posted by davidt on Tuesday July 26 2005, @09:00AM
Belligerent Ghoul sends the link:

ELTON 'LIVID' AT BONO SNUB - contactmusic.com, 24/07/2005 09:25

The ROCKET MAN star was keen to feature [U2's] 1980s hit NEW YEAR'S DAY on the star-studded release - which is set to feature MORRISSEY and BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN - but BONO stunned John with the snub.
posted by davidt on Tuesday July 26 2005, @09:00AM
Hicks writes:
Whilst listening to Hawksbee and Jacobs on Talk Sport Radio this afternoon I heard the two presenters talking about how they had attended the England v Australia Cricket game at Lords in north London on Sunday with comedians Frank Skinner and David Baddiel. At the end of the chat they mentioned that Morrissey was in attendence as the special guest of Lords Cricket ground. Can anyone confirm if morrissey is a cricket fan and if he was seen around London at the weekend?
posted by davidt on Tuesday July 26 2005, @09:00AM
Belligerent Ghoul sends the link:

Look back in anger - The Guardian, July 23, 2005

Justin Quirk wishes bands took a broader view of the past

Excerpt:

The bands just copying the past are particularly pointless because they way that they do it is so one-dimensional. Nostalgia doesn't just mean aping the past, but refers to a yearning for your home - ie one that you actually remember, rather than some strange idea you have of a time before you were born. It also has nothing to do with a quasi-nationalistic, idealised history. The few songwriters who get it right have grasped that your memories of a time and place are as bound up with the bad as the good, and that looking back is not necessarily a happy experience. This ambiguity was captured perfectly on odd occasions by Ray Davies (on Dead End Street, for example), Willy Mason's Live It Up and by much of Morrissey's output until he declined into being a passable Morrissey tribute act. Since his decline, the spirit of old England has been most consistently evoked by Luke Haines.

related:

Cool for copy cats - The Guardian, July 22, 2005

Dave Simpson on why now is such a fertile time for the 'surrogate band'

posted by davidt on Tuesday July 26 2005, @09:00AM
Belligerent Ghoul sends the link:

Sights and sounds - The Observer, July 24, 2005

Excerpt:

Morrissey's Manchester The Smiths only played 10 gigs in their home city of Manchester, but the venues are all featured in Morrissey's Manchester, a guidebook and map that let you create your own tour. Locations include Granada Studios, featured on the sleeve of Viva Hate, where the young Morrissey sent his rejected scripts for Coronation Street, the famous Hacienda nightclub, Manchester Poly (now Manchester Metropolitan) students union and Hulme, the area where Morrissey grew up. The book is published by Empire for £5.99, and author Phill Gatenby offers guided tours of Smiths sites. Contact [email protected] or go to www.morrisseys-manchester.com.

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