Munich Air Disaster 1958
Morrissey's bittersweet ode to the Manchester United players who perished in a plane crash.
The B-side to Morrissey's 2004 'Irish Blood, English Heart' single, 'Munich Air Disaster 1958' was released May 10, 2004. While the song does not appear on the initial release of You Are The Quarry studio album (released May 17, 2004), it is included on the UK deluxe edition, which was issued several months later (October 2004). 'Munich Air Disaster 1958' also appears on Morrissey's 2009 Swords compilation album
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Notwithstanding the grim subject matter, musically the song sounds oddly upbeat, with a familiar mid-tempo "Morrissey sound". Indeed, 'Munich Air Disaster 1958'  is a pleasant piece of music.  The lyrics belie this seemingly sanguine façade - lines such as "I wish I'd gone down/Gone down with them/To where mother nature makes their bed" cruelly yanks the listener back to the fact that Morrissey is singing about a mass-casualty event. Â
Listen to the song here:
The Munich air disaster occurred on February 6, 1958 when British European Airways Flight 609 crashed on its third attempt to take off at Munich-Riem Airport in Munich, West Germany.
The aircraft was carrying the Manchester United football team, nicknamed the "Busby Babes", along with supporters and journalists.Â
There were 44 people on board, 20 of whom died at the scene. The injured, some unconscious, were taken to Munich's Rechts der Isar Hospital, where three more died, resulting in 23 fatalities with 21 survivors. Â A total of 8 Manchester United players were killed1 along with the 15 other victims.
The Manchester United team were returning from a European Cup match in Belgrade, Yugoslavia (now Serbia), having eliminated Red Star Belgrade to advance to the semi-finals of the competition. The flight stopped to refuel in Munich, because a non-stop flight from Belgrade to Manchester was beyond the range of the "Elizabethan"-class Airspeed Ambassador. After refuelling, pilots James Thain and Kenneth Rayment twice abandoned take-off because of boost surging in the left engine. Fearing they would fall too far behind schedule, Thain rejected an overnight stay in Munich in favor of a third take-off attempt. By that time, snow was falling, causing a layer of slush to form at the end of the runway. After hitting the slush, the aircraft ploughed through a fence beyond the end of the runway and the left wing was torn off when it struck a house. The tail section broke off and hit a barn with a parked fuel truck in it, which caught fire and exploded. Fearing the aircraft, too, might explode, Thain began evacuating passengers while goalkeeper Harry Gregg helped pull survivors from the wreckage.  United manager Sir Matt Busby was badly injured, but survived the crash.
An investigation by West German airport authorities originally blamed Thain, saying he did not de-ice the aircraft's wings, despite eyewitness statements indicating that de-icing was unnecessary. The last inquiry by the U.K. Board of Trade, released in 1969, found that the crash was caused by snow slush on the runway that slowed the plane too much to allow takeoff and that Captain Thain was not to blame.
United were aiming to become the third club to win three successive Football League titles and they were six points behind league leaders Wolverhampton Wanderers with 14 games still to play. They also held the FA Charity Shield and had just advanced into their second successive European Cup semi-finals. The team had not been beaten for 11 matches. The crash not only derailed the team's title ambitions that year but also destroyed the nucleus of what promised to be one of the greatest generations of players in English football history. It took ten years for the club to recover after the tragedy. Manager Sir Matt Busby rebuilt the team and won the European Cup in 1968 with a new generation of "Babes".
Manchester United Players killed:
Roger Byrne (captain)
Mark Jones
Eddie Colman
Tommy Taylor
Liam (Billy) Whelan
Duncan Edwards
David Pegg
Geoff Bent