When I was a teenager I would sleep with the radio on because I hate the sound of silence. One night I woke up around 1am and KROQ in Los Angeles was playing this ethereal, haunting song that I had never heard before. Somewhere between sleep and waking life, I laid in my bed and let the sounds wash over me. I became obsessed, I had to find out what this song was. This was the mid 90's, long before the internet. So I listened to KROQ incessantly in the hope of hearing that magical song again. One night, the fates smiled on me and the DJ played it again, and was even kind enough to say the band name and the title of the song. I'd never heard of The Smiths before, but the next day I went to Best Buy and purchased The Best of album and discovered a whole new musical world. Nearly 30 years later, whenever I hear this song I'm transported back to my childhood bedroom, and relive the experience of hearing "How Soon is Now?" for the very first time.
Buy the album “The Stone Roses”, turn off the light, get into bed and hit play. It wouldn’t hurt if you’re a bit stoned, if that’s your thing. Play the whole thing in one go - the version without Elephant Stone at the end, so it ends with I Am The Resurrection.
what's so wrong about the sound of silence? it's honestly not their best song but it's alright. i definitely prefer songs like Bridge over troubled water, Homeward Bound and Only living boy in new York however, their songwriting had developed a lot more by then.
I had been studying the Doppler effect at University when this song was released. I played it to my lecturer. He was my age now at the time. Have to laugh about that. He used to go to the opera LOL.
When I heard this lyric stanza: "There's a club if you'd like to go You could meet somebody who really loves you So you go and you stand on your own And you leave on your own And you go home and you cry And you want to die" I said, you just explained my entire high school experience in one lyric stanza. I will never forget this song.
All of those people who rejected you are losers and weren't worthy of you. You're a Smith's fan, so you're the superior of virtually anyone, in my opinion 💖💖💖💖💖💖
@@clairecarlia-jones5979 no, you're not superior to anyone just because you like a certain band. Maybe you stood alone because nobody liked you if this is what you believe.
@@skypekai I was making a joke! Sorry that you took it seriously 😺 And I didn't stand alone when I went to clubs. I was dancing with my friends. All the best XX 😽
Everyone had that reaction. I'd say the visual of going out to a club expecting to have an incredible time, feeling self-conscious and leaving was 100% universal, at least for fans of the underground. It has as much to do with why this song hit as that incredible guitar (and great beat and bass work I might addI) It's why underground music in the 80s had to happen. I don't know what kids do today. They don't have great artists to relate to.
This dude is a class act man. Instead of shoehorning his personal anecdote about seeing the Smiths live throughout the video like some other RUclipsrs, he left it till the end until everything was said and done and kept it short and sharp.
Warren's the man 👍 The way he can breakdown and analyse a piece of music so perfectly, he actually adds to rather than suck all the passion and soul from the song😊🤘
Used to have this as my ringtone - my phone went off one day in court and the judge told me to get out and switch my phone off, but added with a grin: “...at least it’s a good song!”
@@apathyintheuk265 ha ha my husband made my ringtone Ziggy Stardust and would deliberately phone me when I was in the middle of teaching so my students would think I was "cool".
@@apathyintheuk265 ha ha my husband made my ringtone Ziggy Stardust and would deliberately phone me when I was in the middle of teaching so my students would think I was "cool".
I am at a lost for words to describe how musically satisfying and transcendental this song is. The fact that it is a studio masterpiece that NOBODY can reproduce again speaks wonders to it's uniqueness indeed. Bravo to The Smiths!
My daughter and I just returned from Vegas today. We saw Morrissey Sunday night at Caesar's Palace and he opened with How Soon is Now! Incredible show!
The Smiths should be in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. They were influential and produced some amazing music. Even though they have not performed together in years, they still have a huge fanbase. They accomplished quite a lot in there somewhat short history as a band and this one song is legendary. Great video!
Nah, man. Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is a joke. It's cooler to be out than in the hall of fame considering that the people who actually chose who get into it and who doesn't are a bunch of self important wankers, especially Jann Wenner.
I lived in a rural area of South Africa, growing up in the 80’s. We had the state propaganda radio stations and nothing else, but occasionally, with cloudy weather, we would also get one of 2 pirate AM stations - one in Mozambique and one in Johannesburg. It was one overcast Sunday night when I heard the iconic “How soon is now” for the first time. The song, and that rebellious, illicit feeling of discovering a song so special, is forever burned into my being in a very unique way.
The first time I heard “How Soon is Now?” I was waiting in line for Psychedelic Furs tickets to go on sale at Kent State University, the concert was on 10/2/84. I remember thinking “What is this? It’s amazing, unlike anything I had heard before.”
Now, imagine the jolt of pure energy in an 80s nightclub when this came on?! Indescribable. Just indescribable, every time. The 80s: _Lived ‘em. Loved ‘em. Miss ‘em._
A mega hit that I will never grow tired of listening to. Radio killed a lot of songs for me by overplaying them. This one, I’m glad every time I hear it.
@@cnfuzz Train in Vain - The Clash, Rock n' Roll Hooch Coo - Rick Derringer, Wicked Game - Chris Issac, Do It Again - Steely Dan. I should be sick of all of them, but I'm not.
To me, 'How Soon Is Now' sounds other-worldly in the same way as Donna Summer's 'I Feel Love' does. They are both songs that have never sounded dated since the day I first heard them.
Wow, I've never thought of the two together, but you're right! There is some kind of other-worldly feel. I wonder if it has to do with the pulsing undercurrent in both songs. "I Feel Love" has that relentless stereo-ized synth bass, and of course HSIN has that iconic trem guitar part.
AMEN!! You hit it right on the head. Both songs were both unique and ahead of their times. The sounds and the atmospheres just immediately grab your attention and leaves you wanting for more.
I helped my millennial daughter understand the unlikely success of the Smiths recently by explaining to her that in the early 80s, there were absolutely zero record companies looking for a band fronted by a pale, celibate, well-read vegan who wore glasses. She got it. And loves them almost as much as I do.
To be fair the NewWave thing was going strong in the early eighties and what you described was sought out by a lot of record companies.. hence the success of bands like REM in the B-52's etc etc I think you're letting nostalgic Cloud your actual memories
That’s strange because back in the 80’s when I listened to the Smiths, they made me feel depressed. It’s only in my late middle age, do I now understand and like the Smiths. Better late than never. 😂
@@DaniloSilva-pl3sq 100% with you on that one. The best version of Ashes to Ashes I've heard was when he did the BBC live recordings in 2000. Gail Ann Dorsey's bass is sublime on it. Both of these tracks just zone out everything round you and transport you to a parallel universe. The power of great music.......edit: actually I've just remembered, it was mark playing bass on that version, Gail was playing guitar. Still sublime though.
I know how you feel man. I saw The Smiths live at the Greek Theatre in Berkeley in the summer of 1986. It was magic. It was an outdoor amphitheater concert at night with the San Francisco Bay fog glowing up the atmosphere with eerie beauty as the real life backdrop to The Smiths magical music and presence. Everyone was in a trance.
I remember being in a club in late 80s dancing to this song- the whole place was shaking with the tremolo and bass. It was epic. I am trying to get my tribute band to play it- bucket list.
I GASPED when I saw this, YAYYY! I still remember seeing and hearing this song for the first time- a teenager, sitting in the dark in my parent’s living room, watching 120 Minutes on MTV. I was instantly mesmerized and astonished by the sound and still get tears in my eyes every single time I listen to it. It is so perfectly beautiful.
I guess I was one of the lucky ones hearing it Iive as I was at the London Palladium 26/10/86, I was only 12. Three stories you may be interested in. 1) if you watch the footage of this gig on RUclips, during The boy with the thorn in his side, my brother lifted me up so I was standing on top of the chair in front floor level and I was swaying & waving. Johnny saw me and looked back to Mike gesturing with his head to look then he smiles. 2). When we came out our parents were waiting and we all went to the stage door but Morrissey had already left. A lady asked my sister if she wanted her poster signed by the others as they were still there. My sister asked her how? to which she replied, “I’m Andy’s Mum”. So we have the signed poster of Andy, Johnny, Mike, Craig & someone also wrote Morrissey on it too?? 3) when we got home my Mum said she needed to tell us something. She & my Dad waited for them to arrive after we’d gone in and when Morrissey got out the car, she pushed through some security and asked him if he could sign a picture. The security guy tried to move her back but Morrissey said No. He asked her her name & she said it wasn’t for her but for my Sister. Morrissey asked where my sister was & my Mum said how the 3 of us were inside. Morrissey smiled & asked my Mum why she wasn’t going in too to which my Mum replied that my Sister had come out to see the one she loved. Having signed the picture Morrissey asked my Mum her name, she replied Sheila!! In July 1987 my sister & I met Morrissey outside his house and my 15 year old sobbing sister said how he’d met our Mum at the Palladium. Morrissey straight away said Sheila!! We asked him if Sheila take a bow was written because of her and he simply smiled and shrugged his shoulders. It was the perfect response because if our Mum was an inspiration for the song then that’s awesome but if she wasn’t and it was written about Shelagh Delaney as many speculate, then Morrissey would never want to shatter the dream of a 12 & 15 year old standing in front of him. So who knows but when you think about the lyrics ‘Sheila take a Sheila take a bow boot the grime of this world in the crotch dear’ & don’t go home tonight come out and find the one that you love and who loves you,’ it still makes me wonder??
Wow! What an incredible story! It does not surprise me, even if it is not directly related it can still be an influence! You hear a name and it sparks a melody, a rhyme scheme, there could be a connection? Either way it’s a lovely story
Here in San Diego our alternative radio station in the 80s did a “Top songs of the decade on New Year’s Eve ‘89 and the winner was “How Soon is Now” as voted by listeners. It was a great moment!
Would that have been 91X ? (The vocalization of their XETRA call sign still pops into my head occasionally after all these years: "equis eh, te ere ah, efe emme, baja california, mehico!")
I was stationed in San Diego in the 80's, right outta high school. I had never heard the Smiths before then. I heard them on 91X!. (Remember those stickers!) It changed my life somehow. I still love them. I am possibly addicted to Morrissey's music today at 54.
I, too, saw them perform this. 1985 at the Warner Theatre in Washington D.C. I recall Johnny Marr using two guitars and some kind of effect pedal, like a looping kinda effect...
Yep...I saw them 1st Row at the Bronco Bowl in Dallas Sept of 86 and they played it... (Not very well either) Later, Married the Girl who went with me...33 yrs later she and I happen to mention the show in front of our 25 yr old son...he exclaimed, "YOU SAW THE SMITHS???" and suddenly we were finally cool in his eyes 😎 lol...
As a musician,I'm a guitarist/singer/songwriter,I was interested in how they made that riff,but the lyrics describe bitter loneliness probably better than any other song I've ever heard.I especially like the line "You shut your mouth".....It enrages me when people label sadness,depression,being lonely as "self pity".Morrissey is undoubtedly one of the greatest lyricists of all time,because he doesn't sugar coat life to make it easier for the masses to swallow.He simply describes it exactly as it is.
@@Producelikeapro just like to say that How soon is Now , was made even more famous by the film The Craft and it use used in the TV show charmed ( although that version is a cover, there still alot of people that don't know that the original is by The Smiths
I think so too. Bad by U2, End of the World by REM, and Bizzarre Love Triangle by New Order also had unique sounds and would rank highly in the best of the 80s.
How Soon Is Now takes me away on a mental, emotional and physical journey to another place and then it's so bloody hard to come back and achieve anything else which at that moment just feels less important. It's a sensational trip!
This song always gives me chills - brings back my ‘80s memories. Another great song is Bigmouth Strikes Again. Don’t know what it is about that song but I love it.
@@stevenhartlaub4557 - Yes, undoubtedly! I'm in awe of people with such a gift 😍 Me, I play several instruments and find it very easy to compose new Music, but coming up with good lyrics and vocal melodies sadly has never been my forté 😭 🙂
the one thing that throws me off are the 5s snippets of totally unrelated songs inserted in the editing of the video... I'd rather have silence.. As the explanation of the song goes I have the song in question in my head and then this other "what??" song pops up.. other than that this series is absolutely fabulous of this amazing youtube channel! Thank you so much!! Bravo!!
I loved "alternative" English bands as a teen near DC. As I explored further I also had a love of Hendrix, Clapton, Santana, Rory Gallagher and Stevie Ray Vaughan. As expressive as they are, Johnny Marr always had this complete precision in his playing. So exact. Taking bright sunny chords and contrasting them with dark foreboding lyrics. I worked at Tower Records for almost 5 years. I joked that in order to work at Tower, you had to like The Smiths.
Good segment Warren. The Smiths catalog is arguably then strongest in rock history. Two careers in five years, their best work on b-sides, an instant rise to greatness, and magical songwriting that can never be replicated.
One of my all-time favorites. Absolutely beautiful song. A few months ago my teenager lost one of his ear buds over the course of a few weeks i was privy to hear quite a lot of his preferred music. I can not tell you the pride i felt when walking past his room and hearing this song coming from behind his door. Proud mom moment indeed 🙂 Lord knows he heard it enough growing up but to know that he chooses to listen to it is really cool.
So well done, Warren! Simply one of the greatest songs of the decade. And beyond. It must be mentioned what an impact Andy Rourke is in this song. It is an epic bass line and tone.
Great vid. I saw them in Toronto the summer after this song came out. It was their encore ,blew the place apart. Everyone started leaving the outdoor venue, the house lights were on for almost 10 mins, I'd guess. Then, lights out and the guitar started. It was absolutely amazing, crazy loud and clean, the strobe lights, fantastic. Great memory that still gives me chills. This tune still gets massive play from me. A huge part of my teen yrs and even today. 🍻
Marr was a wizard. The way he layered parts pre digital is unreal. Heard stories of them striking open tuned guitars with kitchen knives to get the effects they need. Their writing process of Marr sending Morrissey the music and the band not knowing where he was going until he turned up to record gives me chills. The band thought he was singing about the elements when he started out on this. Imagine having the redlight bulbs, stoned, having layed down this ethereal music and then hearing Morrisseys contribution for the first time. The "there's a club if you'd like to go" lines are up there with his best Glorious band
Must admit, I don't have a single Smiths recording in my library. That being said this is hands down in my top 5 guitar riffs ever. I could listen to it on loop.
One of my favorite songs of all time! I've adored it ever since I was 16 years old and the DJ at my favorite dance club played this "cool song from a great band called The Smiths" in 1985. This song still makes me feel like I did back then, swaying around on the dance floor, spaced out on X, listening to Morrissey sing about the self-hatred he felt due to crippling shyness and loneliness. Amazing song! Thanks for the video!
Phenomenal song! One of my ALL-TIME favorites! It connects with people and touches the soul and in a way that is cathartic as you realize you're not the only person in the world to experience that type of rejection and feeling undesirable. Just pure masterpiece lyrics.
I saw the Smiths on, The Queen Is Dead tour. They did How soon as now as an encore. I remember seeing Marr pounding a pedal every time he played the slide part. Great gig.
Been wanting for years for a show with a format like yours to be made, exactly as you’ve made it. I knew it would eventually occur to someone else. Love it.
The friend of mine who introduced me to The Smiths didn't like How Soon Is Now, probably because it sounds so different. I told him I loved it, and a week later he said he gave it another chance, and I was right and that it's in fact genius. :-D
I really love this series, and it comes in addition to a channel that continues to teach me so much. Your gift to us is that you're a story teller. You care, and you deeply love what you do and your passion easily withdraws the best from all you've interviewed. It doesn't matter if the music interests me - there's always something in the stories you share that brings it all to life more than simple tech talk ever could alone. "Why" begets "how". Thank you so much, Warren
Never ever in my born days would I have ever thought that that sound came from a guitar being strummed through a tremelo. I always thought it was some kind of processed synth loop. My mind is blown.
Oh Warrèn you lucky devil getting to see The Smiths live. I was a fan at the time but at 14 no way was my parents ever going to let me loose to go to a gig unattended. Besides which they hated them. Great series. Keep 'em coming.
I remember the first time I heard this. It was 1984, and I was in LA involved with the production of a TV commercial. My art director and I were driving around Malibu and the song came on the radio. My reaction was a stunned, “What was THAT?” I became hooked on that song, so I bought the album. I have been a Smiths fan ever since.
Two amazing guitar hooks battling for attention with a hard-grooving drum ‘n’ bass. I love how understated the singing is, beautifully melodic. This song sounded like no other at the time. It couldn’t miss.
I've never played an instrument in my life and never learned to read music, but I'm LOVING this channel!! All the great songs I enjoyed over the years are being dissected and it makes me appreciate them all the more. Thank you!
I remember hearing this on the radio for the first time -- I was *transfixed.* It didn't even register that the sound of the intro was a guitar. I thought it might've been a synth. Despite the weak performance in the pop chart, it must've been huge on the modern-rock chart because it was in heavy rotation on the station I used to listen to. In my top 3 fave Smiths songs. Thanks for this great analysis and all the info on the complications of tracking that iconic guitar part.
@@Producelikeapro Thanks for putting this together so well. You did a great job with it, and it's awesome to hear someone reproduce that ineffable guitar sound!
So, I get why The Smiths were pissed off that their label went behind their back and put out a music video. But.....................gotta say, I'm indebted to their label for making that move. Because the girl in that video....good lord. That ruined me. I distinctly remember the first time I ever saw the video, also the first time I heard the song, it was 1996, meaning I was 13. It made my still-forming mind long to meet an urban noir chic modern cool girl as hauntingly achingly beautiful as the girl in the video. Ah, youth.... And don't even get me started on the girl in The Cars' video for "Drive." Again, that messed me up for months as a kid...
@@avedic Agree! That girl was a dream from that era. There was a girl at my school (college) who looked a lot like her - had that retro/sexy/blonde/Tuesday Weld/ Ray Bans look. I never met her or spoke to her; it was best just to remember her as the doppelganger of the girl from the Smiths video.
..never one of my Smiths favorites but after this video I gave it a few listens and find I'm liking it much better than I used to. Talk about shaping opinions!
Thanks for unpacking How Soon Is Now. Oddly perhaps, back in the day, this was never a song I particularly liked, but now all it takes is to hear "that sound", and I'm there. Epic, awesome and nostalgic, all at once.
Hi I was also at that Smith's concert in June 1984 ,amazing concert ,I had just left school and was one of my first concerts and it was free ,cant believe how good Johnny marr was that day ,didn't think it would have gone ahead due to the fight before with the other bands ,great vlog very interesting thank you
Yes! That was a crazy show! There was a bunch of skinheads who chased people! I remember it well. They caused people, then everyone realised they outnumbered them and chased the skinheads out of the area into Waterloo Station, funny thing was I had friends getting off the train and they saw these crazy skinheads running towards them being chased by a huge crowd! Haha
Thank you! This is so incredibly well researched , explained and produced! Your videos prove why these songs thoroughly deserve their place in the history of pop music! Great job!
This series is amazing Warren, as a huge post punk fan especially The Smiths these videos have been great and production wise these bands are a huge influence on me so hearing in depth analysis is great.
I remember seeing Morrissey for the 1st time in my life, it was March 1, 2013 at the Staples center in Los Angeles. When this song came on it was like a bomb 💣 had gone off. I saw so many girls take their shirts off, great fucking show! Morrissey played all the classics. Love the Smiths ❤
@@920WASHBURN Yeah. Guilty as charged. Now back to your video games big boy. And enjoy your Doritos. But don’t forget mom says you have to put out the garbage in the morning.
High School in the 80s, a friend dated a girl who's father was a DJ. She put this on a mix tape for me. I loved it instantly. Bought the single, it had William and Please Please on one side, and How Soon is Now on the other. It was a thick album, had the kinda melty, tie die colors in red, white, & pink. Like stretched taffy. I used to bring a milk crate of New Wave albums to parties, turn people on to my music.Got laid at one party, just cuz this girl Lisa thought i was so cool for bringing music. Great memories of a great tune!
Yeah, great song. There are certain songs that really evoke my general feeings of the decade I heard them. Like "For What It's Worth" brings back the '60s, "How Soon Is Now" brings back the excitement of the British "New Wave" '80s, just as The Police and XTC do.
When this came out, I bought it as tape single. I house shared at the time and my fellow housemates got sick of hearing it looping over and over from my bedroom so I used to smoke a spliff, get in my shitty old Toyota Celica and drive around blasting it full volume from the car tape deck. It's easily my favourite tune of all time - and I was born in 1961 - and even now there's not a week that goes by when I don't give it a play. I must've listened to it thousands of times and I never, ever get tired of it. Goosebumps guaranteed. Also, I'm a big Bo Diddley fan and Marr was obviously heavily influenced by Mona on this track which makes it extra double extra special - to me anyway. I'll have it played at my funeral - that's what it means to me.
