It's difficult not to repeat yourself with these as, yet again, it's Morrissey's vocal melodies that dominate the song. The music is fairly forgettable, and it's Morrissey who dominates.
The piano does lift things a touch and was a neat little addition.
I can understand why some reviewers compared this with Roy Orbison, both in terms of tone and the vocal style, and it's a solid album track.
The closing lyrics also remind me of a quote attributed to one of Morrissey's associates. When asked whether the press criticisms and accusations hurt Morrissey the associate replied, "Only when it's true."
In the poll on the Hoffman board it ranked 145th from 264 solo songs.
A fine song, despite the many setbacks that colour the Ringleader era. Seems like the ascending riff is modelling itself after “Ziggy Stardust”, but it sadly swamps the more intriguing instrumentation that would set this song apart even more. The production, as I’ve commented before, doesn’t help the material one bit either. Still, Morrissey’s vocal melody is very good (definitely a Roy Orbison influence) and more themes of alienation tie this song clearly into the album’s vague thematic narrative.
7/10
The live version sounds fantastic to me. His vocals seem so passionate. I seem to be a stuck record but I'm enjoying most of the songs I'm listening to. I don't know whether it's because I'm listening through headphones at high volume, or whether it's because I'm listening to tracks out of sync, or that I'm listening more intently because I know others are doing the same thing.
A ROTT highlight only bettered by Pigsty, INBAHN has been a huge favorite of mine since the day it was released. It's Morrissey doing classic Morrissey - i.e. a deeply melancholic torch song about the pain of being a loveless outsider surrounded by people who neither want nor can understand - and he does it with fire and sincerity. The music might not be much to write home about, but it does the job and all in all it's a gorgeous song.
Oh, and that live version? Absolutely magnificent.
Another great track from Ringleader ( 7/10 ) . From an album that seems rather underappreciated after all these years. I like the most the live version from Berlin 2006 with a Polish scarf around Moz's neck. It was almost as symbolic as the conquer of the Brandenburg Gate by the Soviets in 1945 . Viva Moz ! YOU are real hero for many .
I have a lot of time for this one. It's not a stand-out Morrissey track but very much stronger than average - the vocals in the chorus are flat-out gorgeous, and that line "I am a ghost / And as far as I know I haven't even died" is a yet another brilliant way of writing about depression and loneliness.
I have a lot of time for this one. It's not a stand-out Morrissey track but very much stronger than average - the vocals in the chorus are flat-out gorgeous, and that line "I am a ghost / And as far as I know I haven't even died" is a yet another brilliant way of writing about depression and loneliness.
I appreciate those 15 seconds of lounge piano towards the end, but I generally find this track embarrassing and exhausting to listen to. Like everything else on this record, the flatter-than-flat production and mastering doesn't help. This whole album would benefit from a do-over.
I've noticed that on a lot of Morrissey Solo songs you tend to get a few bars of avante garde music somewhere in the song. Never happened with the Smiths. It happens here with the piano.
Maybe the 2 pieces of art I gave him will bring him good karma. He was so careful taking off my hands, the big version of chocolate Lab, so careful not to touch the painted surface of the plank of wood it's painted on.
Elvis Costello could never ever dream of sounding this good,like Morrissey does on the live recording. Not capable. It's not within his capabilities and it never has been.
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