Belfast Telegraph

There is a light that’s about to go out His recent records seem to relish the suspicious walls he’s built around himself

The most annoying thing about Morrissey isn’t his ugly political views ... it’s that his music is in terminal decline. By Nick Hasted

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Listening to Morrissey is like a drawn-out divorce. You keep seeing hopeful flickers of the old love, but you know something’s broken for good. The traditiona­l rites were replayed last week, as devoted fans rushed to touch the one star who still casts a spell like Ziggy Stardust’s rock ‘n’ roll suicide.

More recent Morrissey rituals have gone with it as he’s made his way across the UK and Ireland, loathing Nicola Sturgeon and loving Brexit. The ‘mainstream media’ — decried on his new song My Love I’d Do Anything for You — had their headlines written for them and a few more old fans quietly left the room.

The Steven Patrick Morrissey who, in his youth, shared a TV studio with Bernard Manning in visceral, mutual horror, now calls Nigel Farage a ‘liberal educator’. But his ugly views aren’t really the problem. It’s his calcified music that’s irredeemab­le.

His latest album, Low in High School, has bright moments, but holds little hope that we’ll see his best once more.

When bigmouth strikes again these days, it can admittedly be hard to stomach.

His vegetarian­ism encourages misanthrop­y more than empathy, as when he dubbed the Chinese a ‘sub-species’ for their treatment of animals in 2010.

Telling Der Spiegel in 2017 that refugees had made Germany ‘the rape capital of Europe’ and that sexual harassment should be kept ‘in perspectiv­e’, meanwhile, seems to show that the troubling attitudes that NME first accused him of in 1992 have developed unchecked.

The expansive, attractive sense of Englishnes­s that orbited The Smiths, with icons from Charles Hawtrey to Keats, soured early anyway. In the same 1992 Q interview in which Morrissey declared that he didn’t think “that white and black people will ever really get on and like each other”, he said: “I don’t want to be European. I want England to remain an island.”

There remains an upside to his outspokenn­ess. The ‘lock-jawed pop stars’ afraid to ‘smear their lovely career’, who he condemned in The World is Full of Crashing Bores, are with us more than ever.

The front ranks of what’s left of British alternativ­e rock, too, mostly come from comfortabl­e background­s very unlike Morrissey, or Johnny Marr’s, and rarely seem troubled by iniquity.

The vast good done by ‘politicall­y correct’ speech and #MeToo, meanwhile, has also led to obsessive policing of acceptable discourse, narand-white rowed further by social media firestorms.

The internet doesn’t intrude on Morrissey and, as he sang on last year’s single Spent the Day in Bed, his dreams at least remain ‘legal’ and his thoughts his own.

Low In High School, therefore, bulges with messy opinions on the Arab Spring (as he sensitivel­y, sensually bonds with a protester on In Your Lap) and Israel.

His blanket condemnati­on of soldiers and their work in I Bury the Living and I Wish You Lonely, with the latter seeming to gloat at their deaths, is cruel. It’s no worse, though, than our patriotic acceptance of the civilian deaths caused by our military.

The Morrissey whose most controvers­ial 1990s’ song, The National Front Disco, was sung in sorrow for a boy clinging, lost, to racism, is still worth listening to.

Morrissey can still be glimpsed at his best, then, right next to him at his worst. Listen back to The Smiths, though, and his decline is defined.

On The Queen is Dead alone, the 1986 album I left my last day of school clutching, Never Had No One Ever, There Is A Light That Never Goes Out and I Know It’s Over showed their singer sunk fathoms-deep in suffocated desire, straitjack­eted in his own body and gloriously breaking free in his mind.

Intertwine­d with the liberating glow of Johnny Marr’s music, the great Smiths songs reached out to the listener in a mutual ache for love.

Something equally profound might have followed, as Leonard Cohen, say, spent a lifetime working towards happiness. Solo Morrissey, instead, shrank into lovelessne­ss.

His Autobiogra­phy (2013) charts the landmarks in this personal and artistic tragedy. It begins with a richly recalled evocation of his Manchester childhood, where he walked on “flagstones that have cracked under the duress like the people who tread them”.

It’s a sooty, crepuscula­r, condemned world, left behind by everything outside it, in which communitie­s and families are ripped asunder by alien authoritie­s. His sense of injustice at all those in power starts here.

The kitchen-sink cinema icons on The Smiths’ record sleeves immortalis­ed a blackfans environmen­t that he remembers living in. Morrissey writes about his relatives with devoted love. Though he could be an outsider in it, this working-class community was home.

His 2006 song On The Streets I Ran goes back to it, but it’s gone. Home Is A Question Mark (2017) wonders where. Life in the eternal sunshine of the anti-Manchester, Los Angeles, briefly buoys him. But Autobiogra­phy ends in the only other place he’s ever belonged — the stage.

He lists audiences in precise numbers, as if trying to keep his seat in parliament, and sociologic­ally, as if to prove his relevance. Their fashion sense, tribalism and eruptions of violent emotion fuel him.

Though he rails against religion at every opportunit­y, devotion pumps his blood. His new song Jacky’s Only Happy When She’s Up On The Stage, couldn’t be more autobiogra­phical. His are his community. So long as they believe in him, the rest can go to hell.

The boy who admired his parents and befriended Johnny Marr as an equal never grew up any further. The spontaneou­s afternoon that Marr’s autobiogra­phy records the pair spending in a Manchester pub in September 2008 is even more poignant than The Smiths reunion they flirted with then. Who else can Morrissey talk naturally with now?

Instead, Autobiogra­phy and his recent records seem to relish the suspicious walls he’s built around himself. From record companies to friends, he expects — almost cultivates — betrayal.

The shifting members of his band are among the few to provide companions­hip. The mostly decreasing circles of his music are the product of a world of one.

In song after song, in Autobiogra­phy and his perverse novel, List of the Lost (2015), Morrissey sees humanity as a fearful, painful, mostly loathsome thing.

His loneliness once made him beautiful. Now, as he pulls up the drawbridge on refugees and the rest of us, it leaves less of him every day.

❝ The great Smiths songs reached out to the listener in a mutual ache for love

 ??  ?? Steven take a bow:
Morrissey seems most at home when he’s up on stage
in front of his still devoted fans
Steven take a bow: Morrissey seems most at home when he’s up on stage in front of his still devoted fans
 ??  ?? Charming men: Morrissey (left) in his glory days with The Smiths
Charming men: Morrissey (left) in his glory days with The Smiths

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