Moz in today's NME

M

Miss Misery

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There's a little snippet with Moz talking about Glastonbury in the NME. He sounds a bit grouchy--Maybe he's getting tired of the NME constantly ringing him up?

NME: Are you looking forward to Glastonbury?

This is really the first time I've ventured into the festival thing. We did one once in the outer reaches of Switzerland, which was absolutely dreadful, and we did another somewhere else, but it's all new for me. So therefore bound to be a complete disaster.

NME: You've played Glastonbury before, though?

Glastonbury 21 years ago. So hopefully the catering's changed, but you never know.

NME: What are your memories of it?

Asking for a toilet and being pointed to a hole in the ground. I thought, this is not me.

NME: You're on before Muse...

I'm sure we'll end up scrapping.

NME: Will your fans be converted to space rock?

I don't know, I don't think there's a hell of a difference really, we're not continents apart.

NME: Are you gonna arrive early and make a weekend of it?

Yeah, I'm gonna go straight into the field and then...crawl into a tent.

NME: Michael Stipe says that when he plays Glastonbury, he walks around the fields with his top off and nobody recognises him.

Well, they do but, because he's got no shirt on, they don't really want to go near him. That was a joke.

NME: You should give it a try.

Michael is terribly nice. With his shirt on. No, it's not something I'd try, really, I'm far too diffident.

Guess he left his E's and body paint at home, then....
 
from what rock did you crawl out of to suddenly claim this great devotion to Moz?

> There's a little snippet with Moz talking about Glastonbury in the NME. He
> sounds a bit grouchy--Maybe he's getting tired of the NME constantly
> ringing him up?

> NME: Are you looking forward to Glastonbury?

> This is really the first time I've ventured into the festival thing. We
> did one once in the outer reaches of Switzerland, which was absolutely
> dreadful, and we did another somewhere else, but it's all new for me. So
> therefore bound to be a complete disaster.

> NME: You've played Glastonbury before, though?

> Glastonbury 21 years ago. So hopefully the catering's changed, but you
> never know.

> NME: What are your memories of it?

> Asking for a toilet and being pointed to a hole in the ground. I thought,
> this is not me.

> NME: You're on before Muse...

> I'm sure we'll end up scrapping.

> NME: Will your fans be converted to space rock?

> I don't know, I don't think there's a hell of a difference really, we're
> not continents apart.

> NME: Are you gonna arrive early and make a weekend of it?

> Yeah, I'm gonna go straight into the field and then...crawl into a tent.

> NME: Michael Stipe says that when he plays Glastonbury, he walks around
> the fields with his top off and nobody recognises him.

> Well, they do but, because he's got no shirt on, they don't really want to
> go near him. That was a joke.

> NME: You should give it a try.

> Michael is terribly nice. With his shirt on. No, it's not something I'd
> try, really, I'm far too diffident.

> Guess he left his E's and body paint at home, then....
 
Aren't all the 19 year old spotty 'erberts who buy the NME sick of reading about Morrissey?
There is no way on this, or any other earth that the teen/twenties I see walking around my fair city with NME would appreciate the great man.
They are too young, unlike me at that age - I was desolate, despairing and shy. I had no interest in most of the things that I was supposed to at that age. My peers, I thought, were all shallow fools. Then Moz came along - WAHOOO - this guy knew me!
I now know that it's not just my peers that are lacking anything of any interest to me, it's everybody (nearly).
So Moz in NME every week? Great for grumpy codgers like me, but kids who like Britney and Slipknot?
 
Don't forget 'and also hates black people', grubbly little nazi turd
 
> Aren't all the 19 year old spotty 'erberts who buy the NME sick of reading
> about Morrissey?
> There is no way on this, or any other earth that the teen/twenties I see
> walking around my fair city with NME would appreciate the great man.
> They are too young, unlike me at that age - I was desolate, despairing and
> shy. I had no interest in most of the things that I was supposed to at
> that age. My peers, I thought, were all shallow fools. Then Moz came along
> - WAHOOO - this guy knew me!
> I now know that it's not just my peers that are lacking anything of any
> interest to me, it's everybody (nearly).
> So Moz in NME every week? Great for grumpy codgers like me, but kids who
> like Britney and Slipknot?
there are plenty of teenage morrissey fans.
slipknot fans probably prefer Kerrang to NME.
 
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