The Smiths were an English rock band
active from 1982 to 1987. The group was based on the songwriting
partnership of Morrissey and Johnny
Marr, and were signed to the independent record label Rough
Trade Records. Considered by some critics to be the most important alternative
rock band to emerge from the British indie
scene of the 1980s,
the Smiths have had a major influence on subsequent alternative music,
including the Britpop
movement and bands such as The Stone Roses, Gene,
Radiohead,
Blur,
Suede,
Oasis,
The
Libertines, The Verve and Doves.
At the time, the group was notable in particular for two things:
Morrissey's unusual, witty, ambiguous, and sometimes controversial
lyrics, and Marr's complex, dense music, which helped return
guitar-based music to popularity after it had fallen somewhat out of
favour in the UK charts.
The group released a total of four studio albums and several
compilations in fewer than five years, as well as numerous singles.
Although not commercially successful outside the UK while they
were still together, and never releasing a single that charted higher
than number 10 within their home country, The Smiths won a growing
following both at home and overseas in the closing years of the
twentieth century, and they remain cult and commercial favourites to
this day.
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Contents
- 1 History
- 1.1 Early
history
- 1.2 The
Smiths
- 1.3 Meat
Is Murder
- 1.4 The
Queen Is Dead
- 1.5 Strangeways,
Here We Come
- 1.6 Post-Smiths
careers
- 1.7 Unfinished
business
- 1.8 The
future of The Smiths
- 2 Discography
- 2.1 Studio
albums
- 2.2 Compilations
and live albums
- 2.3 UK
singles (with chart positions)
- 3 Samples
- 4 Notes
- 5 References
- 6 External
links
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History
Early history
Autographed Promotional Poster of The Smiths' 1st album.
The group was formed in early 1982 by two Manchester
residents. Morrissey (Steven Patrick
Morrissey, though he does not use his forenames) was an unemployed
writer who was a big fan of the New York Dolls and briefly fronted punk rock
band The Nosebleeds. Johnny
Marr (originally John Maher, he changed his name to avoid
confusion with the Buzzcocks drummer) was already a
very skillful guitarist with a talent for songwriting, and he provided
the music for Morrissey's lyrics throughout the group's career. Mike
Joyce was recruited as drummer after a short audition. He had
previously played with the punk bands The Hoax and Victim. Dale
Hibbert initially played bass, and provided demo
recording facilities at the studio where he worked as a sound engineer.
However, after two gigs, Marr's friend Andy
Rourke replaced Hibbert. Marr and Rourke had previously
worked together in The Paris Valentinos along with
Kevin
Kennedy, who later became a household name in Britain
as Curly
Watts in the television show Coronation
Street.
The precise origin of the band's name is unknown, although
they stated that it was a reaction against names they considered fancy
and pompous such as Orchestral
Manoeuvres in the Dark. Another theory regarding the origin of the
band's name suggests that it was an ironic joke to give the band a
quintessentially English name when all of the band members were of
Irish descent. Somewhat contrarily, in a 1984 interview Morrissey
stated, "I decided [to call ourselves "The Smiths"] because it was the
most ordinary name, and I think it's time that the ordinary folk of the
world showed their faces."
The band also considered the names "Smiths Family" and "Smithdom"
before settling on "The Smiths".
The Smiths performing "Shoplifters of the
World Unite" on Top of the Pops in 1987.
Signing to indie label Rough
Trade Records, they released their first single, "Hand
in Glove," on 13
May 1983.
That record was championed by DJ John Peel, as were all of their later
singles, yet it failed to chart. The follow-ups "This
Charming Man" and "What Difference Does
It Make?" fared better, however. Aided by much praise from the music
press and a series of studio sessions for Peel and David
Jensen at BBC Radio 1, The Smiths began to acquire
a dedicated fan base—which, particularly in the case of Morrissey
himself, continues to be something of a cult following. Morrissey's
lyrics, while superficially depressing, were often full of mordant
humour (The Smiths were "one of the few bands capable of making me
laugh out loud," said Peel) and his lovelorn tales of alienation found
an audience amongst a disaffected section of youth culture, bored by
the ubiquitous synthesizer bands that dominated the charts. Morrissey
wrote about ordinary things, social statements of life, and everything
from despair, rejection, and death, to vegetarianism and the English
music scene.
