Morrissey Central "SO THIS IS WHERE YOUR FATHER WAS BORN?" (February 22, 2024)

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"Maxwell Hall was the end of the 'heavy petal' aspect of live Smiths. The level of determination from the audience was hysterical and life-changing … suddenly they were a comic-strip photomontage of bare-chested lads of immovable strength … each an out-stretched grab of rough kindness - loudly singing sand-paper voices and square chins, and all of a sudden I'm the Fabian of the slums. In fact, not an audience at all, but a gathering of wrestlers still chewing on yesterday's Hubba Bubba. They look as if someone is out to get them … and they are right! Everything happened so quickly in 1986. Ten years earlier I had seen three Sex Pistols gigs in Manchester, and they were fantastically agitated whereas this night in Salford is a glory celebration. 'Panic' would be released at 9:AM the next day; number 11 by the following weekend; no airplay of course because Smiths songs described the way people actually lived, which then, as now, wasn't ever the point of daytime radio. 'Panic' had been muttered about as being "waaaacist" by the people who shout out insults for a living (they never die! God help us!) … it was an accusation not dependent on any evidence, as usual. It was the opening song, and the blaze of the crowd tells you how this moment - how YOU - are in the "now" of everything. When we are afraid we want to be controlled, but this audience were not afraid and will never be controlled. The music is a fighter jet of guitar, of military crossfire drumming, of bass full of manhoods fire yet played with nobility - no crass New Romantic slow dance bass jerks … as they all did in those days. And then there was me, of course, in gleeful rage, suddenly bare-chested at the lip of the stage; demented - but why not? You only live twice, and I was here because I was no good doing anything else. You must take charge of your life! Everything we had done as a band had moved us forward to this very point, and Maxwell Hall was important because we had seen enough of the outside world to now cherish our own backyard. The venue had the creak of old ward doors, and the rooms had that strange smell of stale bark. Rough Trade workforce walked around the venue like itching activists ready to light the touch paper. They all know how to smoke and how to use the right words. These are the days when everyone still travels up north in a 'van', miles measured by Blue Boar service stations and chips with everything. Each time I'm caught in conversation I can't stop laughing. It's a Sly Stone family affair and all the WRONG people are NOT there. Everyone seems to be saying either "well, we've done it!" or "now THIS is something interesting." Scott Piering repeatedly brushes his hand across the top of his head as he takes a philosophical view, and Mike Hinc rips open his 41st Carlsberg of the night; either one, or both, will quote Kafka and somehow link it to 'Panic' - looking like characters from The L-Shaped Room. Jo Slee and Martha DeFoe are there … trailing their hands in the water. On the stage, the night started as a tornado and moves faster and faster … three encores? It was a fanaticism of discontent 200 miles away from cashpoint SW1.'Still ill', 'Rusholme Ruffians', 'What She Said', along with the unplayed 'Miserable Lie' had developed into soaring blasts that were street-fights rather than 'musical numbers', and this is why Smiths' concerts were essentially about physical proximity. No one ever went to a Smiths concert to sit in their seats. But we would never make it into the arenas of England. Art is time bound. And so are you. Overheard: "What's so important about the Smiths?", "Well, their songs are about something," - "Oh? that's unusual, isn't it?"
Sandra Gough and Jennifer Moss were in the audience? No? Oh that was just a miserable lie. The outro fades and the stragglers straggle and you run down to the safety of the town. We all scuttle home like dust mice: the secrets and the sweat remain on the hall walls forevermore.
Was it really so strange?
To the best of my knowledge it was a pleasure."

MORRISSEY, 2024

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A lovely read. I lol'd at the word "waaaacist" 🤣 (oh so fitting)
I love reading things he writes. Something comforting about it, no matter what it's about. Read me to sleep...
 
No idea what has prompted this but wow. Wonderful. I love it when he talks with such pride and affection for those days. Wondering why this came so out of the blue.
 
No idea what has prompted this but wow. Wonderful. I love it when he talks with such pride and affection for those days. Wondering why this came so out of the blue.

Is M getting soft? Do you smell a reunion?

Will M ask Marr to find a bassist and drummer as he did at the start?

Stranger things have happened.
 
No idea what has prompted this but wow. Wonderful. I love it when he talks with such pride and affection for those days. Wondering why this came so out of the blue.
The mention of Mike Hinc makes me think perhaps it was triggered by his death, and funeral? Whatever the reason it is, as you say, wonderful.
 
Note the ambiguous date.
Hinc is a possibility.
As too: seeing lots of reminiscing media/posts over the last few days.
FWD.
 
Hmm, seemingly I'm the only one a little bit confused by this? I mean it's wonderful to see him talking about the Smiths so affectionately (and about ALL of them (!!!)) But it seems a bit - I don't know, yeah, out of the blue and a little bit all over the place? I don't mean it in a bad way, it's just like a thing he needed to get of his chest, like something that really seems to be of great importance to him at the moment. And with him and the Smiths in recent times it's unprecedented, although his nostalgia seemed to build up since the Johnny Morrissey poster and through his recent posts. I wonder what spawned this positive (!!!) excerpt, I really do (and the looking back on the Smiths), I so hope it's him feeling positive and good again, actively claiming back his part and making peace with the past. This is what need more of (and one can always dream and hope for him to make up with some old acquaintances ;) ) I'm just a bit stunned is all.
 
Words revivify ⚡

More Maxwell Hall notes - https://www.decodedmagazine.com/sto...-maxwell-hall-revealed-in-new-suite-of-films/

The video insert, from about 6 mins in, features some of The Smiths concert, which was voted the best gig of all time, according to the presenter.

The original Fabien was "an overnight singing sensation, a film star with over 30 films to his credit, and the producer of his own concert series..." as per the detailed video note -
 
Is M getting soft? Do you smell a reunion?

Will M ask Marr to find a bassist and drummer as he did at the start?

Stranger things have happened.
No, Andy has passed, the time has passed.
But I wonder if some recent event in the Smiths world (maybe Hinc) has contributed to this reflective mood. A thawing of the ice.. would be nice.
 
Such a lovely read and clearly he is still on the booze full of emotion especially after the mad media attention over This Smiths this week, and he was never in rehab last month at all as that was another lie, added to the rest of them for the cancelled concerts sadly!
 

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