Showing posts with label There Is a Light That Never Goes Out. Show all posts
Showing posts with label There Is a Light That Never Goes Out. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 14, 2023

The Smiths/Morrissey: Top 50 Songs

The Smiths

left to right: Andy Rourke, Morrissey, Johnny Marr, and Mike Joyce;
image from Wikipedia.org

The Smiths were a college rock/synth-pop group formed in Manchester, England. They only lasted five years (1982-1987), but had a significant impact. The band was comprised of Morrissey (vocals), Johnny Marr (guitar), Andy Rourke (bass), and Mike Joyce (drums). The Smiths’ 1986 album The Queen is Dead is featured in the DMDB book The Top 100 Albums of All Time.

Morrissey went on to a successful solo career after the band broke up. Marr worked with other bands, most notably The The (1988-94) and Electronic (1989-98), recorded a couple of solo albums (2013-14), did session work with Beck, Bryan Ferry, Pet Shop Boys, Talking Heads and others and produced Modest Mouse (2006-09). Rourke died on 5/19/2023 at 59 years old.

Click here to see other acts’ best-of lists.


Check out the DMDB podcast episode The Best of the Smiths, 1983-1987 (In Memory of Andy Rourke) based on this list.

Awards (The Smiths):

Awards (Morrissey):


Top 50 Songs


This list includes material by the Smiths and Morrissey as a solo artist (noted in parentheses). Dave’s Music Database lists are determined by song’s appearances on best-of lists as well as chart success, sales, radio airplay, streaming, and awards. Songs which hit #1 on various charts are noted.

DMDB Top 1%:

1. How Soon Is Now? (1984)

DMDB Top 2%:

2. There Is a Light That Never Goes Out (1986)
3. This Charming Man (1983)

DMDB Top 5%:

4. Everyday Is Like Sunday (Morrissey, 1988)

DMDB Top 10%:

5. Suedehead (Morrissey, 1988)
6. Please, Please, Please Let Me Get What I Want (1984)
7. Heaven Knows I’m Miserable Now (1984)
8. The More You Ignore Me, the Closer I Get (Morrissey, 1994) #1 MR

DMDB Top 20%:

9. Panic (1986)
10. William It Was Really Nothing (1984)

11. Bigmouth Strikes Again (1986)
12. Girlfriend in a Coma (1987)
13. Irish Blood, English Heart (Morrissey, 2004)
14. Hand in Glove (1983)
15. Ask (1986)
16. Shoplifters of the World Unite (1987)
17. Sheila Take a Bow (1987)
18. Stop Me if You’ve Heard This One Before (1987)
19. The Boy with the Thorn in His Side (1985)
20. What Difference Does It Make? (1984)

21. First of the Gang to Die (Morrissey, 2004)
22. Half a Person (1987)

Beyond the DMDB Top 20%:

23. The Last of the Famous International Playboys (Morrissey, 1989)
24. Tomorrow (Morrissey, 1992) #1 MR
25. Is It Really So Strange? (1987)
26. Paint a Vulgar Picture (1987)
27. Last Night I Dreamt That Somebody Loved Me (1987)
28. Shakespeare’s Sister (1985)
29. That Joke Isn’t Funny Anymore (1985)

30. Girl Afraid (1984)
31. Asleep (1985)
32. Sweet and Tender Hooligan (1987)
33. Still Ill (1984)
34. I Started Something I Couldn’t Finish (1987)
35. November Spawned a Monster (Morrissey, 1990)
36. Interesting Drug (Morrissey, 1989)
37. You Just Haven’t Earned It Yet Baby (1987)
38. You Have Killed Me (Morrissey, 2006)
39. The Headmaster Ritual (1985)
40. Ouija Board, Ouija Board (Morrissey, 1989)

41. We Hate It When Our Friends Become Successful (Morrissey, (1992)
42. Boxers (Morrissey, 1995)
43. Piccadilly Palare (Morrissey, 1990)
44. The Queen Is Dead (1986)
45. Our Frank (Morrissey, 1991)
46. Sing Your Life (Morrissey, 1991)
47. Frankly Mr. Shankly (1986)
48. Death of a Disco Dancer (1987)
49. Some Girls Are Bigger Than Others (1986)
50. Reel Around the Fountain (1983)


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First posted 2/7/2020; updated 6/14/2023.

Monday, June 4, 2001

The Smiths: A Retrospective, 1982-1988

The Smiths

A Retrospective: 1982-1988

Overview:

This rock quartet formed in Manchester, England, in 1982 and disbanded in 1987. They are considered one of the most important acts to emerge from the British independent music scene in the 1980s and became a staple of the college rock movement.

