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News Archive :
Feb. 02-10, 1998
- "Chicago Hoax"
- "Stemingway and Heinbeck"
- Julie Burchill and Bob Geldof comment |
Hoaxed -
Regarding the Chicago thing. After some more details have come
out, it appears the whole think is a big hoax. I should have known right away when I heard
the term 'from the Morrissey fan club' used by one of the callers. But, at the same time,
these were letters that people personally gave to Morrissey, several people saw him put
their letters into his pocket. Also, this wasn't an isolated case, so far I've heard from
people who have given letters at concerts in Florida, Maryland, Connecticut, and up to the
last show in New York (spanning a stretch of 11 shows total). I guess there really is no
such thing as a secure transaction.
What could be the motive, I don't know. There seems to be a group of people behind it (at
least one male and one female) that somehow stole the letters. If anyone has anything to
add, please let me know. To those involved, be careful...
Margaret Thatcher - a comparison
Thanks to Lawrence Renee
for this item:
In
the 9th Feb edition of Night & Day (The Mail On
Sundays review section), Morrisseys mentioned by Julie Burchill
in a brief profile of the former (thank God!) British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher,
who was voted the most unpopular person out of 50 in Britain. In her piece she writes,
One of the most prolific Thatcher-haters of the
80s was the pop singer Morrissey, who penned the hymn of hate, Margaret On The
Guillotine. Morrissey was an ambitious, cruel-tongued northern outsider who, in
later years, would wrap himself in the Union Jack so many times, while reciting lyrics
like "Life is hard enough when you belong here" from the song Bengali In
Platforms, that he would later be turned on by the pop press as a racist Little
Englander. He later fell out with his cabinet - sorry, band - and was denounced as a power
- crazed prima donna. He now spends much of his time in America. Remind you of anyone?
(a sarky reference to Mrs.Ts
endless lecture tours in the U.S. sponsored by the makers of Marlboro
cigarettes).
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Chicago weekend -
I heard from another one of the "about 30" invited to
the special 'meet and greet' and studio session (?) with Morrissey in Chicago. It seems
the people were chosen by Morrissey because something in his or her letter (given to him
during the tour) somehow touched him. Stay tuned...
"Stemingway And Heinbeck" soundclip
Thanks to John Morley
for providing a soundclip of the aforementioned song by Joan Of Arc. The clip can be found
on the sounds
page of the site that John is a part of, Broken Neck, I believe it is
called. |
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If this is for real...
... then some people will have a very interesting weekend coming
soon in Chicago. Here is what I'm referring to.
Joan Of Arc
Thanks to John Morley
for the following:
Theres
a band from Illinois who does a take off on "Bigmouth Strikes Again". The song
is called "Stemingway And Heinbeck" and its by a band
called Joan Of Arc. the words follow:
Im "big mouth strikes again"
Im "last years man"
Im Rosasharn
Im Rosasharn
And now I know how Morrissey felt
now I know how Morrissey felt
as the flames rose to his Roman nose
and his walkman started to melt
Im sorry
about my body
its all Ive got and its gotten the best of me
Im sorry
about my body
its all Ive got and its gotten the best of me
The song is a b-side of "Busy Bus,
Sunny Sun". The band is on Jadetree Records ( http://www.jadetree.com/
) but the 7" with "Stemingway and Heinbeck" on it was released on Southern
Records ( http://www.southern.com/ ). They also
have a decent website with lots of band info etc at http://www.geocities.com/Nashville/3098/
I find the song quite funny cause its Joan Of Arc singing about knowing how
Morrissey felt after Morrissey sang about knowing how Joan Of Arc felt.
Total Guitar magazine
From Naomi:
"What
Difference Does It Make" is the "classic track" featured in this
month's Total Guitar magazine (with The Verve on the cover).
There's a free CD on the cover, and guitar tablature and an article on tunings and things
inside. If I'd actually understood it, I might have remembered more...
Logo submissions
Check out these new logos, on page 6. |
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Logo submissions
Some more to check out (pages 4 and 5
are new since the last update). The deadline for entry is Feb. 11. |
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Logo submissions
Here are all the logo submissions
I've received so far. Contributions are still welcome. |
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"Death In Pop" for $1000
Thanks to everyone who let me know about the answer which
appeared on the game show Jeopardy!
aired yesterday. First was Troy Clarke:
...the
question was under the category "Death in Pop".
"Hang the D.J." was the refrain of "Panic" by this defunct
British pop group led by Morrissey.
Claudia, the music critic, correctly answered "Who are The Smiths?
It was the $1000 question (or answer), according to Alison Olcott.
These Charming Men - a tribute band
From Daniel
Sikar:
We
are "These Charming Men", a Smiths tribute band. Weve
been going for about five months. At the moment we only play Smiths numbers such
as...
William, It Was Really Nothing, Heaven Knows Im Miserable Now, Still Ill, Ask,
Sheila Take A Bow, The Boy With The Thorn In His Side, There Is A Light That Never Goes
Out, Girlfriend In A Coma, Cemetry Gates, Frankly Mr Shankly, Hand In Glove, Shoplifters
Of The World Unite, Panic, Some Girls Are Bigger Than Others, Back To The Old House, This
Charming Man, What Difference Does It Make? Bigmouth Strikes Again, Please Please Please
Let Me Get What I Want...
but we are also working on some Morrissey-solo stuff and will try to have it ready for our
next gig at the Royal Standard, Walthamstow, London E17 on Wednesday, the 18th of
Feb. So if youre in the area at the time why not pop in for a stage
invasion? Our next plans include a "The Queen Is Dead" special gig further this
year. If you know of any venues/promoters in your area that would accept ourselves please
let us know. Comments and advice are also welcome.
Logo contest
... is still going on. I'll post what I have received soon --
thanks to those who have submitted something so far. |
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Bob Geldof --
Thanks to Rosemary Costello
(page 81 in "Morrissey Shot") for this item:
...I
spotted this comment by Bob Geldof in The Irish Times,
Irelands top broadsheet, today, Saturday 31st. Talking about Music Of The Millenium
- The Final Countdown, a TV show about the best albums of all time as voted by the British
public he said, "The other ridiculous thing was The Smiths getting about three albums
in the chart. OK, they gave English pop a bit of a push, but theyre not a pivotal
group - theyre just whiny bedsit music".
Obviously, hes one of the few who feel that way.
European Tour - Summer 1998?
From Alexander Wendt:
Morrissey's
German booking agency "IBD" announces on their Webpage at http://planetsound.com/agent/ibd/OnTour.html
a possible Moz-Tour in the months of April/May in Germany, Austria + Switzerland.
I mailed them about this and got the following reply:
"Tour ist auf Juni & August verschoben...es gibt noch keine festen Daten"
which means:
Tour is postponed to June & August (sic!) - there are no fixed dates yet.
"This Is Not Your Country" - probable
source
Although it is used in a different context, this is the probably
source. From Mark Deveney:
Just
a small footnote: Re the B Side of "Satan" - "This Is Not Your
Country".
The title of the track is the opening line from the Skinhead film "Romper
Stomper", and is a by-line for the rest of the film.
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