logo
Morrissey at the 3Arena review: Singer folds in four Smiths songs over chimeric evening

Morrissey at the 3Arena review: Singer folds in four Smiths songs over chimeric evening

Irish Times2 days ago

Morrissey
3Arena
★★★★★
'This is not an hallucination,' Morrissey tells us, in case we were wondering, and yet tonight does seem strangely chimeric.
In modern music, Morrissey remains something of an anomaly, perhaps because he remains so firmly himself; 'in my own strange way, I've always been true to you' he sings on the brilliant Speedway, backed by a band comprising Juan Galeano, Jesse Tobias, Camila Grey, Matthew Walker and Carmen Vandenberg.
While Morrissey doesn't completely refuse the past (he folds in four Smiths songs), he is more interested in using it for inspiration and amplification, including visuals that survey some of his perennial obsessions: James Baldwin, Edna O'Brien, Brendan Behan, Dionne Warwick, David Bowie and Oscar Wilde.
READ MORE
And obsession is the touchstone for Morrissey, something he partly details in Rebels Without Applause ('the gangs all gone, and I smoulder on'), recasting himself again and again as the outlier and last man standing.
His voice has always somehow belonged to another time. On One Day Goodbye Will Be Farewell, he is the 'savage beast' with 'nothing to sell', and yet his voice, still so majestic, manages to 'sell' us, sweeping us up. On something like the stirring Life is a Pigsty, it is genuinely transporting, where he makes a song about 'brand new broken fortunes'.
The reason Morrissey continues to intrigue is perhaps because he speaks to the disenchanted, tracing a thread from adolescence, with its heady sense of gilded possibilities to the often jarring realities of the world that is to come. And at the heart of his work is a sense of high idealism in conflict with crushing disappointment, from Best Friend on the Payroll to I Wish You Lonely.
Morrissey's most affecting songs are steeped in a kind of faded romanticism, like the melancholy Everyday is like Sunday and the swooning I Know It's Over, with an accompanying image of Morrissey's late mother, deepening the impact.
There is wry humour too, when Morrissey sings 'stab me in your own time' on Scandinavia, he tells us that 'some of these songs are tongue-in-cheek, but that's not one of them', before rampaging through Sure Enough, the Telephone Rings and its transactional tales.
There is a swaggering menace to something like I Will See You in Far Off Places, which resembles a kind of warning bell. While many of his songs contain that sense of panic, he leavens some that convey uneasy resignation. This happens with the first of his two encore songs: Last Night I Dreamt That Somebody Loved Me, which has evolved into a sort-of lullaby, or an alternative anthem for doomed youth (and beyond), to borrow from Wilfred Owen.
It leaves the audience bloodied, but unbowed, as Morrissey takes us into the visceral gut-punch that is Irish Blood, English Heart, reminding us that he will die 'with both of my hands untied', as if we didn't know already.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rachel Blackmore's retirement
Rachel Blackmore's retirement

Irish Times

time32 minutes ago

  • Irish Times

Rachel Blackmore's retirement

Sir, – Would I be alone in losing interest in Irish horse racing after the recent retirement of Rachael Blackmore? I would eagerly scan the runners and riders to see if 'herself' was on board and then making a mental note to see how she did in the results section the following day. As an retiree with no background in horseracing I avidly read the sports pages but they are a little less interesting now that she has gone. I suspect there are a few like me. – Yours, etc, IAIN KENNEDY, READ MORE Co Fermanagh.

Housewife of the Year review: A reminder that Ireland of the 1970s and 80s was no country for women of any age
Housewife of the Year review: A reminder that Ireland of the 1970s and 80s was no country for women of any age

Irish Times

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Housewife of the Year review: A reminder that Ireland of the 1970s and 80s was no country for women of any age

