quinta-feira, 25 de julho de 2013

A polêmica da não-turnê do Morrissey, que parece estar bem de saúde em Los Angeles com o… Noel Gallagher


Um dos maiores imbróglios envolvendo shows recentemente na América do Sul, sem dúvida, é esse dos que o Morrissey faria na região. O ex-líder dos Smiths, que passou grande parte do primeiro semestre lutando contra problemas de saúde, estava bem para excursionar em terras latinas durante um mês, em turnê que começaria em Lima no início deste mês e terminaria em Brasília, dia 4 de agosto.

O primeiro capítulo da saga se iniciou exatamente no Peru. Morrissey já estava na cidade de Lima há alguns dias e estava até ensaiando o repertório dos shows, mas um dia antes das duas apresentações na cidade ele precisou adiar os compromissos devido a uma intoxicação alimentar e voltou para Los Angeles. Desde então, pipocaram notícias de que toda a turnê latina havia subido no telhado, mas as produtoras locais sempre soltavam notas desmentindo os boatos e garantido os shows.

O “boato” final rolou no sábado, quando o próprio Morrissey postou uma carta no site True To You, canal quase oficial do cantor, na qual o maior britânico vivo dizia que já estava cansado de pedir desculpas por tantos contratempos e cogitou, inclusive, se aposentar. Mesmo com o comunicado pesado de Morrissey, produtoras da Argentina e do Brasil ainda asseguravam que os shows iriam rolar e a venda de ingressos continuou.

Só que, na última segunda-feira, veio o comunicado oficial por parte do staff de Morrissey
informando que a turnê estava mesmo cancelada. Desde então, surgiram especulações se o cancelamento teria relação com os problemas de saúde de Morrissey, mas a alegação mais plausível, parece, é que o cantor “não quis vir” por questões financeiras.

Ainda na segunda-feira, a produtora Colors, responsável pelos shows de Morrissey no Peru e no Chile, soltou um extenso comunicado tentando explicar o cancelamento da turnê. De acordo com a produtora, a opção partiu do próprio cantor, tanto que até seu empresário ficou surpreso com o comunicado publicado pelo artista no sábado pela manhã.

A Colors disse que, desde então, procurou seus direitos junto ao staff de Morrissey e exigiu explicações mais claras. De acordo com o comunicado despachado para a imprensa, Morrissey alegou que uma vinda para a América do Sul neste momento “não seria atrativa por questões econômicas”, tanto que ele usa o termo “lack of funding” em sua carta. A alegação do lado da produção do cantor é a de que Morrissey recentemente teve muitos gastos financeiros “inesperados” com questões médicas e com deslocamentos inesperados de sua equipe saindo de Lima para Los Angeles e outra parte para Londres.

Por fim, a Colors lamentou todo o ocorrido e fez questão de frisar que a quebra do acordo foi unilateral (por parte de Moz). Desde o cancelamento oficial, fãs do cantor misturam sentimentos que vão do amor ao ódio. Uma foto de uma fã circulou nas redes sociais nesta semana, com o Morrissey ao fundo, em um bar, com uns amigos.

Agora apareceu outra foto, divulgada pelo ator e comediante britânico Russell Brand, na qual ele aparece ao lado de Morrissey e Noel Gallagher em um outro bar, na cidade de Los Angeles, ontem.

Parece que a saúde está em dia para o nosso ídolo. O Noel confirma.


Publicado em: http://popload.blogosfera.uol.com.br/2013/07/24/a-polemica-da-nao-turne-do-morrissey-que-parece-estar-bem-de-saude-em-los-angeles-com-o-noel-gallagher/

terça-feira, 23 de julho de 2013

Matéria dramática no The Guardian

Morrissey: has his light finally gone out?



Illness, financial challenges, the lack of a record deal and no new songs for four years – maybe it's time that the singer rekindled some old friendships



Is this the end for Morrissey? After a troubled year in which misery's poet laureate seemed to cancel more shows than he announced, yet another South American tour has fallen through. The reason is not life-threatening illness, which sank another tour earlier this year and is at least on-brand for Morrissey, but something more dismal: money.

