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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (June 30, 2017)
Page 8 News Street Roots • June 30-July 6, 2017 News Street Roots • June 30-July 6, 2017 "Ever since It happened, I've had messages from all over the world - America, Europe, lapan, Aus tralia. Not just from friends, but from fans and strangers all eager to pass on their thoughts and let me know that the rest of the world Is thinking about Manchester, and that's an Incredible privilege for me to have that." Johnny M arr knew from an early age that he wanted to be a musician. B u t the former Smiths guitarist says the pressure on kids today to achieve academic results means it’s harder than ever for new U K . bands to emerge. JOHNNY MARR, Writing in the key of life BY SASKIA MURPHY guitar hooks and memorizing the lyrics to songs by 1960s pop bands such as Love Affair and The Four Tops. hen Johnny M arr sat down to write By the age of 5, Marr had a guitar of his his autobiography, “Set the Boy own, and his journey from a child with a Free,” it was a chance for him to guitar to one of the country’s most revered set the record straight on a career spanning musicians followed an almost biblical path. more than three decades. Starting with his He knew his purpose from a young age, and humble beginnings in Manchester, Marr writes about how his talent was England’s Ardwick district, Marr writes of recognized by a primary school teacher who his first encounter with a guitar, the first opened his eyes to the possibility that he time he met his wife, his fated meeting with could one day be an artist Morrissey and everything that happened “She contacted me to let me know that after and in between. she’d seen it (the book), and that was Although Marr is best known for his part amazing,” Marr said, “because she was the in the undying legacy of The Smiths, his' first person who told me I was an artist, and story as a musician encompasses a plethora that was a real turning point in my life.” of names and collaborators, from Kirsty Marr credits Miss Cocane with helping MacColl to Modest Mouse, Pet Shop Boys him realize his dreams as a musician. But in to Nile Rogers, Hans Zimmer to The Cribs. the current school curriculum, where It is these collaborations, he said, that children face unprecedented pressure to continue to shape him as a guitarist. His achieve academic results, he said, creativity autobiography, first published in November, is being stifled. is now available in a new paperback edition “From what I have seen, the with extra material. overwhelming message kids are given now “For years it seemed like I was put in the is one of career panic and insecurity and position of defending why I hadn’t followed competition. Aside from it stifling creativity the same path as, say, Peter Buck or the and artistry, which I think is crucial on a Edge or the Stones and all these musicians spiritual level, it also takes away their youth who stayed playing with the same bands for to an extent. I’m not saying that people years,” he said. “They happen to be people I don’t need to understand responsibility, but respect so I don’t have a blanket criticism of for kids to be putting themselves under that, other than it wasn’t for me and I can’t immense stress and to have insecurity about imagine not making records with people like career possibilities at the age of 15 is a real Beck, Pet Shop Boys or making solo shame. records. To have not had that opportunity is “Most of the people I know had no idea not something I would have ever wanted. what they wanted to do until they got to “Let’s put it this way,” he said. “I always their mid-20s,” he said. “That’s the natural followed what I thought was best for my way, as I see i t OK, some people know what growth and inspiration as a musician. I path they want to go down when they’re wouldn’t swap playing concerts with Hans young, as I did, and that’s very handy, but Zimmer and a 70-piece choir and orchestra it’s normal to not really know exactly what for anything - regardless of how much your destiny holds for you. But this culture security or fame or status or wealth it may of intense competition is really very have brought. The bottom line is that I’m a convenient for the authorities, and it’s better guitar player because of all the things convenient that they overlook the arts and I’ve done.” culture almost to the point where it is seen M arr’s passion for the guitar is a theme as irresponsible or a bit of a cop-out to that is threaded throughout his book. He actually want a life in the arts.” writes about his fascination with music from “It was bad enough when I was growing an early age and recalls standing in front of up in the 1970s for working-class people to the radio at the age of 4, listening out for even think about themselves