The Smiths released only four studio albums over their short career from 1984 to 1987. However, it was only months “after releasing their first album, [that] the Smiths issued the singles and rarities collection Hatful of Hollow, establishing” HH a “funny, annoying, and/or incredible thing about both the Smiths and Morrissey” WL – “a tradition of repackaging their material as many times and as quickly as possible.” HH This may not be entirely troublesome to Smiths fanatics, however, since “many people consider the Morrissey/Marr duo to be the last great songwriting team [hence] any release by the Smiths is indispensable” WL to “any die-hard fan of the Smiths.” WL Besides, “many of their finest songs were never issued on their studio albums” HH because “the Smiths treated singles as individual entities, not just ways to promote an album.” HH


The Players:

  • Morrissey (vocals)
  • Johnny Marr (guitar, et al)
  • Andy Rourke (bass)
  • Mike Joyce (drums, percussion)


On the Web:


Lists:

Awards:

The Studio Albums:

Hover over an album cover to see its title and year of release. Click on the album to go to its dedicated DMDB page.


Compilations:

Under each album snapshot, songs featured on the anthologies are noted. If the song charted, the date of the song’s release or first chart appearance and its chart peaks are noted in parentheses. Click for codes to singles charts.


The Smiths (1984):

  • Hand in Glove (5/13/83, 19 CO) HH, LB, VB
  • This Charming Man (10/31/83, 1 CO, 8 UK) HH, VB
  • What Difference Does It Make? (1/16/84, 5 CO, 12 UK) HH, VB
  • Still Ill (37 CO) HH, VB
  • Reel Around the Fountain (35 CO) HH
  • You’ve Got Everything Now HH


Meat Is Murder (1985):

  • How Soon Is Now? (1/28/85, 1 CO, 16 UK) HH, VB
  • Barbarism Begins at Home (4/85)
  • That Joke Isn’t Funny Anymore (7/1/85, 12 CO, 49 UK) WL, VB

Hatful of Hollow

The Smiths


Released: November 12, 1984


Recorded: 1983-84


Peak: -- US, 7 UK, -- CN, -- AU


Sales (in millions): 0.13 US, 0.3 UK, 0.43 world (includes US + UK)


Genre: college rock


Tracks: (1) William, It Was Really Nothing (2) What Difference Does It Make? * (3) These Things Take Time * (4) This Charming Man * (5) How Soon Is Now? (6) Handsome Devil * (7) Hand in Glove (8) Still Ill * (9) Heaven Knows I’m Miserable Now (10) This Night Has Opened My Eyes * (11) You’ve Got Everything Now * (12) Accept Yourself * (13) Girl Afraid (14) Back to the Old House * (15) Reel Around the Fountain * (16) Please Please Please Let Me Get What I Want


Total Running Time: 56:11

Rating:

4.105 out of 5.00 (average of 22 ratings)


Awards: (Click on award to learn more).

About Hatful of Hollow:

This was an odd collection gathering some of the Smiths’ early singles and B-sides alongside BBC recordings (marked with an asterisk). The BBC recordings are of cuts from The Smiths. They “are nervy and raw – and they’re also not the selling point of the record.” HH Instead, this collection deservers celebration because it includes a fair share of “classics, including the sweet rush of William, It Was Really Nothing, and the sardonic Heaven Knows I’m Miserable Now, the tongue-in-cheek lament of Please, Please, Please Let Me Get What I Want, the wistful Back to the Old House, [and] Girl Afraid.” HH “With such strong material forming the core of the album, it’s little wonder that Hatful of Hollow is as consistent as The Smiths and arguably captures the excitement surrounding the band even better.” HH


Tracks Not on Previously Noted Albums:

  • Handsome Devil (5/13/83, B-side of “Hand in Glove”) HH
  • Accept Yourself (10/31/83, B-side of “This Charming Man”) HH
  • Back to the Old House (1/16/84, B-side of “What Difference Does It Make?”) HH, LB
  • These Things Take Time (1/16/84, B-side of “What Difference Does It Make?”) HH, LB
  • Heaven Knows I’m Miserable Now (5/21/84, 5 CO, 10 UK) HH, LB, VB
  • Girl Afraid (5/21/84, B-side, 39 CO) HH, LBj
  • William, It Was Really Nothing (8/20/84, 10 CO, 17 UK) HH, LB, VB
  • Please Please Please Let Me Get What I Want (8/20/84, B-side, 9 CO) HH, LB, VB
  • This Night Has Opened My Eyes HH, LB

The Queen Is Dead (1986):