"I am informed today that the projected tour of South America is snuffed out, thus euthanised due, I'm reliably advised, to lack of funding," he wrote on the fansite True To You. "Cancellations and illness have sucked the life out of all of us, and the only sensible solution seems to be the art of doing nothing." With no record deal nor any new material since 2009, touring is supposedly his lifeline. Unsolicited advice from Amanda Palmer – the Mrs Mills of goth – that he should fund a new record through Kickstarter merely compounds the ignominy.

If Morrissey can't make a living out of playing to an audience as large and vociferous as the foam-flecked fundamentalists who follow him, there can be little hope for anyone else. But in some respects Morrissey is the author of his own marginalisation. His surprise rebirth after seven years' purdah in Los Angeles with You Are the Quarry in 2004 brought him to a whole new audience, selling 350,000 albums in the UK alone. But the man who once sang "I don't want to be judged/I would sooner be blindly loved" subsequently settled for the comforts of the fanbase, issuing endless interchangeable greatest hits, deluxe editions and live albums against only two more records of new material.

Then there was the refusal to contemplate that his current band and songwriting partnerships might have run their course. A Morrissey song of 2009 sounds much like one from 1997, and the live rendition of Johnny Marr's delicate This Charming Man that opened many Morrissey shows in recent years was criminally hamfisted and crude.

Meanwhile the public persona that used to provoke and entertain – "Reggae is vile", wishing unsanctioned biographer Johnny Rogan death in a car crash, "Cook Bernard Matthews" – became predictable, bitter and kneejerk. Likening Anders Breivik's massacre at Utøya to a day at KFC, describing the Chinese as a sub-species, and blaming the royal family for the suicide of nurse Jacintha Saldanha all tried the patience of any but the most committed Morrissey sycophants.

Yet his illnesses are undoubtedly real and serious, and Morrissey is hardly to blame for the collapse of the recorded music business. Though there are more than enough Morrissey fans to finance a new album via Kickstarter, it would paint him even more starkly as an artist for the converted only. Perhaps Morrissey's much-anticipated autobiography will break him out of this strange and self-created pocket universe, where he and his fans speak only to one another. If not, there remains one option that would bring modern England's greatest voice back to a mass audience. Somewhere, surely, Morrissey still has Johnny Marr's phone number.


Publicado em: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/shortcuts/2013/jul/22/morrissey-light-finally-gone-out?INTCMP=SRCH

I know it's over

Morrissey cancela shows no Brasil


O cantor britânico Morrissey cancelou os shows que faria no Brasil. A produtora Time For Fun, que pela manhã havia dito que as apresentações estavam confirmadas, afirmou que o ex-líder do The Smiths alegou "motivos pessoais" para cancelar as apresentações.

Morrissey sofreu uma severa intoxicação alimentar ao chegar ao Peru, onde iniciaria a turnê pela América do Sul, no início de julho.


Após rumores de cancelamento de toda a turnê, o ex-Smiths avisou na sexta-feira que os shows em toda a América do Sul haviam sido "sacrificados". A Time For Fun, entretanto, dizia que os shows estavam mantidos.

Após o episódio no Peru, a Punto Ticket, produtora dos shows no país vizinho, já havia informado que "os concertos agendados para a América Latina em julho e agosto deveriam ser adiados para os próximos meses do ano". A Time For Fun informou à época que as datas estavam mantidas.

Reembolso

A produtora informa que os clientes que compraram ingressos para o show - que ocorreriam nos dias 30 de julho em São Paulo, 2 de agosto em Brasília e 04 de agosto no Rio - poderão pedir reembolso a partir desta terça-feira (23).

Quem comprou os ingressos pessoalmente em um ponto de venda devem comparecer ao local com o bilhete.

As pessoas que compraram pela internet devem enviar e-mail para sac@ticketsforfun.com.br com o título "REEMBOLSO".

Caso a compra tenha sido feita com cartão de crédito, o valor será creditado na fatura em até 20 dias úteis.

