No, I am talking mainly as a wordsmith. I think Morrissey knows what he likes musically, but probably can't produce the music on his own. However, in saying that, I'm not sure Marr would have got as far on his own either. I think the role of someone who puts the words together and provides the vocal melodies can be very underrated. It isn't an easy thing to do. I always think of Suede in that regard too. Many dismissed Suede as being finished without Bernard Butler, but Butler's solo work wasn't a patch on the work he did with Suede and that is because Brett Anderson was really important. I think Morrissey stamped the indentity on The Smiths and Marr hasn't really impressed me with his post Smiths work which somewhat validates that view. Morrissey on the other hand, has produced a lot of really solid work. Your Arsenal, Vauxhall and I, and Ringleader of the Tormentors, stand up to most of The Smiths back catalogue for me and the other albums have great songs.
I think much of the great music is about collaboration and you cannot have one without the other. The Velvet Underground wouldn't have been made with just Lou, it needed John Cale too. The Beatles too, I think making a full album of original material was something John and Paul found it hard to do on their own. It sometimes worked great, but all too often didn't. Who needed to hear half an album of Yoko or Red Rose Speedway from start to end?![]()
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