as an artist, let C O N T R IB U T IN G W R IT E R W alone describe themselves as such. If we’re not careful, there will be no culture coming out of the U.K.,” Marr said. “We need a new David Hockney, and we need new Tracy Emins and Maxine Peakes. Those people do it against the odds, and it is seemingly more difficult now than it ever was. “It’s hard enough just being educated in the sciences,” Marr said. “You need to go into debt for it or your parents need to go into debt for it, so how you live as an artist is hardly a consideration or a priority of the establishment at the moment.” The Smiths challenged Margaret Thatcher’s government, and Marr has frequently expressed his disdain for politicians including David Cameron, Boris Johnson and Nigel Farage. But despite his willingness to incorporate politics into his work, “I don’t think artists have a responsibility to do anything or follow any inspiration other than to make good work, whatever that is,” he said. “I am interested in things that have been with me since being a kid and to do with my upbringing and where I grew up and the environment I was in, which is to say working class, from the North West. But I don’t believe in hectoring people. You can be as abstract in your work as you like. If you just want to sing about your love affairs, that’s OK with me, but traditionally it’s been the artists who have maybe created some kind of interesting way of communicating and commenting, whether that’s people like Picasso or writers like Aldous Huxley, who have challenged the establishment. “It was usually as a response to the rise of the right wing. That’s the way I see my position. I don’t want to deal exclusively in politics because frankly I don’t want those people to contaminate all of my work; I don’t think they’re deserving of it,” Marr said. “One of the great things that I do in rock and pop music is to inhabit a world of' escapism. But you just can’t change who you are, and as much as I would like to avoid the annoyance of politicians and disappointment with some things and some people in the world, all things go into your work one way or another if you £ Page 9 O N T H E M A N C H E S T E R T E R R O R IS T A T T A C K are a songwriter. “I’m trying to get better at what I do all the time and hone what I’m about,” Marr said. “And a lot of that seems to be about reflecting the world as I see it.” course it’s very humbling,” Marr said. “You just feel very lucky to be of any kind of help, frankly. “Art can express something about life that words can’t, and that’s what is amazing about pop music. It’s beautiful that people are focused on that aspect of the song and the positivity, and there is a feeling of looking to the future, which is an Unity in the wake of the attack amazing thing given the hurt of the circumstances. t is impossible to think of Miarr’s work “Obviously we’re all feeling a mix of without thinking of Manchester. After emotions, from a numbness and distress an emotional vigil for the victims in Albert to sadness and confusion and anger. It has Square, held a day after the Manchester been amazing for all of us to see the way Arena attack, a lone voice sang out one of the city is handling it and has come to The Smiths’ best known lyrics: “There is a help each other out. I’m thinking of the light that never goes o u t” Photos later emergency services and those amazing showed the lyrics chalked on pavements stories about the taxi drivers and the and inked on placards. hotels and ordinary people getting “I would never in a involved and helping out, and the million years have homeless who are on the streets, coming dreamt that the to the aid of injured children. song would have “In the middle of all this devastation, meant so much seeing that bravery and selflessness and when I came up unity is something that is an amazing with it, and of source of undeniable pride that the rest of I the world can see. Ever since it happened, I’ve had messages from all over the world - America, Europe, Japan, Australia. Not just from friends, but from fans and strangers all eager to pass on their thoughts and let me know that the rest of the world is thinking about Manchester, and that’s an incredible privilege for me to have that.” “It is at times like this when things are beyond bad and unimaginable that incredible things also come into place. One thing I see is this protective pride, not only over our safety but from the people of the city for our heritage, our character, our legacy, our spirit - what makes Manchester what it is. And a recognition that as Mancunians, we will love each other and we will be defiant against anyone who is trying to take those things away. I am really, really proud of coming from this city for that reason.” Courtesy o f B ig Issue North / INSP.ngo J / X / / PHOTOS CO URTESY OF JO H N N Y M A R R