The group also had a very distinctive visual style. Album and
single covers featured colourful images of film and pop stars, usually
in duotone,
designed by Morrissey and Rough Trade art coordinator Jo Slee. Single covers rarely featured any
text other than the band name, and the band themselves did not appear
on the outer cover of any UK release. (Morrissey did, however, appear
on an alternative cover for "What Difference Does It Make?", mimicking
the pose of the original subject Terence Stamp, after the latter
objected to his image being used.) The "cover stars" were an indication
of Morrissey's personal interests — obscure or cult film stars (Stamp, Jean
Marais, Joe Dallesandro, James
Dean), figures from 1960s
British culture (Viv Nicholson, Pat
Phoenix, Yootha Joyce, Shelagh
Delaney), or pictures of unknown models taken from old film or magazine
photos. In contrast to the 1980s obsession with exotic fashion,
typified by new romantic artists such as Spandau
Ballet and Duran Duran, and highlighted
in magazines such as The
Face and i-D, the group dressed
mainly in ordinary clothes — jeans and plain shirts — which reflected
the "back to basics" style of the music. Morrissey occasionally
affected props such as a (fake) hearing aid (supporting a female fan
who was ashamed of using one; see Morrissey & Marr:
The Severed Alliance by Johnny Rogan for more detail),
thick-rimmed NHS-style eyeglasses and
most famously bunches of gladioli (often stuffed casually into the
back of his trousers, paying homage to one of his favourite writers, Oscar
Wilde).
The Smiths
The sleeve of The Smiths' debut album,
featuring Joe Dallesandro in Paul
Morrissey's 1968 film Flesh.
By February 1984, The Smiths fanbase was sufficiently large to
launch the band's long-awaited self-titled
debut album to number two in the UK chart. Its mood was unremittingly
bleak, exemplified by such track titles as "Still Ill" and "Suffer Little Children," the
latter referring to the Moors Murders that had stunned not
just Manchester
but the whole of Britain in the 1960s.
Also evident were Morrissey's studied references to literature
and popular culture icons. His frequent acknowledgment of his many
idols (Alain
Delon, James
Dean, and Oscar
Wilde particularly) in interviews, along with more lyrical subtle
reference (the song title "Pretty Girls Make Graves," for example, is
taken from Jack Kerouac) encouraged a literary
bent amongst fans, who already had a tendency towards bookishness. Both
"Reel Around the Fountain"
and "The Hand That
Rocks the Cradle" met with controversy, supposedly being suggestive of paedophilia.
In addition, "Suffer Little Children"
caused an uproar after the grandfather of one of the murdered children
heard it on a pub jukebox. In spite of the uproar, the song is
in fact entirely sympathetic to the children's plight and led to
Morrissey establishing a friendship with Ann West, the mother of victim
Lesley Ann Downey, who is mentioned by name in the song.
Shortly after the release of the album, Morrissey idol Sandie
Shaw recorded "Hand in Glove" backed by Marr, Rourke, and Joyce. The
hit single resulted in the band performing barefoot (a Sandie Shaw
trademark) on Top of the Pops.
1984 also saw the release of a couple of singles which were
not taken from the album: "Heaven Knows I'm
Miserable Now" (the band's first top ten hit; the title parodies Sandie
Shaw's '60s hit "Heaven Knows I'm Missing Him Now"), and "William, It
Was Really Nothing" (popularly believed to have been written by
Morrissey about his friend Billy Mackenzie, lead singer of The
Associates, and which featured one of The Smiths' most well-known
songs, "How Soon Is Now?," as a B-side). The year
ended with the compilation album Hatful
of Hollow. This album collected singles,
B-sides and the versions of songs which had been recorded throughout
the previous year for the Peel and Jensen shows. The radio session
versions were felt by many (including the band) to be superior to those
released on singles and the debut album.
Meat Is Murder
The sleeve of The Smiths' 1985 album, Meat Is Murder,
featuring a still from Emile de Antonio's 1969 film In the Year of the Pig
Early in 1985 the band released their second album, Meat
Is Murder. This album was more strident and
political than its predecessor, including the vegetarian proselytizing
of the title track (Morrissey forbade the rest of the group from being
photographed eating meat), the light-hearted republicanism of "Nowhere
Fast," and the anti-corporal punishment "The
Headmaster Ritual" and "Barbarism Begins at Home." Musically, also, the
band had grown more adventurous, with Marr adding rockabilly riffs to "Rusholme
Ruffians" and Rourke playing a funk bass solo on "Barbarism Begins at
Home." The album was preceded by the re-release of the B-side "How Soon
is Now?" as a single, and although that song was not on the original LP, it
has been added to subsequent releases. Meat Is Murder
was the band's only album (barring compilations) to reach number one in
the UK charts.
