Medium / Fiona Dodwell: "MORRISSEY SPEAKS" (December 11, 2024)

MORRISSEY SPEAKS​

An Exclusive Interview With Fiona Dodwell​

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Morrissey is an artist that people talk about — a lot. From celebrities and fellow musicians to literary giants and politicians, many have been interviewed and asked to give their take on the Mancunian legend who has been creating music for a staggering 40 years. What do they think of his music? What do they think of his political leanings? Why do they think he has been so maligned by the press? Yet it’s not often that Morrissey himself speaks up. The irony is that the singer who has been previously mocked by “Bigmouth Strikes Again” headlines is that he is no bigmouth at all, and often maintains a dignified silence in the press.

This quality has always intrigued me. His detractors have so much to say, and yet Morrissey himself is rarely heard. We are hammered over the head with people’s opinions of him, more than anything. And the more feeble-minded among us let their opinions be shaped by distorted media narratives from lazy, copy and paste journalists with an axe-to-grind. I wanted to sit and talk to the man himself, and explore his own ideas and beliefs about how this situation has evolved.

As we approach the end of 2024, Morrissey’s fans still await news on the as-yet unreleased albums he has recorded in recent years. “There are two albums, as you know,” he explains. “The second one was re-recorded in France in late 2023, and given a new title. We scrapped half of the tracks and we recorded six new ones, and so it is not the album from the beginning of 2023.” It’s certainly a perplexing situation for many, for the singer has been a hugely successful recording and touring artist for over four decades now. He still draws in the crowds; he has an army of devotees the world over who follow him from gig-to-gig and buy every release, in every format available. Morrissey is still going strong, and yet the music industry keep turning him away.

Primarily, I wanted to know the reason his new titles remain unreleased, the first of which (Bonfire of Teenagers) had a planned release as far back as the summer of 2021. “Labels say that they are both fantastic high quality pop albums,” Morrissey says proudly, “but they say that they can’t release them because they don’t want the wrath of The Guardian making their lives hell. The harassment campaign against me by The Guardian is worldwide knowledge now, and it is effective in the sense that labels do not want to become involved with this Gotcha! Journalism.”

‘What do you mean by ‘Gotcha journalism?’ I ask.’ “It is a form of very annoying student politics where certain publications choose their enemies and they then decide that everything that is said by Morrissey, or whoever, must look like a problem. For this reason alone I am somewhat blacklisted in England.”

Morrissey then added a somewhat poignant and candid anecdote about the topic. “I think it was early 2020 when my mother heard a Radio 4 interview with the editor of The Guardian in which the editor said “we have a big problem in the U.K. with harassment,” and my mother screamed at the radio: “Yes! created by YOU!”

This seems to be an unfolding problem, and we are seeing in live-time the impact that cancel culture and the lockdown on free speech is having. Being an artist who is a proponent of free speech seems to have come at a cost for the singer. “The problem is that I have always been an exponent of free speech. I can’t actually speak any other way. But now that free speech has been criminalized throughout England and Ireland the people who rely on it are being shut down…”

He pauses, as if trying to find the words with which to measure the situation. “To be cancelled is the modern version of lynching, isn’t it?” Morrissey puts to me. “And behind the scenes, your livelihood, your ability to survive, your relationships with whomever you work with, are all quietly attacked so that you can no longer function. There hasn’t ever been a proper study of the extent of cancel culture and how deeply and viciously it goes. It is not a dramatic exaggeration to say that people who are cancelled are privately pushed to the point of suicide” says the singer. And he should know, having faced unrelenting attacks for over a decade, for little more than expressing an opinion. “And for what?” he continues, “in the hope that the entire country loves the same music, the same books, the same comedy, the same politics, the same films? This can never happen! ‘Bonfire of Teenagers’ is the modern version of ‘The Queen is Dead’, but the fact that no label will release it is an indication of how childlike and frightened the music industry has become.”

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Over recent years, it would be impossible not to notice how the press marginalise anyone who they disagree with or who they deem to be too outspoken. Morrissey’s fans have witnessed first-hand how the press have attached to him all manner of damaging labels. “The easiest way to get rid of any open-minded voices is to call them racist because the accusation alone sticks forever even if it could be successfully argued against. Just the initial use of that word is a swift death for your opponent who, of course, must not get any opportunity to reply or to justify their position. Thus, in music, only the fluffheads can survive because they are obedient. Those of us who have our own minds must be ridiculed off the map.”