  • The Boy with the Thorn in His Side (9/23/85, 10 CO, 23 UK) WL, VB
  • Bigmouth Strikes Again (5/19/86, 2 CO, 26 UK) WL, VB
  • There Is a Light That Never Goes Out (10/24/92, 2 CO, 25 UK) WL, VB
  • Some Girls Are Bigger Than Others VB
  • I Know It’s Over VB

The World Won’t Listen

The Smiths


Released: February 23, 1987


Recorded: 1984-87


Peak: -- US, 2 UK, -- CN, -- AU


Sales (in millions): -- US, -- UK, -- world (includes US and UK)


Genre: college rock


Tracks: (1) Panic (2) Ask (3) London (4) Bigmouth Strikes Again (5) Shakespeare’s Sister (6) There Is a Light That Never Goes Out (7) Shoplifters of the World Unite (8) The Boy with the Thorn in His Side (9) Money Changes Everything (10) Asleep (11) Unloveable (12) Half a Person (13) Stretch Out and Wait (14) That Joke Isn’t Funny Anymore (15) Oscillate Wildly (16) You Just Haven’t Earned It Yet Baby (17) Rubber Ring


Total Running Time: 59:26

Rating:

2.921 out of 5.00 (average of 16 ratings)

About The World Won’t Listen:

In 1987, Rough Trade released this UK-only collection of singles (including those from the Meat Is Murder and The Queen Is Dead albums) and B-sides. The album featured 16 songs, although there was an 18-track version released as well. “Shakespeare’s Sister, Panic, Ask, [and] Shoplifters of the World Unite…are all definitive, as are “the sneering, bouncing pop of You Just Haven’t Earned It Yet, BabyLB and “the elegiac Unloveable, Asleep, Stretch Out and Wait, and Half a Person.” LB


Tracks Not on Previously Noted Albums:

  • Oscillate Wildly (1/28/85, B-side of “How Soon Is Now?”, 39 CO) WL, LB
  • Shakespeare’s Sister (3/18/85, 11 CO, 26 UK) WL, LB, VB
  • Stretch Out and Wait (3/18/85, B-side) WL, LB
  • Rubber Ring (9/23/85, B-side of “The Boy with the Thorn in His Side,” 39 CO) WL, LB
  • Asleep (9/23/85, B-side of “The Boy with the Thorn in His Side”) WL, LB
  • Unloveable (5/19/86, B-side) WL, LB
  • Money Changes Everything (5/19/86, B-side) WL
  • Panic (7/21/86, 3 CO, 11 UK) WL, LB, VB
  • Ask (10/20/86, 10 CO, 14 UK) WL, LB, VB
  • Shoplifters of the World Unite (1/26/87, 4 CO, 12 UK) WL, LB, VB
  • London (1/26/87, B-side) WL, LB
  • Half a Person (1/26/87, B-side, 39 CO) WL, LB
  • You Just Haven’t Earned It Yet Baby WL, LB

Louder Than Bombs

The Smiths


Released: March 30, 1987


Recorded: 1983-87


Peak: 62 US, 38 UK, -- CN, -- AU


Sales (in millions): --


Genre: college rock


Tracks: (1) Is It Really So Strange? (2) Sheila Take a Bow (3) Shoplifters of the World Unite (4) Sweet and Tender Hooligan (5) Half a Person (6) London (7) Panic (8) Girl Afraid (9) Shakespeare’s Sister (10) William, It Was Really Nothing (11) You Just Haven’t Earned It Yet Baby (12) Heaven Knows I’m Miserable Now (13) Ask (14) Golden Lights (15) Oscillate Wildly (16) These Things Take Time (17) Rubber Ring (18) Back to the Old House (19) Hand in Glove (20) Stretch Out and Wait (21) Please Please Please Let Me Get What I Want (22) This Night Has Opened My Eyes (23) Unloveable (24) Asleep


Total Running Time: 72:44

Rating:

4.093 out of 5.00 (average of 13 ratings)


Awards: (Click on award to learn more).

About Louder Than Bombs:

In 1987, neither Hatful of Hollow nor The World Won’t Listen were available in the U.S. American audiences were thus treated to this 24-track package which featured 13 cuts from Listen and 8 from Hollow. It “makes the record a little redundant for most Smiths fans.” LB However, it “boasts a wealth of brilliant material” LB and “mostly does a great service by tidying up the Hollow and Listen collections. By whittling out the songs on those collections that appeared on the Smiths’ studio albums, Bombs fits neatly beside the studio albums without overlap. The one exception is the presence of Hand in Glove, the band’s first single. This seems an odd choice since there were still three non-album cuts (Handsome Devil, Accept Yourself, and Money Changes Everything) from Hollow and Listen that weren’t transported over to Bombs.

