke, Terry Sylvester and Bernie Calvert. (Photo by Ivan Keeman/Redferns)







