December 1993. End-of-year round-ups in the music press. American bands still holding up – all polls feature Nirvana, Lemonheads, Belly and the Juliana Hatfield Three. Tindersticks by the Tindersticks is album of the year in Melody Maker. New Wave is at number 19. In the NME Writers' Top Fifty Albums of the Year Bjork's Debut is number one, and New Wave comes in at 18. In Select magazine New Wave is voted the seventh-best album of the year. And the best album of 1993 as voted for by the writers of Select: Giant Steps by the Boo Radleys. Suede lurk around the top three of most critics' polls, and Mr Blobby gets the Christmas number one in the singles chart.
Monday, September 23, 2013
Bad Vibes: Britpop and My Part in Its Downfall by Luke Haines (William Heinemann Ltd 2009)
Saturday, March 09, 2013
Kill Your Friends by John Niven (Harper Perennial 2008)
Saturday, August 28, 2010
The Last Party: Britpop, Blair and the Demise of English Rock by John Harris (Harper Perennial 2003)
Noel Gallagher had turned up at his local polling station to find that he was required to produce one more item of identification than he was carrying. 'Do you want me to sing you a fucking song?' he protested, before celebrity eventually got the better of bureaucracy. That night, though the South Bank beckoned, he remained on the sofa. 'I had a ticket for the Labour Party party, but I had that much fun watching Portillo and the others get done over I stayed at home in front of the TV. It was all champagne and cigars round our house. Meg and me got pissed and went out into the garden and played ['The Beatles'] Revolution dead loud with the neighbours banging on the walls.'
Saturday, July 19, 2008
Britpop Quote of the Day
Lush's Miki Berenyi discussing the release of the Britpop and Shoegazing box set The Brit Box:
"Is there a band in existence who would feel it a compliment to be compared to Dodgy?"
Cruel, but funny . . . and I actually bought Dodgy's first two albums.
Friday, February 22, 2008
My Life Story
Just realised that I've had a 'Suzi moment' after clicking on the Marx and Coca-Cola blog.
Of course, I knew that yesterday was the 160th anniversary of Fred and Charlie's classic agit-prop pamphlet. I forgot to mention it on the blog because I just happened to be distracted by a minor mid nineties agit-pop classic.
Marx and Coca-Cola's JM provides the killer quote from said pamphlet, whilst I do a cut and paste job from Mike Leigh's classic late eighties film, 'High Hopes':
Later in the afternoon, CYRIL and SHIRLEY speed along their street on their bike. They overtake SUZI, who is scuttling along, carrying a large, bulging plastic bag. SHIRLEY waves to her as they pass. She waves back.Moments later, as CYRIL and SHIRLEY alight, SUZI appears round the corner . . .
SUZI: (Saluting) Wotcher, comrades!
SHIRLEY: Hallo, Suzi!
SUZI: Long time no see.
SHIRLEY: You all right?
SUZI: Yeah, I been fine.
(CYRIL and SHIRLEY take off their helmets.)
Where you been?
CYRIL: Highgate Cemetery.
SUZI: Oh! Someone dead?
CYRIL: Yeah - Karl Marx.
(He walks off. SHIRLEY laughs.)
SUZI: Oh, yeah, 'course!
CYRIL: I'd 'ave thought you'd 'ave known that.
SUZI: I did know that - I just forgot.
(SHIRLEY and SUZI follow CYRIL towards their block of flats.)
Monday, January 07, 2008
Sunday, January 06, 2008
Saturday, January 05, 2008
Wednesday, December 19, 2007
How I Learned To Love Luke Haines
*Christmas Special*
Pop over to The Vinyl District music blog, and pick up gratis *samples* of some of the best pop music from the 1990s. Five tracks from the Auteurs classic 1994 album, 'Now I'm A Cowboy', have been made available for your delectation.
Poor old Luke Haines. If the bloke had had the face and the hair to go with his musical chops, Damon Albarn would still be working in the Rucksack Dept of Millets to this day.