posted by davidt on Friday November 26 2010, @11:00AM
charles byron writes:
Irony, he died on Thanksgiving!

Bernard Matthews dies aged 80

Sheila Take A Bow" 7" etching: COOK BERNARD MATTHEWS
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An anonymous person writes:
No more murder for Bernard...

Turkey tycoon Bernard Matthews dies - BBC News
posted by davidt on Friday November 26 2010, @11:00AM
charles byron writes:
Dum Dum Girls Announce New EP, Tour

Dum Dum Girls Announce New EP, Tour - Pitchfork

He Gets Me High EP:

01 Wrong Feels Right
02 He Gets Me High
03 Take Care of My Baby
04 There Is a Light That Never Goes Out (Smiths cover)
posted by davidt on Friday November 26 2010, @11:00AM
goinghome writes:
The Telegraph online has rounded up their list of 50 greatest album tracks: the hits that never were. Some, they say, were too long, some too strange, others hidden on albums that nobody bought.

Cemetry Gates figures in the top ten.

  - 8 The Smiths Cemetry Gates The Queen Is Dead, 1986

‘So we go inside and we gravely read the stones.’ Oh, you japesome punster, Morrissey. Though Some Girls Are Bigger Than Others is catchier, this sun-shunning, poetic-name-dropping, bedsit-angst-fest with its famously misspelt title is about as Smiths as you could ever get. -

50 greatest album tracks: the hits that never were - The Telegraph
posted by davidt on Friday November 26 2010, @11:00AM
torr writes:
Gift Guide 2010 - page 2 - Pitchfork

Mozipedia: The Encyclopedia of Morrissey and the Smiths

Veteran UK music writer Simon Goddard has already written one of the definitive books about the Smiths-- the song-by-song guide The Songs That Saved Your Life. Now he takes that same attention to detail-- cataloging both the trivial as well as the seismic-- to Morrissey's entire career. This new encyclopedia features entires on each in Morrissey's catalog, but more engagingly it also touches on themes, locations, inspirations, and villains, creating as full of a picture as we're likely to get into the enigmatic mind and world of one of independent music's most important figures. --Scott Plagenhoef

Gift Guide 2010 - page 3

The Smiths go with vintage Penguin paperbacks about as well as horn rims pair with thrift-store cardigans-- that is, unquestionably. So if you know a Smiths obsessive, there's about a 100% chance she'll want the prints of British design collective Hunting Bears. The limited editions illustrate key lyrics of three classic anthems ("How Soon is Now", "This Charming Man", and "What Difference Does It Make?") with mid-century-style-referencing drawings and Penguin's iconic color blocks. They're available separately, but if you can spare the cash, buy all three. A framed set could transform the walls of even the dreariest bedsit. ($35 each or $90 for the trio). --Amy Granzin
posted by davidt on Friday November 26 2010, @11:00AM
took my bow writes:
Looks like Morrissey just made it into the top list of "Other Types of Remorse" on McSweeney's Internet Tendency.

McSweeney's Internet Tendency: Other Types of Remorse. by Ainsley Drew, McSweeney's
posted by davidt on Friday November 26 2010, @11:00AM
thetexasbloke writes:
Just checked the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame web page and the Smiths are NOT on the 2011 list of nominees. By the looks of the list, the Hall is moving in an entirely different direction with no British 80's bands on the list. Some that did make it are Alice Cooper, Beastie Boys, Bon Jovi, and LL Cool J. To see a full list of those nominated check http://rockhall.com/inductees
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