This
song is often one of the examples used to demonstrate Morrissey miserable
nature and whilst I would certainly say that reputation is somewhat deserved, I
don’t believe that completely captures the message of the song. Usually the
line “Everyday is silent and grey” is often the line that is focus on to show
his miserable nature but I think that is quite deceptive
This
song was inspired by Morrissey visited a seaside resort and thought it was terrible
idea for a holiday resort to be based in England due to the infamous English
weather where normally it is “silent and grey” This context adds a certain dark
humour to the song about spending time in a british holiday resort on the beach
marred by terrible weather wishing for the town to be nuked to end the drabness
of the experience.
However
the one thing people often overlook when discussing this song is the title. If
you notice the song is called “Everyday Is Like Sunday” not “Every Day Is Like
Sunday” and the fact that everyday isn’t separated is done deliberately.Singing, “Every Day is like Sunday, every day
is silent and grey” would be a hymn to miserable depressing life where every
single day of life is terrible without a light at the end of the tunnel.
However
“Everyday is Silent and Grey” doesn’t project that message and is a clever
switch by Morrissey.Everyday is defined
as “the ordinary or routine day or occasion”. This song isn’t telling people
that every single day is silent and grey but is essentially having message that
the routine normalcy of life is silent and grey.
If
that’s what the line says then perhaps the message is actually a more
optimistic calling people to not behave, dress, think and live in such an
everyday manner as life would be dull if everyone was like that. Perhaps this
song is call to arms of a free-spirited mentality by depicting the drudgery of
the outcome of “everyday” mentality. The call for the nuclear bomb is less of a call for wishing you were dead to but a rather dark humour call for something exciting to break the tedium of "everyday" life .
This
song plays with the expectation of mopey and miserable Morrissey and the
downtempo music adds to that vibe. The song was deliberately written for people to misinterpret it to be how "every day is silent and grey" but with just a single change in word from
Every Day to Everyday Morrissey subverts that expectation in a clever way.
The
Smiths developed a reputation of attracting a fan base of lonely socially
awkward teenagers that used The Smiths as a sort of therapy for their own
problems because they were able to relate to his introspective lyrics. There was a criticism of the The Smiths that
their target audience are immature teenagers and that once those teenagers grew
up and overcome their shyness and get laid, they will no longer need The Smiths
and the band will become obsolete. This song explores the phenomenon that adults
tend to think of troubles they suffer as kids and as adolescent as trivial and
now they are more “clever” then that.
Cleverly
enough Morrissey decided to satirically write about this phenomenon and this
song is about Morrissey lamenting the fans “growing up” and abandoning The Smiths
when they no longer needed the band as therapy. I have to say it’s one of the
things I like about Morrissey and The Smiths that elevate them above other
mope-rockers is that they have a sense of humour albeit a self-mocking one.
This is probably my favorite Smith song in terms of quality of the lyrics.
“A
sad fact widely known
The most impassionate song
To a lonely soul
Is so easily outgrown”
The
song starts off with Morrissey acknowledging that even the greatest song that
speaks for the lonely broken hearted person will become obsolete when the person
becomes happy.
“But
don't forget the songs
That made you smile
And the songs that made you cry
When you lay in awe
On the bedroom floor
And said : "Oh, oh, smother me Mother..."”
This
is Morrissey pleading to his fan base not to forget him and his songs and
remember the times when they were depressed lying on the floor listening to ‘I
Know It’s Over” with awe (smother me mother is a reference to that song from
Queen Is Dead album which is probably known as one of his most emotionally
dramatic song of his career).
“No...
Rubber ring, rubber ring, rubber ring, rubber ring
La...”
I
interpret that the ring in the chorus is used to symbolise a wedding ring. This
is recognizing the loyalty that the fan has with their favourite group to be
akin to a marriage. However because the ring is made out of rubber which I
believe is connected to the ring-shaped flotation device that was originally
made out of rubber that prevented people from drowning.Essentially this is a disposable ring that
may save the lives of the fan but the fans will eventually discard and dispose
when it is no longer useful to them once they have grown up.
“The
passing of time
And all of its crimes
Is making me sad again
The passing of time
And all of its sickening crimes
Is making me sad again”
The
passage of time will make Morrissey to remain cynical and sad as he considers
the fan that “grows out” of the music to be considered a betrayal or a “sickening
crime”. As all his fans will eventually move on, he will always remain the
same.
“But
don't forget the songs
That made you cry
And the songs that saved your life
Yes, you're older now
And you're a clever swine
But they were the only ones who ever stood by you”
This
is another plea from Morrissey to his fan that even though the fan is now older,
wiser and “clever” and more emotionally stable, that they should always keep
his songs close to their hearts because those were the songs that stood by them
and “saved” their liveswhen life was
rough.