It hasn’t just been the unreleased Morrissey albums or press attacks that have caused a stir: the recent news that Morrissey had been open to a Smiths reunion with Marr captivated almost everyone when it made headlines several weeks back. The idea of Morrissey and Marr sharing the same stage seemed so unlikely and yet here was the singer himself saying he had been open to the idea of it. I asked Morrissey about this. Was he really keen on sharing a stage with the guitarist again? “I agreed because it felt like the last time such a thing would be possible. We’ve all begun to grow old. I thought the tour that was offered would be a good way of saying thank you for those who have listened for what suddenly feels like a lifetime. It wasn’t because I had any emotional attachment to Marr. I have absolutely none.”

And so there was the topic that I knew many fans would be curious about. The idea of Morrissey working with the Smiths guitarist in 2024. I asked him how he viewed Marr and he pulled no punches in his reply. “He seems to me to be just as insecure and fearful as he was during the 1980s. But he gains more press adoration by pretending to be the Smiths gatekeeper and custodian in isolation, and as long as he is sitting in a corner complaining about me he has a pedestal which would disappear in the event of a reunion. He claims to find me completely indigestible, but whenever he walks onto a stage he sings my lyrics, my vocal melodies and my song titles. Is this hypocrisy or self-deception? He has forced people to choose between Morrissey and Marr, and I’ve had just about enough of his bitchslap comments. I’ve quietly put up with them for over thirty years.”

It is clear, in speaking to Morrissey, that however proud he is of his legacy with The Smiths, it is his thirty-five year solo career which lights him up and continues to excite the singer. “As for me, whatever time I have left is now quite limited, but I absolutely love the musical career that I have made without Marr’s involvement. Music really is the last thing that brings people together, and if you enjoy music then you enjoy life.” That is hard to argue with. Great music, beautiful art, stands far beyond human relationships and drama, and it seems that Morrissey knows this truth deeply. That he would have been willing to step outside of any tension to bring joy to the fans of The Smiths speaks volumes.

Being an artist who has experienced such difficulties with the mainstream press, I asked Morrissey if there was an artist he felt a kinship with, someone he felt had gone through something comparable. He wasted no time in answering. “Cliff Richard. Mostly because I understand the terror he endured at the hands of the press who had him executed pre-trial. But also, he had something like sixty hits over five decades yet no radio station would play his music which struck me as unjustifiable because radio is a public service. Five years ago I wrote a song called “Knockabout World” with Cliff Richard in mind. Under such terrible circumstances I think he’s done incredibly well.”

As his legions of fans know, Morrissey has toured regularly with his band over the years. It seems that while the music industry and mainstream press have tried to shun him, it is being onstage that serves as a stark reminder of the artist’s continuing popularity. The love between performer and audience is never more evident than in the live arena. “I have the strongest band and live crew that I’ve ever had in my life,” he says with evident pride. “We are on tour in the U.S. at the moment and it is euphoric. Jesse Tobias has been with me for twenty years. The live experience is still unique and it makes a lot of people very happy.” So how has he found the recent US tour dates? Morrissey’s love of being on stage is evident as he replies. “These recent shows have been euphoric. Little Rock in Arkansas, Birmingham in Alabama, Knoxville in Tennessee, Indianapolis in Indiana … there’s an overwhelming welcome from everyone that seems to recognize the inordinate slander that I’ve endured over recent years. It is baffling to look out at the audience who are trying to get onto the stage when I sing … but at the same time there is no way that I can interest anyone in the music industry.”

It is hard not to circle back to the theme of how Morrissey has been shunned by the press and music industry. His band, fans, friends and inner circle know what he has endured, and it is a sore point — for a reason. The artist has not changed; what made him so revered in the 80’s and 90’s is what makes him great today. The same qualities the press once praised him for are now met with disdain and ridicule. It is the culture of fear and the death of free speech that has changed things. Morrissey is now as he always was. ‘Idiot Culture’ is what the singer describes it as. It seems he has hope, though, despite everything. “I believe Idiot Culture will pass, and we’ll all taste cultural freedom once again. It will be too late for me, but … bones are immortal. I will lie in Pere Lachaise and give the spiritual thumbs up.” [laughs]

