LAST week when picking 10 of my favourite Scouse tunes, I claimed I couldn’t really get my head around Liverpool fans who don’t like music from Manchester.

If it’s a good tune, it’s a good tune – and, as Rakim once famously rapped, ‘It’s not where you’re from, it’s where you’re at’.

On my Scouse list, I purposely left out records from the likes of Echo & The Bunnymen and the Beatles in order to try and make things slightly more original. With this Manchester Top 10, there’s no Manc equivalent of the Beatles to leave out – something which must kill them – but all the same, I think I actually found it harder to get this list down to 10 songs than I did with the Scouse tunes.

Anyway, here goes… my 10 favourite Manchester records; 10 songs that have helped soundtrack a Liverpool supporter’s life of loving music.

10. Badly Drawn Boy: Once Around The Block

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tAtcJ954TjQ&feature=related

I remember hearing about this singer with the weird name before I actually heard the tunes. I knew I’d like him just from reading early interviews and the first album is brilliant in my mind, this being the standout track. ‘Born in the UK’, off his fourth album (I think) is a quality British tribute to his hero Bruce Springsteen and only just missed out on this list.

9. A Guy Called Gerald: Voodoo Ray

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ADoBW0c-18
This came out 23 years ago. I loved it then, just as I was getting into acid house, and still love it now. The absolute opposite of the trademark miserable Manchester sound of the time.

8. Oasis: Slide Away

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ei6YQchGZg
I know it’s not fashionable to admit to liking Oasis – the Real People were better etc etc (yawn) – but I thought they were brilliant when they first came out. Yeah, they clearly ripped off the sound of all the bands that influenced them but at least they had the decency to be influenced by the greatest bands this country has ever produced. And, back to the tune, what an intro to a song. The fact it wasn’t deemed good enough to release as a single at the time says a lot about the quality of those early singles and their b-sides. ‘Morning Glory’ is superb too and could quite easily have made this list.

7. Doves: There Goes The Fear

‘Pounding’ and ‘Black and White Town’ are equally as good but I could only pick one tune from them and I’ve gone with this one. Cool band not unlike The Coral in their attitude to music – no fuss, no gimmicks, just top tunes.

6. Northern Uproar: Any Way You Look

I know I may get ridiculed for this particular choice because as everyone knows, Northern Uproar arrived at the arse end of Britpop and were only one step up from being a scruffy young Oasis tribute act. But, but… when all’s said and done, when the hype is over and Britpop is reduced to being the subject of one of those awful Channel 4 countdown shows with Stuart Maconie, you’ve got to take each song on its own merit and this tune holds its own in my eyes. Amazing vocal harmonies, great trumpets and a killer chorus. Can’t ask for much more than that from a three minute pop song.

5. Joy Division: Love Will Tear You Apart

I can take or leave the vast majority of the Joy Division back catalogue and don’t care much for any talk of Ian Curtis being some sort of musical genius but this is a tune. One of THE great openings to any single too.

4. The Stone Roses: (Song for my) Sugar Spun Sister

‘Screamadelica’ or ‘London Calling’ aside, I don’t think I’ve ever listened to an album more than I have ‘The Stone Roses’. As perfect an album as I think is possible to make – certainly to these ears – I could have picked any number of tunes off it: ‘This is The One’, ‘Waterfall’, ‘She Bangs The Drums’, ‘Made of Stone’, ‘Bye Bye Badman’… but I’ve gone for this one as I like the chorus.

3. Happy Mondays: W.F.L. (Think About The Future – Paul Oakenfold Mix)

Vastly underrated in my opinion, the Happy Mondays made far better music than I think they’re ever given credit for. They also knew how to have a laugh and enjoy themselves – something I can never imagine John Squire, for all his genius, doing. This tune, in a club slightly the worse for wear, just makes sense.

2. The Smiths: There is a light that never goes out

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DRtW1MAZ32M
I can’t listen to this song without thinking of Hillsborough – maybe it’s the Liverpool flag with the title on it or the fact that one year, on April 15th, we put a photo of the memorial flame on the splashpage of the LFC website with words ‘There is a light that never goes out’ underneath it. Either way, it’s an unbelievably good tune. Noel Gallagher did a great version too at the Royal Albert Hall.

1.New Order: Vanishing Point

Recorded in Ibiza, listened to in Ibiza. When the piano kicks in after 50 seconds and the tune slows down at 3:30 before kicking in again, that, to me, is a band that understands house music and what people on a dancefloor want.