Other books Morrissey and Smiths fans might like

Lol Tolhurst of The Cure has a new book out, called Goth: A History. He features in the Irish Times Book Club space writing about accepting the genre assumed by and for the band, and gives a flavour of the book's content:

 

WORLD WITHIN A SONG​

An exciting and heartening mix of memories, music, and inspiration from Wilco front man and New York Times bestselling author Jeff Tweedy, sharing fifty songs that changed his life, the real-life experiences behind each one, as well as what he’s learned about how music and life intertwine and enhance each other.

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What makes us fall in love with a song? What makes us want to write our own songs? Do songs help? Do songs help us live better lives? And do the lives we live help us write better songs?

After two New York Times bestsellers that cemented and expanded his legacy as one of America’s best-loved performers and songwriters, Let’s Go (So We Can Get Back) and How to Write One Song, Jeff Tweedy is back with another disarming, beautiful, and inspirational book about why we listen to music, why we love songs, and how music can connect us to each other and to ourselves. Featuring fifty songs that have both changed Jeff’s life and influenced his music—including songs by the Replacements, Mavis Staples, the Velvet Underground, Joni Mitchell, Otis Redding, Dolly Parton, and Billie Eilish—as well as Jeff’s “Rememories,” dream-like short pieces that related key moments from Jeff’s life, this book is a mix of the musical, the emotional, and the inspirational in the best possible way.



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One that could be of interest in light of record artwork, lost list & other references from Smiths, Morrissey ouevre

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Direct Booking #1150 x 210 mm, 48 pages

Madrid, Spain

First published 2023

Created by: Luis Venegas​

‘Javier Darder + 11 Books’

A new publication by editor and publisher Luis Venegas (the man behind Candy, Fanzine137, EY! and more). This latest addition is a much smaller, pared back affair. Zine-like, it focuses on one model, Javier Darder, posing alongside 11 queer books — and all photographed by Luis.

If you’re into pretty boys, books and cigarettes, you’ll want to add this to your collection. Limited edition of 150 copies, each hand-numbered and signed by Luis Venegas. Javier won’t be on the shelves for long.

 
if people want to sample a bit of wolfes writing without having to read 500 to a 1000 pages id suggest the lost boy which is a short five chapter act on the death of his brother and the significance of memory. need to get the right edition but youll have to look that up as i cant remember which is which these days. its heartbreaking honestly so be ready for that. cant go home again is magnificent but like roths long chapter on how a glove is made the novel devotes a good bit of time to a puppet show and its somewhat trying to push through that. its interesting how much his editor played a role in the novels and how many were published after his death for those interested in his life. a brillant author who will probably not survive the test of time. to dense, to long , to deep for people now a days
 
I have a few recomendations, a few are my favourites

Other voices, Other Rooms - Truman Capote
Nausea - Jean Paul Satre (don't be put off by the title, its meant to be partly sartirical, it may also be a book in philosophy)
Loser Takes All - Graham Greene
Goodbye, Columbus - Philip Roth
The Complete Stories - Flannery O'Connor

Thank you, hope you find time to enjoy. No bores in this collection I can assure you!
 
The Island Book of Records by Neil Storey

...Storey began working on The Island Book of Records in earnest in 2007. The volumes focus on Island Records’ analog era beginning in 1959, and ending, coincidentally, when the label was sold to Universal in 1989. The volumes number at four (so far) with each one chronicling 100 Island Records releases. The first volume, The Island Book of Records Volume I: 1959-1968, arrives this month via Manchester University Press.

A niche collector’s item, The Island Book of Records Volume I: 1959-1968 minutely details each Island release with input from individuals who worked on them firsthand. In between are “pink pages” where Storey sketches unforgettable Island Records characters. These pages give insight into why Island was as impactful as it was with these operators at the helm. Also included is original memorabilia from album covers to tickets, advertisements and much more, primarily from Story’s own collection and beautifully designed by Jane Gould.

