Of course Morrissey is a great writer: he is a great songwriter, and the types of songs he writes lend themselves into expansion into prose.He is great on multiple levels: clarity of thought, complexity of idea, and fun play with words. Perspective? More on that later. He becomes a great writer in the same conventional way most writers become good: by being well-read and emulating the saints of literature. Moz's favorite is quite obviously Oscar Wilde, as he practically imitates him to illness, plus admiring other people of wit. Using his clever rhyme time word chords. He quotes himself rather liberally as well, and quotes other people quoting him. He also quotes from good movies, artists, and other musicians --he was a student of all arts it appears. But exceptionally so, music--too bad we couldn't have reached across the water to share our record collections while growing up in isolation. It would have been so fun. Rubber ring, rubber ring, rubber ring, rubber ring....
So fun. Like a rain-soaked car hiding under a dark underpass near Reading Gaol.
Okay, the boy's got a little ego, but who that is interesting doesn't? I enjoy calling him a boy, and think he would enjoy it as well--being as he is as self-conscious of aging, as he was earlier of being young and powerless as a schoolboy. I enjoy the tag for selfish reasons as well, as I am two weeks younger , and if he is still a boy, well. He seems to have never changed, really, which is another thing I admire in him--still trodding the death boards, brooding against the rotting wrought-iron cemetery fences, posing in languishing ecstasy over an imagined incompetence at being loved, playing dry word games.
I have to share a few favorite quotes, but I don't want to do this too much, since it will detract from reading the ebony black sparkle of the words in context when you read it. This one is attributed to his neighbor who heard him singing through the windows in Manchester:
"If you must sing every night, could you please sing something we know?"
Now this one rides right down the center line of everything I love about my boy. Creativity self-deprecated and unappreciated. You can hear the snap and crackle of missed synapses with those around him in a way that I can relate. It makes his grande finales, wallowing in the love festas of young, tattooed Mexico and blue-eyed Sweden, quite, quite understandable and sympathetic. The story lags here a little as he lists show after explosive, worshipful -to- the- point- of- near- violence show. And of course he throws in that ...oh. well, I am not going to give away all.
"A beach at nighttime is silent with secrets--finally given a rest from those dreaded day-people" . And fully dressed.
Don't miss the great story of Arthur Kane, from the New York Dolls--$45.00 is all I'm gonna say.
And HERE is everything I meant to say--I don't GET the people that don't GET Morrissey. If you are one of those folks who find him whiney, depressing, morbid and pale,--c'mere--we need to have a long chat about perspective on life. You must be one of those who imagines the world always to be a sun-filled, smiley faced place. How many pieces of flair do you wear? Just ignoring death, tragedy, sadness, longing, tosca: does not make it go away. Not to mention, can you put your head in the oven for a minute and let me turn up the gas--for just a minute--no?--okay--20 seconds--until I can explain to you the concept of black humor and self-deprecating humor? It is so much more interesting and witty than the usual slap-stick pratfalls of Fail-blog or running the dozens of "Your mama" or braggadocio macho humor. He is so goddammed funny, endlessly, in almost every word. Just don't take it all so seriously!! It's called STYLE. It is a stylized perspective--trading heavily on the use of hyperbole and litote. Like his great hero, O.W., who is on his side. And he is not nearly as mean-spirited or illogical (quite the contrary) as you might imagine, and in the rare moments he is guilty of being human, his insipid targets deserve it and more--IMHO.
Oh, yeah, I promised earlier to give my dish on the great Moz celebrity/celibate love-life mystery.
It's all true. Steven was, in my estimation, omnisexual--which is not bisexual. The peak of his love life came in the midst of thousands or tens of thousands, depending on the venue, and has never been fully consummated or satisfied. He really does love us all, wants us ALL, old, young, famous, obscure, the boys, the girls, the stylish, the sadly ugly,the thin-waisted, the big bosomed, the room-bound, the fatties, but refrains in sensitivity for our touching, eroticized emotions that HE stirred.