Saúde e financimaneto

A informação do novo cancelamento começou a rodar após o site "True-to-You", dedicado aos fãs do cantor, publicar na sexta-feira (19) uma carta supostamente assinada por Morrissey - o músico mantém contato com os fãs a partir do site. Na carta, o cantor cita "falta de financiamento" como motivo para o cancelamento. "É muito fácil vender ingressos, mas impossível transportar a banda e a equipe do ponto F para o G", diz.

Ainda na carta atribuída a Morrissey publicada no site, o cantor diz que "cancelamentos e doenças têm sugado a vida de todos nós, e a única solução razoável parece ser a arte de não fazer nada".

Em entrevista ao jornal chileno "La Tercera", Morrissey afirmou que quase morreu no início do ano, quando cancelou uma série de shows por causa de uma úlcera e uma pneumonia dupla.


Publicado em: http://musica.uol.com.br/noticias/redacao/2013/07/22/morrissey-cancela-shows-no-brasil.htm

segunda-feira, 22 de julho de 2013

Comunicado do Morrissey, pelo True to You

I am informed today that the projected tour of South America is snuffed out, thus euthanized - due, I'm reliably advised, to lack of funding. It's quite easy to sell tickets, yet impossible to transport band and crew from F to G.

In a year when far too many disappointments have been buried this really is the last of many final straws, and I am not alone in feeling this. The future is suddenly absent, and my apologies are now so frequent as to be somewhat ridiculous, and it is I who apologize because no one else would bother. It is agonizing to be responsible for imparting such news - especially when it springs upon me unexpectedly and inexplicably. But the collapse of South America rings the curtain down with a colossal thud, and the major problems remain as insoluble now as they were in 2009. The obvious conclusion stares back at me from the mirror, and the wheels are finally off the covered wagon. Cancellations and illness have sucked the life out of all of us, and the only sensible solution seems to be the art of doing nothing.

As always I ask your pardon, and I offer pangs of overwhelming love and gratitude to the band and the crew, whose loyalty stretched above and beyond.

I shall see you in my dreams,
Morrissey
19 July 2013, Los Angeles

Produtoras oficializam: turnê de Morrissey na América do Sul está cancelada


A nova-nova-notícia do drama que se tornou a turnê-não-turnê de Morrissey pela América do Sul dá conta de que, ENFIM, a visita do maior britânico vivo ao continente está mesmo cancelada. Nas últimas horas, a turnê esteve “cancelada” de acordo com Morrissey, mas “de pé” de acordo com produtoras locais. 




Só que a Time For Fun da Argentina informa em comunicado divulgado no final da manhã de hoje que o cantor precisou cancelar seus shows pela América do Sul. A T4F brasileira ainda não se pronunciou oficialmente sobre o assunto, o que deve ocorrer nas próximas horas (para um “sim” ou para um “não).

* Por volta das 13h30, a T4F brasileira confirmou o cancelamento dos shows de Morrissey no país. Ele se apresentaria em São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro e Brasília. O reembolso para quem adquiriu ingressos começará nesta terça-feira, 23 de julho.

Publicado em: http://popload.blogosfera.uol.com.br/

quarta-feira, 3 de julho de 2013

Johnny Marr entrevistado pelo The Guardian (Janeiro 2013)



Johnny Marr on the Smiths, Morrissey


and putting politics back in pop



With the release of his first solo album The Messenger, the former Smiths guitarist talks about finally embracing his old sound, David Cameron and why he and Morrissey don't talk any more


During the December 2010 debate over the raising of student tuition fees in the House of Commons, Labour MP Kerry McCarthy asked a rather surreal question of prime minister David Cameron, who had just gone public with his rather unlikely fandom of leftwing, anti-Conservative, seminal Manchester indie band the Smiths.

"As the Smiths are the archetypal student band, if he wins tomorrow night's vote, what songs does he think students will be listening to?"asked the member for Bristol East, to roars from the opposition benches. "Miserable Lie, I Don't Owe You Anything or Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now?"

Cameron, improbably, responded in kind. "I expect that if I turned up I probably wouldn't get This Charming Man," he quipped, "and if I went with the foreign secretary [William Hague] it would probably be William, It Was Really Nothing."

