January is a lulling
month, with skies and pavement reflecting each other’s dismal grey,
so to break up the monotony, I thought it would be a good time to
book a trip to New York and visit some Moz friends. Waking up in
Brooklyn the morning after crossing the continent cramped and crammed
into two economy class flights, my first delight was a purring
peaches and cream kitty nestled beside me, and then, upon checking
notifications on my phone, my next delight was discovering that a
snippet of a new Morrissey single was circulating the net. Stale
jetlag evaporating in an instant, I fumbled with my phone for that
heart-surging initial listen and Bobby Don’t You Think They Know
graced my
ears (and the kitty’s) for
the first time.
And oh, what perfect timing to be visiting a tour friend for the release, as decades fall away and we are suddenly oozing teenage excitement because how can we not? By mid-afternoon, the entire track is available to stream, much to our enraptured screams. With each listen of Bobby, another new layer is uncovered.
Featuring
R&B powerhouse Thelma Houston, Bobby Don’t You Think
They Know is the first single
from
Morrissey’s upcoming album I Am Not A Dog On A Chain. The
song opens with a catchy
keyboard riff, higher notes pushing
forward with sparkling urgency, whilst underneath lush dark chords
resonate.
Darkness and light expound first phrases, and well, we wonder, “what
is this song about?”
Morrissey’s smooth voice
invites us into Bobby’s dark underworld: “ice, blow, spikes,
snow... Bobby don’t you think they know?” He’s forceful, but
then, he softens, “aren’t you... tired of...
pretending? I know, you’re tortured... below.” Man,
Bobby is going through
it and it’s heavy.
Thelma and Morrissey (via thelmahoustonofficial Instagram) |
Then,
Thelma joins in and the harmonizing begins. Their voices work
well together: Morrissey’s
silky smooth vocals blend,
balance, and drive mesmerizingly with
Houston’s nimble yet
controlled phrasing. It’s
elegant and plucky
at once. While the tune is
definitely keyboard-based, guitars and bass, with gritty-city
distortion cradle the keys nicely, and add texture to the track. For
anyone unversed in druggie-slang, you’ll pick it up here, as Bobby
has been more than merely
dabbling, trying to mask his
“torture down below” with
a cocktail of uppers and downers. An
organ solo adds vintage flair, a bit of late 60’s a la Doors, and
builds with Houston’s gospel rock vocal accents
into streetwise
vibrato-driven baritone and tenor saxophones.
Bobby is a truly
textured musical piece, simultaneously
dark, smooth, heavy – and showcases Morrissey’s uncanny ability
to fabric a short story - a life - within a pop song; his lyrics
always leave us wanting more and wondering more.
Undoubtedly,
the release of a new Morrissey single added an extra spring in my
step whilst pounding the shoe-worn pavements of Brooklyn, and,
combined with the news (unveiled back in December) that Morrissey is
planning another May New York residency, this time at the Harlem
Apollo, there lingers a certain sparkle in NYC air. My friend and I
decided to tackle the subways up to Harlem, taking in cultural sites
and a quick glimpse at the legendary
Apollo, which
stands with dramatic
anticipation amongst the
bustle of street vendors and
dusky lights.
Harlem at Dusk by me |
New
York is one of those cities that breathes art, culture,
inspiration, and as a place where such divine, revolutionary
literature and music are birthed, it has been an influential city for
Morrissey. Even buildings and subways throb struggle-art,
art-struggle, as well as a certain edginess that evokes and erupts
cultural shift to anyone who is paying attention. So, my visit did
bring to mind some of Morrissey’s New York influences, and while
I’m sure I’m missing many (do forgive), I thought I’d touch on
some here:
1.
The New York Dolls
via Esquire |
Well,
obviously! The Dolls were one of those bands decades
ahead of their time, and struck young Morrissey like otherworldly
lightning. Forcing open
the lock-and-key of
gender-specific
fashion, with hair
teased to the skies, they
shocked any “basic” who
even glanced their way, and they merged sultry pout with aggressive
snarl both in appearance and sound. Morrissey has
described them as “the mafia of rock and roll” (Face,
1985) and “the band
who completely destroyed and changed my life” (Mozipedia).
“At
last I am someone!” (Autobiography – of
which pages 68-75 may remind you of just how
much the Dolls mean to
Mozzer).
Teenage Moz in a Dolls tee via Pinterest |
Morrissey
ran the Dolls fan club in the 1970’s, and published a short book,
The New York Dolls
in 1981. Most astoundingly, he facilitated the
band’s reunion in 2004 for
his Meltdown festival, documented in the
film New York Doll,
featuring the story of bassist Arthur Kane, who tragically passed
away only a few weeks later.
