22 December 1988
Wolverhampton Civic Hall

Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before
Disappointed
Interesting Drug
Suedehead
The Last Of The Famous International Playboys
Sister I'm A Poet
Death At One's Elbow
Sweet And Tender Hooligan
This first solo Morrissey show was also meant as a farewell Smiths concert. The musicians backing Morrissey were ex-Smiths Mike Joyce and Andy Rourke, as well as once Smiths #5 Craig Gannon filling in as lead guitarist. The setlist featured a mix of Morrissey songs with Smiths tracks from 1987, so none of it had been performed in front of a live audience before.

Admission was free to anyone wearing a Morrissey shirt, but most people turned up with Smiths shirts and were still admitted. Only half the fans who traveled to Wolverhampton made it inside the venue. Outside the queuing and organisation almost turned to chaos. The atmosphere inside was obviously very charged. There was a great deal of cheering and chanting Morrissey's name to the English football tune. Throughout the short set many fans made it on stage, much more than for a typical Smiths concert.

Morrissey came on stage to a thunder of applause, after a long period of cheering and chanting. In the first song, "Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before", he sang "And so I drank one, or was it four?" instead of "... it became four". He actually sang that line as it had been originally written and not as it appeared on "Strangeways Here We Come". Before "Interesting Drug" which was yet unreleased and unknown to the fans, Morrissey started "This song is called..." but never finished his line. In that song as in the previous one, "Disappointed", Morrissey missed many lines because of the mayhem with the fans keeping him away from his microphone.

Just before "Suedehead", Mike Joyce teased the fans with a few notes of the drum intro to "The Queen Is Dead", but that song was not to be played. Morrissey changed the "oh so many illustrations" line in "Suedehead" to "Oh so many blank pages". He also sang "I'm so very saddened, oh, I am so sickened NOW". Before "The Last Of The Famous International Playboys" Morrissey started "I'd like to say hello..." but didn't finish his line and simply introduced the next song.

Before "Death At One's Elbow" Morrissey managed to say what he had originally meant to: "I'd like to say hello to Julian and hello to Mouse.... your mother's letter arrived today, she has a good hand...". In that song Morrissey changed a line from "you'll slip on the trail of my bespattered remains" to "you'll slip on the trail of all of my entrails". After that number and its final lines "Goodbye my love, goodbye my love", Morrissey just said "goodbye" and everyone left the stage. They were called back with much insistence and performed one more song, a very rocking "Sweet And Tender Hooligan".

Were you there? Do you have a recording of this concert? If yes please information and be credited.

 


Opening band was Bradford. Their debut single titled "Skin Storm" released earlier in 1988 was covered by Morrissey in 1991 and made available on the "Pregnant For The Last Time" single for most of the world and the "My Love Life" single in the USA.

 


None.

 


Morrissey and his one-off band walked on stage after Klaus Nomi's "Der Nussbaum". The fans exited the venue to Shirley Bassey's "You'll Never Walk Alone".

 


The backdrop photo for this show only was the little boy from the cover to the "That Joke Isn't Funny Anymore" single.

 


Because of its unique setlist, and because they know it was filmed (by Tim Broad), many fans list this concert as among the ones they would most like to see released in video or audio form. At this point in time however they will have to do with one song in video and another one in audio only.

"Sister I'm A Poet" can be seen on the "Hulmerist" compilation of early promotional films. The promos on the compilation are also interspersed with a good amount of footage from outside the venue in Wolverhampton. The footage is mostly of fans queuing and Morrissey's arrival in an old fashioned bus.

"Sweet And Tender Hooligan" from this gig can be heard on the "Interesting Drug" 12" and cd-single.

 


Only one recording of this concert is available on bootlegs at this point in time. It is an audience recording, of the complete gig. The sound quality is average at best, and the recording captured the bootlegger's neighbour screaming better than it did Morrissey and his band.

The recording was first made available on a bootleg LP titled "Untitled". The set was also featured on the Smiths bootleg LP "A Nice Bit Of Meat 2", in same poor quality, but with mixed content (radio sessions, live material, soundchecks).

The show is available on cd on "Wolverhampton '88" and "The First Solo Show", as well as on many other fanmade cd-rs. Many fans have attempted to 'remaster' the recording to improve its sound, so versions of varying quality are available. None of them however stand out as being better than others. Those credited as having a better sound are just louder, but at the same time, more distorted.

 

Quote
Morrissey, in an interview published in Record Mirror on 11 September 1989:
Q: What was it like playing live again when you appeared in Wolverhampton in December?
A: "It was nice. I did enjoy it. It was nice to be fondled."
Q: Was it good to be back on stage?
A: "No, it was just nice to be fondled. I was a bit wobbly. I thought that as I was walking on stage I'd change direction, but I didn't. It was great to be back in the natural habitat."
Q: How did it feel with Andy Rourke, Mike Joyce and Craig Gannon backing you?
A: "Very tearful. There was a radiant feeling on stage. You knew where everybody was and who they were, which was astonishingly good. It was a really comfortable feeling. No, comfortable sounds like an old cardigan... but it was nice."

In an interview given to Len Brown in 1990 Morrissey said: "Wolverhampton was not really a concert, it was an event at which I didn't really sing."