Meticulously researched and fact checked, The Island Book of Records Volume I: 1959-1968 proves to be a reference book of a time and a culture that Island Records defined. As Storey says, “This kind of forensic overview of a record label’s every release has never been attempted before.”'...

https://www.spin.com/2023/10/the-ul...1-anyway/?mc_cid=1617ba11f4&mc_eid=d933c6562e
 
Before The Smiths and in-between musical stints, Morrissey wrote on popular culture. He published two works with Babylon The New York Dolls (1981), about his favourite band; and James Dean is Not Dead (1983), about actor James Dean's brief career.

In an interview about the cultural movie icon, Morrissey explains his obsession as

"I saw Rebel Without A Cause quite by accident when I was about 6. I was entirely enveloped. I did research about him and it was like unearthing Tutankhamun's tomb. His entire life seemed so magnificently perfect. What he did on film didn't stir me that much but as a person he was immensely valuable. Everything from his birth in a farming town to coming to New York, breaking into film and finding he didn't really want it when he had enormous success. At school it was an absolute drawback because nobody really cared about him. If they did, it was only in a synthetic rock and roll way. Nobody had a passion for him as I did - for that constant uneasiness with life. Even though he was making enormous strides with his craft, he was still incredibly miserable and obviously doomed. Which is exactly the quality Oscar Wilde had. That kind of mystical knowledge that there is something incredibly black around the corner. People who feel this are quite special and always end up in quite a mangled mess."

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/460658.James_Dean_Is_Not_Dead
 
The Now Now Express, John Fleming's new novel, turned into a star-studded post-punk gig in Dublin earlier this month

John Fleming earns his crust as an editor, a trade (‘once-proud’ might be the cliché he would embrace/abhor) which in the view of the present writer is likely to have offered diminishing psychic satisfaction to most of its practitioners over recent years – or even decades – as freshness of thought and accuracy of expression have come to be valued less than visual presentation and, more destructively, the tyranny of the algorithm (‘we know what they like; give them excess of it’). A man fixated on words, wordplay, thoughtplay might have to find most of his satisfactions elsewhere.

We always knew there was ‘the writing’, a number of broadcast radio plays, short stories. A novel for a long time ‘in progress’, perhaps more than one; a film documentary about London life, Guests of Another Nation, shown on RTÉ. This year, however, has seen a quite dramatic breaking of the surface and blossoming of long subterranean stirrings as Fleming has impressively combined his musical and writerly interests in the publication of the novel The Now Now Express and the transformation into a living, breathing, pounding thing of the Prongs, a fictional postpunk band which features in its pages. The hero of The Now Now Express, Patrick, leads a somewhat squalid existence in the not so glamorous east London suburb of Walthamstow in the 1980s with his generically Irish mates Mulligan, Foley, Murphy and Neary, collectively known as ‘the Mocking Boys’, their names recalling various Dublin pubs. The boys survive on a diet of toast and honey, Red Stripe beer, mushroom-poor stirfry, crap London Guinness and French New Wave films, the expense of their prolonged and occasionally wild drinking bouts covered by ambitious schemes of benefit fraud. Early on, we get a socio-psychological summary of the Mocking Boy condition:

… we were a cheery gaggle of leering slouch adults bound together by some overdue date and linked in our avoidance of the inevitable. Content to linger too long in the interzone of caustic youth, we sneered and laughed our way out of responsibility’s call to arms. We were half-on-the-run, half-truant and half-hearted: we did things by halves and never went the whole hog. There was no focus, just the reassurance we all disliked the same things.

Leering and sneering these boys certainly are. But cheery? I don’t think so.

This generation of 1980s Irish emigrants to Britain, at least in its Mocking Boy manifestation, is different from its 1950s or ’60s predecessors, urban, educated and with the potential to forge ‘a career’ yet deeply resistant to that path, sharing some of the self-destructive urge of its older counterparts, forced out of Ireland by poverty and maimed by the hardship of their new English lives.