As well as the album being more political than its
predecessor, Morrissey brought a political stance to many of his
interviews, courting further controversy. Among his targets were the Thatcher
administration, the Monarchy, and Band
Aid. Morrissey famously quipped of the last, "One can have great
concern for the people of Ethiopia, but it's another thing to inflict
daily torture on the people of England."
The subsequent single-only release "Shakespeare's Sister" was
not a great success in chart terms, nor was the only single taken from
the album, "That Joke Isn't Funny Anymore." Many considered this an odd
choice for a single, with its backwards guitar and lack of any
consistent hook.
The charts reflected this, with it barely cracking the top 50.
September 1985's "The Boy With The Thorn in His Side," however, was an
indication of bigger things to come.
The Queen Is Dead
The sleeve of The Smiths' 1986 album, The Queen Is Dead,
featuring Alain
Delon from the 1965 film L'insoumis.
During 1985 the band completed exhausting tours of the UK and
the US while recording the next studio record, The
Queen Is Dead. The album was released in June
1986, shortly after the single "Bigmouth Strikes Again." A typical
mixture of the mordantly bleak (e.g. "Never Had No One Ever," which
seemed to play up to stereotypes of the band), the dry humour of (e.g.
"Frankly, Mr. Shankly," allegedly a message to Rough Trade boss Geoff
Travis disguised as a letter of resignation from a worker to his
superior) and a number of songs that synthesised both of these sides
(such as "There Is a
Light That Never Goes Out" and "Cemetry Gates"), the record reached
number two in the UK chart, and is now generally thought of as their
best work. In 1989 SPIN magazine rated
The Queen Is Dead as number one of "The Greatest
Albums Ever Made." Subsequent "Greatest Albums" lists by numerous music
publications have placed the album at the top or within the top ten,
including the NME
and Melody Maker.
In June 2006, the NME dedicated an entire issue to
the twentieth anniversary of the record's release.
However, all was not well within the group. A legal dispute
with Rough Trade had delayed the album by almost seven months (it had
been completed in November 1985), and Marr was beginning to feel the
stress of the band's exhausting schedule. He later told NME,
"'Worse for wear' wasn't the half of it; I was extremely ill. By the
time the tour actually finished it was all getting a little bit...
dangerous. I was just drinking more than I could handle."
Meanwhile, Rourke was fired from the band in early 1986 due to ongoing
problems with heroin.
He received notice of his dismissal via a Post-it
note stuck to his car windscreen. It read, "Andy - you have left The
Smiths. Goodbye and good luck, Morrissey."
Rourke was temporarily replaced on bass by Craig
Gannon, but was reinstated after only a fortnight. Gannon was
retained and switched to rhythm guitar. This five-piece recorded the
singles "Panic"
and "Ask"
(with Kirsty MacColl on backing
vocals), and toured the United Kingdom; after the tour ended
in October 1986, Gannon was fired.
Strangeways, Here We
Come
1987 started off well for the band. The single "Shoplifters of the
World Unite" (one of Morrissey's favourite Smiths songs) was released
early in the year to chart success—as well as mild controversy and
concern from parents over whether the song encouraged children to
thieve. This was followed by a second compilation, The World Won't Listen
(the title was Morrissey's comment on his frustration with the band's
lack of mainstream recognition, although ironically the album reached
number two in the charts), and the single "Sheila Take a Bow," the
band's second (and last during the band's lifetime) UK top 10 hit.
Another compilation, Louder Than Bombs,
was intended for the overseas market and covered much the same material
as The World Won't Listen, with the addition of
"Sheila Take a Bow" and material from Hatful of Hollow,
as that compilation was yet to be released in the States.
Despite their continued success, personal differences within the band —
including the increasingly strained relationship between Morrissey and
Marr — saw them on the verge of splitting. In August 1987, it was announced
that Marr had left the group. Auditions to find a replacement for Marr
— with Roddy Frame supposedly being
lined up to join the band at one point — proved fruitless, and by the
time Strangeways, Here We Come
(named after Strangeways Prison, Manchester)
was released in September, the band had ceased to exist. The breakdown
in the relationship has been primarily attributed to Morrissey becoming
annoyed with Marr's work with other artists, and Marr growing
frustrated by Morrissey's musical inflexibility. Marr in particular
hated Morrissey's obsession with covering 1960s pop artists such as Twinkle
and Cilla
Black. Referring to the songs recorded in the band's last session
together (B-sides for the "Girlfriend in a Coma" single, which preceded
the album's release), Marr said, "I wrote 'I
Keep Mine Hidden,' but 'Work Is a Four Letter Word' I hated. That was
the last straw, really. I didn't form a group to perform Cilla Black
songs."
