Awards The Ivors Inspiration Award
This Ivor Novello Award acknowledges not just the quality of the songwritersâ catalogue, but also their achievements in inspiring others. It represents the appreciation of all those who have been inspired to emulate their talent and originality.
The Ivors Inspiration Award No less a star than Oasisâ Noel Gallagher once described Happy Mondays as a âheroicâ band, adding that the Manchester group were â along with their counterparts The Stone Roses â the reason âwhy I started in musicâ. Inspiring the most successful songwriter of his generation is probably enough to justify the Mondays picking up The Ivors Inspiration gong in itself. But in fact, while their career may have been chaotic at times, the Mondays have encouraged countless bands to make their mark. The music press may still resound to tales of the bandâs legendary excess, but there was much more to the original line-up â Shaun Ryder on vocals, his brother Paul on bass, Mark Day on guitar, Paul Davis on keyboards and Gary Whelan on drums â than the tales of hellraising that followed them from Moss Side to Barbados. Their early work, in particular, was mind-blowing, as songs such as 24 Hour Party People, Wrote For Luck and Lazyitis introduced the world to their maverick, genre-splicing musical approach, not to mention the freeform lyrical genius of frontman Ryder. The head of Happy Mondaysâ record label Factory, the late, great Tony Wilson, once put Ryderâs words âon a par with WB Yeatsâ. And, while it seems unlikely Yeats ever penned a couplet like Kinky Afroâs opening salvo of âSon, Iâm 30/I only went with your mother âcos sheâs dirtyâ, Ryderâs grasp of the surreal, scattershot soundbite elevated Happy Mondays into one of the most important bands of their era. As their career progressed, they incorporated more of the dance grooves they heard in Manchesterâs clubs into their sound, helping to give birth to the Madchester/baggy scene that gripped Britain in the late â80s/early â90s. But their classic 1990 album Pills âNâ Thrills âNâ Bellyaches would have succeeded in any era, built as it was on irresistible anthems such as Godâs Cop and Loose Fit. The Mondaysâ original incarnation came to a messy end after final album Yes Please! in 1992, although their regular reunions remain in high demand on the live circuit. But their real legacy was the huge list of artists theyâve influenced. Everyone from Robbie Williams to Kasabian contains a little bit of Happy Mondays, and anyone out there keeping rockânârollâs maverick spirit alive owes Shaun, Paul, Mark, Paul and Gary the greatest of thanks.
The 2016 Ivor Novello Awards 33