I’ve had Blue
Dreamers Eyes stuck in my head
for days. Two lines especially stand out and my
innermost thoughts are yet
again revealed to me with much more clarity through someone else’s
words: “I wanna go somewhere, where nobody knows me” and - “I’m
scum and I’ve always been scum.” It’s a relief to hear these
thoughts outside of my own head ... and I feel less lonely, less
confused. I admittedly feel
trapped by my
daily life right now, and long to escape from the streets of the town
where I grew up, and its
looming suburban checklist where any divergence
from the ‘norm’ simply blacklists one as a “loser.”
Meanwhile, I drown in
pessimistic snags and insecurity
– shouldn’t I have life sorted out by 38? My
soul feels 80; my soul feels 18.
The
strange streets of LA are the perfect place to forget about my
hometown. There’s an
anonymity to city life that strips away layers of judgment; part of
me wants to disappear forever into this concrete jungle. As I walk
around Hollywood, I'm enamoured by the glam trash atmosphere of
vintage shops pouring with 70’s tassels and corduroys, and
the vinyl shops where you can actually buy tangible records.
Lingere-clad mannequins pout on street corners and the
tinted-out windows of psychics lure you to find out your fate (I’m
too afraid to ask). Scum
and glitter taint pink-starred sidewalks, and I happen upon blonde
bombshell Jayne Mansfield’s star and snap a pic. Men
wear hot pants and women have beards and all the 'basics' back home evaporate from my memory as every
intersection
screeches “there is no such thing in life as normal.”
I’m
in Hollywood for the James Corden
show,
where Morrissey will sing Back On The Chain Gang.
Prior to the
taping we are sent
a detailed dress code, best followed by wearing something black and
sophisticated. We wait to be seated by TV staff, and it feels
unnerving -
like waiting to be selected
for a pageant, as seating seems neither random nor based on arrival
time. In the same holding area
congregates a gaggle of
garish extroverts, waiting
for the Price Is Right taping; most are dressed in atrocious
Christmas sweaters. Clearly, they were given a different memo for
dress code.
After
Corden, I’m on to San Diego
for the last concert of the California tour, and I realize these two
weeks have raced by with such brevity that my memory grasps
desperately to hang onto every detail, and I feel completely
unprepared to say goodbye. The
concert, at
Copley Symphony Hall, is
seated, and I have managed to
snag a front row ticket at the last minute. Oddly, seated shows offer
a panic dimension all of their own, as venue security can be very
strict about the audience
remaining in their
seats until the moment the band hits
the stage, and things can get rather messy. Further, rather than
focusing on the queue list or racing to and from your hotel to get
ready, for most of the day
you are left to your own
devices, meaning you might
just end up being eaten alive
by nervous butterflies until the rush of doors.
The
Symphony Hall is located directly below our hotel, and we take a few
jitter-fueled jaunts past the venue, trying to make sense of where
the entrance is, amongst pink marble and gold donor plaques. My hunch
is this venue is far more familiar with french horns and orchestras
than electric guitars and rock concerts, and I can’t help but
wonder if they will be unprepared for a passionate flood of bequiffed
Morrissey fans. While trying to find a sense of order externally by
scoping such things out, internally I am a churning mess of moods:
the inevitable post-tour crash is starting to haunt me. I am already
missing Morrissey and my friends before the night even begins, and
all I can do is stare at the ticking clock and feel increasingly
overcome by the strange mix of emotions tugging at my spirit.
We
wait with tense excitement, across four rows at theatre doors. More
international playboys have arrived for this final date of the US
tour, with Belgium, Mexico, and Texas marking the map. While politely
smiling, I slowly wilt and die inside as a lovely elderly usher with
fluffy white hair tears my ticket stub, seemingly in slow motion.