If the 'Lovely Girls' episode of Father Ted was a horror movie, it might have looked something like Housewife of the Year (RTÉ One, Monday, 9.30pm). Ciaran Cassidy's documentary about the only-in-Ireland 'best mammy' contest, hosted each year by Gay Byrne through the 1980s and early 1990s, depicts the event as a glorified pageant for homemakers and a sort of Handmaid's Tale-type ritual that left women in little doubt where they stood in post-DeValera Ireland. Young, old, in-between – the film is a reminder that Ireland was no country for women of any age, and Housewife of the Year let them know it. Cassidy gets the tone exactly right, capturing the low-wattage despair that was part of the background radiation of early 1980s Ireland. When telling the story, there was surely a temptation to serve up a Reeling in the Years type nostalgia-fest – to portray Housewife of the Year as toe-curling and harmless cultural bric-a-brac, to be filed alongside Bosco and Live at Three. The director takes a different tack by interviewing a number of women who participated in this grim jamboree and who are today largely astonished by their naivety. The contrast between the picture they were required to present while on a podium next to 'Uncle Gaybo' – as he refers to himself – and their present-day selves is striking. Ann McStay talks about having had 13 children by the age of 31 and of having to take a bus to what was, in effect, a soup kitchen to feed her family while her husband sought refuge at the bottom of a glass. 'The more kids I had, the more he receded into the pub,' she says. 'He was probably a bit bamboozled'. She entered Housewife of the Year for the prize money and, emboldened by her victory, later spoke out against Ireland's medieval contraception laws. 'After I won, that gave me a bit of courage. You had to be very careful but you have to say it as it is.' READ MORE Just as striking is the story of Ena Howell, whose unmarried mother gave birth to her at the notorious Bessborough Mother and Baby Home in Cork; at the Housewife of the Year, her adoptive mother and her family were gathered on one side of the aisle while on the other her birth mother sat alone. Having reached out to her mother, Ena, we are told her half-siblings demanded she cut off contact. 'They couldn't accept that their perfect family wasn't perfect any more.' Housewife of the Year has many such stories – one woman describes being packed off to a Magdalene Laundry after a pharmacist passes on photographs of her innocently mucking about with some male friends to the parish priest. Another recalls how she became pregnant before marrying her husband and worrying this might be exposed during the contest. 'It was scary. There was still a stigma to it,' she says. 'I didn't want my eldest child to have to suffer anything.' But Cassidy also acknowledges not every mother in 1980s Ireland considered their life a patriarchal hellscape. 'I loved being a housewife,' says Patricia Connolly. 'It never entered my head to go out to work. I didn't have to. Your life revolved around your husband and children.' Gay Byrne doesn't cover himself in glory. As in his interviews on The Late Late Show with Sinéad O'Connor, he comes across as patronising and high on his own smarm. When one contestant reveals she is pregnant, he puts a hand on her waist and cradles his head against her baby bump. There is nothing licentious about the gesture – he isn't being a creep – but nor is he respectful of her personal space. Documentaries about Ireland under the Church are often defined by a sense of barely contained anger. Cassidy's film is in a different register: it radiates a deep sadness as it bears witness to generations of women for whom Ireland was a place of narrowed horizons and stifled opportunities. 'It's like a dreamworld – people accepted all these things,' says one contributor, sounding like someone stirring from a nightmare. Housewife of the Year can also be streamed on Apple TV+

Colm Keena on why it's not the lyrics, it's the  voice that casts the spell
Colm Keena on why it's not the lyrics, it's the  voice that casts the spell

Irish Times

time6 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Colm Keena on why it's not the lyrics, it's the voice that casts the spell

Sitting in the sunshine in the Wicklow mountains recently while having desultory chats with some friends, the conversation visited, momentarily, the topic of the great opera singer, Maria Callas, the subject of a recent biopic. There was mention of her fame, her being from Greece, her love of Paris, and her relationship with the Greek shipping tycoon, Aristotle Onassis. I for my part chipped in to say some argued it was because she had a far from perfect voice that it was so captivating. A perfect voice can run the danger of having no character, while others, perhaps less perfect, can be distinctive in a way that grabs your attention. 'Ah,' said one of the group - a diehard fan - 'like Dylan.' In his 2018 book, Innate: How the wiring of our brains shapes who we are, Kevin Mitchell, the associate professor of Developmental Neurobiology and Genetics at Trinity College, Dublin, wrote (if my brain is still functioning as well as I hope it is) about how each of us gets our unique chromosomal inheritance before going through a developmental stage in the mother's womb that involves a complex to-and-fro interaction between our genes, our developing body, and the mother's body, so that in the end out pops an individual different from all the other humans on the planet. READ MORE Given that there are currently approximately eight billion of us, and the existing population is subject to relentless churn, that's something. Not only that, but because each of us then proceeds to interact with the outside world by way of our unique body, and change and develop as we do, we become, so to speak, ever more unique. We are born different, according to Mitchell, and become more different as we go through life. It an interesting proposition, though all of us of a certain age who have watched our dearly beloved friends become more and more barmy as the years pass, already know it to be the case. It's nice to consider that not only is each person's fingerprint identifiable, but so is each person's face, and each person's singing voice. One day at lunch in our house my late mother, then almost 90, and even smaller and slighter than she'd been during the earlier decades of her life, agreed to give us a song having already endured (sorry!) the pleasure of hearing her grandchildren perform. The fact that her lungs may not have been servicing her vocal cords quite as efficiently as they used to did not diminish the aesthetic effect of the sound she produced. Quite the contrary. I had no memory of having heard her sing before, and the experience of hearing her sing then was powerfully moving and something I will never forget. I might say that I perceived her existence and her history in an entirely new way, but if someone probed that expression, I might find it hard to say what I mean. Nevertheless, while she was singing, my consciousness of her existence had a new and very moving quality. Callas, though she was never as groovy as my mother, can do that too. You just have to listen. The idea of our innate difference to one another was touched on by the writer, Hanif Kareishi, in the extraordinary tweets he posted from his hospital bed in Rome after he fainted and broke his neck in December 2022. Addressing the craft of writing, he advised writers that the characters they create should have fascinations and idiosyncrasies. This chimes with Mitchell's book. A character lacking idiosyncrasies can suck the air out of a story in much the same way a singing voice lacking character can suck the life out of the best of songs. Perhaps the attraction of a voice, or a face, lies in the individuality it reveals (which may explain why bizarrely white teeth, or Botoxed foreheads, can have the opposite effect to the one their owners aspire towards). For me, and obviously for millions of others around the world, the voice of the late, great Bob Marley has the special quality of making you want to listen. His colleague, Bunny Wailer, had a full, clear, impressive voice, but Marley's, to my ears a more delicate, weedier, voice, draws you in more. Sometimes his lyrics are about matters of Rastafarian belief that may not be of particular concern to non-believers. But it's not the lyrics, it's the voice, that casts the spell. Somebody that's not you, singing from the other side of the high garden wall, is making a sound you feel speaks to you precisely because it emphasises the individuality that is core to human nature.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store