georgejallen
New Member
good
Would an image of Morrissey buying loo-roll in ASDA change anything? Does he even buy his own loo-roll...?
He's seen shopping in sainsburys and he was over at unicorn veg shop in manchester the other week.
i disagree . ive seen plentys of young fans myslef on live concerts i attendedIt is a very interesting question. As Mauve21 commented, when Morrissey first became famous with The Smiths, there was a genuine air of innocence about him, he had a child-like innocence. That has obviously gone now, the exterior is very tough, he trusts very few people. I think virtually the entire music industry regards him as 'difficult' and 'unrelenting', this is hardly surprising as Morrissey has never played the game, he's commented on numerous times that he dislikes the industry immensly, and has never been part of it. This is probably the reason why certain elements of it has tried on more than one occasion to destroy his career. He is one of the very few artists whose fanbase is largely fanatical and will stay that way, he doesn't seem to attract a lot of new fans, this is the reason why any new releases chart high in the first week and then plummet straight away. As far as knowing much about him goes, we know very little, he's still a mystery after all these years. Oh, it's late, I'm going to bed.
i disagree . ive seen plentys of young fans myslef on live concerts i attended
and from judging on old pictures videobootlegs this was always so..
compare him to other artists od the same age where there arent so many young new fans among them . note also many of the younger fans even if they arent seening him in the flesh live (parents dont let their kids going alone, lack of money,boarding school/living in emote village) are listening online via last fm , taking part via myspace/facebook)
it has to do with the lyrics and with his uniqueness beside others which make him attractive to the young people
he can put it in words better:
I have been a huge fan of your music since the age of 14. Why do you think your music is so appealing and influential to the younger generation?
Sarah-Jane, 20
Alloa, Scotland
To put it bluntly, I think it's because of the loneliness I've experienced in my life - loneliness in the true sense of the word.
Very young people, I think, feel pushed around and ridiculed - and are - simply because of their age. The world can seem to be full of officious meddlers who like to tell others what to do - and, as a matter of fact, that's exactly how the world is! So in my voice, I think young people hear someone who understands the routine of being dumped.... excavations of the heart, etc.
i havet read in an interview that morrissey comemmented that jonathan ross commented to him"that people doubt i actually exist as a person"