Now, this is just a hunch, but I reckon that in any poll of 1,000 fans asking for a list of their Top 10 favourite Morrissey singles, there will be at least 999 who include this. And the one who doesn’t is a liar.
Released in June 1988, Everyday Is Like Sunday has proven to be one of the most enduring songs of the solo career, having being played on most of the solo tours, particularly those since the 2002 comeback. The single went to #9 in the UK charts which is a hugely impressive achievement given that the song had been available on the LP Viva Hate for a few months beforehand. And while I imagine that many fans would have bought the single for the sake of keeping up the collection (that was certainly my reason at the time), the fact is that the three extra tracks provided on the b-side of the 12″ single are as good as anything else Morrissey had released as a solo artist at that time in his career.
It was like a throwback to his early career with The Smiths when the release of a new single was every bit as eagerly anticipated for the b-sides as well as the ones you would see them perform on Top of The Pops.
mp3 : Morrissey – Everyday Is Like Sunday
mp3 : Morrissey – Sister I’m A Poet
mp3 : Morrissey – Disappointed
mp3 : Morrissey – Will Never Marry
The lead track (but not its b-sides) was once the subject of a dmca. It’s been filed differently this time.
Enjoy.

I Will Never Marry is in my Top Ten Morrissey recordings. I kinda wish it had been the last ever release – as a stand alone single – by the Smiths…it has a certain feel to it of finality that would have been so very appropriate.
I never bought this single, but had a tape recorded off a Peel show with Disappointed on it. Mr Peel comments that the last line in the song “this is the last song I will ever sing – no I’ve changed my mind again” being one of his favourite Morrissey lyrics. As with Echorich above, I wish this had been his final song, as for me he never captured the simplicity of his earlier work with the Smiths, which seeded to cast such a shadow over everything he did.