Unlike the dearly (virtually) departed Shanky, whose Talking Heads thread on the old bored inspired this topic title, I’m fairly confident I know the answer (based on a sample size of 1).
But lazing around on vacation with no proper channels on the boob tube, I let it rest on an 80s music videos stream that put on Stop Me If You Think You’ve Heard This One Before. Been in my head the week since.
Given that the band is, in relative terms, virtually unknown in the States, this is the first and only song I’ve ever heard by them.
So hook ya boy up.
The Smiths - any good?
- fishfoodie
- Posts: 8863
- Joined: Mon Jun 29, 2020 8:25 pm
Never mind the Morrissey prick, this guy was the talent in the group, & here he proves it, by doing a better version than the floppy haired one ever managed. Just drool at the skillz
Love the Smiths. This Charming Man was released when I was living in London, and The Queen is Dead was later one of my half dozen or so "go to" cassettes that I always carried while backpacking around SE Asia in the late 80s...along with my trusty Sony Walkman.
- OomStruisbaai
- Posts: 16058
- Joined: Fri Jul 03, 2020 12:38 pm
- Location: Longest beach in SH
I know the twins since their primary school days. Their parents divorced and ma immigrate to Aus, dad stay on SA. Look like they finally found a home at the Lions.
Ruan was the better one in their Paarl Gim days, JP played B team. Now it seems JP is the better prop.
They were vokken stout bliksems.
Also know their boerewors partner in Aus. Divvie Hugo.
Ruan was the better one in their Paarl Gim days, JP played B team. Now it seems JP is the better prop.
They were vokken stout bliksems.
Also know their boerewors partner in Aus. Divvie Hugo.
- clydecloggie
- Posts: 1290
- Joined: Tue Jun 30, 2020 6:31 am
Great band. Check out "There's a Light That Never Goes Out", generally considered a highlight in their songbook.
Best I & II give a great overview, and the live album Rank is a personal favourite of mine.
Johnny Marr is a genius on guitar. Working on a 'no distortion' principle he laid down some of the best riffs ever.
Best I & II give a great overview, and the live album Rank is a personal favourite of mine.
Johnny Marr is a genius on guitar. Working on a 'no distortion' principle he laid down some of the best riffs ever.
- Guy Smiley
- Posts: 6819
- Joined: Mon Jun 29, 2020 7:52 pm
I was grinding along at work the other day listening to the Sugarcubes 'Birthday' thinking about how much really interesting music hit us throughout the 80s under the broad label of 'alternative music'. REM were the poster child of the movement in many ways, where I was at the time in Sydney listening to alternative radio station JJJ before it went tits up and mainstreamed itself into a jingoistic 'youth network' and started rotating local artists...
but I digress. The Smiths were a part of that whole avalanche for me... a really good band with their own sound and the ability to deliver that sound well. Musicians, innit. I didn't actually buy any of their albums but I had a giant poster of theirs on my wall. I shared an easy listening kind of house and it was hard to squeeze my more edgy tastes into the muzak vibe.
There's a case to be made for another deeply under rated and generally bloody excellent band with a Smiths connection. When Matt Johnson turned his one man band into a group he recruited Johnny Marr and I saw them play in Sydney.
Get your head around The The, Fonz. There's a treasure trove of good sounds to be had in there as well.
but I digress. The Smiths were a part of that whole avalanche for me... a really good band with their own sound and the ability to deliver that sound well. Musicians, innit. I didn't actually buy any of their albums but I had a giant poster of theirs on my wall. I shared an easy listening kind of house and it was hard to squeeze my more edgy tastes into the muzak vibe.
There's a case to be made for another deeply under rated and generally bloody excellent band with a Smiths connection. When Matt Johnson turned his one man band into a group he recruited Johnny Marr and I saw them play in Sydney.
Get your head around The The, Fonz. There's a treasure trove of good sounds to be had in there as well.
- mat the expat
- Posts: 1571
- Joined: Mon Jun 29, 2020 11:12 pm
That guitar tone!Guy Smiley wrote: Tue Oct 18, 2022 8:17 pm I was grinding along at work the other day listening to the Sugarcubes 'Birthday' thinking about how much really interesting music hit us throughout the 80s under the broad label of 'alternative music'. REM were the poster child of the movement in many ways, where I was at the time in Sydney listening to alternative radio station JJJ before it went tits up and mainstreamed itself into a jingoistic 'youth network' and started rotating local artists...
but I digress. The Smiths were a part of that whole avalanche for me... a really good band with their own sound and the ability to deliver that sound well. Musicians, innit. I didn't actually buy any of their albums but I had a giant poster of theirs on my wall. I shared an easy listening kind of house and it was hard to squeeze my more edgy tastes into the muzak vibe.