“It’s a seated gig,” I remind myself – but tranquility is
futile as I skip down stage steps and already find a number of people
standing against
the stage. However,
there
is a little gap of light where I’m meant to stand, directly in
front of my assigned seat – and
I am safe. Tonight’s stage
is extremely low, hitting waist level for me, and there is no
barrier. I rest my elbows on the lacquered wood of the stage, ready
to settle in for the evening, but
venue security has other
plans, as they begin a policing prowl in which they demand we sit
down in our assigned seats. Sigh... clearly they aren’t used to
Morrissey fans, and I feel in no rush to let go of my coveted spot.
Yet again, I’m convinced seated shows pose a unique kind of stress.
Finally,
venue staff is successful in ordering us back to our numbered seats
like unruly schoolchildren. I perch on the very edge of mine,
anticipating a jump back to the stage at any instant. Inside I’m a
churning storm of highs and lows, but on the outside I’m a leaping
cat ready to pounce. Again, my scattered and tattered heart is no
match for this external sense of ‘order’ and structured seating
plans feel hopelessly
impossible, artificial. But ... before I can succumb
to overthinking,
opening act Starcrawler takes the stage. Time to pounce.
Starcrawler
is the best new rock band I’ve heard in ages, refreshing in a 21st
century where most new acts tend to be reality show rejects. The band
members are straight out of high school, and I could easily be their
mother, and I find myself momentarily fretting over stage lights
highlighting any dowdy crows feet around my eyes. But... I hear a
voice...“age shouldn’t affect you, you’re either marvellous or
you’re boring, regardless of your age” and Morrissey’s words
come to my rescue once again. Phew... and I’m able to redirect my
consciousness towards gig excitement. I am forever learning and
relearning how to stay in the moment and drag myself out of the murky
quicksand of self consciousness.
Starcrawler |
The
four piece opening band is an LA-based glam punk rebirth, featuring
heavy Black Sabbathesque walls of layered guitars fused with
Ramones-quick tunes. Frontwoman Arrow De Wilde slinks on stage,
seemingly barely alive while simultaneously being far too alive all
at once, in moments creeping insect-like and barely moving, and in
others shuddering in spasmic bursts of energy. An ectomorphic blonde,
she wears what looks like a rhinestone jock strap and crawls on all
fours, periodically spitting on the audience. During one song she
chokes herself with the microphone cord as her eyes fully roll into
the back of her head.
Their songs are high-speed and intensity and they play loud, as the guitarist, decked out in vintage clothes, Chuck Berry duckwalks along the edge of the stage, the soles of his shoes barely missing our faces. Their set list includes I Love LA, a love anthem for the sprawling city of misfits, and criminally vulgar raunch-fest Pussy Tower, the topic of which begs no further explanation. Another highlight is Chicken Woman, a horror-show bass driven crawl during which Arrow shakingly draws a bloodied cross on her forehead, apparently possessed by some demonic force the rest of us can’t see. The set ends as abruptly as it began, with Arrow diving headfirst into the crowd, leaving people wondering if she is “okay.” Brilliant.
Morrissey’s
pre-show videos start up, and venue security begins a second assault,
demanding we must sit back down, although naturally we just can’t
hear them. The guards strobe flashlights into our eyes, and
ignoring them becomes an act of pure will. It feels as though
Lypsinka will never arrive... but then... like a miracle... she
does...
Curtains
drop and crumple, and now... now... I’m carrying my pounding heart
in my hand. Out walks Morrissey and the band, which is donning smart
black button-up shirts, suspenders, and grey trousers. My love drunk
eyes drink in Morrissey, who wears a dark blue cardigan accented with
pins, a cut up merch tee, and a rosary of white skull beads. This new
cardigan and cut-tshirt combo is very handsome devil!
The
band launches into William It Was Really Nothing, and my mess
of moods melts into pure in-the-moment bliss. I want to feel like
this forever: I like it here can I stay? Morrissey is timeless and
ageless as he thrashes the microphone cord around the stage, his
even-bluer-in-person eyes surveying the crowd. His voice fills the
symphony hall, from pillared walls to gilded ceiling, and every inch
of atmosphere transcends supposed reality into someplace
otherworldly.
