Not really. I think you may hear RP if you listen to someone from the Royal family, or if you watch BBC period dramaIt was also called Queen's English, Oxford English, or BBC English, and basically it is the 'posh accent'. It's also the accent that foreign people who study English in school are taught, as it was considered the 'received pronounciation', but I don't think that there are many native speakers who actually speak it. But I think that nowadays it serves as some kind of yardstick and that many people in Britain speak some kind of modified RP, or something in between their regional accent and RP. Or at least that's what I was taught as my English language studies at the university.
Morrissey may not have a thick Mancunian or Irish accent, but he definitely doesn't speak RP and he never did. I think his accent is one of those that fall somewhere in between RP and regional accents.




It was also called Queen's English, Oxford English, or BBC English, and basically it is the 'posh accent'. It's also the accent that foreign people who study English in school are taught, as it was considered the 'received pronounciation', but I don't think that there are many native speakers who actually speak it. But I think that nowadays it serves as some kind of yardstick and that many people in Britain speak some kind of modified RP, or something in between their regional accent and RP. Or at least that's what I was taught as my English language studies at the university. 

you're not British/American? nightandday I would never have guessed that in a million years ..
However, when I'm tired or emotional it comes back stronger!
i think the fact that I'm actually from W Yorks and have family in Cas gets me out of being called a 'snob' though... twas meant in gest my friend 