According to pitchfork.com when paying tribute to bassist Andy Rourke on social media last week, The Smiths’s drummer Mike Joyce remembered his late friend and bandmate during a recent interview with BBC Breakfast.
Joyce sat down with host Colin Paterson to discuss the memories of performing with Rourke in the Smiths, as well as their friendship outside of the band.
“I don’t think Andy realized just how good a bass player he was. I don’t think Andy ever really embraced just how momentous his contribution towards music is. I don’t think he ever grasped that and realized that.”
The Smiths’s Johnny Marr confirmed Rourke’s death in a statement posted on social media last Friday. Rourke was 59 and had been living with pancreatic cancer. “I knew Andy had been very ill. I kind of felt as though we weren’t going to be waiting long for that call, and when I did get it, it didn’t make it any easier.” said Joyce
Joyce last saw Rourke during a trip to New York back in February, where the two musicians reminisced about some of Rourke’s signature bass lines for the Smiths. “
He was such a self-effacing character,” Joyce said. “He never saw himself as a great bass player because it was so effortless for him and so easy for him. He just put the bass on and magic would happen.” “I felt like he carried me a lot of the time,” Joyce added. “Any drummer’s going to sound great with Andy playing bass.”
Following the news of Rourke’s death, Morrissey penned a eulogy for his former bandmate: “He will never die as long as his music is heard. He didn’t ever know his own power, and nothing that he played had been played by someone else.”