Author Topic: The Smiths  (Read 5521 times)

celeste

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The Smiths
« on: 15:11:10, 18/02/13 »
        17 February 2013 Last updated at 23:29   
  Johnny Marr on The Smiths and going solo         By Ian Youngs Entertainment reporter, BBC News  Johnny Marr Johnny Marr returned to Manchester to write and record the album  Twenty-five years after leaving The Smiths, the band that inspired deeper devotion than any British group since The Beatles, guitarist Johnny Marr has found his own voice with his first solo album.
Since The Smiths split up in 1987, Johnny Marr has been trying to do one thing - to not sound like Johnny Marr.
Or rather trying not to sound like people expect Johnny Marr to sound - trying not to sound like he did in The Smiths.
"As successful as that was and as much as people loved it, when you're 24 or 25 you don't want to have a label stuck on your forehead and just be going round on a conveyer belt for the rest of your life, no matter how good that label is," he says.
After The Smiths, Marr hopped from group to group, his musical direction swerving sharply to defy expectations and prove that he could be more than Morrissey's old bandmate.
He played alongside the synths in Electronic with New Order's Bernard Sumner; scored a US number one album with alt-rockers Modest Mouse; worked on the Oscar-nominated soundtrack for the film Inception; was a member of Wakefield indie-rockers The Cribs; and contributed to the tumultuous pop of The The.
Now he is releasing his first solo album under his own name. And he resisted the urge to instantly discard any chord progressions or riffs that sounded too much like Johnny Marr.
"I've done plenty of that over the years," he says. "I was conscious of not repeating myself.
 Morrissey and Johnny Marr Morrissey and Marr will forever be idolised by many fans for their roles as the songwriters in The Smiths  "It was my prerogative to try and change peoples' perception of what I might be about and be a bit contrary if I needed to be. But this time out I was going to be OK with it. All the songs now start with my guitar, which I think is what people want."
He realised he no longer had to run away from his past when he was watching the punk pioneers Wire.
Wire were a massive influence on a legion of indie musicians, including Marr. As a fan, he did not want them to sound like anything but Wire.
"I want them to sound like Wire being as great as they can be," he says. "That was quite a profound revelation to me."
He could "just be me as well as I can possibly be", he realised. So the new album, titled The Messenger, does not sound like The Smiths, but nor does it hide the familiarly epic swells and sweeps of Marr's guitar.
 Continue reading the main story “Start Quote <blockquote> I miss people singing weird stuff from the brain - it's all a little bit too earnest for me now”</blockquote>End Quote Johnny Marr  He also sings, which he has done on occasion in the past. Unconcerned with recent guitar trends towards blog-baiting braininess or faux-primitive retro rock, his full-bodied indie would not have sounded out of place had he released it as his first post-Smiths project at the turn of the 1990s.
His lyrics encompass modern concerns, though, lamenting how commercialism and technology have taken over our lives. Word Starts Attack is about how people make and break friendships through social networks and texting. "How pixels are affecting relationships and what we think of an aid to communication is actually the opposite," he says.
I Want The Heartbeat is about a man who swaps his wife for an ECG machine. "He hooks himself up to it at night to get his heartbeat up and down. Could happen."
Marr says: "I've no interest in singing about my feelings and I've very little interest in other people singing about their feelings, if truth be told.
 Johnny Marr and The Cribs Marr spent three years as a member of The Cribs  "I like people who sing about their thoughts - whether that comes from observations or telling stories. As long as it isn't some earnest sentimental claptrap.
"A lot of stuff sounds like some bad self-help book masquerading as ideology. There's some collective 'together we're going to look up to the heavens and overcome this incredible adversity with our souls'. What adversity are we talking about here?"
The target of his ire is "music that fills stadiums that people really want to buy in supermarkets".
"When the record was finished, I realised I sang about the way modern life is for me, but I tried and do it in a way that at least people can be entertained by if not entirely relate to," he adds. "Obviously I hope they can relate to it. Or just find it funny.
 Continue reading the main story “Start Quote <blockquote> As songwriters, we entirely backed each other up to the max”</blockquote>End Quote Johnny Marr on writing with Morrissey  "As long as it's not 'I'm gonna fix you.'" Yes, Coldplay, he is talking to you. "I miss people singing weird stuff from the brain. It's all a little bit too earnest for me now. Karaoke culture."
Marr clearly puts Morrissey's lyrics for The Smiths into the "weird stuff from the brain" category rather than the "earnest sentimental claptrap" category.
"They were certainly fascinating and unique," the guitarist reflects. "I don't think there was ever anything soppy in there and if there was I would have backed him up like I backed up everything he did and he backed up everything that I did.
 Johnny Marr Marr will play his new material on tour in March  "I don't think we did do anything that we didn't love 100 per cent, even if it was just at the time. As songwriters, we entirely backed each other up to the max."
To write this album, the guitarist returned to Manchester after five years in Portland, Oregon, because the record "needed to sound like me being where I'm from", Marr says.
But despite making peace with the sound of his former self, Marr firmly rejects the suggestion that his return to Manchester was part of any kind of nostalgia trip.
"I'm sort of resolutely against nostalgia," he says. "There's something mawkish about it to me and it gets in the way of moving forward. I'm sure there's some creative use in it for some other people but not for me."
Nostalgia is a force that Marr has got used to pushing against. Hopeful reports of The Smiths' imminent reformation now come along with reliable regularity. But they have always been quickly shot down by Morrissey and Marr.
I tell him I am now going to ask the question that all journalists leave to the end of their interviews. He glances knowingly at his plugger.
Has a reunion ever been on the cards? "Er… no. No," Marr replies wearily. Will it be? Marr's interest in this interview has suddenly crashed. "Er… don't know. I don't know. I don't have an answer to that question."
That answer looks evasive in black and white, but at the time I simply take it as a sign of his antipathy toward the question.
The message from The Messenger is that he is comfortable with his past, but still not likely to repeat it.
All that's necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing

celeste

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Re: The Smiths
« Reply #1 on: 17:18:08, 19/02/13 »
19 February 2013 Last updated at 15:49   
 David Cameron: I'll defy Johnny Marr's Smiths 'ban' David Cameron and Johnny Marr David Cameron and Johnny Marr agree that This Charming Man is a "good song"  Continue reading the main story Related Stories
  • 'Cameron's forbidden from liking The Smiths' Listen
  • David Cameron has pledged to keep listening to music by The Smiths, despite being "banned" from doing so by guitarist Johnny Marr.
    The prime minister has voiced his liking of the 1980s group on several occasions, but Mr Marr told the BBC this was "not allowed".
    However, speaking on a visit to India, Mr Cameron said he would "go on and listen", regardless of the warning.
    He chose the Smiths song This Charming Man on Desert Island Discs in 2006.
    The Manchester band, whose other hits include Bigmouth Strikes Again, Panic and Heaven Knows (I'm Miserable Now), split in the 1980s, with Mr Marr and lead singer Morrissey pursuing separate careers.'Not his kind' Mr Marr has issued several bans on Mr Cameron liking their music, repeating the warning in an interview with BBC Radio 4's Today programme.    This time he specifically ruled This Charming Man - best known for a gladioli-wielding Morrissey's louchely gyrating performance of it on Top of the Pops - off-limits.
    Mr Marr said: "I think he likes the song. That's probably sadder than if he didn't know it, really. He's entitled to like whatever he likes, as long as he doesn't say it. It's a good song."
    He added: "I do forbid him to like it. He shouldn't like us because we're not his kind of people. "
    Morrissey has also called on the prime minister to stop proclaiming his admiration, saying in 2010: "David Cameron hunts and shoots and kills stags - apparently for pleasure. It was not for such people that either Meat Is Murder or The Queen Is Dead were recorded; in fact, they were made as a reaction against such violence."
    But Mr Cameron, a teenager at the band's height, has continued to display his devotion, even mentioning the 1984 song William, It Was Really Nothing during Prime Minister's Questions on one occasion.
    In Delhi for a diplomatic and trade-building mission, he stood defiant, smiling as he told the BBC: "I've now got Johnny Marr and other members of the band saying I'm not able to listen to the The Smiths.
    "When I've got the complete and full set, even then, I'm afraid, I will go on and listen to The Smiths."
  • All that's necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing

    celeste

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    Re: The Smiths
    « Reply #2 on: 17:20:01, 19/02/13 »
    Is it because he is a Tory?
    hmmm
    All that's necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing

    Corrupt council

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    Re: The Smiths
    « Reply #3 on: 20:01:51, 19/02/13 »
    Your becoming obsessive celeste ... ::)
    ROY.

    celeste

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    Re: The Smiths
    « Reply #4 on: 20:03:21, 19/02/13 »
    oh do be quiet  :P ;D
    All that's necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing

    Corrupt council

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    Re: The Smiths
    « Reply #5 on: 20:11:38, 19/02/13 »
    I started something I couldn't finish
    ROY.

    celeste

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    Re: The Smiths
    « Reply #6 on: 20:12:13, 19/02/13 »
    What is it? :)
    All that's necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing

    Corrupt council

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    Re: The Smiths
    « Reply #7 on: 20:13:58, 19/02/13 »
    You just haven't earned it yet baby
    ROY.

    celeste

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    Re: The Smiths
    « Reply #8 on: 20:16:29, 19/02/13 »
    Earned what? ;D
    All that's necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing

    Corrupt council

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    Re: The Smiths
    « Reply #9 on: 20:18:44, 19/02/13 »
    What diffrence does it make
    ROY.

    celeste

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    Re: The Smiths
    « Reply #10 on: 20:19:55, 19/02/13 »
    What's your point? 8)
    All that's necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing

    Corrupt council

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    Re: The Smiths
    « Reply #11 on: 20:20:46, 19/02/13 »
    Well I wonder
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    celeste

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    Re: The Smiths
    « Reply #12 on: 20:23:48, 19/02/13 »
    Nothing wrong with that
    All that's necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing

    Corrupt council

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    Re: The Smiths
    « Reply #13 on: 20:27:43, 19/02/13 »
    That joke isn't funny anymore
    ROY.

    celeste

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    Re: The Smiths
    « Reply #14 on: 20:29:29, 19/02/13 »
    Joke?
    All that's necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing