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Vauxhall And I
 
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Vauxhall And I

MorrisseyMP3 Download
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (29 customer reviews)
Price: £3.49
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  Song Title Time Price    
Play   1. Now My Heart Is Full 4:58 £0.89
Play   2. Spring Heeled Jim 3:47 £0.89
Play   3. Billy Budd 2:09 £0.89
Play   4. Hold On To Your Friends 4:02 £0.89
Play   5. The More You Ignore Me the Closer I Get 3:43 £0.89
Play   6. Why Don't You Find Out For Yourself 3:20 £0.89
Play   7. I Am Hated For Loving 3:41 £0.89
Play   8. Lifeguard Sleeping, Girl Drowning 3:41 £0.89
Play   9. Used To Be A Sweet Boy 2:49 £0.89
Play 10. The Lazy Sunbathers 3:08 £0.89
Play 11. Speedway 4:29 £0.89
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
33 of 34 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
This is, quite possibly, the best Morrissey solo album. Indeed, there is stiff competition from 1992's heavier Your Arsenal and then, more recently, You are the Quarry, but still, this 1994 release remains something of a pinnacle within the context of his career.

Vauxhall & I was released during the period in which Morrissey still found favour amongst the record buying public - no doubt clinging to the nostalgia of the Smiths - though it was clear that the music press, particularly those at the NME, were poised for a break towards the retro sounds of Britpop, and the whole Blur versus Oasis debacle in general. This was also the period in which Morrissey found himself accused of racism due to the content of songs like Asian Rut, Bengali in Platforms and the National Front Disco, whilst his flirtation with nationalist iconography, Union Jacks and so-on, made those in the press feel slightly uncomfortable. All these factors now seem silly when looked at a decade on, and merely detracted from the greatness of this album and, in effect, soured a time when Morrissey should have been as celebrated as the likes of Paul Weller and Joe Strummer, etc. Instead, the negative press would lead him to those two difficult albums (Southpaw Grammar and Maladjusted), a bust up with his record label, and eventually, his exile from Britain.

This is a sad fact, since Vauxhall & I remains one of the best albums of the last decade, and is the one that, along with Viva Hate, remains the best introduction to the wonders of Morrissey solo. The album as a whole has a great sound to it, with Morrissey once again writing with guitarists Boz Boorer and Alain Whyte, who here craft a series of intoxicating textures for the singer to couple his wordy and evocative tales of woe. There's also a great sense of cohesion, with Morrissey using the songs to analyse a set theme, whilst sound samples are used to heighten the atmosphere... all supervised by Steve Lillywhite, who here, for the first of three albums with Morrissey, does some of the best production work of his career.

His presence gives the record an almost conceptual flow, though none of the subtle instrumental touches are lost within the mire of creativity; with opening track Now My Heart is Full capturing both Morrissey and the band at something approaching an artistic peak. The melody is stunning, whilst the lyrics give us swathes of that trademark melancholic romanticism, with evocative verses that conjure real images in our mind. There are even nods towards Graham Greene's classic novel Brighton Rock, with the chorus "Dallow, Spicer, Pinkie, Cubitt, all the jammy Stressford poets, loafing oafs in all night chemists... ah, but Bunny I loved you!!"... all adding up to create possibly the greatest four minutes and fifty-seven seconds that Morrissey has ever created.

Meanwhile, Spring Heeled Jim covers a similar subject matter as the previous track (that being street crime and wayward/misspent youth), but with a sonic-soundscape that is as far removed from anything he ever created with the Smiths (...the whole song features non-stop sound-samples from an old British crime film - the title of which escapes me - which helps to give the track an even greater sense of narrative flow!!). Billy Budd is a more up-temp number and feels like a throwback to the harder, Mick Ronson-produced sound of Your Arsenal... certainly at odds with the lulled, distorted melodies found herein, but still, a great track; bringing to mind old classics like We Hate it When Our Friends Become Successful and Glamorous Glue. Both Hold on to Your Friends and Why Don't You Find Out For Yourself offer up that trademark Morrissey sound and, along with one of the album's all-time high-points, I am Hated for Loving, shows Morrissey in a confident, reinvigorated light. The record manages to maintain a dreamlike feeling throughout, but also offers more than enough moments of pure alternative perfection, with big single of the time, The More You Ignore Me the Closer I Get, even managing to dent the UK top ten, as well as offering an early prophetic glimpse of Morrissey's views surrounding the legendary Smiths' court case, with the lyric "I bear more grudges, than lonely high court judges".

