Dazza
New Member
Evening - glad to have started a couple of good threads on here.
I remember a quote from an old guitar tutor of mine who insisted that Morrissey HATED synths in the early days of the Smiths. Apparently he had said "when a synth appears on a Smiths record I won't be" or something like that.
If you listen to early Smiths work there's room for the organ stuff from Carrack and a few splashes of piano here and there, so it holds true to Morrissey's general distrust of distinctly artificial sound.
I'm just trying to understand what changed because, although his live band tended to be guitar-centric until the 21st century, the recorded stuff took a distinct twist on Queen is Dead, into Strangeways and by the time of his solo career, there seems to have been a 180 on the theme.
There are keys all over Kill Uncle and a lot of artifical sound, it seems to re-appear a bit on Southpaw (Arsenal and Vauxhall are certainly guitar-centric records) and Maladjusted sees it more prominent.
My understanding is that Morrissey wasn't keen on getting orchestras in etc, partly due to the expense and also not disrupting the 'tight' nature of the group he has put together.
Then you listen to stuff on 'Dog with a chain' and he's turned his band into a cross between Yello and a 1980s New Order. Very odd.
I'm a big fan of some of the better electronic bands (like NO and early Talk Talk) but get his point about the Casio synth thing. Was it better sampling and technology that helped along the way? Morrissey seemed to hold the 'club scene' in a certain amount of disdain so was that the issue?
Johnny full-on embraced Electonic music (literally) the first chance he got. I'm just curious as to what his original disdain was for that kind of sound and why he appeared to change his mind over time.
I think with the right production Moz could make a very good electronic-based record. Just my own personal.
Thanks in advance - as always.
I remember a quote from an old guitar tutor of mine who insisted that Morrissey HATED synths in the early days of the Smiths. Apparently he had said "when a synth appears on a Smiths record I won't be" or something like that.
If you listen to early Smiths work there's room for the organ stuff from Carrack and a few splashes of piano here and there, so it holds true to Morrissey's general distrust of distinctly artificial sound.
I'm just trying to understand what changed because, although his live band tended to be guitar-centric until the 21st century, the recorded stuff took a distinct twist on Queen is Dead, into Strangeways and by the time of his solo career, there seems to have been a 180 on the theme.
There are keys all over Kill Uncle and a lot of artifical sound, it seems to re-appear a bit on Southpaw (Arsenal and Vauxhall are certainly guitar-centric records) and Maladjusted sees it more prominent.
My understanding is that Morrissey wasn't keen on getting orchestras in etc, partly due to the expense and also not disrupting the 'tight' nature of the group he has put together.
Then you listen to stuff on 'Dog with a chain' and he's turned his band into a cross between Yello and a 1980s New Order. Very odd.
I'm a big fan of some of the better electronic bands (like NO and early Talk Talk) but get his point about the Casio synth thing. Was it better sampling and technology that helped along the way? Morrissey seemed to hold the 'club scene' in a certain amount of disdain so was that the issue?
Johnny full-on embraced Electonic music (literally) the first chance he got. I'm just curious as to what his original disdain was for that kind of sound and why he appeared to change his mind over time.
I think with the right production Moz could make a very good electronic-based record. Just my own personal.
Thanks in advance - as always.