I Know It's Over

Album: The Queen Is Dead (1986)
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Songfacts®:

  • This song – often cited as The Smiths' "bleakest ballad" - sees a dying man reflect on what he feels was his wasted and lonely life. Many of Morrissey and Johnny Marr's writing sessions for The Smiths involved the pair sitting inches away from each other, face-to-face, while Marr played Morrissey a track on an acoustic guitar, recording it on a tape player between his knees. During one such legendary night in the late summer of 1985 at Marr's home in Bowdon, Greater Manchester, the duo wrote "Frankly, Mr Shankly," "There Is a Light That Never Goes Out" and this song.
  • This song was laid down one low-lit evening. Marr recalled to NME in 2011: "We recorded it around about teatime, but England being England it was dark and wet outside. It was very beautiful and it reflected how I felt for a large part of my life, and particularly during that period. But I didn't see a despondency in that, there's an acceptance of melancholia being a part of life, that's why I don't think it's depressing."
  • In 1992, Marr told Record Collector that this was one of his favorite songs on The Smiths' third album, The Queen Is Dead. The guitarist said that he was particularly floored by Morrissey's vocals: "Morrissey's vocal on 'I Know It's Over' - I'll never forget when he did that. It's one of the highlights of my life. It was that good, that strong. Every line he was hinting at where he was going to go. I was thinking, 'Is he going to go there? Yes, he is!' It was just brilliant."
  • This is The Smiths' drummer Mike Joyce's favorite bit of bass guitar that bandmate Andy Rourke ever played. "Where Morrissey sings, 'If you're so funny. Then why are you on your own tonight?' and he plays this fretboard slide, and it's like an audible sigh, like a call and answer the between him and Morrissey," Joyce told Mojo magazine. "It's just a stunning piece of playing."
  • The Smiths discussed having a trumpet player on the refrain at the end. They got a session guy in and told him to do what he wanted. There was no score for him to play to, and he started floating some ideas around.

    "He did a Shirley Bassey kind of flourish at the end," drummer Mike Joyce recalled to NME. "It was hilarious: one of the funniest things ever. Moz was just pissing himself. He was bald, had hair on either side – just missing the tie that spins round. Lovely fella."

    It sounded great, but the band felt it sounded weird hearing a trumpet on a Smiths song, so they binned it.

Comments: 3

  • Lefty from MississippiTerry, I hear you shouting into the void and am right there with you.
  • Marek from SomewhereThe man returns home after the last conversation with the object of his affection. It could have been someone he had been in love with for years, and he had been hopeful that they would be together. However, during the conversation, the subject confesses his feelings, and she tells him then that she definitely do not feel the same way. His hopes were pure fiction, as the feelings were only from his side. From the conversation, it emerged that the girl is soon getting married. Her lover is someone entirely different from what the subject could have imagined - a person who, just in his opinion, does not fit her at all as he knew her. Yet, he still cares about her and wishes her well. Therefore, the subject concludes that she must be attracted to that man somehow and she rather needs someone like her crush much more than she even loves him. She responds him angrily, cautioning him about his words, and that his perplexity shows that he is not as attractive as he probably might think of himself. If that was the case, he wouldn't be alone that evening, while others can turn their chances into relationships. Deeply saddened, the subject returns home lonely, thinking about what happened and weighing various ways to end it all.
  • Terry from ChicagoI'm shocked no comments. This is one of the most beautiful in their catalog. If your so clever, good looking, entertaining ect..why are you alone? The most rewarding, inspirational, and life changing times have been just myself. The Smiths make it ok. They got it.
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