"You do wonder," comments Johnny Marr, drily. "What part of the Smiths ethos did he not get?"Few British groups have had the far-reaching impact of the Smiths, and few guitarists are as celebrated as Marr. He was recently named NME's ultimate guitarist (ahead of Jimi Hendrix and Jimmy Page), and even has a Salford University honorary doctorate for "changing the face of British music".

"I get a lot of people being very nice to me, even when I don't want them to be," the former Smith chuckles, pointedly. "With one or two exceptions, the people who like the music are always super nice and don't want to bother you. They just want to tell you how much they love it." He is nothing if not grateful to have been part of a band who "mean so much to so many people", but admits there is a downside: "It can be difficult when it's raining and you're running for the train." His grin widens, but he adds, more seriously. "Or you're trying to move on."

Marr has spent 26 years trying to move on from the Smiths, who split in 1987, in which time he's been quite the musical chameleon. What he calls a "searching personality" has taken him from synthesizer pop with Bernard Sumner in Electronic to foreboding rock with Matt Johnson's The The, from folk with Bert Jansch to adult-oriented pop with Crowded House via playing with Bryan Ferry and Chic's Nile Rodgers. He has fronted short-lived Stooges-ish swamp rockers the Healers, enjoyed an unlikely US No 1 album with leftfield indie outfit Modest Mouse and taken his roving guitar gunslinger role to shouty Wakefield indie band theCribs.

It's hard to see how he could have journeyed further from the trademark "chiming man" guitars he played in the Smiths, short of playing a kazoo. Yet here he is, a youthful 49-year-old, talking about his first ever solo album, The Messenger, which sees him returning to the big tunes and unmistakable, cascading guitar arpeggios that made him the guitarist of his generation.

We meet in a London photographic studio, where, having his picture taken earlier, Marr still looked unmistakably the bouffant-haired tunesmith whose 1983 Top of the Pops appearance alongside a gladioli-hurling Morrissey provided indie rock with its "year zero" moment. His reputation as one of rock's nicest guys is not without merit, yet he is also savvy and single-minded, and when he agrees to the photographer's request for photographs with a guitar it's with a matey but firm: "Just don't tell me how to hold it."

In person, the matt black Keith Richards barnet and glittery nail varnish on his plectrum-holding right hand suggest a man who has spent his entire adult life as a national institution. Otherwise he's disarmingly normal, self-effacing but not falsely modest, and – mostly – open. But he sounds very much a man on a mission.

"I felt something was missing from pop," he explains of The Messenger's prickly energy and epic, romantic soundscapes, which handily coincide with the widely predicted return of the guitar to pop's forefront in 2013. "When you hit it right on guitars in pop, it can be vivacious and exuberant and shiny. I've fond remembrances of bands like Blondie. Without being retro, if I'm really in the mood for it, that's what the guitar is for me. If people say parts of the record sound like the Smiths, I'm OK with that because hopefully it's got the same exuberance."

The Messenger doesn't just nod to the Smiths. As he suggests, the wiry post-punk of bands such as Manchester predecessors Buzzcocks and Magazine is a major influence. The title track is electro pop. Marr (who first sang in the Healers, and worked on his vocals in the Cribs), notMorrissey, is singing. But for years, Marr wasn't "OK" with sounding anything like the Smiths. In fact, as he now admits, the band cast such a long shadow that his musical shapeshifting was an "entirely conscious" decision to avoid sounding like his former self at all. If he came up with a riff that sounded anything like the group, he'd "bin it, flick the Vs up at it". As for the innumerable occasions when other people moaned to him that Johnny Marr didn't sound like, well, Johnny Marr, "No one likes to be dictated to," he insists, combative edge starting to take hold. "If you've been put in a box marked 'jingle jangle indie pop blah blah' then it's your responsibility to break out of that, otherwise you're creatively dead. You might as well write your own tombstone, with diminishing returns." He finishes with a proud, defiant salvo: "Bernard Sumner used to have his head in his hands going 'Everybody's gonna blame me!' When I first played live with Electronic, I came out playing a synthesizer."

