The band’s own archive of images from their early days date back to first local gigs, through to early tours as they began to make a breakthrough.
Jim Kerr explains: “We learned our trade in Glasgow’s pubs in clubs. There was a pub called the Mars Bar at St Enoch Square and we played there every Sunday night. It was free to get in and folk would queue round the block, our pals would tell their pals. It was a big crowd and we knew we had to be good and we were doing our own stuff.
“We recorded some songs onto cassettes and people would make copies of them, that’s how we got the word out. I hiked down to London with some of these cassettes and there was a good reaction, the record label people said, come down here and do a showcase gig for us. Here’s the bit where I don’t know were we had the gall to do this - we didn’t have a manager or anything - I said to them, no you will need to come up to Glasgow.” Seeing Simple Minds perform in the wild with a Glasgow crowd was enough to secure them their first recording contract: “When they came up, people already knew every word because they came to see us every week and they had the cassettes, it was as though we were already playing hits. So Glasgow and the audience and the support, that was the oxygen we needed then.”

9. Botanic Gardens 1980
Simple Minds in Glasgow's Botanic Gardens, picture by Richard Cowley. | Simple Minds
10. Simple Minds 1980
Simple Minds in East Berlin in September 1980, on the band's day off while supporting Peter Gabriel on his European tour. Photo by Ronnie Gurr. | Simple Minds

11. Simple Minds
Jim Kerr and record producer John Leckie who produced Simple Minds albums Life in a Day, Real to Real Cacophony, then Empires and Dance. Photograph by Richard Coward. | Richard Coward.