Free Download Lagu Morrissey Everyday Is Like Sunday Rating: 7,2/10 1143 reviews
- Everyday Is Like Sunday Nfl
- Morrissey
- Viva Hate
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'Everyday Is Like Sunday' |
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Single by Morrissey |
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from the album Viva Hate |
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Released | 31 May 1988 |
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Format | 7', 12', CD, cassette |
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Recorded | October - December 1987 |
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Genre | New wave |
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Length | 3:33 |
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Label | HMV(UK original release) Major Minor(UK 2010 reissue) Sire/Reprise (US) |
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Songwriter(s) | Morrissey, Stephen Street |
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Morrissey singles chronology |
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'Suedehead' (1988) | 'Everyday Is Like Sunday' (1988) | 'The Last of the Famous International Playboys' (1989) |
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Something Is Squeezing My Skull (2009) | Everyday Is Like Sunday (2010) | Glamorous Glue (2011) |
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Alternative cover |
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Problems playing this file? See media help. |
'Everyday Is Like Sunday' is the third track of Morrissey's debut solo album, Viva Hate, and the second single to be released by the artist. While the lyrics were written by Morrissey, the song's composer was Stephen Street. It made number nine in the UK Singles Chart and remains one of his best-known songs.[1] 'Everyday Is Like Sunday', as well as the single's B-sides 'Disappointed' and 'Will Never Marry', feature on the compilation album Bona Drag.
The track has been covered by a number of other bands, including The Pretenders (on the Original Motion Picture soundtrack Boys on the Side), by 10,000 Maniacs (as a B-side to their single 'Candy Everybody Wants'), the Armageddon Dildos (on their 'Come Armageddon' maxi-single), Estonian 1990s pop group Mr. Lawrence and Mikel Erentxun (on his album Acrobatas). Colin Meloy of The Decemberists also covers the track on his solo album Colin Meloy Sings Morrissey. Dave Couse (former lead singer of A House) has performed this live with his later band The Impossible and alternative rock band Fate or Trouble who released the song as their debut single. A mostly instrumental version (containing only the title lyric) was used in NFL Network's 'When all you want is football' television ad campaign.[2] As well as inspiring several cover versions it has also inspired the cult Canadian film Everyday Is Like Sunday.
The lyrics are reportedly inspired by Nevil Shute's novel On the Beach,[3] about a group of people waiting for nuclear devastation in Melbourne, Australia.
The single was re-issued on 27 September 2010, on CD and two 7's, including the unreleased 'November the Second'; an alternative mix of 'November Spawned a Monster'. This re-issue debuted at number 42 on the UK Singles Chart. It coincides with the 20th anniversary re-issue of his 1990 compilation, Bona Drag.
Track listings[edit]
7' vinyl[edit]
- 'Everyday Is Like Sunday'
- 'Disappointed'
12' vinyl, compact disc and cassette[edit]
- 'Everyday Is Like Sunday'
- 'Sister I'm a Poet'
- 'Disappointed'
- 'Will Never Marry'
2010 re-issue[edit]
compact disc[edit]
- 'Everyday Is Like Sunday' (2010 digital remaster)
- 'November the Second'
- 'Everyday Is Like Sunday'
- 'Everyday Is Like Sunday' (Top of the Pops - 9 June 1988)
7' single #1[edit]
- 'Everyday Is Like Sunday' (2010 digital remaster)
- 'Trash' (Live at Irvine Meadows)
Notes:Although credited as being performed at Irvine Meadows, fans have pointed out that Morrissey did not perform at that venue in 1991, and that the live version of 'Trash' is likely to have been recorded at the Pacific Amphitheatre in Costa Mesa, California on 1 June 1991.
7' single #2[edit]
- 'Everyday Is Like Sunday' (2010 digital remaster)
- 'Everyday Is Like Sunday' (live at the Hollywood Bowl - 8 June 2007)
Etchings on vinyl[edit]
British 7' and 12': NINETEEN EIGHTY HATE/none
2010 7': CAN YOU SEE THE BLACK CLOUD?
