The Darkness took off like a rocket in 2003, with their debut album, Permission To Land, selling over a million copies within just ten months of its release, and the group returning fun for fun’s sake to a moribund rock scene at the start of the 21st century. Propelled by ambition, adoration and ample access to excess, the band imploded, leaving a trail of whatever-happened-to questions in their wake. Directed by Simon Emmett, the Welcome To The Darkness documentary offers plenty to learn about the group, including exactly why they disappeared, and how they overcame career- and life-threatening setbacks in order to re-enter the pantheon of the rock gods.
Opening in cinemas on Thursday, 9 November, for what’s being billed as a “one-night only, plus encores” run, Welcome To The Darkness coincides with the release of the band’s 20th-anniversary the 4CD Permission To Land… Again box set, charting a rise, fall and rise again tale that more than grants the band their request.
Here are ten things we learned from the Welcome To The Darkness documentary.
Listen to the ‘Permission To Land… Again’ box set here, and check out our ‘Welcome To The Darkness’ takeaways, below.
1: The Darkness are a grass-roots band who aren’t afraid of graft
In recounting The Darkness’ meteoric rise to fame following the release of Permission To Land, Welcome To The Darkness reveals that the group worked their assess off to make it happen. “They’d been plying pubs and clubs and things for years and years, and most people ignored them,” one music exec recalls. “I went to a show in Peterborough, and it was 16 people and a dog… and the band were playing as if they were playing Wembley Arena. It was fantastic.”
“I didn’t think anybody would buy into a concept like The Darkness if it wasn’t real,” frontman Justin Hawkins explains. “Stadium rock in pubs, clubs, hovels… It’s so preposterous that you have to live it… I decided to just really go for it.”