The Mocking Boy handbook was based on IPC comics and multichannel TV, on gaudy sitcoms and the angry young men, on an adolescence lit up by The Fall, Joy Division and our homemade version in The Prongs. We’d formed a vanguard of late-teen resistance, and conspired into our twenties in our stereotype attack. But on St Patrick’s Day, I walked away.

On St Patrick’s Day, our hero’s twenty-fourth birthday, the Boys go on a pub crawl across Irish north London: the Samuel Pepys, the Railway Tavern, even into ‘the rotting heart of Kilburn itself’. A huge cultural divide – generational but more essentially the deep Dublin/Rest of the Country gulf – separates the young middle class, suburban city smartasses from their older compatriots from rural and small-town Clare, Kerry, Galway, Mayo and Roscommon. And yet there is a residual sympathy and affection at play in spite of the differences.

The Railway Tavern was next. It was done up with green tinsel and rosettes. “Happy St Patrick’s Day, lads,” said an unfamiliar barman as he took our order. Through the large crowd, a curly-haired man forced his way. He stuck a coin in the jukebox and sat back down, proud of his selection. The song’s maudlin lyrics bemoaned how London had lured away its listeners. A tin whistle conversed with a set of uilleann pipes and pressed all the correct buttons in the hearts of these vulnerable men poured into adult Confirmation suits. The smell of carbolic soap was everywhere and shaving cuts were common.
The hackneyed concepts in the song meant nothing to us. We had not yet done anything irreversible and our lives were free of the regret in its refrain. The song was wasted on a bunch of little pricks certain we were edging towards a future of infinity.

Patrick must eventually choose between continuing to live a life as a London-Irish Mocker and returning home, not having achieved anything except having lived off a social welfare scam, to a city and country still stuck in recession – though not for too long more – but whose streets and pubs still exert a certain attraction for him in spite of the general absence of hope and optimism. He makes what seems to be the better choice … a story, perhaps, to be continued.

The Prongs – a band mentioned several times in The Now Now Express in the same breath as The Fall and Joy Division – took flesh on stage at a gig at the Project Arts Centre in Dublin on July 8th this year. The Prongs are John Fleming on words and Niall Toner jnr (Strand, Those Handsome Devils, Dixons etc) on musical arrangement and instrumentation. At the Project they were backed by a seven-piece band comprising members of The Lee Harveys, Ultramontaines, Mighty Avon Jr and Republic of Loose. The gig attracted a full house and the reception was highly enthusiastic.

The novel The Now Now Express is officially being launched with a further Prongs gig this week (Thursday, November 16th) upstairs in Whelan’s:

https://www.whelanslive.com/event/the-prongs/

The book is available to buy at Books Upstairs, D’Olier Street, Dublin, and the book and the CD Theme from The Now Now Express at Spindizzy.

A number of stylish videos featuring individual compositions and directed by Dave Clifford can be seen on YouTube: MiddleMarch17, Fake Samuel Pepys, Kango Hammer, Map of a City etc. The Prongs page on Bandcamp (for streaming and merchandise and info) is
https://theprongs.bandcamp.com/album/theme-from-the-now-now-express

Check out the book, the videos or drop along to Whelan’s on Thursday evening.

 

Absolute Beginner: Memoirs of the world's best least-known guitarist​

by Kevin Armstrong, Oct. 2023


Armstrong was signed by Charlie Gillett's Oval Records in 1980 and formed the group Local Heroes SW9 and released two albums, Drip Dry Zone in 1980 and New Opium in 1981.

Armstrong took part in the recording of The Passions's third album Sanctuary, produced by Mick Glossop. The first single from that album was "Jump for Joy", which was released on 5 May 1982, followed by the album and the "Sanctuary" single on 18 September 1982.

Armstrong collaborated with David Bowie on the soundtrack for the film Absolute Beginners. He also played in the band for David Bowie's Live Aid appearance in 1985, and recorded the song "Dancing In The Street" with David Bowie and Mick Jagger.