Charts[edit]
Chart | Peak position |
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Ireland (IRMA) | 3 |
UK Singles (The Official Charts Company) | 9 |
Reviews[edit]
Professional ratings |
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Review scores |
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Source | Rating |
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AllMusic | [4] |
Although Morrissey's debut 'Suedehead' had received a positive review from the English music magazine NME, the follow-up received a cooler reaction. Alluding to the controversy that had arisen over Morrissey's 'Bengali in Platforms', reviewer Steven Wells warned the singer to not 'attract a Sham Army style of following and end up like Jimmy Pursey' and to 'Think on, lad.'
Praise for the single came in Q magazine in September 1992 when Chrissie Hynde (who would later record her own version of the song) said that the 'lyric to Everyday Is Like Sunday is, to me, a masterful piece of prose' and Siobhan Fahey described it as her 'all-time top song'.[5] Ned Raggett of AllMusic wrote, 'Street's orchestrations fit the melancholic surge of the music to a T, while Morrissey's portrait of a 'seaside town that they forgot to bomb' is evocative and given a bravura vocal.'[4]
'There's no way the B-sides can achieve the same level as the main track, but each has their points,' continues Raggett. 'Sister I'm a Poet' is the most explicitly Smiths-like track, a quick band romp with a cryptic lyric. More of note is 'Disappointed,' which meshes a touch of 'How Soon Is Now?'-style tremolo guitar with an aggressive, shuddering drum punch. The wickedly funny lyric at once celebrates his rock icon status and pokes more than a few holes in it. 'Will Never Marry' is mostly a Street showcase of gently descending guitar and gripping strings, but Morrissey's lyric to an unknown letter writer is also worthy of note.[4]
Musicians[edit]
- Morrissey: vocals
- Stephen Street: bass guitar
- Vini Reilly: guitar, piano
- Andrew Paresi: drums
Live performances[edit]
The song was performed live by Morrissey on his 1991, 1992 (Festival Dates), 2002, 2004, 2006, 2007 and 2008 tours, and on his 2012 tour of Australia and New Zealand. In 2004 the song was played in a medley with the first verse of 'Subway Train' by The New York Dolls.
Video[edit]
The video features clips from the film Carry On Abroad.
Billie Whitelaw appears in a supporting role as does Cheryl Murray and Lucette Henderson as a young fan.
The seaside town used as the location was Southend-on-Sea.
Release details[edit]
Country | Record label | Format | Catalogue number |
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UK | HMV | 7' vinyl | POP1619 |
UK | HMV | 12' vinyl | 12POP1619 |
UK | HMV | Compact disc | CDPOP1619 |
UK | HMV | Cassette | TCPOP1619 |
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^'Morrissey UK chart'. officialcharts.com. Retrieved 22 March 2017.
- ^'NFL Network - 'Every Day Is Like Sunday''. Adforum. Maydream Inc. Retrieved 2 July 2016.
- ^Beasley, Corey (28 October 2010). 'Bona Drag (20th Anniversary Edition)'. Pop Matters. Pop Matters Media. Retrieved 2 July 2016.
- ^ abcRaggett, Ned. 'Everyday Is Like Sunday Review'. AllMusic. Retrieved 18 October 2012.
