I read this and I look for the man I used to love. The article ends and I wonder what happened to that kind and gentle man. This man is a narcissistic bore.
I have been a fan for 30 years. I will not buy this new album. I will not go to see any new concerts. I find this man now to be out of touch and, to put it kindly, misinformed. I'm done. Adiós, pinche Morrissey, me rompiste el puto corazón.
I have the 2CD edition, not the 3 CD deluxe edition. I am curious about the additional covers. The cover for Live in Boston with Kerouac listening to the radio has appeared, but I haven't seen a clear copy of the final product. I also haven't seen the final image for Additional Recordings. Does...
First, I wrote "mostly white", which means it wasn't all white. Evidently, many of us who enjoyed his music were not white. Second, what's so newsworthy about Mexican Morrissey fans? Why is there article after article trying to understand it? I would venture to say (and yes, it's my opinion)...
It just feels moronic on Morrissey's part. Wearing black could signal a certain type of belonging to certain post-punk sensibilities in the eighties. It was done by a mostly white, middle class audience in the US who wanted an alternative to suburban blandness of Top 40 radio in Reagan's...
You've done an amazing job. It was one of the first sites I found and it is still the go-to place for Moz news. Thanks for all your work all these years, David!
This story was published earlier this month on Towleroad, a well-known gay news site.
I thought it would have made it to the front page by now.
This Charming Morrissey – Gay Iconography - Towleroad
by Bobby Hankinson
July 4, 2016 | 1:53pm
Excerpt:
There are certain commonalities shared...
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