"The minute you heard New Order, you were like, 'They're one of me' or 'I'm one of them'. It was instant" The Smashing Pumpkins ‘ Billy Corgan has appeared on a podcast that charts the history of New Order , where he explains why the band’s “alien quality” landed with Generation X in the US. READ MORE: New Order’s Bernard Sumner and Mella Dee on ‘Riptide’, the state of the world and what’s next In the latest episode of Transmissions: The Definitive Story of Joy Division & New Order , released yesterday (September 19), host Maxine Peake focused on how the band’s first-ever US tour in 1980 came to be.

Corgan chimes in to contextualise the unique connection British music sparked with the Gen Xers who were coming of age. Describing a generation of “latchkey kids” who had “too much TV” and “too much time alone”, the “alien quality” of bands like New Order began to resonate. “Bands like New Order seem to find that, ‘Yes, you’re young, Yes, you wanna fall in love and ‘es, you’re having your heart broken, but the world kind of isn’t the way it appears to be,'” he elaborates.

Listen to the podcast episode below, which also features anecdotes from techno producer Kevin Saunderson and writers Andrew O’Hagan and Audrey Golden, along with interviews with current and former band members Bernard Sumner , Stephen Morris, Gillian Gilbert and Peter Hook . A band like New Order, he continues, signified to kids like Corgan that “there was this .