He played guitar on the Iggy Pop 1986 album Blah Blah Blah and was musical director for Iggy Pop's world tour in 1986/87.

In between times, he has worked with Paul McCartney, Morrissey, Grace Jones, Sinéad O’Connor, Prefab Sprout, Thomas Dolby, Transvision Vamp, Brian Eno, Sandie Shaw, Gil Evans, Alien Sex Fiend, Keziah Jones, and many, many more. This is his first book. For more information about Kevin and his music, visit https://www.kevin-armstrong.com

Juicy podcast with him here - https://www.c86show.org/e/kevin-armstrong-david-bowie-iggy-pop-paul-mccartney-morrissey/


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Loaded: The Life (And Afterlife) of the Velvet Underground by Dylan Jones
https://www.spin.com/2023/12/fairyt...o-warhol/?mc_cid=f9bbdadf0a&mc_eid=d933c6562e


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Mentioned elsewhere, the new photo book David Bowie Mixing Memory & Desire: Photographs by Kevin Cummins covers the Outside Tour time period, but contains no Morrissey mentions or images - https://www.roughtrade.com/en-us/pr...-memory-desire-photographs-by-kevin-cummins-2
 
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I'm looking for a good book by or about a bass guitarist as a present, by way of which I learned that Guy Pratt was in The Smiths for a week. His book's called My Bass and Other Animals - https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2822087-my-bass-and-other-animals
It mightn't be the one I go for. Has anyone read it?
Epub of said:
Regards,
FWD.
 
Let us not sniff excessively at nostalgia, once we find out, in a new book by Clay Routledge,

Past Forward: How Nostalgia Can Help You Live a More Meaningful Life​


When an old song makes you want to dance like you did in high school, or you long for the comforting taste of your mom’s cooking, that’s more than just memory—it’s nostalgia. But is nostalgia all about “living in the past” to hide from reality? In Past Forward, psychologist Clay Routledge presents a fascinating investigation into an emotion we all experience yet often misunderstand, revealing nostalgia’s extraordinary potential to enrich our present—and our future.

Dr. Routledge has been at the forefront of a new wave of research that has established a fresh, evidence-based view of nostalgia—not as a psychological weakness, but as a complex and valuable resource for our well-being.

 
Paint a Vulgar Picture: A Compilation of fiction inspired by The Smiths (2009), edited by Peter Wild, various authors

New book, Soundproof in Satellite Town, by Graham Rae (2004) with Morrissey, Smiths references:

- An independent Scotland, 2124. Welcome to a country in chaos. Young people are sterilized after a worldwide Battle of the Sexes causes a huge population boom in 2102. The Scottish Ruling Party sucks up revenues and makes poor people work for their dole in nonexistent jobs, or they will starve. Sci-fi-religion-worshiping suicide bombers blow themselves up to kill infodels. Freedom fighters battle for the liberation of Scottish oil and gas revenues to benefit the people of the country, and to stop fracking.

Into this mass of mess comes Johnny Certex and Ratsoup, two young men determined not to be beaten down by the inhuman system they have been born into. They have avoided their manufactured jobs for five years on leaving hi skool, but have now been captured and must go to work on Monday morning. But in the weekend before they do so they will play digigames and drink and think and hang out with hacktivist friends and play in their crappy go-nowhere band Soundproof. A weekend of blackly humorous booze and sex and muzak and chaos awaits.

