I personally don't agree with it. I have no reason to doubt the veracity of the quote.He didn't say that? - or you personally don't agree with it?
I personally don't agree with it. I have no reason to doubt the veracity of the quote.He didn't say that? - or you personally don't agree with it?
Last I heard, Baker Lite was touring around Yorkshire in a caravan....Idris was DJing in Ibiza. Decisions decisionsOh I don't know. Who WOULDN'T pick a night out with Baker Lite over one with Idris Elba?
He did blame the Hitler salute from the back of a Merc on the bugle. There but for the grace of godI agree with you on his race comment, utter tosh.
Bowie would of course defend or blame drugs or not himself, once his promoters and management pointed the error of speaking his mind, and it could affect his bank balance.
Reminds me of philip anemelso excuse after shouting white power during a gig.He did blame the Hitler salute from the back of a Merc on the bugle. There but for the grace of god
ive never seen him drink white wine, back stage, on his tour bus or at his house.Reminds me of philip anemelso excuse after shouting white power during a gig.
he claimed he had been drinking white wine back stage, and simply was drunk and meant white wine….
knowing him, and having meet him loads of times, I can tell you….
Morrissey is the rock’n’roll rebel we need
There was a truly electric moment at the Morrissey gig at the Palladium in London last night. Moz was introducing his new song, ‘Bonfire of Teenagers’. It’s about the Manchester Arena bombing in which 22 people were killed. He looked out at the audience and asked us a question. How come you know...www.spectator.co.uk
Powerful stuff from Brendan O’Neill, but does Morrisey make a valid point?
Saw him play Ally Pally a few years ago which was great in quite a few ways (eg 2 pint glasses) and icon visuals. However, left the gig disillusioned after observing a fight seemingly being carried out on racial grounds. A few too many union jacks being waved in the crowd didn’t auger well. Very sad when someone with so much talent and influence turns out to be a racist prick.Morrissey is the rock’n’roll rebel we need
There was a truly electric moment at the Morrissey gig at the Palladium in London last night. Moz was introducing his new song, ‘Bonfire of Teenagers’. It’s about the Manchester Arena bombing in which 22 people were killed. He looked out at the audience and asked us a question. How come you know...www.spectator.co.uk
Powerful stuff from Brendan O’Neill, but does Morrisey make a valid point?
What I'm getting from all that is that Mozza is a bit of a prick.Interesting.
The musician recently faced condemnation after wearing a badge featuring the logo of far-right anti-Islam political party For Britain during a recent TV appearance on Fallon.
The performance led to posters for his new album ‘California Son’ to be removed at Merseyrail stations and for his music to be banned from the worlds oldest record shop amid other criticism.
Asked by Rayner why he has not sued The Guardian, who were among the titles to publish critical articles about him in the aftermath, Morrissey said: “As a so-called entertainer, I have no human rights… apparently… because you put yourself ‘out there’. If I were a postman I would have won a Harassment Case against The Guardian and been awarded 10 million pounds in damages by now.”
Later, he added: “The Guardian have pestered and relentlessly harassed musicians in my life urging them not to work with me again. In these days of casual knife crime and hurling of acid, you’d expect The Guardian to maintain a certain careful morality. But no. If I suffered physical harm as a direct result of the Guardian’s tyranny, you can imagine cheers and champagne exploding through their offices… it chills the blood. The Guardian fully believes it is a political party.”
Rayner asked Morrissey to clarify his political position. The musician says he has “never” been a supporter of UKIP or of Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage, but says that “it’s obvious that [Farage] would make a good Prime Minister.”
He also maintained that he “absolutely” supports For Britain, saying: “The UK is a dangerously hateful place now, and I think we need someone to put a stop to the lunacy and to speak for everyone. I see [For Britain leader] Anne Marie Waters as this person. She is extremely intelligent, ferociously dedicated to this country, she is very engaging, and also very funny at times.”
When asked about being called a racist, Morrissey said: “If you call someone racist in modern Britain you are telling them that you have run out of words. You are shutting the debate down and running off. The word is meaningless now. Everyone ultimately prefers their own race … does this make everyone racist?”
He later referenced David Bowie, who at one point in his career expressed admiration for Adolf Hitler and fascism. Morrissey said: “Someone made the point the other day about David Bowie’s famous ‘England would benefit from a fascist government’ comment… and his admiration for Hitler… and how Hitler was as stylish as Jagger… and how the UK needed a ‘complete right wing leader’. Could you imagine if I’d said THAT!
Morrissey said “Now, of course, I sat privately with David many times, and he wasn’t remotely fascist… although it has been said that he’d visited Hitler’s bunker. But, how many writers at The Guardian have David Bowie albums? All of them, probably! Hypocrisy?”
he has a very valid point about Bowie, let’s not forget Claptons racist outburst live on stage about immigration.
Yeah, that can’t be denied, shame really.What I'm getting from all that is that Mozza is a bit of a prick.
No, I think it was Viva Hate. I stand to be corrected thoughIs that the one with Vini Reilly on? I must confess I haven't heard it. I went from 86 to 91 without listening to any new music owing to personal circumstances. Happy to retract my hyperbole.
It was all a long time ago now, though. Bros have come and gone. Madonna. Jeremy Paxman. Friday Night Dinner.No, I think it was Viva Hate. I stand to be corrected though
Contrarians are interesting. Peter Hitchens. Former communist, now aggressive right wing iconoclast. Nicholas van Hoogstraten. José Mourinho.when he was asked his thoughts about animal cruelty and live dog/cat farms in preparation for food, he replied that any people that do that are clearly a sub-species. Now I would imagine many many many people would agree with that in context.
as for his promotion of Britain First, I will have to read up on that, and if indeed he did then obviously that is something of dubious and narrow minded, seeing as he is from an immigrant family and championed Mexican social issues in America when he lived there, and is idolised by millions of Mexican Americans.
he is indeed contrary, I think it makes him interesting though.
Yes, he was the dullard who tried to drag The Pogues into a culture war over the edited version of Fairy tale. They had no truck with it, referring to O'Neill's fellow sad old Tory pretending to be relevant, Laurence Fox as a 'herenvolk shite'.Any article by Brendan O'Neill is likely to be tiresome