“The
passing of time leaves empty lives
Waiting to be filled (the passing...)
The passing of time
Leaves empty lives
Waiting to be filled
I'm
here with the cause
I'm holding the torch
In the corner of your room
Can you hear me?”
However
despite the passage of time leading to people growing out of listening to The
Smiths, the passing of time also leaves a new generation of depressed lonely
socially awkward people needing their lives to be fulfilled by someone that can
empathized with them. Morrissey will always be available to comfort the new
generation of fans and will hold the flame for every generation of socially awkward
youths.
“And
when you're dancing and laughing
And finally living
Hear my voice in your head
And think of me kindly”
He
is reminding the people that when the depressed socially awkward fans finally
recover to be happy with their lives to continue to remember and honour
Morrissey for keeping thems afloat when times were tough.
“Do
you
Love me like you used to?
Oh...
Rubber ring, rubber ring, rubber ring, rubber ring
La...”
Morrissey
then emotionally pleads to the fans that grew out of him whether they still
love him and then lament that his songs are just the rubber ring to the fans.
Just like previous Smiths songs cover the topics of shyness and social
rejection and isolation, this song is about the isolation and rejection he
feels about fans who previously had kinship and related with him.
“You're
clever
Everybody's clever nowadays”
The
audio sample plays over Morrissey lament over the chorus snidely remarking that
everybody is clever, too clever for The Smiths when the teenager becomes adults.
“You are sleeping
You do not want to believe”
The
song end with an enigmatic sample from an LP "Breakthrough: An Amazing
Experiment In Electronic Communication With The Dead" by Latvian
psychologist Konstantin Raudive that supposedly is translation of people who
hear from the dead. I interpret the last line of the typical Smiths fan who do
not believe in themselves and are waiting to be “awaken” by The Smiths and
eventually grow out of the group.
Once
in a while a Code War article pops up on The Roar and they are generally the
most commented article of the day. It is obvious why the code war exist for the
CEO of the sporting organization as there are limited resources and the
different sports are competing with each other for the share of the market.
However, this blog post is trying to analyse why the code war exist for the
supporters of the sport who often don’t care much about the economic
machination of the people in suits upstairs.
1.The ties that
bind us is the ties that divide us
It is often say
that sport is entertainment but although that is an aspect of professional
sport, it is a limited definition as video game, movies, TV shows, theatre,
music are also entertainment. It could also be argued that sport is any
activity that displays any degree of athletic ability but even if that is a
component of sport, however people don’t always consider working out in the gym
as “sport”. What binds all sports fan together is the love of competition.
There have to be individual or teams competing with other individuals and
teams. Generally there is a side that represents you and you are supporting
that side to defeat the opposition. It is the sense of competition that unites
all sports fan together to follow the game but divide us as we are competing
with each other. The fact that the codes are all considered to be called a
variation of “football” and have historical linkage, it makes the football
codes natural competitors.
Also in sports
the fans who attend the match often are active participants of the match and
often the fans feel they have a role in making their side “win” with their
support (such as the home ground advantage phenomenon). It’s not far fetch that
people will bring that competitive active support mentality over the internet
where they can do battle with the opposition with written words.
Of course this
explains why fans of one particular club do battle with a fan of another
particular club. However you may ask why they will battle with a completely
different sport?
The Code
War is the internet fandom equivalent of representative football.
The bread and
butter of most of the football codes are club football. However once in a while
players from two different clubs that could actually be bitter historical
rivals suddenly are unitedand become
brothers in arm to represent their country or state.
The Code Wars
have fans of competing clubs suddenly become brothers in arm arguing against
supporters of different codes of football. The code war has a role in
developing a sense of unity within the football community when normally they
are divided amongst club lines. As a coincidence a code war article general
pops up in a similar infrequent but regular occurrence as an international
fixture in association football.
This is in
combination with the nature of the internet that also adds to the unity where
instead of relying on some degree of luck with meeting someone out there with
similar interest, the internet allows people to seek out community with similar
interest. The resultant is that the internet represents the most hardcore fans
of the sporting community where in the general community; people generally have
broader taste and have a higher proportion of crosscoders. However in the
internet, where you are surrounded by people who are interested in the same
sport as you, bring out the club mentality. That this is Club Association
Football, Club Australian Rules Football, Club Rugby League, Club Rugby Union.
When this club is form, you are going to look out for another club to compete
against and the code war article are a lightning rod to demonstrate your
loyalty to that club.