Praise for Soundproof in Satellite Town
“SIST should be required reading for every disenchanted zillenial, aimless millennial, and burn-out gen x-er across the country. The most criminally underrated writer (and novel) since the inception of ink on paper.”
- Chris Kelso, author of The Black Dog Eats the City

"Mr. Rae's language vibrates and buzzes from the page like a Scots cyber-sabre, smelling like spilled beer and burnt wiring."
- JG Thirlwell

"If Henry Miller decided to rip off both William Gibson and William Burroughs, it might read like this gritty sexplosive novel set in the 22nd century."
- Richard Kern

"Soundproof in Satellite Town crackles with the wit, (unintentional) wisdom, and sheer, unadulterated energy of great rock ‘n’ roll. Lester Bangs, I think you’d be proud.”
- Jim DeRogatis

"Graham Rae makes heterosex sound quite appealing. Which is of course the test of any great fiction writer."
- Mark Simpson

“New writers, like Graham Rae, will always shock + delight a new generation of readers.”
– JG Ballard -
 
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"my favourite record of all time is ‘Third Finger, Left Hand’ by Martha And The Vandellas which can lift me from the most doom-laden depression... It was made in the Sixties but I don't listen to the record now and say ‘Well, I must remember this is a Sixties record and it's 1986 now so let's put it all into perspective.’ It has as much value now as ever. We shouldn't really talk in terms of decades.”
Morrissey, https://illnessasart.com/2020/03/03/melody-maker-27-september-1986/


But Will You Love Me Tomorrow?: An Oral History of the '60s Girl Groups, is a new book by Laura Flam and Emily Sieu Liebowitz, who are interviewed here - https://www.jerryjazzmusician.com/i...orrow-an-oral-history-of-the-60s-girl-groups/

Introduction:
..The soundtrack of the 1960’s includes some of the most culturally significant music in the history of popular recorded music. The phenomenon known as “The British Invasion” (i.e The Beatles, Rolling Stones, The Who, The Kinks, etc) was the era’s principal component, and the music created by the members of these bands – virtually all of whom were white – charted a path for the music that, to this day, continues to be revered and influential. These bands mostly wrote their own music, toured all over the world with the support of the major record labels they recorded for, and performed before large, principally white audiences. The significance of the music, and the lives of many of its key figures – and their bandmates – are historically well-catalogued.

…..Another key element of the 1960’s music scene whose recordings also remain revered and influential is the genre known as the “girl groups” – a type of rock ‘n’ roll that began in the mid-1950’s and represented by the likes of The Marvelettes, The Supremes, The Crystals, The Ronettes and The Shirelles. Little is known of the lives of many of the young Black women who sang, wrote, created, and popularized this generation-defining music, and even less about the obstacles they faced while performing during such a complex era, one rife with racism, sexism, and music industry corruption. In their entertaining and inspiring book But Will You Love Me Tomorrow?: An Oral History of the ‘60s Girl Groups, the authors Laura Flam and Emily Sieu Liebowitz provide opportunity for the artists to successfully address that.



tomorrow250.png


…..They write that the girl group singers who voiced their music “were just girls – some as young as twelve – and they had no expectation that their first forays into the music industry would propel them into the rest of their lives. The very youthfulness and innocence essential to the girl group sound also left these young women particularly vulnerable to be used, as women often are, to serve the purposes of the powerful.”

…..The very nature of the groups made them, essentially, “nameless,” and were thus “treated as interchangeable and faceless – beautiful girls, to be switched around and replaced at the whims of managers, record producers, and songwriters,” and considered as “fleeting investments by the record companies.”

…..This book empowers the women – all of whom are now well into old age – to ponder the important role they played in recording the music that so significantly impacted American culture, and to, as all great oral histories do, provide them (and a cast of some well-known musician colleagues) with a platform on which to reveal their personal experiences and contributions to it. The result is a book that allows the reader a chance to get to know who they were as entertainers, businesspeople, and women, and one that illuminates the enormity of their cultural challenges...
 
