Morrissey "Viva Hate" (1988)
Released a mere 6 months after the Smiths' swansong "Strangeways Here We
Come", Morrissey hit the ground running assisted by Smiths (and
eventually Cranberries, Blur and Kaiser Chiefs) producer Stephen Street.
Street, and guitarist/keyboardist Vini Reilly would later argue over
which of them wrote the bulk of the songs on the album, but whatever the
case, one of them helped Morrissey get over the potentially awkward hurdle of the
first solo album.
To my mind, the tracks are a bit of a mixed bunch and
stand or fall based on the backing track. Morrissey himself mostly seems to do a similar vocal thing over each track. There's are
some sonic experiments (particularly in the first couple of tracks) mixed with more traditional arrangements, one or two even sounding a bit
like the Smiths.
A couple of favourites are "Ordinary Boys" (from which the band of the
same name got their moniker) and "Margaret on the Guillotine" in which
Morrissey wistfully imagines Margaret Thatcher being killed... and as a
result, in real life, got him questioned by the Special Branch
(according to Morrissey's autobiography).
No comments:
Post a Comment