Johnny said they used an eventide harmonizer for the lead parts. So, you were probably right in that it was pitched to a G, and an A pair on the harmonizer. It gives it that mettallic industrial sound
Warren, you've got a really good taste to choose THIS song which is terribly underrated! This incredibly gloomy and at the same time romantic feeling the song creates. I love this slightly depressive quality, mixed with some kind of soul power. Thank you for this!
I remember hearing this when I was younger, my dad used to play this kind of music all the time, in the back of his XR3 booting about Buckinghamshire in the mid-late 80s. For many years I would hear this occasionally on TV and would be like what is this song, but there was never anyone to ask and certainly no Spotify. It was the late 90s when I found it when I started listening to the Smiths in my mid-teens...so a bit later to the party but man...I am so glad I discovered it. Absolutely essential piece of music in my life.
I was at University at the time the Smiths were starting out. How Soon is Now went to the top in no time. At school pubs would play every night sometimes 2 or 3 times. Requests kept comming. My salute
R.I.P Andy Rourke. Thank you for the amazing music you gave us. You will be sorely missed.
listening right now to a precociously-skilled andy rourke off the first album 💔
@@ustheserfswell said. He was the man
Andy Rourke legend R. I. P 🎼💐
word
@@dalelane1948 There can never be a Smiths reunion now. You were great Andy
When I was a teenager I would sleep with the radio on because I hate the sound of silence. One night I woke up around 1am and KROQ in Los Angeles was playing this ethereal, haunting song that I had never heard before. Somewhere between sleep and waking life, I laid in my bed and let the sounds wash over me. I became obsessed, I had to find out what this song was. This was the mid 90's, long before the internet. So I listened to KROQ incessantly in the hope of hearing that magical song again. One night, the fates smiled on me and the DJ played it again, and was even kind enough to say the band name and the title of the song. I'd never heard of The Smiths before, but the next day I went to Best Buy and purchased The Best of album and discovered a whole new musical world. Nearly 30 years later, whenever I hear this song I'm transported back to my childhood bedroom, and relive the experience of hearing "How Soon is Now?" for the very first time.
Buy the album “The Stone Roses”, turn off the light, get into bed and hit play. It wouldn’t hurt if you’re a bit stoned, if that’s your thing. Play the whole thing in one go - the version without Elephant Stone at the end, so it ends with I Am The Resurrection.
Neat!
The late Eighties and early Nineties were a magical time for the World Famous 106.7 KROQ.
ME TOO !
what's so wrong about the sound of silence? it's honestly not their best song but it's alright. i definitely prefer songs like Bridge over troubled water, Homeward Bound and Only living boy in new York however, their songwriting had developed a lot more by then.
the slide guitar to me always created a vision of passing cars honking at a lonesome person on a highway walking home alone after going to a club.
Yes, I get that!
Definitely a song to walk down a rainy sidewalk to lol
Fits with the part "there's a club if you'd like to go..."
I had been studying the Doppler effect at University when this song was released. I played it to my lecturer. He was my age now at the time. Have to laugh about that. He used to go to the opera LOL.
100 percent.
It is without a shadow of a doubt one of the greatest songs of all time.
Thanks ever so much
This song manged to escape me until a few years ago - so powerful, yet familiar...Immigrant song, Led Zeppelin. I wonder if they were fans.
@@heavyearly2232 i hate to burst your bubble but Immigrant Song and How Soon Is Now really ain't that similar chief lmao
@@TheInfamousLegend27 They're in the same key. The howling notes sound similar to the first power chords of I.S. My two cents.
@@heavyearly2232 i guess, that’s a fair point :)
When I heard this lyric stanza:
"There's a club if you'd like to go
You could meet somebody who really loves you
So you go and you stand on your own
And you leave on your own
And you go home and you cry
And you want to die"
I said, you just explained my entire high school experience in one lyric stanza. I will never forget this song.
Morrissey’s lyrics are so powerful! Every kid who felt like we did resonated with his lyrics!!
All of those people who rejected you are losers and weren't worthy of you. You're a Smith's fan, so you're the superior of virtually anyone, in my opinion 💖💖💖💖💖💖
@@clairecarlia-jones5979 no, you're not superior to anyone just because you like a certain band. Maybe you stood alone because nobody liked you if this is what you believe.
@@skypekai I was making a joke! Sorry that you took it seriously 😺 And I didn't stand alone when I went to clubs. I was dancing with my friends. All the best XX 😽
Everyone had that reaction. I'd say the visual of going out to a club expecting to have an incredible time, feeling self-conscious and leaving was 100% universal, at least for fans of the underground. It has as much to do with why this song hit as that incredible guitar (and great beat and bass work I might addI) It's why underground music in the 80s had to happen. I don't know what kids do today. They don't have great artists to relate to.
The song is almost 40 and still sounds like it was made today. Great production.
Agreed 100%! Thanks ever so much Zachary!
FAR better than 99% of stuff “today”
I did a senior boffee fart .eat it fart g sharp poo
This dude is a class act man. Instead of shoehorning his personal anecdote about seeing the Smiths live throughout the video like some other RUclipsrs, he left it till the end until everything was said and done and kept it short and sharp.
Thanks ever so much! I really appreciate it.
Warren's the man 👍
The way he can breakdown and analyse a piece of music so perfectly, he actually adds to rather than suck all the passion and soul from the song😊🤘
@@mr1zog wow! Thanks ever so much!
Totally agree! There's more song reviews on RUclips than you could watch in two lifetimes, but they don't get any better than this.
Agree!
Used to have this as my ringtone - my phone went off one day in court and the judge told me to get out and switch my phone off, but added with a grin: “...at least it’s a good song!”
As a consequence did that lessen the sentence he handed down to you?
@@apathyintheuk265 ha ha my husband made my ringtone Ziggy Stardust and would deliberately phone me when I was in the middle of teaching so my students would think I was "cool".
@@apathyintheuk265 ha ha my husband made my ringtone Ziggy Stardust and would deliberately phone me when I was in the middle of teaching so my students would think I was "cool".
Ok, now we need to know. What were you in court for?
@@moy_moy85 Why do we need to know?
I am at a lost for words to describe how musically satisfying and transcendental this song is. The fact that it is a studio masterpiece that NOBODY can reproduce again speaks wonders to it's uniqueness indeed. Bravo to The Smiths!
Average song
Thanks ever so much for sharing!
These things take time, but we finally got a smiths episode :)
Haha YES!! HUGE fan of The Smiths, Johnny Marr, Morrissey and in particular this song!
Aron Silberwasser -- I see what you did there!
Haha indeed
Yes, it is ‘Now’ after all
Nice one!
My daughter and I just returned from Vegas today. We saw Morrissey Sunday night at Caesar's Palace and he opened with How Soon is Now! Incredible show!
Amazing! That’s so cool
So jealous! Moz cancelled our DC show and my son and I would’ve loved to have seen him perform this😢
The Smiths should be in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. They were influential and produced some amazing music. Even though they have not performed together in years, they still have a huge fanbase. They accomplished quite a lot in there somewhat short history as a band and this one song is legendary. Great video!
Very well said Robert
Nah, man. Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is a joke. It's cooler to be out than in the hall of fame considering that the people who actually chose who get into it and who doesn't are a bunch of self important wankers, especially Jann Wenner.
I don’t understand why there are so many comments like thus about
I think Flock of Seagulls and Buck Owens are taking their spot.
I lived in a rural area of South Africa, growing up in the 80’s. We had the state propaganda radio stations and nothing else, but occasionally, with cloudy weather, we would also get one of 2 pirate AM stations - one in Mozambique and one in Johannesburg. It was one overcast Sunday night when I heard the iconic “How soon is now” for the first time. The song, and that rebellious, illicit feeling of discovering a song so special, is forever burned into my being in a very unique way.
The first time I heard “How Soon is Now?” I was waiting in line for Psychedelic Furs tickets to go on sale at Kent State University, the concert was on 10/2/84. I remember thinking “What is this? It’s amazing, unlike anything I had heard before.”
Now, imagine the jolt of pure energy in an 80s nightclub when this came on?!
Indescribable. Just indescribable, every time.
The 80s: _Lived ‘em. Loved ‘em. Miss ‘em._
A mega hit that I will never grow tired of listening to. Radio killed a lot of songs for me by overplaying them. This one, I’m glad every time I hear it.
Thanks ever so much!! Agreed 100%!
The killing moon from echo n the bunnymen has a similar afterlife
@@cnfuzz Train in Vain - The Clash, Rock n' Roll Hooch Coo - Rick Derringer, Wicked Game - Chris Issac, Do It Again - Steely Dan. I should be sick of all of them, but I'm not.
To me, 'How Soon Is Now' sounds other-worldly in the same way as Donna Summer's 'I Feel Love' does. They are both songs that have never sounded dated since the day I first heard them.
Thanks ever so much R T!
Wow, I've never thought of the two together, but you're right! There is some kind of other-worldly feel. I wonder if it has to do with the pulsing undercurrent in both songs. "I Feel Love" has that relentless stereo-ized synth bass, and of course HSIN has that iconic trem guitar part.
AMEN!! You hit it right on the head. Both songs were both unique and ahead of their times. The sounds and the atmospheres just immediately grab your attention and leaves you wanting for more.
Great comparison.
definitely agree, they both hold up incredibly well
I helped my millennial daughter understand the unlikely success of the Smiths recently by explaining to her that in the early 80s, there were absolutely zero record companies looking for a band fronted by a pale, celibate, well-read vegan who wore glasses. She got it. And loves them almost as much as I do.
Haha that’s a fantastic analogy! Thanks for sharing
@@Producelikeapro I saw that you have worked with James Blunt , which album or song , did you work with him on?
To be fair the NewWave thing was going strong in the early eighties and what you described was sought out by a lot of record companies.. hence the success of bands like REM in the B-52's etc etc I think you're letting nostalgic Cloud your actual memories
55 years young. Iconic forever sound. Brilliance.
Thanks ever so much
The Smith's helped me get through my depression filled teenage years. I will always be grateful to them.
Thanks for sharing! RIP Andy Rourke
That’s strange because back in the 80’s when I listened to the Smiths, they made me feel depressed. It’s only in my late middle age, do I now understand and like the Smiths. Better late than never. 😂
What a tune, no argument about it being unique. It gives me goosebumps every time I hear it. A bit like Bowie's 'Ashes to Ashes'.
Thanks ever so much Graham for sharing!
How Soon Is Now and Ashes to Ashes are two of my top 10 favourite songs ever!
@@DaniloSilva-pl3sq 100% with you on that one. The best version of Ashes to Ashes I've heard was when he did the BBC live recordings in 2000. Gail Ann Dorsey's bass is sublime on it. Both of these tracks just zone out everything round you and transport you to a parallel universe. The power of great music.......edit: actually I've just remembered, it was mark playing bass on that version, Gail was playing guitar. Still sublime though.
@@DaniloSilva-pl3sq .
@@DaniloSilva-pl3sq mine too!!
I know how you feel man. I saw The Smiths live at the Greek Theatre in Berkeley in the summer of 1986. It was magic. It was an outdoor amphitheater concert at night with the San Francisco Bay fog glowing up the atmosphere with eerie beauty as the real life backdrop to The Smiths magical music and presence. Everyone was in a trance.
Absolutely fantastic! Thanks for sharing
I remember being in a club in late 80s dancing to this song- the whole place was shaking with the tremolo and bass. It was epic. I am trying to get my tribute band to play it- bucket list.
Marvellous!
I GASPED when I saw this, YAYYY!
I still remember seeing and hearing this song for the first time- a teenager, sitting in the dark in my parent’s living room, watching 120 Minutes on MTV. I was instantly mesmerized and astonished by the sound and still get tears in my eyes every single time I listen to it.
It is so perfectly beautiful.
I guess I was one of the lucky ones hearing it Iive as I was at the London Palladium 26/10/86, I was only 12.
Three stories you may be interested in.
1) if you watch the footage of this gig on RUclips, during The boy with the thorn in his side, my brother lifted me up so I was standing on top of the chair in front floor level and I was swaying & waving. Johnny saw me and looked back to Mike gesturing with his head to look then he smiles.
2). When we came out our parents were waiting and we all went to the stage door but Morrissey had already left. A lady asked my sister if she wanted her poster signed by the others as they were still there. My sister asked her how? to which she replied, “I’m Andy’s Mum”. So we have the signed poster of Andy, Johnny, Mike, Craig & someone also wrote Morrissey on it too??
3) when we got home my Mum said she needed to tell us something. She & my Dad waited for them to arrive after we’d gone in and when Morrissey got out the car, she pushed through some security and asked him if he could sign a picture. The security guy tried to move her back but Morrissey said No. He asked her her name & she said it wasn’t for her but for my Sister. Morrissey asked where my sister was & my Mum said how the 3 of us were inside. Morrissey smiled & asked my Mum why she wasn’t going in too to which my Mum replied that my Sister had come out to see the one she loved. Having signed the picture Morrissey asked my Mum her name, she replied Sheila!! In July 1987 my sister & I met Morrissey outside his house and my 15 year old sobbing sister said how he’d met our Mum at the Palladium. Morrissey straight away said Sheila!! We asked him if Sheila take a bow was written because of her and he simply smiled and shrugged his shoulders. It was the perfect response because if our Mum was an inspiration for the song then that’s awesome but if she wasn’t and it was written about Shelagh Delaney as many speculate, then Morrissey would never want to shatter the dream of a 12 & 15 year old standing in front of him.
