Peter T.
location: New Hampshire
listening to: Too much of everything!
registered: 1999.05.20
posts: 3017
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I imagine most of you haven't had the pleasure of hearing Bill Morrissey. He died on the same day
as Amy Winehouse. I last saw him in November; it was a dingy, former church, out in the sticks of
New Hampshire, perhaps there were 50 people in attendance. He was frail, in need of cataract
surgery, but still in good humor, and THAT VOICE was intact. I usually am not drawn to "folkies"
but for Bill, I made the exception. His lyrics resonate with the New England I have grown up with.
This entry from Rolling Stone provides some terrific insight into where he was coming
from:
"With his prematurely cracked voice and his sensibility in shift between fatalistic resignation
and
wry wit, Bill Morrissey resembles a New England version of prime John Prine. A story-song writer
with a great gift for the telling detail, he paints snowy, psychic landscapes of the kind Raymond
Carver fashioned-his deadend, small-town Northeast is filled with losers and misfits perpetually
reaching for the bottle; factory girls who rendezvous with hard-luck cases; old sentimental
landmarks that fall victim to the wrecking ball. "
Here's one of my favorites:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CxttvnCCTB8
Peter T.
Peter T.
(view)
I imagine most of you haven't had the pleasure of hearing Bill Morrissey. He died on the same day
as Amy Winehouse. I last saw him in November; it was a dingy, former church, out in the sticks of
New Hampshire, perhaps there were 50 people in attendance. He was frail, in need of cataract
surgery, but still in good humor, and THAT VOICE was intact. I usually am not drawn to "folkies"
but for Bill, I made the exception. His lyrics resonate with the New England I have grown up with.
This entry from Rolling Stone provides some terrific insight into where he was coming
from:
"With his prematurely cracked voice and his sensibility in shift between fatalistic resignation
and
wry wit, Bill Morrissey resembles a New England version of prime John Prine. A story-song writer
with a great gift for the telling detail, he paints snowy, psychic landscapes of the kind Raymond
Carver fashioned-his deadend, small-town Northeast is filled with losers and misfits perpetually
reaching for the bottle; factory girls who rendezvous with hard-luck cases; old sentimental
landmarks that fall victim to the wrecking ball. "
Here's one of my favorites:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CxttvnCCTB8
Peter T.
