August's issue of Mojo ( White Stripes cover) mentions Morrissey twice.
Firstly, in a feature length bio of British group Madness:
Telling of their decline the article states that post dissolution in 1988, Madness member Cathal Smyth:
"would work in A n& R at Go! discs, hanging (sic) out with Morrissey ( "He wanted me to manage him but I didn't fancy ironing his socks").
Secondly, in the Q and A section reader Brian Strong writes in to ask:
I was listening to the Smiths song Rubber Ring and was struck by the female voice at the end saying, " You are sleeping . You do not want to believe". Where did this uncommon example of sampling in the Morrissey and Marr oeuvre come from?"
Writer Fred Dellar answers:
The voice is off a 1971 record-and- book combo entitled Breakthrough: An Amazing Experiment In Electronic Communication with the Dead. This record purportedly contains recordings of the dead talking: the bit The Smiths used is a translation of a voice saying an enigmatic phrase in a broken mixture of Swedish and German. This peculiar recording- presumably a hopt biscuit on the young Morrissey's turntable- was reissued in the US by the Bubble Core label in 2003.
This article accompanied by a small picture of a Smiths era Morrissey holding a banjo lying on a mock-up of his own grave, the epitaph reading: Morrissey
1959- 1986
Mojo info (but you need a subscription to view online).
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There was also a channel 4 documentary a few years back on the phenomenon.
Basically, a tape recorder is left in recording mode in a room with people present and the "silent" recordings are then closely listened to and scrutinized for phantom voices which can be heard on the tape. These usually refer to something of relevance to the people present and even famous people "come through" sometimes.
I was shit-scared, but also fascinated by the book, and especially the disc, back in the seventies.
The name of the author and pioneer of this phenomenon was Konstantin Raudive, a Latvian gentleman, I think.