Eephus
Footballguy
Marr #19 (solo #7) - Johnny Marr - "Upstarts" (2013)
Johnny rebooted his solo career in 2013 following his stints in Modest Mouse and The Cribs. Instead of fronting the Healers, this time out he went for it under his name alone. Ironically the musicians he brought in to play on the record turned out to become the most stable group of collaborators in his career. Co-producer James Doviak on guitar and keys, Iwan Gronow on bass and Jack Mitchell on drums have recorded and toured with Johnny for the past eleven years spanning four albums.
"Upstarts" was the first single from Marr's solo career v2.0. It was inspired by the UK riots resulting from the police killing of Mark Duggan in 2011. Johnny was out of the country at the time but he saw footage of people rioting in the streets of Manchester that he knew so well. One of the demonstrators used the word "upstarts" in an interview which was enough to get Marr started. Like many of his songs, the lyrics are rather minimal and obscure but they're aided by a singalong chorus and a typically melodic Marr riff that draws from his time as a Crib.
Johnny rebooted his solo career in 2013 following his stints in Modest Mouse and The Cribs. Instead of fronting the Healers, this time out he went for it under his name alone. Ironically the musicians he brought in to play on the record turned out to become the most stable group of collaborators in his career. Co-producer James Doviak on guitar and keys, Iwan Gronow on bass and Jack Mitchell on drums have recorded and toured with Johnny for the past eleven years spanning four albums.
"Upstarts" was the first single from Marr's solo career v2.0. It was inspired by the UK riots resulting from the police killing of Mark Duggan in 2011. Johnny was out of the country at the time but he saw footage of people rioting in the streets of Manchester that he knew so well. One of the demonstrators used the word "upstarts" in an interview which was enough to get Marr started. Like many of his songs, the lyrics are rather minimal and obscure but they're aided by a singalong chorus and a typically melodic Marr riff that draws from his time as a Crib.




