The Final Academy

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The event booklet, designed by Neville Brody.

William Burroughs’ reading in the city of Manchester took place on the 4th of October, 1982, at Factory Records’ Haçienda club, as part of the Manchester “edition” of The Final Academy, a Burroughs-themed art event put together by Psychic TV (Genesis P Orridge & Peter Christopherson) and others. A recent posting on the Grey Lodge is a torrent of The Final Academy Documents, the shoddily-produced DVD made from the low-grade video recordings that captured the event (originally an Ikon Video production from Factory). The DVD is so badly presented by Cherry Red that no one should feel guilty about downloading this.

I’ve always been grateful that a record was made of this event, however poor, since I was in the audience that evening, very conscious of the fact that this was my one and only opportunity to see Burroughs in the flesh. His appearance was the magical part of a scaled-down version of the larger two-day Final Academy that had taken place earlier that week in London. The rest of the event was either strange or underwhelming, not helped by the chilly and elitist atmosphere of Manchester’s newest and most famous club. In the days before “Madchester” and the rave scene (the period that gets excised from the city’s cultural history), the Haçienda was a cold, grey concrete barn with terrible acoustics and a members-only policy that required the flourishing of a Peter Saville-designed card at the door. The place was usually half-empty and the clientèle tended to be students living nearby.

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Burroughs’ presence that evening at least managed to fill out the space, even if a large portion of the audience didn’t seem to know why they were there or what the whole thing was about. Some of the films made by Burroughs’ collaborator Antony Balch (Towers Open Fire, The Cut-Ups) were shown on the club’s big projection screens then John Giorno took to the stage to give a spirited and funny presentation of his performance poetry. I hadn’t heard of Giorno before, or his Giorno Poetry Systems, which had been putting readings by Burroughs and others on record, but he was very entertaining.

Burroughs followed, reading from The Place of Dead Roads and The Western Lands. It later became apparent that this was part of an ongoing scheme by his manager, James Grauerholz, to get the aged writer in front of audiences and earning some much-needed money. Whatever money he made was well-earned since few writers can deliver their work in public with as much style and wit, as the numerous recordings of his later readings testify. I’m not sure now what I expected from his reading but I remember being surprised at the degree of humour involved. What might seem cold and dead on the page came to life dripping with satiric vitriol under the stress of that snarling delivery. After this, the screening of a lengthy video by Psychic TV was something of an anti-climax, even if the blood and other fluids on display did provoke one audience member to exclaim “Why are you watching this?!” before storming out.

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The Final Academy was the first event I attended at the Haçienda and certainly one of the best, equalled only by an incredibly ferocious performance from Einstürzende Neubauten a few months later. This featured broken glass flying into the audience and the band drilling into the concrete wall of the venue with a pneumatic drill (part of their stage equipment at the time) which they then left hanging from the wall. I don’t think the Haçienda management were pleased by that. I caught the Burroughs event just as I was preparing to move to the city myself and it made Manchester immediately seem like a vital and worthwhile place to be; how things change…. It’s curious now the way this pointed towards my future work here; also in the audience that evening were future friends and colleagues Michael Butterworth and Martin Flitcroft of Savoy Books. Mike’s sister was part of the Ikon Video team who were filming the event and Savoy are credited on the Final Academy video release. William Burroughs is one of the dark angels presiding over the entire Savoy project; Mike and Dave Britton recounted in an interview with Sarajane Inkster their memories of meeting him in New York City.

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William Burroughs in the Rue Git-le-Coeur, circa 1960.

The programme booklets and posters for the Final Academy were designed by Neville Brody. It would have been nice to see the DVD release use Brody’s designs but that’s obviously expecting too much of the incompetents at Cherry Red. Among the many photographs inside Brody’s booklet are some showing Burroughs in the Rue Git-le-Coeur, Paris, from the period when he was living in the famous Beat Hotel with Brion Gysin and others. I managed to track down the hotel on my last trip to the city. The street seems to have retained much of its earlier character but the hotel itself has received a bland makeover that says “international” and “expensive”. One can’t help but wonder where the Beats would migrate to today in the search for cheap accommodation; it certainly wouldn’t be Paris or London or, for that matter, Manchester. Prague? Somewhere in Brazil maybe?

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The street as it is today, with the former Beat Hotel on the left.