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Talking to Morrissey, it’s easy to see that his passion for music and touring is still there, as much as it ever was. What, then, keeps him inspired? What is it that keeps him going, I put to him. His answer came quickly. “I don’t think I ever left my post. Which is a paralysing thought! I love the songs, and I brim with school pride if ever I hear them. The solo recordings are my ultimate pride and joy. I can’t ask for anything more from life than those songs. Smiths songs are powerful, but they are rooted in youth, whereas the solo songs address a world beyond Manchester. It had to be that way, somehow. A lot of people, I know, wanted me to remain as a spindle-shanked boy twirling around Manchester… but that would be ridiculous at my age.”

As our conversation came to an end, I felt moved by the singer’s predicament. It has been interesting hearing Morrissey’s own views about how things have been for him over recent years. As one would expect, he does not shy away from tackling the issues with a charming directness. Yet talking about his current situation in 2024, it’s hard not to come away disheartened at how one of music’s greats continues to be treated. Perhaps, like Morrissey said, things will one day change. Until that time, those that celebrate originality, free speech and great art will appreciate him. Maybe that’s all that matters.

Interview by: Fiona Dodwell / Images: Ryan Lowry






Update (December 12, 2024):
Now a Central post:


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This assumes the reason he doesn’t have a deal is because of his politics. Which seems to be the narrative he is encouraging.

The real reason he doesn’t have a deal is because what label exec in their right mind would sign a guy that they already know will complain about the labels awful promotion before the album is released?
Well yes, that the self- sabtage i mean. And that's the real theme of this decade honestly. Announcing those World Peace remixes , only to rescind the liscense and walk away from the deal three weeks later, the rainbow valley singles, and then announcing the BOT release via Capitol and Miley before Capitol themselves said a peep.

Encouraging people to antagonize that record Capitol records head by name would be enough for me to not want to work Morrissey ever again, if if he were doing Taylor Swift numbers, were I an exec.
 
Well yes, that the self- sabtage i mean. And that's the real theme of this decade honestly. Announcing those World Peace remixes , only to rescind the liscense and walk away from the deal three weeks later, the rainbow valley singles, and then announcing the BOT release via Capitol and Miley before Capitol themselves said a peep.

Encouraging people to antagonize that record Capitol records head by name would be enough for me to not want to work Morrissey ever again, if if he were doing Taylor Swift numbers, were I an exec.
It’s also kind of amazing that he’s also slipped so much status-wise, that nobody has even written a piece or made a video of just how much of a clusterf*** the past 10 years of his career has been, alleged political beliefs aside. The Guardian should lol.
 
It’s also kind of amazing that he’s also slipped so much status-wise, that nobody has even written a piece or made a video of just how much of a clusterf*** the past 10 years of his career has been, alleged political beliefs aside. The Guardian should lol.
I keep hoping that someone from Rollingstonem the LA Times etc would dig in and talk to whomever would be willing to talk, including Moz, and take a gander at whatever stuff you might have (and i think you do, that'd be a very odd series of things to fabcricate. Scott Rodgers cracked open the door, someone should kick it the rest of the way down.

But then, would an article like that, dep with interviews, timelines, and corroboration, actually be interesting to more than a couple hundred thousand people, or maybe the low millions?
 
The question is if badgering people into a deal will work. There's a universe in which it does, maybe 20 years ago. Thr only thing that makes it seem possible to me is that the prevailing sociopolitical winds at the moment seem to be filling in the sails rightward way, so as to echo of the politics of BOT especially - to extent that a record ex might want to use him as emblem of the purportedly anti-woke- what ever the vacuous hell that sentiment actually means in the manifest and tangible.
I can't really see it. I think there are obstacles between Morrissey and a record deal quite apart from his politics.

Mind, you, Musk Entertainments must surely happen at some point.
 
Do we know if the six tracks for WMTWD are completely new songs or re recordings of the six tracks, as in new versions? The reason I ask is that on the Morrissey Wine podcast Alain Whyte mentioned that upon hearing Notre Dame live it was a very different sounding track to what they recorded in France.
 
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Do we know if the six tracks for WMTWD are completely new songs or re recordings of the six tracks, as in new versions? The reason I ask is that on the Morrissey Wine podcast Alain Whyte mentioned that upon hearing Notre Dame live it was a very different sounding track to what they recorded in France.