In 2006, Morrissey covered
the Dolls’ Human Being.
“They looked and sounded sensational. The lyrics had a fantastic
rat-a-tat-tat spit to them, and the retching sound of Thunder’s
guitar sounded completely unique to me. I was completely hooked –
and I still am. Love at first sight. Or sound.”
2.
Lou Reed
via Rolling Stone |
Morrissey
first saw NYC-born Reed live in 1972, where
he was
captivated by Reed’s unique poetic rock and being: “Lou
Reed is unimpressed by applause, and lives
a life detached from custom. His stare is cold and his romanticism is
brutal. His songs
are half-sung melodies of menace. He might drop dead any second, and
is therefore
the real thing.” (Autobiography).
In 2013, Morrissey covered
Reed
track Satellite Of
Love. Reed’s
disregard for any notion of imposed societal ‘rules’ and misfit
mystique must have spoken to Morrissey, and he chose the Velvet
Underground’s The
Black Angel’s Death Song
amongst his Desert Island discs. After
Reed’s
death, Morrissey wrote on True To You:
“No words to express the sadness at the death of Lou Reed. He
had been there all of my life. He will always be pressed to my heart.
Thank God for those, like Lou, who move within their own laws,
otherwise imagine how dull the world would be. I knew the Lou of
recent years and he was always full of good heart. His music will
outlive time itself. We are all timebound, but today, with the loss
of liberating Lou, life is a pigsty.”
3.
The Ramones
Ramones on Subway Train by Bob Gruen |
Formed
in Queens, the Ramones soon impressed young Morrissey with their
blitz blast of raw punk songs. In a 2012 interview,
Morrissey remarked that his “love for the Ramones would out-live
time itself. And it shall. Well, it virtually
has already.
If the Ramones were alive today, they’d be the biggest band in the
world. It takes the world 30 years to catch on, doesn’t it?” and
in 2014, Morrissey curated a Ramones compilation. Two years, later,
in 2016, Morrissey covered Judy
is a Punk at a Brooklyn concert, later releasing the
song
on Low in High
School Deluxe Edition. He
also
often uses photos of the Ramones as stage backdrops.
4.
James Baldwin
Baldwin in Harlem via The New York Times |
Harlem-born writer and social
activist Baldwin has greatly inspired Morrissey, and in Autobiography
he writes of seeing Baldwin from afar in a Barcelona hotel in 1986:
“He is weathered and intense, absorbed in his own thoughts, with
a face there could never be enough time to describe. I drink him in,
but can do no more. I pin so much prestige to James Baldwin that to
risk approach places my life on the line; I’d hang myself at any
glimmer of rejection. History books overlook James Baldwin because he
presented an unvarnished view of the American essence – as blunt
and rousing as print would allow. His public speeches were
intoxicating, his motivational palette of words so full of fireworks
that you smile as you listen – not because of humor, but because he
was so good at voicing the general truth, with which most struggled.
His liking for male flesh gave the world the perfect excuse to brush
him aside as a social danger, and he was erased away as someone who
used his blackness as an excuse for everything. In fact, his purity
scared them off, and his honesty ignited irrational fear in an
America where men were draped with medals for killing other men yet
imprisoned for loving one another. Pitifully, on this Barcelona day,
I do not have the steel to approach Baldwin, because I know very well
that I will jabber rubbish, and that his large, soulful eyes will
lower at someone ruefully new to the game. Shortly thereafter, he is
dead.”
Morrissey’s
website, Morrissey Central,
features Baldwin’s
image and quote, “artists are here to disturb the peace” on the
homepage, and his stage backdrops also often feature Baldwin.
Of course, there are so many influential New York artists, it is impossible to discuss them all within a short blog post, but certainly artists like singer and poet Patti Smith (while not born in NY, much of her artistic foundation formed during the NYC punk movement; Morrissey was completely spellbound by Horses on first listen in 1976) and drag artist John Epperson aka Lypsinka (also not NY-born, but whose career catapulted off Broadway in the 80’s) feature prominently in Morrissey’s faves.
It
is clear that New York holds a special place in Morrissey’s heart and numerous successful residencies and memorable gigs also attest to
how adored he is in the city. I feel beyond fortunate to have seen
him 8 times in NYC, once at Madison Square Garden, and 7 times at
Lunt-Fontanne, and hope with every ounce of my being to see him in NY
again later this year.
For
now, I’ll leave you with a distinctly
Morrissey
New York “Fashion moment,” where he exudes dapper and sporty in
an embroidered Gucci
Yankees jacket:
Via alisonmartino on Instagram |
Special thanks to #teamsnuggles and my 'NY correspondents' @basia_ana and @butihatepepperoni for their copious cultural know-how |