Is 2023 the second summer of Britpop? Between the reunion of Pulp, a new Blur album on the cards, a Tory government in crisis and a summer of music where a new generation of music fans take over, it all feels mightily familiarâŠ
What better time for The Rise and Fall of Britpop, a new BBC podcast hosted by Steve Lamacq and Jo Whiley, to look back at how the scene was birthed, how it flourished and how, ultimately, it all fell apart in spectacular fashion. Including new interviews, archive material and more, the pair look at British society around the origin of the music, and how the bright young things took British culture to the world.
This past weekend (July 8), the reunited Blur played two shows at Wembley Stadium and will release their ninth album, âThe Ballad of Darrenâ next week (July 21). An apt moment to revisit and rank all their previous studio albums, thenâŠ
âLeisureâ (1991)
Floppy, baggy, and a bit flabby, this one. Released in 1991, it sounds like a band trying to fit into the trends around them rather than define their own. âThereâs No Other Wayâ is the best song that The Stone Roses never wrote, the looped drum beat practically pinched from the Manchester bandâs âFoolâs Goldâ. Elsewhere, âSheâs So Highâ â as gorgeous as it is â is more in line with Cocteau Twins and MBV, but by album closer âSlow Downâ, it ainât half drags. âThank God that [the albumâs release] was a time when you could make a record that wasnât right and not be discarded the next minute,ââ Albarn would later note. Letâs move on.
âThink Tankâ (2003)
Barely a decade later and the band were approaching the end⊠or so we thought. It would be the last record released under the Blur name until 2015âs âThe Magic Whipâ, and was an intimate, if slightly underwhelming collection. Coxon had left the band in 2002, and Albarn, James and Rowntree pieced large parts of it together in riad in Morocco. No wonder it sounds so disjointed: âCrazy Beatâ is deeply irritating, and âJetsâ is spacious but forgettable. That said, âOut of Timeâ, is up there with their strongest material, one that reads as shaking hands across the divide from Albarn to Coxon during their estrangement.
âThe Magic Whipâ (2015)
In the period that followed, a new Blur album wasnât a given. A reunion in 2009 and then more shows in 2012 were strictly live ventures â standalone singles âUnder The Westwayâ and âFools Dayâ aside â and reports of a new record were contradicting at best. Pieced together following a tour delay in Hong Kong in 2013, and then finished off a year later, the groupâs return to the studio was surprising but most welcome. âLonesome Streetâ and âGo Outâ reignites their inner-lout, but itâs an equally delicious treat on âMy Terracotta Heartâ and âGhost Tripâ. Its existence itself was satisfying enough.
âThe Great Escapeâ (1995)
There is truth to what Elasticaâs Justine Frischmann â Albarnâs partner at the time of its release â said about the album being âso cheesy, like a parody of âParklifeâ, but without the balls or the intellect.â Oof. That said, It is fun and loose with tracks âThe Universalâ, âStereotypesâ and âCharmless Manâ providing a string of top-tier hits, while âMr. Robinsons Quangoâ is a perfect distillation of their sound; Coxonâs crunchy guitar riffs paired with Jamesâ sensational bass line. Oh, and they had a little song called âCountry Houseâ. Think that one did alright? (AD)
âBlurâ (1997)
Fitting, really, that the cover of their 1997 self-titled record shows a gurney being raced into an emergency room. Following âThe Great Escapeâ â and the fallout of the Battle of Britpop â the band were distant and in need of a bit of healing. They decamped to ReykjavĂk and channeled new influences: Coxon and Albarnâs love of Pavement and Beck shone through, while âDeath of Partyâ is an apt reflection of their mood at the time: âThe death of the party/Came as no surprise.â âThe Great Escapeâ wasnât that bad, lads! Look past the stadium-baiting of âSong 2â and thereâs some quite magical, understated things happening on this record.
âModern Life Is Rubbishâ (1993)
Fueled by debts, a failed attempt to crack America and the mediaâs perception of the band at the time, âModern LifeâŠâ showcases the quartet as they entered uncharted territory. Alex James referred to their second album as the bandâs âmagnum opusâ due to its vast scope in sound: they were fearless in playing around with different styles including punk rock (âAdvertâ), neo-psychedelia (âChemical Worldâ) and music-hall (âFor Tomorrowâ). Elsewhere, âColin Zealâ and âPressure on Julianâ are pure bangers that highlight Coxonâs signature complex guitar riffs. Blurâs bold reinvention was what saved the band and would essentially birth Britpop. (AD)
âParklifeâ (1994)
The big one. If there was a defining Britpop album, might it be this? It was era-defining, and took voyeuristic reading of British life in the â90s: working-class heroes, middle-class bores and lusty teens would all star. At the time, NMEâs Jonny Dee called it â’Modern Life Is Rubbish’s’ older brother â bigger, bolder, narkier and funnierâ in a 9/10 review. âParklifeâ is a seminal song that is, indeed, âfor all the peopleâ and âThis Is A Lowâ is a devastating blueprint for whereâd theyâd go towards the close of the decade.
â13â (1999)
By the end of the century, it finally felt like we got to know Blur. The years of wily characters, cheeky lyrics and the heady Britpop days dissipated and we were left with â13â, a devastating, heartfelt and human record. It caught the band as things were truly falling apart: Albarn had split with Frischmann, they moved on from long-time producer Stephen Street, and relationships between the band had deteriorated. No surprise that Albarn sought refuge with his then-secret Gorillaz project on the sly.
Itâs there in every song, inescapable and suffocating. âNo Distance Left To Runâ cannot mask the pain â âitâs over, you donât have to tell meâ â while âTenderâ is majestic and hopeful, a flickering light in a world of darkness. That impending doom loosened the band: âBattleâ, âSwamp Songâ and âOptigan Iâ are cerebral, uncomfortable and challenging. It would be the final album Coxon played on, and a hell of swansong to a decade that they ruled.
Additional words: Anagricel Duran
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