Sat, 9 November 2019
12:00pm – 3:00pm
YES, Pink Room
38 Charles Street
Manchester
M1 7DB

Saturday November 9th 2019 marks 30 years since the fall of the Berlin Wall. This free afternoon event at YES, Manchester, celebrates this anniversary through live music, conversation and film, as part of the HOMOBLOC festival.

Tickets are free, but booking is essential. Admission is based on a first-come-first-served basis. You will need to arrive early to guarantee entry.

BOOK YOUR FREE TICKETS HERE

Mark Reeder & Beate Peter: in conversation

Manchester-born, Berlin-based producer, filmmaker and cultural catalyst Mark Reeder (B-Movie: Lust & Sound in West-Berlin 1979-1989) talks to musicologist Dr Beate Peter about Berlin’s underground music scenes in the years leading up to the fall of the Wall, and how he risked his freedom to bring punk to the East.

Abigail Ward & Howard Jacobs: live music

Queer curator, DJ and co-founder of Manchester Digital Music Archive, Abigail Ward, debuts new live material in response to the theme of the Berlin Wall, with percussionist Howard Jacobs (808 State/Mr Wilson’s Second Liners), synth torturer Mandy Wigby (Sisters of Transistors/Architects of Rosslyn) and bassist Cathy Brooks (dub sex).

Wes Baggaley & Margo Broom: live music

Toast of London’s queer underground, DJ Wes Baggaley (Panorama Bar, Fabric, NYC Downlow, Robert Johnson) and producer extraordinaire Margo Broom (Fat White Family, Meatraffle, Big Joanie) play a set of exclusive electronic music inspired by the Berlin Wall.

More on Mark Reeder…

Mark Reeder is a 61-year-old Berlin-based producer, remixer, musician and filmmaker.

Born in Manchester and part of its late 70s punk scene, he moved to West Berlin in 1978 and immersed himself in the music scene there, becoming Factory Records’ German representative. He promoted the label’s bands Joy Division and ACR, whilst working as sound engineer and spending time with Nick Cave, Blixa Bargeld and other musical luminaries of the West Berlin scene.

In 1983, Reeder put together a Berlin Special of The Tube, which he co-presented together with Muriel Gray. This show featured music from both sides of the walled city. Mark risked his freedom to smuggle Western bands into East Germany, putting on illegal shows in churches at a time when the Stasi was attempting to crush the country’s nascent punk scene.

In summer 1989, Reeder was asked by East German officials if he would produce an album for up-and-coming East German indie band Die Vision for the state-owned record label AMIGA in East Berlin. He assumed at the time this was so they could keep an eye on him. Mark is now recognised as the only English person ever to have produced a record in the East, because days after finishing the album, the Berlin Wall fell.

This album was incredibly important to many East German kids, including Dr. Beate Peter. She will talk to Mark about this and many other things, including their shared passion for electronic music, Mark’s pioneering dance label MFS and his work with New Order.

In 2015 Mark was starred in a film based on his own life – B-Movie: Lust & Sound in West-Berlin 1979-1989. You can see a trailer for that film here.

We are grateful to the following organisations for their support: HOMOBLOC, YES, Manchester Metropolitan University, Goethe Institute, Manchester Digital Music Archive, Arts Council England, Economic and Social Research Council, RAH! Research in Arts and Humanities and The Lapsed Clubber.