Hundreds attend Stone Roses' Mani's star-studded Manchester send-off

Paul GlynnCulture reporter
News imagePA Liam Gallagher waves goodbye to Mani's coffinPA
Liam Gallagher helped to carry Mani's coffin out of the cathedral, watched on by hundreds of people

Family, friends and fans of Gary "Mani" Mounfield have turned out in force in Manchester to bid farewell to the much-loved bass player of The Stone Roses and Primal Scream.

Some of the biggest names of British 1980s and 90s music, including his former bandmates Ian Brown and Bobby Gillespie, as well as Oasis frontman Liam Gallagher and Paul Weller, were in attendance for the service at Manchester Cathedral.

Former Manchester United footballers Sir David Beckham and Gary Neville also attended.

Fans lined the streets as the funeral cortege went from the star's home in Heaton Moor in Stockport to Manchester city centre.

News imagePA Mani's former Stone Roses and Primal Scream bandmates, along with Oasis star Liam Gallagher, carrying his coffin out of the cathedral. The coffin was painted like the cover of the Stone Roses first album.PA
Mani's former Stone Roses bandmate John Squire and Primal Scream's Bobby Gillespie (both behind Gallagher)
News imageReuters Another picture of Mani's former Stone Roses and Primal Scream bandmates carrying his coffin out of the cathedral.Reuters
(Left to right) Ian Brown and Primal Scream guitarist Andrew Innes with Alan "Reni" Wren, the Stone Roses drummer who along with Mani gave the band their groove

'Beautiful soul and spirit'

News imageGetty Images Mani playing bass on stage, wearing a red jacketGetty Images
The death of Mani's mother proved to be the catalyst for the Stone Roses reunion in 2011

The Stone Roses singer Brown led the tributes, saying his bandmate was like "a brother to me".

Pausing briefly as he went into church, Brown said he was there to celebrate "what a beautiful human being that he was".

Asked what Mounfield meant to him, the singer said: "Everything.”

In a touching eulogy given inside the church, Brown went on to praise his "musical comrade" as "a beautiful soul and spirit".

He added that the bass player "was able to laugh his way through any darkness" and was "the life and soul of any room he was in".

Brown, whose speech was played to the gathered masses outside - many of whom were wearing bucket hats and Stone Roses T-shirts - was applauded after suggesting he should start a campaign for a lasting statue for his old bandmate.

"A 50ft gold statue of Mani in the city," he beamed.

'R kid'

Hundreds of fans gathered outside the cathedral and clapped as the cortege arrived, preceded by a guard of scooter riders as The Stone Roses track I Wanna Be Adored played on speakers.

Mounfield's coffin - decorated with the classic paint-splashed artwork from his band's first album - was carried into the cathedral as family and friends followed, with more applause from the crowd.

A Manchester United scarf also adorned his coffin, which was next to a wreath bearing the affectionate Mancunian term "R kid”.

News imagePA A wreath of flowers reading "R Kid" inside the hearsePA
News imagePA David Beckham, seen touching Mani's coffin, bids farewell to one of his musical heroesPA
David Beckham said farewell to one of his musical heroes
News imagePA Fans on scooters lead the cortege following the funeral service of former Stone Roses and Primal Scream bass player Gary Mounfield, who was known as Mani, at Manchester Cathedral, following his death at the age of 63.PA
The cortege arrived preceded by a guard of scooter riders, a nod to Mani's love of Mod culture

Mounfield's bass playing was an integral part of The Stone Roses' "baggy" sound - as heard on tracks like Fools Gold.

He joined another seminal group, Primal Scream, in 1996 and played with them for 15 years, before rejoining his old band for a series of reunion gigs.

Primal Scream frontman Gillespie followed Brown in giving his eulogy.

He recalled having first met Mani at the legendary Hacienda nightclub in Manchester. "He made me feel a million dollars," noted Gillespie. "He was like that with everyone."

He added: "His enthusiasm and positivity was contagious."

After comparing Mani's aura to that of footballing legends Diego Maradona and Eric Cantona, Gillespie concluded: "He will always live forever in my soul and mind."

News imageReuters Stone Roses and Manchester United outside the cathedral service with a sign saying "Roses are Red"Reuters
Fans paying their respects outside heard songs by The Stone Roses, Primal Scream, Bob Marley and The Byrds played on speakers

Other Manchester musicians at the service included Paul "Bonehead" Arthurs from Oasis, Mike Joyce from The Smiths and Peter Hook of New Order, who played in a band called Freebass with Mani and the late Andy Rourke.

Mark "Bez" Berry from the Happy Mondays was also in attendance at the funeral, which was a veritable Who's Who of legendary music figures from the city.

Speaking to BBC Radio Manchester, music journalist John Robb described Mani as being "very much the heart and soul of Manchester".

"He was something that's very typically Mancunian, very typically northern as well, you know, beyond the borders of Manchester," he said.

"The overarching trend is how many people say what a brilliant bloke he was to bump into."

News imageGetty Images (Left to right) Alan "Reni" Wren, Gary "Mani" Mounfield, Ian Brown and John Squire of the Stone Roses pictured in black and white, in 1992Getty Images
'Mani' (second left) with the rest of The Stone Roses in 1992

With Mani on bass, Brown on vocals, John Squire on guitar and Alan "Reni" Wren on drums, The Stone Roses were at the forefront of the "Madchester" indie scene of the late 80s and early 90s, which peaked with a famous gig at Spike Island in Widnes.

They released their beloved eponymous debut album in 1989.

The LP featured such classic songs as I Wanna Be Adored, She Bangs The Drums and I Am The Resurrection, all underpinned by the grooves of Mani's basslines.

It was named the greatest British album of all time by the Observer in 2004 and by the NME two years later.

Its harder-rocking follow-up Second Coming came out in 1994. Both albums reached the top five in the UK.

After the group disbanded in 1996, Mani joined Scottish rock band Primal Scream, first playing on their album Vanishing Point, released a year later, where his bass playing was a key part of krautrock-influenced lead single Kowalski.

Mounfield would go on to record four more albums with Primal Scream before leaving in 2011 to reform The Stone Roses.

The band released two further singles in 2016, but no full-length album followed and the group disbanded once more in 2017 after some old tensions resurfaced.

The Stone Roses played a number of UK gigs over 2016 and 2017 before their split, including a concert at Glasgow's Hampden Park, which would end up being the classic line-up's final concert.

Brown told the crowd: "Don't be sad that it's over, be happy that it happened."

Mani tributes: 'He was just a sound guy'

Mounfield died last month - aged 63 - peacefully in his sleep of "respiratory issues" linked to the long-standing lung condition, emphysema, coroners confirmed to the Manchester Evening News.

His wife Imelda died in November 2023, three years after she was diagnosed with bowel cancer. The couple have twin boys, who were born in 2013.

Only last month, the bassist attended the funeral of another Manchester icon, Ricky Hatton, at the same cathedral.

Mani’s death came shortly after he had announced an in-conversation tour of UK venues, which would have seen him recount his experiences and memories in The Stone Roses and Primal Scream from September next year.

Squire last week shared a new piece of artwork in honour of his friend; while another band associated with the city, Doves, paid their own tribute during a weekend gig at Manchester Apollo, calling Mani a "beautiful person".