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There Is No Surf in Cleveland
Browsing articles by Joey - [previous] :: [next]There is no surf in Cleveland, Ohio This article has been viewed 2771 times in the last 2 years little ukraine: 21st Sep 2006 - 15:38 GMTI once heard that from above, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is designed to look like a record player. Personally, after a visit to wikimapia, I was not impressed. zagg: 11th Oct 2006 - 01:49 GMTWhen I was 16, I was given the opportunity to choose where my family went for our summer holdiay. I chose Cleveland so that I could go to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame - hahah. Beadle and Tatum: 11th Dec 2006 - 05:51 GMTWhoever made that postcard must not have seen the NY Times frontpage today... sorry to be repetitive procyon: 13th Dec 2006 - 18:29 GMTI remember being really annoyed about a lot of things at the rock hall. Like the blurb or caption somewhere (in a list of important songs or something compiled by "experts") saying that "Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now" exemplified Morrissey's depressing lyrics and put-upon attitude or something like that--clearly there was absolutely nothing sarcastic about that song. little ukraine: 13th Dec 2006 - 19:18 GMTi think it is total bullshit that the inaugurations are in new york and not cleveland. and that is a pretty annoying blurb about morrissey, i don't think anything about that song is a put-on. i'm sure CG will weigh in on this issue. i'm interested to know what exactly the quote was. colavitos ghost: 13th Dec 2006 - 19:39 GMTto chime in on the morrissey issue: i'm generally bothered by critics' or---as seems to be the case here---curators' analyses of the intentions behind complicated artistic works. if you're gonna inclue a quote from the artist to back up an analytical leap, fine. however, if it's just some "educated" outsider's interpretation, whatever. morrissey may be annoying, but he's a pretty enigmatic personality, hard to really figure out. my note to art critics everywhere: don't tell me what artists are saying. let the artists themselves do that!!! procyon: 13th Dec 2006 - 19:53 GMTto clarify, the "--clearly there was absolutely nothing sarcastic about that song" (a sarcastic statement itself) was my addition; the blurb was just saying that the song exemplified self-pitying, depressing, whiny old Morrissey. I'd always heard that he'd written the song as sort of a sarcastic jab at the critics' caricature of him, but looking for quotes on it now is giving me stuff like: "On the very brief spasms of employment that I had in the past it always seemed to me there were moments of the day when I would realise that I was here working with people that I despised and I had to talk to these horrible people and ask them what they did yesterday. And I would have to report to a boss that I couldn't stand and when you're in that position - which is the absolute basis of 'Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now' you realise that you're actually spending your entire life with people that you do not like - which was incredibly distressing." So I guess I was wrong and he was serious, or at least claimed he was in interviews. Either way, the blurb's simplistic look at the Smiths (hey look! they're depressing and full of self-pity!) was still out of place, and in my personal opinion they could have picked a more representative/influential song for the exhibit (which apparently was/is called "500 Songs That Shaped Rock & Roll"). little ukraine: 13th Dec 2006 - 20:36 GMTCG, couldn't agree more. morrissey is a complicated lyricist and it is dangerous to start throwing around interpretations, especially when the interpreter has as an intention showing how the song fits into a rather ridiculous list (though i admit i am a sucker for lists like that). procyon, i don't think you are wrong - in any case i find it just as easy to believe that morrissey was having fun with critics as that he was being 100% genuine in that song. i really wouldn't rule out the possibility of both situations being true. colavitos ghost: 13th Dec 2006 - 23:09 GMTthis thread is out of control!!! please continue conversation on ILM. (just kidding guys, this is fun). joey: 23rd Nov 2007 - 22:03 GMTcan someone explain the history of this whole 'no surf in cleveland' thing? was it a song? a book? just a popular phrase from the 70s? none of the above. it was something i thought of after living on the west coast for a few years and then coming back 'home' for a visit to cleveland. a jingle of sorts to add to the photo i took and creating a post card. i designed and sold post cards for a living in that era. Guy: 24th Feb 2008 - 06:24 GMTIt was at the very least a song. A band called the Euclid Beach Band made up of studio musicians including David Sanborn recorded a song by that name in 1978. A homemade vid of it is on youtube. The song was produced by Eric Carmen (The Rasberries, All by Myself, etc.) little ukraine: 24th Feb 2008 - 06:45 GMTok.. what's the story here? joey it seems to me perhaps one of the guys from EBB saw your postcard and.. just thought it was an awesome phrase? in any case this is great.. colavitos ghost: 24th Feb 2008 - 21:13 GMTjoey: when did you first release that particular design? please tell me it was prior to 1978! Comment on this article..Browsing articles by Joey - [previous] :: [next] |
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