But by 2005, he had been through so many metamorphoses that he couldn't see himself as a UK artist any more. So he went to Portland in the US (initially to join Modest Mouse, before hooking up with the relocated Cribs) to "find some space to play". One night, his fingers found the beginnings of the sort of instantly melodious guitar shape he turned out by the truckload when he was the musical half of songwriting partnership Morrissey and Marr.

"In the past, I'd have shredded it because it sounded too much like me," he admits, "but it just felt so sweet and so genuine, it seemed important to just go with it." The riff became the Cribs's song We Share the Same Skies, after which he began pining for the way bands operated in the UK, especially in his youth.

"I knew I needed to come back to front a group that operated like that," he explains. "So we all live in Manchester and get together to rehearse a few nights a week even though we don't need to. I just started to act like I was in that group, even though I envisaged a solo record. I didn't want to be in a group where the lead singer didn't want to play guitar any more. So that meant I was the right man for the job." He sniggers. "Luckily!"



Marr denies that he's been stubborn, just single-minded. "It's the prerogative of a young man in his 20s and 30s to be on one," he considers of what seems a partial volte-face, admitting that having been in the Smiths leaves an awful lot of baggage.

"But equally, if you're in your 40s and still carrying that around, then you've got a problem."In May 1982, Marr was an 18-year-old clothes shop assistant when he sashayed up to fellow working-class Irish-Mancunian and renowned misfit-about-town Steven Patrick Morrissey to suggest they form a group. The pair of them were so instantly infatuated with each other's possibilities that on their second meeting they planned the Smiths in detail. They plotted the label they would sign to (Rough Trade), the famous record sleeves, even the colour of the label on their debut single (blue). Everything came true.

"I didn't expect that. I'd written a load of catchy tunes in my bedroom."

While Marr's guitar style and worldview assimilated Motown, Chic, the Hollies and Iggy Pop, Morrissey added words steeped in Oscar Wilde and 1960s kitchen-sink drama. Morrissey's declaration of celibacy was another genius move, which made fans desperate to be the first to love him.

"We invented indie as we still know it," says Marr, the debt ceremoniously acknowledged in the 90s when Oasis's Noel Gallagher played Marr's guitar.

But the guitarist was equally taken aback by the reach of the Smiths' non-musical impact: the amount of people that turned vegetarianbecause of Meat is Murder, or became politically motivated through Margaret on the Guillotine. "We were of that generation that came after punk and post-punk," he explains. "We're grateful for the revolution, but there was a bit of homophobia there, and sexism. There wasn't in indie. People don't talk about it now, but it was non-macho. If you were an alternative musician, you were political, because of the times [Thatcherism and the Falklands war]. It was taken for granted that the bands you shared a stage with had the same politics. I'm not sure you could say that now."

So when David Cameron started saying that he loved the Smiths, Marr's old political edge – and sense of mischief – was suddenly revived, and he issued a now famous tweet: "David Cameron, stop saying that you like the Smiths. I forbid you to like it." It went viral."I got a lot of support," he grins, of what was primarily a joke. "But I didn't realise Twitter was a forum for so many angry people. I'm amazed how many people who should know better were so reactionary towards me. 'Hey Johnny Marr, I'm no Tory but where do you get off on forbidding people liking your music? I bet you won't give Cameron back the £10 he spent on The Queen Is Dead?' What are you talking about?"

Marr may have copped flak, but the incident was an early example of how Cameron – an old Etonian who also professes to adore the Jam's coruscating The Eton Rifles – can be light on detail.

"I know. I seriously did not like him dropping our name. He picked the wrong band."Marr was equally taken aback – and thrilled – when at the student protests over the raising of tuition fees, one young woman was photographed standing over riot police in Parliament Square, wearing a Smiths Hatful of Hollow T-shirt, an image that until recently featured on his homepage.

"I thought it'd been Photoshopped," he admits. "It took a few minutes to sink in that it was real. But I ended up giving it to everyone then. Clegg; the Queen. I was off!" He chuckles.Marr's amusement turned to surprise when Morrissey joined in the kerfuffle, issuing a statement supporting his ex-bandmate's tweet about Cameron. It was the first time they had united publicly on anything since the Smiths. However, while Morrissey is something of a dab hand at controversial statements, they didn't discuss it. "We used to, back in the day, for the bedevilment of it."