Of course, if
there is a code war, surely there must be a winner and a loser of the war. Then
why does code wars article keep on popping up?
Person A:
Hey, look at the scoreboard. Person B: Which scoreboard?
Often players on
the pitch in response to a sledge will respond in look at the scoreboard if
their side is winning.The same is with
fans of two different clubs. Look at the scoreboard. Or look at the ladder or
look at the name engraved on the trophy. Sure people may argue about the
referee or whether one side cheated but in the end what matters in the end is
who is leading in the scoreboard and everything else is academic. Two side
debate and the debate is resolve when the match is played or when the season is
finish before the cycle is repeated next season.
However what is
the scoreboard used to determine who is winning the code war?
Is it crowd
attendance aggregate? Is it crowd attendance average? Is it revenue the league
makes? Is it the value of the TV rights? Is it the value of the TV rights per
game? Is it participation rate? Is it international appeal?
The answer to
that question is whatever scoreboard shows your side to be winning. The Code
War is essentially a sporting match where there are 20 different scoreboards
and each one showing a completely different side is winning and people are
arguing which scoreboard they should use.
So people may
ask, why do people keep on arguing when there is absolutely no way to
definitively determine who is winning the Code War?
Everyone is
a Winner
The Code War is
one of the very few wars where there is no loser. In fact it’s impossible to
lose a Code War because there is always a scoreboard out there that shows your
side is winning.
Of course I
previously mention about measures of the success of a code such as crowd
figures or revenue or participation rate which have some degree of objectivity
even whether its importance and value can be subjective. Often code war debates
revolve around even more subjective
matters such as which game is more entertaining to watch? This type of debate
again is something that is impossible to lose. For example to used Association
Football and it’s low scoring nature of the game, from one perspective that low
scoring makes the game tense as any goal can prove decisive and it makes any
attacking move to be a nail biting affair. Or alternatively the lack of goals
could make the game really boring as there is a lack of end product to a lot of
the play of the game. Which one is right? The answer is both of them are right…
from a certain point of view.
Hence two sides
will argue against each other and both of them can make perfectly logical
arguments without any logical fallacy and then walk away thinking they won the
war. You know what they say, everyone loves being a winner. So whenever another
code war article pops up, it’s a moth to the flame for any code loyalist whose
competitive nature will always be fulfilled as they will always win.
To summarise,
the competitive nature of the sporting fan + unity and loyalty to the sports +
no objective method to resolve conflict + everyone is a winner will results in
a perpetual code war that will never end.
To me “You Can’t Always Get What
You Want” is one of the best songs of all time (in my top 10 songs) and one of
the most positively emotionally resonant rock songs ever made. In fact in my
opinion this song approaches a spiritual and religious experience that no other
song I’ve heard in rock music has ever captured.
I know people may baulk with the
idea of The Rolling Stones writing “spiritual” and “emotionally resonant” songs
during this period and there are people who
even believe “You Can’t Always Get What You Want” to be a pessimistic song
reflecting the end of the idealism of flower power at the end of the 60’s. So I
have to give some context why I feel that way about this song.
I'll mention I do come from a family with a Buddhist background. One of the key
tenants of that religion is the idea that happiness can't be fulfilled by
external forces and the environment as it is out of your control. The idea is
that our desires or “attachment” is the root cause of unhappiness. People desires and want can never be fully
satisfied and the only way to reach happiness is by accepting that "You
Can't Always Get What You Want" and that you’ll have to be happy despite whatever you face in life. For someone to be truly happy, there happiness has to be
unconditional. As long as you put conditions to your happiness then the person
is destined to be unhappy and dissatisfied with life. Whether Jagger/Richards
intended it or not, I believe this song captures that message perfectly. Who knows
maybe they did intend it as Mick Jagger is a practising Buddhist.
So after the choir intro (that I
always felt a bit tacked on), the song starts off with just plain acoustic
guitar strumming with Jagger painting a bleak picture of a women drinking her
sorrows with wine about her relationship with a man who display no commitment or
responsibilities. Then Jagger starts singing in a mournful way "You can't
always get what you want" however the organ appears with some chords and there
is this gorgeous descending and ascending piano line (one of the best keyboard
moment in rock music IMO). To me that combination of the piano and organ
signifies a religious epiphany where the protagonist discovered “the truth"
and he sings “But if you try sometime you find” and then the female gospel
singer joins in and sings “You get what you need" which explodes into
music that is filled with joy. You see the protagonist realized the basic truth
“that you get what you need” (which is happiness) when you accept that “you
can't get what you want” and the song explodes into one of the most joyful and
soulful music you can ever hear signifying the wave of happiness out of
discovering that “truth”.
