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What interested me more than the song's lyrics was the question he posed at the gig (which can be separated from Morissey's argument/politics). Why is it that a mass murderer like Abedi, whose horrific crime was so recent, is a less instantly remembered name than one from long ago like Hindley? Or, for that matter, a Fred West, Harold Shipman or Peter Tobin?
Results 31 to 47 of 47
Thread: Morrissey
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10-10-2022 09:38 PM #31
Last edited by He's here!; 10-10-2022 at 10:52 PM.
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10-10-2022 09:50 PM #32This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Morrissey is an idiot of the highest order. I'll acknowledge his contribution to some great songs a few decades ago but I was never even a fan of his whiny voice.
Johnny Marr on the other hand is a bona fide legend.
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10-10-2022 10:51 PM #33This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I was never a big Smiths fan but would acknowledge that the Morrissey/Marr partnership yielded a catalogue of music that meant the world to their devotees. I think both were equally integral to the band's success.
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10-10-2022 11:12 PM #34
without Jonny Marr, he'd just have been a really weird poet, and not a very good one. his words worked as songs, where having a certain vibe has more mileage than words on a page. tbh, it seems to me that this song 'bonfire of teenagers' is horrifically exploiting a tragedy for the sake of his own ego, from which his ghastly beliefs emanate. absolute bell end.
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10-10-2022 11:32 PM #35This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
The geopolitical nutters aren't embedded into collective conscious. There's a Harold Shipman doc on every couple of hours on the Channel 5s, there's 10 part series streaming on practically every platform about any serial killer you want. Most of their names are remembered in jokes or rhymes.
It's the lurid angle alluded to the other day with Tobin. People are natural curtain twitchers, terrorism is too dry for jokes and jump-frights. Morrisey curtain twitched himself in the 80s, with the moors murderers.
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11-10-2022 03:31 AM #36
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Suicide bombers blow themselves to pieces before we ever know who they are. It doesn’t mean we’re sympathetic or forgiving to them because they’re Muslims.
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11-10-2022 10:01 AM #37This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Was at Madison Square Garden a week past for the Killers and Johnny Marr was the support - really pleasant hearing a couple of Smiths songs without Morrisey.
#PERSEVERED
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11-10-2022 10:05 AM #38
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It's standard practice in the media to not focus on the perpetrators of terrorist acts, to avoid glorification and martyrdom. Essentially it's a form of propaganda (by omission) but there's an awful lot of research papers and discussion on the subject and I guess it works. When I think back to the Manchester Arena bombing the thought in my mind (aside from the horror of the bombing itself) is the unity of and with the people of Manchester. I haven't a scooby what cause the terrorist was supporting.
There's even a UNESCO handbook about the portrayal of terrorism in the media.
https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/pf0000247074
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11-10-2022 10:20 AM #39This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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11-10-2022 10:44 AM #40
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It's just weird that a racist like Morrissey can climb on a stage and make out he's discovered some kind of right wing gotcha which then gets propagated round the internet when a minute's thinking or research would have shown it to be a daft point.
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11-10-2022 11:02 AM #41This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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11-10-2022 02:07 PM #42This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
What if it were Marr who had gone on to express the views Morrissey does these days? Would you still respect his musicianship?
Takes us into the realms of respect for the art, not the artist ie it's easy enough to jettison the likes of Gary Glitter's career to the dustbin in the wake of his imprisonment because he simply wasn't really much of a talent (although he commanded a hefty following at one point), whereas it's harder for long-time Morrissey fans to completely let him go because he's a genuinely talented artist with a body of work to back that up.
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11-10-2022 02:36 PM #43This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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11-10-2022 04:28 PM #44This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I suppose it’s a bit unfair to diminish Morrissey’s entire contribution just because his voice isn’t to my taste and he’s turned into an absolute weapon later in life.
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11-10-2022 04:32 PM #45This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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12-10-2022 02:10 PM #46This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I just checked that out. He makes some very valid points IMHO.
Incidentally it seems Gary Glitter DOES in fact still attract fans (albeit the article was written a few years back):
The Gary Glitter fans who still follow the leader | Pop and rock | The Guardian
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12-10-2022 09:25 PM #47This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
something like that anyway
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