So who knows but when you think about the lyrics
‘Sheila take a Sheila take a bow boot the grime of this world in the crotch dear’ & don’t go home tonight come out and find the one that you love and who loves you,’
it still makes me wonder??
SURE WEIRDO SURE!
@@mastersupreme6126 I have no reason to lie, you’re free to think that It is. I just wanted to share my story & treasured memories. God bless
Thnx for sharing
Cool story!
Wow! What an incredible story! It does not surprise me, even if it is not directly related it can still be an influence! You hear a name and it sparks a melody, a rhyme scheme, there could be a connection? Either way it’s a lovely story
I am GOBSMACKED at the connection with Bo Diddley. What the....!! Amazing, I love this channel. Thank you for explaining this iconic riff.
You are so welcome! Thanks ever so much
Agreed. I never would've thought for a moment that Marr would be influenced by BD. I didn't think he went back that far.
Plus the hip-hop connection to Love Bug Starsky! Incredible!
Stairway to Heaven of the 80's, Love Will Tear Us Apart, How Soon is Now and Just Like Heaven..
Marvellous! We’ve covered all three! Thanks ever so much
I love how much This Riff Simply floats like a Psychadelic mist through your ears and carries the lyrics into your soul.
Here in San Diego our alternative radio station in the 80s did a “Top songs of the decade on New Year’s Eve ‘89 and the winner was “How Soon is Now” as voted by listeners. It was a great moment!
Wow! Amazing!
Would that have been 91X ?
(The vocalization of their XETRA call sign still pops into my head occasionally after all these years: "equis eh, te ere ah, efe emme, baja california, mehico!")
@@spatulasnout Yes! 91X! Broadcast from Mexico as you know. =)
I remember this! Was one of the voters and listeners.
I was stationed in San Diego in the 80's, right outta high school. I had never heard the Smiths before then. I heard them on 91X!. (Remember those stickers!) It changed my life somehow. I still love them. I am possibly addicted to Morrissey's music today at 54.
One of the best bands of all time.
Huge fan!
THE best 😊
You mistakenly put one of at the beginning of your factual statement
"The Smiths rarely played the song live." They played "How Soon is Now" live at the Hollywood Palladium in June 1985. I was there.
Amazing! That would have been incredible to hear!
I, too, saw them perform this. 1985 at the Warner Theatre in Washington D.C. I recall Johnny Marr using two guitars and some kind of effect pedal, like a looping kinda effect...
Yep...I saw them 1st Row at the Bronco Bowl in Dallas Sept of 86 and they played it... (Not very well either)
Later, Married the Girl who went with me...33 yrs later she and I happen to mention the show in front of our 25 yr old son...he exclaimed, "YOU SAW THE SMITHS???"
and suddenly we were finally cool in his eyes 😎 lol...
Same
I saw the Smiths twice: Royal Court Theatre, Liverpool; G-MEX, Manchester ... and they played How Soon is Now both times. Guess I was lucky 🙂
As a musician,I'm a guitarist/singer/songwriter,I was interested in how they made that riff,but the lyrics describe bitter loneliness probably better than any other song I've ever heard.I especially like the line "You shut your mouth".....It enrages me when people label sadness,depression,being lonely as "self pity".Morrissey is undoubtedly one of the greatest lyricists of all time,because he doesn't sugar coat life to make it easier for the masses to swallow.He simply describes it exactly as it is.
Morrissey is one of my favourite lyricists
@@Producelikeapro just like to say that How soon is Now , was made even more famous by the film The Craft and it use used in the TV show charmed ( although that version is a cover, there still alot of people that don't know that the original is by The Smiths
Ok but not really
A sonic masterpiece. A cacophony of angst, sadness, sorrow and loneliness…
best song of the entire decade.
You have impeccable taste my friend!
Fantastsic track indeed but "There is a light that never goes out" is still my favorite song, nothing can come even close.
Nonsense, not even the best Smiths song
@@docsavage8640 that's the beauty of opinions. Yours doesn't have to match mine. What do you think their best song is?
I think so too. Bad by U2, End of the World by REM, and Bizzarre Love Triangle by New Order also had unique sounds and would rank highly in the best of the 80s.
Why can't this guy, and this content, be on the telly? Sky Arts? The best thing I've watched for ages. New subscriber.
Wow! Thanks ever so much!
My favourite Smiths song, that slide guitar part... is breathtaking! And your new guitar "that Ross gave" you is.. wow :-) beautiful machine!
Mine too Bruno! Thanks ever so much
How Soon Is Now takes me away on a mental, emotional and physical journey to another place and then it's so bloody hard to come back and achieve anything else which at that moment just feels less important. It's a sensational trip!
This song always gives me chills - brings back my ‘80s memories. Another great song is Bigmouth Strikes Again. Don’t know what it is about that song but I love it.
Me too! Thanks ever so much
"...as the flames rose to her Roman nose and her walkman started to melt" - How do you even come up with stuff like that?? x-))
I've had my kids singing the chorus to this song for almost two decades!
@@mightyV444 Morrissey is undoubtedly one of the greatest lyricists of his generation.
@@stevenhartlaub4557 - Yes, undoubtedly! I'm in awe of people with such a gift 😍 Me, I play several instruments and find it very easy to compose new Music, but coming up with good lyrics and vocal melodies sadly has never been my forté 😭 🙂
the one thing that throws me off are the 5s snippets of totally unrelated songs inserted in the editing of the video... I'd rather have silence.. As the explanation of the song goes I have the song in question in my head and then this other "what??" song pops up.. other than that this series is absolutely fabulous of this amazing youtube channel! Thank you so much!! Bravo!!
The guitar is hauntingly beautiful!
Agreed 100%!
Listened to this song thousands of times and it never fails to move me each and every time. Iconic then, Iconic now and Iconic forever
Thanks ever so much for sharing!
I loved "alternative" English bands as a teen near DC. As I explored further I also had a love of Hendrix, Clapton, Santana, Rory Gallagher and Stevie Ray Vaughan. As expressive as they are, Johnny Marr always had this complete precision in his playing. So exact. Taking bright sunny chords and contrasting them with dark foreboding lyrics.
I worked at Tower Records for almost 5 years. I joked that in order to work at Tower, you had to like The Smiths.
That’s amazing to hear! Glad to hear Tower Records employees had such good taste!
Good segment Warren. The Smiths catalog is arguably then strongest in rock history. Two careers in five years, their best work on b-sides, an instant rise to greatness, and magical songwriting that can never be replicated.
Incredible catalog of amazing songs!
One of my all-time favorites. Absolutely beautiful song. A few months ago my teenager lost one of his ear buds over the course of a few weeks i was privy to hear quite a lot of his preferred music. I can not tell you the pride i felt when walking past his room and hearing this song coming from behind his door. Proud mom moment indeed 🙂 Lord knows he heard it enough growing up but to know that he chooses to listen to it is really cool.
So well done, Warren! Simply one of the greatest songs of the decade. And beyond. It must be mentioned what an impact Andy Rourke is in this song. It is an epic bass line and tone.
Yes, Andy is a wonderful Bassplayer!
Great vid. I saw them in Toronto the summer after this song came out. It was their encore ,blew the place apart. Everyone started leaving the outdoor venue, the house lights were on for almost 10 mins, I'd guess. Then, lights out and the guitar started. It was absolutely amazing, crazy loud and clean, the strobe lights, fantastic. Great memory that still gives me chills. This tune still gets massive play from me. A huge part of my teen yrs and even today. 🍻
this band is one of the reasons we started our band. you don't get much better than JOHNNY MARR
That’s just gorgeous sounding not only chords but that freaking guitar.
Marr was a wizard.
The way he layered parts pre digital is unreal.
Heard stories of them striking open tuned guitars with kitchen knives to get the effects they need.
Their writing process of Marr sending Morrissey the music and the band not knowing where he was going until he turned up to record gives me chills. The band thought he was singing about the elements when he started out on this. Imagine having the redlight bulbs, stoned, having layed down this ethereal music and then hearing Morrisseys contribution for the first time.
The "there's a club if you'd like to go" lines are up there with his best
Glorious band
Yes, Johnny is easily one of my favourite guitarists ever!!
What do you mean was? He's still with us. :-)
@@alanconway94 not sure his wizardry is though
I vividly remember when hearing this song for the first time September 84 and how I was instantly blown away.
Agreed! Loved it the first time I heard it!
Great video editing Warren. Billy Corgan said this song blew his mind and his world when he first heard it and pretty much changed everything for him.
Thanks ever so much! I really appreciate it!
Must admit, I don't have a single Smiths recording in my library. That being said this is hands down in my top 5 guitar riffs ever. I could listen to it on loop.
Fantastic!! Agreed, great riff!
Well its been 2 years. I'd like to think you have at least one Smiths album by now 🙂
I've heard it a billion times and it still gives me goosebumps every time it comes on
One of my favorite songs of all time! I've adored it ever since I was 16 years old and the DJ at my favorite dance club played this "cool song from a great band called The Smiths" in 1985. This song still makes me feel like I did back then, swaying around on the dance floor, spaced out on X, listening to Morrissey sing about the self-hatred he felt due to crippling shyness and loneliness. Amazing song! Thanks for the video!
I totally agree with your comment of this being a headphone song. To me it is THE headphone song - the ultimate.
Agreed
it's because it's so atmospheric
If I had to choose only one song from the 80s, this would be it. Amazing song, well done.
This song just stood out at the time and still does. Great choice and great video.
Yes! Masterpiece
This song is amazing
Morrissey & Marr are the Jagger / Richards of the 80’s
Pure magic
Thanks ever so much! Agreed 100%!
Better than Jagger/Richards.......imo.
This series is, without a doubt, my favorite on RUclips... I have watched every episode several times. I just cant get enough of this.
Wow! Thanks ever so much
Phenomenal song! One of my ALL-TIME favorites! It connects with people and touches the soul and in a way that is cathartic as you realize you're not the only person in the world to experience that type of rejection and feeling undesirable. Just pure masterpiece lyrics.
Thanks ever so much!!
To me The Smiths are the best band ever!! Glorious liricks and music!!! I never get tired to listening.
I saw the Smiths on, The Queen Is Dead tour. They did How soon as now as an encore. I remember seeing Marr pounding a pedal every time he played the slide part. Great gig.
That's amazing! Yes, I saw them at the GLC Free Festival in Jubilee Gardens, it was AMAZING!
Plus I've seen Johnny Marr solo a bunch of times, huge fan!
@@Producelikeapro I saw Johnny solo a couple of years ago. No offense to Moz but we had much more fun at Johnny’s gig.
@@Producelikeapro I saw Morrissey as well. I don't remember what LP he was touring for. I'm just grateful he didn't cancel the gig.
Been wanting for years for a show with a format like yours to be made, exactly as you’ve made it. I knew it would eventually occur to someone else. Love it.
Glad you enjoyed the video! Thanks ever so much
The friend of mine who introduced me to The Smiths didn't like How Soon Is Now, probably because it sounds so different. I told him I loved it, and a week later he said he gave it another chance, and I was right and that it's in fact genius. :-D
That’s great to hear!!
they actually played this song many, many times live. thank you for this great video!
Glad you enjoyed it!
I really love this series, and it comes in addition to a channel that continues to teach me so much.
Your gift to us is that you're a story teller. You care, and you deeply love what you do and your passion easily withdraws the best from all you've interviewed.
It doesn't matter if the music interests me - there's always something in the stories you share that brings it all to life more than simple tech talk ever could alone.
"Why" begets "how". Thank you so much, Warren
Wow! You are so welcome! Thanks ever so much!
Never ever in my born days would I have ever thought that that sound came from a guitar being strummed through a tremelo. I always thought it was some kind of processed synth loop. My mind is blown.
“One of The Greatest Songs of All Time”.
Yes, indeed
In your room
Oh Warrèn you lucky devil getting to see The Smiths live. I was a fan at the time but at 14 no way was my parents ever going to let me loose to go to a gig unattended. Besides which they hated them. Great series. Keep 'em coming.
The most dramatic song i know. The music wrenches my soul and this whistling in between is pure cynicism about life. Love it ❤️
The smiths, when all your hope is gone, they are the songs that saved my life♥️♥️
Thanks ever so much for sharing
I remember the first time I heard this. It was 1984, and I was in LA involved with the production of a TV commercial. My art director and I were driving around Malibu and the song came on the radio. My reaction was a stunned, “What was THAT?” I became hooked on that song, so I bought the album. I have been a Smiths fan ever since.
What was the commercial? Out of interest...
@@chriskyme5767 It was a Duracell commercial from agency Ogilvy & Mather, where I worked as a copywriter from 1982-88.
My favourite Smith's song...Johnny Marr's guitar ...Morrissey's voice...Unique sound... say no more. :)
Well said. R.I.P Andy Rourke
Two amazing guitar hooks battling for attention with a hard-grooving drum ‘n’ bass. I love how understated the singing is, beautifully melodic. This song sounded like no other at the time. It couldn’t miss.
I've never played an instrument in my life and never learned to read music, but I'm LOVING this channel!! All the great songs I enjoyed over the years are being dissected and it makes me appreciate them all the more. Thank you!
Wow! Thanks ever so much! That really means a lot
I remember hearing this on the radio for the first time -- I was *transfixed.* It didn't even register that the sound of the intro was a guitar. I thought it might've been a synth.
Despite the weak performance in the pop chart, it must've been huge on the modern-rock chart because it was in heavy rotation on the station I used to listen to.
In my top 3 fave Smiths songs. Thanks for this great analysis and all the info on the complications of tracking that iconic guitar part.
It was such a huge song for all of us making music at the time! We also were transfixed!!
I think it sounds more like an accordion than a synth
I cannot believe it's been 35 years and it still moves me to the core every time!
