The Smiths in front of Albert Finney Shop by Lawrence Watson, Manchester 1987
Read More
|
The Smiths
Smiths' bassist Andy Rourke will be heading to Minneapolis next Saturday as a special guest to Minneapolis dance club Transmission's 14th Anniversary.
…
|
|
Actor
Albert Finney died on February 7 at the age of 82.
Although he's known mostly as an English actor, producer, and director of films & television... but he’s been known to sing, if the roles required him to do so. Finney sang in three films
Scrooge (1970),
Annie (1982), and
Corpse Bride (2005).
More importantly, he had been a great inspiration to
Morrissey (singer of
The Smiths), and have often appeared in many of the band’s images and cover artwork.
Morrissey, reacting to Finney’s death, had this to say via
morrisseycentral.com:
“ALBERT FINNEY DIES … he dies, a part of me dies
… his refusal to accept a Knighthood - that moronic delusion of inclusion - elevates him further in the Arts and humanities.
Albert was Manchester.
Please watch Charlie Bubbles. …
… there must be something I can dream tonight …”
If you are a Smiths fan, and interested in Morrissey’s art directions and ideas, you need to get a copy of
Peepholism by Jo Slee, published in 1994. The book covers every official release, from
Hand In Glove to Morrissey’s
Vauxhall and I. I can’t recommend the book highly enough for any Smiths/Morrissey fan. At one point, I actually own two copies of the book, but would later gift the hardcover to a friend.
Albert Finney appeared on these Smiths singles:
Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now (1984)
Original design featured Finney as Arthur Seaton in the film Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1965), but the rejection letter said, "Mr Albert Finney is not willing to consent to the use of his likeness in the manner you describe".
|
 |
William, It Was Really Nothing (1984)
Original artwork of Billie Whitelaw from the film Charlie Bubbles (1968), directed by Albert Finney. For copyright reasons, the original cover was abandoned (both Billie Whitelaw and Albert Finney refused).
|
The Boy With The Thorn In His Side (2016 re-release)
|
 |
The Boy With The Thorn In His Side (2016 demo)
|
For the full death list head over to
Musicians who died in 2019.
February (21)
[09 Feb 2019] Cadet (British rap artist), 28, traffic collision
[08 Feb 2019] Sali Sidibé (Malian composer and singer), 59
[07 Feb 2019] Legarda (Colombian reggaeton musician), 29, shot
[07 Feb 2019] Albert Finney (English actor, inspired The Smiths), 82, chest infection
[06 Feb 2019] Kyle Yorlets (American musician for Carverton), 24, shot
[06 Feb 2019] Gerald English (British tenor), 93
[06 Feb 2019] Carlos Fernando Nogueira (Brazilian singer, architect and graphic designer), 60
[05 Feb 2019] George Klein (American disc jockey for WLFP), 83, complications from dementia
[04 Feb 2019] Giampiero Artegiani (Italian singer-songwriter), 63
[04 Feb 2019] Vyacheslav Ovchinnikov (Russian composer), 82
[04 Feb 2019] Zbigniew Penherski (Polish composer), 84
[04 Feb 2019] Kulyush Sakieva (Kazakh singer and actress), 98
[04 Feb 2019] Matti Nykänen (Finnish ski jumper and singer), 55
[04 Feb 2019] Izzy Young (American-Swedish folklorist and author and music personality for musikpersonlighet), 90
[03 Feb 2019] Peter Posa (New Zealand guitarist), 77
[03 Feb 2019] Detsl (Russian hip hop artist), 35, heart attack
[02 Feb 2019] Tim Landers (American rock guitarist and singer for Transit)
[02 Feb 2019] Bill Sims (American blues musician), 69
[01 Feb 2019] Alex Brown (American painter and punk rock musician for Gorilla Biscuits), 52, brain aneurysm
[01 Feb 2019] Ayub Ogada (Kenyan musician), 63
[01 Feb 2019] Spatsz (French musician for KaS Product), 61
Comments