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“It is almost four years old now. The madly insane efforts to silence the album are somehow indications of its power,”
Morrissey tells me. “Otherwise, who would bother to get so overheated about an inconspicuous recluse?”
“The album” in question is Bonfire of Teenagers, the former Smiths singer’s 14th solo album that he completed back in May 2021, when Britain was emerging from its third Covid lockdown, but has yet to see the light of day. The lost album was set to feature contributions from craggy rocker
Iggy Pop, half of the Red Hot Chili Peppers and, tantalisingly, Tennessee pop superstar
Miley Cyrus. The “inconspicuous recluse” is Morrissey himself. He’s being disingenuous, of course.
The 65-year-old may not have released an album since 2020 and is currently without a record deal but he can still garner global headlines with a single dashed-off post on his website, as witnessed by last month’s revelation about a proposed Smiths reunion. And “overheated”? Well, that’s one word to describe the deeply controversial saga surrounding Bonfire of Teenagers’ 1,200-day delay.
That we’re communicating at all is a surprise. Morrissey hasn’t engaged with the mainstream British press for years, and his disdain for print journalists is well-documented. But he has chosen to talk to me about what he has called “the best album of [his] life”. By turns bullish and withering, the bequiffed bard of 1980s bedrooms – and latterly indie’s divisive elder statesman – pulls no punches in our interaction.
The reason for Bonfire of Teenagers’ delay is remarkably clear. The album’s title track is about the
2017 Manchester Arena terror attack, when a suicide bomber killed 22 people and injured over a thousand more after a concert by American pop star Ariana Grande. Morrissey sings of a fan being “vapourised” and the song ends with an unsettling repeated coda to “Go easy on the killer”, which appears to be a comment on the British justice system (the bomber Salman Abedi died on the night).
Manchester-born Morrissey has written contentious tracks about local tragedies before – in 1984 he co-wrote
Suffer Little Children about the Moors murders. But this song is dark and, to many, tasteless. Online debates over whether the ballad represents powerful-if-uncomfortable storytelling or crass sonic clickbait have been ongoing since its live debut, which was filmed, in 2022.
Morrissey, unsurprisingly, sits in the former camp. In a lengthy email sent from his Los Angeles home, he says he’s being “gagged” and that what he calls “Idiot Culture” is preventing his album’s release. Would he consider simply removing the controversial track and releasing a 10-song album under a different name? No, he says.
“Controversial means intelligent, doesn’t it? We are still in the grip of Idiot Culture, it’s everywhere you look. Naturally I’m one of the first to be gagged since my entire life has relied on free speech,” he tells me. “No, I wouldn’t remove the title song because I wouldn’t abandon the murdered kids of Manchester. Their spirits cry out every single day for remembrance and recognition.” Nor, he writes, would he consider self-releasing the album.
In the title track, he criticises Mancunians’ adoption of
Oasis’s Don’t Look Back in Anger as an anthem of solidarity as they mourned. “And the morons sing and sway: ‘Don’t Look Back in Anger’, I can assure you I will look back in anger ’til the day I die,” Morrissey sings. He suggests the song’s use underplayed the severity of the event. “The Manchester Arena bombing was our 9/11. But, in this sad country of ours, to understand the full meaning of the attack is to be guilty, and this is why the ‘don’t look back in anger’ command always struck me as derisive and not at all words of social harmony,” he says. Morons, though. You can see the problem.
But Morrissey seems determined not to change anything. “Once you edit yourself or
self-censor then the idiots have won. There is no arts media anymore in England, therefore there’s no one to whom I can sit and talk about this. The fact is, genuine artists in England are now being held hostage by people who object to any manner of alternative opinion,” he says. “The biggest monsters are the #BeKind crew” – a social media movement promoting empathy – “who will smash your face in if you disagree with them.”
Bonfire of Teenagers was produced by Grammy-winner Andrew Watt, industry hot property who produced
the Rolling Stones’ comeback album last year. “The album has an astounding production by Andrew Watt, who is in himself a miracle. He is an untouchable genius of music production. All of the songs and musicianship are sensational,” says Morrissey. Not having heard the whole album, I can’t comment.
But certainly its first single, Rebels Without Applause, released in 2022, sounded fresh and lively, with a strong melody with nods to ex-Smiths members Johnny Marr’s jangly guitar and the late
Andy Rourke’s bouncy basslines. Guest cameos from Iggy Pop, Chad Smith and Flea from the Chili Peppers and – temporarily, it turns out – Cyrus only adds to the album’s mystique.
“Every major label in London has refused Bonfire of Teenagers whilst also admitting that it is a masterpiece,” Morrissey says. “And although there is nothing insulting or antagonistic in the title track, label bosses say they are worried that The Guardian would make their lives hell if they supported any such social awareness.” Ah, The Guardian, with whom Morrissey has a long-running beef. In 2019 he claimed he was the victim of an “inexhaustible hate campaign” after it ran a piece saying fans felt betrayed by his support for former far-Right political party For Britain and myriad other controversial comments.