It’s a masterpiece
@@Producelikeapro Thanks for putting this together so well. You did a great job with it, and it's awesome to hear someone reproduce that ineffable guitar sound!
So, I get why The Smiths were pissed off that their label went behind their back and put out a music video.
But.....................gotta say, I'm indebted to their label for making that move.
Because the girl in that video....good lord. That ruined me. I distinctly remember the first time I ever saw the video, also the first time I heard the song, it was 1996, meaning I was 13. It made my still-forming mind long to meet an urban noir chic modern cool girl as hauntingly achingly beautiful as the girl in the video. Ah, youth....
And don't even get me started on the girl in The Cars' video for "Drive." Again, that messed me up for months as a kid...
@@avedic Agree! That girl was a dream from that era. There was a girl at my school (college) who looked a lot like her - had that retro/sexy/blonde/Tuesday Weld/ Ray Bans look. I never met her or spoke to her; it was best just to remember her as the doppelganger of the girl from the Smiths video.
..never one of my Smiths favorites but after this video I gave it a few listens and find I'm liking it much better than I used to. Talk about shaping opinions!
Thanks ever so much! That’s great to hear!!
Thanks for unpacking How Soon Is Now. Oddly perhaps, back in the day, this was never a song I particularly liked, but now all it takes is to hear "that sound", and I'm there. Epic, awesome and nostalgic, all at once.
Hi I was also at that Smith's concert in June 1984 ,amazing concert ,I had just left school and was one of my first concerts and it was free ,cant believe how good Johnny marr was that day ,didn't think it would have gone ahead due to the fight before with the other bands ,great vlog very interesting thank you
Yes! That was a crazy show! There was a bunch of skinheads who chased people! I remember it well. They caused people, then everyone realised they outnumbered them and chased the skinheads out of the area into Waterloo Station, funny thing was I had friends getting off the train and they saw these crazy skinheads running towards them being chased by a huge crowd! Haha
Great show! The Smiths were wonderful
Thank you! This is so incredibly well researched , explained and produced! Your videos prove why these songs thoroughly deserve their place in the history of pop music! Great job!
WOW! Thanks ever so much
Great Video! I've actually heard Johnny reference that along with "Disco Stomp" the tremolo part on "I want more" by Can was an influence also
Thanks ever so much for sharing that Dillon!
Really enjoyed this. You’ve got a great engaging, authentic style.
Thanks ever so much
“When I heard it for the first time, things changed within me.” - - perfect song, and a perfect RUclips channel. This vid is too awesome for words.
Thanks ever so much!!
Loved dancing at the goth clubs to this lol, great choice, really love this series. I'd love to share a new track I just released with you Warren?
This series is amazing Warren, as a huge post punk fan especially The Smiths these videos have been great and production wise these bands are a huge influence on me so hearing in depth analysis is great.
Wow! Thanks ever so much for your wonderful comment!!
I don't think it was this song, I think it's their whole discography that changed the world and music altogether.
Couldn't disagree with that! Thanks ever so much
@@Producelikeapro Keep up the great work! I'm a huge since watching the Joy Division episode. Great stuff brother love your hand pic bands and songs!
I remember seeing Morrissey for the 1st time in my life, it was March 1, 2013 at the Staples center in Los Angeles. When this song came on it was like a bomb 💣 had gone off. I saw so many girls take their shirts off, great fucking show! Morrissey played all the classics. Love the Smiths ❤
Can't argue with that.
Changed fuck-all in Toronto. Most people never heard of them or their shite songs.
“Cacophony” is not a word!
Oh. Wait...
Great breakdown of this tune. Danced to it every chance I got in the ‘80’s.
And yes, I went home alone...
Haha I danced to it as well!
Probly cuz you are a dude who dances
@@920WASHBURN Yeah. Guilty as charged. Now back to your video games big boy.
And enjoy your Doritos. But don’t forget mom says you have to put out the garbage in the morning.
@@chrisfournier6144 took it out last night smart guy.
Thanks Warren! First heard this in college (late 1980s) and it still moves me to this day.
Thanks ever so much Wade!
High School in the 80s, a friend dated a girl who's father was a DJ. She put this on a mix tape for me. I loved it instantly. Bought the single, it had William and Please Please on one side, and How Soon is Now on the other. It was a thick album, had the kinda melty, tie die colors in red, white, & pink. Like stretched taffy. I used to bring a milk crate of New Wave albums to parties, turn people on to my music.Got laid at one party, just cuz this girl Lisa thought i was so cool for bringing music. Great memories of a great tune!
Great memories! Thanks ever so much! Happy New Year!
Yeah, great song. There are certain songs that really evoke my general feeings of the decade I heard them. Like "For What It's Worth" brings back the '60s, "How Soon Is Now" brings back the excitement of the British "New Wave" '80s, just as The Police and XTC do.
Thanks ever so much Sarah!
When this came out, I bought it as tape single. I house shared at the time and my fellow housemates got sick of hearing it looping over and over from my bedroom so I used to smoke a spliff, get in my shitty old Toyota Celica and drive around blasting it full volume from the car tape deck. It's easily my favourite tune of all time - and I was born in 1961 - and even now there's not a week that goes by when I don't give it a play. I must've listened to it thousands of times and I never, ever get tired of it. Goosebumps guaranteed. Also, I'm a big Bo Diddley fan and Marr was obviously heavily influenced by Mona on this track which makes it extra double extra special - to me anyway. I'll have it played at my funeral - that's what it means to me.
Johnny said they used an eventide harmonizer for the lead parts. So, you were probably right in that it was pitched to a G, and an A pair on the harmonizer. It gives it that mettallic industrial sound
Fantastic!! Thanks ever so much for sharing
Warren, you've got a really good taste to choose THIS song which is terribly underrated! This incredibly gloomy and at the same time romantic feeling the song creates. I love this slightly depressive quality, mixed with some kind of soul power. Thank you for this!
I remember hearing this when I was younger, my dad used to play this kind of music all the time, in the back of his XR3 booting about Buckinghamshire in the mid-late 80s. For many years I would hear this occasionally on TV and would be like what is this song, but there was never anyone to ask and certainly no Spotify. It was the late 90s when I found it when I started listening to the Smiths in my mid-teens...so a bit later to the party but man...I am so glad I discovered it. Absolutely essential piece of music in my life.
Just an amazing band! And I don't think Johnny Marr gets all the credit he deserves for his brilliance as a guitar player.
In my world he does!! In my top ten for sure!!
One of the best covers or all time is this song by Love Spit Love led by Richard Butler of the Psychedelic Furs.
Yes! Great cover
That is not an ordinary RUclips video...This is a well orchestrated documentary! Brilliantly done!
Wow! Thanks ever so much
I was at University at the time the Smiths were starting out. How Soon is Now went to the top in no time. At school pubs would play every night sometimes 2 or 3 times. Requests kept comming. My salute
As soon as i hear that first cord I'm just locked it. I loved this song for the longest time. Thanks for breaking it down like this.