Financial Times - negative review of RFH
posted by davidt on Thursday June 17 2004, @08:00AM

featherweight sends:

ARTS: Morrissey Meltdown Festival, Royal Festival Hall, London LUDOVIC HUNTER-TILNEY
By Ludovic Hunter-Tilney
Financial Times; Jun 16, 2004



Recent Meltdowns have been forgettable but this year's guest curator Morrissey has given the two-week festival a fresh lease of life. Tasked with choosing a line-up of performers who interest or have influenced him, he's assembled an impressively quixotic cast ranging from the New York Dolls, whose UK fan club Moz headed as a boy, to Nancy Sinatra, his next-door neighbour in Los Angeles.

Unfortunately his opening night concert was less inspirational. The harbingers for it weren't good: his support act, the Libertines, had to pull out and one of his band members was absent through illness. Lonely defiance is a favourite theme of Morrissey's lyrics; a strong dose of it was needed this evening but instead the atmosphere was disappointingly flat.

One problem is his new material, which is losing its lustre fast as the novelty fades of seeing the ex-Smiths singer on stage again. His new album You Are the Quarry is his first in seven years and, although it's brought him greater chart success than ever, the truth is that it's not a terribly good piece of work.

He opened with one of its best tracks, "The First of the Gang to Die", but thereafter it was downhill. "The World Is Full of Crashing Bores" was peevish and puffed up by power chords. "I Have Forgiven Jesus" (dreadful hubristic title) contained the unedifying spectacle of perhaps the best rock lyricist ever, singing doggerel such as "I was a good kid, I wouldn't do you no harm/ I was a nice kid, with a nice paper round."

The contrast with his early work was striking. Most of the older material in his set was drawn from the more obscure corners of his back catalogue but even lesser-known songs such as "The Headmaster Ritual" (from the Smiths' Meat Is Murder) showed how much more interesting the phrasing and content of his vocals used to be and how much more lithe the music was, too.

Rare moments of brilliance aside, such as a wall of sound version of "Everyday Is Like Sunday", his performance lacked sparkle and character. Still, at least the same can't be said of the bill he's chosen for Meltdown. Tel 08703 800 400. Festival runs to June 27

 
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    Financial Times - negative review of RFH | Log in/Create an Account | Top | 12 comments | Search Discussion
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    The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
    Ludovic (Score:1)
    Hunter-Tilney?
    David T (different) -- Thursday June 17 2004, @09:28AM (#111199)
    (User #256 Info)
    david_t[at]boltblue.com
      pretty sharp (Score:0, Troll)
      That guy echoes alot of peoples thoughts

      I wonder if this really is the begining of a Morrissey that more obviously than ever rides the tidal of his magical past straight into a plastic mainstream artist...he is perhaps trading in his loyal core for the blind masses and the music is really wallowing. Save some dignity and get off the stage old man.
      giant -- Thursday June 17 2004, @10:15AM (#111211)
      (User #430 Info)
      I Like You
        the ft (Score:1)
        Strange...I read the ft for the shares/stock reports when I'm in business class flying Dallas/Fort Worth-London or Atlanta-London.

        Why is this news for ft? What does this have to do with the stock markets today?

        Heck, even the Wall St. Journal gave a great review to Doves and Badly Drawn Boy.

        Sheesh.
        Lon <loneal@ureach.com> -- Thursday June 17 2004, @10:45AM (#111215)
        (User #121 Info)
          arts? In the financial times? (Score:0)
          That's like reading FHM for its economics coverage.

          The reviewer probably has never even listened to "Meat is Murder" and doubtless cobbled her review together from reading those in other magazines. Wake up. This is how moronic journalists write their reviews.

          It's fair enough to say the concert wasn't great, but the Quarry material is in no way inferior - it's a great album.

          broken
          Anonymous -- Thursday June 17 2004, @01:06PM (#111255)
          My word! (Score:1)
          Best name ever.
          Stan <stanleymchale@mac.com> -- Friday June 18 2004, @03:17AM (#111347)
          (User #9752 Info | http://www.stanleymchale.merseyblogs.co.uk/ )
            Ignorance is bliss? (Score:1)
            '"I Have Forgiven Jesus" (dreadful hubristic title)' Enough said about this (ridiculously named) man and what he understands of Morrissey!
            gladioli <{marifiori} {at} {hotmail.com}> -- Friday June 18 2004, @04:08AM (#111351)
            (User #786 Info | http://www.bfi.org.uk/ )
            Gor'blimey... Did you know there's more to life than books, but not much more...
              guess who... (Score:1)
              is reviewing alan bennett for saturday's edition of the FT? yes, it's mister ridiculous name himself.
              featherweight -- Friday June 18 2004, @11:51AM (#111465)
              (User #6542 Info)
                FT on Arts/Music/whatever (Score:1)
                Hang on to your usual heap of shares, growth and social axings and shut up when it gets to things you can't even hope to ever understand.
                The Sailer -- Friday June 25 2004, @03:29AM (#112475)
                (User #11737 Info)
                • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.


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