November Spawned A Monster (single)

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Cover art
MORRISSEY Single
Name November Spawned A Monster
Release 16 April 1990
Total Length 5:25
Recorded Circa late 1989/early 1990
Writer/composer Morrissey / Clive Langer
Producer Clive Langer
Alan Winstanley
Art work Photo: Anton Corbijn
Vinyl Etching No matrix message
November The Second:
"Terrace Stomp"
Publisher HMV Records (UK)
Sire Records (US)
Format(s) 7" Vinyl, 12" Vinyl, CD
Chart position UK #12
Single chronology
Ouija Board, Ouija Board
November Spawned A Monster
Piccadilly Palare

Information

The vinyl etching "Terrace Stomp" is a known Morrissey nom de plume.

Track list

7" Vinyl

[HMV POP1623]

  1. November Spawned A Monster – 5:25 (Morrissey/Langer)
  2. He Knows I'd Love To See Him – 3:08 (Morrissey/Armstrong)

12" Vinyl

UK - [HMV 12POP1623]
US - [Sire/Reprise 9 21529-0]

CD

UK - [HMV CDPOP1623]
US - [Sire/Reprise 9 21529-2]

Lyrics

Sleep on and dream of Love
Because it's the closest you will
Get to love

Poor twisted child
So ugly, so ugly
Poor twisted child
Oh hug me, oh hug me

One November
Spawned a monster
In the shape of this child
Who later cried:
"But Jesus made me, so
Jesus save me from
Pity, sympathy
And people discussing me"
A frame of useless limbs
What can make GOOD
All the BAD that's been done?

And if the lights were out
Could you even bear
To kiss her full on the mouth
(Or anywhere?)

Poor twisted child
So ugly, so ugly
Poor twisted child
Oh hug me, oh hug me

One November
Spawned a monster
In the shape of this child
Who must remain
A hostage to kindness
And the wheels underneath her
A hostage to kindness
And the wheels underneath her
A symbol of where mad, mad lovers
Must PAUSE and draw the line

So sleep and dream of love
Because it's the closest
You will get to love

That November
Is a time
Which I must
Put OUT of my mind
Oh one fine day
LET IT BE SOON
She won't be rich or beautiful
But she'll be walking your streets
In the clothes that she went out
And chose for herself

Sleeve Artwork

Music Video

Credits

November The Second

"November The Second" was officially released as a b-side on the Everyday Is Like Sunday re-issue on Sep. 26, 2010. It appeared originally as a rare unreleased 12" white label track. According to the post at eil.com:

MORRISSEY November The Second (Well if any disc deserves the title of 'Rarest Record Ever' then this unbelievable item has to be in the running. This is the UNRELEASED 12" white label track that was originally scheduled to promote the flagging sales Of The November Spawned album, a desperate and badly misinformed dance remix that Morrissey hated beyond belief and ordered all the masters and discs to be destroyed. This one survived and we can confirm it is a 100% genuine item that 'Ranks' as the ultimate for Smiths & Mozzer fans.

Following the end Of Morrissey's contract with EMI, they released the 'Suedehead: The Best of Morrissey' compilation which was originally scheduled to have a second disc of unreleased rarities (including November The Second') but due to a number of factors this was shelved and only the 19 track single disc was released.

There are a number of theories as to the reason, ranging from insufficient pressing plant capacity due to Elton John's Diana commemorative CD to what is reasonably accepted as to the real reason, that Morrissey hated the tracks and ordered that these not be released. EMI complied and the track then disappeared into obscurity - that is until now!!

Often rumoured not to exist, until extensive research clearly showed that the history of the track is correct, this is the one of a handful of copies in the world, which has long since been in the hands of an avid collector.

The white label has machine stamped matrix and pencil notations on the white bag. An unbelievable delight for any Smiths' collector - believe me I was tempted to keep it myself!!

Sell your granny, wife or yourself to have a chance of owning this item.

In September 1997, after their contract was up, EMI released Suedehead: The Best of Morrissey, a 19-track, single-disc overview originally outfitted with a second CD EP of unreleased rarities "November the Second," a long-rumored dance mix of "November Spawned a Monster" Morrissey detested and had deleted, was supposed to be included. As it turns out Morrissey does bear more grudges than high-court judges, and had the two-disc set blocked.

Or did he? I received an email shortly after this post first ran asserting that the second disc of Suedehead was in fact scrubbed to shore up EMI's pressing capacity for Elton John's treacle Diana death dirge, "Goodbye England's Rose." If this is true – Suedehead was released September 8th, 1997, one week after her death – any devout Morrissey fan knows where I'm going next: the infamous Diana-Morrissey Phenomenon , one of the more inspired flights of internet fantasy. For the uninitiated, know that Morrissey publicly referred to Princess Diana as "an incredibly boring woman" not long after her death, which makes this too hilarious – if unsubstantiated – a coincidence not to mention. (Not to spoil the party, but promotional copies of the 19-track Suedehead sans bonus disc were distributed to reviewers two weeks before Diana's death. This doesn't completely kill the fantasy, but I doubt it's true).

Live History

Play count (Morrissey concert): 290

Morrissey live history:

... further results

Appears On


Discogs Information

Credits

  • Bass Guitar - Andy Rourke
  • Drums - Andrew Paresi
  • Engineer [Assistant] - Stewart Day
  • Guitar [Guitars] - Kevin Armstrong
  • Lacquer Cut By - Tim Young
  • Photography By [Photographs By] - Anton Corbijn
  • Producer [Produced By] - Clive Langer & Alan Winstanley

Notes

Issued in a side opening gloss sleeve, spine with text. Disc held in a poly-lined black paper inner sleeve.

[Sleeve]: Additional voice by Mary Margaret O'Hara (courtesy of Virgin Records)

℗ 1990 The copyright in this sound recording is owned by EMI Records Ltd. © 1990 EMI Records Ltd. Sleeve manufactured in England.

[Labels]: Made in Gt. Britain

Images

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Discogs information (additional release)

Notes

Images

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Wikipedia Information

MorrisseyNovember.jpg

"November Spawned a Monster" is a song by the English singer Morrissey, released as a single in April 1990 by HMV. It was written by Morrissey and Clive Langer and features one of Morrissey's former colleagues from the Smiths, Andy Rourke, on bass guitar. The single reached number 12 on the UK Singles Chart. The track and its B-side "He Knows I'd Love to See Him" appear on his compilation album Bona Drag (1990). In November 2014, Alex Broun's play November Spawned a Monster, inspired by Morrissey's song, premiered at The Old Fitzroy, in Sydney, Australia, directed by Robert Chuter and starring James Wright.

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