“I
left the north, I travelled south,” sings Morrissey, and I remember
my own journey from Canada to Southern California, two weeks earlier.
I’m torn between wanting to take snapshots with my phone, and
snapshots with my memory... and I realize either way, I will be
living off of memories for a while after this last date of the US
tour. To me, it seems strange I only discovered him 4 years ago, as I
feel he has always been with me in a sense, a lifeline, anchored in
my heart, and such a solid part of my foundation. In between songs I
want to shout “I love you,” but only little shrieks slip through
my lips, and while he is in front of me I long to jump on stage to
hug him, yet my feet feel welded with shyness to the symphony floor.
I don’t know why I am so shy, or trapped inside my own self
consciousness in such moments, because my heart beats fierce,
flooding love and gratitude through my veins. I feel overcome, and
wish I had a way to convey such love to him, to thank him for all
he’s done for me.
Next
up on the set list is Hairdresser On Fire... “can you
squeeze me into an empty page of your diary and psychologically save
me... I’ve got faith in you...” Fitting – as I am in dire need
of such salvation myself. We sing along, and Moz playfully tugs at
his cardigan, leading to excited squeals. At the end of If You Don't Like Me, Don't Look At Me, he adds a cheeky "so don't get your knickers in a twist"... and - as any Morrissey fan knows, one of the coolest things about live shows is the lyric switches. We reach towards him, a
stretching sea of lovestruck limbs, as he flips the microphone cord
to the rhythm of How Soon As Now? and strobe lights dazzle in
time with guitar riffs. Before singing newest single Back On The
Chain Gang, Morrissey brings out a 7-inch record, its cover
emblazoned with feminist icon Germaine Greer, and playfully teases us
with it, dangling the new release over our heads, and like kittens we
reach up, til he passes it as a gift to one very lucky devoted fan.
Jack The Ripper’s
smoke machines evoke London fog in 19th
century knife-plunging back alleys, and no matter how many times you
see it live, such mystique inspires awe. As the fog erupts towards
the audience in volcanic billowing clouds, Morrissey
disappears, snaking into the floor of the stage with the agility of a
dancer. When he re-emerges, his quiffed sihlouette stands in
semi-mist, and he stretches his arms towards us, contorting, and
wrapping his cardigan around the microphone, his waist, at times over
his shoulders. “Crash into my arms...”
Jack The Ripper in San Diego |
We are blanketed by semi-darkness as Morrissey and the band disappear backstage, and wait in thunderous anticipation, begging for their return with all the voice and applause we have in us. Encore-time is approaching, always tinged with the sadness and desperation of goodbye-for-now. On his return, Morrissey addresses the crowd, dedicating the next song to “our friends in Thousand Oaks.” The Southern California city had been through multiple tragedies over the last week, including a shooting that killed 12 people. Even with over 300 mass shootings throughout the past calendar year, many Americans claim gun ownership is a ‘right,’ blaming everything and everyone except the guns themselves for this unending rampage of senseless violence. In the same week, wildfires ravaged the Thousand Oaks area, undoubtedly afflicting numerous innocent non-human animals as well. Simply put, the increasing frequency of fires is undoubtedly linked to climate change. As we see a planet engulfed in despair, with many humans are unwilling to change behaviours based on greed and arrogance, it’s undeniable that we are the most destructive species this planet has seen.
Morrissey
stands before us as dark, accented
piano notes fill
the room – so melancholic,
cathartic. Then, awe strikes,
as I realize which song he is about to sing... “It’s the same old
S.O.S....” he begins, and my heart clamours against the cagey
walls of my chest like a
startled bird... Life Is A Pigsty ...
I have
longed to hear this song live since I started following the Morrissey
tour in 2015.
