Still is a compilation album by English rock band Joy Division, consisting of previously released and unreleased studio material and a live recording of Joy Division's last concert, performed at Birmingham University. It was released on 9 October 1981 by Factory Records.
Still was released after the death of the band's frontman Ian Curtis. It consists of previously unused or unavailable studio material and live recordings.[1] The album includes the only live performance by the group of the song "Ceremony", which later became a New Order single. The recording abruptly begins just before the song's first chorus. Like all surviving Joy Division recordings of "Ceremony", Curtis's vocals are barely audible; in this instance, however, the final chorus is unusually clear. Another song featured is a cover version of the Velvet Underground's "Sister Ray", recorded at the Moonlight Club in London on 2 April 1980.
Originally planned for release in August, Still was eventually released in October 1981. It reached No. 5 in the UK upon its release,[2] and peaked at No. 3 in New Zealand in February 1982.[citation needed]
The CD version of the album was released in March 1990; it was the first edition to delete "Twenty Four Hours".
Joshua Klein of Pitchfork called the album "a ragged, enigmatic coda; an uneven odds-and-ends collection of lost tracks that fills in some gaps in Joy Division's history and legacy".[7] In 2013, BBC Music called it "a partly frustrating compilation...aimed at quickly curtailing the bootleg industry that always follows the death of a young icon".[5]