Kelly Rowland: ilikemusic because... Music sets me free. It’s freedom.
Leon Jean-Marie: ilikemusic because... It transcends. It really creates emotion with someone. That feeling it gives you, it goes through boundaries. To create something, it just breaks through all the walls. When you connect with a song, that is it, that is magic isn't it?
pdog: ilikemusic because... it always makes me feel better
gpm100: ilikemusic because... I just do!!!!!
Chris, Orson: ilikemusic because... Well, is there anything else? Music is the perfect thing, it makes you feel good, it makes you feel sad, it makes you feel happy, what else is there?
Riot! Traffic: ilikemusic because... music is LiFe...and more than...
KT Tunstall: ilikemusic because... It makes me feel alive!
Terry, The Temptations: ilikemusic because... There’s no way I could ever imagine a world without music.
Sylvia Powell: ilikemusic because... It can make me happy yet it can make me feel sad. It helps me remember, but it can also make me forget. Most of all I like music because it makes me feel alive.Morrissey is in negotiations with the Iranian government to play a concert in Tehran later this year. Morrissey's new single, That's How People Grow Up, is due for release on 28th January, one week prior to a 15 track Greatest Hits which spans his unique 20-year solo career.
Morrissey has joined the campaign to help restore the famous Salford Lads Club with a £20,000 donation.The youth club famously featured on the sleeve of The Smiths' The Queen Is Dead album.
One of two new songs to be included on the Greatest Hits collection, "That's How People Grow Up" was recorded in Houston, Texas with Jerry Finn, producer of 2004's widely acclaimed No.2 album "You Are The Quarry". Morrissey is currently working with Finn on his new studio album, the follow-up to 2006's No.1 "Ringleader Of The Tormentors". The new LP is scheduled for an Autumn '08 release.
Morrissey; That's How People Grow Up (Polydor 28/01/2008)
REVIEW BY Dave Adair
There are those subscribing to a certain school of thought, uttering their views far away from the earshot of the sometimes fanatical, dyed-in-the-wool Morrissey-ites. They suggest that The Smiths and Morrissey's solo forays, due to the attitude and lyrics concealed in the material, would have generally benefited from more robust and faster paced accompaniments, than they were generally afforded.
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