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Morrissey - Viva Hate album flac

Morrissey - Viva Hate album flac Performer: Morrissey
Title: Viva Hate
Style: Indie Rock
Released: 1988
Country: UK
MP3 album: 1568 mb
FLAC album: 1183 mb
Rating: 4.2
Other formats: MP4 DXD VQF TTA MP1 MPC MIDI
Genre: Rock

Viva Hate is the debut solo studio album by English singer Morrissey. It was released on 14 March 1988 by HMV, six months after the final album by the Smiths, Strangeways, Here We Come. Street has denied this.

This is the Viva Hate album, given a crisp remaster by Stephen Street. Except Morrissey's cut one song ("The Ordinary Boys"), replaced it with a demo ("Treat Me Like a Human Being"), and added nothing else. No B-Sides, no Wolverhampton, just an album that's not quite the same as you remember. Morrissey's early solo career is defined by its string of jilted collaborators. On Viva Hate, the first chance to hear what he might do away from Johnny Marr, he involved two musicians with seemingly divergent instincts. Stephen Street had produced Strangeways, Here We Come for the Smiths, and there's a throughline from his lush, ponderous orchestrations there into Viva Hate’s fuller moments

Viva Hate (Remastered). Only 9 left in stock (more on the way).

Lyrics By – Morrissey. Management – Gail Colson. Music By, Bass Guitar – Stephen Street. Matrix, Runout (Side A, Hand Written): BLOODBATHS I HAVE KNOWN.

Morrissey Viva Hate. Street would continue his relationship with Morrissey on Viva Hate, being the album’s producer, songwriter and performing bass and guitar.

Album Name Viva Hate. Labels Sire Records EMI Records HMV Group. Music StyleIndie Rock. Members owning this album7. 2. Little Man, What Now? 3. Everyday Is Like Sunday.

But in the intervening quarter of a century since the hope proffered by Viva Hate, being a card-carrying Morrissey fan has become an increasingly arduous task. Musically, I don't think he's produced anything since Viva Hate that could quite touch the heights of 'Everyday Is Like Sunday' or 'Late Night, Maudlin Street'.

The Morrissey of Viva Hate is the Morrissey we’ve known ever since. Bengali In Platforms predicted not only Morrissey’s subsequent controversial songs Asian Rut and National Front Disco, but also the decades of incendiary remarks that have kept him in the press even during periods between albums. The album that began Morrissey’s solo journey introduces the agitator you’re either going to ride with or write off. This guy’s idea of a beach holiday is writing bratty postcards and pleading for nuclear annihilation. Wait’ll you hear what he thinks about everything else.

Tracklist

A1 Alsatian Cousin
A2 Little Man, What Now?
A3 Everyday Is Like Sunday
A4 Bengali In Platforms
A5 Angel, Angel, Down We Go Together
A6 Late Night, Maudlin Street
B1 Suedehead
B2 Break Up The Family
B3 The Ordinary Boys
B4 I Don't Mind If You Forget Me
B5 Dial-A-Cliché
B6 Margaret On The Guillotine

Credits

  • Bass, Guitar, Music By – Stephen Street
  • Coordinator [Art Co-ordination] – Jo Slee
  • Drums – Andrew Paresi
  • Engineer [Assistant] – Steve Williams
  • Guitar, Keyboards – Vini Reilly
  • Layout – Caryn Gough
  • Photography By – Anton Corbijn, Steve Wright*
  • Producer – Stephen Street
  • Vocals, Lyrics By – Morrissey

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
CSD 3787 Morrissey Viva Hate ‎(LP, Album) His Master's Voice CSD 3787 UK 1988
262-7901804 Morrissey Viva Hate ‎(Cass, Album) EMI 262-7901804 Greece 1988
64 7901804 Morrissey Viva Hate ‎(Cass, Album) His Master's Voice 64 7901804 Italy 1988
590 7 901801 Morrissey Viva Hate ‎(LP, Album) His Master's Voice, Hispavox 590 7 901801 Spain 1988
8563252 Morrissey Viva Hate ‎(CD, Album, RE) EMI 8563252 Brazil 1999