#the smiths

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lyricxl-dreams: There’s a Light That Never Goes Out // The Smithslyricxl-dreams: There’s a Light That Never Goes Out // The Smithslyricxl-dreams: There’s a Light That Never Goes Out // The Smithslyricxl-dreams: There’s a Light That Never Goes Out // The Smiths

lyricxl-dreams:

There’s a Light That Never Goes Out // The Smiths


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I gave you your Christmas present early,

I don’t know why

but my friend convinced me to.


she said it would give you time 

to think of something really great to give me 

because you don’t even give me your time.


as if a gift will make up for all those nights I spent up crying,

I don’t think a Smiths record will make you see that…

Book #103 of 2018:A Light That Never Goes Out: The Enduring Saga of the Smiths by Tony FletcherI am

Book #103 of 2018:

A Light That Never Goes Out: The Enduring Saga of the Smiths by Tony Fletcher

I am probably not the ideal reader or reviewer for a book about The Smiths, a band with which I have little familiarity and no emotional attachment. (As a partial defense, they had already split up before I was even born.) But it seems to me as though author Tony Fletcher has gone too far in the opposite direction, fawning over the group’s supposed genius and delving deeply into the minutiae of its members’ lives. So although the writer provides an exhaustive amount of information about the studio editing process for the band’s greatest hits — complete with unexplained technical musicology phrases like “spaghetti rockabilly skiffle riff” — he’s ultimately unable to present a coherent or compelling narrative about their rise to the top of the charts.

It shouldn’t be surprising that a 700-page history of a musical act won’t appeal much to non-fans, but I was still expecting a more neutral explanation for why this particular group succeeded when and how they did. Or even, given the book’s title, a more lengthy discussion of their legacy and influence on the acts that followed and the fans who still love them. Instead, it’s mostly a lot of tedium about record deals and touring schedules, occasionally leavened by discussions of the clashing personalities behind the music.

Fletcher is best when exploring those personalities to track the causes behind the band’s eventual dissolution, yet this account comes too little and too late in the overall text to make up for the hundreds of stale pages beforehand. For a reader who hasn’t come at the book already enthused about its subject, I have to admit getting very little out of the experience.

★★☆☆☆


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theworldisfullofcrashingbores:Girlfriend in a coma, I know I know its serious 

theworldisfullofcrashingbores:

Girlfriend in a coma, I know I know its serious 


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fluffyplant:✖ alone but never lonely ✖nightbus - lucy rose / you - keaton henson / amsterdam - dfluffyplant:✖ alone but never lonely ✖nightbus - lucy rose / you - keaton henson / amsterdam - d

fluffyplant:

✖ alone but never lonely ✖

nightbus - lucy rose / you - keaton henson / amsterdam - daughter / lady - regina spektor / summer - hayden calnin / asleep - the smiths / in blooms - ross henry / holocence - bon iver / comrade - volcano choir / something about satellites - john archinal / on peak hill - stars / bang bang ft. sky ferreira - 2 cellos / missing - the xx / flaws [acoustic] - bastille / the scientist - coldplay

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the smiths

frankbowers:

go here and let me know what your short term top artists from spotify (within the last 4 weeks) are in the tags!

There Is A Light That Never Goes Out by The Smiths

liketheghost:

wsswatson:

my absolute favourite thing about the smiths is that a couple of years ago david cameron said that he loves them and johnny marr and morrissey responded by banning him from doing so, the prime minister of the united kingdom is literally banned from liking a band that broke up in 1987

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