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Monday, May 11, 2020
30 Day Song Challenge - Day 11
Wednesday, February 21, 2018
Ruth and Martin's Album Club by Martin Fitzgerald (Unbound 2017)
Saturday, December 23, 2017
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Tuesday, October 29, 2013
Autobiography by Morrissey (Penguin Classics 2013)
Monday, April 11, 2011
30 Day Song Challenge - day 11
day 11 - a song from your favorite band
I'd be kidding myself on if I picked any other band for day 11.
One of their less celebrated songs from the fag end of their career:
Noel Gallagher gets it right again and again when discussing The Smiths.
Friday, April 01, 2011
April means the 30 Day Song Challenge
From the other place.
A music meme with a difference. Thirty days, thirty musical taste questions. If I had my blogging mojo switched on, I'd have activated a file sharing account but, in these blocked times, You Tube is my friend.
day 01 - your favorite song
Christ, kick off with the hard one. How can you have a favourite song? . . . or novel, film or Socialist Standard front cover, for that matter. If you're anything like me, you have 20 or 30 favourites, and you flip between them from month to month suiting the mood, the season or your angst level.
Favourite song? How's my angst level? Ask me next week and it'll be something different but, at this moment in time, this old standard still does it for me every time. Probably listened to it over a thousand times, and I've never got sick of it.
I'm cheating myself a bit with the embedding of The Tube video when, in truth, I first discovered the song via this performance on Top of the Pops.
But surely you can watch both?
Thursday, December 02, 2010
Monday, February 01, 2010
Friday, October 24, 2008
Strange Friday headline, here it comes
The Smiths set for comeback?
I can't see it happening myself.
Mozzer's already belting out the songs from The Smiths back catalogue on the solo tours; Johnny Marr can't pick up a guitar at the moment because he refuses to put down his blackberry for a second in fear that he will miss the email informing him that the critical tide has finally turned with regards to his 2003 album, Boomslang. (Rolling Stone has taken his petition into account and revised the review up to 2.5 stars); and the Other Two? Bruce Foxton and Rick Buckler are fully booked for autograph signings at Smiths Fan Conventions for the next three years (see them tomorrow night at Apsley Village Club . . . entrance fee 75 pence).
But as far-fetched as this particular one-off reunion sounds, it would be a nice bookend to this book. Real life so rarely imitates fiction . . . unless you take into account that time I borrowed Jimmy McGrory's old football boots and scored seven goals in a double period 5 a side game as the gospel truth.
Today, and only for today, let a hundred Smiths song titles bloom as post titles on a thousand blogs.
Thursday, September 04, 2008
How Soon Is Never? by Marc Spitz (Three Rivers Press 2003)
Thursday, May 08, 2008
These Charming Men
A must have for every Smiths devotee out there.
Spinster's Rock has a 'This Charming Man' track for every day of the week (and one left over for just good measure).
The original single version will always be the definitive version for me, but if you love The Smiths that means you are a sad bastard completist. And Spinster's Rock post even includes the only ever official release of Troy Tate's production of 'This Charming Man'.
As I am in New York, I guess I should pass comment on the two extended 'New York' remixes of 'This Charming Man'? Mmm, not necessarily my cup of tea but now you know where the ideas for the Meat Is Murder track, 'Barbarism Begins At Home', came from.
Monday, January 14, 2008
They Talk About The Smiths, So I Don't Have To #2
'This Charming Man': The greatest pop song of all time?
Quite possibly. It depends what day you catch me when asking that particular question.
Professional irritant Paul Morley tests my patience to the limit with his trendy sixth form English teacher deconstruction of the lyrics of 'This Charming Man' on his BBC4 programme, Pop! What is it good for? Simon Armitage is excused from my bile, as I love his prose - though I do wish he wouldn't go to the same barber as Stuart Maconie - and Mike Joyce? . . . well Mike Joyce has the best line of all in the clip.
Hat tip to Urban 75 for bringing the programme to my attention.
They Talk About The Smiths, So I Don't Have To
UNLOVABLE
Ian Bone reports on Smiths fans in Salford getting spikey at the thought of David Cameron securing a photo-op outside the Salford Boys Club.
Doesn't matter if Cameron claims it's his favourite album of all time, it restores my faith a tad.
Friday, January 04, 2008
Manchester, So Much To Answer To
Found via the SPGB discussion list, Manchester Branch's mini-quiz for the end of 2007:
I'll post the answers in the comment box when I get the answers myself.
Saturday, October 13, 2007
Pete and the Dud
Of course he wrote 'Michelle'. It was the only bum note on what is, otherwise, my favourite Beatles album. Paul McCartney and Pete Doherty take time out from the tabloid life to stroke each other in this month's Observer Music Monthly.
And naturally they have things in common: the Barat/Lennon comparisons and trade offs; both being seen as the well dressed good-looking sensitive ones who the fans wanted to take home to meet their mums; Doherty born in '79, Macca dying in '79.
It all adds up to a bit of journalistic fluff, but I did like McCartney's anecdote about meeting Penny Rimbaud at the height of punk in the seventies, and fingers crossed that the late Linda McCartney's reported love for The Smiths didn't begin and end with 'Meat is Murder'.
I'm not sure that these type of music magazine blind dates ever work. Wasn't there that case of the NME covering Paul Weller meeting Pete Townsend at the height of The Jam's fame? I seem to remember reading - maybe in The Beat Concerto? - that they hated each other on sight. But that was nothing in comparison to that time at the height of mullets and militancy on Merseyside that the now sadly defunct Record Mirror covered The Redskins meeting Derek Hatton within its pages.
Sure the pictures of the meeting looked cheery enough, but the gossip is that afterwards it took seven copies of the Militant International Review to mop up the spilled egos. Any advancement for a unified vanguardist left at that time = via the SWP's recent Open Letter to the Militant Tendency - was squandered over an argument as trivial as who played bass on the originally recording of Wilson Pickett's "Ninety Nine and a Half (Won't Do)".
Damn those petit-bourgeois Bolshevik-Centrist-liquidationist types . . . those completely demoralized elements, wearing button down Ben Sherman shirts, sporty number one haircuts and knocked off shiny Pierre Cardin suits.