The Final Academy was a defining moment in what, for want of a better term, is now seen as the Industrial Culture scene, Burroughs having been adopted as godfather by most of the prime movers in that movement-that-wasn’t-quite-a-movement. Psychic TV grew out of Throbbing Gristle, of course, and one of the last releases on TG’s Industrial Records label was Nothing Here Now but the Recordings, a collection of Burroughs’ early tape experiments. 23 Skidoo sampled (in the days before sampling…) a snatch of those recordings for The Gospel Comes to New Guinea, a single produced by Cabaret Voltaire, and both these bands played at the London Final Academy event. At the time this meeting of literary and avant garde musical culture didn’t seem so surprising but 24 years on it seems increasingly unique and unrepeatable. Despite Burroughs’ considerable influence, the events in London and Manchester weren’t the inspirational moment that the organisers and participants might have wished as the 1980s turned out to be a decade of pop trivia and much political and cultural conservatism. Burroughs continued to produce good work (his musical collaborations, Seven Souls with Material and the Dead City Radio readings were high points) but Brion Gysin died in 1986 and many of the musical performers gradually ran out of steam or lost their way as the decade progressed. The “final” part of The Final Academy was more of a terminal declaration than anyone realised at the time.

Brainwashed has some reviews and interviews concerning The Final Academy here.

Previously on { feuilleton }
William Burroughs book covers
Towers Open Fire
Neville Brody and Fetish Records

9 thoughts on “The Final Academy”

  1. Thanks! The building left much to be desired but I still like the card design, with its stripes and the way he chose Gill Sans over Helvetica or Futura.

  2. I always imagined we would head to Berlin for cheap rents, but the london underground is now covered with adverts for a Berlin property expo. Minsk? St Petersburg?

    Any chance of re seeding the final academy torrent? Can’t find it anywhere else.

  3. I think Thailand may be the place these days, seeing as I know a few people who’ve moved there recently.

    Yes, the Final Academy torrent seems to have vanished but there’s more Burroughs stuff around if you search here:

    http://www.alterati.com/

    A good source for the kind of eclectic material the larger trackers miss. If the Final Academy turns up anywhere again it’ll probably be there.

  4. Hey, John

    The Beats moving to Brazil? Unlikely… No cheap things around here, at least not on the Southeast, which is where I am. As a matter of fact, I think things have changed a lot since the haydays of Tangier being the Interzone developed by Burroughs. Are there any cheap places left in the world for a wanna be beatnik to stay, nowadays?
    Hardly, I guess.
    Interesting that story of somebody getting up in the middle of a show and ask why people were watching that in England. Something quite similar happened in Rio de Janeiro, back in 1997, at a cultural center who was presenting a reading and a performance to comemorate the 40 years of ON THE ROAD. I was still a journalist at the time, and was covering the event (at my own expense!). During the performance, which comprised of some brazilian writers and poets who were influenced by the beats, and two jazz musicians, one Brazilian, the other French, an aged lady left her husband behind and went out of the room, saying: “This is no poetry, and I don’t want to be part of it!”. Her husband, however, stayed until the end of the reading/performance.
    Later, I was watching a screening of the TOWERS OPEN FIRE video, which also featured the very short BURROUGHS BUYS A PARROT video. One of the guys present there stated: “Bullshit” I wonder if that guy was here, if he would put up with that crap!”.
    As you can see, things are not that different, whatever side of the world we’re at. Well, people are the same wherever we go, right?
    That’s it.
    All the best
    Márcio Salerno

  5. hahah, I remember the over enthusiastic bouncers at the hacienda trying to stop me going in with Laibach cos i looked too much like a soulboy….

  6. Hello John,

    Very much enjoy your excellent website, and your very fine work!

    Not quite a month shy of my 16th birthday I was at ‘The Final Academy’ in London… I met William Burroughs, Brion Gysin – also became friends with Geff & Peter who would become Coil (you could say “it changed my life”…!)

    I am planning a small edition chapbook to commemorate the 30th anniversary this year – I would love to be able to include your text, as I didn’t attend the Manchester event (and am not currently in touch with anybody that did) – is it possible that we could discuss this? Please let me know via the email above – I can let you have a phone number if you would like to discuss further?

    Thank You for your time – Best Wishes: Matthew

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