- ^'Archived copy'. Archived from the original on 10 December 2006. Retrieved 2007-01-26.Cite uses deprecated parameter
deadurl=
(help)CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Everyday_Is_Like_Sunday&oldid=902275927'
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Top Related Artists
Biography
As the lead singer of the Smiths, arguably the most important indie band in Britain during the '80s, Morrissey's theatrical crooning and literate, poetic lyrics -- filled with romantic angst, social alienation, and cutting wit -- connected powerfully with a legion of similarly sensitive, disaffected youth. These fans turned the Smiths into stars in Britain, exerting tremendous pull over much of the country's guitar-based music for many years after their breakup. Even if the group remained underground cult artists in the States, they had a fan base that slowly, steadily grew larger over the years. Indeed, within a few years after Morrissey began his solo career with Viva Hate (1988), his American cult had grown to the point where he became more popular in the U.S. than in his homeland, where he nonetheless remained a perennial headline maker in the music press. After a quiet period around the turn of the millennium, Morrissey launched a comeback in 2004 with You Are the Quarry, an album whose success proved that he was still one of the most beloved figures in alternative rock. Stephen Patrick Morrissey was born May 22, 1959, in Manchester, England; not surprisingly a shy, awkward youth, he became obsessed with music and film as a teenager and devoted his writing talents to penning a New York Dolls fanzine (he was the president of their U.K. fan club), as well as a tribute to James Dean and numerous opinionated letters to the weekly music paper Melody Maker. During the explosion of punk in the late '70s, Morrissey unsuccessfully auditioned for Slaughter & the Dogs and sang for a brief period with a band called the Nosebleeds. He met guitarist Johnny Marr in 1982 and the two began writing songs together, forging one of the most productive partnerships British pop had seen in quite some time. The Smiths' 1983 debut single, 'Hand in Glove,' a love song filled with oblique references to homosexuality, made them an underground sensation in the U.K. and as Morrissey attracted more attention, he demonstrated a flair for manipulating the media. His interviews were filled with blunt, unpredictable opinions and intentionally outrageous statements, and his notoriety wasn't hurt by his stage presence (he performed wearing a hearing aid with flowers sticking out of his back pockets) or his self-proclaimed celibacy in the wake of much speculation about his sexuality. Possessed of a darkly cynical bent as a lyricist, he was often misinterpreted as advocating some of the more disturbing things he sang about, which only added to the furor surrounding the band. The Smiths' eponymous 1984 debut was a smash in the U.K., and in its wake, Morrissey began promoting his political views, heavily criticizing Margaret Thatcher, and advocating vegetarianism (hence the title of the follow-up LP, Meat Is Murder). The Queen Is Dead (1986) was acclaimed as a masterpiece, but friction between Morrissey and Marr was growing. Marr departed after 1987's Strangeways, Here We Come and Morrissey broke up the rest of the band to begin a solo career.Feeling betrayed by Marr's defection, Morrissey channeled his frustration into creating new material with producer Stephen Street. His first two solo singles, 'Suedehead' and the gorgeous 'Everyday Is Like Sunday,' were significant British hits in 1988 and his first album, Viva Hate (its title a reference to the Smiths' breakup), was commercially and critically well received. He released several more high-quality singles, including 'The Last of the International Playboys' and 'Interesting Drug,' but spent an inordinate amount of time laboring on the follow-up album, issuing the stopgap compilation Bona Drag in 1990. In the meantime, the Madchester fad was sweeping British indie music, and when the lackluster Kill Uncle was finally released in 1991, it only magnified the disappointment. U.K. reviewers took Morrissey to task, suggesting that the record marked the end of his glory days and that he would never be able to match the songs he'd written in tandem with Marr. A misperceived flirtation with British nationalism (not helped by a couple of seemingly racial caricatures in recent songs) tarnished his image even more in the U.K. press during 1992, this coming amid even more frequent reports of feuds with his managers, business associates, and ex-bandmates. All the controversy overshadowed the fact that 1992's Mick Ronson-produced Your Arsenal was a smashing return to form; Morrissey used his new guitar tandem of Alain Whyte (who co-wrote much of the material) and Boz Boorer (formerly of rockabilly revivalists the Polecats) to full advantage in crafting a crunchy, glammed-up record. It easily ranked as the hardest rocking of his career. Meanwhile, over in the U.S., tickets for his upcoming tour were selling like