My reading is that they are new tracks... they re-recorded the album with 6 new tracks.

“There are two albums, as you know,” he explains. “The second one was re-recorded in France in late 2023, and given a new title. We scrapped half of the tracks and we recorded six new ones, and so it is not the album from the beginning of 2023.”
 
My reading is that they are new tracks... they re-recorded the album with 6 new tracks.

“There are two albums, as you know,” he explains. “The second one was re-recorded in France in late 2023, and given a new title. We scrapped half of the tracks and we recorded six new ones, and so it is not the album from the beginning of 2023.”
Thanks for the clarification. I guess I could've re read the interview better. I don't really have a problem with Fiona Dodwell like a lot of others do here, but my only other criticism of the interview apart from its lack of substance is that each little snippet from Morrissey's mouth is prefaced by a long winded introduction that at this point I find redundant.

I prefer the -
Question: blah, blah, blah...
Answer: blah, blah, blah...

This rambling on we have to scan through for Morrissey's words is frustrating. I don't have a problem with her writing per se, just the format. I'm not looking for her skills as a wordsmith, just his.
 
Thanks for the clarification. I guess I could've re read the interview better. I don't really have a problem with Fiona Dodwell like a lot of others do here, but my only other criticism of the interview apart from its lack of substance is that each little snippet from Morrissey's mouth is prefaced by a long winded introduction that at this point I find redundant.

I prefer the -
Question: blah, blah, blah...
Answer: blah, blah, blah...

This rambling on we have to scan through for Morrissey's words is frustrating. I don't have a problem with her writing per se, just the format. I'm not looking for her skills as a wordsmith, just his.


And there's no follow-up. Like the obvious, why did you rerecord the album? Why did half the album have to be scrapped? Or when Morrissey went on and on about no record company having the guts to release BOT. But you had a deal with Captitol, correct? What happened there? These are just some not so challenging follow ups. Would he consider some simple follow-up questions like these "Gotcha! Journalism?"
 
And there's no follow-up. Like the obvious, why did you rerecord the album? Why did half the album have to be scrapped? Or when Morrissey went on and on about no record company having the guts to release BOT. But you had a deal with Captitol, correct? What happened there? These are just some not so challenging follow ups. Would he consider some simple follow-up questions like these "Gotcha! Journalism?"
Probably. I I think he's just looking for uncritical and unchallenged genufllexing.

There's that bit in the New York doll documentary from his cut extended remarks, where he talks about fandom and I'm paraphrasing here but he says something to the affected There are some groups and artists that no matter what they do you always love them, basically that they can't do any wrong and I think that's what he's always wanted from his fandom. That's the vibe I got anyway
 
I keep hoping that someone from Rollingstonem the LA Times etc would dig in and talk to whomever would be willing to talk, including Moz, and take a gander at whatever stuff you might have (and i think you do, that'd be a very odd series of things to fabcricate. Scott Rodgers cracked open the door, someone should kick it the rest of the way down.

But then, would an article like that, dep with interviews, timelines, and corroboration, actually be interesting to more than a couple hundred thousand people, or maybe the low millions?

I too would love a recap of the behind the scenes in Morrissey recent history. It’s too bad Johnny Rogan is gone, he would have had a field day with latter day Moz. Wasn’t he working on a Smiths update when he passed? Does anyone know?

I think Jon Savage is working on an autobiography, should have some interesting Smiths tidbits in there.
 
Just thinking here for a moment... if Morrissey could re-record/rename WMTWD and scrap "half of the album and record six new songs" like no big deal... then why couldn't he simply re-record Veronica without Miley's vocals? A much smaller task by comparison. Maybe there's more to the story but it sounded like that was the only reason BOT didn't get released by Capitol. Thoughts?
 
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Just thinking here for a moment... if Morrissey could re-record/rename WMTWD and scrap "half of the album and record six new songs" like no big deal... then why couldn't he simply re-record Veronica without Miley's vocals? A much smaller task by comparison. Maybe there's more to the story but it sounded like that was the only reason BOT didn't get released by Capitol. Thoughts?
I wondered the same thing re Veronica, I think it's all digitized so he can just removed that digitized track and leave it or replace it with another. I think he has not done it because he doesn't want to, he does not want to cooperate and I think that is why BOT cannot be released, there is a cease and desist regarding using her vocals, legally he can't. He would rather play The Martyr of Free Speech.
 