Strangeways peaked at number two in the UK
but was only a minor US hit. The track "Paint a Vulgar Picture" proved
somewhat prophetic in foretelling how the group's songs would be
"reissued and repackaged" in seemingly innumerable compilations. The
infamous 30-second video for "Girlfriend in a Coma"
garnered video rotation on MTV in America. The album received a
lukewarm reception from critics, but all four members name it as their
favourite Smiths album. A couple of further singles from the album were
released with earlier live, session, and demo tracks as B-sides, and
the following year the live album Rank
(recorded in 1986 while Gannon was in the band) repeated the UK chart
success of previous albums.
Post-Smiths careers
Following the group's demise, Morrissey immediately began work
on a solo effort, collaborating with Strangeways...
producer Stephen Street and fellow Mancunian Vini
Reilly, guitarist for The Durutti Column. The
resulting album, Viva Hate (a
reference to the end of the Smiths), was released six months later,
reaching number one in the UK charts. Morrissey continues to perform
and record as a solo artist.
Johnny Marr returned to the music scene in 1989 with New
Order's Bernard Sumner and Pet
Shop Boy Neil Tennant in the supergroup
Electronic. Electronic
released three albums over the next decade. Marr was also a member of The The,
recording two albums with the group between 1989 and 1993. Marr has
also worked as a session musician and writing collaborator for artists
including The Pretenders, Pet Shop Boys, Billy
Bragg, Black Grape, and Beck. In 2000 he
started another band, Johnny Marr and the Healers, with a moderate
degree of success, and would later work as a guest musician on the Oasis
album Heathen Chemistry.
He performed two Smiths songs and music by others with a supergroup,
consisting of members from Pearl Jam, Radiohead,
Split
Enz and others, assembled by Neil Finn of Crowded
House in 2001. In addition to his work as a recording artist, Marr has
worked as a record producer. In 2006 Marr began work with Modest
Mouse's Isaac Brock on songs that
would eventually feature on the band's 2007 release, We Were Dead
Before the Ship Even Sank. The band
subsequently announced that Marr was a fully-fledged member and the
reformed line-up toured extensively throughout 2006-07. Marr has also
been recording music with Liam Gallagher of Oasis.
Andy Rourke and Mike Joyce have continued working together,
including doing session work for Morrissey (1988–1989) and Sinéad
O'Connor, as well as working apart. Rourke has recorded and toured with
Proud
Mary and is currently forming a supergroup
with fellow bassists Peter Hook (of New
Order and Joy Division) and Mani
(of The Stone Roses and Primal
Scream), called Freebass. He has recently started a radio
career, hosting a show on Saturday evenings on XFM Manchester.
Unfinished business
The Smiths were reunited in court in 1996 to settle a
royalties claim by Joyce against Morrissey and Marr, who had claimed
the lion's share of the Smiths recording and performance royalties and
allowed only ten percent each to Joyce and Rourke (composition
royalties were not an issue, as Rourke and Joyce had never been
credited as composers for the band). Morrissey and Marr claimed that
the other two members of the band had always agreed to that split of
the royalties, but the court found in favour of Joyce, and ordered that
he be paid over £1m in back pay and receive twenty-five percent
henceforth. As Smiths royalties had been frozen for two years, being
under financial pressure Rourke settled for a smaller lump sum to pay
off debts, and continued to receive ten percent. Morrissey was
described by the judge as "devious, truculent and unreliable."
The singer later said, "The court case was a potted history of the life
of The Smiths. Mike, talking constantly and saying nothing. Andy,
unable to remember his own name. Johnny, trying to please everyone and
consequently pleasing no one. And Morrissey under the scorching
spotlight in the dock, being drilled. 'How dare you be successful?'
'How dare you move on?' To me, The Smiths were a beautiful thing and
Johnny left it, and Mike has destroyed it."
Morrissey's 1997 solo album Maladjusted
included a song titled "Sorrow Will Come in the End" which commented on
the case, and which was omitted from the UK version of the album due to
fear of libel
action. Morrissey (but not Marr) appealed against the verdict, but was
not successful .
