Morrissey claims Johnny Marr ‘ignored’ supply to reform The Smiths
Morrissey is steadfastly continuing the feud with Johnny Marr by claiming is ex-bandmate ignored a ‘lucrative offer’ to follow Oasis and reform The Smiths.
A statement on Morrissey’s website, titled ‘war is old, art is young’, said he ‘said yes’ to the offer by AEG Entertainment Group.
It was to tour as The Smiths throughout 2025, but ‘Marr ignored the offer’, he claimed.
While Marr, 60, hasn’t responded, he responded to a post on X suggesting a reunion with a photo of Reform UK leader Nigel Farage.
This is a reference to his opinion of the singer’s political views.
The band – formed in Manchester in 1982 – produced four albums before breaking up in 1987, and many nostalgic fans have expressed hopes that they may follow in Oasis’ footsteps and make peace for a reunion tour.
Morrissey is steadfastly continuing the feud with Johnny Marr by claiming is ex-bandmate ignored a ‘lucrative offer’ to follow Oasis and reform The Smiths
A statement on Morrissey’s website, titled ‘war is old, art is young’, said he ‘said yes’ to the offer by AEG Entertainment Group
While Marr, 60, hasn’t responded, he responded to a post on X suggesting a reunion with a photo of Reform UK leader Nigel Farage
Morrissey, 65, said on his website that the promoter ‘made a lucrative offer to both Morrissey and Marr to tour worldwide as ‘The Smiths’ throughout 2025′.
‘Morrissey said Yes to the offer; Marr ignored the offer.
‘Morrissey undertakes a largely sold out tour of the USA in November. Marr continues to tour as a special guest to New Order.’
Few bands have burned as brightly or fast as The Smiths for so short a time and lived on in the public imagination with such interminable prestige.
The seminal 1980s Manchester act made icons out of Marr and Morrisey but the group hasn’t played together for years – and a reunion isn’t likely.
After releasing four albums in five years between 1982-1987, a tiff over royalties from their now cavernous repertoire spelled the end of the quartet – who spent their last days as an act not on stage but in a court room fighting over scraps of the estate.
Morrisey has frequently hit the headlines for his controversial political comments.
In 2018, the outspoken singer sparked outrage online by describing the jailing of English Defence League founder Tommy Robinson as ‘shocking’.
Guitarist Johnny Marr, singer Morrissey, drummer Mike Joyce and bassist Andy Rourke of The Smiths pose for a portrait before their first show during the Meat Is Murder Tour in 1985
Marr (left) and Morrissey of The Smiths pose together in the store room of Rough Trade records in London in 1983
The former Smiths frontman from Manchester was discussing what he feels is a lack of diversity in opinion in mainstream politics during an interview.
He said right-winger’s jailing for breaking contempt laws by filming outside a court was an example of how Britain’s biggest political parties are against freedom of expression.
‘It’s very obvious that Labour or the Tories do not believe in free speech,’ he told tremr. ‘I mean, look at the shocking treatment of Tommy Robinson.’
A year later, the musician sparked more controversy after reaffirming his support for far-right party For Britain while also claiming ‘everyone prefers their own race’.
The singer also said he believed Nigel Farage would ‘make a good prime minister’, sparking criticism of the former The Smiths frontman on social media.
But others supported the rock star and said he was unfairly targeted for his views, including saying the UK was a ‘dangerously hateful place’.
The Smiths pictured performing live on stage in 1984
Singer Morrissey and guitarist Johnny Marr of The Smiths perform on stage at Hammersmith Palais, on March 12th, 1984 in London
He also stirred up more controversy by appearing on the Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon in the US while wearing a badge supporting For Britain, which has called for the ‘end of Islamisation of the UK’.
Marr and Morrisey’s on and off again relationship was the subject of much tabloid speculation with rumoured reunions percolating the decades the group lay dormant for.
Although for much of this time, the group weren’t even on speaking terms let alone legal ones.
Finally an increasingly irritated Morrisey broke his silence on the matter in 2022 with a frankly terrifying open letter directed at Marr.
In a blog entry on his Morrissey Central website, the musician began: ‘This is not a rant or an hysterical bombast. It is a polite and calmly measured request: Would you please stop mentioning my name in your interviews?
‘Would you please, instead, discuss your own career, your own unstoppable solo achievements and your own music? If you can, would you please just leave me out of it?
A new photograph of Liam and Noel Gallagher as they confirmed that Oasis have reformed
Oasis announced a series of dates in London, Manchester, Cardiff, Edinburgh and Dublin
‘The fact is: you don’t know me. You know nothing of my life, my intentions, my thoughts, my feelings. Yet you talk as if you were my personal psychiatrist with consistent and uninterrupted access to my instincts.’
Continuing in his lengthy rant, Morrissey told Johnny to ‘stop using my name as click-bait’.
He said: ‘Our period together was many lifetimes ago, and a lot of blood has streamed under the bridge since then. There comes a time when you must take responsibility for your own actions and your own career, with which I wish you good health to enjoy. Just stop using my name as click-bait.’
Morrissey concluded: ‘I have not ever attacked your solo work or your solo life, and I have openly applauded your genius during the days of ‘Louder than bombs’ and ‘Strangeways, here we come’, yet you have positioned yourself ever-ready as rent-a-quote whenever the press require an ugly slant on something I half-said during the last glacial period as the Colorado River began to carve out the Grand Canyon.
‘Please stop. It is 2022, not 1982.’
Marr, who has said there’s no way him and Morrisey would ever work together again due to their differences, responded bemusedly: ‘An ‘open letter’ hasn’t really been a thing since 1953, It’s all ‘social media’ now.’
Later in an interview with the Times, he admitted that he had been surprised by the attack but didn’t regret ‘defending himself’ from the ‘insulting’ letter.