Bombs also adds “the bizarre travelogue of Is It Really So Strange?,” LB Sheila Take a Bow, and Sweet and Tender Hooligan, all of which rank with the Smiths’ best. In fact, in the opinion of the DMDB, Bombs showcases the best of the Smiths throughout their career, making it the ideal launch pad for beginners even more so than any of their official studio albums.


Tracks Not on Previously Noted Albums:

  • Golden Lights (10/20/86, B-side of “Ask”) LB
  • Sheila Take a Bow (4/13/87, 10 CO, 10 UK) LB, VB
  • Is It Really So Strange? (4/13/87, B-side) LB
  • Sweet and Tender Hooligan (4/13/87, B-side) LB

Strangeways, Here We Come (1987):

  • Girlfriend in a Coma (8/10/87, 4 CO, 13 UK) VB
  • I Started Something I Couldn’t Finish (11/12/87, 12 CO, 23 UK) VB
  • Last Night I Dreamt Somebody Loved Me (12/7/87, 12 CO, 30 UK) VB
  • Stop Me if You’ve Heard This One Before (1/21/88, 9 CO) VB

The Very Best of

The Smiths


Released: June 4, 2001


Recorded: 1983-1987


Peak: -- US, 30 UK


Sales (in millions): -- US, 0.3 UK


Genre: college rock


Tracks: (1) Panic (2) The Boy with the Thorn in His Side (3) Heaven Knows I’m Miserable Now (4) Ask (5) Bigmouth Strikes Again (6) How Soon Is Now? (7) This Charming Man (8) What Difference Does It Make? (9) William, It Was Really Nothing (10) Some Girls Are Bigger Than Others (11) Girlfriend in a Coma (12) Hand in Glove (13) There Is a Light That Never Goes Out (14) Please Please Please Let Me Get What I Want (15) That Joke Isn’t Funny Anymore (16) I Know It’s Over (17) Sheila Take a Bow (18) I Started Something I Couldn’t Finish (19) Still Ill (20) Shakespeare’s Sister (21) Shoplifters of the World Unite (22) Last Night I Dreamt That Somebody Loved Me (23) Stop Me if You Think You’ve Heard This One Before


Total Running Time: 78:34

Rating:

3.865 out of 5.00 (average of 11 ratings)

About The Very Best of:

For a group that only released four studio albums, there are WAY too many compilations out there, including Best…I, Best…II, Singles, The Sound of the Smiths, AND the three B-side collections highlighted on this page. This is the one that makes the most sense and gathers the biggest and best for the casual fan.

Resources and Related Links:


First posted 4/27/2008; last updated 2/25/2022.

Monday, October 12, 1992

The Smiths “There Is a Light That Never Goes Out” released

There Is a Light That Never Goes Out

The Smiths

Writer(s): Johnny Marr, Morrissey (see lyrics here)


Released: October 12, 1992


First Charted: October 24, 1992


Peak: 2 CO, 25 UK, 14 DF (Click for codes to charts.)


Sales (in millions): --


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): -- radio, 108.68 video, 517.28 streaming

Awards:

Click on award for more details.

About the Song:

Perhaps no other lyric better represents the Smiths than “And if a double-decker bus crashes into us / To die by your side is such a heavenly way to die / And if a ten-ton truck kills the both of us / To die by your side, well, the pleasure, the privilege is mine.” With these words from “There Is a Light That Never Goes Out,” Morrissey “ups the sad-and-doomed quotient by leaps and bounds,” AMG showcasing his talent for simultaneously romantic and morbid imagery. It is “an introspective and lonely lyric underpinned by a delicate, intricate, acoustic-led band.” XFM

“Every instrument, every sound in the song’s four minutes, is positioned for maximum emotional impact. Johnny Marr’s weepy string arrangements dominate most open spaces that Morrissey’s pensive vocals don’t fill.” AMG Marr, the band’s guitarist who gave the band their jangly-pop sound, described the recording process as “magical.” WK

In his 2002 book Songs That Saved Your Life, Simon Goddard shows how the song’s narrative is similar to the movie Rebel Without a Cause. In the 1955 classic, James Dean – who Morrissey idolized – “leaves his tortous home life, being the passenger to a potential romantic partner.” WK Goddard also characterized the song as an “explicit glamorization of suicide.” WK

The song was first released on the Smiths’ 1986 album The Queen Is Dead. It was released as a single six years later – after the band’s demise – in support of their compilation Best II. AllMusic.co’s Tim DiGravina called it “one of the most touching and romantic songs in the Smiths’ discography.” AMG XFM said it “may also be the band at their best.” XFM In 2014, NME ranked it the #12 song of all time. WK


Resources:


Related Links:


First posted 1/20/2024.