Also notice that throughout the
following verses, the music still remain joyful despite the lyrics about the
various disappointments various characters experience in life which signifies
that the person is remaining happy despite the troubles in life. Also notice
how the chorus throughout the song differs to the chorus at the beginning as
the first chorus sounds sad and desperate with the sparse arrangement and the absence
of the female backing vocalist until the “epiphany” but in later chorus the
female backing vocalist sings at the beginning of the chorus signifying that
the character of the song is embracing the joyfulness of not getting what he
wants.
For a person who is raised in a Buddhist family but grew up in a Western culture, this song resonated with
me especially as it is in my opinion a perfect synthesis of Eastern Buddhist
philosophy with Western music. Gospel music is a western music that is
associated with spiritual joy with Christianity and it is an ingenious
arrangement choice to mesh that spiritual joy with the line that is
superficially pessimistic “You can’t always get what you want” to bring out the
message that spiritual joy is derived by realizing that message.The female gospel backing vocalist that
jumped in throughout the song did the perfect job in delivering that message. This song is a perfect example of how the arrangement
can be used to craft the message of the song
This article has been publish on “The Roar” as well
This has been a controversial issue
throughout the Ashes. There is a caught behind decision that is referred to the
DRS system. Hotspot shows nothing, but there is audio and the batsman are given
out. Every time this has occurred there has been controversy with many people
arguing that if hotspot shows nothing then the batsman shouldn’t be given out.
However, I disagree with that
argument and I support the use of audio in the DRS system.
The reason is that throughout the
history of Test cricket, on-field umpires have used a combination of sound and
watching any deviation as a guide to dismissed batsman for caught behind
decisions. There are many times throughout history where we see batsman being
dismissed by on-field umpires based on sound alone for thin edges without any
controversy. Long before hotspot was
invented, commentators would often judge the accuracy of the umpire’s decision
on whether they can hear a sound during the replay.
Considering that hotspot is known
to have ‘false negatives’, audio should be used to assess whether the batsman
has edge or not. If we used the argument
that decision needs a mark to show on hotspot to dismissed the batsman, then we
might as well tell the on-field umpire not to used sound of an edge to dismiss
batsman as well. That they should only
give a batsman out if they see deviation caused by an edge and therefore only
thick edges would ever be given out in cricket. I doubt many people would accept that umpiring
standard in cricket especially when people argue that cricket is too batsman
friendly already. It’s a bit hypocritical to demand on-field umpires to hear
edges when making a decision whilst at the same time demanding third umpires to
ignore sound.
There are a few people who argued
that audio can be unreliable as it can hear sound unrelated to the edge like
the squeaking of the glove. However,
I’ll argue that same standard could be applied to ignore any sound of the edge
by the on-field umpire and hence ignore any audible edge as the audio in the
DRS just shows what the umpire hears in the stump microphone. The stump
microphones picks up what is going on the field and the chance that out of all
the time the glove squeaks just at the moment the ball passes the bat is
unlikely. We have to say that on the basis on probability it is far more likely
the sound is caused by an edge if the bat is far away from the pad or the
ground. Also umpires can listen to the
audio and make the judgment call on whether the audio sounds like a nick.
Now people may wonder that if audio
of a nick is given a greater weighting than a blank hotspot then what’s the
point of hotspot?
The issue with audio is that it has
‘false positives’ especially when there are issue of bat on pad or ball on pad
or bat on ground and it’s difficult to determine what is the source of the
sound in the audio. Hotspot can be used
to help determine whether there was a ball on bat impact in those scenarios
where audio is unreliable.
I’m hoping that snickometer will
eventually be incorporated into DRS. The reason why snickometer is not used in
DRS is not necessarily due to inaccuracy but the slowness of the process of
getting snicko available to the umpire in a timely manner. Right now
snickometer requires a technician to manually sync up the audio from the stump
microphone with the video footage and this can take minutes to prepare and
since the synchronisation is done manually by a technician it is possible that
human error and inconsistency could occur if the technician makes a mistake.
A timely review system requires
information in a few seconds and also requires consistent synchronization of
audio and video and that isn’t good enough. However reports are that Alan Plaskett has developed a system called ‘Real Time
Snicko’ or RTS, which is an automated system that could produce a snicko-type
result within 5-10 seconds which will solve that issue.
There have been calls to introduce RTS
to be incorporated in the DRS system and hopefully it will be ready for the
Ashes in the Australian summer. The
combination of RTS and Hotspot will assist the umpire in making the correct
decision for thin edges and in my opinion would improve the game.