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Yeah, would be nice. But it seems a little too late for these two. Maybe.
I just hope they patch things up, at least privately, like all old friends that have once had that kind of deep creative relationship should.
They're not really old friends, they had a brief, intense working relationship and it nearly did Johnny Marr in, JM seems happy these days, i don't see reaching out to a co-worker from decades ago being worth the bother.
There's nothing 'brave' about shit-stirring from behind a screen and trying to insert yourself in a disagreement that doesn't concern you and likely started before you were even born. Johnny might have issues with Moz for his own reasons but he could take it up with M privately, he doesn't need his son to fight his battles. And if anybody really did use Moz' name for clickbait it was no-hoper Nile, not Johnny.
There isn't any need for you to take peronal shots at people.yes, you’re right, they weren’t just ‘old friends’.
Because of that shared creative experience, their relationship went deeper than being merely friends.
And as you said.. they had a ‘brief intense working relationship’. So I don’t think many would look at a person they had that kind of relationship with, and simply write them off as a ‘co-worker’ that are not ‘worth the bother’. But I guess you would.
Nile was goading and insulting Moz long, long before the open letter and the article in Uncut.Right...did you forget that Moz insulted and marginalized Johnny in a very public manner? As if Johnny couldn't get publicity on his own? Fighting fire with fire, good for Nile, standing up for his dad.
That relationship has defined their whole professional lives, as M rightly said to Johnny. They really don't have the option of just forgetting that 'co-worker' when there is such a shared legacy and they're both still singing those songs, touring, being asked about each other, etc. And being in that situation whilst they're not even on speaking terms is what is leading to a lot of the bad blood, because the press are weaponising every little comment.They're not really old friends, they had a brief, intense working relationship and it nearly did Johnny Marr in, JM seems happy these days, i don't see reaching out to a co-worker from decades ago being worth the bother.
In fact, Marr reveals that while the two former confidantes were meeting up occasionally a few years ago, nowadays they no longer speak at all.
"We don't have any reason to, to be honest," he says, with a touch of glumness. When Marr remastered the Smiths' back catalogue two years ago, he emailed Morrissey (along with all his ex-bandmates) saying he could hear the love in the music, but didn't hear back. "It was a nice way to leave it, I think," he considers, tiptoeing carefully around too much discussion of his former partner. "You can only try and be friendly with someone for so long without getting anything back. You just think: 'Ah, f*ck it.'"
There have been bigger lawsuits (Pink Floyd) and much worse insults exchanged (Sex Pistols, Stone Roses, Velvet Underground) within deeply divided bands. Nevertheless, they’ve found reasons to re-unite down the road.The topic has been done to death, but I think Johnny has long resigned himself to the fact that's it's impossible to reconcile and have an amicable relationship with Morrissey, so there's no point in even trying to engage with him any more. He really is nothing more than an ex-work colleague from decades ago . I always felt this interview was one of the most revealing:
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Johnny Marr on the Smiths, Morrissey and putting politics back in pop
With the release of his first solo album The Messenger, the former Smiths guitarist talks to Dave Simpson about finally embracing his old sound, David Cameron and why he and Morrissey don't talk any morewww.theguardian.com
There have been bigger lawsuits (Pink Floyd) and much worse insults exchanged (Sex Pistols, Stone Roses, Velvet Underground) within deeply divided bands.
Nevertheless, they’ve found reasons to re-unite down the road.
Nile was still posting petty stuff a year after the open letter (January 25, 2022).
Book covering example (February 25, 2023):
Post in thread 'Strange/unexpected Moz references?' https://www.morrissey-solo.com/threads/strange-unexpected-moz-references.83338/post-1987506497
That said, there's only really been a couple of Smiths comments since that post and the Morrissey stuff has pretty much ceased.
FWD.
I think Moz has become too pathetic to make fun of now.
This is my main concern. I'm long past hoping that Morrissey and Marr will reunite for a show/tour/new LP etc, but the relationship seems so frozen that even archive releases seem to be off the table now. Where are all our lavish Smiths archival boxsets, stuffed with unreleased recordings, demos and live goodies? The last thing we need is Nile and Sam carrying the grudge on to the next generation and stopping anything ever getting released.Scary to think that Nile and Sam may be in charge of the legacy after their Dad/Uncle have gone.