Lifeguard Sleeping, Girl Downing is an atmospheric downer that shows Morrissey making allusions to progressive-rock (something that would become more pronounced, to an extent, on the next album), whilst mumbling almost spoken-word vocals and lyrics that take their inspiration from writers like Douglas Coupland and Stevie Smith ("it was only a test, but she swam too far against the tide... she deserves all she gets") and can be seen in continuation with the summery, though, at the same time, completely threatening, The Lazy Sunbathers (with the great refrain "please, keep the noise down low..."). This of course primes us for that great closing number, Speedway, which is another harder-sounding track, with guitars that sound like chainsaws (...though I think the desired effect was supposed to be motorcycle engines) and, as ever, some extraordinary lyrics.

As stated before, Vauxhall & I represents Morrissey's best strengths as both a vocal performer and as a lyricist, and features some of his best ever songs. Although, it must be stressed that those just discovering Morrissey following the commercial success of You Are the Quarry should probably try Viva Hate and the compilation Bona Drag first - which show Morrissey working with a style that is closer to the Smiths - those looking for something that elaborates on that sound (not to mention being a little more emotionally expressive) should proceed directly to this masterpiece right here.

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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
Morrisey at his best 6 April 2005
By D. Evans VINE™ VOICE
Format:Audio CD
Released in 1994, just as Britpop was beginning to dominant the British music scene, Morrisey emerged with his finest album to date, showing the likes of Jarvis,Damin and Noel, how it should be done. There are no filler tracks on this album. Perhaps its most familar song is the single, The More You Ignore Me,The Closer I get, the kind of song The Smiths could have done a decade earlier. Billy Bud, also deserves special mention. But the best track is the superb, Spring Heel Jim, a real gem of a song.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
I could wax lyrical ad nauseum about this guy, but yet another hagiography won't help the casual observer. Suffice to say he is often grossly misrepresented, inspires deep devotion or absolute, unbridled ridicule, and the grey area inbetween is non-existent. However, to excite such polarity of opinion, for over twenty years, is fairly suggestive of a certain uniqueness.

'Vauxhall & I' was recorded seven years after the Smiths spluttered out, when most of the music cognoscenti gleefully believed his early solo promise had similarly petered out. Not so, oh so wrong.

I seriously commend this album to Morrissey beginners, as not only is the the best example of all his strengths (wonderful obliqueness, lyrical humour, mordancy, ambiguity, idiosyncratic cultural references, a clutch of superb tunes), it remains, with 'You Are The Quarry', the most well-produced and symbolic of the man's talents. Personal faves - Billy Budd (rumoured to be about him and Marr, though with Morrissey one is never sure) and Why Don't You Find Out For Yourself - so, as Mozza says, why don't you?

And he is awesome live - catch him if you get the chance.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Again and Again
I've heard it so many times over the years but this album is a high point in a career of many, and features songs as good as any done by the Smiths, better in many cases.
Published 8 months ago by Sarah Don
1994 UBER YEAR
1994 was a good year for british music The Holy Bible,Dog Man Star,Parklife and if your being charitable Definetly Maybe. Read more
Published 13 months ago by mister joe
Sublime music from Morrissey
Vauxhall and I is a tremendous album by Morrissey and definitely one you should add to your record collection. Read more
Published 18 months ago by Mr. Craig Henderson
A must have
This album is a must have for any music fan.
It is quite simply a fantastic piece of work.
I'm not going to single out any one track as being better than another, merely... Read more
Published on 11 Jan 2010 by Mark
Career highlight
From the purring opening of 'Now my heart is full' to the career defining 'In my own strange way, I've always been true to you' this would be the greatest album ever written if not... Read more
Published on 28 Feb 2009 by Rge Turner
Mournful, atmospheric and essential
While Vauxhall and I offers few live favourites that Morrissey still plays to this day, as an album it is arguably Morrissey's finest as a solo artist. Read more
Published on 5 Feb 2009 by Ray L
Moz delivers his most sombre record, and ain't it a good one?
Probably the best record released by a British musician since Bowie's 'Hunky Dory'. Forgive the hyperbole but this album is Morrissey at his most acerbic, reflective and tender. Read more
Published on 1 Aug 2008 by D. Tranter
this is the one
the best mozz album made. followed by viva hate and your arsenal its just perfect. every track is perfect. dreamy even.
Published on 21 April 2008 by mia farrow
Second only to Meat is Murder
This is without a shadow of a doubt Morrissey's finest solo album and is in fact one of the greatest albums of his whole career. Read more
Published on 7 April 2008 by Alexander Lindsay
his best so far
it's a rare event when every song on an album is perfect, but here is a perfect example. A classic? Yes, there can be no doubt about it. Read more
Published on 23 Jan 2008 by Me
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