Morrissey then performed at the Hollywood Bowl in a vest saying “F___ the Guardian”. Little seems to have changed. “As we all know The Guardian could find something hateful and offensive in Five Go To Smuggler’s Top. I think all woke reactions are usually the revenge of the unloved. Have you noticed? They persecute anyone who can successfully argue against them,” he says.
Bonfire’s labyrinthine backstory is just the latest chapter in one of rock’s most enduring tales. Formed in Manchester in 1982, The Smiths were the greatest guitar band of their generation, releasing four studio albums that reached either number one or two in the charts – staggering success at a time when indie music was an underground concern. Through empathetic, wry and romantic songs such as This Charming Man, Panic and There is a Light That Never Goes Out, Morrissey became a spokesman for the teenaged dispossessed. The band split up in 1987.
Since then, Morrissey’s successful solo career – 11 top five albums including three number ones – has been interspersed with prickly, provocative or inflammatory comments about everything from immigration to the “shocking” treatment of far-right activist
Tommy Robinson. Hence the Guardian issue and disengagement with the press. Others have a more relaxed take. Billy Duffy, guitarist in
The Cult, was in a pre-fame Manchester band with Morrissey called The Nosebleeds. Talking to me in LA last October, Duffy said he hasn’t joined the “cancel Morrissey” brigade. “I like to think of myself as a libertarian so I’m not really getting a pitchfork out just yet. There’s a bit too much of that going on at the moment,” Duffy said.
On announcing Bonfire of Teenagers in 2021, Morrissey admitted that he didn’t have a record deal, having been dropped by BMG in 2020. The album, he wrote, was “available to the highest (or lowest) bidder”. In stepped Capitol Records, part of the world’s biggest label Universal Music Group. Morrissey announced a February 2023 release date in all global territories bar the UK.
But in late 2022, Morrissey said Capitol was no longer scheduling a February 2023 release. Then, that Christmas, Morrissey announced that he’d “voluntarily” parted company with both Capitol and his management team. He also said that Cyrus – a huge Smiths fan – had asked for her backing vocals to be removed from her track I Am Veronica. Weeks later, Morrissey said that Capitol wouldn’t be releasing Bonfire at all but was “holding on to” the album all the same. His website announced: “Morrissey has said that although he does not believe that Capitol Records in Los Angeles signed Bonfire of Teenagers in order to sabotage it, he is quickly coming around to that belief.”
In terms of Cyrus, leaked emails suggest that Morrissey ruffled feathers by going public with her involvement against her management’s wishes. Morrissey, however, wrote on his website that she ultimately “backed off for reasons unconnected to me, having had a major clash with a key figure ‘in the circle’”. Regarding the album, fans leapt on Morrissey’s “sabotage” comment.
“Kidnapped”, some cried. Others noted that pop royalty Grande is signed to Universal-owned Republic Records, and wondered whether Universal was sitting on the album so as not to risk upsetting her due to the title track. Morrissey goes even further to me, claiming that a senior executive within Universal – his own record label – tried to quash the album. “David Joseph [the chairman and CEO of Universal Music UK] urged Capitol Records in Los Angeles not to release Bonfire of Teenagers,” he writes. I put this specific allegation to Universal, including to Joseph via a direct email. They didn’t reply.
With the album in limbo, things got surreal. Morrissey accused Capitol of prioritising label-mate
Sam Smith’s “satanism” over his own work after Smith wore devil horns during a Brit Awards performance. Then last October a light aircraft flew over Capitol’s famous cylindrical LA head office pulling the banner: “Release Moz’s ‘Bonfire of Teenagers’!” The plane was hired by Georgia-based Morrissey superfan Travis Gravel at a cost of around $2,000. “The purpose of the stunt was to draw awareness to the importance of the album being released,” Gravel says. So delayed is the album that last year Morrissey even recorded what would be his 15th solo album, Without Music The World Dies, a title that needs no interpretation.
There are signs, however, of movement. In April, after what Morrissey called “a long, hard, bloody war”, he bought Bonfire of Teenagers back off Capitol. In June he told fans: “For those of you 85 and over who are still waiting for Bonfire of Teenagers to be released, good news is finally within our grasp”. I suspect it will come out eventually although, as yet, Morrissey remains unsigned. The controversy will be colossal. Still, superfan Gravel can’t wait: “I am holding out hope that Morrissey will use a plane photo for the album gatefold.”
Smiths fans had another piece of news dangled in front of them recently. In late August Morrissey revealed that promoter AEG approached him and Marr in June with a “lucrative” offer to reform their much-loved band for a 2025 world tour – a proposal to which Morrissey said “yes” but Marr apparently ignored. Morrissey then pointedly compared his own imminent “largely sold out” US tour to Marr’s recent tour as “a special guest to New Order” (Marr is actually about to do a co-headlining US tour with James). On this situation, Morrissey is remaining tight-lipped.
“I think I made my point without turning it into the war of the worlds… which, of course, I easily could,” he says. Funnily, I don’t doubt that for a moment.