Things heated up once more in late November 2005. While
appearing on radio station BBC 6 Music, Mike Joyce claimed to be having
financial problems, and said that he had resorted to selling rare band
recordings on eBay. As a teaser, a few minutes of an unfinished
instrumental track known as "The Click Track" was premiered on the
show. Morrissey hit back at Joyce with a public statement shortly
after, on the website www.true-to-you.net. Relations
between Joyce and Rourke cooled significantly as a result of
Morrissey's statement which revealed that Joyce had misled the courts
by not declaring that, amongst others, Rourke was entitled to assets
seized by Joyce's lawyers from Morrissey. Rourke, it stated, had been
deprived of royalty payments from Morrissey as they had already been
covertly seized by Joyce who was obligated to declare that others
(Rourke, Lillywhite, and Street) had an interest in funds he wished to
seize.
The future of The Smiths
As a result of the court case, a Smiths reunion seemed like it
would almost certainly never happen, despite the apparent thawing of
relations between Marr and Morrissey in recent years. Both Johnny Marr
and Morrissey have repeatedly said in interviews that there is no way a
reformation will ever take place. In 2005, VH1 attempted to get the band back together for
a reunion on its Bands Reunited show. The show
abandoned its attempt after its host Aamer
Haleem was unsuccessful in his attempt to corner Morrissey before a
show.
In December 2005 it was announced that Johnny Marr and The
Healers would play at Manchester v Cancer, a benefit
show for cancer research being organised by Andy Rourke and his
production company, Great Northern Productions.
Rumours suggested that a Smiths reunion would occur at this concert,
but were dispelled by Johnny Marr on his website.
What did eventuate was Rourke joining Marr onstage for the first time
since The Smiths broke up, performing "How Soon Is Now?".
Morrissey refuses to reunite with his old band members, going
as far as to say that he would “rather eat [his] own testicles than
re-form The Smiths, and that’s saying something for a vegetarian.”
In March 2006 Morrissey revealed that the Smiths were offered five
million dollars to reunite for a performance at the Coachella
Valley Music and Arts Festival, which he turned down, saying, "No,
because money doesn't come into it." He further explained, "It was a
fantastic journey. And then it ended. I didn't feel we should have
ended. I wanted to continue. [Marr] wanted to end it. And that was
that."
When asked why he would not reform with The Smiths, Morrissey responded
“I feel as if I’ve worked very hard since the demise of the Smiths and
the others haven’t, so why hand them attention that they haven’t
earned? We are not friends, we don’t see each other. Why on earth would
we be on a stage together?”
Discography
Studio albums
- The Smiths UK #2, US #150 (1984)
- Meat Is Murder UK #1, US #110 (1985)
- The Queen Is Dead UK #2, US #70
(1986)
- Strangeways, Here We Come
UK #2, US #55 (1987)
Compilations and live albums
- Hatful of Hollow UK #7, US # n/a
(1984)
- The World Won't Listen UK #2,
not released in US (1987)
- Louder Than Bombs US #62,
UK(Import) #38 (1987)
- Rank live album UK #2, US #77 (1988)
UK singles (with chart positions)
- "Hand in Glove", (1983 #124)
- "This Charming Man", (1983 #25)
- "What Difference Does
It Make?", (1984 #12)
- "Heaven Knows I'm
Miserable Now", (1984 #10)
- "William, It Was
Really Nothing", (1984 #17)
- "How Soon Is Now?", (1985 #24)
- "Shakespeare's
Sister", (1985 #26)
- "That Joke Isn't Funny
Anymore", (1985 #49)
- "The Boy
with the Thorn in His Side", (1985 #23)
- "Bigmouth Strikes Again",
(1986 #26)
- "Panic", (1986 #11)
- "Ask",
(1986 #14)
- "Shoplifters of the
World Unite", (1987 #12)
- "Sheila Take a Bow", (1987 #10)
- "Girlfriend in a Coma",
(1987 #13)
- "I Started
Something I Couldn't Finish", (1987 #23)
- "Last
Night I Dreamt That Somebody Loved Me", (1987 #30)
- "There Is a
Light That Never Goes Out", (1992 #25)
Re-issues
- "This Charming Man" (1992 re-issue [1983] #8)
- "How Soon Is Now?" (1992 re-issue [1984] #16)
- "Ask" (1995 re-issue [1986] #62)
See also: The Smiths – Cover artwork
Samples