Nottingham Evening Post - pre-gig and post-gig articles |
Posted on Fri, Nov 12 1999 at 1:16 a.m. PST by
David T.
<[email protected]>
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Pre-gig article from Jason
G.:
Morrissey take a
bow
He was singing in The Smiths, and then he left the Smiths
and heaven knows he's legendary now. As Nottingham prepares
to host the first date of his British tour, we look at this
charming man's career
BY MARK PATTERSON
Manchester, the Arndale Centre, 1985: Years before the IRA
made a mess of this monstrous 1960s shopping centre, I'm in
a cheapo record shop and handing my money over for two vinyl
albums. One is Meat Is Murder, by The Smiths, which
has come out on this very day. The other is a singles
compilation by The Buzzcocks, another band from Manchester,
where I'm going to university in a few months' time.
The Buzzcocks album is for a bit of Manchester punk
heritage. The Smiths album, though, is all about today and
now, 1985-style.
The Smiths were already huge by then, and while this second
album lacked the starry glamour of its best-selling
follow-up The Queen Is Dead, it definitively
summarised The Smiths' sound and the concerns of their pale,
be-quiffed and articulate singer, Morrissey vegetarianism,
working class Manchester kids with names scratched on their
arms in fountain pen, the barbarity of school, sexual
yearning for the unreachable, all embedded in Johnny Marr's
shimmering guitar and Andy Rourke's mobile, treble-high
bass.
When the band inevitably split in 1987 after four albums,
Morrissey dove into a solo career which has had a critical
approval rating more violently volatile than a barometer in
rainy Manchester. An anti-pop star hero and supreme
individualist to fans, a puzzling misery to others yet a
legend nonetheless, Morrissey has been absent from the UK
music scene for what seems like half a lifetime but is back
on Tuesday when he begins a short new British tour at
Nottingham Rock City.
The show has sold out, but the tickets were not snapped up
overnight as perhaps would have happened at the start of his
solo career or certainly would have had The Smiths been
playing.
Yet with no new album, single, video or T-shirt to promote,
the new tour is all about reminding the music-buying public
that this great icon of the 1980s is still breathing.
"You've also got to bear in mind that it is quite an
expensive ticket price £17," says Rock City promoter
Andy Copping. "And the reason for that is that
Morrissey is in a position where he could play much bigger
venues and he's got to reflect that in the ticket price. He
also wants a lot of money to play."
So why did he choose Rock City as the first venue for the
tour?
"As far as I can understand it, he wanted to do a
back-to-basics tour. He's quite capable of filling much
larger venues than Rock City. He had played Rock City before
in his time with The Smiths and funnily enough, when the
rumours started that he was going to do a tour, the only
date that was being written about was Rock City. I assume
the reason he chose Rock City to play on this tour is that
he has good memories of shows here before."
However, you still have to wonder about Morrissey's pulling
power with people on the better side of 30.
A generation weaned on dance music and its myriad mutations
has grown up into a world where Steps are allowed to exist.
Since then, Morrissey and Marr have weathered an ugly legal
fall-out with former Smiths drummer Mike Joyce over
royalties, awarded damages of £1m in 1997, while Morrissey
went through an NME- concocted controversy about alleged
racism partly over his use of Union Jack flags at shows.
Today, he's adored in the USA, where he has the same fey
"eccentric limey" appeal as Hugh Grant, and
treated with quiet respect here.
The talk in the music press last week was that Morrissey had
cancelled a gig in Germany because the venue was a former
slaughterhouse.
Indeed, it was also rumoured that he had re-introduced the
song Meat i s Murder into his live set. It suggested that
Morrissey was happy to perform other titles from the Smiths
back catalogue.
There is an unclassifiable something about Morrissey which
attracts people from a strange spectrum of ages and
backgrounds. Just ask Tony Shaw, a 48-year-old Morrissey and
Smiths fan from Nottingham, who says: "The Smiths were
definitely Morrissey. It was his erudition, his enigmatic
character. And then there was the sexual ambivalence.
He was supposed to be celibate, but there was this
suggestion of homosexuality. It's a shame he's been more or
less expelled to the States now."
And this fan's favourite Smiths album? Without hesitation,
he replies Meat Is Murder, which brings us back round
to the Arndale Centre, Manchester, 1985, and all that...
Post-gig article from marktowle:
A
charming man, never out of style
It was
like he'd never been gone! The fervour, the adoration, the
sheer worship which greeted Morrissey last night at the
start of his first UK tour for donkey's years had to be seen
to be believed.
If the Beatles re-formed and played The Boat Club they could
expect a welcome no more enthusiastic
The man with the voice that broke a million bedsit-anchored
hearts in the 80s has clearly been missed by his old
disciples - but the audience was also studded with those
barely born at the time of his heyday. Perhaps they had come
to see what all the fuss was about in those far-off indie
days.
They had their answer. Exploding into Boy Racer, November
Spawned a Monster, and Tomorrow, he proved what
an original figure he still is. And those lyrics! If any of
today's chart contenders had his way with words, maybe pop
wouldn't be dead after all.
The crowd loved all of it, throwing their clothes and even
themselves at the returning hero all night long.
So perhaps it was churlish for this old fan to have longed
for more of the tunes that made Morrissey great. (And
ominously, not a single new song was performed among masses
of solo stuff).
Although a stunning encore solved that, just three Smiths
songs - Is It Really So Strange?, Meat Is Murder,
and Last Night I Dreamt Somebody Loved Me - in a show
lasting barely 75 minutes left me feeling a little empty,
too.
By Sean Hewitt
Nottingham Evening Post - 10th November 1999
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* item archived - comments / notes can no longer be added.
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Comments / Notes
I can confirm that Morrissey remains at the absolute height of his powers having seen the latest leg of this tour, Liverpool, Royal Court last night (11/11/99) Finally seeing Morrissey as i arrived on the balcony (the floor sold out in no time) was just surreal, thrashing the stage with the mic' lead and belting out "Is it really so strange" like time had stood still. An electric wave of emotion bounced around the famous old hall bringing tears to the eyes, everyone was completely absorbed although inevitably being in the seats it wasn't long before someone half my age asked me to sit down. I've never seen a floor so alive, Morrissey treating the adoring masses to regular touches, handshakes and a few songs in to his sweat drenched T-shirt flying into the seething crowd, someone must be very happy today. Of course this was hero worship and he could have played anything but the set was inspirational. "Hairdresser on fire" "Meat is Murder" "Break up the family" "Billy Budd" "Boy Racer" "Trouble haunts me" "Reader meet author" "Alma matters" "November spawned a monster" "Now my heart is full" and finally as an inspirational encore, "Last night i dreamt.." In true tradition a fan reached the stage and after a brief clinch with Morrissey sparked a tense tug of war with the bouncer, Morrissey very physically attempting to ward off the inevitable ejection amidst massive cheers from the crowd. A minimalist light show, a very understated band just huge energy and of course the constant feeling of being in the presence of genius. This was not 1985, it just felt like it...Morrissey 11/11/99, we will remember him.
Jon Grimshaw
Liverpool - Fri, Nov 12, 1999 at 01:54:43 (PST) | #1
Hey Jon Grimshaw,Michael Owen better freaking rip one through the Scottish net tomorrow! GO ENGLAND! GO MOZ!
John Lynch
Florida - Fri, Nov 12, 1999 at 07:29:30 (PST) | #2
everything grimshaw says is true! hey that could be a smiths/mozzer song title !!!!
gary caldwell
- Sun, Nov 14, 1999 at 01:39:25 (PST) | #3
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* return to Morrissey-solo |