The recent tour was on the other hand a success -- but it was also a textbook case of same old same old. If a tour could make any difference at all, Morrissey would have to do a proper greatest hits show with some sparkling new unheard songs sprinkled on top. Perhaps some guest appearances and stuff. Just playing 80-minute sets with Fatty, The Loop and Sure Enough -- only difference is the order in which the songs are played -- with the usual backdrop won't impress anyone. The gigs might be good and fun if you were in the audience but they are not going to change anyone's mind.
 
Just thinking here for a moment... if Morrissey could re-record/rename WMTWD and scrap "half of the album and record six new songs" like no big deal... then why couldn't he simply re-record Veronica without Miley's vocals? A much smaller task by comparison. Maybe there's more to the story but it sounded like that was the only reason BOT didn't get released by Capitol. Thoughts?
I thought in the interview a few months ago he confirmed she was gone. It really is as easy as loading up the track on logic or protools and just pressing mute on her vocal track. It's a 5 minute job.
 
The question is if badgering people into a deal will work. There's a universe in which it does, maybe 20 years ago. Thr only thing that makes it seem possible to me is that the prevailing sociopolitical winds at the moment seem to be filling in the sails rightward way, so as to echo of the politics of BOT especially - to extent that a record ex might want to use him as emblem of the purportedly anti-woke- what ever the vacuous hell that sentiment actually means in the manifest and tangible.

Of course, Morrissey being Morrissey will probably recoil at any attempt at categorization, however accurate it might be. And then the wait for the next self-sabotage begins.

I can't bring myself to care about the industry machinations and the wrangling behind the curtain, at this point. I find it hard to believe that even M cares that much, as he certainly isn't trying very hard to change things. He'll complain no matter what happens really, and after this nasty little 'interview' - frankly he deserves another year where nobody will touch him with a 40-foot pole.
 
Just thinking here for a moment... if Morrissey could re-record/rename WMTWD and scrap "half of the album and record six new songs" like no big deal... then why couldn't he simply re-record Veronica without Miley's vocals? A much smaller task by comparison. Maybe there's more to the story but it sounded like that was the only reason BOT didn't get released by Capitol. Thoughts?
Yes, it is amazing that he announced that in passing in an interview, and the interviewer didn't ask any follow up question. The fact that he has scrapped some songs on a completed album, and recorded new ones, is big news.
At the time of recording the album he said - The songs, of course, are magnificent, and even the relentless difficulties we have experienced recently are not enough to kill us off.
Does he no longer think all the songs are magnificent? I imagine we can assume that one of the songs shelved is Notre Dame? Has he accepted the advice that he has no doubt been given - that the album is 'unreleasable' with that song? Even if he decided to release the album himself - I don't think any mainstream digital streaming platform would agree to monetise that song. They would describe it as 'dangerous misinformation'.
I even wonder has he been advised that if he wants to be laid to rest at some future date in Père Lachaise, then that song needs to 'disappear'. The powers that be in Paris just would not approve of that song. And to be buried there, he will need their approval.
 
He just seems to want to be in the spotlight without doing any real work. I am beginning to think he won't even self release because he knows the albums are terrible and will do poorly, if he is re recording the second album I think it's kind of a clue that he knows this work is sub par and he can just keep blaming various boogeymen for the inability to release them. His live shows are the worst they have ever been with that horrid band and the same tired set list, but he doesn't seem to know how to quit so he will stay on this hamster wheel doing his propaganda interviews with FiDo knowing the bigger press will pick them up.
 
Just thinking here for a moment... if Morrissey could re-record/rename WMTWD and scrap "half of the album and record six new songs" like no big deal... then why couldn't he simply re-record Veronica without Miley's vocals? A much smaller task by comparison. Maybe there's more to the story but it sounded like that was the only reason BOT didn't get released by Capitol. Thoughts?
I think this is just as simple as this: Morrissey likes Veronica and on reflection he didn't like 6 of the tracks prepared for WMTWD. I don't think it has anything to do with who wrote the music or who is playing on the tracks. It's just basic quality control, Morrissey releases material under his name and he has to be 100% happy with it.
 

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