Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty
Opinion

You can grow up to be Morrissey or you can grow up to be Johnny Marr – which are you?

Watching a musical hero with your children reminds you that generational differences are wafer thin, and just another way of creating a division 

Johnny Marr

Johnny Marr onstage at Glasgow Barrowland in April 2024. Image: Stuart Westwood/Shutterstock

My son is the son and the heir of a shyness that is criminally vulgar. 

When he was nine, I wrote a poem after we built a den in the woods.

It pondered on whether this would be our final piece of den building (it was). It was only when I first performed it that I found out it made everyone cry. In Liverpool, a young man approached me and said that I shouldn’t worry, the adventures never end. His mother then leant in to say, “Yes, but there were a few years where it was pretty hard to get you out of bed to have an adventure.” 

Get the latest news and insight into how the Big Issue magazine is made by signing up for the Inside Big Issue newsletter

He was right. My son is 16 now and, without any mind control by me, has become a huge fan of Johnny Marr, and therefore also The Smiths. Unlike me, he is aware that Morrissey goes politically skew-whiff and ends up promoting an extremist right-wing political party, whereas for many of us, it was a twist in the tale (despite certain interviews that were a little more disconcerting when we reread them decades on). 

We went together to watch Marr at Hammersmith Apollo, his first gig there. My first gig there was to see Rik Mayall and all as the spoof metal band Bad News, creators of The Warriors of Genghis Khan and Masturbike

Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty
Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty

Johnny Marr is a shaman. I don’t know if he had to sell his soul at the crossroads, but if he did, we got
a great deal from it and we will all still be listening to his work as he sizzles in hell. Just as building that den was a very special moment, so was sitting side by side and bellowing There is a Light that Never Goes Out.

Parents dread the teenage years, waiting for the grumpy, truculent child to break out of their chrysalis and reveal a bulky black caterpillar resembling Harry Enfield’s Kevin rather than a butterfly, but there is no certainty that this will be your fate. 

Much is written about the generational divides – endless columns on Gen Z, Gen Y, Gen X, Boomers and all. But the differences are wafer thin, and just another way of creating a division; from distracting us from the real divisions of wealth and poverty, power and impotence. 

I have recently been touring cinemas with Nigel Planer and Peter Richardson showing films from The Comic Strip Presents… The Comic Strip was hugely important to me as a teenager. Their films were anarchic, strange, hilarious. They meant to me what The Clash meant to the generation before me. 

Some nights people in the audience say that they wish The Comic Strip came back because that would be a kick against “all this woke stuff”. It seems that they have forgotten that The Comic Strip and alternative comedy of the 1980s was the woke stuff of that generation.

Just as teenagers do not have to become grumpy misanthropes, “You don’t understand me and you don’t understand my music/video games!”, so we do not have to get to middle age and start agreeing with Laurence Fox and repeatedly saying, “The problem with kids NOWADAYS”, and complaining about pronouns. 

There will be dicks in every generation and there will be kind people too, who remain vivacious
and curious.

You can grow up to be Morrissey. Or you can grow up to be Johnny Marr. 

Robin Ince is a comedian, writer and broadcaster.

Bibliomaniac by Robin Ince

His book Bibliomaniac (Atlantic Books, £10.99) is out now. You can buy it from The Big Issue shop on Bookshop.org, which helps to support The Big Issue and independent bookshops.

This article is taken from The Big Issue magazine, which exists to give homeless, long-term unemployed and marginalised people the opportunity to earn an income.

To support our work buy a copy! If you cannot reach your local vendor, you can still click HERE to subscribe to The Big Issue today or give a gift subscription to a friend or family member.

Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty

How many kids, Keir?

Ask the PM to tell us how many kids he'll get out of poverty
Image of two parents holding two small children, facing away from the camera

Recommended for you

View all
I asked ChatGPT to rate my life choices. I didn't like what it told me
Sam Delaney

I asked ChatGPT to rate my life choices. I didn't like what it told me

Housing asylum seekers in military camps is an expensive mistake – and the Home Office knows it
asylum seekers at former military barracks
Julia Savage

Housing asylum seekers in military camps is an expensive mistake – and the Home Office knows it

Westminster must set ambitious, measurable targets to reduce child poverty
set child poverty targets
Child poverty

Westminster must set ambitious, measurable targets to reduce child poverty

Ofgem's plan to write off £500m of energy debt is welcome – but it's not enough to solve the crisis
hob
Vikki Brownridge

Ofgem's plan to write off £500m of energy debt is welcome – but it's not enough to solve the crisis