In fact, Marr reveals that while the two former confidantes were meeting up occasionally a few years ago, nowadays they no longer speak at all.

"We don't have any reason to, to be honest," he says, with a touch of glumness. When Marr remastered the Smiths' back catalogue two years ago, he emailed Morrissey (along with all his ex-bandmates) saying he could hear the love in the music, but didn't hear back. "It was a nice way to leave it, I think," he considers, tiptoeing carefully around too much discussion of his former partner. "You can only try and be friendly with someone for so long without getting anything back. You just think: 'Ah, fuck it.'"

When Marr started Electronic with Bernard Sumner, Morrissey opined: "He's replaced me. I'm not sure what with." Does Marr think he still feels betrayed? "You never know. I don't have any weirdness about it, or any of them."

Marr – whose exit precipitated the split – has long found himself being blamed for the Smiths' demise, calling a meeting after finding himself exhausted through writing the songs, (latterly) producing the records and running the unmanaged group's business affairs. Some months before, a sign that not all was well with the guitarist (who in those days coped with the pressures by drinking heavily, unlike the teetotal, running-and-white-tea regime he adopts now) came when he drove his car into a wall and was lucky to escape alive. But it has long intrigued me – when he called that meeting, did he know that he'd come out of it a former Smith?"In all honesty, I don't think I did. We just needed a reset, to do things differently. Two weeks' holiday would have been nice." But Marr has no regrets: he's proud that the Smiths did everything at the top of their game. "I'm glad I didn't spend 35 years in the same band. It's just not me."

Any lingering notion of the Smiths as a close-knit gang was finally demolished when drummer Mike Joyce sued the two songwriters over royalties. Marr still sees Andy Rourke, a friend since childhood, and the bassist dropped into the studio during recording of The Messenger. But discussion of the Smiths remains off limits. "If we need to think about what went on in the Smiths then we can torture ourselves by reading those books," he says, referring to the expanding pile of Smiths biographies.

There's just one thing that does get Marr's goat – the continual rumours that the Smiths will reform, which he accidentally fuelled himself recently when he joked that he would reunite the band "if the coalition government stood down".

"Some guy stuck a camera in my face," he explains. "If I don't say something glib, what else is there to say? 'Fuck off!'? It would have saved me a lot of trouble." He suddenly sounds truly weary. "But then that becomes the story."His irritation doesn't last, and he's soon excitedly remembering how watching Bert Jansch work at close quarters convinced him he could be a solo artist, even though he does indeed have a band, who rehearse in Manchester a few nights a week. Just like you know who. Writing songs is very different to how it was with Morrissey – who would add words to a tape of Marr's music and return it, which could often result in a completely different song to how Marr imagined. "That was a fascinating process." But he's now enjoying "a sense of liberation, being able to call the shots" and sing about his own concerns, whether humanity's relationship with technology or, on the sublime, autobiographical New Town Velocity, the day, aged 15, he "left school for poetry" and tore around Manchester celebrating his first taste of freedom.Around a year ago, Marr included a couple of Smiths songs in a live set at two low-key gigs in Manchester, and was surprised how much he enjoyed playing them. While Morrissey recently announced plans to retire, Marr says he never will. But if he seems happy in his own skin it's because of a union that goes back much further than the Smiths.

As a little boy, while others had toy cars or teddy bears, Marr had a toy guitar. "Recently, my parents redecorated the house and there were a couple of my really old toy guitars knocking around. So they moved them out, decorated, then put them back, as if they were houseplants."So when he was recently invited to speak at his kids' school, his wife, Angie, told him not to "terrify" them but to talk about what he knew. So Marr talked about being a guitarist."I said: 'If you want to be happy, find something you're good at and make it your life, whether it's being a train driver, architect, or whatever.'" He smiles as he lugs his trusty axe into a waiting car. "There's a lot to be said for being an expert at something."


Publicado em: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2013/jan/11/johnny-marr-smiths-morrissey-politics-pop