My eyes tear,
yet I am too entranced to fully cry – and my senses hungrily
grasp onto every surreal moment of being here, in person, to see him
sing the song that made me sob the first time I heard it on
Ringleader Of The Tormentors, because
it so completely reflected
my own feelings. Pigsty
has guided me through the darkest moments of my life, so many of
which piled on through my 30’s: the unmoving depths
of depressive episodes, the loss of my cat, the
decay of relationships - and
during all that pain, I felt as though Morrissey was there holding my
hand, because he understood.
And somehow, I could find my way out of the fog, because it was okay
to admit life is a pigsty, and I didn’t owe it to other people to
lie that I felt differently, because many
times in life it is more
painful and certainly more exhausting to feign happiness than it is
to say:
“Life is a pigsty... and if you don’t know this, then what do you
know?” This in itself was freeing, life
changing ... everything.
"Can you please stop time, can you stop the pain?"
"Can you please stop time, can you stop the pain?"
“Every
second of my life, I only live for you...” And... Morrissey tears
off his tshirt, throwing it into the crowd... and disappears
backstage... while I ache for more... and my memory longs to engrave
each thread of this night, somehow defying the impossible and making
every experienced moment tangible, accessible, forever.
And
for one more song, Morrissey returns, this time in a button up shirt
patterned with tiny flowers. Everyday Is Like Sunday’s
opening notes sound, and the rest is a blur, as bodies tumble and
rush
over the stage, reaching for contact: handshakes, hugs. Will I try to
hug him tonight? My heart
pulsates, racing... and yet... shyness...
and in split seconds I am stampeded by a fury of feet, and
am pinned to the stage by
another
lunging, frenzied wave
of bodies. But not tonight, my love... and he is whisked away
backstage... before I have a chance to say goodbye.
... and a 2018 California Tour Fashion Poll:
Now,
before I start packing and preparing for a week in South America, I
have some other extremely important business to attend to. With a new
tour, setlists, and pre-show videos, comes new fashion.
Before every tour, I’m excited to see what Morrissey will wear on
stage, and he has certainly brought some dazzling and dashing looks
so far this year. I decided to embark on yet another ultra-scientific run of
Instagram polls, to see what your favourite look was in California. Here
are the results:
For
Round 1, we had
Patterned
Shirt vs. Cut Tshirt
and
Brown
Jacket vs. Cardigan
Results
were:
With
a total of 74 votes, 37% were for Patterned Shirt, and 63% for Cut
tshirt, with the tshirt being the clear winner.
The
other poll was a true edge of your seat nail-biter: with a total of
86 votes – 48% were for brown jacket – and 52% for cardigan.
On
to the final round...
Cardigan and Cut tshirt Battle
Over
a total of 77 votes, cardigan won with 56%, and tshirt was pretty
close behind, with 44% of the votes. There was, however, an absentee
write-in vote for cut shirt, which changed the final result to 55%
for cardigan and 45% cut tshirt. Such fashion drama!
Luckily,
we can have both, as Morrissey often pairs the cardis with the cut
tees. This has to be my favourite fashion combo of all time.
Places to visit in Ventura, LA, and San Diego:
Ventura:
Ventiki Tiki Bar
LA:
Donut Friend (vegan donuts)
Crumbs & Whiskers (cat rescue and cafe)
The Cat & Fiddle
Amoeba Music
San Diego:
Soulshine (vegan restaurant)
Sushi2 (good vegan options)
Donut Bar (good vegan options)
Places to visit in Ventura, LA, and San Diego:
Ventura:
Ventiki Tiki Bar
LA:
Donut Friend (vegan donuts)
Crumbs & Whiskers (cat rescue and cafe)
The Cat & Fiddle
Amoeba Music
San Diego:
Soulshine (vegan restaurant)
Sushi2 (good vegan options)
Donut Bar (good vegan options)
Ultimate snuggle person, Kitty Purry at Crumbs & Whiskers LA |
Brilliant blog as always. Doesn't security realise you NEVER sit at a Morrissey concert.
ReplyDeleteThank you x Morrissey's security knows we don't sit, but often venue security is quite clueless
Delete