There's a case to be made for another deeply under rated and generally bloody excellent band with a Smiths connection. When Matt Johnson turned his one man band into a group he recruited Johnny Marr and I saw them play in Sydney.
Get your head around The The, Fonz. There's a treasure trove of good sounds to be had in there as well.
- Guy Smiley
- Posts: 6819
- Joined: Mon Jun 29, 2020 7:52 pm
Loved The The... hooked as soon as I heard this... can't believe they had no UK Top Tens...
- Guy Smiley
- Posts: 6819
- Joined: Mon Jun 29, 2020 7:52 pm
This is The Day is a timeless masterpiece.
It's a crime that The The didn't rule the world. Everyone wants to...
It's a crime that The The didn't rule the world. Everyone wants to...
I concur... it was a perfect backdrop to my first year in the Halls of Residence at Uni...Guy Smiley wrote: Wed Oct 19, 2022 9:30 am This is The Day is a timeless masterpiece.
It's a crime that The The didn't rule the world. Everyone wants to...
Gotta say, I liked ‘em both when they were with the Reds.OomStruisbaai wrote: Tue Oct 18, 2022 6:26 am I know the twins since their primary school days. Their parents divorced and ma immigrate to Aus, dad stay on SA. Look like they finally found a home at the Lions.
Ruan was the better one in their Paarl Gim days, JP played B team. Now it seems JP is the better prop.
They were vokken stout bliksems.
Also know their boerewors partner in Aus. Divvie Hugo.
- OomStruisbaai
- Posts: 16058
- Joined: Fri Jul 03, 2020 12:38 pm
- Location: Longest beach in SH
Watch their handling skills from 5 mins for theLions last tryMungoMan wrote: Thu Oct 20, 2022 7:05 amGotta say, I liked ‘em both when they were with the Reds.OomStruisbaai wrote: Tue Oct 18, 2022 6:26 am I know the twins since their primary school days. Their parents divorced and ma immigrate to Aus, dad stay on SA. Look like they finally found a home at the Lions.
Ruan was the better one in their Paarl Gim days, JP played B team. Now it seems JP is the better prop.
They were vokken stout bliksems.
Also know their boerewors partner in Aus. Divvie Hugo.
Terrific post as always Guy, you really are the maven of top alternative music (or whatever it’s termed now — seems pretty normal to millennial me).Guy Smiley wrote: Tue Oct 18, 2022 8:17 pm I was grinding along at work the other day listening to the Sugarcubes 'Birthday' thinking about how much really interesting music hit us throughout the 80s under the broad label of 'alternative music'. REM were the poster child of the movement in many ways, where I was at the time in Sydney listening to alternative radio station JJJ before it went tits up and mainstreamed itself into a jingoistic 'youth network' and started rotating local artists...
but I digress. The Smiths were a part of that whole avalanche for me... a really good band with their own sound and the ability to deliver that sound well. Musicians, innit. I didn't actually buy any of their albums but I had a giant poster of theirs on my wall. I shared an easy listening kind of house and it was hard to squeeze my more edgy tastes into the muzak vibe.
There's a case to be made for another deeply under rated and generally bloody excellent band with a Smiths connection. When Matt Johnson turned his one man band into a group he recruited Johnny Marr and I saw them play in Sydney.
Get your head around The The, Fonz. There's a treasure trove of good sounds to be had in there as well.
Never heard of those dudes but song rules, must dig deeper…
- Torquemada 1420
- Posts: 12048
- Joined: Thu Jul 02, 2020 8:22 am
- Location: Hut 8
This. Sort of. You have to put aside Morrissey as a personality and then early Smiths really were very good. Not quite the w*nk ourselves into a coma good the NME might have had you believe every issue, but influential good.fishfoodie wrote: Mon Oct 17, 2022 7:53 pm Never mind the Morrissey prick, this guy was the talent in the group, & here he proves it, by doing a better version than the floppy haired one ever managed. Just drool at the skillz
Just my view you understand…….
Miserable, flower waving drivel for depressives
My older brother used to play this cr@p incessantly when I was a kid and it was the one band where I never used to nick the records to show off to girlfriends. Subsequently of course the lead singer has matured gracefully into a bigoted racist old tw@t.
Please, no need to thank me.
Miserable, flower waving drivel for depressives

My older brother used to play this cr@p incessantly when I was a kid and it was the one band where I never used to nick the records to show off to girlfriends. Subsequently of course the lead singer has matured gracefully into a bigoted racist old tw@t.
Please, no need to thank me.
“It was a pet, not an animal. It had a name, you don't eat things with names, this is horrific!”