"my favourite record of all time is ‘Third Finger, Left Hand’ by Martha And The Vandellas which can lift me from the most doom-laden depression... It was made in the Sixties but I don't listen to the record now and say ‘Well, I must remember this is a Sixties record and it's 1986 now so let's put it all into perspective.’ It has as much value now as ever. We shouldn't really talk in terms of decades.”
Morrissey, https://illnessasart.com/2020/03/03/melody-maker-27-september-1986/


But Will You Love Me Tomorrow?: An Oral History of the '60s Girl Groups, is a new book by Laura Flam and Emily Sieu Liebowitz, who are interviewed here - https://www.jerryjazzmusician.com/i...orrow-an-oral-history-of-the-60s-girl-groups/

Introduction:
..The soundtrack of the 1960’s includes some of the most culturally significant music in the history of popular recorded music. The phenomenon known as “The British Invasion” (i.e The Beatles, Rolling Stones, The Who, The Kinks, etc) was the era’s principal component, and the music created by the members of these bands – virtually all of whom were white – charted a path for the music that, to this day, continues to be revered and influential. These bands mostly wrote their own music, toured all over the world with the support of the major record labels they recorded for, and performed before large, principally white audiences. The significance of the music, and the lives of many of its key figures – and their bandmates – are historically well-catalogued.

…..Another key element of the 1960’s music scene whose recordings also remain revered and influential is the genre known as the “girl groups” – a type of rock ‘n’ roll that began in the mid-1950’s and represented by the likes of The Marvelettes, The Supremes, The Crystals, The Ronettes and The Shirelles. Little is known of the lives of many of the young Black women who sang, wrote, created, and popularized this generation-defining music, and even less about the obstacles they faced while performing during such a complex era, one rife with racism, sexism, and music industry corruption. In their entertaining and inspiring book But Will You Love Me Tomorrow?: An Oral History of the ‘60s Girl Groups, the authors Laura Flam and Emily Sieu Liebowitz provide opportunity for the artists to successfully address that.



tomorrow250.png


…..They write that the girl group singers who voiced their music “were just girls – some as young as twelve – and they had no expectation that their first forays into the music industry would propel them into the rest of their lives. The very youthfulness and innocence essential to the girl group sound also left these young women particularly vulnerable to be used, as women often are, to serve the purposes of the powerful.”

…..The very nature of the groups made them, essentially, “nameless,” and were thus “treated as interchangeable and faceless – beautiful girls, to be switched around and replaced at the whims of managers, record producers, and songwriters,” and considered as “fleeting investments by the record companies.”

…..This book empowers the women – all of whom are now well into old age – to ponder the important role they played in recording the music that so significantly impacted American culture, and to, as all great oral histories do, provide them (and a cast of some well-known musician colleagues) with a platform on which to reveal their personal experiences and contributions to it. The result is a book that allows the reader a chance to get to know who they were as entertainers, businesspeople, and women, and one that illuminates the enormity of their cultural challenges...
Just listened to that wedding band song by the Vandellas, and then their song Heatwave, which was fun.
 
Redditers include Mark Simpson's book Saint Morrissey in their naming of best books on him


Jo Brandt wrote a pretty good novel with lots of references
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/6250360-the-more-you-ignore-me

Let the Right One In (Swedish: Låt den rätte komma in) is the acclaimed 2004 vampire novel by Swedish writer John Ajvide Lindqvist that was turned into a film
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/943402.Let_the_Right_One_In

Marian Keyes' novel title is about the only explicit link
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2334751.This_Charming_Man

Gavin Hopps' scholarly essays tackle a whole range of themes
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/826987.Morrissey
 
Meetings with Morrissey, by Len Brown

Mozipedia: The Encyclopedia of Morrissey and The Smiths, by Simon Goddard

By Grand Central Station I Sat Down and Wept, by Elizabeth Smart

A Taste of Honey (play), by Sheelagh Delaney

The Little Prince, by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

Among the Thugs, by Bill Buford


Acid Detroit: A Psychedelic Story of Motor City Music
by Joe Molloy, Repeater Books, 2023

A long involved review of this new book on acid music and the counter culture that came out of Detroit, including Iggy Pop, showing how all the strands of life are woven consciously or subconsciously into the art that emerges from particular places - https://www.nplusonemag.com/issue-47/reviews/acid-rhythms/
 
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