hotcakes and he managed to sell out L.A.'s Hollywood Bowl even faster than the Beatles had.His confidence renewed by his American success (to the point where he permanently moved to Los Angeles), Morrissey delivered an equally strong follow-up in 1994's calmer Vauxhall and I, which even got him his first Top 50 singles chart entry in the U.S. with the MTV-supported 'The More You Ignore Me, the Closer I Get.' A hit-and-miss compilation, The World of Morrissey, followed in 1995, after which he switched labels (from Sire to RCA) for the first time since the Smiths' debut album. Also issued in 1995 was the prog rock-informed Southpaw Grammar, which confounded many and perhaps prevented him from expanding his American audience past a now-sizable group of longtime listeners. In 1996, he moved to another new label, this time Island, and released Maladjusted the following year. It failed to sell well outside of his most fanatical followers and his relationship with Island ended in 1998. In the years that followed, Morrissey remained a massively popular touring attraction on the strength of his singular identity, despite the fact that he had yet to land another record deal. Finally, he signed his Attack label to Sanctuary, and released his first studio album in seven years, 2004's You Are the Quarry, featuring production by Jerry Finn (blink-182, Sum 41, and Green Day). The album's leadoff single, 'Irish Blood, English Heart,' garnered considerable press, radio, and music television attention, and established a comeback of sorts. The concert recording Live at Earls Court followed one year later, as did the DVD concert Who Put the 'M' in Manchester?, which saw a brief theatrical release. His second full-length for Sanctuary, Ringleader of the Tormentors, was produced by Tony Visconti (T. Rex, David Bowie) and released in spring 2006. Recorded in Rome, the album also featured some orchestration by famed composer Ennio Morricone. Around this time, Morrissey's longtime guitarist and writing partner Alain Whyte left the band. Although Whyte continued to contribute songs for Morrissey, he was largely replaced on album and in live shows by guitarist Jesse Tobias. In 2009, Morrissey released Years of Refusal, his first under Decca after label changes found Sanctuary being absorbed into the Universal Music Group (which owned Decca). Produced by Finn and once again showcasing guitarist Tobias, Years of Refusal found Morrissey going for a more stripped-down, back-to-basics rock approach. Sadly, Finn suffered a cerebral hemorrhage just after wrapping production on the album. He fell into a coma and died just over a month later on August 21, 2008. Despite the tragedy surrounding it, Years of Refusal was largely hailed as Morrissey's best album in years. Over the next few years, Morrissey busied himself with rejigged reissues of his solo material, and various other compilations surfaced, including the 2009 B-sides collection Swords and the 2011 set Very Best of Morrissey; he also played live with semi-regularity. Early in the summer of 2012, he announced in an interview with JuiceOnline.com that he was tentatively planning to retire in 2014. Morrissey then spent much of 2012 and 2013 touring the world. For a time in 2013, he had a bout with bad health that saw him hospitalized first for an ulcer and then for pneumonia.A film of a March 2013 show at L.A.'s Hollywood High School was released as 25Live that August, and was issued on DVD and Blu-ray before the end of the year. His autobiography -- published by Penguin Classics that October -- was well-received and became a number one best-seller in the U.K. In January 2014, despite his earlier proclamation of retirement, Morrissey signed a new record deal, this time with Capitol. Six months later, he released his tenth studio album, World Peace Is None of Your Business, on Capitol's Harvest imprint. In promotion of the album, Morrissey shot several short films that he released online, in which he delivered spoken word versions of the title track as well as the singles 'Istanbul,' 'Earth Is the Loneliest Planet,' and 'The Bullfighter Dies.' By August 2014 Morrissey was once again without a label, having parted ways with Harvest. He also revealed that he'd undergone treatment for an undisclosed type of cancer. Nonetheless, he continued touring, wrapping up the year with a two-month stint in Europe. In January 2015, following several live shows in the U.K., Morrissey appeared in a high-profile concert at New York's Madison Square Garden supported by Blondie. That March he released a fifth single from World Peace Is None of Your Business, the digital download 'Kiss Me a Lot.' Also in 2015, Morrissey announced the publication of his debut novel, List of the Lost, for Penguin. In 2017 he returned with the Low in High School LP; the album entered the British charts at five and the Billboard charts at 20. Two years later, Morrissey delivered California Son, a collection of covers that concentrated largely on folk-rock and pop tunes from the 1960s. ~ Steve Huey
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